SUSSEX COUNTY DELAWARE
GEORGE TOWNSEND, WRITER
George Alfred Townsend,
Sussex writer, was writing before modern electronics were
in competition, such as
television of the internet. He was born in Georgetown, January
30, 1841, to the Rev.
Stephen and Mrs. Mary Fleming Milbourne Townsend . Reverend
Townsend was a Methodist
clergyman for more than fifty years in Sussex County.
In the year 1850 , age 9
year, he was a resident of Port Deposit, Cecil county, Maryland.
When in his teenage years
he developed a talent for writing and as the Civil War came
about he took a job with
the New York Herald as correspondent. His vivid descriptions of
fighting in the Virginia's
eared him a large following and a growing reputation.
At age 24, on the 21st
of December, 1865, at the St. Philips Episcopal Church in
Philadelphia, he married
Elizabeth Evan Rhodes who lived from 1842 to 1903, died
inWashington, D. C. and they had two children, a daughter,
Genevieve, who lived 1866 to 1943, a son Junior, who lived 1874 to
1948.
In the year 1870 he was
resident of Washington, D. C.
After the war, he took the
pen name “Gath” and continued to write about important current
events. During 1867, while in Washington, D. C. he became a friend
of Samuel Langhorn Clemens. He, Clemens and other writers tried
to 'syndicate' their columns,
sending articles to many
different newspapers, however, nothing came of the plan.
Townsend wrote twenty one
columns a week for the Cincinnati Enquirer, two for Philadelphia
Times, two for the Boston Globe and several for the New York
Tribune. This he does with just two assistants.
In addition to the
newspaper work, Townsend also wrote poetry, biographies, and
novels. The most famous being “The Entailed Hat” which drew
upon the Delmarva Peninsula
history which marked the
pinnacle of his career and his popularity began a decline even
though he wrote for two
decades longer.
In 1884 his residence was
at “Gapland”, Burkittsville, Frederick County, Maryland
In the early 1900's he
came down with diabetes and his failing health and a changing public
taste for news, made it difficult for him to earn a living. He was
forced to sell his library to pay his bills.
In 1911, Samuel Bancroft,
a Wilmington industrialist underwrites the publication of
Townsend's poems , 'Poems
of the Delmarva Peninsula” that were published two years
later..
When Townsend died in
Manhatten, New York City, on April 15, 1914, he had been
virtually forgotten by the
American public. He was buried in Laural Hill Cemetery,
Philadelphia. .
Abstract: Michael Morgan,
Sussex Journal, Delawarebeaches.com, Wednesday, 25 April
2018, by Harrison H.
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