Horatio
Alger, Jr. had an unfortunate childhood.
Not because he lived in ragged poverty like the heroes of the novels he
would come to write, but because he was reared under the thumb of a tyrannical
father, a religious zealot and Unitarian
minister. I know the words religious zealot and Unitarian are not often
found in the same sentence these days but, trust me, it was possible in the days
when the new sect was breaking away from Congregational
Puritanism. Not all of the Puritanism
got left behind.
Alger was born on January 13, 1832 in Chelsea, Massachusetts. As the oldest child, he was intended from
birth to follow his father’s footsteps in the ministry. The diminutive boy, like his siblings was
frail, suffering from asthma and severe near sightedness. Whether because of his weakness or because of
his stern father’s deep seeded Puritanism, the boy was forbidden to play like
other children or engage in any amusement. He was expected to spend all of his time
on study or prayer.
He was, however, an apt pupil, pitifully eager to please and unappeasable
father. He showed an early gift for
writing, composing poems and stories for his brothers and sisters. In 1844 his father was called to a new—and
much better paying—pulpit at the Second
Congregational Society of Marlborough,
unfashionably far west of Boston. The boy was enrolled in a local grammar school, from which he graduated
at 15. By then local newspapers were
printing his sentimental poems and uplifting short stories.
Young Alger
was destined for Harvard, then in
the tight grip of Unitarians of the most conservative sort. He easily passed his examinations and entered
the college in 1848. Among his teachers
on the 14 member Harvard faculty were Louis
Aziz and William Wadsworth
Longfellow, who the young man adored and took as a personal role
model. He excelled at the strict
classical curriculum and was admired for his literary talents. But compared to other students, he came from
genteel poverty and a lineage that though it ran deep in New England, adroitly
skirted connection to any of the leading families. So despite his talents he was cut out of the Hasty Pudding and other prestigious
clubs. He also needed to earn money to pay his board and keep in respectable
clothing. In his sophomore year he began
selling essays and poems to support himself.
Suddenly he was a student and a professional writer. Alger was elected class odeist and graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1852, eighth in a
class of 88.
He returned
home to live and continued to support himself with his writing, while resisting
his father’s efforts to get him to return to Harvard for Divinity School. He did
enroll briefly in 1853, but evidence suggests that he may have been more
motivated by the opportunity to be reunited with another student with whom he
had a romantic relationship than any religious fervor. He soon left school and tried his hand as a
junior editor at a Boston newspaper but hated the drudgery. Then he took up the fall back trade of the impoverished
gentleman, school teaching.
He enjoyed
teaching and the company of boys. From
1854 to ’56 he taught at The Grange,
a boarding school in Rhode Island. When that school failed, he took a summer
position at Deerfield Academy. All the while he was also writing. Many of his stories of this period were
written in a feminine voice with women as the central characters. Whether this was “writing to the market” for
women’s popular stories or an expression of his own sexual ambivalence is a
matter of some debate. His first book, a
collection of his short stories and sketches, Bertha's Christmas Vision: An Autumn Sheaf was published in 1856, and his second Nothing to Do: A Tilt at our Best
Society, a lengthy satirical poem mocking the upper class types who
harassed him at Harvard called was published in 1857.
Still, his
father continued to pressure him into the ministry and when his teaching
prospects dimmed he re-enrolled at Harvard Divinity in 1857. Despite a lack of enthusiasm, this time he
stuck it out and was graduated in 1860.
As a reward for finally fulfilling his ambitions, Alger’s father
permitted him to go on a European tour. He was gone a year and felt totally liberated
from his father’s oppressive domination for the first time.
He returned
to find a nation at war. Eager to
enlist, the young man who stood only 5’ 2” and still wracked by asthma, he was
rejected as unfit for service. Instead,
he turned his pen to patriotic themes.
He also reluctantly accepted the call to the pulpit of First Unitarian Church and Society of
Brewster, Massachusetts. He disliked
preaching and the necessary fawning over important church elders. But he did enjoy throwing himself into work
with boys. He organized games, led
special Sunday school classes, preached temperance and moral virtue to the
lads, and founded a group called Cadets
for Temperance. His attention to
boys alarmed congressional leaders, who received complaints from parents about
unwanted advances on their sons. He
denied nothing and agreed to be discretely separated from the Parish. His father prevented further scandal by
getting Unitarian officials in Boston to agree to take no action on the
condition that the younger Alger never accept another call. It was 1866 and Alger’s career as a minister
was over.
His career
as a writer, however, was on the upswing.
In the last years of the Civil
War he began contributing regularly to Student
and Schoolmate, a boys’ monthly magazine of moral writings edited by William Taylor Adams. It serialized the first of Alger’s novels
for boys, a three book series about boys and the war. The books were far more successful than his
first adult novel Marie Bertrand: The
Felon's Daughter. He was also regularly placing adult stories
in prestigious magazines like Harper's
Monthly and Frank
Leslie’s Illustrated Newspaper.
In 1866 he left New England—and rumors—behind to build a new life as a
writer in New York City. One of his first works was a long poem, Friar Anselmo's Sin about an errant cleric who gains redemption
though good work. Similarly, Alger
turned his attention to the plight of the orphans and urchins that flooded the
city after the Civil War. He published
two more unsuccessful adult novels and a sentimental epic about a Great Lakes
shipwreck called John Maynard which got favorable attention from serious
critics, and even brought a letter of praise from his old teacher and hero,
Longfellow.
In 1868
Alger took his experience among the street urchins of Five Points and produced a 12 part serial in Student and
Schoolmate about a boot-black’s
rise to middle class comfort and respectability. Ragged
Dick was a huge, unexpected success.
He soon revised it to be published as a novel by A. K. Loring of Boston. It became one of the biggest best sellers
of the post-war period and remained in print for decades. Loring signed Alger to a contract for more
novels in the Ragged Dick fashion.
Alger now
mostly concentrated on his boy’s books.
Dozens followed, almost all with interchangeable plots. The ambitious boys might be news butchers, luggage porters, or even street musicians. Alger sold
books, sometimes under nom de plumes,
to as many as sixty different publishers, many of the purveyors of cheep dime novels. The books included biographies of James Garfield, Daniel Webster, and Abraham
Lincoln recast in the familiar rags-to-riches formula.
In his early
years in New York he also acted as a private
tutor to wealthy families. A stay
with the Jewish international banker Joseph Seligman resulted in stories
with poor Jewish boys for Young
Israel. He stayed in the Seligman home until 1876 despite his growing success
and popularity.
At the urging of his main publisher Loring, who sensed that the public
was finally beginning to tire of urban tales, Alger journeyed west in 1877 in
search of new material. He reconnected with his brother in San Francisco, and then returned to New York on a schooner via Cape Horn. Soon young cowboys and miners were
making the same climb to riches as their urban cousins. Other stories took the boys to sea.
Despite some complaints that Alger’s books were “lurid” and occasional
attempts to remove them from libraries, the rags-to-riches formula became an
enduring social artifact both inspiring real boys and justifying the
exploitation of the young as “character building” opportunities for young
go-getters.
In the 1880’s Alger informally adopted two of his beloved street boys, Charlie Davis and in
1883 John Downie, Alger wanted to
play in real life the benefactor that lifted his heroes from the streets.
Biographers
and critics agree that Alger struggled with homosexuality and with romantic attraction to boys. Some find clues of sexual confusion and
hidden homo-eroticism in his books. If
so they are pretty well hidden. He did
seem tortured by guilt and his friend William
James made mention that Alger, “…talks freely about his own late
insanity—which he in fact appears to enjoy as a subject of conversation.” But there is no evidence that he abused his
adopted sons or any of the other children, whether wealthy tutees or urchins,
with whom he was in contact after his brief ministry.
By the
1890’s Alger’s books were even more formulaic than ever, often virtual
re-writes of earlier efforts with new character names and locations. He spiced the tales up with a bit of
violence—often in the form of fantasy vengeance against those who had exploited
the hero. He had a wide circle of friends and often did readings to groups of
boys. But his popularity was waning as
the century closed, and with it the income that depended on steady sales of new
books. He suffered a nervous breakdown
in 1896 and had to move in with his sister in South Natick, Massachusetts where he suffered from persistent lung
ailments execrated by his asthma. He
died on July 18, 1899 practically penniless.
After his
death, his popularity unexpectedly returned.
Over the next twenty years upwards of 70 million copies of his books
were printed and sold. Since most of
them were sold outright to the original publishers, his heirs—his sister and
adopted sons—got little from them. There
was another surge of popularity of re-prints during the Depression. Ragged Dick and a handful of others,
mostly his earliest boys books, have remained in print ever since.
Excellent, informative, and sympathetic of a writer it is often fashionable to disparage. My attraction to the topic is personal (ordained in South Natick) but also historical: before the lad became famous, his father's poverty was bruited as an example of mistreatment by parishes who call ministers and then shirk payment. In the case of Rev. Alger, Sr, memory hints that it was the firewood which was not provided on schedule. In any case, by the end of the 19th century, it was clear that strident admonition and shaming would not, could not, induce many parishes to support a minister. This led to the policy of closing or consolidating some of the numerous small parishes that dotted the Massachusetts landscape like summer milkweed pods. (South Natick, for some reason, survived the purge to which its history contributed, and is today doing well; it is still small.)
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