American author and lawyer Richard Henry Dana, Jr. (1815-1882), wrote one of the most persistently popular nonfiction narratives in American letters, "Two Years before the Mast". He was also an adviser in the formation and direction of the Free Soil party.
Son of Richard Henry Dana, Sr. (1787-1879), the Massachusetts poet and editor, the younger Dana distinguished himself in 1834, when he abruptly left the security of Harvard undergraduate life and shipped round Cape Horn to California on a tiny hide-trading brig. He returned 2 years later, completed his studies, and in 1840 was admitted to the bar. In the same year Two Years before the Mast was published by Harper and Brothers, and though the publisher had deftly lifted the copyright (paying Dana just $250), the author hoped that the book would at least bring him some law practice.
Dana's hopes were realized - indeed his office filled with sailors and he became known as the "Seaman's Champion" - and he eventually shaped an impressive legal career. Still, the fact that his publisher realized $50,000 from the book did at times move Dana to complaint. He comforted himself with the knowledge that if he had lost money he had gained fame. The book was embraced by all factions - reformers, temperance crusaders, and romantic lovers of the sea, who saw the oceans as at least comparable to the prairies when it came to charting a frontier to explore. Since the day of its publication the book has never been out of print.
Years later, however, Dana wrote to his son: "My life has been a failure compared with what I might and ought to have done. My great success - my book - was a boy's work, done before I came to the Bar." There were other books: The Seaman's Friend (1841), a manual and handbook for sailors; and To Cuba and Back (1859), an interesting account of a vacation voyage.
But Dana's real commitments were to the law, where he finally prospered, and to politics, where he finally failed. Celebrated as the legal champion of fugitive black slaves, Dana consistently missed opportunities for high public office, even within the Free Soil party he had helped create. In 1878 he packed up and left for Europe, furious that his appointment as minister to England had failed of approval in the Senate.
In Europe Dana joined some of the brilliant expatriate circles then dominating Rome and seemed to find some peace. He called it "a dream of life," but even the dream ended, in January 1882, and he was buried in the same Italian graveyard that contained the remains of John Keats and Percy Bysshe Shelley.
Further Reading
Charles Francis Adams, Jr., Richard Henry Dana (1890), and Samuel Shapiro, Richard Henry Dana, Jr., 1815-1882 (1961), are recommended studies. Of interest also are two editions of Two Years before the Mast, one edited by Dana's son, R. H. Dana III (1911), and the other by John H. Kemble (1964). See also The Journal of Richard Henry Dana (3 vols., 1968). Background information is in D. H. Lawrence, Studies in Classic American Literature (1923; repr. 1964).
Additional Sources
Dana, Richard Henry, Two years before the mast: a personal narrative of life at sea, Pleasantville, N.Y.: Reader's Digest Association, 1995.
| 1839 | "Cruelty to Seamen." Dana's first publication appears in the American Jurist, announcing the theme he would elaborate in Two Years Before the Mast (1840). To regain his health, Dana had sailed to California as a common sailor in 1834 and had vowed to redress the grievances suffered by sailors. |
| 1840 | Two Years Before the Mast. Taken from the journal he had kept on a hide-trading expedition around the Horn to California in 1834, this is a description of Cape Horn, the land that is now California, and life at sea in general, concentrating on the abuses endured by sailors. The popular work would set a standard of realism in sea literature and prompt maritime reforms. |
| 1841 | The Seaman's Friend. This reference for sailors on their legal rights and duties and important sea vocabulary and customs would become the standard manual on maritime law in England and the United States. Dana, known as "the sailor's lawyer," had assembled the manual after witnessing cruelty toward sailors. |
| 1859 | To Cuba and Back. The author's only travel book. Although he had written it hastily, Dana's descriptive talents provide a lasting picture of Cuban life and culture. Especially notable are his depictions of slave life on a sugar plantation and a bullfight. |
Quotes:
"Better to be driven out from among men than to be disliked of children."
| Richard Henry Dana, Jr. | |
|---|---|
|
|
|
| Signature | |
Richard Henry Dana Jr. (August 1, 1815 – January 6, 1882) was an American lawyer and politician from Massachusetts, a descendant of an eminent colonial family who gained renown as the author of the American classic, the memoir Two Years Before the Mast. Both as a writer and as a lawyer, he was a champion of the downtrodden, from seamen to fugitive slaves.
|
Contents
|
Dana was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts on August 1, 1815[1] into a family that had settled in colonial America in 1640, counting Anne Bradstreet among its ancestors.[2] His father was the poet and critic Richard Henry Dana, Sr. As a boy, Dana studied in Cambridgeport under a strict schoolmaster named Samuel Barrett, alongside fellow Cambridge native and future writer James Russell Lowell.[3] Barrett was infamous as a disciplinarian who punished his students for any infraction by flogging. He also often pulled students by their ears and, on one such occasion, nearly pulled Dana's ear off, causing the boy's father to protest enough that the practice was abolished.[4]
In 1825, Dana enrolled in a private school overseen by Ralph Waldo Emerson, whom Dana later mildly praised as "a very pleasant instructor", though he lacked a "system or discipline enough to insure regular and vigorous study."[4] In July 1831, Dana enrolled at Harvard College, where in his freshman year his support of a student protest cost him a six month suspension.[5] In his junior year, he contracted measles, which in his case led to ophthalmia.
Fatefully, the worsening vision inspired him to take a sea voyage. But rather than going on a fashionable Grand Tour of Europe, he decided to enlist as a merchant seaman, despite his high-class birth. On August 14, 1834 he departed Boston aboard the brig Pilgrim bound for Alta California, at that time still a part of Mexico.[6] This voyage would bring Dana to a number of settlements in California (including Monterey, San Pedro, San Juan Capistrano, San Diego, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, and San Francisco). After witnessing a flogging on board the ship, he vowed that he would try to help improve the lot of the common seaman. The Pilgrim collected hides for shipment to Boston, and Dana spent much of his time in California curing hides and loading them onto the ship. To return home sooner, he was reassigned by the ship's owners to a different ship, the Alert, and on September 22, 1836, Dana arrived back in Massachusetts.[7]
He thereupon enrolled at Harvard Law School. He graduated from there in 1837 and was admitted to the bar in 1840[citation needed]. He went on to specialize in maritime law. In the October 1839 issue of a magazine, he took a local judge, one of his own instructors in law school, to task for letting off a ship's captain and mate with a slap on the wrist for murdering the ship's cook, beating him to death for not "laying hold" of a piece of equipment. The judge had sentenced the captain to ninety days in jail and the mate to thirty days.[8][9]
In 1841 he published The Seaman's Friend, which became a standard reference on the legal rights and responsibilities of sailors, He defended many common seamen in court.
During his voyages he had kept a diary, and in 1840 (coinciding with his admission to the bar) he published a memoir, Two Years Before the Mast. The term, "before the mast" refers to sailors' quarters, which were located in the forecastle (the ship's bow), officers' quarters being near the stern. His writing evidences his later social feeling for the oppressed. With the California Gold Rush later in the decade, Two Years Before the Mast would become highly sought after as one of the few sources of information on California.
He became a prominent abolitionist, helping to found the anti-slavery Free Soil Party in 1848 and representing the fugitive slave Anthony Burns in Boston in 1854.
In 1853 he represented William T.G. Morton in Morton's attempt to establish that he discovered the "anaesthetic properties of ether".[10]
In 1859, while the U.S. Senate was considering whether the United States should try to annex the Spanish possession of Cuba, Dana traveled there and visited Havana, a sugar plantation, a bullfight, and various churches, hospitals, schools, and prisons, a trip documented in his book To Cuba and Back.
During the American Civil War, Dana served as a United States Attorney, and successfully argued before the Supreme Court that the United States Government could rightfully blockade Confederate ports. During 1867–1868 Dana was a member of the Massachusetts legislature and also served as a U.S. counsel in the trial of Confederate President Jefferson Davis.
In 1876, his nomination as ambassador to Great Britain was defeated in the Senate by political enemies, partly because of a lawsuit for plagiarism brought against him for a legal textbook he had edited, Henry Wheaton's Elements of International Law (8th ed., 1866). Immediately after the book's publication, Dana had been charged by the editor of two earlier editions, William Beach Lawrence, with infringing his copyright, and was involved in litigation which continued for thirteen years. In such minor matters as arrangement of notes and verification of citations the court found against Dana, but in the main Dana's notes were vastly different from Lawrence's.[11]
Dana died of influenza in Rome and is buried in that city's Protestant Cemetery.
His son, Richard Henry Dana III, married Edith Longfellow, daughter of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.[12]
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dana, Francis". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
| Wikisource has original works written by or about: |
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Richard Henry Dana, Jr. |
| Legal offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Charles L. Woodbury |
United States Attorney for the District of Massachusetts 1861–1866 |
Succeeded by George Stillman Hillard |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)