- Hugh Henry Brackenridge
Hugh Henry Brackenridge (1748—
June 25 ,1816 ) was an Americanwriter ,lawyer ,judge , and justice of thePennsylvania Supreme Court .A frontier citizen in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania ,USA , he founded both the Pittsburgh Academy, now theUniversity of Pittsburgh , and the "Pittsburgh Gazette", still operating today as the "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ".He was raised in
York County, Pennsylvania , near theMaryland border, then a frontier, where his parents had immigrated in 1753 fromCampbeltown ,Scotland [ [http://www.scotlands.com/usa/21.html Scotland's Mark on America] ] when he was 5. At age 15 he was head of a free school in Maryland. At age 19 he entered the College of New Jersey, nowPrinceton University , where he joinedPhilip Morin Freneau ,James Madison , and others in forming the American Whig Society to counter the conservative Cliosophic, orTory , Society. (Today these are conjoined as theAmerican Whig-Cliosophic Society .) Freneau and Brackenridge collaborated on a satire on American manners that may be the first work of prose fiction written in America, "Father Bombo's Pilgrimage to Mecca in Arabia" . They also wrote "The Rising Glory of America", a prophetic poem of a united nation that would rule theNorth America ncontinent from theAtlantic Ocean to thePacific Ocean . Brackenridge recited it at thecommencement exercises of 1771.After his graduation, Brackenridge remained another year to study divinity. In 1772 he became headmaster of an academy in
Somerset County, Maryland , with Freneau as his assistant. He went back to Princeton for a Master's degree, and then served inGeorge Washington 's army as achaplain , preaching fiery patriotic sermons to the soldiers of theRevolutionary War . He started the "United States Magazine" inPhiladelphia in 1778, where he published poems by his friendFreneau , but its lagging subscriptions convinced him to change his profession. He took a law degree, studying underSamuel Chase inAnnapolis , and was admitted to the bar in Philadelphia in 1780 at age 32. Of Philadelphia he wrote, "I saw no chance for being anything in that city, there were such great men before me." Four months later he struck out for the frontier, 300 miles to the west, over theAppalachian Mountains .In 1781 Pittsburgh was a village of 400 inhabitants, most Scots, like himself,
Scots-Irish , and Germans. His aim, he wrote, in "offering myself to the place" was "to advance the country and thereby myself."In Pittsburgh he helped establish the first western newspaper, the "Pittsburgh Gazette", in 1786. He was elected in 1786 to the Pennsylvania state assembly, where he fought for the adoption of the federal
Constitution , and obtained state endowments in 1787 for the establishment of the Pittsburgh Academy (University of Pittsburgh), modeled onBenjamin Franklin 'sAcademy of Philadelphia (University of Pennsylvania ). He also played a role in the little knownWestsylvania dispute, siding with Pennsylvania that the western lands should not become a 14th state. He lost a bid for re-election because he opposed popular sentiment in supporting federal controls, and he also nearly lost his life when he attempted to mediate theWhiskey Rebellion . He ran for theUnited States Congress , but was soundly defeated byAlbert Gallatin . The formation ofAllegheny County is largely due to Brackenridge's efforts. In December 1799 GovernorThomas McKean appointed him a justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court.In 1815 he completed "
Modern Chivalry ", his rambling satiricalnovel . Widely considered the first important fictional work about the American frontier and called "to the West whatDon Quixote was toEurope ," the third and fourth sections of the book appeared in 1793 and 1797, and a revision in 1805, with a final addition in 1815.Henry Adams called it "a more thoroughly American book than any written before 1833."Brackenridge died June 25, 1816 in
Carlisle, Pennsylvania .The Allegheny County
borough ofBrackenridge, Pennsylvania is named for his son, the lawyer, judge, and writerHenry Marie Brackenridge (1786-1871).Works
* 1776. "The Battle of Bunker Hill." A blank-verse tragedy for performance by his students at the Somerset Academy in Maryland, where he is a master. It features contrasting views by Revolutionary leaders and the British.
* 1777. "The Death of General Montgomery at the Siege of Quebec." A second patriotic drama for production at Maryland's Somerset Academy, where he was a master, is about the ill-fated attack on Quebec.
* 1783. "*Brackenridge, H. H., ed. "Indian Atrocities: Narratives of the Perils and Sufferings of Dr. Knight and John Slover, among the Indians during the Revolutionary War, with Short Memoirs of Col. Crawford & John Slover." Cincinnati, 1867. Knight and Slover's captivity narratives, often printed under various titles and in other collections, including "A Selection of the Most Interesting Narratives of Outrages Committed by the Indians…" (ed. Archibald Loudon, 1808).
* 1792. "Modern Chivalry." The first two parts of Brackenridge's satirical novel appear.
* 1795. "Incidents of the Insurrection in the Western Parts of Pennsylvania." Covers the conflict between the federal government and the local insurgents during the Whiskey Rebellion.
* 1814 "Law Miscellanies." Essays concerning Pennsylvania law, federal statutes, judgments of the U.S. Supreme Court, and the employment of English common law in the American legal system.
* 1815. "Modern Chivalry." Additions completed to his four-volume novel.References
*cite book | author=Alberts, Robert C. | title=Pitt: The Story of the University of Pittsburgh 1787-1987 | location=Pittsburgh | publisher=
University of Pittsburgh Press | year=1987 | id=ISBN 0-8229-1150-7
*cite book | author=Marder, Daniel | title=Hugh Henry Brackenridge | location=New York | publisher=Twayne Publishers | year=1967 | id=
*cite book | author=Newlin, Claude M. | title=The Life and Writings of Hugh Henry Brackenridge | location=Princeton | publisher=Princeton University Press | year=1932 | id=
*O'Toole, James (2000). [http://www.post-gazette.com/regionstate/20000102brackenridge1.asp Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Profile of Its Founder Hugh Henry Brackenridge] . Retrieved November 27, 2005.
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