Gamaliel Bradford

Gamaliel Bradford

Gamaliel Bradford (October 9, 1863– April 11, 1932) was an American biographer, critic, poet, and dramatist. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, the sixth of seven men called Gamaliel Bradford in unbroken succession, of whom the first, Gamaliel Bradford, was a great-grandson of Governor William Bradford of the Plymouth Colony.

Gamaliel Bradford (October 9, 1863– April 11, 1932) was an American biographer, critic, poet, and dramatist. Born in Boston, Massachusetts, the sixth of seven men called Gamaliel Bradford in unbroken succession, of whom the first, Gamaliel Bradford, was a great-grandson of Governor William Bradford of the Plymouth Colony.

Bradford attended Harvard University briefly with the class of 1886, then continued his education with a private tutor, but is said to have been educated “mainly by ill-health and a vagrant imagination.” As an adult, Bradford lived in Wellesley, Massachusetts. The building and student newspaper for the Wellesley High School (where Sylvia Plath received her secondary school education) were named after Gamaliel Bradford. The town changed the name of the building to Wellesley High School, but the newspaper maintains Bradford’s name.

In his day Bradford was regarded as the “Dean of American Biographers.” He is acknowledged as the American pioneer of the psychographic form of written biographies, after the style developed by Lytton Strachey. Despite suffering poor health during most of his life, Bradford wrote 114 biographies over a period of 20 years.

Bibliography

A Pageant of Life (poetry)
A Prophet of Joy (poetry)
Shadow Verses (poetry)
Unmade in Heaven (drama)
Lee, the American
American Portraits, 1875-1900
Union Portraits
Confederate Portraits, 1914.
Portraits of Women
Portraits of American Women
Saints and Sinners
A Naturalist of Souls: Studies in Psychography
Life and I (autobiography)
Elizabethan Women, 1936.

Articles

“Government in the United States,” The Contemporary Review, Vol. XLVIII, July/December 1885.
“Municipal Government,” Scribners, October 1887.
“Journalism and Permanence,” The North American Review, August 1915.
“A Confederate Pepys,” The American Mercury, December 1925.

References

Wikipedia—https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamaliel_Bradford_(biographer)




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