Henry Seidel Canby
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Henry Seidel Canby (September 6, 1878 – April 5, 1961) was a critic, editor, and
Yale University Yale University is a Private university, private research university in New Haven, Connecticut. Established in 1701 as the Collegiate School, it is the List of Colonial Colleges, third-oldest institution of higher education in the United Sta ...
professor. A scion of a Quaker family that arrived in
Wilmington, Delaware Wilmington (Lenape: ''Paxahakink /'' ''Pakehakink)'' is the largest city in the U.S. state of Delaware. The city was built on the site of Fort Christina, the first Swedish settlement in North America. It lies at the confluence of the Christina ...
, around 1740 and grew to regional prominence through milling and business affairs, Henry Seidel Canby was a son of Edward T. Canby. Canby was born in Wilmington, and attended Wilmington Friends School. He graduated from Yale in 1899, then taught at the university until becoming a professor in 1922. Following a four-year stint as the editor of the literary review of the ''
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'', Canby became one of the founders and editors of the ''
Saturday Review of Literature ''Saturday Review'', previously ''The Saturday Review of Literature'', was an American weekly magazine established in 1924. Norman Cousins was the editor from 1940 to 1971. Under Norman Cousins, it was described as "a compendium of reportage, ess ...
'', serving as the last until 1936. His notes on the work of
Vilfredo Pareto Vilfredo Federico Damaso Pareto ( , , , ; born Wilfried Fritz Pareto; 15 July 1848 – 19 August 1923) was an Italians, Italian polymath (civil engineer, sociologist, economist, political scientist, and philosopher). He made several important ...
in 1933 in the ''Saturday Review'' helped launch the Pareto vogue of the 1930s. In 1926 Canby became Editorial Chair of the newly created ''
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'' Club. This was a subscription book club intended to promote the notion of middlebrow culture though their premier selection was quite forward at the time. In 1922 Canby, together with his wife Marion Ponsonby Gause Canby, Mason and Helen Fox Trowbridge, Beverly Waugh and Caroline (Lena) Jennings Kunkel, Henry Noble and Marjorie Dodd MacCracken, Lee Wilson and Marion Roberts Canby Dodd, and David Stanley and Cora Deming Welch Smith founded the Yelping Hill Association. A summer colony based on the Pocono Lake Preserve Quaker colony in Pennsylvania, where some of the families had summered in previous years. It was from his office, The Writer's Cramp, on Yelping Hill that Canby did much work for the ''
Saturday Review of Literature ''Saturday Review'', previously ''The Saturday Review of Literature'', was an American weekly magazine established in 1924. Norman Cousins was the editor from 1940 to 1971. Under Norman Cousins, it was described as "a compendium of reportage, ess ...
'' and the ''
Book of the Month Club Book of the Month (founded 1926) is a United States subscription-based e-commerce service that offers a selection of five to seven new hardcover books each month to its members. Books are selected and endorsed by a panel of judges, and members ...
''. In his book ''American Memoir'' Canby reflects on his, and authors', work done in Cornwall citing that "it is not too much to say that for some years at least the fate of a new book of importance was more dependent upon the Hills of Cornwall than upon anything else except its own merits." Henry Canby joined nearly 250 bohemians in signing ''
The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door The Greenwich Village Bookshop Door (1920–25) separated the back office from the main area of Frank Shay's Bookshop in Greenwich Village from 1920 until 1925, where it served as an autograph book for nearly two hundred and fifty authors, arti ...
'' sometime between 1920 and 1925. The door is now held by the
Harry Ransom Center The Harry Ransom Center (until 1983 the Humanities Research Center) is an archive, library and museum at the University of Texas at Austin, specializing in the collection of literary and cultural artifacts from the Americas and Europe for the pur ...
at the
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, and Canby's signature can be found on front panel 2. He was the father of Edward Tatnall Canby (1912-1998), a noted reviewer, radio-show host, folklorist and early advocate of
electronic music Electronic music is a genre of music that employs electronic musical instruments, digital instruments, or circuitry-based music technology in its creation. It includes both music made using electronic and electromechanical means ( electroa ...
.NYT obit of Edward T. Canby
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Bibliography

*''College Sons and College Fathers'' (1915) *''Everyday Americans'' (1920) *''Definitions: Essays in Contemporary Criticism'' (1922) *''American Estimates'' (1929) *''Classic Americans'' (1931) *''The Age of Confidence'' (1934) *''Alma Mater: The Gothic Age of the American College'' (1936) *''Seven Years Harvest'' (1936) *''Thoreau'' (1939) *''Walt Whitman An American'' (1943) *''The Brandywine'' (1941) (Part of the
Rivers of America Series The Rivers of America Series is a landmark series of books on American rivers, for the most part written by literary figures rather than historians. The series spanned three publishers and thirty-seven years. History The Rivers of America Series ...
) *''American Memoir'' (1947) *''Introduction to Favorite Poems of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow'' (1947) *''Turn West, Turn East: Mark Twain and Henry James'' (1951)


References


External links

* * *
Information Please Almanac article on Henry Seidel CanbyHervey Allen Papers, 1831-1965, SC.1952.01, Special Collections Department, University of Pittsburgh
* Henry Seidel Canby Papers. Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library. {{DEFAULTSORT:Canby, Henry 1878 births 1961 deaths Yale University faculty Members of the American Academy of Arts and Letters