Flavius
Josephus
Littlejohn
Born:
1804
Herkimer County,
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.ViewFeatures.StringHtmlContent
Died: 1880
Died: 1880
Writings
| Image | Title | Genre | Audience | Publisher | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
The Legends of Michigan and The Old NorthWest or, a Cluster of Unpublished Waifs, Gleaned Along the Uncertain, Misty Line, Dividing Traditional from Historic Times - Allegan County Historical Society authorized printing 1956 |
History | Adult | Allegan, MI : Northwestern Bible and Publishing Company | 1875 |
What is the aim or goal of your writing:
To properly value the "Legends," it is necessary to know something of Flavius Josephus Littlejohn, the "Old Trailer", who is pictured by the pioneers of his day as a man of great personal integrity, one who understood and sympathized with the Indians. To regain his health, he became a surveyor and geologist in southwestern Michigan, avocations which necessitated his living among the Indians. For forty years, he had opportunity to study the race of whom he later wrote. He died in 1880 and perhaps the best impression of the integrity of this early author, may be obtained from the story of his burial at Allegan with the special trains brings hundreds who sought to pay tribute to a Mason of high standing, an eminent jurist and a politician whose integrity was unchallenged--though the opposition did most soundly berate his party.
A critic of his day says of the "Legends": "For data for delineation of character, for topography, the reader may well trust Littlejohn." With this in mind, the old "Legends" may be read with greater appreciation of their delineation of Indian character, may be read to gain pictures of faithful Indian friendships, for descriptions of the flower covered Edens, now more prosaically know as St. Joseph, Kalamazoo and other counties--the region at one time known as St. Joseph township, "the land lying north of South Bend, Indiana, including that which is south of the Grand river in Kent County, Michigan."
To Littlejohn's great command of the English language he added the fluent style of the Indian orators. He who has braved Littlejohn's long, rolling sentences has been thrilled at the exploits of Chief Pokagon, the mighty warrior of the St. Joseph river valley, a past-master of Indian strategy in the battle of Three Rivers, as he captures the charming Shawnee princess and, to insure an ally's participation in the war, places the princess in the safe keeping of an otherwise indifferent neighboring tribe.
May inquiries be sent to you about doing workshops, readings: No
Donated books to the Authors & Illustrators database project: No
Skills:
Author
Inclusion in biographical or critical works:
| Name | Date |
|---|---|
| Michigan Authors, 3rd edition | 1993 |
| Literary Michigan by the Michigan Council for the Humanities | 1988 |
Education:
| Degree | Institution | Location | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hamilton College | Clinton, NY | 1827 |
Career:
| Position | Organization | Location | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| State senator | 1845-1846 | ||
| State representative | 1842-1855 | ||
|
Surveyor, engineer, geologist - Surveyed the original plat of the City of Allegan |
Allegan | 1836 | |
|
Lawyer - Practice in Little Falls, New York |
Microsoft.AspNetCore.Mvc.ViewFeatures.StringHtmlContent | 1830 | |
| - Became expert in Indian lore from job travels | |||
|
Circuit-riding judge - He presided over a territory which now comprises 20 Michigan counties |
Other Resources:
Last Modified On: 2/8/2014 12:00:00 AM