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1847 - 1922

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Bayard Tuckerman

Author

Centurion, 1887–1923

born July 2, 1855
New York (Manhattan), New York
died October 20, 1923
Ipswich, Massachusetts
elected December 3, 1887
Age thirty-two
proposer of
seconder of
Member portrait of Bayard Tuckerman

Archivist’s Notes

Son of Lucius Tuckerman; brother of Walter C. Tuckerman; nephew of Wolcott Gibbs; uncle of Arthur G. Sedgwick; second cousin of Eliot Tuckerman

Century Memorial

Bayard Tuckerman early showed his taste for history and literature; in 1882, at the age of twenty-seven, he published “A Short History of English Prose Fiction,” which remains one of his best productions. Later followed “A Life of General Lafayette,” “The Diary of Philip Howe,” “William Jay and the Abolition of Slavery” (1893), “Peter Stuyvesant” and the “Life of General Philip Schuyler.” He was lecturer on English History at Princeton University from 1889 to 1908, and contributed occasional articles to the Princeton Review.

Tuckerman’s early life was passed in New York, but of late years he had lived more and more at Ipswich, in his country home “Sunswick” named after his grandfather’s estate on Long Island. Here his scholarly habits made the tranquil life full and satisfying, and he was surrounded by a large circle of family and friends. The great gentleness and sweetness of his disposition and the simplicity of his character endeared him to every one who came in contact with him. The little daughter of an old friend once spoke of him as “the most gentle gentleman” she had ever seen; his friends among the distinguished writers of the day described his personality in similar terms of affection.

Alexander Dana Noyes
1924 Century Association Yearbook

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