Cyrus Townsend Brady

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Cyrus Townsend Brady

Cyrus Townsend (December 20, 1861 – January 24, 1920) was a journalist, historian and adventure writer. His best-known work is Indian Fights and Fighters.

Background

He was born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, and graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1883. In 1889, he was ordained a deacon in the Episcopal church, and was ordained a priest in 1890. His first wife was Clarissa Guthrie, who died in 1890. His second wife was Mary Barrett.

Brady's first major book, For Love of Country, whilst telling the story of a fictitious John Seymour, was actually based in part on the true heroics of Nicholas Biddle, one of the first five captains of the fledgling Continental Navy.

Brady was also famous for his views of feminism and Women's suffrage, he preached many anti-suffrage sermons and described women voters as "an insult to God".

Brady died in Yonkers, New York of pneumonia at age 58.

Works

  • The Island of Regeneration (1888)
  • For Love of Country (1898)
  • American Fights and Fighters (1900)
  • Recollections of a Missionary in the Great West (1900)
  • Hohenzollern: A Story of the Time of Frederick Barbarossa (1901)
  • The Southerners (1903)
  • The Corner in Coffee (1904)
  • A Midshipman in the Pacific (1904)
  • Indian Fights and Fighters (1904)
  • Three Daughters of the Confederacy (1905)
  • As the Sparks Fly Upward (1911)
  • The Island of the Stairs (1913)
  • By the World Forgot (1917)
  • Bob Dashaway Privateersman (1911)
  • The Patriots (1906)
  • Britton of the Seventh: A Romance of Custer and the Great Northwest(1914) A.C. McClurg & Co. Chicago
  • Little France
  • And Thus He Came: A Christmas Fantasy (New York and London: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1916[1]

Many more titles by Cyrus Townsend Brady are listed in: American Fiction, 1901-1925: A Bibliography by Geoffrey D. Smith, pp. 75–78.

References

External links


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