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John Neal (writer)

John Neal (August 25, 1793 – June 20, 1876) was an American writer, critic, editor, lecturer, and activist. Considered both eccentric and influential, he delivered speeches and published essays, novels, poems, and short stories between the 1810s and 1870s in the United States and Great Britain, championing American literary nationalism and regionalism in their earliest stages. Neal advanced the development of American art, fought for women's rights, advocated the end of slavery and racial prejudice, and helped establish the American gymnastics movement.

John Neal

Portrait by Sarah Miriam Peale, circa 1823
Born(1793-08-25)August 25, 1793
Portland, District of Maine, US
DiedJune 20, 1876(1876-06-20) (aged 82)
Portland, Maine, US
Resting placeWestern Cemetery
Portland, Maine, US
Pen name
  • Somebody, M.D.C.
  • Jehu O'Cataract
  • John O'Cataract
  • Carter Holmes
  • A New Englander Over-Sea
Occupation
  • Writer
  • critic
  • editor
  • activist
  • lawyer
  • lecturer
  • entrepreneur
Signature

The first American author to use natural diction and a pioneer of colloquialism, John Neal is the first to use the phrase son-of-a-bitch in a work of fiction. He attained his greatest literary achievements between 1817 and 1835, during which time he was America's first daily newspaper columnist, the first American published in British literary journals, author of the first history of American literature, America's first art critic, a short story pioneer, a children's literature pioneer, and a forerunner of the American Renaissance. As one of the first men to advocate women's rights in the US and the first American lecturer on the issue, for over fifty years he supported female writers and organizers, affirmed intellectual equality between men and women, fought coverture laws against women's economic rights, and demanded suffrage, equal pay, and better education for women. He was the first American to establish a public gymnasium in the US and championed athletics to regulate violent tendencies with which he himself had struggled throughout his life.

A largely self-educated man who attended no schools after the age of twelve, Neal was a child laborer who left self-employment in dry goods at twenty-two to pursue dual careers in law and literature. By middle age Neal had attained comfortable wealth and community standing in his native Portland, Maine, through varied business investments, arts patronage, and civic leadership.

Neal is considered an author without a masterpiece, though his short stories are his highest literary achievements and ranked with the best of his age. Rachel Dyer is considered his best novel, "Otter-Bag, the Oneida Chief" and "David Whicher" his best tales, and The Yankee his most influential periodical. His "Rights of Women" speech (1843) at the peak of his influence as a feminist had a considerable impact on the future of the movement.

Biography

Childhood and early employment

John Neal and his twin sister Rachel were born in the town of Portland in the Massachusetts District of Maine on August 25, 1793, the only children of parents John and Rachel Hall Neal.[1] The senior John Neal, a school teacher, died a month later. Neal's mother, described by former pupil Elizabeth Oakes Smith as a woman of "clear intellect, and no little self-reliance and independence of will",[2] made up the lost family income by establishing her own school and renting rooms in her home to boarders. She also received assistance from the siblings' unmarried uncle, James Neal, and others in their Quaker community. Neal grew up in "genteel poverty", attending his mother's school, a Quaker boarding school, and the public school in Portland.[3]

Neal claimed his lifelong struggle with a short temper and violent tendencies originated in the public school, at which he was bullied and physically abused by classmates and the schoolmaster.[4] To reduce his mother's financial burden, Neal left school and home at the age of twelve for full-time employment.[5]

 
Penmanship business advertisement circa 1813

As an adolescent haberdasher and dry goods salesman in Portland and Portsmouth, Neal learned dishonest business practices like passing off counterfeit money[a] and misrepresenting merchandise quality and quantity.[7] Laid off multiple times due to business failures resulting from US embargoes against British imports, Neal traveled through Maine as an itinerant penmanship instructor, watercolor teacher, and miniature portrait artist.[8] At twenty years of age in 1814, he answered an ad for employment with a dry goods shop in Boston and moved to the larger city.[9]

In Boston, Neal established a partnership with John Pierpont and Pierpont's brother in-law,[1] whereby they exploited supply chain constrictions caused by the War of 1812 to make quick profits smuggling contraband British dry goods between Boston, New York City, and Baltimore.[10] They established stores in Boston, Baltimore, and Charleston[1] before the recession following the war upended the firm and left Pierpont and Neal bankrupt in Baltimore in 1816.[10] Though the "Pierpont, Lord, and Neal" wholesale/retail chain proved to be short-lived, Neal's relationship with Pierpont grew into the closest and longest-lived friendship of his life.[1][b]

Neal's experience in business riding out the multiple booms and busts that eventually left him bankrupt at age twenty-two made him into a proud and ambitious young man who viewed reliance on his own talents and resources as the key to his recovery and future success.[13]

Building a career in Baltimore

Neal's time in Baltimore between his business failure in 1816 and his departure for London in 1823 was the busiest period of his life as he juggled overlapping careers in editorship, journalism, poetry, novels, law study, and later, law practice.[14] During this period he taught himself to read and write in eleven languages,[c] published seven books,[17] read law for four years,[18] completed an independent course of law study in eighteen months that was designed to be completed in seven-to-eight years,[19] earned admission to the bar in a community known for rigorous requirements,[14] and contributed prodigiously to newspapers and literary magazines, two of which he edited at different points.[20]

Two months after Neal's bankruptcy trial, he submitted his first contribution to The Portico and quickly became the magazine's second-most prolific[21] contributor of poems, essays, and literary criticism, though he was never paid.[22] Two years later he took over as editor for what ended up being the last issue.[23] The magazine was closely associated with the Delphian Club, which he founded in 1816 with Dr. Tobias Watkins, John Pierpont, and four other men.[21] Neal felt indebted to this "high-minded, generous, unselfish" association of "intellectual and companionable" people for many of the happy memories and employment connections he enjoyed in Baltimore.[24] While writing his earliest poetry, novels, and essays he was studying law as an unpaid apprentice in the office of William H. Winder, a fellow Delphian.[25]

Neal's business failure had left him without enough "money to take a letter from the post-office",[26][d] so Neal "cast about for something better to do ... and, after considering the matter for ten minutes or so, determined to try my hand at a novel."[27] When he wrote his first book, fewer than seventy novels had been published[28] by "not more than half a dozen [American] authors; and of these, only Washington Irving had received more than enough to pay for the salt in his porridge."[29] Neal was nevertheless inspired by Pierpont's financial success with his poem The Airs of Palestine (1816) and encouraged by the reception of his initial submissions to The Portico. He resolved that "there was nothing left for me but authorship, or starvation, if I persisted in my plan of studying law".[30]

Composing his first and only bound volume of poetry was Neal's nighttime distraction from laboring sixteen hours a day, seven days a week, for more than four months to produce an index for six years of weekly publications of Hezekiah Niles's Weekly Register magazine,[31] which Niles admitted was "the most laborious work of the kind that ever appeared in any country".[32]

In 1819, he published a play and took his first paying job as a newspaper editor,[33] becoming the country's first daily columnist.[34] The same year he wrote three-quarters of History of the American Revolution, otherwise credited to Paul Allen.[35] Neal's substantial literary output earned him the moniker "Jehu O'Cataract" from his Delphian Club associates.[20] By these means he was able to pay his expenses while completing his apprenticeship and independently studying law. He was admitted to the bar and started practicing law in Baltimore in 1820.[36]

Neal's final years in Baltimore were his most productive as a novelist.[37] He published one novel in 1822 and three more the following year, eventually rising to the status of James Fenimore Cooper's chief rival for recognition as America's leading novelist.[38] In this turbulent period he quit the Delphian Club on bad terms[39] and accepted excommunication from the Society of Friends after his participation in a street brawl.[40] In reaction to insults against prominent lawyer William Pinkney published in Randolph just after Pinkney died, his son Edward Coote Pinkney challenged Neal to a duel. Having established himself six years earlier as an outspoken opponent of dueling,[41] Neal refused and the two engaged in a battle of printed words in the fall of that year.[42] Neal became "weary of the law—weary as death", feeling that he spent those years in "open war, with the whole tribe of lawyers in America".[43] "Ironically, ... at precisely the moment when [Neal] was endeavoring to establish himself as the American writer, Neal was also alienating friends, critics, and the general public at an alarming rate."[44]

By late 1823, Neal was ready to relocate away from Baltimore.[45] According to him, the catalyst to move to London was a dinner party with an English friend who quoted Sydney Smith's 1820 then-notorious remark, "in the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book?".[46] Whether it had more to do with Smith or Pinkney, Neal took less than a month after that dinner date to settle his affairs in Baltimore and secure passage on a ship bound for the UK on December 15, 1823.[47]

Writing in London

Neal's relocation to London figured into three professional goals that guided him through the 1820s: to supplant Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper as the leading American literary voice, to bring about a new distinctly American literary style, and to reverse the British literary establishment's disdain for American writers.[48] He followed Irving's precedent of using temporary residence in London to earn more money and notoriety from the British literary market.[49] London publishers had already pirated Seventy-Six and Logan, but Neal hoped those companies would pay him to publish Errata and Randolph if he were present to negotiate.[50] They refused.[51]

Neal brought enough money to survive for only a few months on the assumption that "if people gave any thing [sic] for books here, they would not be able to starve me, since I could live upon air, and write faster than any man that ever lived."[52] His financial situation had become desperate[53] when William Blackwood asked Neal in April 1824 to become a regular contributor to Blackwood's Magazine.[54] For the next year and a half, Neal was "handsomely paid"[53] to be one of the magazine's most prolific contributors.[55]

His first Blackwood's article, a profile on the 1824 candidates for US president and the five presidents who had served to that point, was the first article by an American to appear in a British literary journal[56] and was quoted and republished widely throughout Europe.[53] As the first written history of American literature, the American Writers series was Neal's most noteworthy contribution to the magazine.[57] Blackwood provided the platform for Neal's earliest written works on gender and women's rights[58] and published Brother Jonathan,[e] but a back-and-forth over manuscript revisions in autumn 1825 soured the relationship and Neal was once again without a source of income.[59]

After a short time earning much less money writing articles for other British periodicals,[60] thirty-two year-old John Neal met seventy-seven year-old utilitarian philosopher Jeremy Bentham through the London Debating Societies.[61] In late 1825 Bentham offered him rooms at his "Hermitage" and a position as his personal secretary.[62] Neal spent the next year and a half writing for Bentham's Westminster Review.[63]

In spring 1827, Bentham financed Neal's return to the US.[64] He left the UK having caught the attention of the British literary elite, published the novel he brought with him, and "succeeded to perfection"[65] in educating the British about American institutions, habits, and prospects. Yet Brother Jonathan was not received as the great American novel and it failed to earn Neal the level of international fame he had hoped for, so he returned to the US no longer Cooper's chief rival.[66]

Return to Portland, Maine

Neal returned to the United States from Europe in June 1827 with plans to settle in New York City, but stopped first in his native Portland to visit his mother and sister.[67] There he was confronted by citizens offended by his derision of prominent citizens in the semi-autobiographical Errata, the way he depicted New England dialect and habits in Brother Jonathan, and his criticism of American writers in Blackwood's Magazine.[68] Residents posted broadsides,[69] engaged in verbally and physically violent exchanges with Neal in the streets,[70] and conspired to block his admission to the bar.[71] Neal defiantly resolved to settle in Portland instead of New York. "'Verily, verily,' said I, 'if they take that position, here I will stay, till I am both rooted and grounded—grounded in the graveyard, if nowhere else.'"[72]

 
Portland's town hall in Market Square, site of John Neal's first gymnasium

Neal became a proponent in the US of athletics he had practiced abroad, including Friedrich Jahn's early Turnen gymnastics[73] and boxing and fencing techniques he learned in Paris, London, and Baltimore.[74] He opened Maine's first gymnasium in 1827,[75] making him the first American to establish a public gym in the US.[f] He offered lessons in boxing and fencing in his law office.[78] The same year he started gyms in nearby Saco and at Bowdoin College.[79] The year before he had published articles on German gymnastics in the American Journal of Education and urged Thomas Jefferson to include a gymnastics school at the University of Virginia.[80] Neal's athletic pursuits modeled "a new sense of maleness" that favored "forbearance based on strength"[81] and helped him regulate the violent tendencies with which he struggled throughout his life.[82]

In 1828, Neal established The Yankee magazine with himself as editor, and continued publication through the end of 1829.[83] He used its pages to vindicate himself to fellow Portlanders,[84] critique American art[85] and drama,[86] host a discourse on the nature of New Englander identity,[87] advance his developing feminist ideas,[88] and encourage new literary voices, most of them women.[89] Neal also edited many other periodicals between the late 1820s and the mid 1840s and was during this time a highly sought-after contributor on a variety of topics.[90]

Neal published three novels from material he produced in London and focused his new creative writing efforts on a body of short stories[91] that represents his greatest literary achievement.[92] Neal published an average of one tale per year between 1828 and 1846, helping to shape the relatively new short story genre.[93] He began traveling as a lecturer in 1829, reaching the height of his influence in the women's rights movement in 1843 when he was delivering speeches before large crowds in New York City and reaching wider audiences through the press.[94] This period of juggling literary, activist, athletic, legal, artistic, social, and business pursuits was captured by Neal's law apprentice James Brooks in 1833:

Neal was ... a boxing-master, and fencing-master too, and as a printer's devil came in, crying "copy, more copy," he would race with a huge swan's quill, full gallop, over sheets of paper as with a steam-pen, and off went one page, and off went another, and then a lesson in boxing, the thump of glove to glove, then the mask, and the stamp of the sandal, and the ringing of the foils.[95]

Family and civic leadership

 
Daguerreotype of the Neal family, 1843[g]
 
John Neal houses at 173–175 State Street, Portland, Maine[h]

In 1828, Neal married his second cousin Eleanor Hall and together they had five children between 1829 and 1847.[98] The couple raised their children in the house he built on Portland's prestigious State Street in 1836.[98] Also in 1836 he received an honorary master's degree from Bowdoin College, the same institution at which Neal made a living as a self-employed teenage penmanship instructor and that later educated the more economically privileged Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.[99]

After the 1830s, Neal became less active in literary circles and increasingly occupied with business, activism, and local arts and civic projects, particularly after receiving inheritances from two paternal uncles that dramatically reduced his need to rely on writing as a source of income.[100] James Neal died in 1832 and Stephen Neal in 1836, but the second inheritance was held up until 1858 in a legal battle involving Stephen's daughter, suffragist Lydia Neal Dennett.[101] In 1845 he became the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company's first agent in Maine,[102] earning enough in commissions that he decided to retire from the lecture circuit, law practice, and most writing projects.[103] Neal began developing and managing local real estate,[104] operating multiple granite quarries,[105] developing railroad connections to Portland,[106] and investing in land speculation in Cairo, Illinois.[107] He led the movement to incorporate Portland as a city and build the community's first parks and sidewalks.[108] He became interested in architecture, interior design, and furniture design, developing pioneering, simple, and functional solutions that influenced other designers outside his local area.[109]

Many of his literary contemporaries interpreted Neal's change in focus as a disappearance. Hawthorne wrote in 1845 of "that wild fellow, John Neal", who "surely has long been dead, else he never could keep himself so quiet."[110] James Russell Lowell in 1848 claimed he had "wasted in Maine the sinews and cords of his pugilist brain".[111] Friend and fellow Portland native Henry Wadsworth Longfellow described Neal in 1860 as "a good deal tempered down but fire enough still".[112]

After years of vaguely affiliating with Unitarianism and universalism, Neal converted to Congregationalism in 1851.[113] Through deepened religiosity he found new moral arguments for women's rights,[114] potential release from his violent tendencies,[115] and inspiration for seven religious essays. Neal collected these "exhortations"[116] in One Word More (1854), which "rambles passionately for two hundred pages and closes with breathless metaphor"[117] in an effort to convert "the reasoning and thoughtful among believers".[116]

At the urging of Longfellow and other friends, John Neal returned to novel writing late in life, publishing True Womanhood in 1859.[118] To fill a gap in his income between 1863 and 1866 he wrote three dime novels.[119] In 1869 he published his "most readable book, and certainly one of the most entertaining autobiographies to come out of nineteenth-century America".[120] Reflecting on his life this way inspired Neal to amplify his activism and assume regional leadership roles in the women's suffrage movement.[121] His last two books are a collection of pieces for and about children titled Great Mysteries and Little Plagues (1870), and a guidebook for his hometown titled Portland Illustrated (1874).[11]

 
Neal circa 1870

By 1870, in his old age, he had amassed a comfortable fortune, valued at $80,000.[122][i] His last appearance in the public eye was likely an 1875 syndicated article from the Portland Advertiser about an eighty-one year-old Neal physically overpowering a man in his early twenties who was smoking on a non-smoking streetcar.[125] John Neal died on June 20, 1876, and was buried in the Neal family plot in Portland's Western Cemetery.[126]

Writing

Neal's body of literary work spans almost sixty years from the end of the War of 1812 to a decade following the Civil War, though he achieved his major literary accomplishments between 1817 and 1835.[127] His writing both reflects and challenges shifting American ways of life over those years.[128] He started his career as an American reading public was just beginning to emerge,[129] working immediately and consistently within the nation's developing "complex web of print culture".[130] Throughout his adult life, especially in the 1830s, Neal was a prolific contributor to newspapers and magazines, writing essays on a wide variety of topics including but not limited to art criticism, literary criticism, phrenology, women's rights, early German gymnastics, and slavery.[131]

His efforts to subvert the influence of the British literary elite[132] and to develop a rival American literature were largely credited to his successors until more recent twenty-first century scholarship shifted that credit to Neal.[133] His short stories are "his highest literary achievement"[92] and are ranked with those of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, and Rudyard Kipling.[134] John Neal is often considered an influential American literary figure with no masterpiece of his own.[135]

Style

 
Dedication to John Neal's first novel in 1817

Defying the rigid moralism and sentimentality of his American contemporaries Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper, Neal's early novels between the late 1810s and 1820s depict dark, physically-flawed, conflicted Byronesque heroes of great intellect and morals.[136] His brand of Romanticism reflected an aversion for self-criticism and revision, relying instead on "nearly automatic writing"[137] to define his style, enhance the commercial viability of his works, and craft a new American literature.[138] As a pioneer of "talk[ing] on paper"[139] or "natural writing",[140] Neal was "the first in America to be natural in his diction"[141] and his work represents "the first deviation from ... Irvingesque graciousness"[142] in which "not only characters but also genres converse, and are interrogated, challenged, and transformed."[143] Neal declared that he "never shall write what is now worshipped under the name of classical English", which was "the deadest language I ever met with or heard of".[144]

Neal's voice was one of many following the War of 1812 calling for an American literary nationalism, but Neal felt his colleagues' work relied too much on British conventions.[145] By contrast, he felt that "to succeed ..., I must be unlike all that have gone before me" and issue "another Declaration of Independence, in the great Republic of Letters."[146] To achieve this he exploited distinctly American characters, settings, historical events, and manners of speech in his writing.[147] This was a "caustic assault"[147] on British literary elites viewed as aristocrats writing for personal amusement, in contrast to American authors as middle class professionals plying a commercial trade for sustenance.[148] By mimicking the common and sometimes profane language of his countrymen in fiction, Neal hoped to appeal to a broader readership of minimally educated book buyers, thereby intending to guarantee the existence of an American national literature by ensuring its economic viability.[149]

Starting in the late 1820s, Neal shifted his focus from nationalism to regionalism to challenge the rise of Jacksonian populism in the US by showcasing and contrasting coexisting regional and multicultural differences within the United States. The collection of essays and stories he published in his magazine The Yankee "lays the groundwork for reading the nation itself as a collection of voices in conversation" and "asks readers to decide for themselves how to manage the multiple and contending sides of a federal union."[150] To preserve variations in American English he feared might disappear in an increasingly nationalist climate,[151] he became one of the first writers to employ colloquialism and regional dialects in his writing.[152]

Literary criticism

Neal used literary criticism in magazines and novels to encourage desired changes in the field and to uplift new writers, most of them women.[153] Noted for his "critical vision", Neal expressed judgments that were widely accepted in his lifetime.[154] "My opinion of other [people's] writings", he said, "has never been ill received; and in every case ... my judgment has been confirmed, sooner or later, without a single exception."[155] Fred Lewis Pattee corroborated this statement seventy years after Neal's death: "Where he condemned, time has almost without exception condemned also."[154]

As an American literary nationalist, he called for "faithful representations of native character"[156] in literature that utilize the "abundant and hidden sources of fertility ... in the northern, as well as the southern Americas".[157] His American Writers essay series in Blackwood's Magazine (1824) is the earliest written history of American literature,[158] and was reprinted as a collection in 1937. Neal dismissed almost all of the 120 authors he critiqued in that series as derivative of their British predecessors.[159]

 
September 1829 issue of The Yankee, containing Neal's first critique of Edgar Allan Poe's work

John Neal used his role as critic, particularly in the pages of his magazine The Yankee, to draw attention to newer writers in whose work he saw promise. John Greenleaf Whittier, Edgar Allan Poe, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow all received their first "substantial sponsorship or praise" in the magazine's pages.[160] When submitting poetry to Neal for review, Whittier made the request, "if you don't like it, say so privately; and I will quit poetry, and everything also of a literary nature".[161]

Poe was Neal's most historically impactful discovery and when he quit poetry for short stories it was likely due to Neal's influence.[162] Poe thanked Neal for "the very first words of encouragement I ever remember to have heard".[163] After Poe's death two decades later, Neal defended his legacy against attacks in Rufus Wilmot Griswold's unsympathetic obituary of Poe, labeling Griswold "a Rhadamanthus, who is not to be bilked of his fee, a thimble-full of newspaper notoriety".[164]

Short stories

Called "the inventor of the American short story",[165] Neal's tales are "his highest literary achievement".[92] He published an average of one per year between 1828 and 1846, helping to shape the relatively new short story genre,[93] particularly early children's literature.[166]

Considered his best short stories,[91] "Otter-Bag, the Oneida Chief" (1829) and "David Whicher" (1832) "overshadow the less inspired efforts of his more famous contemporaries and add a dimension to the art of storytelling not to be found in Irving and Poe, rarely in Hawthorne, and rarely in American fiction until Melville and Twain decades later (and Faulkner a century later) began telling their tales."[91] Ironically, "David Whicher" was published anonymously and not attributed to Neal until the 1960s.[93] "The Haunted Man" (1832) is noteworthy as the first work of fiction to utilize psychotherapy.[167] "The Old Pussy-Cat and the Two Little Pussy-Cats" and "The Life and Adventures of Tom Pop" (1835) are both considered pioneering works of children's literature.[166]

Like his magazine essays and lectures, Neal's stories challenged American socio-political phenomena that grew in the period leading up to and including Andrew Jackson's terms as US president (1829–1837): manifest destiny, empire building, Indian removal, consolidation of federal power, racialized citizenship, and the Cult of Domesticity.[168] "David Whicher" challenged a body of popular literature that converged in the 1820s around a "divisive and destructive insistence on frontiersman and the Indian as implacable enemies".[169] "Idiosyncrasies" is a "manifesto for human rights" in the face of "hegemonic patriarchalism".[170] His stories in this period also used humor and satire to address social and political phenomena, most notably "Courtship" (1829), "The Utilitarian" (1830), "The Young Phrenologist" (1836), "Animal Magnetism" (1839), and "The Ins and the Outs" (1841).[171]

Novels

With the exception of True Womanhood (1859), John Neal published all of his novels between 1817 and 1833. The first five he wrote and published in Baltimore: Keep Cool (1817), Logan (1822), Seventy-Six (1823), Randolph (1823), and Errata (1823). He wrote Brother Jonathan in Baltimore, but revised and published it in London in 1825. He published Rachel Dyer (1828), Authorship (1830), and The Down-Easters (1833) while living in Portland, Maine, but all are reworkings of content he wrote in London.[91]

Keep Cool, Neal's first novel, made him "the first in America to be natural in his diction"[141] and the "father of American subversive fiction".[172] Generally regarded as a failure, the book shows that "the gulf between Neal's prophetic vision of a native literature and his own capacity to fulfill that vision is painfully apparent".[173] The productivity of Neal's Baltimore days is "hard to believe — until one reads the novels" and notices the haste with which they were written.[174]

Logan, a Family History is a "gothic tapestry"[175] of "superstition, supernatural suggestions, brutality, sensuality, colossal hatred, delirium, rape, insanity, murder ... incest and cannibalism".[176] By "elevating emotional effect over coherence, the novel excites its readers to death."[177] It challenged the national narrative of American Indians' foreordained disappearance in the face of White Americans' territorial expansion and collapsed racial boundaries between the two groups.[178]

"It was there," said he, "there exactly where that horse is passing now, that they first fired upon me. I set off at a speed up that hill, but, finding nine of the party there, I determined to dash over that elevation in front; I attempted it, but shot after shot was fired after me, until I preferred making one desperate attempt, sword in hand, to being shot down, like a fat goose, upon a broken gallop. I wheeled, made a dead set at the son-of-a-bitch in my rear, unhorsed him, and actually broke through the line."

— John Neal, Seventy-Six, 1823[179]

Seventy-Six was Neal's favorite of his novels.[180] When it was released in 1823, Neal was at the height of his prominence as a novelist, being at the time the chief rival of leading American author, James Fenimore Cooper.[38] Inspired by Cooper's The Spy,[181] Neal based his story on historical research compiled a few years earlier while helping his friend Paul Allen write his History of the American Revolution.[31] Seventy-Six was criticized at the time for its use of profanity and was recognized later as the first work of American fiction to use the phrase son-of-a-bitch.[182]

Brother Jonathan: or, the New Englanders was the most "complex, ambitious, and demanding" American novel until Cooper's Littlepage Manuscripts trilogy twenty years later.[183] As "one of the most emphatic, even shrill examples of U.S. nationalistic literature",[183] it is "positively bristling with regional accents, from the New England twang of its protagonists through to bursts of patois in Virginian, Georgian, Scottish, Penobscot Indian, and Ebonics".[184] Running counter to Neal's purported nationalist theme, "the diverse linguistic styles" used in the novel "subvert the fiction of a unified, national whole" in the US.[185] The novel's "greatest achievement [is] its faithful if irreverent representation of American customs and American speech"[186] that nevertheless "was read by American reviewers as outright slander" against the US[187] and "aroused a terrible storm ... in Portland [where] he was denounced with great indignation."[188]

Rachel Dyer: a North American Story (1828) is widely considered to be John Neal's most successful novel, most readable for a modern audience, and most successful at manifesting his desire for a national American literature.[189] Along with Brother Jonathan and The Down-Easters, it is notable for depicting peculiar American folkways, accents, and slang. One hundred years later it provided source material for the Dictionary of American English.[190] A historical fiction like many of Neal's other novels, it is the first hardcover novel based on the Salem witch trials and influenced John Greenleaf Whittier and Nathaniel Hawthorne to include witchcraft in their creative writing.[191]

Art criticism and patronage

Neal was the first American art critic,[192] though he did not receive this recognition until the twentieth century.[193] Starting in 1819 with articles in Baltimore newspapers,[194] he expanded to a much wider audience with Randolph (1823), which communicated his opinions through the thin veil of the novel's protagonist.[195] Though he continued work in this field at least as late 1869, his chief impact was in the 1820s.[196] Neal around this time regularly visited Rembrandt Peale's Peale Museum, courted his daughter Rosalba Carriera Peale, and sat for portraits with his niece Sarah Miriam Peale.[197]

 
John Neal in 1823 by Sarah Miriam Peale

Neal's approach to art criticism in the early 1820s was intuitive and showed disdain for connoisseurship, which he viewed as aristocratic and incompatible with American democratic ideals.[198] Neal shows some initial influence from August Wilhelm Schlegel's Course of Lectures in Dramatic Art and Literature and Sir Joshua Reynolds's Discourses, but largely broke with those sensibilities over the course of the decade.[199] By the late 1820s he came to dismiss history painting and show preference for "the unadulterated truth of the American locality and nature"[200] he found in portraits and landscapes, anticipating the rise of the Hudson River School.[201] The positive attention Neal paid to American portrait painters trained in the "humbler contingencies"[200] of sign painting and applied arts was accompanied by his acknowledgment of the artist's often conflicting priorities: preserving likeness of the subject without offending the customer.[202] Neal was also unique in his effort in this period to raise the status of engraving as fine art.[203]

Reynolds's approach to art criticism would remain dominant in both the US and UK until John Ruskin's Modern Painters was published in 1843, though Neal's "Landscape and Portrait-Painting" (1829) anticipated many of those Ruskinesque changes by distinguishing between "things seen by the artist" and "things as they are".[204]

After Neal had accumulated sufficient wealth and influence toward the middle of the nineteenth century, he began patronizing and uplifting artists in the Portland, Maine area. Painter Charles Codman and sculptor Benjamin Paul Akers both became steadily patronized as a result of Neal's encouragement, patronage, and connections.[205] Neal also helped guide the work and careers of Franklin Simmons, John Rollin Tilton, and Harrison Bird Brown.[206] Brown became Portland's most successful artist of the nineteenth century.[207]

Comparatively constant is Neal's taste for bold, unlabored approaches to painting that utilize "an offhand, free, sketchy style, without high finish".[208] The same could be said of Neal's "fantastic mixture of common sense and absurdity, of intelligent observation and dross" that portrays Neal the art critic as "melodramatic, addicted to exaggeration, superficial, inconsistent, ill-informed, naive".[85] These descriptors apply less to his final essays on art (1868 and 1869) that conspicuously lack the qualities of Neal's boastful, confident, and passionate style in the 1820s.[209] His opinions from that earlier period "to a remarkable degree ... have stood the trying test of time."[85]

Poetry

The bulk of Neal's poetry was published in The Portico while studying law in Baltimore.[210] His only bound collection of poems is Battle of Niagara, A Poem, without Notes; and Goldau, or the Maniac Harper, published in 1818. Though Battle of Niagara brought him little fame or money, it is considered the best poetic description of Niagara Falls up to that time.[211] Poems by Neal are also featured in Specimens of American Poetry edited by Samuel Kettell (1829), The Poets and Poetry of America edited by Rufus Wilmot Griswold (1850), and American Poetry from the Beginning to Whitman edited by Louis Untermeyer (1931).[212]

Drama and theatrical criticism

Neal authored two plays, neither of which were ever produced on stage: Otho: A Tragedy, in Five Acts (1819) and Our Ephraim, or The New Englanders, A What-d'ye-call-it?—in three Acts (1835).[213]

Neal wrote Otho hoping it would see production with Thomas Abthorpe Cooper in the lead, but Cooper showed no interest.[214] Written in verse and heavily inspired by the works of Lord Byron,[215] John Pierpont considered the play too dense and wrote to Neal that it needed "a sky-light or two" cut into it.[216] It was also described as "at once both mystifying and trite".[214] Neal brought the script with him to London with plans to revise it and have it produced for the stage while he was there, but he never achieved that goal.[217]

"Not knowin', can't say."

— John Neal, Our Ephraim, 1834[218]

Our Ephraim was commissioned in 1834 by actor James Henry Hackett, who asked Neal to "squat right down & in your ready style in two or three days conjure me together something 'curious nice.'"[219] Hackett rejected the play upon receipt as unsuitable for production: too many roles requiring a rural Maine accent, unrealistic set requirements, and too much scheduled improvisation.[220] The play nevertheless represents "a significant advance in early American theatrical realism"[221] and is the "fullest detailing of Yankee dialect" of any work Neal produced.[222]

Neal's most noteworthy work of theatrical criticism is his five-installment essay "The Drama" (1829).[86] Condemning stilted dialogue, Neal contended that "when a person talks beautifully in his sorrow, it shows both great preparation and insincerity" and urged that playwrights should, "avoid poetry whenever the characters are much in earnest."[223] Sixty years later William Dean Howells was considered innovative for saying the same thing.[224]

Editing

Periodicals under John Neal's editorship[225]
Title Period Headquarters
The Portico Final issue: April–June 1818 Baltimore, MD
Federal Republican and Baltimore Telegraph February–July 1819 Baltimore, MD
The Yankee January 1, 1828 – December 1829 Portland, ME
The New-England Galaxy January–December 1835 Boston, MA
The New World January–April 1840 New York, NY
Brother Jonathan May–December 1843 New York, NY
Portland Transcript June 10 – July 8, 1848 Portland, ME

Neal found his first two positions as editor through fellow members of the Delphian Club in Baltimore.[226] His longest stint as editor was for The Yankee, which he founded only a few months after returning from London in 1827. Maine's first literary periodical,[227] it ran weekly until, for financial reasons, it merged with a Boston magazine and was renamed The Yankee and Boston Literary Gazette as a monthly publication.[228] It merged with Ladies' Magazine when it ceased publication at the end of 1829.[229] When starting his last stint as editor, he declared, "Having ten or fifteen minutes to spare, we have made up our minds to edit a newspaper." After Neal left in a huff few weeks later, the next editor announced, "John Neal has retired from the editorship of the Transcript, the fifteen minutes having expired."[230]

Despite professing allegiance to Benthamian Utilitarianism in The Yankee, Neal dedicated much more space in its pages to reinforcing Northern New England's standing on the national stage and championing American regionalism.[231] His regionalism was distinct from those later in the century "who tended to portray regional spaces in nostalgic or sentimental terms as 'enclaves of tradition' that were posed against an increasingly urban and industrial nation." Instead, "Neal remained committed to imagining regions as dynamic, future-oriented spaces whose identities would—and should—remain elusive."[232]

Controversial at the time for its lack of association with any political party or other interest group,[233] The Yankee was free to cover "every thing [sic] from church to state, from the tallest tome, no matter how thick, down to the smallest affairs, of tokens and souvenirs and lady-actress's feet—of poets and dogs, of paintings and side-walks, of Bentham and Jeffrey, and sleigh-rides and huskings, of politics and religion, and 'courting' and 'blackberrying.'"[95] The magazine's greatest impact on literature was uplifting new voices like John Greenleaf Whittier, Edgar Allan Poe, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Elizabeth Oakes Smith, and Nathaniel Hawthorne.[89] Most of the new writers whose works he published and wrote about in The Yankee were women.[234]

Lecturing

 
First Parish Church, the site of John Neal's first scheduled lecture in 1829

Between 1829 and 1848, Neal supplemented his income as a lecturer. Traveling on the lyceum circuit, he covered topics such as "literature, eloquence, the fine arts, political economy, temperance, poets and poetry, public-speaking, our pilgrim-fathers, colonization, law and lawyers, the study of languages, natural-history, phrenology, women's-rights, self-education, self-reliance, and self-distrust, progress of opinion, &c., &c., &c.".[235]

When asked without notice to address the theme of freedom in Portland, Maine, on Independence Day 1832, Neal accepted and gave an unprepared speech that was his first on women's rights. He used the principles of the American Revolution to attack slavery as an affront to liberty, and female disfranchisement and coverture as taxation without representation.[236] Women's rights became a favorite topic of his frequent lecture engagements between 1832 and 1843 throughout the northeastern states. Because they were almost always published afterward and often covered in newspaper reviews, these events broadened Neal's sphere of influence and made his ideas accessible to readers not necessarily aligned with his views.[237] Margaret Fuller admired Neal's "magnetic genius", "lion heart", and "sense of the ludicrous" as a lecturer, though she poked fun at his "exaggeration and coxcombry".[238] His most well-attended and influential address was the 1843 "Rights of Women" speech at New York City's largest auditorium at the time, the Broadway Tabernacle.[239]

Activism

Using magazine and newspaper articles, short stories, novels, lectures, political organizing, and personal relationships, Neal throughout his adult life addressed issues including feminism, women's rights, slavery, rights of free Black Americans, rights of American Indians, dueling, temperance, lotteries, capital punishment, militia tax, insolvency law, and social hierarchy. Of these, "women's rights were the cause for which he fought longer and more consistently than for any other." [240] Much of Neal's writing and lecturing on these topics demonstrated "a basic distrust of institutions and a continuing plea for self-examination and self-reliance".[241]

Additionally, Neal was heavily involved in William Henry Harrison's 1840 presidential campaign, which almost resulted in his appointment as a district attorney.[242] He also promoted pseudoscience movements like phrenology, animal magnetism, spiritualism, and clairvoyance.[243]

Feminism

Neal was America's first women's rights lecturer[244] and one of the first male advocates of women's rights and feminist causes in the US.[245] At least as early as 1817 and late as 1873, he used journalism, fiction, lectures, political organizing, and personal relationships to advance feminist issues in the US and UK, reaching the height of his influence in this field around 1843.[246] Neal supported female writers and organizers, affirmed intellectual equality between men and women, fought coverture laws against women's economic rights, and demanded suffrage, equal pay, and better education for women.

Neal's early focus on female education was primarily influenced by Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Woman as well as works by Catharine Macaulay and Judith Sargent Murray.[247] His early feminist essays from the 1820s fill an intellectual gap between eighteenth-century feminists and their pre-Seneca Falls Convention successors Sarah Moore Grimké, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and Margaret Fuller.[248] As a male writer insulated from many forms of attack leveled against earlier female feminist thinkers, Neal's advocacy was crucial to bringing the field back into published discourse in the US and UK after a lull at the turn of the century.[249]

From the "feminist undertones" in his first novel (1817)[240] through the illustrations of "patriarchal cruelty" in Errata (1823) and "Idiosyncrasies" (1843)[250] to the vindication of independent, unmarried women in True Womanhood (1859),[251] Neal broke with writers of his generation by consciously and consistently including women and women's issues throughout his career as a writer of fiction.[252] "Idiosyncrasies" explored the male feminist perspective through the character Lee who said, "we men ... imprison the soul of woman, and set a seal upon her faculties— ... allowing her no share whatever in ... governing ourselves: Having found the cause, ... and believing in my heart ... that where the evil was, there the remedy must be sought for, I went to work".[253]

"Men and Women" (1824), his first feminist essay, recalls the eighteenth-century priority of female education:[254] "Wait until women are educated like men—treated like men—and permitted to talk freely, without being put to shame, because they are women". At that future time, he posited that the greatest of male writers "will be equalled by women".[255] Going further than his predecessors on intellectual equality, he "maintain[ed] that women are not inferior to men, but only unlike men, in their intellectual properties" and "would have women treated like men, of common sense."[256] The article more fully explores the concept he raised in "Essay on Duelling" (1817), in which when he urged women to use "the reason that Heaven has apportioned so equally between her, and her brother" to rid the world of duels.[257]

Over the 1820s, Neal shifted his focus from educational and intellectual ideas to political and economic issues like coverture and suffrage.[258] In an 1845 letter to activist Margaret Fuller, he said

I tell you there is no hope for woman, till she has a hand in making the law — no chance for her till her vote is worth as much as a mans [sic] vote. When it is — woman will not be fobbed off with a six-pence a day for the very work a man would get a dollar for ... All you and others are doing to elevate woman, is only fitted to make her feel more sensibly the long abuse of her own understanding, when she comes to her senses. You might as well educate slaves — and still keep them in bondage.[259]

 
The Broadway Tabernacle as it appeared at the time of John Neal's "Rights of Women" speech on January 24, 1843

Neal delivered America's first women's rights lecture as an Independence Day address in Portland, Maine in 1832.[260] He declared that under coverture and without suffrage, women were victims of the same crime of taxation without representation that caused the Revolutionary War.[261] He reached the peak of his influence on feminist issues at the time of his "Rights of Women" speech (1843)[262] before a crowd of 3,000 people in New York City.[263] He attacked the concept of virtual representation in government that suffrage opponents argued women could enjoy through men: "Just reverse the condition of the two sexes: give to Women all the power now enjoyed by Men ... What a clamour there would be then, about equal rights, about a privileged class, about being taxed without their own consent, and virtual representation, and all that!"[264]

The "Rights of Women" speech was widely covered, albeit dismissed, by the press, and Neal printed it later that year in the pages of Brother Jonathan magazine, of which he was editor.[265] He used that magazine in 1843 to publish his own essays calling for equal pay and better workplace conditions for women, and to host a printed debate of correspondence on the merits of women's suffrage between himself and Eliza W. Farnham.[266] Looking back more than forty years later, the second volume of the History of Woman Suffrage (1887) remembered that the lecture "roused considerable discussion ..., was extensively copied, and ... had a wide, silent influence, preparing the way for action. It was a scathing satire, and men felt the rebuke."[267]

For twenty years following his work with Brother Jonathan magazine, Neal wrote about women almost exclusively in fiction but only occasionally about feminist issues in periodicals.[268] He mused about crossdressing and the performative nature of gender in "Masquerading" (1864),[245] "one of the most interesting essays of his career".[269] He followed this with two women's rights essays for the American Phrenological Journal (1867), the women's rights chapter of his autobiography (1869), and twelve articles in The Revolution (1868–1870).[270]

Neal became prominently involved as an organizer in the women's suffrage movement following the Civil War, finding influence in local, regional, and national organizations.[271] When the American Equal Rights Association split in 1869 over the Fifteenth Amendment, Neal regretted the division of efforts, but lent his support to the subsequent National Woman Suffrage Association because of its insistence upon immediate suffrage for all women.[245] He cofounded the New England Woman Suffrage Association in 1868, organized Portland's first public meeting on women's suffrage in 1870, and cofounded Maine's first statewide Woman Suffrage Association in 1873.[272]

Slavery

Neal was "resolutely and heartily opposed to slavery",[273] interpreting the ideals of the Declaration of Independence to mean that "the slaves in America were created free ... Ergo—They may abolish the government, which, by keeping them as they are kept, has 'violated its trust.'"[274] In reaction to widespread rape of enslaved women, he reported that "white fathers ... are guilty of selling their own flesh and blood to bondage ... In the Southern States of America, where coloured women are sought after, purchased, and cohabited with by white men ... because the profit of the master is in direct proportion to the fruitfulness of the slave."[275]

Believing that "sudden emancipation of the whole [enslaved population], at once, is impossible"[276] and that it would perpetuate Black Americans' status as "a much-to-be-dreaded caste" in the US,[277] he supported "gradual emancipation [which] has done well in the New England states; and in New York."[276] Because New England had "nothing to lose by emancipation; but rather ... much to gain by it; since the value of white labour would rise",[275] Neal called for federally-funded compensated emancipation to spread the cost throughout the states.[278]

Neal supported the American Colonization Society,[279] founding the Portland, Maine local chapter in 1833, serving as its secretary, and later meeting with Liberia's first president, Joseph Jenkins Roberts.[280] Neal likely avoided the movement for "immediate, unconditional, and universal emancipation"[281] because of a long-standing feud with William Lloyd Garrison. The feud was not resolved until Neal declared in 1865 that "I was wrong ... and Mr. Garrison was right."[282]

Rights of Black Americans

Neal protested disfranchisement of free Black Americans by revealing how "free-born Americans, ... because of their colour," not just in the slave states, "but in the states where slavery is regarded with horror ... are suffered even to vote, ... being either excluded by law ... or excluded, by fear".[283] Wary of "practical racism" among White Northerners,[284] Neal drew attention to members of his gymnasium who in 1828 "voted that ... no colored man ... can be permitted to exercise with white citizens of our free and equal-community. Hurra for New-England! We have no prejudices here—None but wholesome prejudices, at any rate."[285] Disappointed they would not admit the Black men he sponsored for membership, Neal ended his involvement with the gym shortly thereafter.[286] In fiction, Neal explored the differences between Northern and Southern prejudices against Black Americans, particularly in The Down-Easters (1833).[279] He nevertheless believed in phrenological inferiority, explaining that "while we disregard colour, we pay great attention to form, in our estimation of capacity. The negro head is very bad."[287] This led him to a proto-eugenicist argument for legalizing interracial marriage so that future generations of "the negroes of America would no longer be a separate, inferior class, without political power, without privilege, and without a share in the great commonwealth".[288]

Rights of American Indians

Neal published essays, novels, and short stories to advocate the rights of American Indians. At a time when "native American" was a nativist term referring to Anglo-Americans, Neal declared in his first novel (1817) that "the Indian is the only native American."[289] In "A Summary View of America" (1824), Neal claimed that American Indians "have never been the aggressors" in conflicts with European-Americans and that "no people, ancient or modern ... have been so deplorably oppressed, belied, and wronged, in every possible way."[290] He called for recognition of Indigenous sovereignty, decrying that "the law of nations has never been regarded, in dealing with them: ... their ambassadors have been seized, imprisoned, and butchered, ... [and] war has never been declared against them".[290] Outlining the process by which the US government seized Indigenous land, Neal said,

The frontier people pick a quarrel with the Indians ... No declaration of war follows; no ceremony; but, forth goes General [Andrew] Jackson—or general somebody else; wasting and firing the whole country. A truce follows: a ceding of the conquered country—for the protection of the whites.[290]

Neal used novels like Logan (1822) to challenge racial boundaries between White and Indigenous Americans.[178] Reacting to the Indian Removal Act (1830) and popular literature that supported it, Neal published the short story "David Whicher" (1832) to explore peaceful multiethnic coexistence in the US.[291] The tale also "contested how popular literature employed colonial violence to provide a model of and justification for its continuation in the name of national expansion".[292]

Temperance

As a child, Neal decided to avoid intemperate drinking and maintained this personal conviction throughout his life.[293] He did not associate himself with the temperance movement until after he returned to Portland, Maine from London. His first invitation to lecture an audience was for the annual address for the Portland Association for the Promotion of Temperance in 1829.[294] Neal Dow, John Neal's cousin, was a leader of the prohibition movement, and in 1836 Neal engaged in public debates with his cousin to defend moderate wine drinking as an alternative to total abstinence.[295] It was in this period between the late 1830s and late 1840s that Neal became disillusioned with the temperance movement, which had moved away from a focus on moral suasion to enacting prohibition laws; Dow and his followers "instead of regarding the injunction, 'Be temperate in all things,' were furiously intemperate on the subject of temperance; making total abstinence the condition of citizenship, and almost of civilization."[296] Neal remained convinced of "the evils of intemperance ... They could not well be exaggerated; the only question was about the remedy."[297]

Dueling

In his first novel (1817), Neal portrayed dueling as a holdover from an aristocratic era that is immoral, pointless, antidemocratic, and anti-American,[62] charging "that here, in America, a gentleman may cut another's throat, or blow out his brains with complete impunity."[298] His "Essay on Duelling" that same year attacked the institution as a gendered performance, or "the unqualified evidence of manhood",[299] believing that "in his closet every man wishes duelling abolished, and if every man who wishes it sincerely in private would but speak as firmly in publick [sic], it would be abolished."[257]

Social hierarchy

Neal's Quaker upbringing likely instilled in him an aversion to "worldly titles" he claimed were unfitting in republican society.[300] He mocked them with humorous works like the title page of his first novel (1817) that claimed the book was "Reviewed By—Himself—'Esquire.'"[240] In "A Summary View of America" (1824) he decried that the US had fallen away from its ideals of equality to a place in which "titles are multiplying ... Even the pride of ancestry ... has found root in that republican soil. There is a tremendous contention ... between the families of yesterday, and those of the day before."[301] As a lawyer he refused to address Chief Justice John Marshall or any other judge as "your honor,"[302] claiming that "there is no greater humbug in the minds of men than this obsequious bowing to men of high station. The great thinkers of the world are the workers of the world, the producers of the world."[303]

Militia tax

In his "United States" essay (1826), Neal made his first published argument against the poll tax that financed the US militia system.[304] He illustrated that both "the poor and the rich are taxed ... under the militia law" which was designed "to defend property of the rich man. The rich, of course, do not appear in the field. The poor do. The latter cannot afford to keep away; the former can." He proposed replacing the poll tax with a property tax to pay men serving in militias, thereby making the system more equitable.[305]

Lotteries

Neal made his earliest arguments against lotteries in Baltimore newspapers as a law apprentice, then in Logan (1822). His argument that the law should treat lotteries the same as other forms of gambling found influence across the US and in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom.[306] In The Yankee, he "opened fire upon all [lottery] offices, ... both at the bar, and in our legislative halls, and never rested, until the system was up-rooted ... throughout our whole country".[304] Lotteries fell into disfavor in the US in the 1830s.[307]

Capital punishment

Neal began his campaign against public executions after witnessing one in Baltimore.[308] He attacked capital punishment by writing in newspapers, magazines, novels, and debates, achieving national influence in the US and reaching a more limited audience in the UK.[309] Late in life he remembered still "having no belief in the wisdom of strangulation, for men, women, and children, however they might seem to deserve it, and being fully persuaded that the worst men have most need of repentance, and that they who are unfit to live, are still more unfit to die."[310]

Bankruptcy law

Neal became active in bankruptcy law reform shortly after his own bankruptcy in 1816.[311] As a young Baltimore lawyer he took an unpopular stance against Chief Justice Marshall's opinion in Sturges v. Crowninshield (1819) and played a prominent role in the movement for a national bankruptcy law.[312] He continued by attacking the policy of imprisonment for debt in his Baltimore novels and in American and British newspapers later in the 1820s.[313]

Legacy

Scattered genius

I AM called upon for a Preface. Like the "weary knife-grinder," when asked for a story, I am half tempted to answer, "Preface! God bless you! I've none to give you, sir!"

My book itself is only a Preface. And what, after all, is any Life but a preface?—a preface to something better—or worse?

On the whole, therefore, I think it safer for me, and better for the reader, whom I hope to be on good terms with, before he gets through, whatever may be his present notions upon the subject, not to trouble him with a Preface.

— John Neal, Preface to Wandering Recollections of a Somewhat Busy Life: An Autobiography, 1869[314]

Neal's reputation as an intellectually dispersed and uncontrolled genius is exemplified by biographer Windsor Daggett, who claimed "he scattered his genius into many channels at a loss."[315] Historian Edward H. Elwell opined that "he wrote for everything because he could not write long for anything."[316] By Neal's own admission, a year-long stint as newspaper editor was "a long while, for any thing [sic] I had to do with."[317] American literature scholar Fred Lewis Pattee saw Neal's as "genius of a type that must be especially defined" with words like "energy and persistence" but also "ignorance colossal".[318] American literature scholar Theresa A. Goddu concluded that Neal had been canonized as "half wildman, half genius".[319] Edgar Allan Poe was "inclined to rank John Neal first, or at all events second, among our men of indisputable genius", but in the same paragraph rated his work as "massive and undetailed", "hurried and indistinct", and "deficient in a sense of completeness".[320]

Contemporaries and scholars of Neal alike are disposed to lament his inability to achieve what others saw as the potential of his abilities. Biographer Donald A. Sears classified him as "a writer without a masterpiece" who "lived to be eclipsed by writers of lesser genius but greater control of their talents."[321] Daggett claimed "he flashed youthful brilliance. He never quite caught up with it or conquered it, and so he sometimes wore the stamp of failure in the minds of his contemporaries."[322] American literature scholar Alexander Cowie referred to Neal as "the victim of his own lust for words" with "no single work of fiction which deserves to be revived for its sheer merit"[323] and no books "worth placing on the shelves of any library save as a 'believe it or not' specimen".[324] In an 1848 poem, James Russell Lowell classified Neal as "a man who made less than he might have" who was good at "whisking out flocks of comets, but never a star" because he was "too hasty to wait till Art's ripe fruit should drop", and concluded that "could he only have waited he might have been great".[325]

Influence

Neal's creative work had indirect influence on many writers during and after his life. Seba Smith, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow are all known to have enjoyed and been influenced by Neal's early poems and novels.[326] Smith is most famous for his "Jack Downing" humor series, which was likely influenced by Neal's humorous use of regional dialect.[327] It is also likely that Edgar Allan Poe developed many of his characteristic traits as a writer under the influence of Neal's articles in The Yankee in the late 1820s.[328]

Many scholars conclude that most defining authors of the mid-nineteenth-century American renaissance earned their reputations by employing techniques learned from Neal's work earlier in the century, among them Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman, Edgar Allan Poe, and Herman Melville.[329] Biographer Benjamin Lease pointed to Neal's comparatively better remembered immediate predecessors, Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper, as lacking an obvious link to those mid-century masters that Neal clearly demonstrates.[330] He further argued that Neal's ability to influence such disparate figures as Poe and Whitman demonstrates the weight of his work.[331]

Historical status

Aligned with their twentieth-century predecessors, both Lease and Sears in the 1970s classified John Neal as a transitional figure in literature who came after the initial wave of British-imitating American literature but before the great American Renaissance that occurred after Neal had published the bulk of his work.[332] More recent scholarship placed Neal "Not exactly 'beneath' the 'American Renaissance,'" but "scattered across it."[333] American literature scholars Edward Watts, David J. Carlson, and Maya Merlob contended that Neal was written out of the Renaissance because of his distance from the Boston-Concord circle and his utilization of popular styles and modes viewed at a lower artistic level.[334]

Selected works

Notes

  1. ^ Counterfeit money was very common in the United States in the early nineteenth century.[6]
  2. ^ In 1847, John Neal named his youngest child John Pierpont Neal in honor of his closest friend.[11] In 1866 he wrote Pierpont's obituary.[12]
  3. ^ Neal became fluent in French, but also became able to easily converse and write in Spanish, Italian, and German. In addition, he "could manage ... pretty well" writing and reading Portuguese, Swedish, Danish, Hebrew, Latin, Greek, and Old Saxon.[15] He learned to read Chinese shortly before his death.[16]
  4. ^ In 1816, recipients were responsible for paying postage on US Mail.
  5. ^ The name Brother Jonathan also refers to a personification of New England popular at the time of Neal's Brother Jonathan novel.
  6. ^ All the public gymnasiums in the US that precede Neal's were established by Germans and none of the gyms established in the US by Americans that precede Neal's were open to the general public: one public gym in Boston founded by German Charles Follen in early 1827[76] and multiple school and college gymnasiums in the northeastern states founded by Germans and Americans in 1826 and 1827.[77]
  7. ^ Clockwise from top: John Neal, daughter Mary Neal, wife Eleanor Hall Neal, daughter Margaret Eleanor Neal, and son James Neal[96]
  8. ^ John Neal built two mirror-image row houses, moving into number 173 (right) and selling 175 (left). In 1970 they were listed as contributing buildings in the Spring Street Historic District.[97]
  9. ^ $80,000 in 1870 was approximately equal to between fifty and seventy years' wages for industrial management workers at the time[123] and is approximately equivalent to $1,714,316 in 2021.[124]
  10. ^ Neal published Keep Cool under the pen name "Somebody, M.D.C.", which stands for "Member of the Delphian Club".[335]
  11. ^ Neal published Authorship under the pen name "A New Englander Over-Sea".
  12. ^ Neal published the original American Writers series under the pen name "Carter Holmes" – one of many British personas he used while writing for magazines from London.
  13. ^ Neal published "Battle of Niagara" under the pen name "John O'Cataract", which is a variation on his Delphian Club pen name.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d Sears 1978, p. 15.
  2. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 145, quoting Elizabeth Oakes Smith.
  3. ^ Lease 1972, p. 5.
  4. ^ Lease 1972, p. 9; Neal 1869, pp. 66–67; Fleischmann 1983, p. 243.
  5. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 146; Richards 1933, p. 28.
  6. ^ Lease 1972, p. 10; Neal 1869, p. 124; Mihm 2007, p. 6.
  7. ^ Lease 1972, p. 9.
  8. ^ Lease 1972, p. 11; Daggett 1920, p. 1.
  9. ^ Richards 1933, p. 39.
  10. ^ a b Lease 1972, p. 12.
  11. ^ a b Sears 1978, p. 12.
  12. ^ Neal 1869, p. 9.
  13. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xv.
  14. ^ a b Fleischmann 1983, p. 147.
  15. ^ Neal 1869, p. 112.
  16. ^ Richards 1933, p. 1271.
  17. ^ Sears 1978, p. 145.
  18. ^ Neal 1869, p. 169.
  19. ^ Neal 1869, p. 113; Brooks 1833, p. 84.
  20. ^ a b Appleby 2000, p. 93.
  21. ^ a b Mott 1966, p. 294.
  22. ^ Lease 1972, p. 21.
  23. ^ Sears 1978, p. 111.
  24. ^ Neal 1869, p. 210.
  25. ^ Sears 1978, p. 23.
  26. ^ Brooks 1833, p. 77.
  27. ^ Neal 1869, p. 196.
  28. ^ Sears 1978, p. 35.
  29. ^ Neal 1869, p. 162.
  30. ^ Neal 1869, p. 163.
  31. ^ a b Sears 1978, p. 40.
  32. ^ Brooks 1833, p. 85, quoting Hezekiah Niles
  33. ^ Sears 1978, p. 11.
  34. ^ Gallant 2012, p. 1.
  35. ^ Sears 1978, p. 40; Brooks 1833, p. 100.
  36. ^ Lease 1972, p. 38; Brooks 1833, p. 84.
  37. ^ Sears 1978, p. 34.
  38. ^ a b Lease 1972, p. 39.
  39. ^ Lease 1972, p. 38.
  40. ^ Sears 1978, p. 11; Lease 1972, p. 38.
  41. ^ Sears 1978, pp. 55–56.
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  48. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xvi.
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  62. ^ a b Kayorie 2019, p. 87.
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  68. ^ Lease 1972, pp. 123–124.
  69. ^ Lease 1972, p. 124.
  70. ^ Neal 1869, pp. 326–329.
  71. ^ Neal 1869, pp. 330–331.
  72. ^ Neal 1869, p. 325.
  73. ^ Sears 1978, p. 106; Eisenberg 2007, p. 136.
  74. ^ Neal 1869, pp. 83, 318–322.
  75. ^ Barnes 1984, p. 47.
  76. ^ Leonard 1923, pp. 235–236.
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  111. ^ Lowell 1891, p. 62.
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  117. ^ Lease 1972, p. 198.
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  119. ^ Lease 1972, pp. 199–200, 206.
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  127. ^ Sears 1978, p. 125.
  128. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xxvi.
  129. ^ Merlob 2012, p. 118n7.
  130. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xxiii.
  131. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 187.
  132. ^ Merlob 2012, p. 118n11.
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  134. ^ Fleischmann 1983, pp. 144–145; Lang, p. 207.
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  137. ^ Sears 1978, p. 26.
  138. ^ Merlob 2012, pp. 109, 100, 120n11.
  139. ^ Neal 1840, p. 4.
  140. ^ Neal 1823a, p. 59.
  141. ^ a b Pattee 1937b, p. 22.
  142. ^ Lease 1972, p. 70, quoting Harold C. Martin.
  143. ^ Pethers 2012, p. 3.
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  145. ^ Lease 1972, pp. 42, 69.
  146. ^ Neal 1828, pp. xii, xviii.
  147. ^ a b Fiorelli 1980, abstract.
  148. ^ Merlob 2012, p. 114.
  149. ^ Merlob 2012, p. 109.
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  152. ^ Kayorie 2019, p. 90; Fleischmann 1983, p. 145.
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  154. ^ a b Pattee 1937b, p. 23.
  155. ^ Neal 1869, p. 221.
  156. ^ Neal 1833, p. iv.
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  158. ^ Sears 1978, p. 72; Appleby 2000, p. 93; Pattee 1937a, p. v.
  159. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xiii.
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  161. ^ Sears 1978, p. 113, quoting John Greenleaf Whittier.
  162. ^ Lease 1972, p. 132.
  163. ^ Sears 1978, p. 114, quoting Poe's letter.
  164. ^ Lease 1972, p. 194, quoting John Neal
  165. ^ Fleischmann 1987, pp. 157–158.
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  167. ^ Lease 1972, p. 172; Sears 1978, p. 95.
  168. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xxi.
  169. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, pp. 209–210.
  170. ^ Fleischmann 2012, p. 257.
  171. ^ Sears 1978, p. 96.
  172. ^ Merlob 2012, p. 118, note 11
  173. ^ Sears 1978, p. 81.
  174. ^ Pattee 1937b, p. 5.
  175. ^ Goddu 1997, p. 60, quoting Alexander Cowie
  176. ^ Richter 2003, p. 245.
  177. ^ Goddu 1997, p. 62.
  178. ^ a b Goddu 1997, p. 63.
  179. ^ Neal 1840, p. 52.
  180. ^ Neal 1869, p. 224.
  181. ^ Waples 1938, p. 250.
  182. ^ Sears 1978, p. 46; Barnes 1984, pp. 46–47.
  183. ^ a b Sivils 2012, p. 45.
  184. ^ Pethers 2012, p. 23.
  185. ^ Richter 2003, p. 259.
  186. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 284.
  187. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 150.
  188. ^ Todd 1906, p. 66.
  189. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xviii; Fleischmann 1983, p. 295.
  190. ^ Lease 1972, p. 189.
  191. ^ Sears 1978, pp. 82–83; Kayorie 2019, p. 90.
  192. ^ Sears 1978, p. 118; Dickson 1943, p. ix.
  193. ^ Orestano 2012, p. 138.
  194. ^ Richards 1933, pp. 152–153.
  195. ^ Orestano 2012, p. 124.
  196. ^ Orestano 2012, p. 140; Dickson 1943, p. xx.
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  198. ^ Orestano 2012, p. 130.
  199. ^ Orestano 2012, pp. 126–127, 132–133.
  200. ^ a b Orestano 2012, p. 133.
  201. ^ Orestano 2012, p. 135.
  202. ^ Orestano 2012, pp. 133, 139.
  203. ^ Orestano 2012, pp. 135, 141.
  204. ^ Orestano 2012, pp. 137–138, quoting John Ruskin
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  206. ^ Neal 1874, pp. 42, 57–61; Greater Portland Landmarks, pp. 46–47.
  207. ^ Greater Portland Landmarks, p. 47.
  208. ^ Dickson 1943, p. xxiii.
  209. ^ Orestano 2012, p. 140.
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  211. ^ Lease 1972, p. 21; Hayes 2012, p. 275.
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  215. ^ Daggett 1920, p. 5; Lease 1972, p. 44.
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  218. ^ Lease 1972, p. 92, quoting Our Ephraim.
  219. ^ Lease 1972, p. 185, quoting James Henry Hackett
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  223. ^ Meserve 1986, p. 24, quoting John Neal.
  224. ^ Meserve 1986, p. 24.
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  226. ^ Sears 1978, pp. 40, 111.
  227. ^ Richards 1933, p. 576.
  228. ^ Holt 2012, p. 187; Neal 1869, p. 336.
  229. ^ Richards 1933, pp. 581–582.
  230. ^ Elwell 1877, p. 29, quoting the Portland Transcript.
  231. ^ Holt 2012, pp. 187–188.
  232. ^ Holt 2012, p. 203.
  233. ^ Elwell 1877, p. 26.
  234. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 145.
  235. ^ Neal 1869, pp. 354–355.
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  237. ^ Weyler 2012, p. 240; Capper 1992, p. 220.
  238. ^ Capper 1992, p. 220, quoting Margaret Fuller
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  251. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 319.
  252. ^ Fleischmann 1983, pp. 158–159.
  253. ^ Fleischmann 2012, p. 255, quoting "Idiosyncrasies"
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  256. ^ Neal October 1824, pp. 387, 388.
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  258. ^ Weyler 2012, pp. 236–237, 239.
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  261. ^ Sears 1978, p. 99.
  262. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 189.
  263. ^ Daggett 1920, pp. 30, 35.
  264. ^ Daggett 1920, p. 47, quoting "Rights of Women"
  265. ^ Daggett 1920, p. 34.
  266. ^ Daggett 1920, pp. 37–39.
  267. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 189, quoting History of Woman Suffrage vol 2.
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  269. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 210.
  270. ^ Fleischmann 1983, pp. 212, 222.
  271. ^ Fleischmann 2012, p. 249.
  272. ^ Fleischmann 1983, pp. 212, 215, 216–217.
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  276. ^ a b Neal December 1824, p. 642.
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  281. ^ Neal 1869, p. 403.
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  283. ^ Neal January 1826, pp. 183–184.
  284. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 154.
  285. ^ Price & Talbot 2006, pp. 190–192, quoting Neal
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  287. ^ Neal December 1824, p. 643.
  288. ^ Neal January 1826, p. 188.
  289. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 153, quoting Keep Cool.
  290. ^ a b c Neal December 1824, p. 640.
  291. ^ Watts 2012, p. 209.
  292. ^ Watts 2012, p. 211.
  293. ^ Neal 1869, p. 364.
  294. ^ Neal 1869, p. 355.
  295. ^ Byrne 1969, p. 23.
  296. ^ Neal 1869, p. 368.
  297. ^ Neal 1869, p. 367.
  298. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 154, quoting Keep Cool.
  299. ^ Neal 1817, pp. 132–133.
  300. ^ Fleischmann 1983, pp. 152–153.
  301. ^ Neal December 1824, p. 628.
  302. ^ Neal 1869, p. 289.
  303. ^ Todd 1906, p. 68, quoting Neal from memory.
  304. ^ a b Neal 1869, p. 348.
  305. ^ Neal January 1826, p. 180.
  306. ^ Neal 1869, pp. 179–180, 347–348.
  307. ^ Mihm 2007, p. 236.
  308. ^ Jackson 1907, p. 521.
  309. ^ Neal 1869, pp. 59, 179–180.
  310. ^ Neal 1869, p. 390.
  311. ^ Neal 1869, p. 389.
  312. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 153; Neal 1869, pp. 180–181.
  313. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 153; Neal 1869, pp. 179–180, 348, 389.
  314. ^ Neal 1869, p. iii.
  315. ^ Daggett 1920, p. 30.
  316. ^ Elwell 1877, p. 29.
  317. ^ Neal 1869, p. 340.
  318. ^ Pattee 1937b, p. 1.
  319. ^ Goddu 1997, p. 70.
  320. ^ Poe 1849, p. 545.
  321. ^ Sears 1978, pp. 122, 13.
  322. ^ Daggett 1920, p. 17.
  323. ^ Cowie 1951, p. 175.
  324. ^ Pattee 1935, p. 282.
  325. ^ Lowell 1891, pp. 62–64.
  326. ^ Sears 1978, p. 114; Fleischmann 1983, p. 145.
  327. ^ Kayorie 2019, p. 86.
  328. ^ Lease 1972, pp. 131–132.
  329. ^ Kayorie 2019, p. 87; Sears 1978, p. 123.
  330. ^ Lease 1972, p. 80.
  331. ^ Lease 1972, p. 79.
  332. ^ Sears 1978, p. 123; Lease 1972, p. 79.
  333. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xviii.
  334. ^ Watts & Carlson 2012b, p. xiii; Merlob 2012, p. 110.
  335. ^ Fleischmann 1983, p. 205.

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  • Pattee, Fred Lewis (1935). The First Century of American Literature: 1770–1870. New York, New York: Appleton-Century. OCLC 2461125.
  • Pattee, Fred Lewis (1937a). "Preface". In Pattee, Fred Lewis (ed.). American Writers: A Series of Papers Contributed to Blackwood's Magazine (1824–1825). Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. p. v. OCLC 464953146.
  • Pattee, Fred Lewis (1937b). "Introduction". In Pattee, Fred Lewis (ed.). American Writers: A Series of Papers Contributed to Blackwood's Magazine (1824–1825). Durham, North Carolina: Duke University Press. pp. 3–26. OCLC 464953146.
  • Pethers, Matthew (2012). "Chapter 1: "I Must Resemble Nobody": John Neal, Genre, and the Making of American Literary Nationalism". John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture. pp. 1–38. In Watts & Carlson (2012a).
  • Poe, Edgar Allan (1849). The Works of Edgar Allan Poe. Vol. 3. New York, New York: W.J. Widdleton. OCLC 38115823.
  • Price, H. H.; Talbot, Gerald E. (2006). "Sports". In Price, H. H.; Talbot, Gerald (eds.). Maine's Visible Black History: The First Chronicle of Its People. Gardiner, Maine: Tilbury House. pp. 190–192. ISBN 9780884482758.
  • Richards, Irving T. (1934) [Originally published in The New England Quarterly, vol. 7, no. 2. pp. 335–355]. "Mary Gove Nichols and John Neal". Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism: Criticism of the Works of Novelists, Philosophers, and Other Creative Writers Who Died between 1800 and 1899, from the First Published Critical Appraisals to Current Evaluations. pp. 168–178. In DiMercurio (2018).
  • Richter, Jörg Thomas (2003) [Originally published in Colonial Encounters: Essays in Early American History and Culture. Heidelberg, Germany: Universitätsverlag Winter. pp. 157–172]. "Exemplary American: Logan, the Mingo Chief, in Jefferson, Neal, and Doddridge". Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism: Criticism of the Works of Novelists, Philosophers, and Other Creative Writers Who Died between 1800 and 1899, from the First Published Critical Appraisals to Current Evaluations. pp. 241–249. In DiMercurio (2018).
  • Sears, Donald A. (1978). John Neal. Twayne's United States Author Series. Boston, Massachusetts: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 9780805772302.
  • Sivils, Matthew Wynn (2012). "Chapter 2: "The Herbage of Death": Haunted Environments in John Neal and James Fenimore Cooper". John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture. pp. 39–56. In Watts & Carlson (2012a).
  • Stern, Madeline B. (1991). The Life of Margaret Fuller (2nd revised ed.). New York, New York: Greenwood Press. ISBN 9780313275265.
  • Thurston, Brown (1886). "Biographical Sketches: John Neal". In Wood, Joseph (ed.). Twenty-Third Annual Report of the Proceedings of the Maine Press Association, for the Year Ending February 1, 1886. Bar Harbor, Maine: Mount Desert Publishing Company. pp. 39–42. OCLC 7158022. The source URL includes multiple separate publications bundled together.
  • Todd, John M. (1906). A Sketch of the Life of John M. Todd (Sixty-two Years in a Barber Shop) And Reminiscences of His Customers. Portland, Maine: William W. Roberts Co. OCLC 663785.
  • von Mehren, Joan (1994). Minerva and the Muse: A Life of Margaret Fuller. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 9780870239410.
  • Waples, Dorothy (1938). The Whig Myth of James Fenimore Cooper. Yale studies in English, v. 88. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. OCLC 670265.
  • Watts, Edward (2012). "Chapter 10: He Could Not Believe that Butchering Red Men Was Serving Our Maker: "David Whicher" and the Indian Hater Tradition". John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture. pp. 209–226. In Watts & Carlson (2012a).
  • Watts, Edward; Carlson, David J., eds. (2012a). John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture. Lewisburg, Pennsylvania: Bucknell University Press. ISBN 9781611484205.
  • Watts, Edward; Carlson, David J. (2012b). "Introduction". John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture. pp. xi–xxxiv. In Watts & Carlson (2012a).
  • Weyler, Karen A. (2012). "Chapter 11: John Neal and the Early Discourse of American Women's Rights". John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture. pp. 227–246. In Watts & Carlson (2012a).
  • Young, Edward (1871). Special Report on Immigration; Accompanying Information for Immigrants. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. OCLC 786302802.
Magazine and journal articles
  • Brooks, James (August 31, 1833). "Letters from the East—John Neal". New-York Mirror. Vol. 11. New York, New York: G.P. Morris. pp. 69–70, 76–77, 84–85, 92–93, 100–101, 109, 117–118. (A serial biography of Neal published in eight installments.)
  • Edwards, George Thornton (February 1907). "'Highfield': One of Longfellow's Favorite Haunts". Pine Tree Magazine. Vol. 7, no. 1. Portland, Maine: Sale Publishing Co. pp. 28–31.
  • "The Great Value of a Good Name". Pine Tree Magazine. Vol. 7, no. 5. Portland, Maine: Sale Publishing Co. June 1907. p. 480.
  • Jackson, Charles E. (July 1907). "Maine Charitable Mechanic Association". Pine Tree Magazine. Vol. 7, no. 6. Portland, Maine: Sale Publishing Co. pp. 515–523.
  • Lang, Hans-Joachim (1962). "Critical Essays and Stories by John Neal". Jahrbuch für Amerikastudien. 7: 204–288. JSTOR 41155013.
  • Neal, John (February 1817). "Essay on Duelling". The Portico. Vol. 3 (January–June, 1817), no. 2. Baltimore, Maryland: Neale Willis & Cole. pp. 132–146.
  • Neal, John (July 1824). "Speculations of a Traveler Concerning the People of the United States With Parallels". Blackwood's Magazine. Vol. 16 (July–December 1824). Edinburgh, Scotland: William Blackwood. pp. 91–97.
  • Neal, John (October 1824). "Men and Women: Brief Hypothesis concerning the Difference in their Genius". Blackwood's Magazine. Vol. 16 (July–December 1824). Edinburgh, Scotland: William Blackwood. pp. 387–394.
  • Neal, John (December 1824). "A Summary View of America". Blackwood's Magazine. Vol. 16 (July–December 1824). Edinburgh, Scotland: William Blackwood. pp. 617–652.
  • Neal, John (January 7, 1826). "United States". Westminster Review. Vol. 5 (January–April, 1826). London, England: Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy. pp. 173–201.
  • Neal, John (April 1826). "Yankee Notions". The London Magazine. Vol. 4 (January–April, 1826). London, England: Hunt and Clarke. pp. 437–449.
  • Neal, John (December 1829). "Unpublished Poetry". The Yankee; And Boston Literary Gazette. Vol. 79 (July–December, 1829). Boston, Massachusetts: James Adams, Jr. pp. 295–298.
News articles
  • Anonymous (July 19, 1875). "Served Him Right: The Veteran John Neal Gives an Impertinent Young Rough His Deserts". The New York Times. Vol. 24, no. 7438. New York, New York. p. 3.
  • Anonymous (August 4, 1875). "Served Him Right". The Tobacco Leaf: Organ of the Tobacco Trade in the United States. Vol. 11, no. 25. New York, New York. p. 7.
  • Gallant, Cliff (July 13, 2012). "The Churlish and Brilliant John Neal". The Portland Daily Sun. Portland, Maine. pp. 1, 5.
Unpublished dissertations
  • Fiorelli, Edward Alfred (1980). Literary Nationalism in the Works of John Neal (1793–1876) (PhD). Fordham University. OCLC 918099566.
  • Richards, Irving T. (1933). The Life and Works of John Neal (PhD). Harvard University. OCLC 7588473.

External links

john, neal, writer, john, neal, august, 1793, june, 1876, american, writer, critic, editor, lecturer, activist, considered, both, eccentric, influential, delivered, speeches, published, essays, novels, poems, short, stories, between, 1810s, 1870s, united, stat. John Neal August 25 1793 June 20 1876 was an American writer critic editor lecturer and activist Considered both eccentric and influential he delivered speeches and published essays novels poems and short stories between the 1810s and 1870s in the United States and Great Britain championing American literary nationalism and regionalism in their earliest stages Neal advanced the development of American art fought for women s rights advocated the end of slavery and racial prejudice and helped establish the American gymnastics movement John NealEsq Portrait by Sarah Miriam Peale circa 1823Born 1793 08 25 August 25 1793Portland District of Maine USDiedJune 20 1876 1876 06 20 aged 82 Portland Maine USResting placeWestern Cemetery Portland Maine USPen nameSomebody M D C Jehu O Cataract John O Cataract Carter Holmes A New Englander Over SeaOccupationWriter critic editor activist lawyer lecturer entrepreneurSignatureThe first American author to use natural diction and a pioneer of colloquialism John Neal is the first to use the phrase son of a bitch in a work of fiction He attained his greatest literary achievements between 1817 and 1835 during which time he was America s first daily newspaper columnist the first American published in British literary journals author of the first history of American literature America s first art critic a short story pioneer a children s literature pioneer and a forerunner of the American Renaissance As one of the first men to advocate women s rights in the US and the first American lecturer on the issue for over fifty years he supported female writers and organizers affirmed intellectual equality between men and women fought coverture laws against women s economic rights and demanded suffrage equal pay and better education for women He was the first American to establish a public gymnasium in the US and championed athletics to regulate violent tendencies with which he himself had struggled throughout his life A largely self educated man who attended no schools after the age of twelve Neal was a child laborer who left self employment in dry goods at twenty two to pursue dual careers in law and literature By middle age Neal had attained comfortable wealth and community standing in his native Portland Maine through varied business investments arts patronage and civic leadership Neal is considered an author without a masterpiece though his short stories are his highest literary achievements and ranked with the best of his age Rachel Dyer is considered his best novel Otter Bag the Oneida Chief and David Whicher his best tales and The Yankee his most influential periodical His Rights of Women speech 1843 at the peak of his influence as a feminist had a considerable impact on the future of the movement Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Childhood and early employment 1 2 Building a career in Baltimore 1 3 Writing in London 1 4 Return to Portland Maine 1 5 Family and civic leadership 2 Writing 2 1 Style 2 2 Literary criticism 2 3 Short stories 2 4 Novels 2 5 Art criticism and patronage 2 6 Poetry 2 7 Drama and theatrical criticism 3 Editing 4 Lecturing 5 Activism 5 1 Feminism 5 2 Slavery 5 3 Rights of Black Americans 5 4 Rights of American Indians 5 5 Temperance 5 6 Dueling 5 7 Social hierarchy 5 8 Militia tax 5 9 Lotteries 5 10 Capital punishment 5 11 Bankruptcy law 6 Legacy 6 1 Scattered genius 6 2 Influence 6 3 Historical status 7 Selected works 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 External linksBiography EditChildhood and early employment Edit John Neal and his twin sister Rachel were born in the town of Portland in the Massachusetts District of Maine on August 25 1793 the only children of parents John and Rachel Hall Neal 1 The senior John Neal a school teacher died a month later Neal s mother described by former pupil Elizabeth Oakes Smith as a woman of clear intellect and no little self reliance and independence of will 2 made up the lost family income by establishing her own school and renting rooms in her home to boarders She also received assistance from the siblings unmarried uncle James Neal and others in their Quaker community Neal grew up in genteel poverty attending his mother s school a Quaker boarding school and the public school in Portland 3 Neal claimed his lifelong struggle with a short temper and violent tendencies originated in the public school at which he was bullied and physically abused by classmates and the schoolmaster 4 To reduce his mother s financial burden Neal left school and home at the age of twelve for full time employment 5 Penmanship business advertisement circa 1813 As an adolescent haberdasher and dry goods salesman in Portland and Portsmouth Neal learned dishonest business practices like passing off counterfeit money a and misrepresenting merchandise quality and quantity 7 Laid off multiple times due to business failures resulting from US embargoes against British imports Neal traveled through Maine as an itinerant penmanship instructor watercolor teacher and miniature portrait artist 8 At twenty years of age in 1814 he answered an ad for employment with a dry goods shop in Boston and moved to the larger city 9 In Boston Neal established a partnership with John Pierpont and Pierpont s brother in law 1 whereby they exploited supply chain constrictions caused by the War of 1812 to make quick profits smuggling contraband British dry goods between Boston New York City and Baltimore 10 They established stores in Boston Baltimore and Charleston 1 before the recession following the war upended the firm and left Pierpont and Neal bankrupt in Baltimore in 1816 10 Though the Pierpont Lord and Neal wholesale retail chain proved to be short lived Neal s relationship with Pierpont grew into the closest and longest lived friendship of his life 1 b Neal s experience in business riding out the multiple booms and busts that eventually left him bankrupt at age twenty two made him into a proud and ambitious young man who viewed reliance on his own talents and resources as the key to his recovery and future success 13 Building a career in Baltimore Edit Neal s time in Baltimore between his business failure in 1816 and his departure for London in 1823 was the busiest period of his life as he juggled overlapping careers in editorship journalism poetry novels law study and later law practice 14 During this period he taught himself to read and write in eleven languages c published seven books 17 read law for four years 18 completed an independent course of law study in eighteen months that was designed to be completed in seven to eight years 19 earned admission to the bar in a community known for rigorous requirements 14 and contributed prodigiously to newspapers and literary magazines two of which he edited at different points 20 The Portico A Repository of Science amp Literature Two months after Neal s bankruptcy trial he submitted his first contribution to The Portico and quickly became the magazine s second most prolific 21 contributor of poems essays and literary criticism though he was never paid 22 Two years later he took over as editor for what ended up being the last issue 23 The magazine was closely associated with the Delphian Club which he founded in 1816 with Dr Tobias Watkins John Pierpont and four other men 21 Neal felt indebted to this high minded generous unselfish association of intellectual and companionable people for many of the happy memories and employment connections he enjoyed in Baltimore 24 While writing his earliest poetry novels and essays he was studying law as an unpaid apprentice in the office of William H Winder a fellow Delphian 25 Neal s business failure had left him without enough money to take a letter from the post office 26 d so Neal cast about for something better to do and after considering the matter for ten minutes or so determined to try my hand at a novel 27 When he wrote his first book fewer than seventy novels had been published 28 by not more than half a dozen American authors and of these only Washington Irving had received more than enough to pay for the salt in his porridge 29 Neal was nevertheless inspired by Pierpont s financial success with his poem The Airs of Palestine 1816 and encouraged by the reception of his initial submissions to The Portico He resolved that there was nothing left for me but authorship or starvation if I persisted in my plan of studying law 30 Composing his first and only bound volume of poetry was Neal s nighttime distraction from laboring sixteen hours a day seven days a week for more than four months to produce an index for six years of weekly publications of Hezekiah Niles s Weekly Register magazine 31 which Niles admitted was the most laborious work of the kind that ever appeared in any country 32 In 1819 he published a play and took his first paying job as a newspaper editor 33 becoming the country s first daily columnist 34 The same year he wrote three quarters of History of the American Revolution otherwise credited to Paul Allen 35 Neal s substantial literary output earned him the moniker Jehu O Cataract from his Delphian Club associates 20 By these means he was able to pay his expenses while completing his apprenticeship and independently studying law He was admitted to the bar and started practicing law in Baltimore in 1820 36 Neal s final years in Baltimore were his most productive as a novelist 37 He published one novel in 1822 and three more the following year eventually rising to the status of James Fenimore Cooper s chief rival for recognition as America s leading novelist 38 In this turbulent period he quit the Delphian Club on bad terms 39 and accepted excommunication from the Society of Friends after his participation in a street brawl 40 In reaction to insults against prominent lawyer William Pinkney published in Randolph just after Pinkney died his son Edward Coote Pinkney challenged Neal to a duel Having established himself six years earlier as an outspoken opponent of dueling 41 Neal refused and the two engaged in a battle of printed words in the fall of that year 42 Neal became weary of the law weary as death feeling that he spent those years in open war with the whole tribe of lawyers in America 43 Ironically at precisely the moment when Neal was endeavoring to establish himself as the American writer Neal was also alienating friends critics and the general public at an alarming rate 44 By late 1823 Neal was ready to relocate away from Baltimore 45 According to him the catalyst to move to London was a dinner party with an English friend who quoted Sydney Smith s 1820 then notorious remark in the four quarters of the globe who reads an American book 46 Whether it had more to do with Smith or Pinkney Neal took less than a month after that dinner date to settle his affairs in Baltimore and secure passage on a ship bound for the UK on December 15 1823 47 Writing in London Edit Neal s relocation to London figured into three professional goals that guided him through the 1820s to supplant Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper as the leading American literary voice to bring about a new distinctly American literary style and to reverse the British literary establishment s disdain for American writers 48 He followed Irving s precedent of using temporary residence in London to earn more money and notoriety from the British literary market 49 London publishers had already pirated Seventy Six and Logan but Neal hoped those companies would pay him to publish Errata and Randolph if he were present to negotiate 50 They refused 51 Neal brought enough money to survive for only a few months on the assumption that if people gave any thing sic for books here they would not be able to starve me since I could live upon air and write faster than any man that ever lived 52 His financial situation had become desperate 53 when William Blackwood asked Neal in April 1824 to become a regular contributor to Blackwood s Magazine 54 For the next year and a half Neal was handsomely paid 53 to be one of the magazine s most prolific contributors 55 His first Blackwood s article a profile on the 1824 candidates for US president and the five presidents who had served to that point was the first article by an American to appear in a British literary journal 56 and was quoted and republished widely throughout Europe 53 As the first written history of American literature the American Writers series was Neal s most noteworthy contribution to the magazine 57 Blackwood provided the platform for Neal s earliest written works on gender and women s rights 58 and published Brother Jonathan e but a back and forth over manuscript revisions in autumn 1825 soured the relationship and Neal was once again without a source of income 59 After a short time earning much less money writing articles for other British periodicals 60 thirty two year old John Neal met seventy seven year old utilitarian philosopher Jeremy Bentham through the London Debating Societies 61 In late 1825 Bentham offered him rooms at his Hermitage and a position as his personal secretary 62 Neal spent the next year and a half writing for Bentham s Westminster Review 63 In spring 1827 Bentham financed Neal s return to the US 64 He left the UK having caught the attention of the British literary elite published the novel he brought with him and succeeded to perfection 65 in educating the British about American institutions habits and prospects Yet Brother Jonathan was not received as the great American novel and it failed to earn Neal the level of international fame he had hoped for so he returned to the US no longer Cooper s chief rival 66 Return to Portland Maine Edit Neal returned to the United States from Europe in June 1827 with plans to settle in New York City but stopped first in his native Portland to visit his mother and sister 67 There he was confronted by citizens offended by his derision of prominent citizens in the semi autobiographical Errata the way he depicted New England dialect and habits in Brother Jonathan and his criticism of American writers in Blackwood s Magazine 68 Residents posted broadsides 69 engaged in verbally and physically violent exchanges with Neal in the streets 70 and conspired to block his admission to the bar 71 Neal defiantly resolved to settle in Portland instead of New York Verily verily said I if they take that position here I will stay till I am both rooted and grounded grounded in the graveyard if nowhere else 72 Portland s town hall in Market Square site of John Neal s first gymnasium Neal became a proponent in the US of athletics he had practiced abroad including Friedrich Jahn s early Turnen gymnastics 73 and boxing and fencing techniques he learned in Paris London and Baltimore 74 He opened Maine s first gymnasium in 1827 75 making him the first American to establish a public gym in the US f He offered lessons in boxing and fencing in his law office 78 The same year he started gyms in nearby Saco and at Bowdoin College 79 The year before he had published articles on German gymnastics in the American Journal of Education and urged Thomas Jefferson to include a gymnastics school at the University of Virginia 80 Neal s athletic pursuits modeled a new sense of maleness that favored forbearance based on strength 81 and helped him regulate the violent tendencies with which he struggled throughout his life 82 In 1828 Neal established The Yankee magazine with himself as editor and continued publication through the end of 1829 83 He used its pages to vindicate himself to fellow Portlanders 84 critique American art 85 and drama 86 host a discourse on the nature of New Englander identity 87 advance his developing feminist ideas 88 and encourage new literary voices most of them women 89 Neal also edited many other periodicals between the late 1820s and the mid 1840s and was during this time a highly sought after contributor on a variety of topics 90 Neal published three novels from material he produced in London and focused his new creative writing efforts on a body of short stories 91 that represents his greatest literary achievement 92 Neal published an average of one tale per year between 1828 and 1846 helping to shape the relatively new short story genre 93 He began traveling as a lecturer in 1829 reaching the height of his influence in the women s rights movement in 1843 when he was delivering speeches before large crowds in New York City and reaching wider audiences through the press 94 This period of juggling literary activist athletic legal artistic social and business pursuits was captured by Neal s law apprentice James Brooks in 1833 Neal was a boxing master and fencing master too and as a printer s devil came in crying copy more copy he would race with a huge swan s quill full gallop over sheets of paper as with a steam pen and off went one page and off went another and then a lesson in boxing the thump of glove to glove then the mask and the stamp of the sandal and the ringing of the foils 95 Family and civic leadership Edit Daguerreotype of the Neal family 1843 g John Neal houses at 173 175 State Street Portland Maine h In 1828 Neal married his second cousin Eleanor Hall and together they had five children between 1829 and 1847 98 The couple raised their children in the house he built on Portland s prestigious State Street in 1836 98 Also in 1836 he received an honorary master s degree from Bowdoin College the same institution at which Neal made a living as a self employed teenage penmanship instructor and that later educated the more economically privileged Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 99 After the 1830s Neal became less active in literary circles and increasingly occupied with business activism and local arts and civic projects particularly after receiving inheritances from two paternal uncles that dramatically reduced his need to rely on writing as a source of income 100 James Neal died in 1832 and Stephen Neal in 1836 but the second inheritance was held up until 1858 in a legal battle involving Stephen s daughter suffragist Lydia Neal Dennett 101 In 1845 he became the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company s first agent in Maine 102 earning enough in commissions that he decided to retire from the lecture circuit law practice and most writing projects 103 Neal began developing and managing local real estate 104 operating multiple granite quarries 105 developing railroad connections to Portland 106 and investing in land speculation in Cairo Illinois 107 He led the movement to incorporate Portland as a city and build the community s first parks and sidewalks 108 He became interested in architecture interior design and furniture design developing pioneering simple and functional solutions that influenced other designers outside his local area 109 Many of his literary contemporaries interpreted Neal s change in focus as a disappearance Hawthorne wrote in 1845 of that wild fellow John Neal who surely has long been dead else he never could keep himself so quiet 110 James Russell Lowell in 1848 claimed he had wasted in Maine the sinews and cords of his pugilist brain 111 Friend and fellow Portland native Henry Wadsworth Longfellow described Neal in 1860 as a good deal tempered down but fire enough still 112 After years of vaguely affiliating with Unitarianism and universalism Neal converted to Congregationalism in 1851 113 Through deepened religiosity he found new moral arguments for women s rights 114 potential release from his violent tendencies 115 and inspiration for seven religious essays Neal collected these exhortations 116 in One Word More 1854 which rambles passionately for two hundred pages and closes with breathless metaphor 117 in an effort to convert the reasoning and thoughtful among believers 116 At the urging of Longfellow and other friends John Neal returned to novel writing late in life publishing True Womanhood in 1859 118 To fill a gap in his income between 1863 and 1866 he wrote three dime novels 119 In 1869 he published his most readable book and certainly one of the most entertaining autobiographies to come out of nineteenth century America 120 Reflecting on his life this way inspired Neal to amplify his activism and assume regional leadership roles in the women s suffrage movement 121 His last two books are a collection of pieces for and about children titled Great Mysteries and Little Plagues 1870 and a guidebook for his hometown titled Portland Illustrated 1874 11 Neal circa 1870 By 1870 in his old age he had amassed a comfortable fortune valued at 80 000 122 i His last appearance in the public eye was likely an 1875 syndicated article from the Portland Advertiser about an eighty one year old Neal physically overpowering a man in his early twenties who was smoking on a non smoking streetcar 125 John Neal died on June 20 1876 and was buried in the Neal family plot in Portland s Western Cemetery 126 Writing EditNeal s body of literary work spans almost sixty years from the end of the War of 1812 to a decade following the Civil War though he achieved his major literary accomplishments between 1817 and 1835 127 His writing both reflects and challenges shifting American ways of life over those years 128 He started his career as an American reading public was just beginning to emerge 129 working immediately and consistently within the nation s developing complex web of print culture 130 Throughout his adult life especially in the 1830s Neal was a prolific contributor to newspapers and magazines writing essays on a wide variety of topics including but not limited to art criticism literary criticism phrenology women s rights early German gymnastics and slavery 131 His efforts to subvert the influence of the British literary elite 132 and to develop a rival American literature were largely credited to his successors until more recent twenty first century scholarship shifted that credit to Neal 133 His short stories are his highest literary achievement 92 and are ranked with those of Nathaniel Hawthorne Edgar Allan Poe Herman Melville and Rudyard Kipling 134 John Neal is often considered an influential American literary figure with no masterpiece of his own 135 Style Edit Dedication to John Neal s first novel in 1817 Defying the rigid moralism and sentimentality of his American contemporaries Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper Neal s early novels between the late 1810s and 1820s depict dark physically flawed conflicted Byronesque heroes of great intellect and morals 136 His brand of Romanticism reflected an aversion for self criticism and revision relying instead on nearly automatic writing 137 to define his style enhance the commercial viability of his works and craft a new American literature 138 As a pioneer of talk ing on paper 139 or natural writing 140 Neal was the first in America to be natural in his diction 141 and his work represents the first deviation from Irvingesque graciousness 142 in which not only characters but also genres converse and are interrogated challenged and transformed 143 Neal declared that he never shall write what is now worshipped under the name of classical English which was the deadest language I ever met with or heard of 144 Neal s voice was one of many following the War of 1812 calling for an American literary nationalism but Neal felt his colleagues work relied too much on British conventions 145 By contrast he felt that to succeed I must be unlike all that have gone before me and issue another Declaration of Independence in the great Republic of Letters 146 To achieve this he exploited distinctly American characters settings historical events and manners of speech in his writing 147 This was a caustic assault 147 on British literary elites viewed as aristocrats writing for personal amusement in contrast to American authors as middle class professionals plying a commercial trade for sustenance 148 By mimicking the common and sometimes profane language of his countrymen in fiction Neal hoped to appeal to a broader readership of minimally educated book buyers thereby intending to guarantee the existence of an American national literature by ensuring its economic viability 149 Starting in the late 1820s Neal shifted his focus from nationalism to regionalism to challenge the rise of Jacksonian populism in the US by showcasing and contrasting coexisting regional and multicultural differences within the United States The collection of essays and stories he published in his magazine The Yankee lays the groundwork for reading the nation itself as a collection of voices in conversation and asks readers to decide for themselves how to manage the multiple and contending sides of a federal union 150 To preserve variations in American English he feared might disappear in an increasingly nationalist climate 151 he became one of the first writers to employ colloquialism and regional dialects in his writing 152 Literary criticism Edit Neal used literary criticism in magazines and novels to encourage desired changes in the field and to uplift new writers most of them women 153 Noted for his critical vision Neal expressed judgments that were widely accepted in his lifetime 154 My opinion of other people s writings he said has never been ill received and in every case my judgment has been confirmed sooner or later without a single exception 155 Fred Lewis Pattee corroborated this statement seventy years after Neal s death Where he condemned time has almost without exception condemned also 154 As an American literary nationalist he called for faithful representations of native character 156 in literature that utilize the abundant and hidden sources of fertility in the northern as well as the southern Americas 157 His American Writers essay series in Blackwood s Magazine 1824 is the earliest written history of American literature 158 and was reprinted as a collection in 1937 Neal dismissed almost all of the 120 authors he critiqued in that series as derivative of their British predecessors 159 September 1829 issue of The Yankee containing Neal s first critique of Edgar Allan Poe s work John Neal used his role as critic particularly in the pages of his magazine The Yankee to draw attention to newer writers in whose work he saw promise John Greenleaf Whittier Edgar Allan Poe Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow all received their first substantial sponsorship or praise in the magazine s pages 160 When submitting poetry to Neal for review Whittier made the request if you don t like it say so privately and I will quit poetry and everything also of a literary nature 161 Poe was Neal s most historically impactful discovery and when he quit poetry for short stories it was likely due to Neal s influence 162 Poe thanked Neal for the very first words of encouragement I ever remember to have heard 163 After Poe s death two decades later Neal defended his legacy against attacks in Rufus Wilmot Griswold s unsympathetic obituary of Poe labeling Griswold a Rhadamanthus who is not to be bilked of his fee a thimble full of newspaper notoriety 164 Short stories Edit Called the inventor of the American short story 165 Neal s tales are his highest literary achievement 92 He published an average of one per year between 1828 and 1846 helping to shape the relatively new short story genre 93 particularly early children s literature 166 Considered his best short stories 91 Otter Bag the Oneida Chief 1829 and David Whicher 1832 overshadow the less inspired efforts of his more famous contemporaries and add a dimension to the art of storytelling not to be found in Irving and Poe rarely in Hawthorne and rarely in American fiction until Melville and Twain decades later and Faulkner a century later began telling their tales 91 Ironically David Whicher was published anonymously and not attributed to Neal until the 1960s 93 The Haunted Man 1832 is noteworthy as the first work of fiction to utilize psychotherapy 167 The Old Pussy Cat and the Two Little Pussy Cats and The Life and Adventures of Tom Pop 1835 are both considered pioneering works of children s literature 166 Like his magazine essays and lectures Neal s stories challenged American socio political phenomena that grew in the period leading up to and including Andrew Jackson s terms as US president 1829 1837 manifest destiny empire building Indian removal consolidation of federal power racialized citizenship and the Cult of Domesticity 168 David Whicher challenged a body of popular literature that converged in the 1820s around a divisive and destructive insistence on frontiersman and the Indian as implacable enemies 169 Idiosyncrasies is a manifesto for human rights in the face of hegemonic patriarchalism 170 His stories in this period also used humor and satire to address social and political phenomena most notably Courtship 1829 The Utilitarian 1830 The Young Phrenologist 1836 Animal Magnetism 1839 and The Ins and the Outs 1841 171 Novels Edit With the exception of True Womanhood 1859 John Neal published all of his novels between 1817 and 1833 The first five he wrote and published in Baltimore Keep Cool 1817 Logan 1822 Seventy Six 1823 Randolph 1823 and Errata 1823 He wrote Brother Jonathan in Baltimore but revised and published it in London in 1825 He published Rachel Dyer 1828 Authorship 1830 and The Down Easters 1833 while living in Portland Maine but all are reworkings of content he wrote in London 91 Keep Cool Neal s first novel made him the first in America to be natural in his diction 141 and the father of American subversive fiction 172 Generally regarded as a failure the book shows that the gulf between Neal s prophetic vision of a native literature and his own capacity to fulfill that vision is painfully apparent 173 The productivity of Neal s Baltimore days is hard to believe until one reads the novels and notices the haste with which they were written 174 Logan a Family History is a gothic tapestry 175 of superstition supernatural suggestions brutality sensuality colossal hatred delirium rape insanity murder incest and cannibalism 176 By elevating emotional effect over coherence the novel excites its readers to death 177 It challenged the national narrative of American Indians foreordained disappearance in the face of White Americans territorial expansion and collapsed racial boundaries between the two groups 178 It was there said he there exactly where that horse is passing now that they first fired upon me I set off at a speed up that hill but finding nine of the party there I determined to dash over that elevation in front I attempted it but shot after shot was fired after me until I preferred making one desperate attempt sword in hand to being shot down like a fat goose upon a broken gallop I wheeled made a dead set at the son of a bitch in my rear unhorsed him and actually broke through the line John Neal Seventy Six 1823 179 Seventy Six was Neal s favorite of his novels 180 When it was released in 1823 Neal was at the height of his prominence as a novelist being at the time the chief rival of leading American author James Fenimore Cooper 38 Inspired by Cooper s The Spy 181 Neal based his story on historical research compiled a few years earlier while helping his friend Paul Allen write his History of the American Revolution 31 Seventy Six was criticized at the time for its use of profanity and was recognized later as the first work of American fiction to use the phrase son of a bitch 182 Brother Jonathan or the New Englanders was the most complex ambitious and demanding American novel until Cooper s Littlepage Manuscripts trilogy twenty years later 183 As one of the most emphatic even shrill examples of U S nationalistic literature 183 it is positively bristling with regional accents from the New England twang of its protagonists through to bursts of patois in Virginian Georgian Scottish Penobscot Indian and Ebonics 184 Running counter to Neal s purported nationalist theme the diverse linguistic styles used in the novel subvert the fiction of a unified national whole in the US 185 The novel s greatest achievement is its faithful if irreverent representation of American customs and American speech 186 that nevertheless was read by American reviewers as outright slander against the US 187 and aroused a terrible storm in Portland where he was denounced with great indignation 188 Rachel Dyer a North American Story 1828 is widely considered to be John Neal s most successful novel most readable for a modern audience and most successful at manifesting his desire for a national American literature 189 Along with Brother Jonathan and The Down Easters it is notable for depicting peculiar American folkways accents and slang One hundred years later it provided source material for the Dictionary of American English 190 A historical fiction like many of Neal s other novels it is the first hardcover novel based on the Salem witch trials and influenced John Greenleaf Whittier and Nathaniel Hawthorne to include witchcraft in their creative writing 191 Art criticism and patronage Edit Neal was the first American art critic 192 though he did not receive this recognition until the twentieth century 193 Starting in 1819 with articles in Baltimore newspapers 194 he expanded to a much wider audience with Randolph 1823 which communicated his opinions through the thin veil of the novel s protagonist 195 Though he continued work in this field at least as late 1869 his chief impact was in the 1820s 196 Neal around this time regularly visited Rembrandt Peale s Peale Museum courted his daughter Rosalba Carriera Peale and sat for portraits with his niece Sarah Miriam Peale 197 John Neal in 1823 by Sarah Miriam Peale Neal s approach to art criticism in the early 1820s was intuitive and showed disdain for connoisseurship which he viewed as aristocratic and incompatible with American democratic ideals 198 Neal shows some initial influence from August Wilhelm Schlegel s Course of Lectures in Dramatic Art and Literature and Sir Joshua Reynolds s Discourses but largely broke with those sensibilities over the course of the decade 199 By the late 1820s he came to dismiss history painting and show preference for the unadulterated truth of the American locality and nature 200 he found in portraits and landscapes anticipating the rise of the Hudson River School 201 The positive attention Neal paid to American portrait painters trained in the humbler contingencies 200 of sign painting and applied arts was accompanied by his acknowledgment of the artist s often conflicting priorities preserving likeness of the subject without offending the customer 202 Neal was also unique in his effort in this period to raise the status of engraving as fine art 203 Reynolds s approach to art criticism would remain dominant in both the US and UK until John Ruskin s Modern Painters was published in 1843 though Neal s Landscape and Portrait Painting 1829 anticipated many of those Ruskinesque changes by distinguishing between things seen by the artist and things as they are 204 After Neal had accumulated sufficient wealth and influence toward the middle of the nineteenth century he began patronizing and uplifting artists in the Portland Maine area Painter Charles Codman and sculptor Benjamin Paul Akers both became steadily patronized as a result of Neal s encouragement patronage and connections 205 Neal also helped guide the work and careers of Franklin Simmons John Rollin Tilton and Harrison Bird Brown 206 Brown became Portland s most successful artist of the nineteenth century 207 Comparatively constant is Neal s taste for bold unlabored approaches to painting that utilize an offhand free sketchy style without high finish 208 The same could be said of Neal s fantastic mixture of common sense and absurdity of intelligent observation and dross that portrays Neal the art critic as melodramatic addicted to exaggeration superficial inconsistent ill informed naive 85 These descriptors apply less to his final essays on art 1868 and 1869 that conspicuously lack the qualities of Neal s boastful confident and passionate style in the 1820s 209 His opinions from that earlier period to a remarkable degree have stood the trying test of time 85 Poetry Edit The bulk of Neal s poetry was published in The Portico while studying law in Baltimore 210 His only bound collection of poems is Battle of Niagara A Poem without Notes and Goldau or the Maniac Harper published in 1818 Though Battle of Niagara brought him little fame or money it is considered the best poetic description of Niagara Falls up to that time 211 Poems by Neal are also featured in Specimens of American Poetry edited by Samuel Kettell 1829 The Poets and Poetry of America edited by Rufus Wilmot Griswold 1850 and American Poetry from the Beginning to Whitman edited by Louis Untermeyer 1931 212 Drama and theatrical criticism Edit Neal authored two plays neither of which were ever produced on stage Otho A Tragedy in Five Acts 1819 and Our Ephraim or The New Englanders A What d ye call it in three Acts 1835 213 Neal wrote Otho hoping it would see production with Thomas Abthorpe Cooper in the lead but Cooper showed no interest 214 Written in verse and heavily inspired by the works of Lord Byron 215 John Pierpont considered the play too dense and wrote to Neal that it needed a sky light or two cut into it 216 It was also described as at once both mystifying and trite 214 Neal brought the script with him to London with plans to revise it and have it produced for the stage while he was there but he never achieved that goal 217 Not knowin can t say John Neal Our Ephraim 1834 218 Our Ephraim was commissioned in 1834 by actor James Henry Hackett who asked Neal to squat right down amp in your ready style in two or three days conjure me together something curious nice 219 Hackett rejected the play upon receipt as unsuitable for production too many roles requiring a rural Maine accent unrealistic set requirements and too much scheduled improvisation 220 The play nevertheless represents a significant advance in early American theatrical realism 221 and is the fullest detailing of Yankee dialect of any work Neal produced 222 Neal s most noteworthy work of theatrical criticism is his five installment essay The Drama 1829 86 Condemning stilted dialogue Neal contended that when a person talks beautifully in his sorrow it shows both great preparation and insincerity and urged that playwrights should avoid poetry whenever the characters are much in earnest 223 Sixty years later William Dean Howells was considered innovative for saying the same thing 224 Editing EditPeriodicals under John Neal s editorship 225 Title Period HeadquartersThe Portico Final issue April June 1818 Baltimore MDFederal Republican and Baltimore Telegraph February July 1819 Baltimore MDThe Yankee January 1 1828 December 1829 Portland METhe New England Galaxy January December 1835 Boston MAThe New World January April 1840 New York NYBrother Jonathan May December 1843 New York NYPortland Transcript June 10 July 8 1848 Portland MENeal found his first two positions as editor through fellow members of the Delphian Club in Baltimore 226 His longest stint as editor was for The Yankee which he founded only a few months after returning from London in 1827 Maine s first literary periodical 227 it ran weekly until for financial reasons it merged with a Boston magazine and was renamed The Yankee and Boston Literary Gazette as a monthly publication 228 It merged with Ladies Magazine when it ceased publication at the end of 1829 229 When starting his last stint as editor he declared Having ten or fifteen minutes to spare we have made up our minds to edit a newspaper After Neal left in a huff few weeks later the next editor announced John Neal has retired from the editorship of the Transcript the fifteen minutes having expired 230 Despite professing allegiance to Benthamian Utilitarianism in The Yankee Neal dedicated much more space in its pages to reinforcing Northern New England s standing on the national stage and championing American regionalism 231 His regionalism was distinct from those later in the century who tended to portray regional spaces in nostalgic or sentimental terms as enclaves of tradition that were posed against an increasingly urban and industrial nation Instead Neal remained committed to imagining regions as dynamic future oriented spaces whose identities would and should remain elusive 232 Controversial at the time for its lack of association with any political party or other interest group 233 The Yankee was free to cover every thing sic from church to state from the tallest tome no matter how thick down to the smallest affairs of tokens and souvenirs and lady actress s feet of poets and dogs of paintings and side walks of Bentham and Jeffrey and sleigh rides and huskings of politics and religion and courting and blackberrying 95 The magazine s greatest impact on literature was uplifting new voices like John Greenleaf Whittier Edgar Allan Poe Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Elizabeth Oakes Smith and Nathaniel Hawthorne 89 Most of the new writers whose works he published and wrote about in The Yankee were women 234 Lecturing Edit First Parish Church the site of John Neal s first scheduled lecture in 1829 Between 1829 and 1848 Neal supplemented his income as a lecturer Traveling on the lyceum circuit he covered topics such as literature eloquence the fine arts political economy temperance poets and poetry public speaking our pilgrim fathers colonization law and lawyers the study of languages natural history phrenology women s rights self education self reliance and self distrust progress of opinion amp c amp c amp c 235 When asked without notice to address the theme of freedom in Portland Maine on Independence Day 1832 Neal accepted and gave an unprepared speech that was his first on women s rights He used the principles of the American Revolution to attack slavery as an affront to liberty and female disfranchisement and coverture as taxation without representation 236 Women s rights became a favorite topic of his frequent lecture engagements between 1832 and 1843 throughout the northeastern states Because they were almost always published afterward and often covered in newspaper reviews these events broadened Neal s sphere of influence and made his ideas accessible to readers not necessarily aligned with his views 237 Margaret Fuller admired Neal s magnetic genius lion heart and sense of the ludicrous as a lecturer though she poked fun at his exaggeration and coxcombry 238 His most well attended and influential address was the 1843 Rights of Women speech at New York City s largest auditorium at the time the Broadway Tabernacle 239 Activism EditUsing magazine and newspaper articles short stories novels lectures political organizing and personal relationships Neal throughout his adult life addressed issues including feminism women s rights slavery rights of free Black Americans rights of American Indians dueling temperance lotteries capital punishment militia tax insolvency law and social hierarchy Of these women s rights were the cause for which he fought longer and more consistently than for any other 240 Much of Neal s writing and lecturing on these topics demonstrated a basic distrust of institutions and a continuing plea for self examination and self reliance 241 Additionally Neal was heavily involved in William Henry Harrison s 1840 presidential campaign which almost resulted in his appointment as a district attorney 242 He also promoted pseudoscience movements like phrenology animal magnetism spiritualism and clairvoyance 243 Feminism Edit Neal was America s first women s rights lecturer 244 and one of the first male advocates of women s rights and feminist causes in the US 245 At least as early as 1817 and late as 1873 he used journalism fiction lectures political organizing and personal relationships to advance feminist issues in the US and UK reaching the height of his influence in this field around 1843 246 Neal supported female writers and organizers affirmed intellectual equality between men and women fought coverture laws against women s economic rights and demanded suffrage equal pay and better education for women Neal s early focus on female education was primarily influenced by Mary Wollstonecraft s A Vindication of the Rights of Woman as well as works by Catharine Macaulay and Judith Sargent Murray 247 His early feminist essays from the 1820s fill an intellectual gap between eighteenth century feminists and their pre Seneca Falls Convention successors Sarah Moore Grimke Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Margaret Fuller 248 As a male writer insulated from many forms of attack leveled against earlier female feminist thinkers Neal s advocacy was crucial to bringing the field back into published discourse in the US and UK after a lull at the turn of the century 249 From the feminist undertones in his first novel 1817 240 through the illustrations of patriarchal cruelty in Errata 1823 and Idiosyncrasies 1843 250 to the vindication of independent unmarried women in True Womanhood 1859 251 Neal broke with writers of his generation by consciously and consistently including women and women s issues throughout his career as a writer of fiction 252 Idiosyncrasies explored the male feminist perspective through the character Lee who said we men imprison the soul of woman and set a seal upon her faculties allowing her no share whatever in governing ourselves Having found the cause and believing in my heart that where the evil was there the remedy must be sought for I went to work 253 Men and Women 1824 his first feminist essay recalls the eighteenth century priority of female education 254 Wait until women are educated like men treated like men and permitted to talk freely without being put to shame because they are women At that future time he posited that the greatest of male writers will be equalled by women 255 Going further than his predecessors on intellectual equality he maintain ed that women are not inferior to men but only unlike men in their intellectual properties and would have women treated like men of common sense 256 The article more fully explores the concept he raised in Essay on Duelling 1817 in which when he urged women to use the reason that Heaven has apportioned so equally between her and her brother to rid the world of duels 257 Over the 1820s Neal shifted his focus from educational and intellectual ideas to political and economic issues like coverture and suffrage 258 In an 1845 letter to activist Margaret Fuller he said I tell you there is no hope for woman till she has a hand in making the law no chance for her till her vote is worth as much as a mans sic vote When it is woman will not be fobbed off with a six pence a day for the very work a man would get a dollar for All you and others are doing to elevate woman is only fitted to make her feel more sensibly the long abuse of her own understanding when she comes to her senses You might as well educate slaves and still keep them in bondage 259 The Broadway Tabernacle as it appeared at the time of John Neal s Rights of Women speech on January 24 1843 Neal delivered America s first women s rights lecture as an Independence Day address in Portland Maine in 1832 260 He declared that under coverture and without suffrage women were victims of the same crime of taxation without representation that caused the Revolutionary War 261 He reached the peak of his influence on feminist issues at the time of his Rights of Women speech 1843 262 before a crowd of 3 000 people in New York City 263 He attacked the concept of virtual representation in government that suffrage opponents argued women could enjoy through men Just reverse the condition of the two sexes give to Women all the power now enjoyed by Men What a clamour there would be then about equal rights about a privileged class about being taxed without their own consent and virtual representation and all that 264 The Rights of Women speech was widely covered albeit dismissed by the press and Neal printed it later that year in the pages of Brother Jonathan magazine of which he was editor 265 He used that magazine in 1843 to publish his own essays calling for equal pay and better workplace conditions for women and to host a printed debate of correspondence on the merits of women s suffrage between himself and Eliza W Farnham 266 Looking back more than forty years later the second volume of the History of Woman Suffrage 1887 remembered that the lecture roused considerable discussion was extensively copied and had a wide silent influence preparing the way for action It was a scathing satire and men felt the rebuke 267 For twenty years following his work with Brother Jonathan magazine Neal wrote about women almost exclusively in fiction but only occasionally about feminist issues in periodicals 268 He mused about crossdressing and the performative nature of gender in Masquerading 1864 245 one of the most interesting essays of his career 269 He followed this with two women s rights essays for the American Phrenological Journal 1867 the women s rights chapter of his autobiography 1869 and twelve articles in The Revolution 1868 1870 270 Neal became prominently involved as an organizer in the women s suffrage movement following the Civil War finding influence in local regional and national organizations 271 When the American Equal Rights Association split in 1869 over the Fifteenth Amendment Neal regretted the division of efforts but lent his support to the subsequent National Woman Suffrage Association because of its insistence upon immediate suffrage for all women 245 He cofounded the New England Woman Suffrage Association in 1868 organized Portland s first public meeting on women s suffrage in 1870 and cofounded Maine s first statewide Woman Suffrage Association in 1873 272 Slavery Edit Neal was resolutely and heartily opposed to slavery 273 interpreting the ideals of the Declaration of Independence to mean that the slaves in America were created free Ergo They may abolish the government which by keeping them as they are kept has violated its trust 274 In reaction to widespread rape of enslaved women he reported that white fathers are guilty of selling their own flesh and blood to bondage In the Southern States of America where coloured women are sought after purchased and cohabited with by white men because the profit of the master is in direct proportion to the fruitfulness of the slave 275 Believing that sudden emancipation of the whole enslaved population at once is impossible 276 and that it would perpetuate Black Americans status as a much to be dreaded caste in the US 277 he supported gradual emancipation which has done well in the New England states and in New York 276 Because New England had nothing to lose by emancipation but rather much to gain by it since the value of white labour would rise 275 Neal called for federally funded compensated emancipation to spread the cost throughout the states 278 Neal supported the American Colonization Society 279 founding the Portland Maine local chapter in 1833 serving as its secretary and later meeting with Liberia s first president Joseph Jenkins Roberts 280 Neal likely avoided the movement for immediate unconditional and universal emancipation 281 because of a long standing feud with William Lloyd Garrison The feud was not resolved until Neal declared in 1865 that I was wrong and Mr Garrison was right 282 Rights of Black Americans Edit Neal protested disfranchisement of free Black Americans by revealing how free born Americans because of their colour not just in the slave states but in the states where slavery is regarded with horror are suffered even to vote being either excluded by law or excluded by fear 283 Wary of practical racism among White Northerners 284 Neal drew attention to members of his gymnasium who in 1828 voted that no colored man can be permitted to exercise with white citizens of our free and equal community Hurra for New England We have no prejudices here None but wholesome prejudices at any rate 285 Disappointed they would not admit the Black men he sponsored for membership Neal ended his involvement with the gym shortly thereafter 286 In fiction Neal explored the differences between Northern and Southern prejudices against Black Americans particularly in The Down Easters 1833 279 He nevertheless believed in phrenological inferiority explaining that while we disregard colour we pay great attention to form in our estimation of capacity The negro head is very bad 287 This led him to a proto eugenicist argument for legalizing interracial marriage so that future generations of the negroes of America would no longer be a separate inferior class without political power without privilege and without a share in the great commonwealth 288 Rights of American Indians Edit Neal published essays novels and short stories to advocate the rights of American Indians At a time when native American was a nativist term referring to Anglo Americans Neal declared in his first novel 1817 that the Indian is the only native American 289 In A Summary View of America 1824 Neal claimed that American Indians have never been the aggressors in conflicts with European Americans and that no people ancient or modern have been so deplorably oppressed belied and wronged in every possible way 290 He called for recognition of Indigenous sovereignty decrying that the law of nations has never been regarded in dealing with them their ambassadors have been seized imprisoned and butchered and war has never been declared against them 290 Outlining the process by which the US government seized Indigenous land Neal said The frontier people pick a quarrel with the Indians No declaration of war follows no ceremony but forth goes General Andrew Jackson or general somebody else wasting and firing the whole country A truce follows a ceding of the conquered country for the protection of the whites 290 Neal used novels like Logan 1822 to challenge racial boundaries between White and Indigenous Americans 178 Reacting to the Indian Removal Act 1830 and popular literature that supported it Neal published the short story David Whicher 1832 to explore peaceful multiethnic coexistence in the US 291 The tale also contested how popular literature employed colonial violence to provide a model of and justification for its continuation in the name of national expansion 292 Temperance Edit As a child Neal decided to avoid intemperate drinking and maintained this personal conviction throughout his life 293 He did not associate himself with the temperance movement until after he returned to Portland Maine from London His first invitation to lecture an audience was for the annual address for the Portland Association for the Promotion of Temperance in 1829 294 Neal Dow John Neal s cousin was a leader of the prohibition movement and in 1836 Neal engaged in public debates with his cousin to defend moderate wine drinking as an alternative to total abstinence 295 It was in this period between the late 1830s and late 1840s that Neal became disillusioned with the temperance movement which had moved away from a focus on moral suasion to enacting prohibition laws Dow and his followers instead of regarding the injunction Be temperate in all things were furiously intemperate on the subject of temperance making total abstinence the condition of citizenship and almost of civilization 296 Neal remained convinced of the evils of intemperance They could not well be exaggerated the only question was about the remedy 297 Dueling Edit In his first novel 1817 Neal portrayed dueling as a holdover from an aristocratic era that is immoral pointless antidemocratic and anti American 62 charging that here in America a gentleman may cut another s throat or blow out his brains with complete impunity 298 His Essay on Duelling that same year attacked the institution as a gendered performance or the unqualified evidence of manhood 299 believing that in his closet every man wishes duelling abolished and if every man who wishes it sincerely in private would but speak as firmly in publick sic it would be abolished 257 Social hierarchy Edit Neal s Quaker upbringing likely instilled in him an aversion to worldly titles he claimed were unfitting in republican society 300 He mocked them with humorous works like the title page of his first novel 1817 that claimed the book was Reviewed By Himself Esquire 240 In A Summary View of America 1824 he decried that the US had fallen away from its ideals of equality to a place in which titles are multiplying Even the pride of ancestry has found root in that republican soil There is a tremendous contention between the families of yesterday and those of the day before 301 As a lawyer he refused to address Chief Justice John Marshall or any other judge as your honor 302 claiming that there is no greater humbug in the minds of men than this obsequious bowing to men of high station The great thinkers of the world are the workers of the world the producers of the world 303 Militia tax Edit In his United States essay 1826 Neal made his first published argument against the poll tax that financed the US militia system 304 He illustrated that both the poor and the rich are taxed under the militia law which was designed to defend property of the rich man The rich of course do not appear in the field The poor do The latter cannot afford to keep away the former can He proposed replacing the poll tax with a property tax to pay men serving in militias thereby making the system more equitable 305 Lotteries Edit Neal made his earliest arguments against lotteries in Baltimore newspapers as a law apprentice then in Logan 1822 His argument that the law should treat lotteries the same as other forms of gambling found influence across the US and in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom 306 In The Yankee he opened fire upon all lottery offices both at the bar and in our legislative halls and never rested until the system was up rooted throughout our whole country 304 Lotteries fell into disfavor in the US in the 1830s 307 Capital punishment Edit Neal began his campaign against public executions after witnessing one in Baltimore 308 He attacked capital punishment by writing in newspapers magazines novels and debates achieving national influence in the US and reaching a more limited audience in the UK 309 Late in life he remembered still having no belief in the wisdom of strangulation for men women and children however they might seem to deserve it and being fully persuaded that the worst men have most need of repentance and that they who are unfit to live are still more unfit to die 310 Bankruptcy law Edit Neal became active in bankruptcy law reform shortly after his own bankruptcy in 1816 311 As a young Baltimore lawyer he took an unpopular stance against Chief Justice Marshall s opinion in Sturges v Crowninshield 1819 and played a prominent role in the movement for a national bankruptcy law 312 He continued by attacking the policy of imprisonment for debt in his Baltimore novels and in American and British newspapers later in the 1820s 313 Legacy EditScattered genius Edit I AM called upon for a Preface Like the weary knife grinder when asked for a story I am half tempted to answer Preface God bless you I ve none to give you sir My book itself is only a Preface And what after all is any Life but a preface a preface to something better or worse On the whole therefore I think it safer for me and better for the reader whom I hope to be on good terms with before he gets through whatever may be his present notions upon the subject not to trouble him with a Preface John Neal Preface to Wandering Recollections of a Somewhat Busy Life An Autobiography 1869 314 Neal s reputation as an intellectually dispersed and uncontrolled genius is exemplified by biographer Windsor Daggett who claimed he scattered his genius into many channels at a loss 315 Historian Edward H Elwell opined that he wrote for everything because he could not write long for anything 316 By Neal s own admission a year long stint as newspaper editor was a long while for any thing sic I had to do with 317 American literature scholar Fred Lewis Pattee saw Neal s as genius of a type that must be especially defined with words like energy and persistence but also ignorance colossal 318 American literature scholar Theresa A Goddu concluded that Neal had been canonized as half wildman half genius 319 Edgar Allan Poe was inclined to rank John Neal first or at all events second among our men of indisputable genius but in the same paragraph rated his work as massive and undetailed hurried and indistinct and deficient in a sense of completeness 320 Contemporaries and scholars of Neal alike are disposed to lament his inability to achieve what others saw as the potential of his abilities Biographer Donald A Sears classified him as a writer without a masterpiece who lived to be eclipsed by writers of lesser genius but greater control of their talents 321 Daggett claimed he flashed youthful brilliance He never quite caught up with it or conquered it and so he sometimes wore the stamp of failure in the minds of his contemporaries 322 American literature scholar Alexander Cowie referred to Neal as the victim of his own lust for words with no single work of fiction which deserves to be revived for its sheer merit 323 and no books worth placing on the shelves of any library save as a believe it or not specimen 324 In an 1848 poem James Russell Lowell classified Neal as a man who made less than he might have who was good at whisking out flocks of comets but never a star because he was too hasty to wait till Art s ripe fruit should drop and concluded that could he only have waited he might have been great 325 Influence Edit Neal s creative work had indirect influence on many writers during and after his life Seba Smith Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow are all known to have enjoyed and been influenced by Neal s early poems and novels 326 Smith is most famous for his Jack Downing humor series which was likely influenced by Neal s humorous use of regional dialect 327 It is also likely that Edgar Allan Poe developed many of his characteristic traits as a writer under the influence of Neal s articles in The Yankee in the late 1820s 328 Many scholars conclude that most defining authors of the mid nineteenth century American renaissance earned their reputations by employing techniques learned from Neal s work earlier in the century among them Ralph Waldo Emerson Walt Whitman Edgar Allan Poe and Herman Melville 329 Biographer Benjamin Lease pointed to Neal s comparatively better remembered immediate predecessors Washington Irving and James Fenimore Cooper as lacking an obvious link to those mid century masters that Neal clearly demonstrates 330 He further argued that Neal s ability to influence such disparate figures as Poe and Whitman demonstrates the weight of his work 331 Historical status Edit Aligned with their twentieth century predecessors both Lease and Sears in the 1970s classified John Neal as a transitional figure in literature who came after the initial wave of British imitating American literature but before the great American Renaissance that occurred after Neal had published the bulk of his work 332 More recent scholarship placed Neal Not exactly beneath the American Renaissance but scattered across it 333 American literature scholars Edward Watts David J Carlson and Maya Merlob contended that Neal was written out of the Renaissance because of his distance from the Boston Concord circle and his utilization of popular styles and modes viewed at a lower artistic level 334 Selected works EditMain articles John Neal bibliography and Articles by John Neal Novels Keep Cool A Novel j 1817 Full text Logan a Family History 1822 Full text Seventy Six 1823 Full text Randolph A Novel 1823 Full text Errata or the Works of Will Adams 1823 Full text Brother Jonathan or the New Englanders 1825 Full text vol I vol II vol III Rachel Dyer a North American Story 1828 Full text Authorship a Tale k 1830 Full text The Down Easters amp c amp c amp c 1833 Full text vol I vol II True Womanhood A Tale 1859 Full textPosthumous collections American Writers A Series of Papers Contributed to Blackwood s Magazine 1824 1825 l 1937 edited by Fred Lewis Pattee Full text Observations on American Art Selections from the Writings of John Neal 1793 1876 1943 edited by Harold Edward Dickson The Genius of John Neal Selections from His Writings 1978 edited by Benjamin Lease and Hans Joachim Lang Short stories Otter Bag the Oneida Chief 1829 Full text The Haunted Man 1832 Full text David Whicher 1832 Full text The Squatter 1835 Full text The Young Phrenologist 1835 Full text Idiosyncracies 1843 Full text ch 1 ch 2 Poems Battle of Niagara m 1818 Full textDrama Otho a Tragedy in Five Acts 1819 Full text Our Ephraim or The New Englanders A What d ye call it in three Acts 1835 Other works One Word More Intended for the Reasoning and Thoughtful among Unbelievers 1854 Full text Wandering Recollections of a Somewhat Busy Life An Autobiography 1869 Full text Great Mysteries and Little Plagues 1870 Full text Portland Illustrated 1874 A guide to Portland Maine Full textNotes Edit Counterfeit money was very common in the United States in the early nineteenth century 6 In 1847 John Neal named his youngest child John Pierpont Neal in honor of his closest friend 11 In 1866 he wrote Pierpont s obituary 12 Neal became fluent in French but also became able to easily converse and write in Spanish Italian and German In addition he could manage pretty well writing and reading Portuguese Swedish Danish Hebrew Latin Greek and Old Saxon 15 He learned to read Chinese shortly before his death 16 In 1816 recipients were responsible for paying postage on US Mail The name Brother Jonathan also refers to a personification of New England popular at the time of Neal s Brother Jonathan novel All the public gymnasiums in the US that precede Neal s were established by Germans and none of the gyms established in the US by Americans that precede Neal s were open to the general public one public gym in Boston founded by German Charles Follen in early 1827 76 and multiple school and college gymnasiums in the northeastern states founded by Germans and Americans in 1826 and 1827 77 Clockwise from top John Neal daughter Mary Neal wife Eleanor Hall Neal daughter Margaret Eleanor Neal and son James Neal 96 John Neal built two mirror image row houses moving into number 173 right and selling 175 left In 1970 they were listed as contributing buildings in the Spring Street Historic District 97 80 000 in 1870 was approximately equal to between fifty and seventy years wages for industrial management workers at the time 123 and is approximately equivalent to 1 714 316 in 2021 124 Neal published Keep Cool under the pen name Somebody M D C which stands for Member of the Delphian Club 335 Neal published Authorship under the pen name A New Englander Over Sea Neal published the original American Writers series under the pen name Carter Holmes one of many British personas he used while writing for magazines from London Neal published Battle of Niagara under the pen name John O Cataract which is a variation on his Delphian Club pen name References EditCitations Edit a b c d Sears 1978 p 15 Fleischmann 1983 p 145 quoting Elizabeth Oakes Smith Lease 1972 p 5 Lease 1972 p 9 Neal 1869 pp 66 67 Fleischmann 1983 p 243 Fleischmann 1983 p 146 Richards 1933 p 28 Lease 1972 p 10 Neal 1869 p 124 Mihm 2007 p 6 Lease 1972 p 9 Lease 1972 p 11 Daggett 1920 p 1 Richards 1933 p 39 a b Lease 1972 p 12 a b Sears 1978 p 12 Neal 1869 p 9 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xv a b Fleischmann 1983 p 147 Neal 1869 p 112 Richards 1933 p 1271 Sears 1978 p 145 Neal 1869 p 169 Neal 1869 p 113 Brooks 1833 p 84 a b Appleby 2000 p 93 a b Mott 1966 p 294 Lease 1972 p 21 Sears 1978 p 111 Neal 1869 p 210 Sears 1978 p 23 Brooks 1833 p 77 Neal 1869 p 196 Sears 1978 p 35 Neal 1869 p 162 Neal 1869 p 163 a b Sears 1978 p 40 Brooks 1833 p 85 quoting Hezekiah Niles Sears 1978 p 11 Gallant 2012 p 1 Sears 1978 p 40 Brooks 1833 p 100 Lease 1972 p 38 Brooks 1833 p 84 Sears 1978 p 34 a b Lease 1972 p 39 Lease 1972 p 38 Sears 1978 p 11 Lease 1972 p 38 Sears 1978 pp 55 56 Sears 1978 p 55 Neal 1823b p 353 Neal April 1826 p 446 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xvii Sears 1978 p 70 Lease 1972 p 38 Pattee 1937b p 12 Sears 1978 p 70 Lease 1972 pp 41 43 Daggett 1920 p 9 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xvi Gohdes 1944 p 33 Merlob 2012 p 108 Neal 1869 pp 244 245 Neal April 1826 p 450 Neal 1869 p 245 Neal April 1826 p 450 a b c Sears 1978 p 71 Lease 1972 p 49 Lease 1972 p 50 Daggett 1920 p 11 Sears 1978 p 72 Sears 1978 p 99 Weyler 2012 p 238 Lease 1972 pp 61 62 Sears 1978 p 76 Neal 1869 p 59 a b Kayorie 2019 p 87 Lease 1972 p 192 Sears 1978 p 78 Fleischmann 1983 p 148 Lease 1972 p 64 Sears 1978 p 78 Lease 1972 p 123 Lease 1972 pp 123 124 Lease 1972 p 124 Neal 1869 pp 326 329 Neal 1869 pp 330 331 Neal 1869 p 325 Sears 1978 p 106 Eisenberg 2007 p 136 Neal 1869 pp 83 318 322 Barnes 1984 p 47 Leonard 1923 pp 235 236 Leonard 1923 pp 227 250 Neal 1869 p 322 Sears 1978 p 106 Neal 1869 p 334 Sears 1978 p 106 Fleischmann 1983 p 244 Fleischmann 2012 p 270n94 Fleischmann 1983 p 243 Holt 2012 p 187 Mott 1966 p 355 Sears 1978 p 112 a b c Dickson 1943 p xxii a b Meserve 1986 pp 24 25 Holt 2012 pp 185 187 Fleischmann 1983 p 180 a b Sears 1978 p 113 Fleischmann 1983 p 145 Sears 1978 pp 11 12 146 Lease 1972 p 208 Fleischmann 1983 p 187 a b c d Lease 1972 p 159 a b c Fleischmann 1983 p 13 a b c Sears 1978 p 93 Fleischmann 1983 p 188 Neal 1869 p 355 a b Brooks 1833 p 69 Lease 1972 illus 8 Briggs John W December 31 1969 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Spring Street Historic District PDF National Park Service Retrieved December 30 2020 Accompanying photos a b Sears 1978 pp 11 12 Sears 1978 p 115 Fleischmann 1983 p 150 Neal 1869 pp 395 401 Sears 1978 p 125 Richards 1933 pp 852 853 The Great Value of a Good Name p 480 Neal 1869 p 410 Neal 1869 pp 1 2 370 Sears 1978 p 125 Richards 1933 pp 858 862 Neal 1869 pp 134 150 Isham 2013 p 210n19 Neal et al 1858 pp 9 18 99 Neal 1869 pp 345 346 Fleischmann 1983 p 150 Neal 1869 p 360 361 Hawthorne 1854 p 159 Lowell 1891 p 62 Edwards 1907 p 31 quoting Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Neal 1869 pp 359 360 Byrne 1969 p 49 Fleischmann 1983 p 218 Thurston 1886 p 41 a b Lease 1972 p 198 quoting One Word More Lease 1972 p 198 Sears 1978 p 103 Lease 1972 pp 199 200 206 Fleischmann 1983 p 151 Fleischmann 2012 p 249 Sears 1978 p 105 Barker Matt 2017 Neal Dow Memorial House www maineirishheritagetrail org Maine Irish Heritage Trail Retrieved June 27 2020 Young 1871 pp 202 207 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 New York Times p 3 The Tobacco Leaf p 7 Sears 1978 p 121 Sears 1978 p 125 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xxvi Merlob 2012 p 118n7 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xxiii Fleischmann 1983 p 187 Merlob 2012 p 118n11 Sears 1978 pp 13 123 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xiv Fleischmann 1983 pp 144 145 Lang p 207 Sears 1978 p 122 Lease 1972 pp 79 80 Sears 1978 pp 80 8 Lease 1972 pp 19 70 Neal 1833 p iv Sears 1978 p 26 Merlob 2012 pp 109 100 120n11 Neal 1840 p 4 Neal 1823a p 59 a b Pattee 1937b p 22 Lease 1972 p 70 quoting Harold C Martin Pethers 2012 p 3 Neal 1828 p xv Lease 1972 pp 42 69 Neal 1828 pp xii xviii a b Fiorelli 1980 abstract Merlob 2012 p 114 Merlob 2012 p 109 Holt 2012 p 187 Sears 1978 p 88 Kayorie 2019 p 90 Fleischmann 1983 p 145 Sears 1978 pp 25 26 Fleischmann 1983 p 145 a b Pattee 1937b p 23 Neal 1869 p 221 Neal 1833 p iv Neal 1828 p xvi Sears 1978 p 72 Appleby 2000 p 93 Pattee 1937a p v Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xiii Sears 1978 p 113 Lease 1972 p 129 Sears 1978 p 113 quoting John Greenleaf Whittier Lease 1972 p 132 Sears 1978 p 114 quoting Poe s letter Lease 1972 p 194 quoting John Neal Fleischmann 1987 pp 157 158 a b Sears 1978 p 120 Lease 1972 p 172 Sears 1978 p 95 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xxi Watts amp Carlson 2012b pp 209 210 Fleischmann 2012 p 257 Sears 1978 p 96 Merlob 2012 p 118 note 11 Sears 1978 p 81 Pattee 1937b p 5 Goddu 1997 p 60 quoting Alexander Cowie Richter 2003 p 245 Goddu 1997 p 62 a b Goddu 1997 p 63 Neal 1840 p 52 Neal 1869 p 224 Waples 1938 p 250 Sears 1978 p 46 Barnes 1984 pp 46 47 a b Sivils 2012 p 45 Pethers 2012 p 23 Richter 2003 p 259 Fleischmann 1983 p 284 Fleischmann 1983 p 150 Todd 1906 p 66 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xviii Fleischmann 1983 p 295 Lease 1972 p 189 Sears 1978 pp 82 83 Kayorie 2019 p 90 Sears 1978 p 118 Dickson 1943 p ix Orestano 2012 p 138 Richards 1933 pp 152 153 Orestano 2012 p 124 Orestano 2012 p 140 Dickson 1943 p xx Sears 1978 p 116 Orestano 2012 p 130 Orestano 2012 pp 126 127 132 133 a b Orestano 2012 p 133 Orestano 2012 p 135 Orestano 2012 pp 133 139 Orestano 2012 pp 135 141 Orestano 2012 pp 137 138 quoting John Ruskin Neal 1874 p 22 Sears 1978 pp 116 117 125 Neal 1874 pp 42 57 61 Greater Portland Landmarks pp 46 47 Greater Portland Landmarks p 47 Dickson 1943 p xxiii Orestano 2012 p 140 Sears 1978 pp 24 28 Lease 1972 p 21 Hayes 2012 p 275 Sears 1978 p 147 Neal 1869 p 222 Lease 1972 pp 185 186 a b Sears 1978 p 27 Daggett 1920 p 5 Lease 1972 p 44 Lease 1972 p 87 quoting John Pierpont Lease 1972 p 44 Lease 1972 p 92 quoting Our Ephraim Lease 1972 p 185 quoting James Henry Hackett Lease 1972 pp 186 188 Lease 1972 p 190 Sears 1978 p 92 Meserve 1986 p 24 quoting John Neal Meserve 1986 p 24 Sears 1978 pp 146 147 Sears 1978 pp 40 111 Richards 1933 p 576 Holt 2012 p 187 Neal 1869 p 336 Richards 1933 pp 581 582 Elwell 1877 p 29 quoting the Portland Transcript Holt 2012 pp 187 188 Holt 2012 p 203 Elwell 1877 p 26 Fleischmann 1983 p 145 Neal 1869 pp 354 355 Sears 1978 p 99 Lease 1972 p 192 Weyler 2012 p 240 Capper 1992 p 220 Capper 1992 p 220 quoting Margaret Fuller Daggett 1920 pp 30 34 35 a b c Fleischmann 1983 p 152 Fleischmann 1983 p 152 quoting Benjamin Lease and Hans Joachim Lang Richards 1934 p 177n50 Neal 1869 pp 344 391 407 Fleischmann 1983 p 165 Neal 1869 pp 387 389 Daggett 1920 p 30 Sears 1978 p 98 a b c Fleischmann 2007 pp 565 567 Neal 1869 p 49 Sears 1978 p 105 Fleischmann 2012 p 248 Fleischmann 1983 pp 152 188 216 222 Weyler 2012 pp 227 228 232 Lease 1972 p 16 Sears 1978 p 100 Weyler 2012 p 227 Weyler 2012 pp 227 228 242 Fleischmann 1983 p 360n204 Fleischmann 1983 p 319 Fleischmann 1983 pp 158 159 Fleischmann 2012 p 255 quoting Idiosyncrasies Weyler 2012 p 237 Neal October 1824 p 394 Neal October 1824 pp 387 388 a b Neal 1817 p 145 Weyler 2012 pp 236 237 239 Fleischmann 1983 p 144 quoting Neal s letter Weyler 2012 p 248 Daggett 1920 p 30 Sears 1978 p 98 Sears 1978 p 99 Fleischmann 1983 p 189 Daggett 1920 pp 30 35 Daggett 1920 p 47 quoting Rights of Women Daggett 1920 p 34 Daggett 1920 pp 37 39 Fleischmann 1983 p 189 quoting History of Woman Suffrage vol 2 Fleischmann 1983 p 209 Fleischmann 1983 p 210 Fleischmann 1983 pp 212 222 Fleischmann 2012 p 249 Fleischmann 1983 pp 212 215 216 217 Neal 1869 p 49 Neal January 1826 p 184 a b Neal January 1826 p 185 a b Neal December 1824 p 642 Neal January 1826 p 187 Neal January 1826 pp 189 190 a b Sears 1978 p 109 Sears 1978 p 109 Neal 1869 p 403 Neal 1869 p 403 Lease 1972 p 126 Sears 1978 pp 109 110 Brennan 2014 p 51 quoting John Neal Neal January 1826 pp 183 184 Fleischmann 1983 p 154 Price amp Talbot 2006 pp 190 192 quoting Neal Sears 1978 p 110 Neal December 1824 p 643 Neal January 1826 p 188 Fleischmann 1983 p 153 quoting Keep Cool a b c Neal December 1824 p 640 Watts 2012 p 209 Watts 2012 p 211 Neal 1869 p 364 Neal 1869 p 355 Byrne 1969 p 23 Neal 1869 p 368 Neal 1869 p 367 Fleischmann 1983 p 154 quoting Keep Cool Neal 1817 pp 132 133 Fleischmann 1983 pp 152 153 Neal December 1824 p 628 Neal 1869 p 289 Todd 1906 p 68 quoting Neal from memory a b Neal 1869 p 348 Neal January 1826 p 180 Neal 1869 pp 179 180 347 348 Mihm 2007 p 236 Jackson 1907 p 521 Neal 1869 pp 59 179 180 Neal 1869 p 390 Neal 1869 p 389 Fleischmann 1983 p 153 Neal 1869 pp 180 181 Fleischmann 1983 p 153 Neal 1869 pp 179 180 348 389 Neal 1869 p iii Daggett 1920 p 30 Elwell 1877 p 29 Neal 1869 p 340 Pattee 1937b p 1 Goddu 1997 p 70 Poe 1849 p 545 Sears 1978 pp 122 13 Daggett 1920 p 17 Cowie 1951 p 175 Pattee 1935 p 282 Lowell 1891 pp 62 64 Sears 1978 p 114 Fleischmann 1983 p 145 Kayorie 2019 p 86 Lease 1972 pp 131 132 Kayorie 2019 p 87 Sears 1978 p 123 Lease 1972 p 80 Lease 1972 p 79 Sears 1978 p 123 Lease 1972 p 79 Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xviii Watts amp Carlson 2012b p xiii Merlob 2012 p 110 Fleischmann 1983 p 205 Sources Edit Books and book chaptersAppleby Joyce 2000 Inheriting the Revolution The First Generation of Americans Cambridge Massachusetts Belknap Press ISBN 9780674002364 Barker Matthew Jude 2014 The Irish of Portland Maine A History of Forest City Hibernians Portland Maine The History Press ISBN 9781626190566 Barnes Albert F 1984 Greater Portland Celebration 350 Portland Maine Guy Gannett Publishing Co ISBN 9780930096588 Brennan Dennis 2014 The Making of an Abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison s Path to Publishing the Liberator Jefferson North Carolina MacFarland ISBN 9781476615356 Byrne Frank L 1969 Prophet of Prohibition Neal Dow and His Crusade Gloucester Massachusetts Peter Smith OCLC 1180883839 Capper Charles M 1992 Margaret Fuller An American Romantic Life Vol 1 New York New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195045796 Cowie Alexander 1951 The Rise of the American Novel New York New York American Book Company OCLC 818012686 Daggett Windsor 1920 A Down East Yankee From the District of Maine Portland Maine A J Huston OCLC 1048477735 Davis Theo 2007 Formalism Experience and the Making of American Literature in the Nineteenth Century New York New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139466561 Dickson Harold Edward 1943 Observations on American Art Selections from the Writings of John Neal 1793 1876 State College Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State College OCLC 775870 DiMercurio Catherine C ed 2018 Nineteenth Century Literature Criticism Criticism of the Works of Novelists Philosophers and Other Creative Writers Who Died between 1800 and 1899 from the First Published Critical Appraisals to Current Evaluations Farmington Hills Michigan Gale A Cengage Company ISBN 9781410378514 Eisenberg Christiane 2007 German Gymnastics in Britain or the Failure of Culture Transfer In Manz Stefan Beerbuhl Margrit Schulte Davis John R eds Migration and Transfer from Germany to Britain 1660 1914 Munich Germany K G Saur pp 131 146 ISBN 9783598230028 Elwell Edward H 1877 Historical Sketches Cumberland County In Wood Joseph ed Fourteenth Annual Report of the Proceedings of the Maine Press Association for the Year 1877 Portland Maine Brown Thurston amp Co pp 22 31 OCLC 7158022 The source URL includes multiple separate publications bundled together Fleischmann Fritz 2012 Chapter 12 A Right Manly Man in 1843 John Neal on Women s Rights and the Problem of Male Feminism John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 247 270 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Fleischmann Fritz 2007 John Neal 1793 1876 In Gardiner Judith Kegan Pease Bob Pringle Keith Flood Michael eds International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities Vol 2 London England Routledge pp 565 567 ISBN 9780415333436 Fleischmann Fritz 1987 Yankee Heroics New England Folk Life and Character in the Fiction of Portland s John Neal 1793 1876 In Vaughan David K ed Consumable Goods Papers from the North East Popular Culture Association Meeting 1986 Orono Maine National Poetry Foundation University of Maine pp 157 165 ISBN 0943373026 Fleischmann Fritz 1983 A Right View of the Subject Feminism in the Works of Charles Brockden Brown and John Neal Erlangen Germany Verlag Palm amp Enke Erlangen ISBN 9783789601477 Goddu Theresa A 1997 Gothic America Narrative History and Nation New York New York Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231108171 Gohdes Clarence 1944 American Literature in Nineteenth Century England New York New York Columbia University Press OCLC 250711537 Greater Portland Landmarks 1986 Portland 2nd ed Hallowell Maine Greater Portland Landmarks Inc ISBN 9780939761074 Hawthorne Nathaniel 1854 Mosses from an Old Manse Vol 2 New ed Boston Massachusetts Ticknor and Fields OCLC 219598285 Hayes Kevin J 2012 Chapter 13 How John Neal Wrote His Autobiography John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 271 282 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Holt Kerin 2012 Chapter 9 Here There and Everywhere The Elusive Regionalism of John Neal John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 185 208 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Isham Matthew 2013 A Press That Speaks Its Opinions Frankly and Openly and Fearlessly In Slap Andrew L Thomas Michael eds The Distracted and Anarchical People New Answers for Old Questions about the Civil War Era North New York New York Fordham University Press pp 11 28 ISBN 9780823245680 Kayorie James Stephen Merritt 2019 John Neal 1793 1876 In Baumgartner Jody C ed American Political Humor Masters of Satire and Their Impact on U S Policy and Culture Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO pp 86 91 ISBN 9781440854866 Lease Benjamin 1972 That Wild Fellow John Neal and the American Literary Revolution Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226469690 Leonard Fred Eugene 1923 A Guide to the History of Physical Education Philadelphia Pennsylvania and New York New York Lea amp Febiger OCLC 561890463 Lowell James Russell 1891 originally published 1848 A Fable for Critics Boston Massachusetts Houghton Mifflin and Company OCLC 616820491 Merlob Maya 2012 Chapter 5 Celebrated Rubbish John Neal and the Commercialization of Early American Romanticism John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 99 122 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Meserve Walter J 1986 Heralds of Promise The Drama of the American People During the Age of Jackson 1829 1849 New York New York Greenwood Press ISBN 9780313250156 Mihm Stephen 2007 A Nation of Counterfeiters Capitalists Con Men and the Making of the United States Cambridge Massachusetts University Press ISBN 9780674026575 Mott Frank Luther 1966 A History of American Magazines 1741 1850 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press OCLC 715774796 Fourth printing Neal John 1823a Errata or The Works of Will Adams Vol 1 New York New York Published for the proprietors OCLC 36653136 Neal John 1823b Errata or The Works of Will Adams Vol 2 New York New York Published for the proprietors OCLC 36653136 Neal John 1828 Rachel Dyer A North American Story Portland Maine Shirley and Hyde OCLC 1167705583 Neal John 1833 The Down Easters amp c amp c amp c Vol 1 New York New York Harper Brothers OCLC 917637995 Neal John 1840 Originally published as Seventy Six in 1823 Seventy Six or Love and Battle London England J Cunningham OCLC 13162183 Neal John Baldwin Harvey Macalister Charles Randall Josiah Clark Luther C Nichols Lyman 1858 The Past Present and Future of the City of Cairo In North America With Reports Estimates and Statistics Portland Maine Brown Thurston OCLC 13619400 Neal John 1869 Wandering Recollections of a Somewhat Busy Life Boston Massachusetts Roberts Brothers OCLC 1056818562 Neal John 1874 Portland Illustrated Portland Maine W S Jones OCLC 26519992 Orestano Francesca 2012 Chapter 6 John Neal the Rise of the Critick and the Rise of American Art John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 123 144 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Pattee Fred Lewis 1935 The First Century of American Literature 1770 1870 New York New York Appleton Century OCLC 2461125 Pattee Fred Lewis 1937a Preface In Pattee Fred Lewis ed American Writers A Series of Papers Contributed to Blackwood s Magazine 1824 1825 Durham North Carolina Duke University Press p v OCLC 464953146 Pattee Fred Lewis 1937b Introduction In Pattee Fred Lewis ed American Writers A Series of Papers Contributed to Blackwood s Magazine 1824 1825 Durham North Carolina Duke University Press pp 3 26 OCLC 464953146 Pethers Matthew 2012 Chapter 1 I Must Resemble Nobody John Neal Genre and the Making of American Literary Nationalism John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 1 38 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Poe Edgar Allan 1849 The Works of Edgar Allan Poe Vol 3 New York New York W J Widdleton OCLC 38115823 Price H H Talbot Gerald E 2006 Sports In Price H H Talbot Gerald eds Maine s Visible Black History The First Chronicle of Its People Gardiner Maine Tilbury House pp 190 192 ISBN 9780884482758 Richards Irving T 1934 Originally published in The New England Quarterly vol 7 no 2 pp 335 355 Mary Gove Nichols and John Neal Nineteenth Century Literature Criticism Criticism of the Works of Novelists Philosophers and Other Creative Writers Who Died between 1800 and 1899 from the First Published Critical Appraisals to Current Evaluations pp 168 178 In DiMercurio 2018 Richter Jorg Thomas 2003 Originally published in Colonial Encounters Essays in Early American History and Culture Heidelberg Germany Universitatsverlag Winter pp 157 172 Exemplary American Logan the Mingo Chief in Jefferson Neal and Doddridge Nineteenth Century Literature Criticism Criticism of the Works of Novelists Philosophers and Other Creative Writers Who Died between 1800 and 1899 from the First Published Critical Appraisals to Current Evaluations pp 241 249 In DiMercurio 2018 Sears Donald A 1978 John Neal Twayne s United States Author Series Boston Massachusetts Twayne Publishers ISBN 9780805772302 Sivils Matthew Wynn 2012 Chapter 2 The Herbage of Death Haunted Environments in John Neal and James Fenimore Cooper John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 39 56 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Stern Madeline B 1991 The Life of Margaret Fuller 2nd revised ed New York New York Greenwood Press ISBN 9780313275265 Thurston Brown 1886 Biographical Sketches John Neal In Wood Joseph ed Twenty Third Annual Report of the Proceedings of the Maine Press Association for the Year Ending February 1 1886 Bar Harbor Maine Mount Desert Publishing Company pp 39 42 OCLC 7158022 The source URL includes multiple separate publications bundled together Todd John M 1906 A Sketch of the Life of John M Todd Sixty two Years in a Barber Shop And Reminiscences of His Customers Portland Maine William W Roberts Co OCLC 663785 von Mehren Joan 1994 Minerva and the Muse A Life of Margaret Fuller Amherst Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 9780870239410 Waples Dorothy 1938 The Whig Myth of James Fenimore Cooper Yale studies in English v 88 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press OCLC 670265 Watts Edward 2012 Chapter 10 He Could Not Believe that Butchering Red Men Was Serving Our Maker David Whicher and the Indian Hater Tradition John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 209 226 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Watts Edward Carlson David J eds 2012a John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture Lewisburg Pennsylvania Bucknell University Press ISBN 9781611484205 Watts Edward Carlson David J 2012b Introduction John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp xi xxxiv In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Weyler Karen A 2012 Chapter 11 John Neal and the Early Discourse of American Women s Rights John Neal and Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture pp 227 246 In Watts amp Carlson 2012a Young Edward 1871 Special Report on Immigration Accompanying Information for Immigrants Washington DC Government Printing Office OCLC 786302802 Magazine and journal articlesBrooks James August 31 1833 Letters from the East John Neal New York Mirror Vol 11 New York New York G P Morris pp 69 70 76 77 84 85 92 93 100 101 109 117 118 A serial biography of Neal published in eight installments Edwards George Thornton February 1907 Highfield One of Longfellow s Favorite Haunts Pine Tree Magazine Vol 7 no 1 Portland Maine Sale Publishing Co pp 28 31 The Great Value of a Good Name Pine Tree Magazine Vol 7 no 5 Portland Maine Sale Publishing Co June 1907 p 480 Jackson Charles E July 1907 Maine Charitable Mechanic Association Pine Tree Magazine Vol 7 no 6 Portland Maine Sale Publishing Co pp 515 523 Lang Hans Joachim 1962 Critical Essays and Stories by John Neal Jahrbuch fur Amerikastudien 7 204 288 JSTOR 41155013 Neal John February 1817 Essay on Duelling The Portico Vol 3 January June 1817 no 2 Baltimore Maryland Neale Willis amp Cole pp 132 146 Neal John July 1824 Speculations of a Traveler Concerning the People of the United States With Parallels Blackwood s Magazine Vol 16 July December 1824 Edinburgh Scotland William Blackwood pp 91 97 Neal John October 1824 Men and Women Brief Hypothesis concerning the Difference in their Genius Blackwood s Magazine Vol 16 July December 1824 Edinburgh Scotland William Blackwood pp 387 394 Neal John December 1824 A Summary View of America Blackwood s Magazine Vol 16 July December 1824 Edinburgh Scotland William Blackwood pp 617 652 Neal John January 7 1826 United States Westminster Review Vol 5 January April 1826 London England Baldwin Cradock and Joy pp 173 201 Neal John April 1826 Yankee Notions The London Magazine Vol 4 January April 1826 London England Hunt and Clarke pp 437 449 Neal John December 1829 Unpublished Poetry The Yankee And Boston Literary Gazette Vol 79 July December 1829 Boston Massachusetts James Adams Jr pp 295 298 News articlesAnonymous July 19 1875 Served Him Right The Veteran John Neal Gives an Impertinent Young Rough His Deserts The New York Times Vol 24 no 7438 New York New York p 3 Anonymous August 4 1875 Served Him Right The Tobacco Leaf Organ of the Tobacco Trade in the United States Vol 11 no 25 New York New York p 7 Gallant Cliff July 13 2012 The Churlish and Brilliant John Neal The Portland Daily Sun Portland Maine pp 1 5 Unpublished dissertationsFiorelli Edward Alfred 1980 Literary Nationalism in the Works of John Neal 1793 1876 PhD Fordham University OCLC 918099566 Richards Irving T 1933 The Life and Works of John Neal PhD Harvard University OCLC 7588473 External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about John Neal Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Neal John Neal artifacts at Maine Historical Society Neal family portraits at Maine Historical Society John Neal at Library of Congress Authorities Works by or about John Neal at Internet Archive Works by John Neal at Project Gutenberg John Neal at Find a Grave Works by John Neal at Open Library Works by John Neal on the Online Books Page of the University of Pennsylvania Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Neal writer amp oldid 1130604235, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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