Jump to content

Washington Irving: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Literary reputation: Change Wikilink to avoid redirect
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|American writer, historian, and diplomat (1783–1859)}}
{{Infobox Writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox Writer/doc]] -->
| name = Washington Irving
{{about|the writer|the cricketer|Irving Washington}}
{{good article}}
| image = Irving-Washington-LOC.jpg
{{Use American English|date=May 2023}}
| caption = [[Daguerreotype]] of Washington Irving taken by [[John Plumbe]] and later copied by [[Mathew Brady]]
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2024}}
| birthdate = {{birth date|1783|04|3}}
{{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see [[:Template:Infobox writer/doc]] -->
| birthplace = [[New York, New York|New York]], [[New York]], [[United States]]
| name = Washington Irving
| deathdate = {{death date and age|1859|11|28|1783|04|3}}
| image = Irving-Washington-LOC.jpg
| deathplace = [[Sunnyside (Tarrytown, New York)|Sunnyside]], [[New York]], [[United States]]
| caption = Daguerreotype of Washington Irving<br />(modern copy by [[Mathew Brady]],<br />original by [[John Plumbe]])
| occupation = Short story writer, essayist, biographer, magazine editor, diplomat
| genre =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1783|4|3}}
| movement = [[Romanticism]]
| birth_place = [[New York City]], U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1859|11|28|1783|4|3}}
| influences =
| death_place = {{nowrap|[[Sunnyside (Tarrytown, New York)|Sunnyside]], [[Tarrytown, New York|Tarrytown]], New York, U.S.}}
| influenced =
| resting_place = [[Sleepy Hollow Cemetery]], New York
| signature = Irving_signature.jpg
| pseudonym = Geoffrey Crayon, [[Diedrich Knickerbocker]], Jonathan Oldstyle
| occupation = {{flatlist|
* Short story writer
* essayist
* biographer
* historian
* diplomat
}}
| language = English
| movement = Romanticism
| signature = Washington Irving Signature.svg
| relatives = [[William Irving (New York politician)|William Irving]] (brother)<br/>[[Peter Irving]] (brother)
| module = {{infobox officeholder | embed = yes
|office = [[United States Minister to Spain]]
|president = [[John Tyler]]<br>[[James K. Polk]]
|predecessor = [[Aaron Vail]]
|successor = [[Romulus Mitchell Saunders]]
|term_start = 1842
|term_end = 1846}}
}}
}}
'''Washington Irving''' (April 3, 1783 – November 28, 1859) was an [[United States|American]] [[author]], [[essays|essayist]], [[biography|biographer]] and [[history|historian]] of the early 19th century. He was best known for his [[short story|short stories]] "[[The Legend of Sleepy Hollow]]" and "[[Rip Van Winkle]]", both of which appear in his book ''[[The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon|The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.]]'' His historical works include biographies of [[George Washington]], [[Oliver Goldsmith]] and [[Muhammad]], and several histories of 15th-century [[Spain]] dealing with subjects such as [[Christopher Columbus]], the [[Moorish Spain|Moors]], and the [[Alhambra]]. Irving also served as the [[United States Ambassador to Spain|U.S. minister to Spain]] from 1842 to 1846.


'''Washington Irving''' (April 3, 1783 – November 28, 1859) was an American short-story writer, essayist, biographer, historian, and diplomat of the early 19th century. He wrote the short stories "[[Rip Van Winkle]]" (1819) and "[[The Legend of Sleepy Hollow]]" (1820), both of which appear in his collection ''[[The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.]]'' His historical works include biographies of [[Oliver Goldsmith]], [[Muhammad]], and [[George Washington]], as well as several histories of 15th-century Spain that deal with subjects such as the [[Alhambra]], [[Christopher Columbus]], and the [[Moors]]. Irving served as American ambassador to Spain in the 1840s.
He made his literary debut in 1802 with a series of observational letters to the ''Morning Chronicle'', written under the [[pseudonym]] [[Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle|Jonathan Oldstyle]]. After moving to England for the family business in 1815, he achieved international fame with the publication of ''The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.'' in 1819. He continued to publish regularly—and almost always successfully—throughout his life, and completed a five-volume biography of George Washington just eight months before his death, at age 76, in [[Tarrytown, New York]].


Irving was born and raised in [[Manhattan]] to a merchant family. He made his literary debut in 1802 with a series of observational letters to the ''Morning Chronicle'', written under the pseudonym [[Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle, Gent.|Jonathan Oldstyle]]. He temporarily moved to England for the family business in 1815, where he achieved fame with the publication of ''The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.'' which was serialized from 1819 to 1820. He continued to publish regularly throughout his life, and he completed a five-volume biography of George Washington just eight months before his death at age 76 in [[Tarrytown, New York]].
Irving, along with [[James Fenimore Cooper]], was the first American writer to earn acclaim in Europe, and Irving encouraged American authors such as [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]], [[Herman Melville]], [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]], and [[Edgar Allan Poe]]. Irving was also admired by some European writers, including [[Sir Walter Scott]], [[Lord Byron]], [[Thomas Campbell]], [[Francis Jeffrey]], and [[Charles Dickens]]. As America's first genuine internationally best-selling author, Irving advocated for writing as a legitimate profession, and argued for stronger laws to protect American writers from [[copyright infringement]].

Irving was one of the first American writers to earn acclaim in Europe, and he encouraged other American authors such as [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]], [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]], [[Herman Melville]], and [[Edgar Allan Poe]]. He was also admired by some British writers, including [[Lord Byron]], [[Thomas Campbell (poet)|Thomas Campbell]], [[Charles Dickens]], [[Mary Shelley]], [[Francis Jeffrey]], and [[Walter Scott]]. He advocated for writing as a legitimate profession and argued for stronger laws to protect American writers from copyright infringement.

==Biography==


==Biography==poo
===Early years===
===Early years===
Washington Irving's parents were William Irving, Sr., originally of [[Quholm]], [[Shapinsay]], [[Orkney]] and Sarah (née Sanders), Scottish-English immigrants. They married in 1761 while William was serving as a petty officer in the British Navy. They had eleven children, eight of which survived to adulthood. Their first two sons, each named William, died in infancy, as did their fourth child, John. Their surviving children were: William, Jr. (1766), Ann (1770), Peter (1772), Catherine (1774), Ebenezer (1776), John Treat (1778), Sarah (1780), and Washington.<ref name=Burstein7>Burstein, 7.</ref>
Washington Irving's parents were William Irving Sr., originally of [[Quholm]], [[Shapinsay]], [[Orkney]], Scotland, and Sarah (née Saunders), originally of [[Falmouth, Cornwall]], England. They married in 1761 while William was serving as a petty officer in the British Navy. They had eleven children, eight of whom survived to adulthood. Their first two sons died in infancy, both named William, as did their fourth child John. Their surviving children were [[William Irving (New York)|William Jr.]] (1766), Ann (1770), [[Peter Irving|Peter]] (1771), Catherine (1774), Ebenezer (1776), John Treat (1778), Sarah (1780), and Washington.<ref name=Burstein7>Burstein, 7.</ref><ref>{{cite news|work=Historic Hudson Valley |title=Home of the Legend: Washington Irving's Sunnyside |date=October 28, 2017 |author=Docent Tour}}</ref>


[[File:Washington Irving's Encounter with George Washington.jpg|thumb|Watercolor of Washington Irving's encounter with George Washington, painted in 1854 by [[George Bernard Butler]] Jr.]]
The Irving family was settled in [[Manhattan]], [[New York City]] as part of the city's small vibrant merchant class when Washington Irving was born on April 3, 1783,<ref name=Burstein7/> the same week city residents learned of the British ceasefire that ended the [[American Revolution]]. Consequently, Irving’s mother named him after the hero of the revolution, George Washington.<ref>PMI, 1:26, ''et al''.</ref> At age six, with the help of a nanny, Irving met his namesake, who was then living in New York after his inauguration as president in 1789. The president blessed young Irving,<ref>PMI, 1:27.</ref> an encounter Irving later commemorated in a small watercolor painting, which still hangs in his home today.<ref>Jones, 5.</ref> Several of Washington Irving's older brothers became active New York merchants, and they encouraged their younger brother's literary aspirations, often supporting him financially as he pursued his writing career.


The Irving family settled in Manhattan, and were part of the city's merchant class. Washington was born on April 3, 1783,<ref name=Burstein7/> the same week that New York City residents learned of the British ceasefire which ended the [[American Revolution]]. Irving's mother named him after George Washington.<ref>Irving, Pierre M. (1862) [https://archive.org/stream/lifelettersofwas01irvi2/lifelettersofwas01irvi2_djvu.txt "The life and letters of Washington Irving"] (Cited herein as PMI), vol. 1:26.</ref> Irving met his namesake at age 6 when George Washington came to New York just before his inauguration as President in 1789. The President blessed young Irving,<ref>PMI, 1:27.</ref> an encounter that Irving had commemorated in a small watercolor painting which continues to hang in his home.<ref>Jones, 5.</ref>
A disinterested student, Irving preferred adventure stories and drama and, by age fourteen, was regularly sneaking out of class in the evenings to attend the theater.<ref>Warner, 27; PMI, 1:36.</ref> The 1798 outbreak of [[yellow fever]] in Manhattan prompted his family to send him to healthier climes upriver, and Irving was dispatched to stay with his friend [[James Kirke Paulding]] in [[Tarrytown, New York]]. It was in Tarrytown that Irving became familiar with the nearby town of [[Sleepy Hollow]], with its quaint Dutch customs and local ghost stories.<ref>Jones, 11.</ref> Irving made several other trips up the Hudson as a teenager, including an extended visit to [[Johnstown, New York]], where he passed through the [[Catskill Mountains|Catskill mountain]] region, the setting for "[[Rip Van Winkle]]". "[O]f all the scenery of the Hudson", Irving wrote later, "the Kaatskill Mountains had the most witching effect on my boyish imagination".<ref>PMI, 1:42-43.</ref>


The Irvings lived at 131 William Street at the time of Washington's birth, but they later moved across the street to 128 William Street.<ref>PMI, 1:27</ref> Several of Irving's brothers became active New York merchants; they encouraged his literary aspirations, often supporting him financially as he pursued his writing career.
The nineteen year old Irving began writing letters to ''[[The Morning Chronicle]]'' in 1802, submitting commentaries on New York's social and theater scene under the name of [[Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle|Jonathan Oldstyle]]. The name, which purposely evoked the writer's [[Federalist Party (United States)|Federalist]] leanings,<ref>Burstein, 19.</ref> was the first of many pseudonyms Irving would employ throughout his career. The letters brought Irving some early fame and moderate notoriety. [[Aaron Burr]], a co-publisher of the ''Chronicle'', was impressed enough to send clippings of the Oldstyle pieces to his daughter, [[Theodosia Burr Alston|Theodosia]], while writer [[Charles Brockden Brown]] made a trip to New York to recruit Oldstyle for a literary magazine he was editing in Philadelphia.<ref>Jones, 36.</ref>


Irving was an uninterested student who preferred adventure stories and drama, and he regularly sneaked out of class in the evenings to attend the theater by the time he was 14.<ref>Warner, 27; PMI, 1:36.</ref> An outbreak of [[yellow fever]] in Manhattan in 1798 prompted his family to send him upriver, where he stayed with his friend [[James Kirke Paulding]] in [[Tarrytown, New York]]. It was in Tarrytown where he became familiar with the bucolic beauty of the region with its Dutch customs and local ghost stories.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Mancuso |first=Anne |date=September 28, 2016 |title=Sleepy Hollow: Surrounded by History, and Legends |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/10/02/realestate/sleepy-hollow-surrounded-by-history-and-legends.html |access-date=November 24, 2023 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> Though the town of Sleepy Hollow did not exist in Irving's time (North Tarrytown changed its name to Sleepy Hollow in 1996), the area had been known as Slapershaven or "Sleeper's Haven" by the Dutch.<ref>{{cite book | last=Newton-Matza | first=M. | title=Historic Sites and Landmarks That Shaped America [2 volumes]: From Acoma Pueblo to Ground Zero | publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing | year=2016 | isbn=978-1-61069-750-7 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h6fOEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA519 | page=519}}</ref> Irving made several other trips up the Hudson as a teenager, including an extended visit to [[Johnstown (city), New York|Johnstown, New York]], where he passed through the [[Catskill Mountains]] region, the setting for "[[Rip Van Winkle]]". "Of all the scenery of the Hudson", Irving wrote, "the Kaatskill Mountains had the most witching effect on my boyish imagination".<ref>PMI, 1:39.</ref>
Concerned for his health, Irving's brothers financed an extended tour of Europe from 1804 to 1806. Irving bypassed most of the sites and locations considered essential for the development of an upwardly-mobile young man, to the dismay of his brother William. William wrote that, though he was pleased his brother's health was improving, he did not like the choice to "''gallop through Italy''... leaving Florence on your left and Venice on your right".<ref name=Burstein43>Burstein, 43.</ref> Instead, Irving honed the social and conversational skills that would later make him one of the world's most in-demand guests.<ref>See Jones, 44-70</ref> "I endeavor to take things as they come with cheerfulness", Irving wrote, "and when I cannot get a dinner to suit my taste, I endeavor to get a taste to suit my dinner".<ref>Washington Irving to William Irving Jr., September 20, 1804, ''Works'' 23:90.</ref> While visiting [[Rome]] in 1805, Irving struck up a friendship with the American painter [[Washington Allston]],<ref name=Burstein43/> and nearly allowed himself to be persuaded into following Allston into a career as a painter. "My lot in life, however", Irving said later, "was differently cast".<ref>Irving, Washington. "Memoir of Washington Allston", ''Works'' 2:175.</ref>

Irving began writing letters to the New York ''Morning Chronicle'' in 1802 when he was 19, submitting commentaries on the city's social and theater scene under the pseudonym [[Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle, Gent.|Jonathan Oldstyle]]. The name evoked his [[Federalist Party (United States)|Federalist]] leanings<ref>Burstein, 19.</ref> and was the first of many pseudonyms he employed throughout his career. The letters brought Irving some early fame and moderate notoriety. [[Aaron Burr]] was a co-publisher of the ''Chronicle'', and was impressed enough to send clippings of the Oldstyle pieces to his daughter [[Theodosia Burr Alston|Theodosia]]. [[Charles Brockden Brown]] made a trip to New York to try to recruit Oldstyle for a literary magazine he was editing in Philadelphia.<ref>Jones, 36.</ref>

Concerned for his health, Irving's brothers financed an extended tour of Europe from 1804 to 1806. He bypassed most of the sites and locations considered essential for the social development of a young man, to the dismay of his brother William who wrote that he was pleased that his brother's health was improving, but he did not like the choice to "''gallop through Italy''… leaving Florence on your left and Venice on your right".<ref name=Burstein43>Burstein, 43.</ref> Instead, Irving honed the social and conversational skills that eventually made him one of the world's most in-demand guests.<ref>See Jones, 44–70</ref> "I endeavor to take things as they come with cheerfulness", Irving wrote, "and when I cannot get a dinner to suit my taste, I endeavor to get a taste to suit my dinner".<ref>Washington Irving to William Irving Jr., September 20, 1804, ''Works'' 23:90.</ref> While visiting Rome in 1805, Irving struck up a friendship with painter [[Washington Allston]]<ref name=Burstein43/> and was almost persuaded into a career as a painter. "My lot in life, however, was differently cast".<ref>Irving, Washington. "Memoir of Washington Allston", ''Works'' 2:175.</ref>


===First major writings===
===First major writings===
[[File:Matilda Hoffman (1791 - 1809) (cropped).jpg|thumb|Matilda Hoffman, portrait by [[Anson Dickinson]]]]
[[Image:washington irvingyounger.jpg|thumb|right|upright|A young Washington Irving]]
Irving returned from Europe to study law with his legal mentor, Judge Josiah Ogden Hoffman, in New York City. By his own admission, he was not a good student, and barely passed the [[Bar examination|bar]] in 1806.<ref>Washington Irving to Mrs. Amelia Foster, [April–May 1823], ''Works'', 23:740-41. See also PMI, 1:173, Williams, 1:77, ''et al''.</ref> Irving began actively socializing with a group of literate young men he dubbed "The Lads of [[Kilkenny]]".<ref>Burstein, 47.</ref> Collaborating with his brother William and fellow Lad James Kirke Paulding, Irving created the literary magazine ''[[Salmagundi (periodical)|Salmagundi]]'' in January 1807. Writing under various pseudonyms, such as William Wizard and Launcelot Langstaff, Irving lampooned New York culture and politics in a manner similar to today's [[Mad (magazine)|''Mad'']] magazine.<ref>Jones, 82.</ref> ''Salmagundi'' was a moderate success, spreading Irving's name and reputation beyond New York. In its seventeenth issue, dated November 11, 1807, Irving affixed the nickname "[[Gotham]]"—an Anglo-Saxon word meaning "Goat's Town"—to New York City.<ref>Burrows, Edwin G. and Mike Wallace. ''Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898''. (Oxford University Press, 1999), 417. See Jones, 74-75.</ref>
Irving returned from Europe to study law with his legal mentor Judge [[Josiah Ogden Hoffman]] in New York City. By his own admission, he was not a good student and barely passed the bar examination in 1806.<ref>Washington Irving to Mrs. Amelia Foster, [April–May 1823], ''Works'', 23:740-41. See also PMI, 1:173, Williams, 1:77, ''et al''.</ref> He began socializing with a group of literate young men whom he dubbed "The Lads of Kilkenny",<ref>Burstein, 47.</ref> and he created the literary magazine ''[[Salmagundi (periodical)|Salmagundi]]'' in January 1807 with his brother William and his friend James Kirke Paulding, writing under various pseudonyms, such as William Wizard and Launcelot Langstaff. Irving lampooned New York culture and politics in a manner similar to the 20th century [[Mad (magazine)|''Mad'']] magazine.<ref>Jones, 82.</ref> ''Salmagundi'' was a moderate success, spreading Irving's name and reputation beyond New York. He gave New York City the nickname "Gotham" in its 17th issue dated November 11, 1807, an Anglo-Saxon word meaning "Goat's Town".<ref>Burrows, Edwin G. and Mike Wallace. ''Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898''. (Oxford University Press, 1999), 417. See Jones, 74–75.</ref>


[[File:Diedrich Knickerbocker.jpg|thumb|right|The fictional "Diedrich Knickerbocker" from the frontispiece of ''[[A History of New York]]'', a wash drawing by [[F.O.C. Darley|Felix O. C. Darley]]]]
In late 1809, while mourning the death of his seventeen year old fiancée Matilda Hoffman, Irving completed work on his first major book, ''A History of New-York from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty, by Diedrich Knickerbocker'' (1809), a satire on self-important local history and contemporary politics. Prior to its publication, Irving started a [[hoax]] akin to today's [[viral marketing]] campaigns; he placed a series of missing person adverts in New York newspapers seeking information on Diedrich Knickerbocker, a crusty Dutch historian who had allegedly gone missing from his hotel in New York City. As part of the ruse, Irving placed a notice—allegedly from the hotel's proprietor—informing readers that if Mr. Knickerbocker failed to return to the hotel to pay his bill, he would publish a manuscript Knickerbocker had left behind.<ref>Jones, 118-27.</ref>
[[File:Portrait of Washington Irving by John Wesley Jarvis in 1809.jpg|thumb|right|Portrait of Washington Irving by [[John Wesley Jarvis]] from 1809]]


{{anchor|A History of New York}}
Unsuspecting readers followed the story of Knickerbocker and his manuscript with interest, and some New York city officials were concerned enough about the missing historian that they considered offering a reward for his safe return. Riding the wave of public interest he had created with his hoax, Irving—adopting the pseudonym of his Dutch historian—published ''A History of New York'' on December 6, 1809, to immediate critical and popular success.<ref>Burstein, 72.</ref> "It took with the public", Irving remarked, "and gave me celebrity, as an original work was something remarkable and uncommon in America".<ref>Washington Irving to Mrs. Amelia Foster, [April-May, 1823], ''Works'', 23:741.</ref> Today, the surname of Diedrich [[Knickerbocker]], the fictional narrator of this and other Irving works, has become a nickname for Manhattan residents in general.<ref>Oxford English Dictionary.</ref>
Irving completed ''[[A History of New York|A History of New-York from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty, by Diedrich Knickerbocker]]'' (1809) while mourning the death of his 17-year-old fiancée Matilda Hoffman. It was his first major book and a satire on self-important local history and contemporary politics. Before its publication, Irving started a hoax by placing a series of missing person advertisements in the [[New York Evening Post]] seeking information on [[Diedrich Knickerbocker]], a crusty Dutch historian who had allegedly gone missing from his hotel in New York City. As part of the ruse, he placed a notice from the hotel's proprietor informing readers that, if Mr. Knickerbocker failed to return to the hotel to pay his bill, he would publish a manuscript that Knickerbocker had left behind.<ref>Jones, 118-27.</ref>


Unsuspecting readers followed the story of Knickerbocker and his manuscript with interest, and some New York city officials were concerned enough about the missing historian to offer a reward for his safe return. Irving then published ''A History of New York'' on December 6, 1809, under the Knickerbocker pseudonym, with immediate critical and popular success.<ref>Burstein, 72.</ref> "It took with the public", Irving remarked, "and gave me celebrity, as an original work was something remarkable and uncommon in America".<ref>Washington Irving to Mrs. Amelia Foster, [April–May 1823], ''Works'', 23:741.</ref> The name Diedrich Knickerbocker became a nickname for Manhattan residents in general and was adopted by the [[New York Knicks|New York Knickerbockers]] basketball team.<ref>{{cite news|work=Oxford English Dictionary|title=Knickerbocker}}</ref>
After the success of ''A History of New York'', Irving searched for a job and eventually became an editor of ''Analectic'' magazine, where he wrote biographies of naval heroes like [[James Lawrence]] and [[Oliver Perry]].<ref>Hellman, 82.</ref> He was also among the first magazine editors to reprint [[Francis Scott Key]]'s poem "Defense of [[Fort McHenry]]", which would later be immortalized as "[[The Star-Spangled Banner]]", the national anthem of the United States.<ref>Jones, 121–22.</ref>


Like many merchants and New Yorkers, Irving originally opposed the [[War of 1812]], but the [[Burning of Washington|British attack on Washington, D.C.]] in 1814 convinced him to enlist.<ref>Jones, 121.</ref> He served on the staff of [[Daniel Tompkins]], governor of New York and commander of the New York State Militia. Apart from a reconnaissance mission in the [[Great Lakes region (North America)|Great Lakes region]], he saw no real action.<ref>Jones, 122.</ref> The war was disastrous for many American merchants, including Irving's family, and in mid-1815 he left for England to attempt to salvage the family trading company. He remained in Europe for the next seventeen years.<ref>Hellman, 87.</ref>
After the success of ''A History of New York'', Irving searched for a job and eventually became an editor of ''[[Analectic Magazine]]'', where he wrote biographies of naval heroes such as [[James Lawrence]] and [[Oliver Hazard Perry]].<ref>Hellman, 82.</ref> He was also among the first magazine editors to reprint [[Francis Scott Key]]'s poem "Defense of [[Fort McHenry]]", which was immortalized as "[[The Star-Spangled Banner]]".<ref>Jones, 121–22.</ref> Irving initially opposed the [[War of 1812]] like many other merchants, but the [[Burning of Washington|British attack on Washington, D.C.]], in 1814 convinced him to enlist.<ref>Jones, 121.</ref> He served on the staff of [[Daniel Tompkins]], governor of New York and commander of the New York State Militia, but he saw no real action apart from a reconnaissance mission in the Great Lakes region.<ref>Jones, 122.</ref> The war was disastrous for many American merchants, including Irving's family, and he left for England in mid-1815 to salvage the family trading company. He remained in Europe for the next 17 years.<ref>Hellman, 87.</ref>


===Life in Europe===
===Life in Europe===

====''The Sketch Book''====
====''The Sketch Book''====
[[Image:TheSketchbookTitlePage.jpg|thumb|upright|right|upright|The front page of ''The Sketch Book'' (1819)]]
[[File:TheSketchbookTitlePage.jpg|thumb|left|upright|The front page of ''The Sketch Book'' (1819)]]
Irving spent the next two years trying to bail out the family firm financially but was eventually forced to declare [[bankruptcy]].<ref>Hellman, 97.</ref> With no job prospects, Irving continued writing throughout 1817 and 1818. In the summer of 1817, he visited the home of novelist [[Walter Scott]], marking the beginning of a lifelong personal and professional friendship for both men.<ref>Jones, 154-60.</ref> Irving continued writing prolifically—the short story "[[Rip Van Winkle]]" was written overnight while staying with his sister Sarah and her husband, [[Henry van Wart]] in [[Birmingham]], [[England]], a place that also inspired some of his other works.<ref>Jones, 169.</ref> In October 1818, Irving's brother William secured for Irving a post as chief clerk to the United States Navy, and urged him to return home.<ref>William Irving Jr. to Washington Irving, New York, 14 October 1818, Williams, 1:170-71.</ref> Irving, however, turned the offer down, opting to stay in England to pursue a writing career.<ref>Washington Irving to Ebenezer Irving, [London, late November 1818], ''Works'', 23:536.</ref>


Irving spent the next two years trying to bail out the family firm financially but eventually had to declare bankruptcy.<ref>Hellman, 97.</ref> With no job prospects, he continued writing throughout 1817 and 1818. In the summer of 1817, he visited [[Walter Scott]], beginning a lifelong personal and professional friendship.<ref>Jones, 154-60.</ref>
In the spring of 1819, Irving sent to his brother Ebenezer in New York a set of essays that he asked be published as ''[[The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon| The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.]]'' The first installment, containing "Rip Van Winkle", was an enormous success, and the rest of the work, published in seven installments in the United States and England throughout 1819 and 1820 ("[[The Legend of Sleepy Hollow]]" would appear in the sixth issue), would be equally successful.<ref>See reviews from ''Quarterly Review'' and others, in ''The Sketch Book'', xxv–xxviii; PMI 1:418–19.</ref>


Irving composed the short story "Rip Van Winkle" overnight while staying with his sister Sarah and her husband, [[Henry van Wart]], in [[Birmingham|Birmingham, England]], a place that inspired other works as well.<ref>Jones, 169.</ref> In October 1818, Irving's brother William secured for Irving a post as chief clerk to the United States Navy and urged him to return home.<ref>William Irving Jr. to Washington Irving, New York, October 14, 1818, Williams, 1:170-71.</ref> Irving turned the offer down, opting to stay in England to pursue a writing career.<ref>Washington Irving to Ebenezer Irving, [London, late November 1818], ''Works'', 23:536.</ref>
Like many successful authors of this era, Irving struggled against literary bootleggers.<ref>Burstein, 114</ref> In England, his sketches were published in book form by British publishers without his permission, an entirely legal practice as there were no clear international copyright laws. Seeking an English publisher to protect his copyright, Irving appealed to Walter Scott for help. Scott referred Irving to his own publisher, London powerhouse [[John Murray (1778-1843)|John Murray]], who agreed to take on ''The Sketch Book''.<ref>Irving, Washington. "Preface to the Revised Edition", ''The Sketch Book'', ''Works'', 8:7; Jones, 188-89.</ref> From then on, Irving would publish concurrently in the United States and England to protect his copyright, with Murray being his English publisher of choice.<ref>McClary, Ben Harris, ed. ''Washington Irving and the House of Murray''. (University of Tennessee Press, 1969).</ref>


In the spring of 1819, Irving sent to his brother Ebenezer in New York a set of short prose pieces that he asked be published as ''[[The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.]]'' The first installment, containing "Rip Van Winkle", was an enormous success, and the rest of the work was equally successful; it was issued in 1819–1820 in seven installments in New York and in two volumes in London ("The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" appeared in the sixth issue of the New York edition and the second volume of the London edition).<ref>See reviews from ''Quarterly Review'' and others, in ''The Sketch Book'', xxv–xxviii; PMI 1:418–19.</ref>
Irving's reputation soared, and for the next two years, he led an active social life in Paris and England, where he was often feted as an anomaly of literature: an upstart American who dared to write English well.<ref>See comments of William Godwin, cited in PMI, 1:422; Lady Littleton, cited in PMI 2:20.</ref>

Like many successful authors of this era, Irving struggled against literary bootleggers.<ref>Burstein, 114</ref> In England, some of his sketches were reprinted in periodicals without his permission, a legal practice as there was no international copyright law at the time. To prevent further piracy in Britain, Irving paid to have the first four American installments published as a single volume by John Miller in London.

Irving appealed to Walter Scott for help procuring a more reputable publisher for the remainder of the book. Scott referred Irving to his own publisher, London powerhouse [[John Murray (publisher, born 1778)|John Murray]], who agreed to take on ''The Sketch Book''.<ref>Irving, Washington. "Preface to the Revised Edition", ''The Sketch Book'', ''Works'', 8:7; Jones, 188-89.</ref> From then on, Irving would publish concurrently in the United States and Britain to protect his copyright, with Murray as his English publisher of choice.<ref>McClary, Ben Harris, ed. ''Washington Irving and the House of Murray''. (University of Tennessee Press, 1969).</ref>

Irving's reputation soared, and for the next two years, he led an active social life in Paris and Great Britain, where he was often feted as an anomaly of literature: an upstart American who dared to write English well.<ref>See comments of William Godwin, cited in PMI, 1:422; Lady Littleton, cited in PMI 2:20.</ref>


====''Bracebridge Hall'' and ''Tales of a Traveller''====
====''Bracebridge Hall'' and ''Tales of a Traveller''====
[[File:Portrait of Washington Irving attr. to Charles Robert Leslie.jpg|thumb|right|Portrait of Irving in about 1820, attributed to [[Charles Robert Leslie]]]]


With both Irving and publisher John Murray eager to follow up on the success of ''The Sketch Book'', Irving spent much of 1821 travelling in Europe in search of new material, reading widely in Dutch and German folk tales. Hampered by writer's block—and depressed by the death of his brother William—Irving worked slowly, finally delivering a completed manuscript to Murray in March 1822. The book, [[Bracebridge Hall|''Bracebridge Hall, or The Humorists, A Medley'']] (the location was based loosely on [[Aston Hall]], occupied by members of the Bracebridge family, near his sister's home in Birmingham) was published in June 1822.
With both Irving and publisher John Murray eager to follow up on the success of ''The Sketch Book'', Irving spent much of 1821 traveling in Europe in search of new material, reading widely in Dutch and German folk tales. Hampered by writer's block—and depressed by the death of his brother William—Irving worked slowly, finally delivering a completed manuscript to Murray in March 1822. The book, [[Bracebridge Hall|''Bracebridge Hall, or The Humorists, A Medley'']] (the location was based loosely on [[Aston Hall]], occupied by members of the Bracebridge family, near his sister's home in Birmingham) was published in June 1822.


The format of ''Bracebridge'' was similar to that of ''The Sketch Book'', with Irving, as Crayon, narrating a series of more than fifty loosely connected short stories and essays. While some reviewers thought ''Bracebridge'' to be a lesser imitation of ''The Sketch Book'', the book was well-received by readers and critics.<ref>Aderman, Ralph M., ed. ''Critical Essays on Washington Irving''. (G. K. Hall, 1990), 55–57; STW 1:209.</ref> "We have received so much pleasure from this book," wrote critic [[Francis Jeffrey]] in the ''[[Edinburgh Review]]'', "that we think ourselves bound in gratitude . . . to make a public acknowledgement of it."<ref>Aderman, 58-62.</ref> Irving was relieved at its reception, which did much to cement his reputation with European readers.
The format of ''Bracebridge'' was similar to that of ''The Sketch Book'', with Irving, as Crayon, narrating a series of more than 50 loosely connected short stories and essays. While some reviewers thought ''Bracebridge'' to be a lesser imitation of ''The Sketch Book'', the book was well received by readers and critics.<ref>Aderman, Ralph M., ed. ''Critical Essays on Washington Irving''. (G. K. Hall, 1990), 55–57; STW 1:209.</ref> "We have received so much pleasure from this book", wrote critic Francis Jeffrey in the ''Edinburgh Review'', "that we think ourselves bound in gratitude... to make a public acknowledgement of it".<ref>Aderman, 58–62.</ref> Irving was relieved at its reception, which did much to cement his reputation with European readers.


Still struggling with writer's block, Irving traveled to Germany, settling in Dresden in the winter of 1822. Here he dazzled the royal family and attached himself to Mrs. Amelia Foster, an American living in Dresden with her five children.<ref>See Reichart, Walter A. ''Washington Irving and Germany''. (University of Michigan Press, 1957).</ref> Irving was particularly attracted to Mrs. Foster's 18-year-old daughter Emily, and vied in frustration for her hand. Emily finally refused his offer of marriage in the spring of 1823.<ref>Jones, 207-14.</ref>
Still struggling with writer's block, Irving traveled to Germany, settling in [[Dresden]] in the winter of 1822. Here he dazzled the royal family and attached himself to Amelia Foster, an American living in Dresden with her five children.<ref>See Reichart, Walter A. ''Washington Irving and Germany''. (University of Michigan Press, 1957).</ref> The 39-year-old Irving was particularly attracted to Foster's 18-year-old daughter Emily and vied in frustration for her hand. Emily finally refused his offer of marriage in the spring of 1823.<ref>Jones, 207-14.</ref>


He returned to Paris and began collaborating with playwright [[John Howard Payne]] on translations of French plays for the English stage, with little success. He also learned through Payne that the novelist [[Mary Shelley|Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley]] was romantically interested in him, though Irving never pursued the relationship.<ref>See Sanborn, F.B., ed. ''The Romance of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, John Howard Payne and Washington Irving''. Boston: Bibliophile Society, 1907.</ref>
He returned to Paris and began collaborating with playwright [[John Howard Payne]] on translations of French plays for the English stage, with little success. He also learned through Payne that the novelist [[Mary Shelley|Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley]] was romantically interested in him, though Irving never pursued the relationship.<ref>See Sanborn, F.B., ed. ''The Romance of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, John Howard Payne and Washington Irving''. Boston: Bibliophile Society, 1907.</ref>


In August 1824, Irving published the collection of essays ''[[Tales of a Traveller]]''—including the short story "[[The Devil and Tom Walker]]"—under his Geoffrey Crayon persona. "I think there are in it some of the best things I have ever written", Irving told his sister.<ref>Irving to Catharine Paris, Paris, September 20, 1824, ''Works'' 24:76</ref> But while the book sold respectably, ''Traveller'' was dismissed by critics, who panned both ''Traveller'' and its author. "The public have been led to expect better things", wrote the ''United States Literary Gazette'', while the ''New-York Mirror'' pronounced Irving "overrated".<ref>See reviews in ''Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine'', ''Westminster Review'', et al., 1824. Cited in Jones, 222.</ref> Hurt and depressed by the book's reception, Irving retreated to Paris where he spent the next year worrying about finances and scribbling down ideas for projects that never materialized.<ref>Hellman, 170–89.</ref>
In August 1824, Irving published the collection of essays ''[[Tales of a Traveller]]''—including the short story "[[The Devil and Tom Walker]]"—under his Geoffrey Crayon persona.
"I think there are in it some of the best things I have ever written," Irving told his sister.<ref>Irving to Catharine Paris, Paris, 20 September 1824, ''Works'' 24:76</ref> But while the book sold respectably, ''Traveller'' largely bombed with critics, who panned both ''Traveller'' and its author. "The public have been led to expect better things," wrote the ''United States Literary Gazette'', while the ''New-York Mirror'' pronounced Irving "overrated."<ref>See reviews in ''Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine'', ''Westminster Review'', et al., 1824. Cited in Jones, 222.</ref> Hurt and depressed by the book's reception, Irving retreated to Paris where he spent the next year worrying about finances and scribbling down ideas for projects that never materialized.<ref>Hellman, 170–89.</ref>


====Spanish books====
====Spanish books====

While in Paris, Irving received a letter from [[Alexander Hill Everett]] on January 30, 1826. Everett, recently the American Minister to Spain, urged Irving to join him in Madrid,<ref>Burstein, 191.</ref> noting that a number of manuscripts dealing with the Spanish conquest of the Americas had recently been made public. Irving left for Madrid and enthusiastically began scouring the Spanish archives for colorful material.<ref>Bowers, 22–48.</ref>
While in Paris, Irving received a letter from [[Alexander Hill Everett]] on January 30, 1826. Everett, recently the American Minister to Spain, urged Irving to join him in Madrid,<ref>Burstein, 191.</ref> noting that a number of manuscripts dealing with the Spanish conquest of the Americas had recently been made public. Irving left for Madrid and enthusiastically began scouring the Spanish archives for colorful material.<ref>Bowers, 22–48.</ref>


[[Image:Alhambra view.jpg|thumb|right|The palace [[Alhambra]], where Irving briefly resided in 1829, inspired one of his most colorful books.]]With full access to the American consul's massive library of Spanish history, Irving began working on several books at once. The first offspring of this hard work, ''[[The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus]]'', was published in January 1828. The book was popular in the United States and in Europe and would have 175 editions published before the end of the century.<ref>Burstein, 196.</ref> It was also the first project of Irving's to be published with his own name, instead of a pseudonym, on the title page.<ref>Jones, 248.</ref> The ''[[Conquest of Granada (1829)|Chronicles of the Conquest of Granada]]'' was published a year later,<ref>Burstein, 212.</ref> followed by ''Voyages and Discoveries of the Companions of Columbus'' in 1831.<ref>Burstein, 225.</ref>
[[File:Alhambra view.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|right|The [[Alhambra]] palace in [[Granada, Spain|Granada]], southern Spain, where Irving briefly resided in 1829, inspired one of his most colorful books.]]With full access to the American consul's massive library of Spanish history, Irving began working on several books at once. The first offspring of this hard work, ''[[A History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus]]'', was published in January 1828. The book was popular in the United States and in Europe and would have 175 editions published before the end of the century.<ref>Burstein, 196.</ref> It was also the first project of Irving's to be published with his own name, instead of a pseudonym, on the title page.<ref>Jones, 248.</ref> Irving was invited to stay at the palace of the [[Duke of Gor]], who gave him unfettered access to his library containing many medieval manuscripts.<ref>Jones, 207.</ref>''[[A Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada]]'' was published a year later,<ref>Burstein, 212.</ref> followed by ''Voyages and Discoveries of the Companions of Columbus'' in 1831.<ref>Burstein, 225.</ref>


Irving's writings on Columbus are a mixture of history and fiction, a genre now called romantic history. Irving based them on extensive research in the Spanish archives, but also added imaginative elements aimed at sharpening the story. The first of these works is the source of the durable myth that medieval Europeans believed the [[Earth]] was flat.<ref>Russell, Jeffrey Burton. ''Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians''. Praeger Paperback, 1997. ISBN 027595904X</ref>
Irving's writings on Columbus are a mixture of history and fiction, a genre now called romantic history. Irving based them on extensive research in the Spanish archives, but also added imaginative elements aimed at sharpening the story. The first of these works is the source of the durable myth that medieval Europeans [[Myth of the flat Earth|believed the Earth was flat]].<ref>Russell, Jeffrey Burton. ''Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians''. Praeger Paperback, 1997. {{ISBN|0-275-95904-X}}</ref> According to the popular book, Columbus proved the Earth was round.<ref>Loewen, James W. ''Lies Across America: What Our Historic Sites Get Wrong''. New York: The New Press, 1999: 59.</ref>


In 1829, Irving moved into Granada's ancient palace [[Alhambra]], "determined to linger here", he said, "until I get some writings under way connected with the place".<ref>Washington Irving to Peter Irving, Alhambra, 13 June 1829. ''Works'', 23:436</ref> Before he could get any significant writing underway, however, he was notified of his appointment as Secretary to the American Legation in London. Worried he would disappoint friends and family if he refused the position, Irving left Spain for England in July 1829.<ref>Hellman, 208.</ref>
In 1829, Irving was elected to the [[American Philosophical Society]].<ref>{{Cite web|title=APS Member History|url=https://search.amphilsoc.org/memhist/search?year=1829;year-max=1829;smode=advanced;f1-date=1829|access-date=April 7, 2021|website=search.amphilsoc.org}}</ref> That same year, he moved into Granada's ancient palace Alhambra, "determined to linger here", he said, "until I get some writings under way connected with the place".<ref>Washington Irving to Peter Irving, Alhambra, June 13, 1829. ''Works'', 23:436</ref> Before he could get any significant writing underway, however, he was notified of his appointment as Secretary to the American Legation in London. Worried he would disappoint friends and family if he refused the position, Irving left Spain for England in July 1829.<ref>Hellman, 208.</ref>


====Secretary to the American legation in London====
====Secretary to the American legation in London====
Arriving in London, Irving joined the staff of American Minister [[Louis McLane]]. McLane immediately assigned the daily secretary work to another man and tapped Irving to fill the role of aide-de-camp. The two worked over the next year to negotiate a trade agreement between the United States and the [[British West Indies]], finally reaching a deal in August 1830. That same year, Irving was awarded a medal by the Royal Society of Literature, followed by an honorary doctorate of civil law from Oxford in 1831.<ref>PMI, 2:429, 430, 431–32</ref>


Following McLane's recall to the United States in 1831 to serve as Secretary of Treasury, Irving stayed on as the legation's chargé d'affaires until the arrival of [[Martin Van Buren]], President [[Andrew Jackson]]'s nominee for British Minister. With Van Buren in place, Irving resigned his post to concentrate on writing, eventually completing ''[[Tales of the Alhambra]]'', which would be published concurrently in the United States and England in 1832.<ref>PMI, 3:17–21.</ref>
Arriving in London, Irving joined the staff of American Minister [[Louis McLane]]. McLane immediately assigned the daily secretary work to another man and tapped Irving to fill the role of aide-de-camp. The two worked over the next year to negotiate a trade agreement between the United States and the [[British West Indies]], finally reaching a deal in August 1830. That same year, Irving was awarded a medal by the Royal Society of Literature, followed by an honorary doctorate of civil law from [[University of Oxford|Oxford]] in 1831.<ref>PMI, 2:429, 430, 431–32</ref>


Irving was still in London when Van Buren received word that the United States Senate had refused to confirm him as the new Minister. Consoling Van Buren, Irving predicted that the Senate's partisan move would backfire. "I should not be surprised", Irving said, "if this vote of the Senate goes far toward elevating him to the presidential chair".<ref>Washington Irving to Peter Irving, London, March 6, 1832, ''Works'', 23:696</ref>
Following McLane's recall to the United States in 1831 to serve as Secretary of Treasury, Irving stayed on as the legation's chargé d'affaires until the arrival of [[Martin Van Buren]], President Jackson's nominee for British Minister. With Van Buren in place, Irving resigned his post to concentrate on writing, eventually completing ''[[Tales of the Alhambra]]'', which would be published concurrently in the United States and England in 1832.<ref>PMI, 3:17–21.</ref>


===Return to the United States===
Irving was still in London when Van Buren received word that the United States Senate had refused to confirm him as the new Minister. Consoling Van Buren, Irving predicted that the Senate's partisan move would backfire. "I should not be surprised", Irving said, "if this vote of the Senate goes far toward elevating him to the presidential chair".<ref>Washington Irving to Peter Irving, London, 6 March 1832, ''Works'', 23:696</ref>
[[File:Christian Schussele - Washington Irving and his Literary Friends at Sunnyside - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|Irving and his friends at [[Sunnyside (Tarrytown, New York)|Sunnyside]]]]
Irving arrived in New York on May 21, 1832, after 17 years abroad. That September, he accompanied Commissioner on Indian Affairs [[Henry Leavitt Ellsworth]] on a surveying mission, along with companions [[Charles La Trobe]]<ref>{{cite Australian Dictionary of Biography |id=A020077b |title=La Trobe, Charles Joseph (1801–1875) |access-date=July 13, 2007 |author=Jill Eastwood |volume=2 |year=1967 |pages=89–93}}</ref> and Count Albert-Alexandre de Pourtales, and they traveled deep into [[Indian Territory]] (now the state of Oklahoma).<ref>See Irving, "A Tour on the Prairies", ''Works'' 22.</ref> At the completion of his western tour, Irving traveled through Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, where he became acquainted with politician and novelist [[John Pendleton Kennedy]].<ref>Williams, 2:48–49</ref>


Irving was frustrated by bad investments, so he turned to writing to generate additional income, beginning with ''A Tour on the Prairies'' which related his recent travels on the frontier. The book was another popular success and also the first book written and published by Irving in the United States since ''A History of New York'' in 1809.<ref>Jones, 318.</ref> In 1834, he was approached by fur magnate [[John Jacob Astor]], who convinced him to write a history of his fur trading colony in [[Astoria, Oregon]]. Irving made quick work of Astor's project, shipping the fawning biographical account ''[[Astoria (book)|Astoria]]'' in February 1836.<ref>Jones, 324.</ref> In 1835, Irving, Astor, and a few others founded the [[Saint Nicholas Society in the City of New York]].
===Return to America===


During an extended stay at Astor's home, Irving met explorer [[Benjamin Bonneville]] and was intrigued with his maps and stories of the territories beyond the [[Rocky Mountains]].<ref>Williams, 2:76–77.</ref> The two men met in Washington, D.C., several months later, and Bonneville sold his maps and rough notes to Irving for $1,000.<ref>Jones, 323.</ref> Irving used these materials as the basis for his 1837 book ''The Adventures of Captain Bonneville''.<ref>Burstein, 288.</ref> These three works made up Irving's "western" series of books and were written partly as a response to criticism that his time in England and Spain had made him more European than American.<ref>Williams, 2:36.</ref> Critics such as James Fenimore Cooper and [[Philip Freneau]] felt that he had turned his back on his American heritage in favor of English aristocracy.<ref>Jones, 316.</ref> Irving's western books were well received in the United States, particularly ''A Tour on the Prairies'',<ref>Jones, 318-28.</ref> though British critics accused him of "book-making".<ref>''Monthly Review, New and Improved'', ser. 2 (June 1837): 279–90. See Aderman, Ralph M., ed. ''Critical Essays on Washington Irving''. (G. K. Hall, 1990), 110–11.</ref>
Washington Irving arrived in New York, after seventeen years abroad on May 21, 1832. That September, he accompanied the U.S. Commissioner on Indian Affairs, [[Henry Ellsworth]], along with companions [[Charles La Trobe]]<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A020077b.htm |title=La Trobe, Charles Joseph (1801 - 1875) |accessdate=2007-07-13 |author=Jill Eastwood |work=[[Australian Dictionary of Biography]], Volume 2 |publisher=[[Melbourne University Press|MUP]] |year=1967 |pages=89-93}}</ref> and Count Albert-Alexandre de Pourtales, on a surveying mission deep in [[Indian Territory]].<ref>See Irving, "A Tour on the Prairies", ''Works'' 22.</ref> At the completion of his western tour, Irving traveled through Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, where he became acquainted with the politician and novelist [[John Pendleton Kennedy]].<ref>Williams, 2:48–49</ref>


[[File:Sunnyside, Tarrytown, New York.JPG|thumb|right|Irving acquired his famous home in Tarrytown, New York, known as Sunnyside, in 1835.]]
Frustrated by bad investments, Irving turned to writing to generate additional income, beginning with ''A Tour on the Prairies'', a work which related his recent travels on the [[frontier]]. The book was another popular success and also the first book written and published by Irving in the United States since ''A History of New York'' in 1809.<ref>Jones, 318.</ref> In 1834, he was approached by fur magnate [[John Jacob Astor]], who convinced Irving to write a history of his [[fur trade|fur trading]] colony in the American Northwest, now known as [[Astoria, Oregon]]. Irving made quick work of Astor's project, shipping the fawning biographical account titled ''[[Astoria]]'' in February 1836.<ref>Jones, 324.</ref>
In 1835, Irving purchased a "neglected cottage" and its surrounding riverfront property in Tarrytown, New York, which he named [[Sunnyside (Tarrytown, New York)|Sunnyside]] in 1841.<ref>Burstein, 295.</ref> It required constant repair and renovation over the next 20 years, with costs continually escalating, so he reluctantly agreed to become a regular contributor to ''[[The Knickerbocker]]'' magazine in 1839, writing new essays and short stories under the Knickerbocker and Crayon pseudonyms.<ref>Jones, 333.</ref> He was regularly approached by aspiring young authors for advice or endorsement, including Edgar Allan Poe, who sought Irving's comments on "[[William Wilson (short story)|William Wilson]]" and "[[The Fall of the House of Usher]]".<ref>Edgar Allan Poe to N. C. Brooks, Philadelphia, September 4, 1838. Cited in Williams, 2:101-02.</ref>


In 1837, a lady of [[Charleston, South Carolina]] brought to the attention of [[William Clancy]], newly appointed bishop to [[Demerara]], a passage in ''The Crayon Miscellany'', and questioned whether it accurately reflected Catholic teaching or practice. The passage under "Newstead Abbey" read:<blockquote>One of the parchment scrolls thus discovered, throws rather an awkward light upon the kind of life led by the friars of Newstead. It is an indulgence granted to them for a certain number of months, in which a plenary pardon is assured in advance for all kinds of crimes, among which, several of the most gross and sensual are specifically mentioned, and the weaknesses of the flesh to which they were prone.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A3URAAAAYAAJ&q=crayon+miscellany+by+washington+irving|title=The Crayon Miscellany|first=Washington|last=Irving|date=January 1, 1849|publisher=G.P. Putnam's Sons|via=Google Books}}</ref></blockquote>
During an extended stay at Astor's, Irving met the explorer [[Benjamin Bonneville]], who intrigued Irving with his maps and stories of the territories beyond the [[Rocky Mountains]].<ref>Williams, 2:76–77.</ref> When the two met in Washington, D.C. several months later, Bonneville opted to sell his maps and rough notes to Irving for $1,000.<ref>Jones, 323.</ref> Irving used these materials as the basis for his 1837 book ''The Adventures of Captain Bonneville''.<ref>Burstein, 288.</ref>


Clancy wrote to Irving, who "promptly aided the investigation into the truth, and promised to correct in future editions the misrepresentation complained of". Clancy traveled to his new posting by way of England, and bearing a letter of introduction from Irving, stopped at [[Newstead Abbey]] and was able to view the document to which Irving had alluded. Upon inspection, Clancy discovered that it was, in fact, not an indulgence issued to the friars from any ecclesiastical authority, but a pardon given by the king to some parties suspected of having broken "forest laws". Clancy requested the local pastor to forward his findings to Catholic periodicals in England, and upon publication, send a copy to Irving. Whether this was done is not clear as the disputed text remains in the 1849 edition.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Z79LiSQC8YEC&dq=William+Clarke&pg=PA264|title=Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States|first=Richard Henry|last=Clarke|date=January 1, 1872|publisher=P. O'Shea|via=Google Books}}</ref>
These three works made up Irving's "western" series of books and were written partly as a response to criticism that his time in England and Spain had made him more European than American.<ref>Williams, 2:36.</ref> In the minds of some critics, especially James Fenimore Cooper and [[Philip Freneau]], Irving had turned his back on his American heritage in favor of English aristocracy.<ref>Jones, 316.</ref> Irving's western books, particularly ''A Tour on the Prairies'', were well-received in the United States,<ref>Jones, 318-28.</ref> though British critics accused Irving of "book-making".<ref>''Monthly Review, New and Improved'', ser. 2 (June 1837): 279–90. See Aderman, Ralph M., ed. ''Critical Essays on Washington Irving''. (G. K. Hall, 1990), 110–11.</ref>


Irving also championed America's maturing literature, advocating stronger [[copyright]] laws to protect writers from the kind of piracy that had initially plagued ''The Sketch Book''. Writing in the January 1840 issue of ''Knickerbocker'', he openly endorsed copyright legislation pending in Congress. "We have a young literature", he wrote, "springing up and daily unfolding itself with wonderful energy and luxuriance, which … deserves all its fostering care". The legislation, however, did not pass at that time.<ref>Washington Irving to Lewis G. Clark, (before January 10, 1840), ''Works'', 25:32–33.</ref>
[[Image:Sunnyside, Tarrytown, New York.JPG|thumb|right|Irving acquired his famous home in [[Tarrytown, New York]], known as [[Sunnyside (Tarrytown, New York)|Sunnyside]], in 1835.]]
In 1835, Irving purchased a "neglected cottage" and its surrounding riverfront property in Tarrytown, New York. The house, which Irving named [[Sunnyside]] in 1841,<ref>Burstein, 295.</ref> would require constant repair and renovation over the next twenty years. With costs of Sunnyside escalating, Irving reluctantly agreed in 1839 to become a regular contributor to [[The Knickerbocker|''Knickerbocker'' magazine]], writing new essays and short stories under the Knickerbocker and Crayon pseudonyms.<ref>Jones, 333.</ref>


In 1841, Irving was elected to the [[National Academy of Design]] as an Honorary Academician.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nationalacademy.org/academy/national-academicians/?na=I|title=National Academicians|access-date=January 18, 2014|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140116083431/http://www.nationalacademy.org/academy/national-academicians/?na=I|archive-date=January 16, 2014}}</ref> He also began a friendly correspondence with Charles Dickens and hosted Dickens and his wife at Sunnyside during Dickens's American tour in 1842.<ref>Jones, 341.</ref>
Irving was regularly approached by aspiring young authors for advice or endorsement, including [[Edgar Allan Poe]], who sought Irving's comments "on [[William Wilson (short story)|William Wilson]]" and "[[The Fall of the House of Usher]]".<ref>Edgar Allan Poe to N. C. Brooks, Philadelphia, 4 September, 1838. Cited in Williams, 2:101-02.</ref> Irving also championed America's maturing literature, advocating for stronger copyright laws to protect writers from the kind of piracy that had initially plagued ''The Sketch Book''. Writing in the January 1840 issue of ''Knickerbocker'', he openly endorsed copyright legislation pending in the U.S. Congress. "We have a young literature", Irving wrote, "springing up and daily unfolding itself with wonderful energy and luxuriance, which... deserves all its fostering care". The legislation did not pass.<ref>Washington Irving to Lewis G. Clark, (before January 10, 1840), ''Works'', 25:32-33.</ref>

Irving at this time also began a friendly correspondence with the English writer [[Charles Dickens]], and hosted the author and his wife at Sunnyside during Dickens's American tour in 1842.<ref>Jones, 341.</ref>


===Minister to Spain===
===Minister to Spain===
President [[John Tyler]] appointed Irving as Minister to Spain in February 1842, after an endorsement from Secretary of State [[Daniel Webster]].<ref>Hellman, 257.</ref> Irving wrote, "It will be a severe trial to absent myself for a time from my dear little Sunnyside, but I shall return to it better enabled to carry it on comfortably".<ref>Washington Irving to Ebenezer Irving, New York, February 10, 1842, ''Works'', 25:180.</ref> He hoped that his position as Minister would allow him plenty of time to write, but Spain was in a state of political upheaval during most of his tenure, with a number of warring factions vying for control of the 12-year-old [[Isabella II of Spain|Queen Isabella II]].<ref>Bowers, 127–275.</ref> Irving maintained good relations with the various generals and politicians, as control of Spain rotated through [[Baldomero Espartero|Espartero]], Bravo, then [[Ramón María Narváez y Campos, 1st Duke of Valencia|Narváez]]. Espartero was then locked in a power struggle with the Spanish Cortes. Irving's official reports on the ensuing civil war and revolution expressed his romantic fascination with the regent as young Queen Isabella's knight protector, He wrote with an anti-republican, undiplomatic bias. Though Espartero, ousted in July 1843, remained a fallen hero in his eyes, Irving began to view Spanish affairs more realistically.<ref>Mary Duarte, and Ronald E. Coons, "Washington Irving, American Ambassador to Spain, 1842-1846". ''Consortium on Revolutionary Europe 1750-1850: Proceedings'' (1992), Vol. 21, pp, 350-360.</ref> However, the politics and warfare were exhausting, and Irving was both homesick and suffering from a crippling skin condition.


{{blockquote|I am wearied and at times heartsick of the wretched politics of this country…. The last ten or twelve years of my life, passed among sordid speculators in the United States, and political adventurers in Spain, has shewn me so much of the dark side of human nature, that I begin to have painful doubts of my fellow man; and look back with regret to the confiding period of my literary career, when, poor as a rat, but rich in dreams, I beheld the world through the medium of my imagination and was apt to believe men as good as I wished them to be.<ref>Irving to Thomas Wentworth Storrow, Madrid, 18 May 1844, ''Works'', 25:751</ref>}}
In 1842, after an endorsement from Secretary of State [[Daniel Webster]], President [[John Tyler]] appointed Irving as Minister to Spain.<ref>Hellman, 257.</ref> Irving was surprised and honored, writing, "It will be a severe trial to absent myself for a time from my dear little Sunnyside, but I shall return to it better enabled to carry it on comfortably".<ref>Washington Irving to Ebenezer Irving, New York, 10 February 1842, ''Works'', 25:180.</ref>

While Irving hoped his position as Minister would allow him plenty of time to write, Spain was in a state of perpetual political upheaval during most of his tenure, with a number of warring factions vying for control of the twelve-year-old [[Queen Isabella II]].<ref>Bowers, 127–275.</ref> Irving maintained good relations with the various generals and politicians, as control of Spain rotated through [[Espartero]], Bravo, then [[Ramón María Narváez y Campos, 1st Duke of Valencia|Narvaez]]. However, the politics and warfare were exhausting, and Irving—homesick and suffering from a crippling skin condition—grew quickly disheartened:

{{cquote|I am wearied and at times heartsick of the wretched politics of this country. . . . The last ten or twelve years of my life, passed among sordid speculators in the United States, and political adventurers in Spain, has shewn me so much of the dark side of human nature, that I begin to have painful doubts of my fellow man; and look back with regret to the confiding period of my literary career, when, poor as a rat, but rich in dreams, I beheld the world through the medium of my imagination and was apt to believe men as good as I wished them to be.<ref>Irving to Thomas Wentworth Storrow, Madrid, 18 May 1844, ''Works'', 25:751</ref>}}


With the political situation in Spain relatively settled, Irving continued to closely monitor the development of the new government and the fate of Isabella. His official duties as Spanish Minister also involved negotiating American trade interests with Cuba and following the Spanish parliament's debates over slave trade. He was also pressed into service by the American Minister to the [[Court of St. James's]] in London, [[Louis McLane]], to assist in negotiating the Anglo-American disagreement over the Oregon border that newly-elected president [[James K. Polk]] had vowed to resolve.<ref>Jones, 415-56.</ref>
With the political situation relatively settled in Spain, Irving continued to closely monitor the development of the new government and the fate of Isabella. His official duties as Spanish Minister also involved negotiating American trade interests with Cuba and following the Spanish parliament's debates over the slave trade. He was also pressed into service by Louis McLane, the American Minister to the [[Court of St. James's]] in London, to assist in negotiating the [[Oregon boundary dispute|Anglo-American disagreement over the Oregon border]] that newly elected president [[James K. Polk]] had vowed to resolve.<ref>Jones, 415-56.</ref>


===Final years and death===
===Final years and death===
[[File:Washington Irving's headstone Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.jpg|thumb|Washington Irving's headstone, [[Sleepy Hollow Cemetery]], [[Sleepy Hollow, New York]]]]
{{anchor|Wolfert's Roost}}Irving returned from Spain in September 1846, took up residence at Sunnyside, and began work on an "Author's Revised Edition" of his works for publisher [[George Palmer Putnam]]. For its publication, Irving had made a deal which guaranteed him 12 percent of the retail price of all copies sold, an agreement that was unprecedented at that time.<ref>Jones, 464.</ref> As he revised his older works for Putnam, he continued to write regularly, publishing biographies of [[Oliver Goldsmith]] in 1849 and Islamic prophet [[Muhammad]] in 1850. In 1855, he produced ''Wolfert's Roost'', a collection of stories and essays that he had written for ''The Knickerbocker'' and other publications,<ref name=Williams208209>Williams, 2:208–209.</ref> and he began publishing a biography of his namesake [[George Washington]] which he expected to be his masterpiece. Five volumes of the biography were published between 1855 and 1859.<ref>Bryan, William Alfred. ''George Washington in American Literature 1775–1865''. New York: Columbia University Press, 1952: 103.</ref>


Irving traveled regularly to [[Mount Vernon]] and Washington, D.C., for his research, and struck up friendships with Presidents [[Millard Fillmore]] and [[Franklin Pierce]].<ref name=Williams208209/> He was elected an Associate Fellow of the [[American Academy of Arts and Sciences]] in 1855.<ref name=AAAS>{{cite web|title=Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter I|url=http://www.amacad.org/publications/BookofMembers/ChapterI.pdf|publisher=American Academy of Arts and Sciences|access-date=September 9, 2016}}</ref> He was hired as an executor of John Jacob Astor's estate in 1848 and appointed by Astor's will as first chairman of the [[Astor Library]], a forerunner to the [[New York Public Library]].<ref>Hellman, 235.</ref>
[[Image:WashingtonIrvingGrave.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Irving's grave, marked by a flag, in [[Sleepy Hollow Cemetery]], [[Sleepy Hollow, New York]].]]
Returning from Spain in 1846, Irving took up permanent residence at Sunnyside and began work on an "Author's Revised Edition" of his works for publisher [[George Palmer Putnam]]. For its publication, Irving had made a deal that guaranteed him 12 percent of the retail price of all copies sold. Such an agreement was unprecedented at that time.<ref>Jones, 464.</ref> On the death of John Jacob Astor in 1848, Irving was hired as an executor of Astor's estate and appointed, by Astor's will, as first chairman of the Astor library, a forerunner to the [[New York Public Library]].<ref>Hellman, 235.</ref>


Irving continued to socialize and keep up with his correspondence well into his seventies, and his fame and popularity continued to soar. "I don't believe that any man, in any country, has ever had a more affectionate admiration for him than that given to you in America", wrote Senator [[William C. Preston]] in a letter to Irving. "I believe that we have had but one man who is so much in the popular heart".<ref>William C. Preston to Washington Irving, Charlottesville, May 11, 1859, PMI, 4:286.</ref> By 1859, author [[Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.]] noted that Sunnyside had become "next to Mount Vernon, the best known and most cherished of all the dwellings in our land".<ref>Kime, Wayne R. ''Pierre M. Irving and Washington Irving: A Collaboration in Life and Letters''. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1977: 151. {{ISBN|0-88920-056-4}}</ref>
As he revised his older works for Putnam, Irving continued to write regularly, publishing biographies of the writer and poet [[Oliver Goldsmith]] in 1849 and the 1850 work about the prophet [[Muhammad]]. In 1855, he produced ''Wolfert's Roost'', a collection of stories and essays he had originally written for ''Knickerbocker'' and other publications,<ref name=Williams208209>Williams, 2:208–209.</ref> and began publishing at intervals a biography of his namesake, [[George Washington]], a work which he expected to be his masterpiece. Five volumes of the biography were published between 1855 and 1859.<ref>Bryan, William Alfred. ''George Washington in American Literature 1775–1865''. New York: Columbia University Press, 1952: 103.</ref> Irving traveled regularly to [[Mount Vernon]] and Washington, D.C. for his research, and struck up friendships with Presidents [[Millard Fillmore]] and [[Franklin Pierce]].<ref name=Williams208209/>


Irving died of a heart attack in his bedroom at Sunnyside on November 28, 1859, age 76—only eight months after completing the final volume of his Washington biography. Legend has it that his last words were: "Well, I must arrange my pillows for another night. When will this end?"<ref>Nelson, Randy F. ''The Almanac of American Letters''. Los Altos, California: William Kaufmann, Inc., 1981: 179. {{ISBN|0-86576-008-X}}</ref> He was buried under a simple headstone at Sleepy Hollow cemetery on December 1, 1859.<ref>PMI, 4:328.</ref> Irving and his grave were commemorated by [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]] in his 1876 poem "In the Churchyard at Tarrytown", which concludes with:
He continued to socialize and keep up with his correspondence well into his seventies, and his fame and popularity continued to soar. "I don’t believe that any man, in any country, has ever had a more affectionate admiration for him than that given to you in America", wrote Senator [[William C. Preston]] in a letter to Irving. "I believe that we have had but one man who is so much in the popular heart".<ref>William C. Preston to Washington Irving, Charlottesville, May 11, 1859, PMI, 4:286.</ref>


{{poemquote|How sweet a life was his; how sweet a death!
On the evening of November 28, 1859, only eight months after completing the final volume of his Washington biography, Washington Irving died of a heart attack in his bedroom at Sunnyside at the age of 76. Legend has it that his last words were: "Well, I must arrange my pillows for another night. When will this end?"<ref>Nelson, Randy F. ''The Almanac of American Letters''. Los Altos, California: William Kaufmann, Inc., 1981: 179. ISBN 086576008X</ref> He was buried under a simple headstone at Sleepy Hollow cemetery on December 1, 1859.<ref>PMI, 4:328.</ref>
Living, to wing with mirth the weary hours,
Or with romantic tales the heart to cheer;
Dying, to leave a memory like the breath
Of summers full of sunshine and of showers,
A grief and gladness in the atmosphere.<ref>Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. "In The Churchyard at Tarrytown", quoted in Burstein, 330.</ref>}}


==Legacy==
Irving and his grave were commemorated by [[Henry Wadsworth Longfellow]] in his 1876 poem, "In The Churchyard at Tarrytown", which concludes with:


<blockquote>How sweet a life was his; how sweet a death!</br>
Living, to wing with mirth the weary hours,</br>
Or with romantic tales the heart to cheer;</br>
Dying, to leave a memory like the breath</br>
Of summers full of sunshine and of showers,</br>
A grief and gladness in the atmosphere.<ref>Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. "In The Churchyard at Tarrytown", quoted in Burstein, 330.</ref></blockquote>

==Legacy==
===Literary reputation===
===Literary reputation===
[[Image:Irvington bust of Wasington Irving.jpg|thumb|right|180px|A bust of Washington Irving in [[Irvington, New York]], not far from Sunnyside.]]
[[File:Washington Irving Memorial Irvington Washington Irving bust.jpg|thumb|upright|Bust of Washington Irving by [[Daniel Chester French]] in [[Irvington, New York]], not far from Sunnyside]]
Irving is largely credited as the first American Man of Letters, and the first to earn his living solely by his pen. Eulogizing Irving before the [[Massachusetts Historical Society]] in December 1859, his friend, the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, acknowledged Irving's role in promoting American literature: "We feel a just pride in his renown as an author, not forgetting that, to his other claims upon our gratitude, he adds also that of having been the first to win for our country an honourable name and position in the History of Letters".<ref>Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. "Address on the Death of Washington Irving", ''Poems and Other Writings'', J.D. McClatchy, editor. (Library of America, 2000).</ref>
Irving is largely credited as the first American Man of Letters and the first to earn his living solely by his pen. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow acknowledged Irving's role in promoting American literature in December 1859: "We feel a just pride in his renown as an author, not forgetting that, to his other claims upon our gratitude, he adds also that of having been the first to win for our country an honourable name and position in the History of Letters".<ref>Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. "Address on the Death of Washington Irving", ''Poems and Other Writings'', J.D. McClatchy, editor. (Library of America, 2000).</ref>


Irving perfected the American short story,<ref>Leon H. Vincent, ''American Literary Masters'', 1906.</ref> and was the first American writer to place his stories firmly in the United States, even as he poached from German or Dutch folklore. He is also generally credited as one of the first to write both in the vernacular, and without an obligation to the moral or didactic in his short stories, writing stories simply to entertain rather to enlighten.<ref>Fred Lewis Pattee, ''The First Century of American Literature'', 1935.</ref>
Irving perfected the American short story<ref>Leon H. Vincent, ''American Literary Masters'', 1906.</ref> and was the first American writer to set his stories firmly in the United States, even as he poached from German or Dutch folklore. He is also generally credited as one of the first to write in the vernacular and without an obligation to presenting morals or being didactic in his short stories, writing stories simply to entertain rather than to enlighten.<ref>Pattee, Fred Lewis. ''The First Century of American Literature, 1770–1870''. New York: Cooper Square Publishers, 1935.</ref> He also encouraged many would-be writers. As [[George William Curtis]] noted, there "is not a young literary aspirant in the country, who, if he ever personally met Irving, did not hear from him the kindest words of sympathy, regard, and encouragement".<ref>Kime, Wayne R. ''Pierre M. Irving and Washington Irving: A Collaboration in Life and Letters''. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1977: 152. {{ISBN|0-88920-056-4}}</ref>


Some critics, however—including Edgar Allan Poe—felt that while Irving should be given credit for being an innovator, the writing itself was often unsophisticated. "Irving is much over-rated", Poe wrote in 1838, "and a nice distinction might be drawn between his just and his surreptitious and adventitious reputation—between what is due to the pioneer solely, and what to the writer".<ref>Poe to N.C. Brooks, Philadelphia, 4 September 1838. Cited in Williams 2:101-02.</ref>
Edgar Allan Poe, on the other hand, felt that Irving should be given credit for being an innovator but that the writing itself was often unsophisticated. "Irving is much over-rated", Poe wrote in 1838, "and a nice distinction might be drawn between his just and his surreptitious and adventitious reputation—between what is due to the pioneer solely, and what to the writer".<ref>Poe to N.C. Brooks, Philadelphia, September 4, 1838. Cited in Williams 2:101-02.</ref> A critic for the ''New-York Mirror'' wrote: "No man in the Republic of Letters has been more overrated than Mr. Washington Irving".<ref>Jones, 223</ref> Some critics claimed that Irving catered to British sensibilities, and one critic charged that he wrote "''of'' and ''for'' England, rather than his own country".<ref>Jones, 291</ref> For instance, American critic [[John Neal]] in his 1824–25 critical work ''[[American Writers]]'' dismissed Irving as a poor copy of Goldsmith.<ref>{{cite book | last1 = Watts | first1 = Edward | last2 = Carlson | first2 = David J. | editor1-last = Watts | editor1-first = Edward | editor2-last = Carlson | editor2-first = David J. | chapter = Introduction | page = xiii | title = John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture | year = 2012 | publisher = Bucknell University Press | location = Lewisburg, Pennsylvania | isbn = 978-1-61148-420-5}}</ref>


Other critics were inclined to be more forgiving of Irving's style. [[William Makepeace Thackeray]] was the first to refer to Irving as the "ambassador whom the New World of Letters sent to the Old",<ref>Thackeray, ''Roundabout Papers'', 1860.</ref> a banner picked up by writers and critics throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. "He is the first of the American humorists, as he is almost the first of the American writers", wrote critic H.R. Hawless in 1881, "yet belonging to the New World, there is a quaint Old World flavor about him".<ref>Hawless, ''American Humorists'', 1881.</ref>
Other critics were more supportive of Irving's style. [[William Makepeace Thackeray]] was the first to refer to Irving as the "ambassador whom the New World of Letters sent to the Old",<ref>Thackeray, ''Roundabout Papers'', 1860.</ref> a banner picked up by writers and critics throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. "He is the first of the American humorists, as he is almost the first of the American writers", wrote critic H.R. Hawless in 1881, "yet belonging to the New World, there is a quaint Old World flavor about him".<ref>Hawless, ''American Humorists'', 1881.</ref> Early critics often had difficulty separating Irving the man from Irving the writer. "The life of Washington Irving was one of the brightest ever led by an author", wrote [[Richard Henry Stoddard]], an early Irving biographer.<ref>Stoddard, ''The Life of Washington Irving'', 1883.</ref> Later critics, however, began to review his writings as all style with no substance. "The man had no message", said critic [[Barrett Wendell]].<ref>Wendell, ''A Literary History of America'', 1901.</ref>


As a historian, Irving's reputation had fallen out of favor but then gained a resurgence. "With the advent of 'scientific' history in the generations that followed his, Irving's historical writings lapsed into disregard and disrespect. To late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century historians, including [[J. Franklin Jameson|John Franklin Jameson]], [[George Peabody Gooch|G. P. Gooch]], and others, these works were demiromances, worthy at best of veiled condescension. However, more recently several of Irving's histories and biographies have again won praise for their reliability as well as the literary skill with which they were written. Specifically, ''A History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus''; ''Astoria, or Anecdotes of an Enterprise beyond the Rocky Mountains''; and ''Life of George Washington'' have earned the respect of scholars whose writings on those topics we consider authoritative in our generation: [[Samuel Eliot Morison]], [[Bernard DeVoto]], [[Douglas Southall Freeman]]".<ref name=DLB>Kime, Wayne R. "Washington Irving (3 April 1783-28 November 1859", in Clyde N. Wilson (ed.), ''American Historians, 1607-1865'', [[Dictionary of Literary Biography]] Vol. 30, Detroit: Gale Research, 1984, 155.</ref>
Early critics often had difficulty separating Irving the man from Irving the writer—"The life of Washington Irving was one of the brightest ever led by an author", wrote [[Richard Henry Stoddard]], an early Irving biographer<ref>Stoddard, ''The Life of Washington Irving'', 1883.</ref>—but as years passed and Irving's celebrity personality faded into the background, critics often began to review his writings as all style, no substance. "The man had no message", said critic Barrett Wendell.<ref>Wendell, ''A Literary History of America'', 1901.</ref> Yet, critics conceded that despite Irving's lack of sophisticated themes—Irving biographer Stanley T. Williams could be scathing in his assessment of Irving's work<ref>See Williams, 2:Appendix III.</ref>—most agreed he wrote elegantly.


===Impact on American culture===
===Impact on American culture===
[[File:John Quidor - Headless Horseman Pursuing Ichabod Crane - Smithsonian.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4|right|[[John Quidor]]'s 1858 painting ''[[The Headless Horseman Pursuing Ichabod Crane]]'', inspired by Washington Irving's work]]
Irving popularized the nickname "[[Nicknames of New York City|Gotham]]" for New York City,<ref>{{cite web|last1=Migro|first1=Carmen|title=So, Why Do We Call It Gotham, Anyway?|url=https://www.nypl.org/blog/2011/01/25/so-why-do-we-call-it-gotham-anyway|website=NYPL.org|publisher=New York Public Library|access-date=October 27, 2017}}</ref> and he is credited with inventing the expression "the almighty dollar". The surname of his fictional Dutch historian Diedrich Knickerbocker is generally associated with New York and New Yorkers, as found in New York's professional [[basketball]] team The [[New York Knicks|New York Knickerbockers]].


One of Irving's most lasting contributions to American culture is in the way that Americans celebrate Christmas. In his 1812 revisions to ''A History of New York'', he inserted a dream sequence featuring [[St. Nicholas]] soaring over treetops in a flying wagon, an invention which others dressed up as Santa Claus. In his five Christmas stories in ''The Sketch Book'', Irving portrayed an idealized celebration of old-fashioned Christmas customs at a quaint English manor which depicted English Christmas festivities that he experienced while staying in England, which had largely been abandoned.<ref>Kelly, Richard Michael (ed.) (2003), A Christmas Carol. p.20. Broadview Literary Texts, New York: Broadview Press, {{ISBN|1-55111-476-3}}</ref> He used text from ''The Vindication of Christmas'' (London 1652) of old English Christmas traditions,<ref name=BTR>{{Cite book |author=Restad, Penne L. |year=1995 |title=Christmas in America: a History |location=Oxford |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-510980-5 }}</ref> and the book contributed to the revival and reinterpretation of the Christmas holiday in the United States.<ref>See Stephen Nissebaum, ''The Battle for Christmas'' (Vintage, 1997)</ref>
Irving popularized the nickname "[[Gotham]]" for New York City, later used in [[Batman]] comics and movies, and is credited with inventing the expression "the [[almighty dollar]]".


Irving introduced the erroneous idea that Europeans believed the world to be flat prior to the discovery of the New World in his biography of Christopher Columbus,<ref>See Irving, 1829, Chapter VII: "Columbus before the council at Salamanca", pp. 40–47, especially p. 43.</ref> yet the [[Myth of the flat Earth|flat-Earth myth]] has been taught in schools as fact to many generations of Americans.<ref>Grant (Edward), 2001, "God and Reason in the Middle Ages", p. 342.</ref><ref>Grant (John), 2006, p. 32, in the subsection "The Earth – Flat or Hollow?" beginning at p. 30, within Chapter 1 "Worlds in Upheaval".</ref> American painter [[John Quidor]] based many of his paintings on scenes from the works of Irving about Dutch New York, including such paintings as ''Ichabod Crane Flying from the Headless Horseman'' (1828), ''The Return of Rip Van Winkle'' (1849), and ''[[The Headless Horseman Pursuing Ichabod Crane]]'' (1858).<ref>{{cite book | last1 = Caldwell | first1 = John| last2 = Rodriguez Roque| first2 = Oswaldo| editor = Kathleen Luhrs| others = Dale T. Johnson, Carrie Rebora, Patricia R. Windels| title = American Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art| volume = I: a Catalogue of Works by Artists Born By 1815| year = 1994 | publisher = The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press | pages = 479–482}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | editor = Roger Panetta|title = Dutch New York: the roots of Hudson Valley culture | year = 2009 | publisher = Hudson River Museum | isbn = 978-0-8232-3039-6| pages = 223–235}}</ref>
The surname of his Dutch historian, Diedrich Knickerbocker, is generally associated with New York and New Yorkers, and can still be seen across the jerseys of New York's professional basketball team, albeit in its more familiar, abbreviated form, reading simply [[New York Knicks|Knicks]].


===Memorials===
One of Irving's most lasting contributions to American culture is in the way Americans perceive and celebrate [[Christmas]]. In his 1812 revisions to ''A History of New York'', Irving inserted a dream sequence featuring [[St. Nicholas]] soaring over treetops in a flying wagon—a creation others would later dress up as [[Santa Claus]]. Later, in his five Christmas stories in ''The Sketch Book'', Irving portrayed an idealized celebration of old-fashioned Christmas customs at a quaint English manor, which directly contributed to the revival and reinterpretation of the Christmas holiday in the United States.<ref>See Stephen Nissebaum, ''The Battle for Christmas'' (Vintage, 1997)</ref> Charles Dickens later credited Irving as a strong influence on his own Christmas writings, including the classic ''[[A Christmas Carol]]''. The [[community areas of Chicago|Community Area]] of [[Irving Park, Chicago|Irving Park]] in [[Chicago]] was named in Irving's honor.
[[File:Washington Irving2 1940 Issue-1c.jpg|thumb|Washington Irving, [[Postage stamps and postal history of the United States#Famous Americans Series of 1940|postage stamp]], 1940|132x132px]]
[[File:WASHINGTON-IRVING-ALHAMBRA-0.jpg|thumb|178x178px|Statue in Granada, Spain]]
The village of Dearman, New York, changed its name to "[[Irvington, New York|Irvington]]" in 1854 to honor Washington Irving, who was living in nearby [[Sunnyside (Tarrytown, New York)|Sunnyside]], which is preserved as a museum.<ref>Sunnyside was considered to be part of Irvington (or Dearman) at the time; the neighboring village of Tarrytown incorporated in 1870, two years before Irvington. The estate ended up in Tarrytown rather than Irvington after the boundaries were drawn.</ref> Influential residents of the village prevailed upon the [[Hudson River Railroad]], which had reached the village by 1849,<ref name=foundation>Dodsworth (1995)</ref> to change the name of the train station to "Irvington", and the village incorporated as Irvington on April 16, 1872.<ref name="scharf">{{cite book| last=Scharf| title=History of Westchester County| year=1886| volume=2| page=190| chapter=II| url=http://www.rootsweb.com/~nywestch/towns/irvingtn.htm}}</ref><ref name="chamber">{{cite web|url=http://www.irvingtonnychamber.com/about_irvington_NY.html |title=About Irvington, NY |year=2007 |publisher=Village of Irvington Chamber of Commerce |access-date=May 14, 2009 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081206091628/http://www.irvingtonnychamber.com/about_irvington_NY.html |archive-date=December 6, 2008 }}</ref><ref name="living1992">{{cite news| url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/04/19/realestate/if-you-re-thinking-of-living-in-irvington.html| title= If You're Thinking of Living in: Irvington| last=Vizard| first=Mary McAleer| date=April 19, 1992| work=New York Times| access-date=May 14, 2009}}</ref>


The town of [[Knickerbocker, Texas]], was founded by two of Irving's nephews, who named it in honor of their uncle's literary pseudonym.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://irvingtx.net/common/irving-history.html|website=IrvingTX.net|title=Irving History|access-date=March 28, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110818163830/http://irvingtx.net/common/irving-history.html|archive-date=August 18, 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> The city of [[Irving, Texas]], states that it is named for Washington Irving.<ref>{{cite web|title=Declaration that Irving, TX is named for Washington Irving.|url=http://cityofirving.org/documentcenter/view/6461|access-date=September 26, 2014}}</ref>
The [[Irving Trust]] Corporation (now the [[Bank of New York Mellon Corporation]]) was named after him. Since there was not yet a federal currency in 1851, each bank issued its own paper and those institutions with the most appealing names found their certificates more widely accepted. His portrait appeared on the bank's notes and contributed to their wide appeal.


[[Irvington, New Jersey]] is also named after Irving. It was incorporated on March 27, 1874, from parts of Clinton Township (Clinton Township is now part of [[Newark, New Jersey]] since 1902).
In his biography of Christopher Columbus,<ref>See Irving, 1828; and his 1829 abridged version.</ref> Irving introduced the erroneous idea that Europeans believed the world to be flat prior to the discovery of the New World.<ref>See Irving, 1829, Chapter VII: "Columbus before the council at Salamanca", pp. 40-47, especially p. 43.</ref> Borrowed from Irving, the [[Flat Earth|flat-Earth myth]] has been taught in schools as fact to many generations of Americans.<ref>Grant (Edward), 2001, p. 342.</ref><ref>Grant (John), 2006, p. 32, in the subsection "The Earth - Flat or Hollow?" beginning at p. 30, within Chapter 1 "Worlds in Upheval".</ref>


Irving Street in [[San Francisco]] is named after him.<ref>''The Chronicle'' April 12, 1987, p.6</ref>
===Memorials===


The [[Irving Park, Chicago|Irving Park]] neighborhood in Chicago are named for him as well, though the original name of the subdivision was Irvington and then later Irving Park before annexation to Chicago.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/655.html|title=Irving Park|website=www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org}}</ref> The major Chicago thoroughfare [[Illinois Route 19]] is also named Irving Park Road.
Washington Irving's home, [[Sunnyside (Tarrytown, New York)|Sunnyside]], is still standing, just south of the [[Tappan Zee Bridge]] in [[Tarrytown, New York]]. The original house and the surrounding property were once owned by 18th-century colonialist [[Wolfert Acker]], about whom Irving wrote his sketch ''Wolfert's Roost'' (the name of the house). The house is now owned and operated as a historic site by [[Historic Hudson Valley]] and is open to the public for tours. The [[Washington Irving Memorial]] by [[Daniel Chester French]] stands near the entrance to Sunnyside in the village of [[Irvington, New York|Irvington]], which renamed itself from Dearman in his memory, and visitors to [[Christ Episcopal Church (Tarrytown, New York)|Christ Episcopal Church]] in nearby [[Tarrytown, New York|Tarrytown]], where he served as a [[vestry]]man in the last years of his life, can see his [[pew]]. His name is also frequently mentioned in [[Joseph Heller|Joseph Heller's]] novel ''[[Catch-22]]'' in a recurring theme where is name is signed by other people to documents which triggers several military investigations as to who Washington Irving is. Throughout the United States, there are many [[Washington Irving School|schools named after Irving]] or after places in his fictional works. A [[Washington Irving Memorial Park and Arboretum]] exists in Oklahoma.


[[Honesdale Star Park|Gibbons Memorial Park]], located in [[Honesdale, Pennsylvania]], is located on Irving Cliff, which was named after him.<ref>"[http://www.waynehistorypa.org/page/irving-cliff Washington Irving, Irving Cliff and the Ill-fated Irving Cliff Hotel] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191119063959/http://www.waynehistorypa.org/page/irving-cliff |date=November 19, 2019 }}", Wayne County Historical Society]</ref>
==List of works==

{| class="wikitable" align="center" cellpadding="7" style="clear:both;"
The [[Irvington Historic District (Indianapolis)|Irvington]] neighborhood in Indianapolis is also one of the many communities named after him.<ref>[https://irvingtondevelopment.org/why-we-do/about-irvington/ Irvington Development Organization]</ref>
|-align="center" bgcolor="#696969"

!<div align="left">Title</div>!!<div align="left">Publication date</div>!!<div align="left">Written As</div>!!<div align="left">Genre</div>
Irving College (1838–1890) in [[Irving College, Tennessee]], was named for Irving.<ref>Larry Miller, ''[https://books.google.com/books?id=zOzPQYkkbaAC&vq Tennessee Place Names]'' (Indiana University Press, 2001), p. 107.</ref>
|-valign="top"

|''[[Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle]]''
There is a statue of Irving in Granada, Spain.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.alhambra-patronato.es/edificios-lugares/monumento-a-washington-irving|title=Monumento a Washington Irving|website=Patronato de la Alhambra y Generalife|access-date=January 24, 2024|language=es}}</ref>

The Village of North Tarrytown, New York, changed its name to Sleepy Hollow in 1996 to honor Washington Irving and capitalize on the popularity of the story "The Legend Of Sleepy Hollow".<ref>{{Cite web |last=Feloni |first=Richard |title=How the 'Legend of Sleepy Hollow' saved a tiny industrial town in New York |url=https://www.businessinsider.com/how-sleepy-hollow-saved-north-tarrytown-2015-10 |access-date=January 16, 2024 |website=Business Insider |language=en-US}}</ref>

[[Washington Irving Memorial Park and Arboretum]], located in [[Bixby, Oklahoma]], is named in honor of Washington Irving and features an amphitheater stage with a replica façade of his Sunnyside home. The home includes a statue of Irving seated on the porch of the home. Among the tributes to Irving are memorials to the victims of the Oklahoma City Bombing and the World Trade Center attacks, with a steel beam from the towers on display. The park is also the site of local community events, including the annual Bixby BBQ and Blues festival.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.travelok.com/listings/view.profile/id.23900 | title=Washington Irving Memorial Park & Arboretum }}</ref>

==Works==
{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"
|+ Works by Washington Irving
|-
!scope="col"| Title
!scope="col"| Publication date
!scope="col"| Written as
!scope="col"| Genre
|-
|-
!scope="row"|''[[Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle, Gent.|Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle]]''
|1802
|1802
|Jonathan Oldstyle
|Jonathan Oldstyle
|Observational Letters
|Observational letters
|-
|-valign="top"
|''[[Salmagundi (periodical)|Salmagundi]]''
!scope="row"|''[[Salmagundi (periodical)|Salmagundi]]''
|1807–1808
|1807-1808
|Launcelot Langstaff, Will Wizard
|Launcelot Langstaff, Will Wizard
|Periodical
|Satire
|-
|-valign="top"
|''[[A History of New York]]''
!scope="row"|''[[A History of New York]]''
|1809
|1809
|Diedrich Knickerbocker
|Diedrich Knickerbocker
|Satire
|Satire
|-
|-valign="top"
|''[[The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon|The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.]]''
!scope="row"|''[[The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent.]]''
|1819–1820
|1819-1820
|Geoffrey Crayon
|Geoffrey Crayon
|Short stories/Essays
|Short stories/essays
|-
|-valign="top"
|''[[Bracebridge Hall]]''
!scope="row"|''[[Bracebridge Hall]]''
|1822
|1822
|Geoffrey Crayon
|Geoffrey Crayon
|Short stories/Essays
|Short stories/essays
|-
|-valign="top"
|''[[Tales of a Traveller]]''
!scope="row"|''[[Tales of a Traveller]]''
|1824
|1824
|Geoffrey Crayon
|Geoffrey Crayon
|Short stories/Essays
|Short stories/essays
|-
|-valign="top"
|''[[The Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus]]''
!scope="row"|''[[A History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus]]''
|1828
|1828
|Washington Irving
|Washington Irving
|Biography/Historical novel
|Biography
|-
|-valign="top"
|''The Chronicles of the Conquest of Granada''
!scope="row"|''[[A Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada]]''
|1829
|1829
|Fray Antonio Agapida<ref>Irving's publisher, John Murray, overrode Irving's decision to use this pseudonym and published the book under Irving's name—much to the annoyance of its author. See Jones 258-59.</ref>
|Fray Antonio Agapida<ref>Irving's publisher, John Murray, overrode Irving's decision to use this pseudonym and published the book under Irving's name—much to the annoyance of its author. See Jones 258—259.</ref>
|Romantic history
|Romantic history
|-
!scope="row"|''Voyages and Discoveries of the Companions of Columbus''
|-valign="top"
|''Voyages and Discoveries</br>of the Companions of Columbus''
|1831
|1831
|Washington Irving
|Washington Irving
|Biography/History
|Biography/history
|-
|-valign="top"
|''[[Tales of the Alhambra]]''
!scope="row"|''[[Tales of the Alhambra]]''
|1832
|1832
|"The Author of the Sketch Book"
|"The Author of the Sketch Book"
|Short stories/Travel
|Short stories/travel
|-
|-valign="top"
|''The Crayon Miscellany''<ref>Comprised of the three short stories "A Tour on the Prairies", "Abbotsford and Newstead Abbey", and "Legends of the Conquest of Spain".</ref>
!scope="row"|''The Crayon Miscellany''<ref>Composed of the three short stories "A Tour on the Prairies", "Abbotsford and Newstead Abbey", and "Legends of the Conquest of Spain".</ref>
|1835
|1835
|Geoffrey Crayon
|Geoffrey Crayon
|Short stories
|Short stories
|-
|-valign="top"
|''[[Astoria (book)|Astoria]]''
!scope="row"|''[[Astoria (book)|Astoria]]''
|1836
|1836
|Washington Irving
|Washington Irving
|Biography/History
|History
|-
|-valign="top"
|''The Adventures of Captain Bonneville''
!scope="row"|''The Adventures of Captain Bonneville''
|1837
|1837
|Washington Irving
|Washington Irving
|Biography/Romantic History
|Biography/romantic history
|-
|-valign="top"
|''The Life of Oliver Goldsmith''
!scope="row"|''The Life of Oliver Goldsmith''
|1840</br>(revised 1849)
|1840<br />(revised 1849)
|Washington Irving
|Washington Irving
|Biography
|Biography
|-
|-valign="top"
|''Biography and Poetical Remains</br>of the Late Margaret Miller Davidson''
!scope="row"|''Biography and Poetical Remains of the Late Margaret Miller Davidson''
|1841
|1841
|Washington Irving
|Washington Irving
|Biography
|Biography
|-
|-valign="top"
|''Mahomet and His Successors''
!scope="row"|''[[Mahomet and His Successors]]''
|1850
|1850
|Washington Irving
|Washington Irving
|Biography
|Biography
|-
|-valign="top"
|''Wolfert's Roost''
!scope="row"|''Wolfert's Roost''
|1855
|1855
|Geoffrey Crayon</br>Diedrich Knickerbocker</br>Washington Irving
|Geoffrey Crayon<br />Diedrich Knickerbocker<br />Washington Irving
|Short stories/essays
|Biography
|-
|-valign="top"
|''The Life of George Washington'' (5 volumes)
!scope="row"|''The Life of George Washington'' (5 volumes)
|1855–1859
|1855-1859
|Washington Irving
|Washington Irving
|Biography
|Biography
|-
!scope="row"|''Moorish Chronicles''
|1891<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=_5RDAQAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false original date not stated]</ref>
|Washington Irving
|History
|}
|}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|30em}}
===Notes===
{{reflist|3}}


===Bibliography===
==Further reading==
* Burstein, Andrew. ''The Original Knickerbocker: The Life of Washington Irving''. (Basic Books, 2007). ISBN 978-0-465-00853-7
* Aderman, Ralph M. ed. ''Critical essays on Washington Irving'' (1990) [https://archive.org/details/criticalessayson00ader online]
* Apap, Christopher, and Tracy Hoffman. "Prospects for the Study of Washington Irving". ''Resources for American Literary Study'' 35 (2010): 3–27. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/26367275 online]
* Bowden, Edwin T. ''Washington Irving bibliography'' (1989) [https://archive.org/details/washingtonirving0030bowd online]
* Brodwin, Stanley. ''The Old and New World romanticism of Washington Irving'' (1986) [https://archive.org/details/oldnewworldrom00brod online]
* Brooks, Van Wyck. ''The World Of Washington Irving'' (1944) [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.234731/page/n5/mode/2up online]
* Burstein, Andrew. ''The Original Knickerbocker: The Life of Washington Irving''. (Basic Books, 2007). {{ISBN|978-0-465-00853-7}}
* Burstein, Andrew, and Nancy Isenberg, eds. ''Rip Van Winkle’s Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory'' (Louisiana State University Press, 2022) [http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=58572 online review]
* [[Claude Bowers|Bowers, Claude G]]. ''The Spanish Adventures of Washington Irving''. (Riverside Press, 1940).
* [[Claude Bowers|Bowers, Claude G]]. ''The Spanish Adventures of Washington Irving''. (Riverside Press, 1940).
* Hedges, William L. ''Washington Irving: An American Study, 1802–1832'' (Johns Hopkins UP, 2019).
* Hellman, George S. ''Washington Irving, Esquire''. (Alfred A. Knopf, 1925).
* Hellman, George S. ''Washington Irving, Esquire''. (Alfred A. Knopf, 1925).
* Irvine, James M. ''The Genealogy of Washington Irving'' (Ashtead, 2019). ISBN 978-1-78955-477-9
* Grant, Edward. (2001) ''God & Reason in the Middle Ages'', Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-80279-2 hardcover; ISBN 978-0-521-00337-7 softcover.
* Jones, Brian Jay. ''Washington Irving: An American Original''. (Arcade, 2008). {{ISBN|978-1-55970-836-4}}
* Grant, John. (2006) ''Discarded Science: Ideas that seemed good at the time ...'' [sic], ff&f (Facts, Figures & Fun), publisher, ISBN 978-1-904332-49-7 hardcover.
* LeMenager, Stephanie. "Trading Stories: Washington Irving and the Global West". ''American Literary History'' 15.4 (2003): 683–708. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/3567928 online]
* McGann, Jerome. "Washington Irving", A History of New York", and American History". ''Early American Literature'' 47.2 (2012): 349–376. [https://www.jstor.org/stable/41705664 online].
* Myers, Andrew B., ed. ''A Century of commentary on the works of Washington Irving, 1860–1974'' (1975) [https://archive.org/details/centuryofcomment00myer online]
* Pollard, Finn. "From beyond the grave and across the ocean: Washington Irving and the problem of being a questioning American, 1809–20". ''American Nineteenth Century History'' 8.1 (2007): 81–101.
* Springer, Haskell S. ''Washington Irving: a reference guide'' (1976) [https://archive.org/details/washingtonirving00spri online]
* Williams, Stanley T. ''The Life of Washington Irving.'' 2 vols. (Oxford UP, 1935). [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.3294 vol 1 online]; also [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.3297 vol 2 online]

===Primary sources===
* Irving, Pierre M. ''Life and Letters of Washington Irving''. 4 vols. (G.P. Putnam, 1862). Cited herein as PMI.
* Irving, Pierre M. ''Life and Letters of Washington Irving''. 4 vols. (G.P. Putnam, 1862). Cited herein as PMI.
* Irving, Washington. ''The Complete Works of Washington Irving''. (Rust, ''et al'', editors). 30 vols. (University of Wisconsin/Twayne, 1969-1986). Cited herein as ''Works''.
* Irving, Washington. ''The Complete Works of Washington Irving''. (Rust, ''et al.'', editors). 30 vols. (University of Wisconsin/Twayne, 1969–1986). Cited herein as ''Works''.
* Irving, Washington. (1828) ''History of the Life of Christopher Columbus'', 3 volumes, 1828, G. & C. Carvill, publishers, New York, New York; as 4 volumes, 1828, John Murray, publisher, London; and as 4 volumes, 1828, Paris A. and W. Galignani, publishers, France.
* Irving, Washington. (1828) ''History of the Life of Christopher Columbus'', 3 volumes, 1828, G. & C. Carvill, publishers, New York, New York; as 4 volumes, 1828, John Murray, publisher, London; and as 4 volumes, 1828, Paris A. and W. Galignani, publishers, France.
* Irving, Washington. (1829) ''The Life and Voyage of Christopher Columbus'', 1 volume, 1829, G. & C. & H. Carvill, publishers, New York, New York; an abridged version prepared by Irving of his 1828 work.
* Irving, Washington. (1829) ''The Life and Voyage of Christopher Columbus'', 1 volume, 1829, G. & C. & H. Carvill, publishers, New York, New York; an abridged version prepared by Irving of his 1828 work.
* Irving, Washington. ''Selected writings of Washington Irving'' (Modern Library edition, 1945) [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.186771/page/n3/mode/2up online]
* Jones, Brian Jay. ''Washington Irving: An American Original''. (Arcade, 2008). ISBN 978-1-55970-836-4
* [[Charles Dudley Warner|Warner, Charles Dudley]]. ''Washington Irving''. (Riverside Press, 1881).
* Williams, Stanley T. ''The Life of Washington Irving.'' 2 vols. (Oxford University Press, 1935). ISBN 0781252911


==External links==
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
{{wikisource author}}
{{wikisource author}}
{{commons}}
{{commons}}
{{GeoGroup}}
*[http://www.archive.org/search.php?query=mediatype%3A(texts)%20-contributor%3Agutenberg%20AND%20(subject%3A%22Irving%2C%20Washington%2C%201783-1859%22%20OR%20creator%3A%22Irving%2C%20Washington%2C%201783-1859%22) Works by or about Washington Irving] at [[Internet Archive]] (scanned books original editions color illustrated)
* {{StandardEbooks|Standard Ebooks URL=https://standardebooks.org/ebooks/washington-irving}}
*[http://www.gutenberg.org/browse/authors/i#a34 Works by Washington Irving] at [[Project Gutenberg]] (plain text and HTML)
* {{Gutenberg author | id=34 }}
*[http://quotationpark.com/authors/IRVING,%20Washington.html Famous Quotes by Washington Irving]
* {{Internet Archive author |sname=Washington Irving}}
*[http://www.hudsonvalley.org/content/view/13/43/ Washington Irving's Sunnyside]
* {{Librivox author |id=1743}}
* [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ft738nb30f Timothy Hopkins' Washington Irving collection, 1683-1839](5 volumes) is housed in the [http://library.stanford.edu/depts/spc/spc.html Department of Special Collections and University Archives] at [http://library.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Libraries]
* [http://digital.lib.lehigh.edu/remain/search.php?searchletters=authsearch181 Washington Irving letters] at Lehigh University's [http://digital.lib.lehigh.edu/remain/index.html I&nbsp;Remain: A Digital Archive of Letters, Manuscripts, and Ephemera]
* [http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/mountholyoke/mshm083_main.html Irving letter, 1854] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150403113153/http://asteria.fivecolleges.edu/findaids/mountholyoke/mshm083_main.html |date=April 3, 2015 }}, Mount Holyoke College Archives and Special Collections
* [http://theotherpages.org/poems/poem-ij.html#irving Washington Irving at Poets' Corner] (theOtherPages.org/poems)
<!-- above this line June 2022: works available online -->
* [[s:A day with Washington Irving|"A Day with Washington Irving"]], published 1859 in ''[[Once a Week (magazine)|Once a Week]]''
* [http://www.spainisculture.com//en/rutas_culturales/ruta_de_washington_irving.html Washington Irving Cultural Route] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140619220934/http://www.spainisculture.com/en/rutas_culturales/ruta_de_washington_irving.html |date=June 19, 2014 }} in Spain
* {{LCAuth|n79005645|Washington Irving|988|}}
* [http://archives.nypl.org/brg/19103 Finding Aid for the Washington Irving Collection of Papers, 1805–1933], at the [[New York Public Library]]
* [http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/ft738nb30f Guide to Timothy Hopkins' Washington Irving collection, 1683–1839] – five 5 volumes of letters at the [http://library.stanford.edu/depts/spc/spc.html Department of Special Collections and University Archives] at [http://library.stanford.edu/ Stanford University Libraries]
* [https://www.loc.gov/rr/rarebook/coll/irving.html The Washington Irving Collection], Rare Book and Special Collection Division at the [[Library of Congress]]
* [[hdl:10079/fa/beinecke.irving|Washington Irving Collection]], Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library


{{start box}}
{{s-start}}
{{s-dip}}
{{s-dip}}
{{s-bef|before = [[Aaron Vail]]}}
{{succession box
| title=[[United States Ambassador to Spain|U.S. Minister to Spain]]
{{s-ttl|title = [[United States Ambassador to Spain|U.S. Minister to Spain]]|years = 1842–1846}}
{{s-aft|after = [[Romulus Mitchell Saunders|Romulus M. Saunders]]}}
| before=[[Aaron Vail]]
{{s-end}}
| after=[[Romulus Mitchell Saunders|Romulus M. Saunders]]
{{Washington Irving}}
| years=1842–1846
{{Navboxes
|title=Links to related articles
|list1=
{{Romanticism}}
{{Sleepy Hollow}}
{{Rip Van Winkle}}
{{Hall of Fame for Great Americans}}
{{US Ambassadors to Spain}}
}}
}}
{{end box}}
{{Authority control}}


{{Sleepy Hollow}}

<!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]] -->
{{Persondata
|NAME= Irving, Washington
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
|SHORT DESCRIPTION= American short story writer, essayist, biographer
|DATE OF BIRTH= April 3, 1783
|PLACE OF BIRTH= [[Manhattan]], [[New York]], [[United States]]
|DATE OF DEATH= November 28, 1859
|PLACE OF DEATH=
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Irving, Washington}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Irving, Washington}}
[[Category:Washington Irving| ]]
[[Category:1783 births]]
[[Category:1859 deaths]]
[[Category:American biographers]]
[[Category:American biographers]]
[[Category:American diplomats]]
[[Category:American male biographers]]
[[Category:American essayists]]
[[Category:American essayists]]
[[Category:American satirists]]
[[Category:American satirists]]
[[Category:American short story writers]]
[[Category:American speculative fiction writers]]
[[Category:American travel writers]]
[[Category:American travel writers]]
[[Category:English Americans]]
[[Category:American people of English descent]]
[[Category:Scottish-Americans]]
[[Category:American people of Scottish descent]]
[[Category:New York lawyers]]
[[Category:Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences]]
[[Category:Writers from New York]]
[[Category:New York (state) lawyers]]
[[Category:People from Manhattan]]
[[Category:Writers from Manhattan]]
[[Category:Romanticism]]
[[Category:Writers of the Romantic era]]
[[Category:United States ambassadors to Spain]]
[[Category:Ambassadors of the United States to Spain]]
[[Category:1783 births]]
[[Category:American Hispanists]]
[[Category:1859 deaths]]
[[Category:Masterpiece Museum]]
[[Category:Burials at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery]]

[[Category:19th-century American diplomats]]
[[az:Vaşinqton İrvinq]]
[[Category:Hall of Fame for Great Americans inductees]]
[[be-x-old:Ўошынгтан Ірвінг]]
[[Category:American male dramatists and playwrights]]
[[bg:Уошингтън Ървинг]]
[[Category:American male short story writers]]
[[ca:Washington Irving]]
[[Category:19th-century American short story writers]]
[[cv:Вашингтон Ирвинг]]
[[Category:19th-century American dramatists and playwrights]]
[[da:Washington Irving]]
[[Category:American male essayists]]
[[de:Washington Irving]]
[[Category:Presidents of the New York Public Library]]
[[es:Washington Irving]]
[[Category:19th-century pseudonymous writers]]
[[eo:Washington Irving]]
[[eu:Washington Irving]]
[[fa:واشنگتن ایروینگ]]
[[fr:Washington Irving]]
[[it:Washington Irving]]
[[nl:Washington Irving]]
[[ja:ワシントン・アーヴィング]]
[[pl:Washington Irving]]
[[pt:Washington Irving]]
[[ru:Ирвинг, Вашингтон]]
[[sv:Washington Irving]]
[[vi:Washington Irving]]
[[tg:Вашингтон Ирвинг]]
[[tr:Washington Irving]]

Latest revision as of 17:24, 8 January 2025

Washington Irving
Daguerreotype of Washington Irving (modern copy by Mathew Brady, original by John Plumbe)
Daguerreotype of Washington Irving
(modern copy by Mathew Brady,
original by John Plumbe)
Born(1783-04-03)April 3, 1783
New York City, U.S.
DiedNovember 28, 1859(1859-11-28) (aged 76)
Sunnyside, Tarrytown, New York, U.S.
Resting placeSleepy Hollow Cemetery, New York
Pen nameGeoffrey Crayon, Diedrich Knickerbocker, Jonathan Oldstyle
Occupation
  • Short story writer
  • essayist
  • biographer
  • historian
  • diplomat
LanguageEnglish
Literary movementRomanticism
RelativesWilliam Irving (brother)
Peter Irving (brother)
Signature
United States Minister to Spain
In office
1842–1846
PresidentJohn Tyler
James K. Polk
Preceded byAaron Vail
Succeeded byRomulus Mitchell Saunders

Washington Irving (April 3, 1783 – November 28, 1859) was an American short-story writer, essayist, biographer, historian, and diplomat of the early 19th century. He wrote the short stories "Rip Van Winkle" (1819) and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" (1820), both of which appear in his collection The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. His historical works include biographies of Oliver Goldsmith, Muhammad, and George Washington, as well as several histories of 15th-century Spain that deal with subjects such as the Alhambra, Christopher Columbus, and the Moors. Irving served as American ambassador to Spain in the 1840s.

Irving was born and raised in Manhattan to a merchant family. He made his literary debut in 1802 with a series of observational letters to the Morning Chronicle, written under the pseudonym Jonathan Oldstyle. He temporarily moved to England for the family business in 1815, where he achieved fame with the publication of The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. which was serialized from 1819 to 1820. He continued to publish regularly throughout his life, and he completed a five-volume biography of George Washington just eight months before his death at age 76 in Tarrytown, New York.

Irving was one of the first American writers to earn acclaim in Europe, and he encouraged other American authors such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Herman Melville, and Edgar Allan Poe. He was also admired by some British writers, including Lord Byron, Thomas Campbell, Charles Dickens, Mary Shelley, Francis Jeffrey, and Walter Scott. He advocated for writing as a legitimate profession and argued for stronger laws to protect American writers from copyright infringement.

Biography

[edit]

Early years

[edit]

Washington Irving's parents were William Irving Sr., originally of Quholm, Shapinsay, Orkney, Scotland, and Sarah (née Saunders), originally of Falmouth, Cornwall, England. They married in 1761 while William was serving as a petty officer in the British Navy. They had eleven children, eight of whom survived to adulthood. Their first two sons died in infancy, both named William, as did their fourth child John. Their surviving children were William Jr. (1766), Ann (1770), Peter (1771), Catherine (1774), Ebenezer (1776), John Treat (1778), Sarah (1780), and Washington.[1][2]

Watercolor of Washington Irving's encounter with George Washington, painted in 1854 by George Bernard Butler Jr.

The Irving family settled in Manhattan, and were part of the city's merchant class. Washington was born on April 3, 1783,[1] the same week that New York City residents learned of the British ceasefire which ended the American Revolution. Irving's mother named him after George Washington.[3] Irving met his namesake at age 6 when George Washington came to New York just before his inauguration as President in 1789. The President blessed young Irving,[4] an encounter that Irving had commemorated in a small watercolor painting which continues to hang in his home.[5]

The Irvings lived at 131 William Street at the time of Washington's birth, but they later moved across the street to 128 William Street.[6] Several of Irving's brothers became active New York merchants; they encouraged his literary aspirations, often supporting him financially as he pursued his writing career.

Irving was an uninterested student who preferred adventure stories and drama, and he regularly sneaked out of class in the evenings to attend the theater by the time he was 14.[7] An outbreak of yellow fever in Manhattan in 1798 prompted his family to send him upriver, where he stayed with his friend James Kirke Paulding in Tarrytown, New York. It was in Tarrytown where he became familiar with the bucolic beauty of the region with its Dutch customs and local ghost stories.[8] Though the town of Sleepy Hollow did not exist in Irving's time (North Tarrytown changed its name to Sleepy Hollow in 1996), the area had been known as Slapershaven or "Sleeper's Haven" by the Dutch.[9] Irving made several other trips up the Hudson as a teenager, including an extended visit to Johnstown, New York, where he passed through the Catskill Mountains region, the setting for "Rip Van Winkle". "Of all the scenery of the Hudson", Irving wrote, "the Kaatskill Mountains had the most witching effect on my boyish imagination".[10]

Irving began writing letters to the New York Morning Chronicle in 1802 when he was 19, submitting commentaries on the city's social and theater scene under the pseudonym Jonathan Oldstyle. The name evoked his Federalist leanings[11] and was the first of many pseudonyms he employed throughout his career. The letters brought Irving some early fame and moderate notoriety. Aaron Burr was a co-publisher of the Chronicle, and was impressed enough to send clippings of the Oldstyle pieces to his daughter Theodosia. Charles Brockden Brown made a trip to New York to try to recruit Oldstyle for a literary magazine he was editing in Philadelphia.[12]

Concerned for his health, Irving's brothers financed an extended tour of Europe from 1804 to 1806. He bypassed most of the sites and locations considered essential for the social development of a young man, to the dismay of his brother William who wrote that he was pleased that his brother's health was improving, but he did not like the choice to "gallop through Italy… leaving Florence on your left and Venice on your right".[13] Instead, Irving honed the social and conversational skills that eventually made him one of the world's most in-demand guests.[14] "I endeavor to take things as they come with cheerfulness", Irving wrote, "and when I cannot get a dinner to suit my taste, I endeavor to get a taste to suit my dinner".[15] While visiting Rome in 1805, Irving struck up a friendship with painter Washington Allston[13] and was almost persuaded into a career as a painter. "My lot in life, however, was differently cast".[16]

First major writings

[edit]
Matilda Hoffman, portrait by Anson Dickinson

Irving returned from Europe to study law with his legal mentor Judge Josiah Ogden Hoffman in New York City. By his own admission, he was not a good student and barely passed the bar examination in 1806.[17] He began socializing with a group of literate young men whom he dubbed "The Lads of Kilkenny",[18] and he created the literary magazine Salmagundi in January 1807 with his brother William and his friend James Kirke Paulding, writing under various pseudonyms, such as William Wizard and Launcelot Langstaff. Irving lampooned New York culture and politics in a manner similar to the 20th century Mad magazine.[19] Salmagundi was a moderate success, spreading Irving's name and reputation beyond New York. He gave New York City the nickname "Gotham" in its 17th issue dated November 11, 1807, an Anglo-Saxon word meaning "Goat's Town".[20]

The fictional "Diedrich Knickerbocker" from the frontispiece of A History of New York, a wash drawing by Felix O. C. Darley
Portrait of Washington Irving by John Wesley Jarvis from 1809

Irving completed A History of New-York from the Beginning of the World to the End of the Dutch Dynasty, by Diedrich Knickerbocker (1809) while mourning the death of his 17-year-old fiancée Matilda Hoffman. It was his first major book and a satire on self-important local history and contemporary politics. Before its publication, Irving started a hoax by placing a series of missing person advertisements in the New York Evening Post seeking information on Diedrich Knickerbocker, a crusty Dutch historian who had allegedly gone missing from his hotel in New York City. As part of the ruse, he placed a notice from the hotel's proprietor informing readers that, if Mr. Knickerbocker failed to return to the hotel to pay his bill, he would publish a manuscript that Knickerbocker had left behind.[21]

Unsuspecting readers followed the story of Knickerbocker and his manuscript with interest, and some New York city officials were concerned enough about the missing historian to offer a reward for his safe return. Irving then published A History of New York on December 6, 1809, under the Knickerbocker pseudonym, with immediate critical and popular success.[22] "It took with the public", Irving remarked, "and gave me celebrity, as an original work was something remarkable and uncommon in America".[23] The name Diedrich Knickerbocker became a nickname for Manhattan residents in general and was adopted by the New York Knickerbockers basketball team.[24]

After the success of A History of New York, Irving searched for a job and eventually became an editor of Analectic Magazine, where he wrote biographies of naval heroes such as James Lawrence and Oliver Hazard Perry.[25] He was also among the first magazine editors to reprint Francis Scott Key's poem "Defense of Fort McHenry", which was immortalized as "The Star-Spangled Banner".[26] Irving initially opposed the War of 1812 like many other merchants, but the British attack on Washington, D.C., in 1814 convinced him to enlist.[27] He served on the staff of Daniel Tompkins, governor of New York and commander of the New York State Militia, but he saw no real action apart from a reconnaissance mission in the Great Lakes region.[28] The war was disastrous for many American merchants, including Irving's family, and he left for England in mid-1815 to salvage the family trading company. He remained in Europe for the next 17 years.[29]

Life in Europe

[edit]

The Sketch Book

[edit]
The front page of The Sketch Book (1819)

Irving spent the next two years trying to bail out the family firm financially but eventually had to declare bankruptcy.[30] With no job prospects, he continued writing throughout 1817 and 1818. In the summer of 1817, he visited Walter Scott, beginning a lifelong personal and professional friendship.[31]

Irving composed the short story "Rip Van Winkle" overnight while staying with his sister Sarah and her husband, Henry van Wart, in Birmingham, England, a place that inspired other works as well.[32] In October 1818, Irving's brother William secured for Irving a post as chief clerk to the United States Navy and urged him to return home.[33] Irving turned the offer down, opting to stay in England to pursue a writing career.[34]

In the spring of 1819, Irving sent to his brother Ebenezer in New York a set of short prose pieces that he asked be published as The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. The first installment, containing "Rip Van Winkle", was an enormous success, and the rest of the work was equally successful; it was issued in 1819–1820 in seven installments in New York and in two volumes in London ("The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" appeared in the sixth issue of the New York edition and the second volume of the London edition).[35]

Like many successful authors of this era, Irving struggled against literary bootleggers.[36] In England, some of his sketches were reprinted in periodicals without his permission, a legal practice as there was no international copyright law at the time. To prevent further piracy in Britain, Irving paid to have the first four American installments published as a single volume by John Miller in London.

Irving appealed to Walter Scott for help procuring a more reputable publisher for the remainder of the book. Scott referred Irving to his own publisher, London powerhouse John Murray, who agreed to take on The Sketch Book.[37] From then on, Irving would publish concurrently in the United States and Britain to protect his copyright, with Murray as his English publisher of choice.[38]

Irving's reputation soared, and for the next two years, he led an active social life in Paris and Great Britain, where he was often feted as an anomaly of literature: an upstart American who dared to write English well.[39]

Bracebridge Hall and Tales of a Traveller

[edit]
Portrait of Irving in about 1820, attributed to Charles Robert Leslie

With both Irving and publisher John Murray eager to follow up on the success of The Sketch Book, Irving spent much of 1821 traveling in Europe in search of new material, reading widely in Dutch and German folk tales. Hampered by writer's block—and depressed by the death of his brother William—Irving worked slowly, finally delivering a completed manuscript to Murray in March 1822. The book, Bracebridge Hall, or The Humorists, A Medley (the location was based loosely on Aston Hall, occupied by members of the Bracebridge family, near his sister's home in Birmingham) was published in June 1822.

The format of Bracebridge was similar to that of The Sketch Book, with Irving, as Crayon, narrating a series of more than 50 loosely connected short stories and essays. While some reviewers thought Bracebridge to be a lesser imitation of The Sketch Book, the book was well received by readers and critics.[40] "We have received so much pleasure from this book", wrote critic Francis Jeffrey in the Edinburgh Review, "that we think ourselves bound in gratitude... to make a public acknowledgement of it".[41] Irving was relieved at its reception, which did much to cement his reputation with European readers.

Still struggling with writer's block, Irving traveled to Germany, settling in Dresden in the winter of 1822. Here he dazzled the royal family and attached himself to Amelia Foster, an American living in Dresden with her five children.[42] The 39-year-old Irving was particularly attracted to Foster's 18-year-old daughter Emily and vied in frustration for her hand. Emily finally refused his offer of marriage in the spring of 1823.[43]

He returned to Paris and began collaborating with playwright John Howard Payne on translations of French plays for the English stage, with little success. He also learned through Payne that the novelist Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley was romantically interested in him, though Irving never pursued the relationship.[44]

In August 1824, Irving published the collection of essays Tales of a Traveller—including the short story "The Devil and Tom Walker"—under his Geoffrey Crayon persona. "I think there are in it some of the best things I have ever written", Irving told his sister.[45] But while the book sold respectably, Traveller was dismissed by critics, who panned both Traveller and its author. "The public have been led to expect better things", wrote the United States Literary Gazette, while the New-York Mirror pronounced Irving "overrated".[46] Hurt and depressed by the book's reception, Irving retreated to Paris where he spent the next year worrying about finances and scribbling down ideas for projects that never materialized.[47]

Spanish books

[edit]

While in Paris, Irving received a letter from Alexander Hill Everett on January 30, 1826. Everett, recently the American Minister to Spain, urged Irving to join him in Madrid,[48] noting that a number of manuscripts dealing with the Spanish conquest of the Americas had recently been made public. Irving left for Madrid and enthusiastically began scouring the Spanish archives for colorful material.[49]

The Alhambra palace in Granada, southern Spain, where Irving briefly resided in 1829, inspired one of his most colorful books.

With full access to the American consul's massive library of Spanish history, Irving began working on several books at once. The first offspring of this hard work, A History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus, was published in January 1828. The book was popular in the United States and in Europe and would have 175 editions published before the end of the century.[50] It was also the first project of Irving's to be published with his own name, instead of a pseudonym, on the title page.[51] Irving was invited to stay at the palace of the Duke of Gor, who gave him unfettered access to his library containing many medieval manuscripts.[52]A Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada was published a year later,[53] followed by Voyages and Discoveries of the Companions of Columbus in 1831.[54]

Irving's writings on Columbus are a mixture of history and fiction, a genre now called romantic history. Irving based them on extensive research in the Spanish archives, but also added imaginative elements aimed at sharpening the story. The first of these works is the source of the durable myth that medieval Europeans believed the Earth was flat.[55] According to the popular book, Columbus proved the Earth was round.[56]

In 1829, Irving was elected to the American Philosophical Society.[57] That same year, he moved into Granada's ancient palace Alhambra, "determined to linger here", he said, "until I get some writings under way connected with the place".[58] Before he could get any significant writing underway, however, he was notified of his appointment as Secretary to the American Legation in London. Worried he would disappoint friends and family if he refused the position, Irving left Spain for England in July 1829.[59]

Secretary to the American legation in London

[edit]

Arriving in London, Irving joined the staff of American Minister Louis McLane. McLane immediately assigned the daily secretary work to another man and tapped Irving to fill the role of aide-de-camp. The two worked over the next year to negotiate a trade agreement between the United States and the British West Indies, finally reaching a deal in August 1830. That same year, Irving was awarded a medal by the Royal Society of Literature, followed by an honorary doctorate of civil law from Oxford in 1831.[60]

Following McLane's recall to the United States in 1831 to serve as Secretary of Treasury, Irving stayed on as the legation's chargé d'affaires until the arrival of Martin Van Buren, President Andrew Jackson's nominee for British Minister. With Van Buren in place, Irving resigned his post to concentrate on writing, eventually completing Tales of the Alhambra, which would be published concurrently in the United States and England in 1832.[61]

Irving was still in London when Van Buren received word that the United States Senate had refused to confirm him as the new Minister. Consoling Van Buren, Irving predicted that the Senate's partisan move would backfire. "I should not be surprised", Irving said, "if this vote of the Senate goes far toward elevating him to the presidential chair".[62]

Return to the United States

[edit]
Irving and his friends at Sunnyside

Irving arrived in New York on May 21, 1832, after 17 years abroad. That September, he accompanied Commissioner on Indian Affairs Henry Leavitt Ellsworth on a surveying mission, along with companions Charles La Trobe[63] and Count Albert-Alexandre de Pourtales, and they traveled deep into Indian Territory (now the state of Oklahoma).[64] At the completion of his western tour, Irving traveled through Washington, D.C., and Baltimore, where he became acquainted with politician and novelist John Pendleton Kennedy.[65]

Irving was frustrated by bad investments, so he turned to writing to generate additional income, beginning with A Tour on the Prairies which related his recent travels on the frontier. The book was another popular success and also the first book written and published by Irving in the United States since A History of New York in 1809.[66] In 1834, he was approached by fur magnate John Jacob Astor, who convinced him to write a history of his fur trading colony in Astoria, Oregon. Irving made quick work of Astor's project, shipping the fawning biographical account Astoria in February 1836.[67] In 1835, Irving, Astor, and a few others founded the Saint Nicholas Society in the City of New York.

During an extended stay at Astor's home, Irving met explorer Benjamin Bonneville and was intrigued with his maps and stories of the territories beyond the Rocky Mountains.[68] The two men met in Washington, D.C., several months later, and Bonneville sold his maps and rough notes to Irving for $1,000.[69] Irving used these materials as the basis for his 1837 book The Adventures of Captain Bonneville.[70] These three works made up Irving's "western" series of books and were written partly as a response to criticism that his time in England and Spain had made him more European than American.[71] Critics such as James Fenimore Cooper and Philip Freneau felt that he had turned his back on his American heritage in favor of English aristocracy.[72] Irving's western books were well received in the United States, particularly A Tour on the Prairies,[73] though British critics accused him of "book-making".[74]

Irving acquired his famous home in Tarrytown, New York, known as Sunnyside, in 1835.

In 1835, Irving purchased a "neglected cottage" and its surrounding riverfront property in Tarrytown, New York, which he named Sunnyside in 1841.[75] It required constant repair and renovation over the next 20 years, with costs continually escalating, so he reluctantly agreed to become a regular contributor to The Knickerbocker magazine in 1839, writing new essays and short stories under the Knickerbocker and Crayon pseudonyms.[76] He was regularly approached by aspiring young authors for advice or endorsement, including Edgar Allan Poe, who sought Irving's comments on "William Wilson" and "The Fall of the House of Usher".[77]

In 1837, a lady of Charleston, South Carolina brought to the attention of William Clancy, newly appointed bishop to Demerara, a passage in The Crayon Miscellany, and questioned whether it accurately reflected Catholic teaching or practice. The passage under "Newstead Abbey" read:

One of the parchment scrolls thus discovered, throws rather an awkward light upon the kind of life led by the friars of Newstead. It is an indulgence granted to them for a certain number of months, in which a plenary pardon is assured in advance for all kinds of crimes, among which, several of the most gross and sensual are specifically mentioned, and the weaknesses of the flesh to which they were prone.[78]

Clancy wrote to Irving, who "promptly aided the investigation into the truth, and promised to correct in future editions the misrepresentation complained of". Clancy traveled to his new posting by way of England, and bearing a letter of introduction from Irving, stopped at Newstead Abbey and was able to view the document to which Irving had alluded. Upon inspection, Clancy discovered that it was, in fact, not an indulgence issued to the friars from any ecclesiastical authority, but a pardon given by the king to some parties suspected of having broken "forest laws". Clancy requested the local pastor to forward his findings to Catholic periodicals in England, and upon publication, send a copy to Irving. Whether this was done is not clear as the disputed text remains in the 1849 edition.[79]

Irving also championed America's maturing literature, advocating stronger copyright laws to protect writers from the kind of piracy that had initially plagued The Sketch Book. Writing in the January 1840 issue of Knickerbocker, he openly endorsed copyright legislation pending in Congress. "We have a young literature", he wrote, "springing up and daily unfolding itself with wonderful energy and luxuriance, which … deserves all its fostering care". The legislation, however, did not pass at that time.[80]

In 1841, Irving was elected to the National Academy of Design as an Honorary Academician.[81] He also began a friendly correspondence with Charles Dickens and hosted Dickens and his wife at Sunnyside during Dickens's American tour in 1842.[82]

Minister to Spain

[edit]

President John Tyler appointed Irving as Minister to Spain in February 1842, after an endorsement from Secretary of State Daniel Webster.[83] Irving wrote, "It will be a severe trial to absent myself for a time from my dear little Sunnyside, but I shall return to it better enabled to carry it on comfortably".[84] He hoped that his position as Minister would allow him plenty of time to write, but Spain was in a state of political upheaval during most of his tenure, with a number of warring factions vying for control of the 12-year-old Queen Isabella II.[85] Irving maintained good relations with the various generals and politicians, as control of Spain rotated through Espartero, Bravo, then Narváez. Espartero was then locked in a power struggle with the Spanish Cortes. Irving's official reports on the ensuing civil war and revolution expressed his romantic fascination with the regent as young Queen Isabella's knight protector, He wrote with an anti-republican, undiplomatic bias. Though Espartero, ousted in July 1843, remained a fallen hero in his eyes, Irving began to view Spanish affairs more realistically.[86] However, the politics and warfare were exhausting, and Irving was both homesick and suffering from a crippling skin condition.

I am wearied and at times heartsick of the wretched politics of this country…. The last ten or twelve years of my life, passed among sordid speculators in the United States, and political adventurers in Spain, has shewn me so much of the dark side of human nature, that I begin to have painful doubts of my fellow man; and look back with regret to the confiding period of my literary career, when, poor as a rat, but rich in dreams, I beheld the world through the medium of my imagination and was apt to believe men as good as I wished them to be.[87]

With the political situation relatively settled in Spain, Irving continued to closely monitor the development of the new government and the fate of Isabella. His official duties as Spanish Minister also involved negotiating American trade interests with Cuba and following the Spanish parliament's debates over the slave trade. He was also pressed into service by Louis McLane, the American Minister to the Court of St. James's in London, to assist in negotiating the Anglo-American disagreement over the Oregon border that newly elected president James K. Polk had vowed to resolve.[88]

Final years and death

[edit]
Washington Irving's headstone, Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Sleepy Hollow, New York

Irving returned from Spain in September 1846, took up residence at Sunnyside, and began work on an "Author's Revised Edition" of his works for publisher George Palmer Putnam. For its publication, Irving had made a deal which guaranteed him 12 percent of the retail price of all copies sold, an agreement that was unprecedented at that time.[89] As he revised his older works for Putnam, he continued to write regularly, publishing biographies of Oliver Goldsmith in 1849 and Islamic prophet Muhammad in 1850. In 1855, he produced Wolfert's Roost, a collection of stories and essays that he had written for The Knickerbocker and other publications,[90] and he began publishing a biography of his namesake George Washington which he expected to be his masterpiece. Five volumes of the biography were published between 1855 and 1859.[91]

Irving traveled regularly to Mount Vernon and Washington, D.C., for his research, and struck up friendships with Presidents Millard Fillmore and Franklin Pierce.[90] He was elected an Associate Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1855.[92] He was hired as an executor of John Jacob Astor's estate in 1848 and appointed by Astor's will as first chairman of the Astor Library, a forerunner to the New York Public Library.[93]

Irving continued to socialize and keep up with his correspondence well into his seventies, and his fame and popularity continued to soar. "I don't believe that any man, in any country, has ever had a more affectionate admiration for him than that given to you in America", wrote Senator William C. Preston in a letter to Irving. "I believe that we have had but one man who is so much in the popular heart".[94] By 1859, author Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. noted that Sunnyside had become "next to Mount Vernon, the best known and most cherished of all the dwellings in our land".[95]

Irving died of a heart attack in his bedroom at Sunnyside on November 28, 1859, age 76—only eight months after completing the final volume of his Washington biography. Legend has it that his last words were: "Well, I must arrange my pillows for another night. When will this end?"[96] He was buried under a simple headstone at Sleepy Hollow cemetery on December 1, 1859.[97] Irving and his grave were commemorated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in his 1876 poem "In the Churchyard at Tarrytown", which concludes with:

How sweet a life was his; how sweet a death!
Living, to wing with mirth the weary hours,
Or with romantic tales the heart to cheer;
Dying, to leave a memory like the breath
Of summers full of sunshine and of showers,
A grief and gladness in the atmosphere.[98]

Legacy

[edit]

Literary reputation

[edit]
Bust of Washington Irving by Daniel Chester French in Irvington, New York, not far from Sunnyside

Irving is largely credited as the first American Man of Letters and the first to earn his living solely by his pen. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow acknowledged Irving's role in promoting American literature in December 1859: "We feel a just pride in his renown as an author, not forgetting that, to his other claims upon our gratitude, he adds also that of having been the first to win for our country an honourable name and position in the History of Letters".[99]

Irving perfected the American short story[100] and was the first American writer to set his stories firmly in the United States, even as he poached from German or Dutch folklore. He is also generally credited as one of the first to write in the vernacular and without an obligation to presenting morals or being didactic in his short stories, writing stories simply to entertain rather than to enlighten.[101] He also encouraged many would-be writers. As George William Curtis noted, there "is not a young literary aspirant in the country, who, if he ever personally met Irving, did not hear from him the kindest words of sympathy, regard, and encouragement".[102]

Edgar Allan Poe, on the other hand, felt that Irving should be given credit for being an innovator but that the writing itself was often unsophisticated. "Irving is much over-rated", Poe wrote in 1838, "and a nice distinction might be drawn between his just and his surreptitious and adventitious reputation—between what is due to the pioneer solely, and what to the writer".[103] A critic for the New-York Mirror wrote: "No man in the Republic of Letters has been more overrated than Mr. Washington Irving".[104] Some critics claimed that Irving catered to British sensibilities, and one critic charged that he wrote "of and for England, rather than his own country".[105] For instance, American critic John Neal in his 1824–25 critical work American Writers dismissed Irving as a poor copy of Goldsmith.[106]

Other critics were more supportive of Irving's style. William Makepeace Thackeray was the first to refer to Irving as the "ambassador whom the New World of Letters sent to the Old",[107] a banner picked up by writers and critics throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. "He is the first of the American humorists, as he is almost the first of the American writers", wrote critic H.R. Hawless in 1881, "yet belonging to the New World, there is a quaint Old World flavor about him".[108] Early critics often had difficulty separating Irving the man from Irving the writer. "The life of Washington Irving was one of the brightest ever led by an author", wrote Richard Henry Stoddard, an early Irving biographer.[109] Later critics, however, began to review his writings as all style with no substance. "The man had no message", said critic Barrett Wendell.[110]

As a historian, Irving's reputation had fallen out of favor but then gained a resurgence. "With the advent of 'scientific' history in the generations that followed his, Irving's historical writings lapsed into disregard and disrespect. To late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century historians, including John Franklin Jameson, G. P. Gooch, and others, these works were demiromances, worthy at best of veiled condescension. However, more recently several of Irving's histories and biographies have again won praise for their reliability as well as the literary skill with which they were written. Specifically, A History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus; Astoria, or Anecdotes of an Enterprise beyond the Rocky Mountains; and Life of George Washington have earned the respect of scholars whose writings on those topics we consider authoritative in our generation: Samuel Eliot Morison, Bernard DeVoto, Douglas Southall Freeman".[111]

Impact on American culture

[edit]
John Quidor's 1858 painting The Headless Horseman Pursuing Ichabod Crane, inspired by Washington Irving's work

Irving popularized the nickname "Gotham" for New York City,[112] and he is credited with inventing the expression "the almighty dollar". The surname of his fictional Dutch historian Diedrich Knickerbocker is generally associated with New York and New Yorkers, as found in New York's professional basketball team The New York Knickerbockers.

One of Irving's most lasting contributions to American culture is in the way that Americans celebrate Christmas. In his 1812 revisions to A History of New York, he inserted a dream sequence featuring St. Nicholas soaring over treetops in a flying wagon, an invention which others dressed up as Santa Claus. In his five Christmas stories in The Sketch Book, Irving portrayed an idealized celebration of old-fashioned Christmas customs at a quaint English manor which depicted English Christmas festivities that he experienced while staying in England, which had largely been abandoned.[113] He used text from The Vindication of Christmas (London 1652) of old English Christmas traditions,[114] and the book contributed to the revival and reinterpretation of the Christmas holiday in the United States.[115]

Irving introduced the erroneous idea that Europeans believed the world to be flat prior to the discovery of the New World in his biography of Christopher Columbus,[116] yet the flat-Earth myth has been taught in schools as fact to many generations of Americans.[117][118] American painter John Quidor based many of his paintings on scenes from the works of Irving about Dutch New York, including such paintings as Ichabod Crane Flying from the Headless Horseman (1828), The Return of Rip Van Winkle (1849), and The Headless Horseman Pursuing Ichabod Crane (1858).[119][120]

Memorials

[edit]
Washington Irving, postage stamp, 1940
Statue in Granada, Spain

The village of Dearman, New York, changed its name to "Irvington" in 1854 to honor Washington Irving, who was living in nearby Sunnyside, which is preserved as a museum.[121] Influential residents of the village prevailed upon the Hudson River Railroad, which had reached the village by 1849,[122] to change the name of the train station to "Irvington", and the village incorporated as Irvington on April 16, 1872.[123][124][125]

The town of Knickerbocker, Texas, was founded by two of Irving's nephews, who named it in honor of their uncle's literary pseudonym.[126] The city of Irving, Texas, states that it is named for Washington Irving.[127]

Irvington, New Jersey is also named after Irving. It was incorporated on March 27, 1874, from parts of Clinton Township (Clinton Township is now part of Newark, New Jersey since 1902).

Irving Street in San Francisco is named after him.[128]

The Irving Park neighborhood in Chicago are named for him as well, though the original name of the subdivision was Irvington and then later Irving Park before annexation to Chicago.[129] The major Chicago thoroughfare Illinois Route 19 is also named Irving Park Road.

Gibbons Memorial Park, located in Honesdale, Pennsylvania, is located on Irving Cliff, which was named after him.[130]

The Irvington neighborhood in Indianapolis is also one of the many communities named after him.[131]

Irving College (1838–1890) in Irving College, Tennessee, was named for Irving.[132]

There is a statue of Irving in Granada, Spain.[133]

The Village of North Tarrytown, New York, changed its name to Sleepy Hollow in 1996 to honor Washington Irving and capitalize on the popularity of the story "The Legend Of Sleepy Hollow".[134]

Washington Irving Memorial Park and Arboretum, located in Bixby, Oklahoma, is named in honor of Washington Irving and features an amphitheater stage with a replica façade of his Sunnyside home. The home includes a statue of Irving seated on the porch of the home. Among the tributes to Irving are memorials to the victims of the Oklahoma City Bombing and the World Trade Center attacks, with a steel beam from the towers on display. The park is also the site of local community events, including the annual Bixby BBQ and Blues festival.[135]

Works

[edit]
Works by Washington Irving
Title Publication date Written as Genre
Letters of Jonathan Oldstyle 1802 Jonathan Oldstyle Observational letters
Salmagundi 1807–1808 Launcelot Langstaff, Will Wizard Periodical
A History of New York 1809 Diedrich Knickerbocker Satire
The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. 1819–1820 Geoffrey Crayon Short stories/essays
Bracebridge Hall 1822 Geoffrey Crayon Short stories/essays
Tales of a Traveller 1824 Geoffrey Crayon Short stories/essays
A History of the Life and Voyages of Christopher Columbus 1828 Washington Irving Biography
A Chronicle of the Conquest of Granada 1829 Fray Antonio Agapida[136] Romantic history
Voyages and Discoveries of the Companions of Columbus 1831 Washington Irving Biography/history
Tales of the Alhambra 1832 "The Author of the Sketch Book" Short stories/travel
The Crayon Miscellany[137] 1835 Geoffrey Crayon Short stories
Astoria 1836 Washington Irving History
The Adventures of Captain Bonneville 1837 Washington Irving Biography/romantic history
The Life of Oliver Goldsmith 1840
(revised 1849)
Washington Irving Biography
Biography and Poetical Remains of the Late Margaret Miller Davidson 1841 Washington Irving Biography
Mahomet and His Successors 1850 Washington Irving Biography
Wolfert's Roost 1855 Geoffrey Crayon
Diedrich Knickerbocker
Washington Irving
Short stories/essays
The Life of George Washington (5 volumes) 1855–1859 Washington Irving Biography
Moorish Chronicles 1891[138] Washington Irving History

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Burstein, 7.
  2. ^ Docent Tour (October 28, 2017). "Home of the Legend: Washington Irving's Sunnyside". Historic Hudson Valley.
  3. ^ Irving, Pierre M. (1862) "The life and letters of Washington Irving" (Cited herein as PMI), vol. 1:26.
  4. ^ PMI, 1:27.
  5. ^ Jones, 5.
  6. ^ PMI, 1:27
  7. ^ Warner, 27; PMI, 1:36.
  8. ^ Mancuso, Anne (September 28, 2016). "Sleepy Hollow: Surrounded by History, and Legends". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 24, 2023.
  9. ^ Newton-Matza, M. (2016). Historic Sites and Landmarks That Shaped America [2 volumes]: From Acoma Pueblo to Ground Zero. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 519. ISBN 978-1-61069-750-7.
  10. ^ PMI, 1:39.
  11. ^ Burstein, 19.
  12. ^ Jones, 36.
  13. ^ a b Burstein, 43.
  14. ^ See Jones, 44–70
  15. ^ Washington Irving to William Irving Jr., September 20, 1804, Works 23:90.
  16. ^ Irving, Washington. "Memoir of Washington Allston", Works 2:175.
  17. ^ Washington Irving to Mrs. Amelia Foster, [April–May 1823], Works, 23:740-41. See also PMI, 1:173, Williams, 1:77, et al.
  18. ^ Burstein, 47.
  19. ^ Jones, 82.
  20. ^ Burrows, Edwin G. and Mike Wallace. Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898. (Oxford University Press, 1999), 417. See Jones, 74–75.
  21. ^ Jones, 118-27.
  22. ^ Burstein, 72.
  23. ^ Washington Irving to Mrs. Amelia Foster, [April–May 1823], Works, 23:741.
  24. ^ "Knickerbocker". Oxford English Dictionary.
  25. ^ Hellman, 82.
  26. ^ Jones, 121–22.
  27. ^ Jones, 121.
  28. ^ Jones, 122.
  29. ^ Hellman, 87.
  30. ^ Hellman, 97.
  31. ^ Jones, 154-60.
  32. ^ Jones, 169.
  33. ^ William Irving Jr. to Washington Irving, New York, October 14, 1818, Williams, 1:170-71.
  34. ^ Washington Irving to Ebenezer Irving, [London, late November 1818], Works, 23:536.
  35. ^ See reviews from Quarterly Review and others, in The Sketch Book, xxv–xxviii; PMI 1:418–19.
  36. ^ Burstein, 114
  37. ^ Irving, Washington. "Preface to the Revised Edition", The Sketch Book, Works, 8:7; Jones, 188-89.
  38. ^ McClary, Ben Harris, ed. Washington Irving and the House of Murray. (University of Tennessee Press, 1969).
  39. ^ See comments of William Godwin, cited in PMI, 1:422; Lady Littleton, cited in PMI 2:20.
  40. ^ Aderman, Ralph M., ed. Critical Essays on Washington Irving. (G. K. Hall, 1990), 55–57; STW 1:209.
  41. ^ Aderman, 58–62.
  42. ^ See Reichart, Walter A. Washington Irving and Germany. (University of Michigan Press, 1957).
  43. ^ Jones, 207-14.
  44. ^ See Sanborn, F.B., ed. The Romance of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, John Howard Payne and Washington Irving. Boston: Bibliophile Society, 1907.
  45. ^ Irving to Catharine Paris, Paris, September 20, 1824, Works 24:76
  46. ^ See reviews in Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Westminster Review, et al., 1824. Cited in Jones, 222.
  47. ^ Hellman, 170–89.
  48. ^ Burstein, 191.
  49. ^ Bowers, 22–48.
  50. ^ Burstein, 196.
  51. ^ Jones, 248.
  52. ^ Jones, 207.
  53. ^ Burstein, 212.
  54. ^ Burstein, 225.
  55. ^ Russell, Jeffrey Burton. Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians. Praeger Paperback, 1997. ISBN 0-275-95904-X
  56. ^ Loewen, James W. Lies Across America: What Our Historic Sites Get Wrong. New York: The New Press, 1999: 59.
  57. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
  58. ^ Washington Irving to Peter Irving, Alhambra, June 13, 1829. Works, 23:436
  59. ^ Hellman, 208.
  60. ^ PMI, 2:429, 430, 431–32
  61. ^ PMI, 3:17–21.
  62. ^ Washington Irving to Peter Irving, London, March 6, 1832, Works, 23:696
  63. ^ Jill Eastwood (1967). "La Trobe, Charles Joseph (1801–1875)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol. 2. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. pp. 89–93. ISBN 978-0-522-84459-7. ISSN 1833-7538. OCLC 70677943. Retrieved July 13, 2007.
  64. ^ See Irving, "A Tour on the Prairies", Works 22.
  65. ^ Williams, 2:48–49
  66. ^ Jones, 318.
  67. ^ Jones, 324.
  68. ^ Williams, 2:76–77.
  69. ^ Jones, 323.
  70. ^ Burstein, 288.
  71. ^ Williams, 2:36.
  72. ^ Jones, 316.
  73. ^ Jones, 318-28.
  74. ^ Monthly Review, New and Improved, ser. 2 (June 1837): 279–90. See Aderman, Ralph M., ed. Critical Essays on Washington Irving. (G. K. Hall, 1990), 110–11.
  75. ^ Burstein, 295.
  76. ^ Jones, 333.
  77. ^ Edgar Allan Poe to N. C. Brooks, Philadelphia, September 4, 1838. Cited in Williams, 2:101-02.
  78. ^ Irving, Washington (January 1, 1849). "The Crayon Miscellany". G.P. Putnam's Sons – via Google Books.
  79. ^ Clarke, Richard Henry (January 1, 1872). "Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States". P. O'Shea – via Google Books.
  80. ^ Washington Irving to Lewis G. Clark, (before January 10, 1840), Works, 25:32–33.
  81. ^ "National Academicians". Archived from the original on January 16, 2014. Retrieved January 18, 2014.
  82. ^ Jones, 341.
  83. ^ Hellman, 257.
  84. ^ Washington Irving to Ebenezer Irving, New York, February 10, 1842, Works, 25:180.
  85. ^ Bowers, 127–275.
  86. ^ Mary Duarte, and Ronald E. Coons, "Washington Irving, American Ambassador to Spain, 1842-1846". Consortium on Revolutionary Europe 1750-1850: Proceedings (1992), Vol. 21, pp, 350-360.
  87. ^ Irving to Thomas Wentworth Storrow, Madrid, 18 May 1844, Works, 25:751
  88. ^ Jones, 415-56.
  89. ^ Jones, 464.
  90. ^ a b Williams, 2:208–209.
  91. ^ Bryan, William Alfred. George Washington in American Literature 1775–1865. New York: Columbia University Press, 1952: 103.
  92. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter I" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved September 9, 2016.
  93. ^ Hellman, 235.
  94. ^ William C. Preston to Washington Irving, Charlottesville, May 11, 1859, PMI, 4:286.
  95. ^ Kime, Wayne R. Pierre M. Irving and Washington Irving: A Collaboration in Life and Letters. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1977: 151. ISBN 0-88920-056-4
  96. ^ Nelson, Randy F. The Almanac of American Letters. Los Altos, California: William Kaufmann, Inc., 1981: 179. ISBN 0-86576-008-X
  97. ^ PMI, 4:328.
  98. ^ Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. "In The Churchyard at Tarrytown", quoted in Burstein, 330.
  99. ^ Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. "Address on the Death of Washington Irving", Poems and Other Writings, J.D. McClatchy, editor. (Library of America, 2000).
  100. ^ Leon H. Vincent, American Literary Masters, 1906.
  101. ^ Pattee, Fred Lewis. The First Century of American Literature, 1770–1870. New York: Cooper Square Publishers, 1935.
  102. ^ Kime, Wayne R. Pierre M. Irving and Washington Irving: A Collaboration in Life and Letters. Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 1977: 152. ISBN 0-88920-056-4
  103. ^ Poe to N.C. Brooks, Philadelphia, September 4, 1838. Cited in Williams 2:101-02.
  104. ^ Jones, 223
  105. ^ Jones, 291
  106. ^ Watts, Edward; Carlson, David J. (2012). "Introduction". In Watts, Edward; Carlson, David J. (eds.). John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture. Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Bucknell University Press. p. xiii. ISBN 978-1-61148-420-5.
  107. ^ Thackeray, Roundabout Papers, 1860.
  108. ^ Hawless, American Humorists, 1881.
  109. ^ Stoddard, The Life of Washington Irving, 1883.
  110. ^ Wendell, A Literary History of America, 1901.
  111. ^ Kime, Wayne R. "Washington Irving (3 April 1783-28 November 1859", in Clyde N. Wilson (ed.), American Historians, 1607-1865, Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 30, Detroit: Gale Research, 1984, 155.
  112. ^ Migro, Carmen. "So, Why Do We Call It Gotham, Anyway?". NYPL.org. New York Public Library. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  113. ^ Kelly, Richard Michael (ed.) (2003), A Christmas Carol. p.20. Broadview Literary Texts, New York: Broadview Press, ISBN 1-55111-476-3
  114. ^ Restad, Penne L. (1995). Christmas in America: a History. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-510980-5.
  115. ^ See Stephen Nissebaum, The Battle for Christmas (Vintage, 1997)
  116. ^ See Irving, 1829, Chapter VII: "Columbus before the council at Salamanca", pp. 40–47, especially p. 43.
  117. ^ Grant (Edward), 2001, "God and Reason in the Middle Ages", p. 342.
  118. ^ Grant (John), 2006, p. 32, in the subsection "The Earth – Flat or Hollow?" beginning at p. 30, within Chapter 1 "Worlds in Upheaval".
  119. ^ Caldwell, John; Rodriguez Roque, Oswaldo (1994). Kathleen Luhrs (ed.). American Paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Vol. I: a Catalogue of Works by Artists Born By 1815. Dale T. Johnson, Carrie Rebora, Patricia R. Windels. The Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Princeton University Press. pp. 479–482.
  120. ^ Roger Panetta, ed. (2009). Dutch New York: the roots of Hudson Valley culture. Hudson River Museum. pp. 223–235. ISBN 978-0-8232-3039-6.
  121. ^ Sunnyside was considered to be part of Irvington (or Dearman) at the time; the neighboring village of Tarrytown incorporated in 1870, two years before Irvington. The estate ended up in Tarrytown rather than Irvington after the boundaries were drawn.
  122. ^ Dodsworth (1995)
  123. ^ Scharf (1886). "II". History of Westchester County. Vol. 2. p. 190.
  124. ^ "About Irvington, NY". Village of Irvington Chamber of Commerce. 2007. Archived from the original on December 6, 2008. Retrieved May 14, 2009.
  125. ^ Vizard, Mary McAleer (April 19, 1992). "If You're Thinking of Living in: Irvington". New York Times. Retrieved May 14, 2009.
  126. ^ "Irving History". IrvingTX.net. Archived from the original on August 18, 2011. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  127. ^ "Declaration that Irving, TX is named for Washington Irving". Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  128. ^ The Chronicle April 12, 1987, p.6
  129. ^ "Irving Park". www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org.
  130. ^ "Washington Irving, Irving Cliff and the Ill-fated Irving Cliff Hotel Archived November 19, 2019, at the Wayback Machine", Wayne County Historical Society]
  131. ^ Irvington Development Organization
  132. ^ Larry Miller, Tennessee Place Names (Indiana University Press, 2001), p. 107.
  133. ^ "Monumento a Washington Irving". Patronato de la Alhambra y Generalife (in Spanish). Retrieved January 24, 2024.
  134. ^ Feloni, Richard. "How the 'Legend of Sleepy Hollow' saved a tiny industrial town in New York". Business Insider. Retrieved January 16, 2024.
  135. ^ "Washington Irving Memorial Park & Arboretum".
  136. ^ Irving's publisher, John Murray, overrode Irving's decision to use this pseudonym and published the book under Irving's name—much to the annoyance of its author. See Jones 258—259.
  137. ^ Composed of the three short stories "A Tour on the Prairies", "Abbotsford and Newstead Abbey", and "Legends of the Conquest of Spain".
  138. ^ original date not stated

Further reading

[edit]
  • Aderman, Ralph M. ed. Critical essays on Washington Irving (1990) online
  • Apap, Christopher, and Tracy Hoffman. "Prospects for the Study of Washington Irving". Resources for American Literary Study 35 (2010): 3–27. online
  • Bowden, Edwin T. Washington Irving bibliography (1989) online
  • Brodwin, Stanley. The Old and New World romanticism of Washington Irving (1986) online
  • Brooks, Van Wyck. The World Of Washington Irving (1944) online
  • Burstein, Andrew. The Original Knickerbocker: The Life of Washington Irving. (Basic Books, 2007). ISBN 978-0-465-00853-7
  • Burstein, Andrew, and Nancy Isenberg, eds. Rip Van Winkle’s Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory (Louisiana State University Press, 2022) online review
  • Bowers, Claude G. The Spanish Adventures of Washington Irving. (Riverside Press, 1940).
  • Hedges, William L. Washington Irving: An American Study, 1802–1832 (Johns Hopkins UP, 2019).
  • Hellman, George S. Washington Irving, Esquire. (Alfred A. Knopf, 1925).
  • Irvine, James M. The Genealogy of Washington Irving (Ashtead, 2019). ISBN 978-1-78955-477-9
  • Jones, Brian Jay. Washington Irving: An American Original. (Arcade, 2008). ISBN 978-1-55970-836-4
  • LeMenager, Stephanie. "Trading Stories: Washington Irving and the Global West". American Literary History 15.4 (2003): 683–708. online
  • McGann, Jerome. "Washington Irving", A History of New York", and American History". Early American Literature 47.2 (2012): 349–376. online.
  • Myers, Andrew B., ed. A Century of commentary on the works of Washington Irving, 1860–1974 (1975) online
  • Pollard, Finn. "From beyond the grave and across the ocean: Washington Irving and the problem of being a questioning American, 1809–20". American Nineteenth Century History 8.1 (2007): 81–101.
  • Springer, Haskell S. Washington Irving: a reference guide (1976) online
  • Williams, Stanley T. The Life of Washington Irving. 2 vols. (Oxford UP, 1935). vol 1 online; also vol 2 online

Primary sources

[edit]
  • Irving, Pierre M. Life and Letters of Washington Irving. 4 vols. (G.P. Putnam, 1862). Cited herein as PMI.
  • Irving, Washington. The Complete Works of Washington Irving. (Rust, et al., editors). 30 vols. (University of Wisconsin/Twayne, 1969–1986). Cited herein as Works.
  • Irving, Washington. (1828) History of the Life of Christopher Columbus, 3 volumes, 1828, G. & C. Carvill, publishers, New York, New York; as 4 volumes, 1828, John Murray, publisher, London; and as 4 volumes, 1828, Paris A. and W. Galignani, publishers, France.
  • Irving, Washington. (1829) The Life and Voyage of Christopher Columbus, 1 volume, 1829, G. & C. & H. Carvill, publishers, New York, New York; an abridged version prepared by Irving of his 1828 work.
  • Irving, Washington. Selected writings of Washington Irving (Modern Library edition, 1945) online
[edit]
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by U.S. Minister to Spain
1842–1846
Succeeded by