James Fenimore Cooper, born on September
14, 1789, was not young America’s first
novelist, but he was the first successful
one. His adventure romances, especially
his sea yarns and his frontier Leatherstocking Tales won wide readership
around the world. Later, his disputative
nature and the savage mockery of Mark
Twain would nearly destroy his American reputation. But he remained widely read and admired in Europe
cited as an inspiration by Alexandre
Dumas père, Victor Hugo, and
later writers including D. H. Lawrence and
Joseph Conrad.
James
was the eleventh of twelve children of Judge
William Cooper and Elizabeth
Fenimore Cooper. He was descended
from a long line of Quakers who had
invested in land in Pennsylvania and
New Jersey. From his home in Burlington, New Jersey, the William rose to prominence and a lawyer
and to vast wealth in post-Revolutionary
War land speculation in Pennsylvania and upstate New York partly by buying land
warrants awarded to Revolutionary veterans.
William
was serving in Congress when young
James was born in Burlington. But he had
dreams of building a great dynastic estate.
When James was just a year old the family moved to the wilds of upstate
New York where his father had large holdings on the shores of Lake Otsego and the source of the Susquehanna River. He platted a town there which officially
became known as Cooperstown in 1807.
The
family lived in a cabin by the lake at first and the boys were free to roam the
forests, streams, and the lake becoming accomplished woodsmen. The village was also in the heart of the
territory of the Six Nations of the Iroquois,
and the boy learned much of their lore.
He also grew to admire a rugged long
hunter who visited his family regularly on his rambles between the woods and
the town where he sold his meat and pelts.
William
started construction on his grand Otsego
Hall which was completed in 1799 when James was 10 years old. Already several of the children had
died. William impressed the survivors
with his dynastic dreams, but also with a philosophy that great generosity and
charity were the responsibility of the wealthy.
The family converted to the Episcopalians
and young James was particularly devout.
At the age of 13 James entered Yale where he was a good, but rebellious
student. He was expelled in his third
year, supposedly for blowing up another student’s door with gun powder. An older brother had been similarly expelled
from Princeton in 1802 being the
most likely culprit in the burning of Nassau
Hall. Their sister Hannah wrote of her brothers, “They are
very wild and show plainly they have been bred in the woods.”
The
family fortunes were already in a steady, long decline when James was cut loose
from formal education. The 17 year old
decided to make his own way by going to sea in 1806. He signed on as a common sailor on the
merchant ship Sterling. Sailing first
to England with a cargo of flour,
Cooper witnessed the ship being boarded by a press gang of the Royal Navy, who made off with at least
one of the crew. Later he sailed on the Sterling to the Mediterranean.
He stayed ashore for several weeks in Spain as the captain strove to obtain a cargo for the long voyage
home. His experiences there would be
incorporated into later work.
After
almost a year at sea and with a fine record as a seaman, Cooper returned to the
States where his father’s political connection secured him a place in the Navy.
He received his commission as a midshipman
on January 1, 1808. He was first
assigned to the USS Vesuvius, an 82 foot bomb ketch that carried twelve guns
and a thirteen inch mortar based in New York.
His
connections and knowledge of up-state New York next got him a plum assignment,
service under Lieutenant Melancthon
Taylor Woolsey near Oswego on Lake Ontario, building the brig USS Oneida for service on the lake. What he learned of naval construction and by
roaming the woods once again in his leisure time became incorporated in his
later writing.
Next,
he accompanied Woolsey to Niagara Falls and
then to service on a Lake Champlain gun
boat until the lake froze over in 1809.
Then he was assigned to the USS Wasp under the command of Captain James Lawrence, who was also
from Burlington and a personal friend of Cooper’s. Had he been able to stay on board, he might
have share in Lawrence’s later War of
1812 glory.
But
despite his love for the Navy, the death of his father that same year called
Cooper home to inherit his share of the estate, which was dwindling under the
management of his older brothers.
Back
at home he met and fell in love with lovely Susan Augusta de Lancey a member of a wealthy family who had been
Revolutionary War Tories. The couple was
married on January 1, 1811, exactly two years after he entered the Navy, at her family’s home in Westchester County. They returned to Cooperstown to help manage the
estate.
Between
1812 and 1814 all four Cooper’s surviving elder brothers died in a succession
of accidents and calamities, each of them having served briefly as executor of
their father’s estate. Under their management
the family wealth had virtually vanished.
Cooper was left with large debts and financial responsibility for his
brothers’ wives and children. He managed, barely, to save Otsego Hall and some
property in the immediate vicinity of the village, but large holdings elsewhere
had to be sold, often at distressed prices as the War devastated the American economy.
Meanwhile
Cooper and his wife had their own growing family to attend to. Eventually there would be seven children,
five of whom lived to adulthood.
Daughter Susan Fenimore Cooper became a writer of note herself, an early
suffragist, and the frequent editor of her father’s work. Other descendent also became writers.
By
1820 Cooper was living mostly in New York City pursuing business interests and
continuing to pay his family’s debts. O.ne
evening he was reading a popular novel when he threw it down in disgust declaring
that he could write better. His wife
dared him to do so.
He
accepted the challenge and dashed off his first novel, Precaution, a domestic
story of manners in the style of Jane
Austin. It was published anonymously both the U.S. and England. It was a failure on this side of the ocean,
but a critical and popular success in England where it was assumed to be the
work of another gentlewoman. His British
publisher stirred up a storm of publicity when he announced the true author was
an American gentleman.
Cooper
found that he enjoyed writing. Moreover he
need the income writing could provide.
He had real success with his second book, The Spy (1821) set in his
wife’s Westchester County during the Revolution. It was a historical romance with elements of
high adventure. The public appetite for
it spurred similar efforts.
In
1823 Cooper introduced his most enduring hero, Natty Bumpo a/k/a Leatherstocking, Hawkeye, the Trapper, Pathfinder, Deerslayer in The
Pioneers, set in the country around Lake Otsego just as it was in
Coopers boyhood in the 1790’s. In it he
established themes to which he would return again and again—the clash of civilization
with the wild, the dual natures of Indians
as either noble savages or sadistic murderers, dynastic family expectations and duties.
Bumpo
was molded on the real long hunter of Cooper’s youth, but he would also incorporate
tales drawn from the real life Daniel
Boone in later installments in the series that became known as The
Letherstocking Tales, which were, by the way, may father’s favorite
books growing up in Missouri a century
later.
Cooper
used his knowledge of the sea in adventure novels like, The Pilot about John Paul Jones and his raids on English
ports during the Revolution; Red Rover, a tale of piracy; and The
Water-Witch about smuggling in New York waters in the early 18th
Century. Another early novel, Lionel Lincoln was set during the
English occupation of Boston and the
Battle of Bunker Hill.
Cooper
had his greatest success in the book still regarded as his masterpiece, The
Last of the Mohicans set during the French and Indian Wars.
A Natty Bumpo, known as Hawkeye,
teams with Native American friends the noble Chingachgook and his son Uncas
to save two English captive women from the clutches of the French and their
barbaric Huron allies. He is accompanied by an English officer, the fiancé
of one of the women, who despises him.
The story is a rip roaring adventure from beginning to end, salted with descriptions
of unimaginable brutality. Yet Coopers
somewhat turgid style make the book a tough slog for modern readers, who
none-the-less revel in the several movies and television adaptations.
Cooper
followed up with The Prairie, published in 1827, chronicled 83 year old Natty
Bumpo’s final year as The Trapper—offering
aid and assistance to a family seeking land in the newly opened prairies of the
Louisiana Purchase in 1804.
In
1826—the same year Mohicans was
published—Cooper’s excellent political connections with Monroe administration for his service to the Republicans in New York politics, paid off with an appointment as U.S. Consul at Lyons, France. The duties of such a diplomatic plum were
not onerous. Cooper had plenty of time
to tour the continent with his family, gathering inspiration for future work.
He
continued to write and to supervise his English and European publication where
he was even more popular than at home.
His two sea novels were written and published during this period. He also made friends with the elderly Marquise de Lafayette, who he had first
met as a member of the Welcoming
Committee in New York for the old hero’s 1824 American tour.
But
Cooper also became embroiled in bitter controversy, the fall-out of which would
consume his attention for some years. In
1832 he responded to a bitter attack on the United States published in the Revue
Britannique with a series of articles in the Parisian journal Le
National in which he attacked European anti-republicanism. But what
should have been a patriotic rebuke, was tempered with some of his own harsh criticism
of American excesses, particularly a kind of avaricious admission that over
powered the loftier aims of the Revolution.
The controversy was intense and when excerpts were printed back home,
Cooper found himself under attack by the Whig
press.
Meanwhile
Cooper expounded on his raillery against privilege and power in three new novels.
The Bravo set in the Republic of Venice where the shadowy rule of an oligarchy subtlety—and not so subtly—thwart
the will and needs of the people. The
Heidenmauer set during the turmoil of the Reformation in the Rhineland
Germany laid out the conflicts between the old Church, the new, the aristocracy
and the rising new bourgeoisie with
all parties coming off as corrupt and unsympathetic. A was town caught in the conflict between its feudal baron and a wealthy monastery. The Headsman set among the Alps and in Geneva, Switzerland explored similar themes. Although all sold well in Europe, they were failures in the
United States where readers were frankly uninterested in European politics. Victor Hugo would find them inspirational.
When
his diplomatic posting ended with the election of Andrew Jackson, Cooper and his family returned to New York. He was stunned by both the failure of his
European trilogy and by the vicious response the books in the press. Wrapped in self-righteous rage, he penned A
Letter to My Countrymen, an account of the controversies and an
indictment of many aspects of American society.
Naturally the uproar in the press, particularly the Whig press, only
intensified and included many sharp personal attacks on Cooper and his family.
Cooper
announced that he was retiring from writing novels. He spent much of the next four years filing
law suit after law suit charging his critics with slander. Although he won every suit his contentious
behavior drew scorn among the public.
For
several years he only published a series of travel books, recounting his
European travels. This was a highly
popular genre in America at the time and helped win back reader loyalty.
In
1834 Cooper decided to reopen Otsego Hall, which had fallen into disrepair in
his long absence. At first he spent his
winters in New York City and summered in Cooperstown, but after 1839 he made it
his primary residence once again.
During
those years Cooper worked hard researching—including conducting extensive
interviews with surviving figures—his long dreamed of History of the Navy of the United
States of America which he finally published in 1839. It won praise, but also attacks from some
officers who felt they had been slighted.
Details of some battles, including those on Lake Erie were challenged.
But modern naval historians now regard it as the most authoritive early
history of the Navy.
Other
naval non-fiction followed. He came to
the defense of Alexander Slidell
Mackenzie, one of the leading critics of his naval history, Mackenzie was court-martialed after he hanged three young sailors, including the
son of the Secretary of War, for
mutiny aboard the USS Somers. It was this
sensational case that inspired Herman Melville’s
Billy Budd. Lives of Distinguished American Naval
Officers was published in 1846, and Old Ironsides, about then
USS Constitution was issued
posthumously.
14
years after The Prairie, Cooper
finally returned to novels with a new installment in the Leatherstocking Tales. The
Pathfinder followed Natty Bumpo’s further exploits in the French and Indian Wars along the shores of Lake Ontario. It is the only one of the novels where the
hunter, called La Longue
Carabine
in this book, falls in love with a sweet younger woman, who in the end he nobly
releases to the arms of a younger man. It
was followed by a prequel going all the way back to the hero’s coming of age in
The
Deerslayer.
In
his final years, Cooper remained prolific turning out fiction and non-fiction
alike. Too numerous to mention all, his
output included Autobiography of a
Pocket-Handerchief. A social satire in France and New York, told by an
expensive handkerchief; the three volumes of the multi-generational The
Littlepage Manuscripts accounting a family spanning well established
and genteel Westchester County to the frontier settlements in the Adirondacks; The Crater; or,
Vulcan’s Peak a
novel set in the South Pacific with utopian themes and supernatural elements; and The Ways of the Hour considered America’s
first murder mystery novel with
courtroom scenes and touching on women’s rights
On
September 14, 1851, just a day short of his 62nd birthday, Cooper died of dropsy at Otsego Hall. He was buried in the church yard Christ Episcopal Church, which he had
loyally served as a vestryman since
1836 and generously endowed. His wife
Susan was laid at his side only a few months later.
In
New York City a large memorial program was held the next February co-chaired by
Washington Irving, William Cullen Bryant, and, surprisingly,
an old Federalist and Whig, Daniel Webster.
As
noted above, despite his early popularity, Cooper’s literary reputation was
pretty much destroyed in this country by Mark Twain in his 1895 essay Fenimore
Cooper’s Literary Offenses perhaps fitting for the writer who Balzac
hailed as “the American [Sir
Walter] Scott—another writer
famously scorned by Twain. Most modern
American critics have echoed Twain’s harsh assessments. With the possible exception of The Last of the Mohicans, which is frequently
assigned in college American Literature
survey classes, he is seldom read here.
He
is memorialized in his home town with a statue and his name on an art
museum. Once elegant Otsego Hall has long vanished. Cooperstown is now better known as the faux
birthplace of baseball and home of
the Hall of Fame than it is for the
once most famous writer in America.
On
the other hand the French are still wild for him. Go figure.
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