James Gates Percival Explained

James Gates Percival
Birth Date:15 September 1795
Birth Place:Berlin, Connecticut
Death Place:Hazel Green, Wisconsin
Citizenship:American
Genre:Poetry
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Signature:Signature of James Gates Percival (1795–1856).png

James Gates Percival (September 15, 1795 – May 2, 1856) was an American poet, surgeon, and geologist, born in Berlin, Connecticut, and died in Hazel Green, Wisconsin.[1] [2] [3]

Biography

James Gates Percival was a precocious child and a versatile, yet morbid and impractical man. He had a remarkable ability to write verse on various subjects and in almost every known meter. His sentimentalism and dazzling diction appealed to a wide audience, earning him a reputation as the foremost poet in the United States during the 1820s. Some of his most famous poems include "Prometheus," "The Coral Grove," and "The Graves of the Patriots." He was also a renowned geologist.

Percival entered Yale College at the age of 16 and graduated at the head of his class at the age of 20. After graduating, he pursued a career in medicine and relocated to Charleston, South Carolina. In 1823, a volume of his collected poems was published in New York and London.[4] In 1824, he briefly served as a professor of chemistry at West Point before resigning and dedicating several years to assisting Noah Webster in editing his American Dictionary of the English Language, published in 1828.

In 1835, the governor of Connecticut commissioned Percival to prepare a geological survey of the state, which he completed and published in 1842. In 1854, he was appointed as the State Geologist for Wisconsin and tasked with conducting a similar geological survey. The first annual report was issued in 1855, but while preparing the second annual report, Percival fell ill and passed away in May 1856. Most of his life was spent at his home in New Haven, Connecticut. Following his death, he was the subject of an admiring biography by Julius H. Ward.

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Notes and References

  1. Percival, James Gates.
  2. History of Grant County, Wisconsin. Chicago: Western Historical Company, 1881, pp. 576-581.
  3. Web site: A tribute to james gates percival, poet, scientist, linquist, buried at hazel green | Newspaper Article/Clipping. January 2012.
  4. News: September 20, 1959 . U.S. Poet of Obscurity: James Gates Percival . W15 . The Salt Lake Tribune . April 28, 2017 . Newspapers.com.
  5. Web site: James Gates Percival.
  6. Book: Benjamin . Park . The New World: A Weekly Family Journal of Popular Literature, Science, Art and News . Aldrich . James . Deming . Henry Champion . Mackay . James . 1844 . J. Winchester . en.
  7. [Diana McVeagh]