George Edward Woodberry Papers, 1903-1927 | Oberlin College Archives
George Edward Woodberry was born in Beverly, Massachusetts on May 12, 1855, the son of Henry Elliott and Sarah Dane (Tuck) Woodberry. He was descended from colonial New England stock on both sides; his first American ancestor, John Woodberry, settled in Salem in 1626 and was one of the founders of the settlement at Beverly. Many of G.E. Woodberry’s forbears were sea-captains and sailors, and his own poetic preoccupation with the sea and his taste for wandering in strange places show that he was of their blood.
Woodberry was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter, New Hampshire, to. He entered Harvard College with the class of 1876, but did not graduate until 1877 due to illness and poverty. At Harvard Woodberry was greatly influenced by Henry Adams, and Charles Eliot Norton. He helped to catalogue the library of James Russell Lowell, and he was present at Emerson’s last lecture. Woodberry was a representative of New England Transcendentalism on its more rebellious side, and he was considered a “character” in the “New England sense.”
From 1877 to 1878 and again from 1880 to 1882 Woodberry was professor of English at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln, and this western sojourn greatly influenced his later writing. For a year, in 1888, he was literary editor of the Boston Post. In 1891 Woodberry was appointed professor of literature at Columbia University, a title that was changed to professor of comparative literature in 1900. His thirteen years at Columbia were the fullest and richest of Woodberry’s life. He was brilliantly successful as a teacher and later built up a graduate department which transformed the methods of higher instruction in literature and left a deep mark on university teaching in the field of English throughout America. Woodberry left Columbia early in 1904 while on a year’s leave of absence, and for the rest of his life pursued activity as an itinerant teacher, traveler and writer. Most of his time was spent, however, in Beverly, Massachusetts, writing or dreaming in the house occupied for generations by his ancestors.
Woodberry had begun his literary career in his undergraduate days as an editor of the Harvard Advocate, he had been contributing to the Atlantic Monthly since 1876, and to the Nation since 1878, and he became a regular contributor to both until 1891. Woodberry published a number of books, including: A History of Wood Engraving (1883), the life of Edgar Allan Poe (1885), The North Shore Watch and Other Poems (1890), Studies in Letters and Life (1890), Wild Eden (1899), Heart of Man (1899), Makers of Literature (1900), a biography of Nathaniel Hawthorne (1902), America in Literature (1903), and a two-volume Life of Edgar Allan Poe (1909). Woodberry’s retirement from Columbia in 1904 was immediately followed by the publication of a number of works largely based on his academic and other lectures. These include: The Torch (1905), The Appreciation of Literature (1907), Great Writers lectures delivered at John Hopkins University (1907), The Inspiration of Poetry (1910), and one of his most important biographies Ralph Waldo Emerson in the English Men of Letters Series (1907). Woodberry’s work The Torch is probably the fullest expression of his philosophy of literature, and exhibits the deep sense of race and tradition which was fundamental in his thought - though it should be borne in mind that for Woodberry “race” represented not so much an ethnic entity as a spiritual quality of mind made up of imaginative memories and experiences. During the last fifteen years of his life he published a series of sonnets, Ideal Passion (1917), and The Roamer and Other Poems (1920) in which most of his poetry is collected. Besides the work already enumerated, he edited a considerable number of books, including The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley (1892) and, with E.C. Stedman, The Works of Edgar Allan Poe (10 vols., 1894-1895).
Woodberry was the recipient of several honors and academic distinctions, and was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature of England. The Woodberry Society was organized in 1911 and printed several of his writings privately. The Harvard University Library named the Poetry Room in his honor. As a critic Woodberry occupies a position of no mean importance, some of his essays and lectures holding their place side by side with the best that has been written of man’s imaginative life by any American. In his best critical work there is a subtle intuition of the emotional experience that produced the work of literature and a deep sense of its relation to the spiritual background of western man. He is noted for his excellent biography of Hawthorne and his in-depth and impartial research on Poe. Woodberry died in his home town of Beverly, Massachusetts on January 2, 1930.
Sources Consulted
Malone, Dumas (ed.). Dictionary of American Biography, v.20. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1936.
George H. Danton faculty file, RG 28/3, box 28.
Author: Kamille T.H. ParkinsonThe papers of George Edward Woodberry reflect Woodberry’s position as a poet, critic and educator. The 46 documents in the collection are letters written by Woodberry to George H. Danton, Oberlin College faculty member who, while working on his doctorate at Columbia University, had been Woodberry’s research assistant. The letters range in date from June 30, 1903 to October 29, 1927 and are largely personal in nature. Woodberry was a charming and indefatigable letter-writer, his correspondence illustrating his literary prose style.
Woodberry’s letters to Danton from 1903-1907 touch on Danton’s relationship to Woodberry as a research assistant and later as a colleague and friend. The later letters are personal, relating to Woodberry’s own and Danton’s life experiences. The correspondence in the Oberlin College Archives Woodberry Papers ends just as Danton takes up his position on the Oberlin College faculty as a professor of German in 1927. Woodberry’s October 29, 1927 letter to Danton speaks favorably of Oberlin, and of Woodberry’s friendship with Dr. Ernest Hatch Wilkins, President of Oberlin College from 1927 to 1945.
INVENTORY
Box 1
George E. Woodberry to George Danton, 1903-1913
George E. Woodberry to George Danton, 1914-1927