Correspondence

Title

Correspondence

Description

Digitized content from the Edwin Markham Archive.

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Biography:

American poet Charles Edwin Anson Markham was born in Oregon, spent the early part of his career in California, moved to Staten Island in 1901, and remained on the island until his death in 1940.

Markham was a prolific letter writer and had correspondence with many important figures of his time, including Ambrose Bierce, Jack London, Carl Sandburg, Herbert Hoover, Amy Lowell, and Theodore and Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Markham is best known for his spirited protest against the exploitation of poor laborers in "The Man with the Hoe", inspired by Jean-Francois Millet's painting of the same title. Published in the San Francisco Examiner in 1899, almost overnight it became a literary sensation. Markham had "sounded a trumpet blast of social justice," one critic wrote, for the poor and oppressed people of the world. The response was astounding. It became the single most commercially successful poem ever published. Translated into forty languages, including Arabic and Japanese, it was read worldwide and remains anthologized today.

Collection Items

WheelockEMa.jpg

Wheelock, Edwin M. (Edwin Miller), 1829-1901 1894-04-29
WheelockEM2.jpg

Wheelock, Edwin M. (Edwin Miller), 1829-1901 1894-05-24
BlissWDP4a.jpg

Bliss, William Dwight Porter, 1856-1926 1895-04-09
HerronG4a.jpg

Herron, George Davis, 1862-1925 1895-06-01
BlissWDP1.jpg

Bliss, William Dwight Porter, 1856-1926 1896-01-29
BlissWDP2.jpg

Bliss, William Dwight Porter, 1856-1926 1896-06-20
HerronG5a.jpg

Herron, George Davis, 1862-1925 1898-04-21
WheelockEMa.jpg

Wheelock, Edwin M. (Edwin Miller), 1829-1901 1899-04-27
DebsE1a.jpg

Mailloux, Emma Debs 1899-05-07
HerronG3.jpg

Herron, George Davis, 1862-1925 1899-05-13
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