Paul Leicester Ford

Paul Leicester Ford (March 23, 1865 – May 8, 1902) was an American novelist and biographer, born in Brooklyn, the son of Gordon Lester Ford and Emily Fowler Ford (a granddaughter of Noah Webster and lifelong friend of Emily Dickinson).

Paul Leicester Ford
Paul Leicester Ford (1902)
Born(1865-03-23)March 23, 1865
Brooklyn, New York
DiedMay 8, 1902(1902-05-08) (aged 37)
New York, New York
NationalityAmerican
Occupationnovelist and biographer

Life and work

Merrywood, Ford's estate on Stone Pond in Marlborough, New Hampshire
Gravesite of Paul Leicester Ford

He was the great-grandson (through his mother's family) of Noah Webster and the brother of the noted historian Worthington C. Ford. He wrote lives of George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and others, edited the works of Thomas Jefferson, and wrote a number of novels, which had considerable success, including The Honorable Peter Stirling (1894), Story of an Untold Love, Janice Meredith, Wanted a Matchmaker, and Wanted a Chaperon.

Ford's edition of The Writings of Thomas Jefferson is still regarded as one of the monuments of American historical scholarship, setting the standard for documentary editing for half-a-century, till the appearance of the first volume of The Papers of Thomas Jefferson, edited by Julian P. Boyd. Ford's edition remains valuable for its accuracy of transcription from original manuscripts and its careful annotation of the documents chosen for publication. Ford, however, was at best cool to Jefferson, unlike Boyd, whose critics sometimes attacked him as an uncritical apologist for Jefferson. The Ford edition appeared in two versions, a ten-volume edition published between 1892 and 1896 and a fourteen-volume limited numbered edition (known as the "Federal" edition) issued in 1904; other than the different breakdown of volumes, the contents of these editions are identical. Readers, however, have to take note of which edition is being used in a given scholarly work.

Ford was murdered in his Manhattan home by his brother, Malcolm Webster Ford, at one time the most famous amateur athlete in the United States, who then committed suicide.[1] He is interred at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Sleepy Hollow, NY.[2]

Works

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gollark: I think, so clearly I must be, right?
gollark: Well, I am too.
gollark: 1. "lit"?2. It's Lua, not LUA3. There are... lots of cross-platform languages, you realise? .NET ones (C#, F#), JVM ones (Clojure, Kotlin, Eta, Groovy - this isn't the same as *Java*), Python, Perl, or depending on what you consider "cross-platform" also stuff like C, Rust, the abomination known as Go, C++, Nim, D...
gollark: ... what?

References

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Cousin, John William (1910). A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature. London: J. M. Dent & Sons via Wikisource.

  1. "Paul L. Ford Slain by his Brother" (PDF). The New York Times. May 9, 1902. Retrieved June 5, 2010.
  2. "Paul Leicester Ford". findagrave.com. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
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