Frederick Wadsworth Loring

Frederick Wadsworth Loring (December 12, 1848 – November 5, 1871) was an American journalist, novelist and poet.

Frederick Wadsworth Loring, in his campaign costume, with his mule "Evil Merodach". Taken about 48 hours before the Wickenburg massacre

Loring was born on December 12, 1848, in Boston, Massachusetts, to David and Mary Hall Stodder Loring.[1] He was a fifth great grandson to immigrant Thomas Loring.[1] He graduated from Phillips Academy, Andover, in 1866, and then from Harvard University, where he first made his mark with contributions to the Harvard Advocate, in 1870. Inheriting a love of literature from his mother, who died when he was eleven, he quickly gained in stature as an up-and-coming American author.[2] In 1871, he published a novel, Two College Friends, and a book of poems, The Boston Dip and Other Verses. Two College Friends, in which two Harvard students serve together in the Civil War, has been singled out as an important example of the representation of romantic male friendship.[3] He also made numerous contributions, both fiction and non-fiction, to such periodicals as The Atlantic Monthly, Appleton's Journal, Old and New, The Independent, and Every Saturday during this time.

Wickenburg Massacre

In the spring of 1871, Appleton's Journal sent Loring as a correspondent on a cartographic expedition to Arizona led by Lieutenant George M. Wheeler of the US Army Corps of Engineers. The articles Loring wrote included "A Council of War," "A Glimpse of Mormonism,"[4] "Silver Mining in Nevada," and "The Valley of Death." Their party suffered several setbacks, and in August 1871 Loring wrote to his employers from Death Valley: "I am bootless, coatless, everything but lifeless. I have had a fortnight of horrors. This morning an Indian fight capped the climax. However, I am well and cheerful."[5] Although they escaped from the valley, his party's carriage was attacked on November 5 by a band of Yavapai near Wickenburg, Arizona, while on the way to La Paz. That ambush came to be known as the Wickenburg Massacre. The driver, Loring, and four other passengers were killed.

After his death, he was mourned by Charles Reade as the most promising of all young American authors.[5]

Several of Loring's poems, including "In the Old Churchyard at Fredericksburg" and "The Old Professor", have appeared in American verse anthologies.

Bibliography

  • Cotton Cultivation in the South (1869, with Charles F. Atkinson)
  • Two College Friends (1871)
  • The Boston Dip and Other Verses (1871)
gollark: No we don't.
gollark: Except not really that either and mapping on regular computers to it is kind of unhelpful.
gollark: The brain is combined kind-of-volatile RAM and CPU.
gollark: No, analogising it that way is ridiculous.
gollark: It's some sort of neural-net-type thing with weird extra communication between components running on weird hardware.

References

  1. Charles Henry Pope, Loring Genealogy, (1917), p. 260
  2. Nissen, Axel. The Romantic Friendship Reader: Love Stories Between Men in Victorian America. Page 85. 2003.
  3. Katz, Jonathan Ned (2001). Love Stories: Sex between Men before Homosexuality. University of Chicago Press. p. 141.
  4. Frederick W. Loring, Appleton's Journal: A Magazine of General Literature, Volume 6, pp. 214-5 accessed 12 October 2015
  5. Wilson, James Grant & John Fiske (editors). Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography: Volume IV, Lodge-Pickens. Page 27. D. Appleton and Company, 1900.
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