Thomas Dunn English | |
State: | New Jersey |
Term Start: | March 4, 1891 |
Term End: | March 3, 1895 |
Predecessor: | Herman Lehlbach |
Successor: | Richard W. Parker |
Birth Date: | 29 June 1819 |
Birth Place: | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Death Place: | Newark, New Jersey, U.S. |
Party: | Democratic |
Thomas Dunn English (June 29, 1819 – April 1, 1902) was an American Democratic Party politician from New Jersey who represented the state's 6th congressional district in the House of Representatives from 1891 to 1895. He was also a published author and songwriter, who had a bitter feud with Edgar Allan Poe. Along with Waitman T. Barbe and Danske Dandridge, English was considered a major West Virginia poet of the mid 19th century.[1]
English was born in Philadelphia on June 29, 1819.[2] He attended the Friends Academy in Burlington, New Jersey, and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine in 1839. His graduation thesis was on phrenology.[3] He studied law, and was admitted to the Philadelphia bar in 1842. He was a founding member of the American Numismatic Society in 1858.[4] By then, his career as a journalist and writer was already well underway.
English wrote scores of poems and plays as well as stories and novels, but his reputation as a writer was built on the ballad "Ben Bolt" (1843).[5] Written for Nathaniel Parker Willis's New-York Mirror, it was turned into a song and became very popular, with a ship, steamboat and racehorse soon named in its honor.[6] American opera singer Eleonora de Cisneros recorded this on an Edison Blue Amberol cylinder in 1912.[7]
Other works include the temperance novel Walter Woolfe, or the Doom of the Drinker in 1842 and the political romance MDCCCXLII. or the Power of the S. F. in 1846.[8] He was the founding editor of the monthly The Aristidean in New York,[9] which printed its first issue in February 1845.[10] English later edited several other journals, including the humorous magazine The John Donkey, and Sartain's Magazine.[8] English was a friend of author Edgar Allan Poe, but the two fell out amidst a public scandal involving Poe and the writers Frances Sargent Osgood and Elizabeth F. Ellet. After suggestions that her letters to Poe contained indiscreet material, Ellet asked her brother to demand the return of the letters. Poe, who claimed he had already returned the letters, asked English for a pistol to defend himself from Ellet's infuriated brother.[11] English was skeptical of Poe's story and suggested that he end the scandal by retracting the "unfounded charges" against Ellet.[12] The angry Poe pushed English into a fistfight, during which his face was cut by English's ring.[13] Poe later claimed to have given English "a flogging which he will remember to the day of his death", though English denied it; either way, the fight ended their friendship and stoked further gossip about the scandal.[13]
Later that year, Poe harshly criticized English's work as part of his "Literati of New York" series published in Godey's Lady's Book, referring to him as "a man without the commonest school education busying himself in attempts to instruct mankind in topics of literature".[14] The two had several confrontations, usually centered around literary caricatures of one another. One of English's letters which was published in the July 23, 1846, issue of the New York Mirror[15] caused Poe to successfully sue the editors of the Mirror for libel.[16] Poe was awarded $225.06 as well as an additional $101.42 in court costs.[17] That year English published a novel called 1844, or, The Power of the S.F. Its plot made references to secret societies, and ultimately was about revenge. It included a character named Marmaduke Hammerhead, the famous author of The Black Crow, who uses phrases like "Nevermore" and "lost Lenore." The clear parody of Poe was portrayed as a drunkard, liar, and domestic abuser. Poe's story "The Cask of Amontillado" was written as a response, using very specific references to English's novel.[18] Another Poe revenge tale, "Hop-Frog", may also reference English.[19] Years later, in 1870, when English edited the magazine The Old Guard, founded by the Poe-defender Charles Chauncey Burr, he found occasion to publish both an anti-Poe article (June 1870) and an article defending Poe's greatest detractor Rufus Wilmot Griswold (October 1870).[20]
English's first foray into politics was as an advocate of the annexation of Texas.[21] He moved to present-day Logan, West Virginia, in 1852, to New York City in 1857, and to Newark, New Jersey, a year later. He was a member of the New Jersey General Assembly in 1863 and 1864.[22]
English was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-second and Fifty-third Congresses, serving in office from March 4, 1891, to March 3, 1895. He was chairman of the Committee on Alcoholic Liquor Traffic (Fifty-third Congress). He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1894 to the Fifty-fourth Congress.[22]
After leaving Congress, English resumed his former literary pursuits in Newark. In 1896, he published Reminisces of Poe, in which he hinted at scandals without specificity. He did, however, defend Poe against rumors of drug use: "Had Poe the opium habit when I knew him (before 1846) I should both as a physician and a man of observation, have discovered it during his frequent visits to my rooms, my visits at his house, and our meetings elsewhere – I saw no signs of it and believe the charge to be a baseless slander".[23]
English died April 1, 1902, and was interred in Fairmount Cemetery in Newark.[22] His monument notes him as "Author of Ben Bolt".