Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Henry Howard Brownell

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Henry Brownell

Role
  
Poet

Education
  
Trinity College


Henry Howard Brownell 1895 Henry Howard Brownell American Poet Historian vintage magazine

Died
  
1872, Hartford, Connecticut, United States

Books
  
War‑lyrics and other poems, Lines Of Battle And Other Po, War‑Lyrics and Other Poems - b, North and South America il, The new world

Henry Howard Brownell (Thomas Bailey Aldrich Poem)


Henry Howard Brownell (February 6, 1820 – 1872) was an American poet and historian.

Contents

Henry Howard Brownell Henry Howard Brownell 1820 1872 Find A Grave Memorial

Biography

Brownell was born in Providence, Rhode Island, February 6, 1820. He graduated from Trinity College, Hartford, in 1841, studied law, and was admitted to the bar, but settled as a teacher in Hartford. He published in 1847 a volume of Poems and in 1851 the People's Book of Ancient and Modern History, and followed this in 1863 with The Discoverers, Pioneers, and Settlers of North and South America. But Brownell first attracted general attention with poems written during the Civil War. The earliest of these was a stirring version of the "General Orders" given by Admiral Farragut at the attack on the defenses of New Orleans. This led to his becoming attached to Admiral Farragut as private secretary. He was present at the naval battle in Mobile Bay, and after the war accompanied the Admiral on his European cruise. His best poems, "The River Fight" and "The Bay Fight" deal with the naval actions at New Orleans and Mobile. He collected his war poems in Lyrics of a day; or, Newspaper Poetry by a Volunteer in the United States Service (1864). A selection of his Poems, revised by himself, appeared in 1866. His was amongst the most popular battle-poetry produced in the North during the Civil War; but his work has been criticized as unfinished, uneven, often undignified, and sometimes grotesque. At its best, however, it sounds the lyric cry of a great national emotion. There is an appreciative essay on Brownell, by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., entitled "Our Battle Laureate."

References

Henry Howard Brownell Wikipedia