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HENRY WHEELER SHAW (1818–1885)

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 813 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HENRY WHEELER SHAW (1818–1885)  ,
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American humorist, known by the pen-name of " Josh Billings," was born of Puritan stock at Lanesborough, Massachusetts, on the 21st of
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April 1818, the son of Henry Shaw (1788–1857), who was a representative in Congress in 1817–1821 . The son
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left Hamilton College to go West . In 1858 he settled in
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Poughkeepsie, N.Y., as a
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land - agent and auctioneer, and began writing newspaper articles, especially for the Poughkeepsie Daily Press . His " Essa on the Muel bi Josh Billings" (186o) in a New York paper was followed by many similar articles, chiefly in the New York Weekly and the New York Saturday Press, and by several popular volumes, among which are Josh Billings: His Sayings (1866), Josh Billings on Ice (1868), Everybody's Friend (1876), Josh Billings: His
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Works,
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Complete (1876), Trump Kards (1877), Old Probabilities (1879), Josh Billings' Spice-Box (1881), and Josh Billings' Farmers'Allminax, burlesquing the Old Farmers'
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Almanac, issued annually between 187o and 188o, and collected into a
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volume in 1902 under the title Josh Billings' Old Farmers' Allminax . He died in
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Monterey, California, on the 14th of
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October 1885 . His platform lectures, such as " Milk," "
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Hobby Horse," " The Pensive Cockroach," and " What I kno about Hotels," his mannerisms and apparently unstudied witticisms made him conspicuous . See
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Life and Adventures of Josh Billings (New York, 1883), by Francis S . Smith .

End of Article: HENRY WHEELER SHAW (1818–1885)
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