Back to photostream

"The aged pioneer relating his early adventures." From "The Great West" by Henry Howe. NY: Geo. F. Tuttle, 1858. Hand-colored plate

"Some fine summer's evening, he may be seen seated in the porch of his dwelling, his frank, open countenance beaming with delight as he relates the tale of his early adventures to his little grandchildren, who, clustering about his knees, drink in every word with intense interest." [From the frontispiece of "The Great West."]

 

Henry Howe (1816-1893) was an American author who wrote histories of several states in the United States. His most celebrated work is the 3-volume “Historical Collections of Ohio.” Howe was married September, 1848, and moved to Cincinnati, where he wrote “The Great West,” “Achievement of Americans,” “Life and Death on the Ocean,” and “Travels and Adventures of Celebrated Travelers.”

 

In 1856, he began his epic work, a series called “Our Whole Country.” It was not issued until the month Fort Sumter fell, marking the beginning of the American Civil War, and people were living history, not reading it. The book was a financial disaster. His “Times of the Rebellion in the West,” published shortly after the war, was very profitable. In the 1870s he reprinted his older works, and was often asked by influential Ohioans to update his “Collections.” [Source: Wikipedia]

 

2,122 views
3 faves
0 comments
Uploaded on September 6, 2015
Taken on September 6, 2015