- Born: Mfay 23, 1918
- Birthplace: Mankato, MN
- Died: July 26, 1999
Award-winning biographer Walter Jackson Bate, won the Pulitzer Prize twice, for his biographies of John Keats and Samuel Johnson. The latter also earned him a National Book Award and the Nation Book Critics Circle Award. Bate graduated summa cum laude from Harvard in 1939, and received his Ph.D. in 1942. He taught history and literature there from 1946 until his retirement in 1986. Bate's earlier works include articles on criticism and eighteenth-century literature; Negative Capability (1939), a study of Keats and the poetic imagination; The Stylistic Development of Keats (1945); From Classic to Romantic (1946) a series of Lowell Lectures on the eighteenth-century transition to modern conceptions of art; The Achievement of Samuel Johnson (1955), winner of the Gauss Award of the Phi Beta Kappa, and the textbook, Criticism: the Major Texts.
Most Famous Works
- John Keats (1963)
- Samuel Johnson (1977)




