James Church Alvord

This article is about the poet. For the politician (1808-1839), see James C. Alvord.

James Church Alvord was an American poet who flourished in the early years of the 20th century. A handful of his poems were published in Poetry Magazine, and are available in its online archives. Others appeared in general magazines such as The Nation and The Century Magazine. In addition, the libretto he wrote for a "Scène Dramatique" by the composer Frederick Stevenson, called "An American Ace", is available through the Library of Congress. Before the entry of the United States into the First World War, he published a short story ("The Iron Cross") in a collection produced by the Christian Women's Peace Movement, but as the libretto to "American Ace" shows, by the end of the war he had adopted a rather different stance. In addition to poetry, he also wrote reviews for the New York Times.[1] In the 1920s someone of the same name was a Professor of Modern Languages at Centenary College of Louisiana, and wrote the lyrics of the college's Alma Mater,[2] but it is not clear whether this was the same person.

References

  1. Recchio, Thomas (2009). Elizabeth Gaskell's Cranford: A publishing history. Farnham, UK: Ashgate. p. 213
  2. See Centenary College of Louisiana Alma Mater

External links


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