Samuel Adams Drake
Samuel Adams Drake (20 December 1833, Boston – 4 December 1905, Kennebunkport, Maine) was a United States journalist and writer.
Biography
He was a son a Samuel Gardner Drake. He was educated in the public schools of Boston.
He went to Kansas in 1858 as telegraphic agent of the New York Associated Press, became the regular correspondent of the St. Louis Republican and the Louisville Journal, and for a while edited the Leavenworth Times. In 1861 he joined the state militia and served throughout the American Civil War, becoming brigadier general of militia in 1863. In 1864, he was colonel of the 17th Kansas Volunteers, commanding the post of Paola, Kansas, during Price's invasion of Missouri in that year.
He returned to Boston in 1871 and resumed literary work.
Works
- Hints for Emigrants to Pike's Peak, a pamphlet and his first publication (1860)
- Old Landmarks of Boston (1873)
- Nooks and Corners of the New England Coast (1875)
- Bunker Hill (1875)
- Captain Nelson (1879)
- History of Middlesex County, Massachusetts (1880)
- Around the Hub (1881)
- Heart of the White Mountains (1882)
- New England Legends and Folk Lore (1884)
- Our Great Benefactors (1885)
- The Making of New England (1886)
- The Making of the Great West (1887)
- Burgoyne's Invasion (1889)
- The Taking of Louisburg (1891)
- The Pine Tree Coast (1891)
- The Battle of Gettysburg (1892)
- The Making of Virginia (1893)
- Our Colonial Homes (1894)
- The Campaign of Trenton (1895)
- The Watch Fires of '76 (1895)
- On Plymouth Rock (1898)
- The Myths and Fables of To-day (1900)
- The Young Vigilantes (1904)
Notes
References
- Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Drake, Samuel Adams". Encyclopedia Americana.
- Wilson, James Grant; Fiske, John, eds. (1905). "Drake, Samuel Gardner". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton
Wikisource has original works written by or about: |