Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Christopher Pearse Cranch

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Christopher Cranch


Role
  
Writer

Christopher Pearse Cranch Massachusetts Historical Society the Beehive

Died
  
January 20, 1892, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

Education
  
George Washington University, Harvard Divinity School

Books
  
The Bird And The Bell - With, The Life and Letters of Christo, Three Children's Novels by, last of the huggermuggers, Three Children's Novels

Requiem in D Minor and THE HUMAN FLOWER by Christopher Pearse Cranch (1813-1892)


Christopher Pearse Cranch (March 8, 1813 – January 20, 1892) was an American writer and artist.

Contents

Christopher Pearse Cranch httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Biography

Christopher Pearse Cranch Christopher Cranch

Cranch was born in the District of Columbia. His conservative father, William Cranch, was Chief Judge of the United States Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, while his brother John was a painter.

Christopher Pearse Cranch FileChristopher Pearse Cranch 1878jpg Wikimedia Commons

He graduated from Columbian College (now George Washington University) in 1835 before attending Harvard Divinity School and becoming a licensed preacher. He traveled as a Unitarian minister, preaching in Providence, Andover, Richmond, Bangor, Portland, Boston, Washington, and St. Louis. Later, he pursued various occupations: a magazine editor, caricaturist, children's fantasy writer (the Huggermugger books), poet (The Bird and the Bell with Other Poems in 1875), translator, and landscape painter. He lived much of his life in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Christopher Pearse Cranch Massachusetts Historical Society the Beehive

Though not one of its founding members, Cranch became associated with the Transcendental Club; he read Ralph Waldo Emerson's Nature by December 1836 and beginning in June 1837 served as a substitute editor of the Western Messenger in the absence of James Freeman Clarke. For that journal, Cranch reviewed Emerson's Phi Beta Kappa address at Harvard in August 1837 known as "The American Scholar". He referred to the speech as "so full of beauties, full of original thought and illustration" and its author as "the man of genius, the bold deep thinker, and the concise original writer". Cranch's connection with the Transcendentalists ultimately diminished his demand as a minister.

His poetry was published in The Harbinger and The Dial among other publications. He sent "Enosis", which Hazen Carpenter noted as perhaps Cranch's most well-known poem, to Emerson for The Dial on March 2, 1840.

As an artist, Cranch painted landscapes similar to the work of Thomas Cole, the Hudson River school, and the Barbizon school in France. In one foray into historical painting, Cranch depicted the burning of P. T. Barnum's American Museum in New York City. Later in life, Cranch painted scenes from Venice and Italy. Cranch's caricatures of Emerson were later bound as Illustrations of the New Philosophy: Guide. Perhaps his most well-remembered and recognized artwork is a hand-drawn caricature illustrating Emerson's concept of the "transparent eyeball". In 1850, he was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate Academician, and became a full Academician in 1864.

He died in 1892 and was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Massachusetts.

Works

  • Poems (1844)
  • The Last of the Huggermuggers, A Giant Story (1855)
  • Kobboltozo, A Sequel to the Last of the Huggermuggers (1857)
  • The Aeneid of Virgil (translation, 1872)
  • Satan: A Libretto (1874)
  • The Bird and the Bell with Other Poems (1875)
  • Ariel and Caliban with Other Poems (1887)
  • References

    Christopher Pearse Cranch Wikipedia