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General Information

Bio

(1819-1891) Writer, novelist. Herman Melville was one of the great American writers and figures in world literature. Born in Manhattan, New York, at 6 Pearl Street, into an impoverished family, he later lived at 104 East 26th Street (or 103 4th Avenue). The house is gone, but there is a plaque on the 26th Street side of the building at 357 Park Avenue South. Melville left school at age 15 and spent his teenage years at sea. These adventures would eventually inform his novels “Typee” (1846), “Omoo” (1847), “Redburn” (1849), and Melville’s masterpiece “Moby-Dick” (1851). The first three novels were wildly successful romances, and Melville won regard as a literary figure in New York City circles. In 1850 Melville bought a farm near Pittsville, Massachusetts, where he lived next to Nathaniel Hawthorne. Melville’s novel “Moby-Dick,” and the work that followed it (“Pierre;” or, “The Ambiguities” (1852), “The Confidence Man” (1857), “The Piazza Tales” (1856)), was largely misunderstood and ill-received at the time of its publication. Meanwhile debts, poor health, and a diminishing audience took their collective toll on Melville, and he was forced to move back to New York City in 1866. He took a poorly paid job as a district inspector of customs, which he held for 19 years. Melville died in poverty and obscurity in New York City. In 1984 the United States Postal Service issued its fourth stamp in the Literary Arts series in honor of Herman Melville.

Full Name

Herman Melville

Locations

Albany

Author's Timeline


1819

BIRTH

Herman Melville was born in New York City in 1819.

1830

RESIDENCE

Melville's family moved to Albany, New York, in 1830 and lived at 3 Clinton Square from 1834-1838.

1832

RESIDENCE

Melville's family moved to Lansingburgh, New York, (now part of Troy, New York) in 1832.

1846

LITWORK

Typee: A Peep at Polynesian Life


Wildly successful romance novel.

1847

LITWORK

Omoo: A Narrative of Adventures in the South Seas


Wildly successful romance novel.

1849

LITWORK

Redburn


Successful romance novel.

1849

LITWORK

Mardi: And a Voyage Thither


Novel.

1850

LITWORK

White-Jacket; or, The World in a Man-of-War


Novel.

1851

LITWORK

Moby-Dick


Melville's masterpiece. Was largely misunderstood and ill-received at the time of its publication.

1852

LITWORK

Pierre or, The Ambiguities


Was largely misunderstood and ill-received at the time of its publication.

1856

LITWORK

The Piazza Tales


Was largely misunderstood and ill-received at the time of its publication.

1856

LITWORK

The Piazza Tales


Short story collection.

1857

LITWORK

The Confidence Man


Was largely misunderstood and ill-received at the time of its publication.

1866

LITWORK

Battle-Pieces and Aspects of the War


Poetry collection.

1891

DEATH

Herman Melville lived at 104 East 26th Street in Manhattan, New York, from 1863 and until his death in 1891. The house is gone, but a plaque on the 26th Street side of the building at 357 Park Avenue South remains to his honor.

1891

INTERMENT

Herman Melville is interred in the Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, New York.

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