Ohio History Journal

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THOMAS BUCHANAN READ AND THE CIVIL WAR

THOMAS BUCHANAN READ AND THE CIVIL WAR

 

The Story of "Sheridan's Ride"

 

by HARVEY S. FORD

Head Librarian, TOLEDO BLADE

 

The phenomenal popularity of "Sheridan's Ride" lasted a

long time. Few poems have taken such a hold on the American

people, nor have there been many so well liked. It is true that

its popularity today is not what it once was; and "Sheridan's

Ride" does not appear as often as it used to in the textbooks for

high school literature courses. No longer is it declaimed from

the platform at the graduation exercises. But it lingers yet in

the minds of thousands who, as rebellious boys compelled to com-

mit a poem to memory, turned to its martial stanzas in relief,

thankful to be saved from the awful alternatives of Longfellow's

or Tennyson's "sissy" verses.

 

Up from the South at break of day,

Bringing to Winchester fresh dismay,

The affrighted air with a shudder bore,

Like a herald in haste to the chieftain's door,

The terrible grumble, and rumble, and roar,

Telling the battle was on once more,

And Sheridan twenty miles away.

 

So the familiar lines begin. When, six stanzas later, Sheridan

at last arrives at Cedar Creek and saves the day, the audiences of

the past always responded with thunderous applause.

Thomas Buchanan Read, the author of "Sheridan's Ride," was

born in Chester County, Pennsylvania, March 12, 1822. His

family being poor, he had almost no formal education. He was

bound out to a tailor at an early age, but eventually ran away and

found employment with a cigar maker in Philadelphia. Tiring of

this, at fifteen he set out for Cincinnati, the home of a married

sister. Here he supported himself by cigar making, sign painting.

 

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