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== Biography ==
== Biography ==
=== Early life ===
=== Early life ===
[[Image:Sarah T. Bolton Marriage Certificate.jpg|thumb|right|Nathaniel Bolton and Sarah T. Barrett marriage certificate, signed by James H. Johnson of Jennings County, Indiana on 16 January 1832.]] Sarah Tittle Barrett was born in [[Newport, Kentucky]] to Jonathan Belcher Barritt (1778–1855) and Esther (Pendleton) Barritt (b. 1790).<ref group=note>The spelling of Bolton's maiden name appears most often as "Barrett" when referring to her although public documents relating to her father almost always have the name as "Barritt." This article maintains the historical record by using "Barritt" when referring to ancestors of Sarah T. Bolton and "Barrett" when referring to Bolton herself.</ref><ref>"A Southern Poetess."</ref> She was one of seven children born to her parents although public records suggest only her sisters Beth Pendleton Barritt (1814–1893) and Missouri Tittle Barrett (1826–1883) lived to adulthood. When she was three years old,<ref>Willard and Livermore, 102.</ref> her family moved from the well-established/busy city [XXX something historical] of Newport, Kentucky to a homestead along Sixmile Creek near the city of [[Vernon, Indiana|Vernon]] in [[Jennings County, Indiana]]. <ref>Dye, 254.</ref> In 1820 there were 2000 residents in Jennings County [1820 Census]. Late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century accounts of Bolton’s life emphasize the rugged conditions in which her family lived, describing their family’s farm as part of “an unbroken wilderness” where the family saw almost no other people.<ref>Martin.</ref>
[[Image:Sarah T. Bolton Marriage Certificate.jpg|thumb|right|Nathaniel Bolton and Sarah T. Barrett marriage certificate, signed by James H. Johnson of Jennings County, Indiana on 16 January 1832.]] Sarah Tittle Barrett was born December 18, 1814 to Jonathan Belcher Barritt (1778–1855) and Esther Pendleton Barritt (b. 1790) in [[Newport, Kentucky]].<ref group=note>The spelling of Bolton's maiden name appears most often as "Barrett" when referring to her although public documents relating to her father almost always have the name as "Barritt." This article maintains the historical record by using "Barritt" when referring to ancestors of Sarah T. Bolton and "Barrett" when referring to Bolton herself.</ref><ref>"A Southern Poetess."</ref> Jonathan Belcher Barritt (born in [[Hagerstown, Maryland]]), son of Lemuel Barritt (1722–1814), a colonel in the [[American Continental Army|Revolutionary Army]],<ref>Telle, 535</ref> and Sarah Tittle (1774–1814), was named after[[ Jonathan Belcher]], the colonial governor of the provinces of [[Province_of_Massachusetts_Bay|Massachusetts Bay]], [[Province_of_New_Hampshire|New Hampshire]], and [[Province_of_New_Jersey|New Jersey]] and a friend of Lemuel Barritt.<ref>Downing, 2</ref> Barrett’s mother, Esther Pendleton Barritt (of Virginia), daughter of James Pendleton (b. 1751), was U.S. President [[James Madison]]'s first <ref>Greasley 383</ref> or second cousin.<ref>Downing, 2</ref> Both her parents were from the [[East_Coast_of_the_United_States| East Coast]], but nothing is known about when they came to Kentucky.<ref group=note>Jonathan Barritt may have accompanied his parents to Kentucky. His father Lemeul Barritt died in [[Harrison County, Kentucky]] in 1814; his mother died in Newport, Kentucky in 1817.</ref>

She was one of six children born to her parents although public records suggest only she and her sisters Beth Pendleton Barritt (1814–1893) and Missouri Tittle Barrett (1826–1883) survived to adulthood. When she was three years old,<ref>Willard and Livermore, 102</ref> her family moved from the busy city and [[Newport Barracks|military post]] of Newport, Kentucky about 75 miles west to a homestead along Sixmile Creek near the city of [[Vernon, Indiana|Vernon]] in [[Jennings County, Indiana]].<ref>Dye, 254</ref> At that time, [[History of Indiana|Indiana]] had been a state for just a year, and in 1820 there were 2,000 residents in Jennings County. Late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century accounts of Bolton’s life emphasize the rugged conditions in which her family lived, describing their family’s farm belonging to the wilderness where the family saw almost no other people.<ref>Martin</ref>

From 1817 to 1823, the family lived in this remote area where her father cleared the land for farming. Jonathan Barritt was an active member of the community serving first as Captain of the local militia and then Colonel and eventually being named Judge of the Probate Court,<ref>Bolton letter to Cravens</ref> and in 1823 the family moved to [[Madison, Indiana]],<ref>Greasley, 383</ref> a city about 25 miles south of Vernon on the [[Ohio River]] and the most “thriving” city in Indiana at the time.<ref>Smith, 840</ref> In Madison, her father went into business with [[Milton Stapp]], Indiana Lieutenant Governor from 1828 to 1831.<ref>Bolton letter to Cravens</ref> They moved to Madison so that the children could have an education.<ref>Greasley, 383</ref>

She was a remarkable student despite her late start. (XXX) She studied Latin and was reading Virgil’s Aeneid until social pressures dictating that women should not have such literary aspirations forced her to abandon those studies. (XXX) One of her classmates was [[Jesse D. Bright]], a future Lieutenant Governor of Indiana.<ref>Downing, 6</ref> To supplement her studies, [[Jeremiah Sullivan]], future Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, gave her access to his library.<ref>Pictorial, 344</ref>

Her first poem was written after hearing a wilderness preacher. (XXX) Her first published poem appeared in the Madison Banner in XXX when she was fifteen; the name of the poem is XXX. (Pictorial 344) Every week she published a poem in newspapers in Madison and Cincinnati until she married Nathaniel Bolton in 1831.<ref>Pictorial, 344</ref>



Madison. First publications. Marriage.
Father was in good standing in community of Vernon: elected Captain of militia, then Colonel, then Judge of the Probate Court. Left Vernon area for Madison where father went into business with Milton Stapp (Indiana Lieutenant Governor, 1828–1831).<ref> Sarah T. Bolton letter to John R. Cravens, 16 February 1888. (Published in ''Madison Courier'' (Madison, Indiana) 24 February 1888.)</ref>
Married Jefferson County, October 16, 1831.<ref>Indiana State Library. Genealogy Database: Marriages through 1850. Retrieved 25 December 2010.</ref>
Married Jefferson County, October 16, 1831.<ref>Indiana State Library. Genealogy Database: Marriages through 1850. Retrieved 25 December 2010.</ref>


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==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
===Primary Sources===
===Primary Sources===
* Bolton, Sarah T. ''Poems''. New York: Carleton Publisher, 1865.
* Bolton, Sarah T. Letter to John R. Cravens, 6 February 1888. (Published in ''Madison Courier'' (Madison, Indiana) 24 February 1888.)
* Bolton, Sarah T. ''The Life and Poems of Sarah T. Bolton''. Indianapolis: Fred L. Horton, 1880.
* Bolton, Sarah T. ''The Life and Poems of Sarah T. Bolton''. Indianapolis: Fred L. Horton, 1880.
* Bolton, Sarah T. ''Songs of a Lifetime''. Edited by John Clark Ridpath. Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill, 1892.
* Bolton, Sarah T. ''Paddle Your Own Canoe and Other Poems.'' Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill, 1897.
* Bolton, Sarah T. ''Paddle Your Own Canoe and Other Poems.'' Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill, 1897.
* Bolton, Sarah T. ''Poems''. New York: Carleton Publisher, 1865.
* Bolton, Sarah T. ''Songs of a Lifetime''. Edited by John Clark Ridpath. Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill, 1892.


===Secondary Sources===
===Secondary Sources===

Revision as of 21:39, 1 January 2011

Sarah T. Bolton (Sarah Tittle Botlon, née Barrett (18 December 1814–5 August 1893)), an American poet and Indiana's "pioneer poet," is best known for her poem “Paddle Your Own Canoe” (1850). An activist for women’s rights, she worked with Robert Dale Owen during Indiana's 1850–1851 Constitutional Convention to include the recognition of women's property rights. Her husband Nathaniel Bolton (25 July 1803–26 November 1858) co-founded Indianapolis’s first newspaper, the Gazette, and was Indiana State Librarian from 1851 to 1854.


Biography

Early life

Nathaniel Bolton and Sarah T. Barrett marriage certificate, signed by James H. Johnson of Jennings County, Indiana on 16 January 1832.

Sarah Tittle Barrett was born December 18, 1814 to Jonathan Belcher Barritt (1778–1855) and Esther Pendleton Barritt (b. 1790) in Newport, Kentucky.[note 1][1] Jonathan Belcher Barritt (born in Hagerstown, Maryland), son of Lemuel Barritt (1722–1814), a colonel in the Revolutionary Army,[2] and Sarah Tittle (1774–1814), was named afterJonathan Belcher, the colonial governor of the provinces of Massachusetts Bay, New Hampshire, and New Jersey and a friend of Lemuel Barritt.[3] Barrett’s mother, Esther Pendleton Barritt (of Virginia), daughter of James Pendleton (b. 1751), was U.S. President James Madison's first [4] or second cousin.[5] Both her parents were from the East Coast, but nothing is known about when they came to Kentucky.[note 2]

She was one of six children born to her parents although public records suggest only she and her sisters Beth Pendleton Barritt (1814–1893) and Missouri Tittle Barrett (1826–1883) survived to adulthood. When she was three years old,[6] her family moved from the busy city and military post of Newport, Kentucky about 75 miles west to a homestead along Sixmile Creek near the city of Vernon in Jennings County, Indiana.[7] At that time, Indiana had been a state for just a year, and in 1820 there were 2,000 residents in Jennings County. Late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century accounts of Bolton’s life emphasize the rugged conditions in which her family lived, describing their family’s farm belonging to the wilderness where the family saw almost no other people.[8]

From 1817 to 1823, the family lived in this remote area where her father cleared the land for farming. Jonathan Barritt was an active member of the community serving first as Captain of the local militia and then Colonel and eventually being named Judge of the Probate Court,[9] and in 1823 the family moved to Madison, Indiana,[10] a city about 25 miles south of Vernon on the Ohio River and the most “thriving” city in Indiana at the time.[11] In Madison, her father went into business with Milton Stapp, Indiana Lieutenant Governor from 1828 to 1831.[12] They moved to Madison so that the children could have an education.[13]

She was a remarkable student despite her late start. (XXX) She studied Latin and was reading Virgil’s Aeneid until social pressures dictating that women should not have such literary aspirations forced her to abandon those studies. (XXX) One of her classmates was Jesse D. Bright, a future Lieutenant Governor of Indiana.[14] To supplement her studies, Jeremiah Sullivan, future Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, gave her access to his library.[15]

Her first poem was written after hearing a wilderness preacher. (XXX) Her first published poem appeared in the Madison Banner in XXX when she was fifteen; the name of the poem is XXX. (Pictorial 344) Every week she published a poem in newspapers in Madison and Cincinnati until she married Nathaniel Bolton in 1831.[16]


Married Jefferson County, October 16, 1831.[17]

Bolton Tavern

1831–1845 Farm becomes tavern for financial reasons. V. popular place for political & cultural figures. Connections she has. Sale of farm/tavern to state for hospital; relocated to Indpls

Indianapolis and "Paddle Your Own Canoe"

Indiana's Statehouse from 1835 to 1876

1846–1854 NB as Librarian purchased carpet from Shillito's in Cincinnati (JCHS clipping file). RDO & 1850 Constitutional Convention Third Presbytarian

A Grand Tour

1855–1858

Return to Indianapolis

Civil War, 1861–1865 1863: Reese 1871: move to Beech Bank

Return to Europe

1871–1873

Final years and death

Literary themes and styles

Poems

Image of "Indiana" sheet music?

Reputation

Bronze relief of Sarah T. Bolton by Emma Sangernebo. The relief, mounted in the Indiana State House rotunda, has four lines from Bolton's poem "Indiana."
Bronze relief of Sarah T. Bolton by Emma Sangernebo. The relief, mounted in the Indiana State House rotunda, has four lines from Bolton's poem "Indiana."

where has my caption gone?

Selected list of works

• "Ralph Farnham's Last Dream." Harper's Weekly. 2 February 1861.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The spelling of Bolton's maiden name appears most often as "Barrett" when referring to her although public documents relating to her father almost always have the name as "Barritt." This article maintains the historical record by using "Barritt" when referring to ancestors of Sarah T. Bolton and "Barrett" when referring to Bolton herself.
  2. ^ Jonathan Barritt may have accompanied his parents to Kentucky. His father Lemeul Barritt died in Harrison County, Kentucky in 1814; his mother died in Newport, Kentucky in 1817.

References

  1. ^ "A Southern Poetess."
  2. ^ Telle, 535
  3. ^ Downing, 2
  4. ^ Greasley 383
  5. ^ Downing, 2
  6. ^ Willard and Livermore, 102
  7. ^ Dye, 254
  8. ^ Martin
  9. ^ Bolton letter to Cravens
  10. ^ Greasley, 383
  11. ^ Smith, 840
  12. ^ Bolton letter to Cravens
  13. ^ Greasley, 383
  14. ^ Downing, 6
  15. ^ Pictorial, 344
  16. ^ Pictorial, 344
  17. ^ Indiana State Library. Genealogy Database: Marriages through 1850. Retrieved 25 December 2010.

Bibliography

Primary Sources

  • Bolton, Sarah T. Letter to John R. Cravens, 6 February 1888. (Published in Madison Courier (Madison, Indiana) 24 February 1888.)
  • Bolton, Sarah T. The Life and Poems of Sarah T. Bolton. Indianapolis: Fred L. Horton, 1880.
  • Bolton, Sarah T. Paddle Your Own Canoe and Other Poems. Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill, 1897.
  • Bolton, Sarah T. Poems. New York: Carleton Publisher, 1865.
  • Bolton, Sarah T. Songs of a Lifetime. Edited by John Clark Ridpath. Indianapolis: Bowen-Merrill, 1892.

Secondary Sources

  • “The American Communities.” Bulletin of the International Institute of Social History 6.2 (1951): 89–122.
  • “Death of Sarah Bolton.” Indianapolis Sentinel (Indianapolis, Indiana). 5 August 1893.
  • “‘Paddle Your Own Canoe:’ The Writer of that Noted Song Still Alive and Vigorous.” Bismark Daily Tribune (Bismark, North Dakota). 26 March 1892.
  • “Pen, Pencil and Brush.” The Trenton Times (Trenton, New Jersey). 26 April 1892.
  • “Pen, Pencil and Brush.” The Evening News (Lincoln, Nebraska). 26 April 1892.
  • Pictorial and Biographical Memoirs of Indianapolis and Marion. Chicago: Goodspeed, 1893.
  • “A Southern Poetess. The Author of ‘Paddle Your Own Canoe’ Passes Away.” Galveston Daily News (Galveston, Texas). 14 August 1893.
  • Obituary. The Publishers Weekly 44 (12 August 1893).
  • Banta, R. E. Indiana Authors and Their Books, 1816–1916. Crawfordsville, IN: Wabash College, 1949.
  • Bodenhammer, David J., and Robert Graham Barrows. The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1994. ISBN 9780253312228.
  • Boyer, Paul. Notable American Women: 1607-1950. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1971. ISBN 0674627342
  • Brown, Austin H. “The First Printers in Indianapolis: George Smith and Nathaniel Bolton.” The Indiana Quarterly Magazine of History 2.3 (September 1906): 121–126.
  • Bryant, William Cullen. A New Library of Poetry and Song. Volume 2. New York: The Baker Taylor Company, 1923.
  • Buley, R. C. “Indiana in the Mexican War (Continued).” Indiana Magazine of History 15.4 (December 1919): 293–326.
  • Clement, J. “Hoosier Minstrels.” The Western Literary Messenger 22.1 (March 1854): 1–3.
  • Coggeshall, William T. The Poets and Poetry of the West. Columbus, OH: Follett, Foster and Company, 1860.
  • Coggeshall, William T. The Protective Policy in Literature: A Discourse on the Social and Moral of Cultivation of Local Literature. Columbus, OH: Follett, Foster and Company, 1859.
  • Cottman, George S. XXX Home and School Visitor. Sketch of Bolton possibly in 1911.
  • Cottman, George S. “The Western Association of Writers: A Literary Reminiscence.” Indiana Magazine of History 29.3 (September 1933): 187–197.
  • Dana, Charles A. The Household Book of Poetry. New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1858.
  • DeMarr, Mary Jean. “Sarah T. Barrett Bolton: Nineteenth-Century Hoosier Poet.” Midwestern Miscellany 17 (1990): XXX.
  • Dershem, Elsie. An Outline of American State Literature. Lawrence, KN: World Company, 1921.
  • Downing, Olive Inez. Indiana’s Poet of the Wildwood. Marion, IN: News Publishing Company, 1941.
  • Draegert, Eva. “Cultural History of Indianapolis: Literature, 1875–1890.” Indiana Magazine of History 52.4 (December 1956): 343–367.
  • Dunn, Jacob Piatt. Greater Indianapolis: The History, the Industries, the Institutions, and the People of a City of Homes. Volume 1. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, 1910.
  • Dunn, Jacob Piatt. Indiana and Indianans: A History of Aboriginal and Territorial Indiana and the Century of Statehood. Volume 1. Chicago: American Historical Society, 1919.
  • Dunn, Jacob Piatt. Indiana and Indianans: A History of Aboriginal and Territorial Indiana and the Century of Statehood. Volume 2. Chicago: American Historical Society, 1919.
  • Dye, Charity. Some Torch Bearers in Indiana. Indianapolis, 1917.
  • Engel, Bernard F. “Linoln, Twain, Certain Lesser Midwestern Poets, and the Civil War.” The Great Lakes Review 8.2–9.1 (Fall 1982–Spring 1983): 38–50.
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  • G.S.C. “Mrs. Sarah T. Bolton, Poetess.” The Indiana Quarterly Magazine of History 8.4 (December 1912): 181–190.
  • Garrison, Gertrude. "XXX: Essay on STB." Indianapolis Journal XXX (22 February 1880): XXX.
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