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  • 1876 99
Search : As of 1860, there were no American cities with a population that exceeded
Year : 1876

99 results

Abraham Stoker to Walt Whitman, 14 February 1876

  • Date: February 14, 1876
  • Creator(s): Abraham Stoker
Text:

intended to copy out and send to you —it has lain in my desk since then—when I had heard that you were

But I am glad to say that I have been the means of making your work known to many who were scoffers at

Many of us were hoping to see you in Ireland.

Ainsworth R. Spofford to Walt Whitman, 21 July 1876

  • Date: July 21, 1876
  • Creator(s): Ainsworth R. Spofford
Text:

Boston 1860–61. 3d. Ed. ? New York 1867, 4th. Ed. ? Washington 1871, 5th. Ed. ? Camden 1876 6th.

Wishing to know from an authentic source what other american Editions have been printed if any, will

Annotations Text:

On February 10, 1860, Whitman received a letter from the Boston publishing firm of Thayer and Eldridge

In March 1860, Whitman traveled to Boston to meet with the publishers and to oversee the printing of

the volume consisted of four separately paginated books stitched together (an edited version of the 1860

Albert G. Knapp to Walt Whitman, 2 April 1876

  • Date: April 2, 1876
  • Creator(s): Albert G. Knapp
Text:

intent, a stalwart man of genial appearance & seemingly past the middle age since his hair & face beard were

, live here, (my mother living with us) & have charge of one of the public schools (No. 13) of the city

Annotations Text:

Whitman served as the basis for Stephen Alonzo Schoff's engraving of the poet for Leaves of Grass (1860

Frank Leslie's Weekly, published from 1852 to 1922, was an American literary and news magazine published

Andrew J. Davis to Walt Whitman, 27 April 1876

  • Date: April 27, 1876
  • Creator(s): Andrew J. Davis
Annotations Text:

Mary Fenn Robinson (1824–1886) was an American Spiritualist and the second wife of Andrew Jackson Davis

The couple founded the Herald of Progress, a Spiritualist newspaper, in 1860.

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 18 May 1876

  • Date: May 18, 1876
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Rejoiced, too, perhaps with the sight of many dear old friends whom occasion has brought to your city

Annotations Text:

An aspiring physician, Beatrice took the needed preparatory classes but was barred (as were all women

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 21 April 1876

  • Date: April 21, 1876
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Let us come & be near you—& see if we are made of the right sort of stuff for transplanting to American

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 25 February 1876

  • Date: February 25, 1876
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Annotations Text:

Whitman's relationships with his publishers and distributors in the 1870s were extremely fraught, and

Anne Gilchrist to Walt Whitman, 30 March 1876

  • Date: March 30, 1876
  • Creator(s): Anne Gilchrist
Text:

Nor do I feel discouraged or surprised at what you say of American "crudeness," &c.

Asa K. Butts to Walt Whitman, 29 September 1876

  • Date: September 29, 1876
  • Creator(s): Asa K. Butts
Text:

He utterly refused to let me have any money or even books which were mine under exemption laws had I

The first with other debts were to be paid in four proportions as the goods were sold.

Byron G. Morrison to Walt Whitman, 14 April 1876

  • Date: April 14, 1876
  • Creator(s): Byron G. Morrison
Text:

Sent books by express prepaid—April 21 Karns City Butler Co County Pa Pennsylvania April 14th 1876 Walt

Charles P. Somerby to Walt Whitman, 12 May 1876

  • Date: May 12, 1876
  • Creator(s): Charles P. Somerby
Text:

Dear Sir: Your books were returned yesterday. The Web. Dict. and the Auth.

Annotations Text:

Their offices were at 721 Market Street, San Francisco.

Ivison, Blakeman, Taylor, & Co. were booksellers and publishers, who printed books by William Swinton

Charles W. Eldridge to Walt Whitman, 2 May 1876

  • Date: May 2, 1876
  • Creator(s): Charles W. Eldridge
Annotations Text:

Eldridge, the Boston publishing firm responsible for the third edition of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass (1860

Fanny Raymond Ritter (c.1835–1891) was an American musician, writer, historian, and the wife of the German-American

The Ritters were friends of William Sloane Kennedy and William D.

Edward Carpenter to Walt Whitman, 3 June 1876

  • Date: June 3, 1876
  • Creator(s): Edward Carpenter
Text:

I was glad to hear you were better.

Annotations Text:

1901, now preserved in the "The Papers of Edward Carpenter, 1844–1929," in the Sheffield, England, City

Memoranda During the War (1875) chronicles Whitman's time as a hospital volunteer during the American

Edward Dowden to Walt Whitman, 16 February 1876

  • Date: February 16, 1876
  • Creator(s): Edward Dowden
Text:

I do not know whether your American Summers are as health-bringing as our Summers, but I should suppose

that we shall look for an advance towards recovery The newspaper statement of the attitude of the American

a speech which consisted in the main of apt selections from L. of G. & Democratic Vistas, & these were

Whitman side,—a barrister, a young clergyman, a man in business, & others, while the remaining speakers were

Annotations Text:

Memoranda During the War (1875) chronicles Whitman's time as a hospital volunteer during the American

Edward Dowden to Walt Whitman, 16 March 1876

  • Date: March 16, 1876
  • Creator(s): Edward Dowden
Text:

Ought it not to be a duty, too, of—not the American public to recognize your gift to America as a writer

but—the American Government to recognize your services, as of one who saved the lives, & lightened the

sufferings of many American citizens—It would be honourable to the Government & to you.

Annotations Text:

Memoranda During the War (1875) chronicles Whitman's time as a hospital volunteer during the American

Edward Dowden to Walt Whitman, 4 October 1876

  • Date: October 4, 1876
  • Creator(s): Edward Dowden
Annotations Text:

Krieg, chapter 8, "Dublin," Walt Whitman and the Irish (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2000), 190

Emerson and Whitman

  • Date: April 22, 1876
  • Creator(s): William Douglass O'Connor
Text:

When the author of “Leaves of Grass” was in Boston in 1860, Emerson was his frequent and cordial visitor

This general statement of the relations between the two men explains the talk upon Boston Common in 1860

And my arriere and citadel positions—such as I have indicated in my June North American Review memorandum—were

not only not attacked, they were not even alluded to.”

Chadwick may try to say that if Walt Whitman had any case to state, that hour with Emerson in 1860 was

Emory A. Ellsworth to Walt Whitman, 17 February 1876

  • Date: February 17, 1876
  • Creator(s): Emory A. Ellsworth
Annotations Text:

his time, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807–1882) was both a highly popular and highly respected American

When Whitman met Longfellow in June 1876, he was unimpressed: "His manners were stately, conventional—all

Harry Buxton Forman to Walt Whitman, 26 January 1876

  • Date: January 26, 1876
  • Creator(s): Harry Buxton Forman
Text:

My dear Sir, Some years ago when I had occasion to address you, you were so good as to say you should

The American agent to whom my last application for this was forwarded says: "I don't think there is an

not an edition between the the one set up by yourself in 1855 and that of Thayer & Eldridge dated 1860

Annotations Text:

was the Boston publishing firm responsible for the third edition of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass (1860

[I have jotted down these memoranda]

  • Date: 1876–1882
Text:

In fact, portions of this manuscript were used in Whitman's footnote to New Themes Entered Upon, Specimen

John Newton Johnson to Walt Whitman, 17 July 1876

  • Date: July 17, 1876
  • Creator(s): John Newton Johnson
Text:

questions I have lately sent about policy of attacking suc h Orthodoxy as prevails here and elsewhere, were

De feated till I sometimes wish I were dead.)

John Newton Johnson to Walt Whitman, 20 December 1876

  • Date: December 20, 1876
  • Creator(s): John Newton Johnson
Text:

Crops here of all kinds were much injured by the drought, —am sorry to hear of your bad luck & that with

John Newton Johnson to Walt Whitman, 5 July 1876

  • Date: July 5, 1876
  • Creator(s): John Newton Johnson
Text:

claim a patent right for the my old terms "champion of nature" and "good-enough man" &c &c If you were

come (Perhaps on all subjects, in time, I have had printed as much as would make 3 or 4 columns of a city

to Meltonsville Perhaps the greatest doubter is the greatest Philosopher A while back some debtors were

Annotations Text:

During the American Civil War, Camp Douglas—founded in 1861—was a Union camp in Chicago.

John Newton Johnson to Walt Whitman, 7 February 1876

  • Date: February 7, 1876
  • Creator(s): John Newton Johnson
Annotations Text:

Moncure Daniel Conway (1832–1907) was an American abolitionist, minister, and frequent correspondent

Joaquin Miller was the pen name of Cincinnatus Heine Miller (1837–1913), an American poet nicknamed "

Mason Locke Weems (1759–1825) was an American minister and writer.

John Newton Johnson to Walt Whitman, 7 May 1876

  • Date: May 7, 1876
  • Creator(s): John Newton Johnson
Text:

(Now, if there were living near me, such people that I could take my Walt Whitman books with me, and

If I were a rich man I would print in great, big type, that Song , for wide distribution at the Centennial

The Passage to India and the Strong Bird &c were not new to me—I had them before.

Annotations Text:

In August 1865, the city of St.

Louis presented Sherman a gift of $30,000 to buy a house in the city, and he purchased a house on Garrison

Lee (1807–1870) was an American military officer who commanded the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia

in the American Civil War.

generals in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War.

John Swinton to Walt Whitman, 24 April 1876

  • Date: April 24, 1876
  • Creator(s): John Swinton
Annotations Text:

Young's knowledge of the Chinese language earned him the position of the American ambassador to China

Laura Curtis Bullard to Walt Whitman, 3 May 1876

  • Date: May 3, 1876
  • Creator(s): Laura Curtis Bullard
Text:

sent May 6 '76 see notes Jan 7 1889 35 East 39th St New York City. May 3d 1876.

many & so delighted the few—Permit me to congratulate you & to feel a little pride myself as an American

Annotations Text:

Joaquin Miller was the pen name of Cincinnatus Heine Miller (1837–1913), an American poet nicknamed "

Moncure D. Conway to Walt Whitman, 24 April 1876

  • Date: April 24, 1876
  • Creator(s): Moncure D. Conway
Text:

Austin's letter to the same paper in which he said "While we talk, he starves"; to defend your American

last loaf with you; and to free you from the charge of getting aid on false pretences of which you were

at one here on the subject, and Rossetti wrote to me that he knew Buchanans Buchanan's statements were

Annotations Text:

1884, when George and Louisa moved to a farm outside of Camden and Whitman decided to stay in the city

Mrs. Walter Bownes to Walt Whitman, 7 June [1876?]

  • Date: June 7, 1876
  • Creator(s): Mrs. Walter Bownes
Annotations Text:

Ted Genoways [Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2004], 7:145).

New Work by Walt. Whitman

  • Date: 11 March 1876
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

The only American prophet to my knowledge who enjoys a fame in England not accorded him in his own country

singer he especially desired to be called, it can hardly be said that his claims to the rank of poet were

[other than merely literary points]

  • Date: 1876
Text:

The notes found on the first leaf were used in Preface, 1876, to the two-volume Centennial Edition of

Both of these pieces were eventually included in Complete Prose Works (1892).

Our Old Feuillage

  • Date: between 1876-1881
Text:

28Our Old Feuillage (1860).

Feuillagebetween 1876-1881poetryhandwritten6 leaves20.5 x 12.5 cm; A bound copy of six leaves (the poem American

Rachel M. Cox to Walt Whitman, 24 May 1876

  • Date: May 24, 1876
  • Creator(s): Rachel M. Cox
Annotations Text:

Copies of the volume were withdrawn so that the sequel could be added.

several poems, adding eighteen new poems to those that appeared in Drum-Taps, and all of these poems were

Later, these poems were folded into Leaves of Grass, and by the time the final arrangement of Leaves

Review of Memoranda During the War

  • Date: 7 July 1876
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Walt Whitman continued steadily through '63, '64, and '65, to visit the sick and wounded of the American

armies, both on the field and in the hospitals in and around Washington city.

Some were scratched down from narratives he heard and itemized while watching, or writing, or leading

or Southey—ever depicted the woes of war so powerfully and touchingly as Walt Whitman does, as it were

It was in the same battle both were hit.

Review of Two Rivulets

  • Date: 17 November 1876
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

Whitman's poetry is like no other that ever was written—boldly conceived, bluntly expressed, purely American

Robert Buchanan to Walt Whitman, 18 April [1876]

  • Date: April 18, [1876]
  • Creator(s): Robert Buchanan
Text:

I wish I were a rich man—I am only an author living by his pen—and you should certainly never want anything

I can conceive you smiling superbly as you survey the gnats of American journalism now hovering round

that you have fulfilled your life, & spoken—in tones no thunder can silence—the beautiful message you were

Annotations Text:

Moncure Daniel Conway (1832–1907) was an American abolitionist, minister, and frequent correspondent

" presumably Lincoln's first campaign song, and served as correspondent of the New York World from 1860

He published many volumes of poems and was an indefatigable compiler of anthologies, among which were

(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1885) and A Library of American Literature from the Earliest Settlement to

Robert Buchanan to Walt Whitman, 28 April 1876

  • Date: April 28, 1876
  • Creator(s): Robert Buchanan
Annotations Text:

Richard Bentley & Son were London publishers.

Rudolf Schmidt to Walt Whitman, 18 April 1876

  • Date: April 18, 1876
  • Creator(s): Rudolf Schmidt
Annotations Text:

accusations of homosexuality; accusations that Petersen was inappropriately involved with schoolchildren were

Rudolf Schmidt to Walt Whitman, 24 July 1876

  • Date: July 24, 1876
  • Creator(s): Rudolf Schmidt
Text:

My thoughts were with on the 4th.

Should you know some good memoirs and relations of contemporaries about the Anglo-American work?

Songs of Parting

  • Date: about 1881
Text:

These corrections were probably intended for the 1881–82 edition of Leaves of Grass.

Songs Oversea

  • Date: 21 October 1876
  • Creator(s): McCarthy, J. H.
Text:

But, if many opposed him, many were of his party, and the most opposite and opposed schools of poetry

Americans question his right to be the typical singer of America.

Yet Walt Whitman has merits that no American prose-writer or poet ever yet had, with virtues and strength

sufficient for claiming laureateship of the great American nation.

Such, hurriedly sketched, were the accompaniments of the death of President Lincoln.

Starting from Paumanok

  • Date: about 1881
Text:

Starting From Paumanok was first published as Proto-Leafin 1860. Starting from Paumanok

Suppressing Walt Whitman.

  • Date: April 22, 1876
  • Creator(s): William Douglass O'Connor
Text:

If it were not for unduly trenching upon your space, I would like to show you the passages which the

I find it the most extraordinary piece of wit and wisdom that American has yet contributed.

seemed the sterile and stingy nature, as if too much handiwork or too much lymph in the temperament were

I rubbed my eyes a little to see if this sunbeam were no illusion; but the solid sense of the book is

Susan Stafford to Walt Whitman, 1 May 1876

  • Date: May 1, 1876
  • Creator(s): Susan Stafford
Annotations Text:

Traubel's With Walt Whitman in Camden—though it does appear frequently in the last three volumes, which were

Walt Whitman

  • Date: 18 March 1876
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

STRANGELY impudent agitation has just been started with regard to what is called "Walt Whitman's Actual American

Whitman, it may be explained, is an American writer who some years back attracted attention by a volume

of so-called poems which were chiefly remarkable for their absurd extravagance and shameless obscenity

"The real truth," says an American journal, which has taken up the subject apparently in the interest

All the established American poets studiously ignore Whitman."

Annotations Text:

"Walt Whitman's Actual American Position" was an unsigned article published in the West Jersey Press

Walt Whitman: A Glimpse at a Poet in His Lair

  • Date: 24 February 1876
  • Creator(s): Anonymous
Text:

On the floor at his feet was a "paper file," containing a small sheet on which some memoranda were written

, and on a larger table, in the centre of the room, were several letters bearing English postage stamps

Walt Whitman: A Symposium in a Sick Room

  • Date: 18 November 1876
  • Creator(s): James Matlack Scovel
Text:

And the good women—God bless them—who were the first at the sepulchre and the last at the cross—how kind

his oral opinion that I might drink some light wine once a day till the returns in South Carolina were

host of English friends whose words of praise, warm and earnest, have kindled up the great poet's American

admirers, till Longfellow himself begins to appreciate the poet of American manhood, whose large utterances

Walt Whitman: A Visit to the Good Gray Poet

  • Date: 19 April 1876
  • Creator(s): Frank Sanborn
Text:

already begun to wear the grizzled beard and silvering locks that have become almost the badge of American

been a confirmed invalid, he has assumed more entirely the grayness that was ascribed to him, and were

It was in April, 1860, when I had been seized at night by the Untied States marshal, under an unlawful

Whitman, who is inspector of gas-pipes in the city of Camden.

Thoreau was also a writer for the Democratic Review in those days before the flood,—so were Hawthorne

Walt Whitman by Jacob Spieler at the Charles H. Spieler Studio, ca. 1876

  • Date: ca. 1876
  • Creator(s): Jacob Spieler
Text:

Italian curls—or the semblance of 'em" (Saturday, October 13th, 1888), and he was relieved when they were

Walt Whitman, the American Poet

  • Date: May 1876
  • Creator(s): Adams, Robert Dudley
Text:

Walt Whitman, the American Poet.

their souls as an instinct, their general tone of thought and feeling, and modes of expressing them, were

One of his own countrymen (a press correspondent) thus writes of him— The only American prophet to my

The "seven cities" refer to Chios, Athens, Rhodes, Colophon, Argos, Smyrna, and Salamis.

Walt Whitman, the American Poet

Annotations Text:

Clear Grits were reformers in the province of Upper Canada, a British colony that is now Ontario, Canada

Their support was concentrated among southwestern Ontario farmers, who were frustrated and disillusioned

The Clear Grits advocated universal male suffrage, representation by population, democratic institutions

They can easily be remembered through the mnemonic "carcass" (the first letter of each city spells the

have been attributed to several writers, including Thomas Heywood (died 1649), who wrote: "Seven cities

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