INGRAHAM, JOSEPH HOLT

INGRAHAM, JOSEPH HOLT (1809–1860). Born in Portland, Maine,
Joseph Holt Ingraham was a teacher, minister, and popular writer who produced more than 100 novels, 25 in 1845 alone at the peak of his career.
Until the late 1840s Ingraham wrote popular historical romances, many
about pirates* and sea adventures. After his ordination in 1852 as a minister
of the Episcopal Church, Ingraham turned his talents to writing biblicallybased fiction.
Little is known about the early years of Ingraham’s life. Around 1826 he
may have traveled to Buenos Aires, Argentina, on one of his grandfather’s
merchant ships and worked for a time as a clerk. His novel Paul Perril, the
Merchant’s Son (1847) may be a fictionalized account of his experience in
South America.
Ingraham’s first book, the nonfiction travel narrative The South-West
(1835), is based on his 1830 sea and river journey from New England to
Natchez, Mississippi, by way of Bermuda, the Bahamas, Cuba, and New
Orleans. This detailed work, directed toward an audience of northerners,
chronicles his journey and offers a northerner’s perspective on the South.
His first novel, Lafitte*: The Pirate of the Gulf (1836), was tremendously
popular; like several of his subsequent works, it was adapted into a stage
production. Ingraham’s pirate tales and sea adventures include Captain Kyd;
or, The Wizard of the Sea (1839), The Dancing Feather (1842), Morris
Graeme; or, The Cruise of the Sea-Slipper (1843), The Midshipman; or, The
Corvette and Brigantine (1844), The Spanish Galleon; or, The Pirate of the
Mediterranean (1845), and The Lady of the Gulf: A Romance of the City
and Seas (1846).
Although both his adventure and biblical novels sold well, Ingraham
struggled financially throughout his life. He died at age fifty-one from an
accidentally self-inflicted pistol wound.