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RICHARD HILDRETH (1807—1865)

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 463 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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RICHARD HILDRETH (1807—1865)  ,
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American journalist and author, was born at
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Deerfield, Massachusetts, on the 28th of
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June 1807, the son of
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Hosea Hildreth (1782-1835), a teacher of mathematics and later a Congregational minister . Richard graduated at Harvard in 1826, and, after studying law at
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Newburyport, was admitted to the bar at Boston in 183o . He had already taken to journalism, and in 1832 he became joint founder and editor of a daily newspaper, the Boston
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Atlas . Having in 1834 gone to the South for the benefit of his
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health, he was led by what he witnessed of the evils of
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slavery (chiefly in
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Florida) to write the anti-slavery novel The Slave: or Memoir of Archy Moore (1836; enlarged edition, 1852, The White Slave) . In 1837 he wrote for the Atlas a series of articles vigorously opposing the annexation of
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Texas . In the same
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year he published Banks, Banking, and Paper Currencies, a
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work which helped to promote the growth of the
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free banking
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system in
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America . In 1838 he resumed his editorial duties on the Atlas, but in 1840 removed, on account of his health, to
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British Guiana, where he lived for three years and was editor of two weekly
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news-papers in succession at
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Georgetown . He published in this year (1840) a
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volume in opposition to slavery, Despotism in America (2nd ed., 18J4) . In 1849 he published the first three volumes of his
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History of the
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United States, two more volumes of which were published in 181 and the
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sixth and last in 1852 . The first three volumes of this history, his most important work,
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deal with the period 1492-1789, and the second three with the period 1789-1821 . The history is notable for its painstaking accuracy and candour, but the later volumes have a strong Federalist bias . Hildreth's
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Japan as It Was and Is (1855) was at the time a valuable
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digest of the information contained in other
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works on that country (new ed., 1906) .

He also wrote a

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campaign biography of William Henry Harrison (1839); Theory of Morals (1844) ; and Theory of Politics (1853), as well as Lives of Atrocious Judges (1856), compiled from Lord Campbell's two works . In 1861 he was appointed United States consul at Trieste, but
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ill-health compelled him to resign and remove to Florence, where he died on the rth of
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July 1865 .

End of Article: RICHARD HILDRETH (1807—1865)
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