Josiah Gilbert Holland - Springfield, MA
Posted by: Groundspeak Charter Member neoc1
N 42° 06.269 W 072° 34.550
18T E 700441 N 4664220
The grave of 19th Century American historian, novelist, poet, and editor Josiah Gilbert Holland, in Springfield Cemetery, is marked with a relief portrait by Augustus Saint-Gaudens.
Waymark Code: WM111KW
Location: Massachusetts, United States
Date Posted: 07/30/2019
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Alfouine
Views: 2

Holland died at age 62 on October 12, 1881, in New York City and is buried in the Methodist section of Springfield Cemetery. His grave is marked by a bas-relief sculpture by Augustus Saint-Gaudens. This was one of Saint-Gaudens earliest commissions. On the sculpture is inscribed ET VITAM IMPENDERE VERO (TO DEVOTE LIFE TO TRUTH). The base of the sculpture has the name JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND

On top of the sculpture is written the name HOLLAND. Below is the inscription:

JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND

BORN JULY 24 1819 + DIED OCT 12 1881

FOR THE GREATER HEREAFTER I TRUST IN THE INFINITE
LOVE AS IT IS EXPRESSED TO ME IN THE LIFE AND DEATH OF
MY LORD AND SAVIOUR JESUS CHRIST

The left side contains the inscription:

ELIZABETH L. CHAPIN
WIFE OF
JOSIAH GILBERT HOLLAND
BORN JULY 3 1823 + DIED APR 26 1896

Description:

Josiah Gilbert Holland was an American editor, historian, novelist, and poet. He was born in Belchertown, Massachusetts, on July 24, 1819. He attended Northampton High School and, in 1844, graduated from Berkshire Medical College.

While practicing medicine in Springfield, MA, he wrote for various magazines. He then became editor of the Springfield Republican newspaper, published by abolitionist Samuel Bowles. He gained fame as a writer after the essays he wrote for the paper were collected and published in book form. Following the Civil War he wrote his most popular works, Life of Abraham Lincoln (1866), and Katrina (1869).

His wrote the History of Western Massachusetts and the historical novel Bay Path (1857). In 1858, writing under the pen name Timothy Titcomb, he wrote a collection of essays entitled Titcomb's Letters to Young People, Single and Married and the poem "Bitter Sweet".

In 1869, he moved to New York City and collaborated with Charles Scribner to publish and edit Scribner's Monthly. He continued writing and published three novels: Arthur Bonicastle (1873), Story of Sevenoaks (1875), and Nicholas Minturn (1877). His poetry includes "The Marble Prophecy" (1872), "The Mistress and the Manse" (1874), and "The Puritan's Guest" (1881).



Date of birth: 07/03/1823

Date of death: 04/26/1896

Area of notoriety: Literature

Marker Type: Monument

Setting: Outdoor

Visiting Hours/Restrictions: Daylight Hours

Fee required?: No

Web site: [Web Link]

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