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BENSON JOHN LOSSING (1813-1891)

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 14 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BENSON JOHN LOSSING (1813-1891)  ,
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American
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historical writer, was born in Beekman, New York, on the 12th of
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February 1813 . After editing
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newspapers in
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Poughkeepsie he became an engraver on wood, and removed to New York in 1839 for the practice of his profession, to which he added that of
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drawing illustrations for books and
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periodicals . He likewise wrote or edited the text of numerous publications . His Pictorial Field-
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Book of the Revolution (first issued in 30 parts, 1850-1852, and then in 2 volumes) was a
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pioneer
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work of value in American historical literature . In its preparation he travelled some 9000 M. during a period of nearly two years; made more than a thousand sketches of extant buildings, battlefields, &c.; and presented his material in a form serviceable to the topographer and interesting to the general reader . Similar but less characteristic and less valuable undertakings were a Pictorial Field-Book of the War of 1812 (1868), and a Pictorial
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History of the
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Civil War in the
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United States of
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America (3 vols . 1866-1869) . His other books were numerous: an Outline History of the
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Fine Arts; many illustrated histories, large and small, of the United States; popular descriptions of Mount Vernon and other localities associated with famous names; and
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biographical sketches of celebrated Americans, of which The
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Life and Times of Major-General Philip Schuyler (2 vols . 186o-1873) was the most considerable . He died at Dover Plains, New York, on the 3rd of
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June 1891 .

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