- Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe (writer)
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Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe (also Anthony, DeWolfe and Jr; August 28, 1864 in Bristol, Rhode Island – December 6, 1960 in Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an American editor and author.
Contents
Early life and education
In 1886, he graduated from Lehigh University and in 1887 from Harvard (A.M., 1888), where his son later taught law. He received and honorary degree Litt. D. from Lehigh in 1916. [1]
Family
He was the son of Bishop Mark De Wolfe Howe[2]
He married Frances Huntington Quincy (1870–1933), also an essayist and author, who was a sister to Josiah Quincy (1859–1919) and the daughter of Helen Frances Huntington (1831–1903) & Josiah Phillips Quincy, poet, writer, and publicist.
He had two sons and one daughter: Quincy Howe (b. 1900), news analyst and author, Helen Huntington Howe (b. 1905), monologuist and novelist who married Reginald Allen, and Mark De Wolfe Howe, Harvard law professor, historian, biographer, civil rights leader.[3]
Career
He served as associate editor of the Youth's Companion from 1888 to 1893 and again from 1899 to 1913, as assistant editor of the Atlantic Monthly in 1893-1895, and as editor of the Harvard Alumni Bulletin until 1913. He was also Vice President of the Atlantic Monthly company from 1911 to 1929. As an author he won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography for Barrett Wendell and His Letters. He was the editor of Harvard Volunteers in Europe in 1916.
Published works
Besides editing The Memory of Lincoln (1889), Home Letters of General Sherman (1909), The Beacon Biographies (31 volumes, 1899–1910), and Lines of Battle and Other Poems by Henry Howard Brownell (1912), he published the following:
- Shadows (1897)
- American Bookmen (1898)
- Phillips Brooks (1899)
- Boston: The Place and People (1903)
- Life and Letters of George Bancroft (1908)
- Harmonics: A Book of Verse (1909)
- Boston Common: Scenes from Four Centuries (1910)
- Life and Labors of Bishop Hare, Apostle to the Sioux (1911)
- Letters of Charles Eliot Norton (1813), with Sara Norton
- The Boston Symphony Orchestra (1914)
- The Harvard Volunteers in Europe (1916)
- The Humane Society of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts (1918)
- The Atlantic Monthly and Its Makers (1919)
- George von Lengerke Meyer, his Life and Public Services (1919)
- Memoirs of the Harvard Dead in the War against Germany two volumes, (1920, 1921)
Notes and references
- ^ Chi Phi Centenial Memorial Volume
- ^ Walt Howe Genealogy
- ^ Massachusetts Historical Society: Quincy, Wendell, Holmes, and Upham Family Papers, 1633-1910
- Encyclopedia Americana (Volume 14: 1969) page 457.
- This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.
Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography (1917–1925) - Laura E. Richards and Maud Howe Elliott, assisted by Florence Howe Hall (1917)
- William Cabell Bruce (1918)
- Henry Adams (1919)
- Albert J. Beveridge (1920)
- Edward W. Bok (1921)
- Hamlin Garland (1922)
- Burton J. Hendrick (1923)
- Michael I. Pupin (1924)
- M. A. Dewolfe Howe (1925)
- Complete list
- (1917–1925)
- (1926–1950)
- (1951–1975)
- (1976–2000)
- (2001–2025)
Categories:- Lehigh University alumni
- Harvard University alumni
- American historians
- American biographers
- Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography winners
- 1864 births
- 1960 deaths
- People from Bristol, Rhode Island
- American historian stubs
- American editor stubs
- American non-fiction writer stubs
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