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William Henry Hurlbert
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William Henry Hurlbert : ウィキペディア英語版
William Henry Hurlbert
William Henry Hurlbert (July 3, 1827—September 4, 1895) was an American journalist and author of “The Diary of a Public Man,” published in the ''North American Review'' in 1879. His responsibility for the Diary—once dubbed the “most gigantic” problem of uncertain authorship in American historical writing—was carefully concealed and has only recently been established.〔 — the Diary appears as an appendix to this volume; Jacques Barzun and Henry F. Graff, The Modern Researcher (Fourth Edition, San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1985), 135-36.〕
==Early life==
Hurlbert was born in Charleston, South Carolina. His father, Martin Luther Hurlbut, a Unitarian minister and schoolmaster from Massachusetts, resettled in South Carolina in 1812 and lived there for most of the next two decades.〔William Henry Hurlbert changed the spelling of his family name, apparently on a whim, shortly after he finished college. He became “Hurlbert” rather than “Hurlbut” upon receiving some erroneous “visiting-cards” from a London stationery store, and deciding that he preferred “Hurlbert.” His own hasty scrawl had been the source of the confusion. Hurlbert obituary, New York World, 7 September 1895.〕 The elder Hurlbut remained a self-conscious Yankee who nonetheless owned slaves. Hurlbert’s mother, Margaret Ashburner Morford Hurlbut, his father’s second wife, was a native of Princeton, New Jersey. Hurlbert’s parents moved to Philadelphia in 1831, where his father founded a successful school.〔Jeffrey N. Lash, A Politician Turned General: The Civil War Career of Stephen Augustus Hurlbut (Kent, Ohio: Kent State Univ. Press, 2003), 1-10, 25-27.〕
Fragmentary evidence suggests that Hurlbert’s childhood was difficult and intense. The gifted son plainly was his father’s star pupil, adept in rhetoric, foreign languages, and classical literature. One may surmise that he was pushed to excel. His subsequent decision to change the way he spelled the family name may have distanced him from an overly demanding paterfamilias.〔Lash, A Politician Turned General, 26, 221n48; B. P., “A Reminiscence of the Hurlberts,” New York Times Saturday Literary Review, 5 July 1902, p. 453; Charles G. Leland, Memoirs, by Charles Godfrey Leland (Hans Breitman) (New York: D. Appleton, 1893), 73, 80-81, 233-34.〕
Martin Luther Hurlbut died unexpectedly in 1843. William and his mother and sisters promptly returned to South Carolina. There the precocious sixteen-year-old came under the influence of his half brother, Stephen Augustus Hurlbut, an aspiring lawyer and politician who was over a decade William’s senior. Stephen—who later moved to Illinois, became an ally of Abraham Lincoln’s, and served as a Union general during the Civil War—was attempting in the early 1840s to carve out a niche in Charleston society. He persuaded William to study for the Unitarian ministry.〔Lash, A Politician Turned General, 26.〕
When Hurlbert enrolled at Harvard College in 1845, he had spent his most recent two years in Charleston and was regarded as a Southerner. He earned an undergraduate degree in 1847 and a divinity degree in 1849. Following college he traveled extensively in Europe. His personal charm, his gifts as a linguist, and his ability of “acquiring knowledge as if by magic” enabled him to pass easily as “a Frenchman in France, an Italian in Italy, () a Spaniard in Spanish countries.”〔Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Cheerful Yesterdays (Boston: Houghton, Mifflin, 1898), 107.〕 He served a brief stint as a Unitarian minister in Salem, Massachusetts, where he was said to be “extremely popular and very much admired as a preacher.”〔Hurlbert obituary, New York World, 7 September 1895.〕

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