John Henry Ingram

John Henry Ingram (November 16, 1842 – February 12, 1916) was an English biographer and editor[1] with a special interest in Edgar Allan Poe.

Ingram was born at 29 City Road, Finsbury Square, Middlesex, and died at Brighton, England.[2] His family lived at Stoke Newington, recollections of which appear in Poe's works.

J. H. Ingram dedicated himself to the resurrection of Poe's reputation, maligned by the dubious memoirs of Rufus Wilmot Griswold; he published the first reliable biography of the author and a four volume collection of his works.[3] Sarah Helen Whitman correspondence with Ingram, with her letters from Poe and a daguerrotype portrait, was added to the library of material he was assembling; Ingram's Poe collection is now held at the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia.[2]

Works

gollark: As far as I can tell, the "security" was possibly encryption of some kind.
gollark: 233 bytes seems implausible for the entire thing, and my browser identifies it a "detached OpenPGP signature (233 bytes)".
gollark: Are you sure file.lua.gpg isn't a *signature*, by the way?
gollark: Oh yes, fair.
gollark: Decompiled, but better.

References

  1. "Ingram, John H." Who's Who. Vol. 59. 1907. p. 912.
  2. Miller, John Carl. "John Henry Ingram: Editor, Biographer, and Collector of Poe Materials". University of Virginia Library. Retrieved 20 February 2011.
  3. The Works of the Edgar Allan Poe (Ingram Edition) Archived 2011-03-14 at the Wayback Machine E A Poe society
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