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The Thoreau Institute
at Walden Woods Library
About Thoreau's Life and Writings
Texts and Links
including Thoreau's contemporaries, his readings, current
scholarship and
related documents
Henry D. Thoreau
Brief Overviews: Thoreau, The Man
The American writer, thinker, and naturalist Henry D. Thoreau was born to John and
Cynthia (Dunbar) Thoreau in Concord, Massachusetts, on 12 July 1817. In 1828, after a few
years in Concord's grammar school, Thoreau began attending the Concord Academy, and from
1833 to 1837 he attended Harvard College.
After graduating from Harvard Thoreau secured a teaching position at the Concord Center
School (public), but he resigned after just two weeks because he refused to use corporal
punishment on his charges. From 1838 until 1841 he and his older brother John, Jr., taught
a private school in Concord, and in 1838 the two brothers went on a two week boating
excursion that Thoreau later memorialized in his first book,
A
Week on the Concord and
Merrimack Rivers, published in 1849. In 1840 Thoreau published poems and essays in the
transcendentalist periodical,
The
Dial, and from 1841 to 1843 he lived with the
famous author and lecturer
Ralph Waldo Emerson and Emerson's family (Waldo's wife, Lidian,
and two children) in Concord. In 1842 John, Jr., died a painful death of lockjaw in
Thoreau's arms, and the following year Thoreau moved to Staten Island, New York, to tutor
William Emerson's children and to attempt to break into the New York literary market.
Having returned to Concord, in 1844 Thoreau and Edward Hoar, a companion, accidentally set
fire to some woods in Concord when trying to prepare a fish chowder near Fair Haven Pond
on a windy day.
From 1845 to 1847 Thoreau lived in a small house that he built himself on the shore of
Walden Pond, a mile and a half south of Concord Center. In 1846, while still at the pond,
he climbed to the summit of Mt. Katahdin while on a visit to the Maine woods and spent one
night in jail for refusing to pay his poll tax. He later worked these experiences into
lectures that were later still published as the
"Ktaadn" chapter of
The
Maine Woods
and the famous, influential essay "Civil
Disobedience."
After leaving the house at the pond Thoreau stayed with the Emerson family again while
Ralph Waldo Emerson lectured in England. Thoreau returned to his parent's home in 1848
and continued living with them as a boarder for the remainder of his life. At about this
time he began the routine of morning and evening study and writing, and afternoon walks
that were the foundation upon which he may be said to have built his creative life.
Thoreau made the first of four trips to Cape Cod in 1849, and he later delivered
lectures about his experiences that were posthumously published as
Cape
Cod.
The
following year he traveled to Quebec and wrote up that experience in a lecture titled
"An Excursion to Canada," partially published in 1853 as
A
Yankee
in
Canada. His famous book
Walden; or, Life in the Woods
(later shortened at his
request to Walden) was published in 1854, and in that same year he delivered his
lecture-essay "Slavery in Massachusetts" at an Independence Day meeting of the
American Anti-Slavery Society.
In 1856 Thoreau traveled to Perth Amboy, New Jersey, to survey a large estate and
deliver three lectures. While there he visited Walt Whitman in nearby Brooklyn. In 1857
and 1858 he visited Cape Cod, the woods of Maine, and the White Mountains of New
Hampshire; and in the latter year he published what was to become the second chapter of
The Maine Woods, his essay "Chesuncook." In 1859 his father died, and as a
result he had to begin assuming more responsibility of the family's plumbago business. In
October of that year the abolitionist Capt. John Brown raided the federal arsenal at
Harper's Ferry, and Thoreau spoke mightily in defense of Brown's characterthe first
person in America to do so. His essay "A Plea for Capt. John Brown" was
published and widely circulated in his friend, the famous editor Horace Greeley's
newspaper, The New-York Tribune. The following year Thoreau lectured to his townsmen on
"The Succession of Forest
Trees," and his lecture was shortly afterward
published and republished, receiving wider circulation than any of Thoreau's other
writings during his lifetime and cementing his reputation as a naturalist.
While counting tree rings on 3 December 1860 Thoreau contracted a cold that quickly
worsened into bronchitis. His lungs had long been tubercular, and Thoreau was housebound
for many weeks. During the summer of 1861 he traveled to Minnesota in a vain effort to
recover his health. Arriving back home he began putting his affairs in order and began
preparing for publication many of his late lectures. He died of tuberculosis at his
mother's home on Main Street in Concord on 6 May 1862, aged 44 years. He is buried in his
family's plot near the graves of his friends Hawthorne, Alcott, Emerson, and Channing on
Author's Ridge in Concord's Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.
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