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Whitman's tenure at the Brooklyn Daily Times paralleled the seemingly inexorable breakdown of the American
broad-based prosperity, a position he used to successfully secure the presidency in the election of 1860
As Whitman recalled to Horace Traubel in 1889 , "we were originally Democrats, but when the time came
we went over with a vengeance: it was no role, no play, for us: we were at once what the church would
Politics Journal of American History 2023 110 3 419–48 Lause, Mark A.
Waterworks constitutes one of his longest sets of texts published between the second (1856) and third (1860
Brooklyn Daily Times editorials, note that Whitman "fought for a good system of waterworks for the city
flimsy, cheap and temporary series of works that would have long since broken down, and disgraced the city
In 1858, for instance, as the city council debated a revision to the ongoing construction, the project
and suggest that while the late 1850s may have been a period of struggle for Whitman the poet they were
residents of the town of Williamsburgh, along the East River across from the Lower East Side of New York City
When Williamsburgh was incorporated into the city of Brooklyn in 1854, the paper changed its name to
incorporation into Brooklyn, the Brooklyn Daily Times became one of the three daily papers for the city
By 1860, the Eagle , according to its own reckoning, had a circulation of 6,200 daily readers, while
Nevertheless, soon after its rebranding, the Daily Times won a city contract to serve as the official
range of contexts" and there "is evidence he befriended some of the officers he met; [as such] they were
Times served as Whitman's primary, though not exclusive, employer between the second (1856) and third (1860
Whitman's writings on policing for the Brooklyn Daily Times come at a crucial moment in the history of American
While this transition was relatively smooth in Brooklyn, it led to outright rioting in New York City,
Few Impressions of Walt Whitman The Conservator June 1896 57 Greenspan, Ezra Walt Whitman and the American
reception introduction • 3 of Whitman had a remarkable impact on the American one.
For example, the first collection dedicated to American litera- ture in Italy, which came out in 1884
simple because they were strong—they were great because they were healthy.”
Another case in this sense is that of the poem “City of Orgies.”
For Walt, through Naturism, even American democracy became an expressive problem.
TheDisenthralledHostsofFreedom” IowaWhitmanSeries EdFolsom,serieseditor university of iowa press ,iowa city
Wilentz shows how “the versions of American republicanism multiplied, as men of different backgrounds
“TheChicagoConvention,”Buffalo(NY)MorningExpress,May16, 1860,p.2,col.1.
:H.Dayton,1860.
“Whitmanin1850:ThreeUncollectedArticles.”American Literature19,no.4(January1948):301–17.
Above all, it was the contributions of American artists that piqued his editorial interest.
He focused in particular on the growing presence of American artists in exhibitions hosted by such prominent
institutions as the Brooklyn Institute, the American Art-Union, the National Academy of Design, and
Free exhibitions such as those organized by the American Art-Union drew special praise as did the sale
Historical subjects, portraits, biblical scenes, city views, botanical specimens, genre scenes, fashion
My first impressions, architectural, &c. were not favorable; but upon the whole, the city, the spaces,
Culture (Iowa City, IA: University of Iowa Press, 1992), 8. x The city’s monuments were of special
The possibilities for African American life were unresolved at this time, as were the possibilities for
Washington’s black population tripled by 1870, jumping from 19 percent of the city’s total population
Mapping American Culture. Iowa City, IA: University of Iowa Press, 1992. French, R. W.
After 1860, Whitman's narrative strategy veers in the opposite direction.
The song satirized the American craze pervading Italy at that time.
The book opens of course with a "Poem of Walt Whitman, an American."
On the whole it sounds to me very brave & American after whatever deductions.
Whereupon we went and had a good dinner at the American House.
In 1963-65 he was an Instructor in Italian Language and Literature at Columbia University, New York City
As his interest in Anglo-American Literature grew, between 1965 and 1990 he taught full courses at Bocconi
concentrating on Puritanism (I Puritani d'America, Cuem, Milan, 1972; enlarged, Aracne, Rome, 2009) and the "American
In 1987-91 he held the chair of American Literature at the University of Messina (Co-editor, with Giuseppe
This essay originates from and summates Corona's previous work on Whitman and on the authors of the American
“I dreamed in a dream of a city where all men were like brothers,” Whitman wrote in the poem that would
invincible”) are now inscribed on the Camden city hall (LG 1860, 373).
On the eve of the American Civil War in the 1860 Leaves of Grass, Whitman is no longer singing an actu
at the time of the founding were be- ginning to tear the American union apart at the seams.
,moreardent,more general,” Whitman presents the 1860 Leaves of Grass as the “New Bible” of the American
As nearly exact contemporaries with roots in NewYork City—both men were born there in 1819—Herman Melville
From then until dawn, a total of sixteen shots were fired on the city, ten of which were incen- diary
The jubilant Afri - can Americans who greeted Lincoln during his daring visit to the city only a day
Harris, In the Shadow of Slavery: African Americans in New York City, 1626–1863, 279–288. 13.
In the Shadow of Slavery: African Americans in NewYork City, 1626–1863.
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Herrick and Ropes had famously decided that he was "the laziest fellow who ever undertook to edit a city
quit the paper, after which he publicly declared Herrick and Ropes "two as dirty fellows, as ever were
the poet writes "Manly Health and Training" not only as a paean to the potential of the everyday American
Emerson and Higginson—Waldo and Wentworth, as they were known to their friends—were two of the most formidable
In the turn the American Puritans then gave to it, these correlations were extended further from innerselftoouterself
When read in relation to their pre-1860 versions, the poet’s later revi- sions of the 1860 poems, in
Press, 1962); Stephen John Mack, PragmaticWhitman: Reimagining American Democ- racy (Iowa City: University
Tompkins, Sensational Designs: The Cultural Work of American Fiction, 1790–1860 (NewYork: Oxford University
Not profit-based (though books were also sold), the distribution efforts of the American Bible Society
“American books, the physical objects as well as the texts and ideas, were exported around the globe
Mail and American Citizen (which were generally positive about the poet), the Charleston (S.C.)
See American Institute of the City of New York, Thirty-Second Annual Report of the American Institute
[John Reuben Thompson], “A New American Poem,” Southern Field and Fireside (9 June 1860): 20.
Genocide and disease decimated Native American populations.
He would soon discover, however, that the American public were even less tolerant than their British
Whitman, LG 1860, 342–43. 16. All poems were originally untitled in the 1855 edition.
A disproportionate number of anatomical subjects were African American, Indian, or Irish.
“The Gory New York City Riot That Shaped American Medicine.” The Smithsonian, June 17, 2014. Web.
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
1841), where he played a bemused urban observer of doings in the countryside, proved untenable in the city
Whitman's arrival at the Aurora coincided with Charles Dickens' visit to New York City in 1842.
the debate over the bill to pry Irish Catholic support away from the Democratic Party in New York City
Protestant-inflected curriculum of the Public School Society, led the fight for the Maclay Bill in the city
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Others, it seems, were rarely reprinted at all.
The stories were soon circulated widely again since they were then reprinted, with the accompanying illustrations
were designated as having been authored by "W.
The Dollar Newspaper , "Pay of American Writers."
The publishers were likely more generous with well-known writers than they were with Whitman, but The
The teaching assignments were for three-month terms and, like many schoolteachers during the early nineteenth
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
poems and essays, letters to and from members of Whitman's family, and commentary on contemporary American
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Myerson Collection of Nineteenth-Century American Literature, Rare Books & Special Collections
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Myerson Collection of Nineteenth-Century American Literature, Rare Books & Special Collections, Thomas
Myerson Collection of Nineteenth-Century American Literature, Rare Books & Special Collections, Thomas
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
.; Walt Whitman's papers were divided among his three literary executors, Richard M.
Whitman's personal habits were such that he wrote and collected his notes in a casual and unsystematic
1942, a group of Whitman notebooks from the Harned collection, along with other national treasures, were
material from storage in 1944, it was discovered that ten Whitman notebooks and a cardboard butterfly were
Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892; Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892--Manuscripts; Poets, American--19th century
It was the first of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
In fact, four of the five most often reprinted pieces of Whitman's short fiction were first published
"Pay of American Writers," The Dollar Newspaper , September 13, 1843, [3].
Both the Madison Weekly Herald and The Dollar Newspaper were correct in their assessment of the wide
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
complete article, which focuses primarily on Whitman's life and writing in the late 1850s and early 1860s
, "To the Editor of the Boston Morning Post," Boston Morning Post, August 4, 1841, [2].; "Pay of American
Magazine), and "The Boy-Lover" (January 4–5, 1848; previously printed with the same title in The American
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
work of serial fiction (August 29–30, 1845) about two months after the story was reprinted in The American
It was the second of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
The Washington temperance societies, part of the Washingtonian temperance movement, were popular in New
Bervance in " Bervance: or, Father and Son " and even the unsympathetic Unrelenting, a Native American
in the School-Room,' contributed by the same writer to a preceding number of the Democratic Review, were
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
The Washington temperance societies, part of the Washingtonian temperance movement, were popular in New
Masculinity in 1840s Temperance Narratives," in Sentimental Men: Masculinity and the Politics of Affect in American
A Fact"), and "The Boy-Lover" (January 4–5, 1848; previously printed with the same title in The American
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
work of serial fiction (August 29–30, 1845), about two months after the story was reprinted in The American
It was the seventh of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
In fact, four of the five most often reprinted pieces of Whitman's short fiction were first published
In the article, the writer claims, "Recently were published, the sketch of 'Death in the School Room'
and a 'Legend of Life and Love,' both of which, as they respectively appeared, were copied by three
"Pay of American Writers," The Dollar Newspaper , September 13, 1843, [3].
.; "Pay of American Writers," The Dollar Newspaper, September 13, 1843, [3].; For more information about
A Fact"), and "The Boy-Lover" (January 4–5, 1848; previously printed with the same title in The American
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
work of serial fiction (August 29–30, 1845) about two months after the story was published in The American
Whitman worked as a compositor for the paper in May 1841 after he moved from Long Island to New York City
The Washington temperance societies, part of the Washingtonian temperance movement, were popular in New
Masculinity in 1840s Temperance Narratives," in Sentimental Men: Masculinity and the Politics of Affect in American
Bervance in " Bervance: or, Father and Son ," and the vengeful, unwavering Native American chief, the
Masculinity in 1840s Temperance Narratives," in Sentimental Men: Masculinity and the Politics of Affect in American
The story's narrator is a young man who meets the widow when he is on respite from the city, and Whitman
begins the tale by expounding upon the merits of the rural village and the vices of the city, revealing
The tale was even reprinted in the British journal The Great Western Magazine and Anglo-American Journal
See Walter Whitman, "The Tomb-Blossoms," The Great Western Magazine and Anglo-American Journal 1 (July
On the same date as the illustrated "Posthumous Sketch" reprints were published, October 23, 1892, The
.; See Walter Whitman, "The Tomb-Blossoms," The Great Western Magazine and Anglo-American Journal 1 (
It was the fifth of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
On May 27, 1869, portions of "The Last of the Sacred Army" were reprinted as part of a newspaper article
the Sacred Army of the Revolution, written by a now venerable and highly respected citizen of this city
Tribune (Daily) (Salt Lake City, UT) and in the Salt Lake Weekly Tribune (Salt Lake City, UT) on June
The illustrated versions of the story, as well as the repeated insistence that the later reprints were
It was the sixth of nine short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the eight
He shows neither mercy nor sympathy for the American armies or for the local civilians.
Likewise, when he and his younger son were several miles from home, the elder Slade had too much to drink
Slade and Reuben were out in the cold rain, and Reuben became an invalid because he never entirely recovered
Experience meetings were important parts of Washington temperance societies' compassionate approach to
Washington temperance societies, which were named after George Washington, were part of the Washingtonian
Holloway announced both finds in the January 1956 issue of American Literature .
"Temperance in the Bed of a Child," in Dependent States: The Child's Part in Nineteenth-Century American
Masculinity in 1840s Temperance Narratives," in Sentimental Men: Masculinity and the Politics of Affect in American
Brooklyn Daily Eagle, May 24, 1842, [2].; See Emory Holloway, "More Temperance Tales by Whitman," American
It was the third of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
children, the violent, drunken sailor in " The Child's Champion ," and the vengeful, unwavering Native American
The major plot events of Whitman's "The Reformed" were not altered for the later printing as "Little
Marchion's, which were often shared at "experience meetings," was an important part of the Washington
The Washington temperance societies, part of the Washingtonian temperance movement, were popular in New
The New York City printer Benjamin H. Day founded The Sun in 1833.
See Anthony Fellow, "Benjamin Day and The New York Sun " in American Media History (Boston: Wadsworth
The major plot events of Whitman's "The Reformed" were not altered for the later printing as "Little
"; See Anthony Fellow, "Benjamin Day and The New York Sun" in American Media History (Boston: Wadsworth
A Fact"), and "The Boy-Lover" (January 4–5, 1848; previously printed with the same title in The American
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
"Temperance in the Bed of a Child," in Dependent States: The Child's Part in Nineteenth-Century American
the novel, an "antiquarian"—an expert on local history in New York—relates the tale of a Native American
son, Wind-Foot, to main character Franklin Evans on the journey from rural Long Island to New York City
antiquarian prefaces the story with a warning about the detrimental effects of alcohol on Native Americans
The American Review was a monthly journal published in New York and edited by George H.
Stephen Rachman, " American Whig Review ," in Walt Whitman: An Encyclopedia , 20.
.; Wesley Allen Riddle, "Culture and Politics: The American Whig Review, 1845–1852," Humanitas 8.1 (1995
): 44.; Riddle, "Culture and Politics," 46.; Stephen Rachman, "American Whig Review," in Walt Whitman
: An Encyclopedia, 20.; Riddle, "Culture and Politics," 48.; "Introductory," The American Review: A Whig
A Fact"), and "The Boy-Lover" (January 4–5, 1848; previously printed with the same title in The American
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
Belief in spirits formed the foundation of modern American spiritualism, a popular nineteenth-century
See Frank Luther Mott, "The Columbian Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine," in A History of American Magazines
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
it was reprinted under the title "A Spirit Record" in The Press (Philadelphia, PA) on January 20, 1860
A description of The American Historical Annual can be found in Joel Myerson's bibliography of Whitman's
Belief in spirits formed the foundation of modern American spiritualism, a popular nineteenth-century
moment.; See Frank Luther Mott, "The Columbian Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine," in A History of American
A Fact"), and "The Boy-Lover" (January 4–5, 1848; previously printed with the same title in The American
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
and Odd-Fellows' Literary Magazine 1.2 (May 1850), 63–64; "A Spirit Record," The Press, January 20, 1860
to the beginning of the story and changing the title to "The Boy-Lover" before sending it to The American
After "The Boy-Lover" was published in The American Review , Whitman later reprinted it under that title
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
as a work of serial fiction (August 29–30, 1845) about two months after the story appeared in The American
Several of the revisions Whitman made to the American Review version of "The Boy-Lover" (1845) prior
Two of Whitman's stories were reprinted in the Eagle before he became the paper's editor in March 1846
as a work of serial fiction (August 29–30, 1845) about two months after the story appeared in The American
Morse, who founded the paper after coming to New York City in order to establish a religious newspaper
"platform" was described as largely "the same as that of the National Benevolent Institutions that were
Frances Winwar, American Giant: Walt Whitman and His Times (New York: Harper, 1941), 73.
.; Frances Winwar, American Giant: Walt Whitman and His Times (New York: Harper, 1941), 73.; See Walt