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George Rice Carpenter
George Rice Carpenter (October 25, 1863 – April 8, 1909) was an American educator, scholar and writer. He was a descendant of the Rehoboth Carpenter Family and Edmund Rice of Massachusetts.
Early life and education
His father was Charles Carrol Carpenter (born 1836) and mother was Nancy Feronia Rice (born 1840). His father was a Congregational minister who left an account of the final days of the Civil War and was an eyewitness of Abraham Lincoln's entry into Petersburg, Virginia. George Rice Carpenter was born at the Eskimo River Mission Station on the Labrador Coast where his parents were engaged in pioneer missionary service. After attending Phillips Academy, Andover, Carpenter entered Harvard where he graduated in 1886.
Academic career
Carpenter became a Harvard instructor in 1888 and assistant professor at MIT until 1893. Carpenter then became a professor and chairman of English rhetoric at Columbia University in New York where he remained for the duration of his life. He died in New York City in 1909 and was the subject of several articles in salutation. A library at Columbia is jointly named in his honor.
Family of authors
Carpenter married Mary Seymour of New York in 1890. Carpenter's daughter Margaret Seymour Carpenter (Margaret Carpenter Richardson) (April 3, 1893 – 1973) was herself the author of several short stories and the novel Experiment Perilous, Little Brown & Co., Boston. (1943). George Rice Carpenter's publications were copious. A large number of textbooks were from his hand. Carpenter produced works on Longfellow (1901), Whittier (1903), Whitman (1909), among others listed in the next sections.
Books
Articles referencing subject
Genealogy
George Rice Carpenter was a descendant of Edmund Rice, an English immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony.
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