Barrett Wendell (August 23, 1855 – February 8, 1921) was an Americanacademic known for a series of textbooks includingEnglish Composition, studies ofCotton Mather andWilliam Shakespeare,A Literary History of America,The France of Today, andThe Traditions of European Literature.
Wendell was born inBoston on August 23, 1855. He was the son of Jacob and Mary Bertodi (née Barrett) Wendell.[1] His parents married in Boston in 1854, about a year after his father had moved fromPortsmouth, New Hampshire, and joined the firm of J.C. Howe & Co.[2] Among his three younger brothers were Gordon Wendell, philanthropist and athlete Evert Jansen Wendell, and actorJacob Wendell.[3]
His paternal grandparents were Jacob Wendell Sr. and Mehitable Rindge (née Rogers) Wendell.[4] The first Wendell, Evert Jansen, left the Netherlands in 1640 and settled inAlbany, New York.[5] His maternal grandparents were Boston merchant Nathaniel Augustus Barrett and Sally (née Dorr) Barrett. Both the Barrett and Dorr families had deep roots in colonial America, with the Dorrs making their fortune in thefur trade.[2]
Wendell graduated fromHarvard in the class of 1877 withAbbott Lawrence Lowell, who was later a president of Harvard. At Harvard, Wendell was a member of TheLampoon.[1]
In 1880, he was appointed Instructor in English at Harvard. He later became an Assistant Professor of English from 1888 to 1898, and a Professor of English from 1898 to 1917, after which he was a professor emeritus. He was also elected to theHarvard Board of Overseers.[6]
In 1904 to 1905, he travelled overseas, and lectured at Cambridge University in England, the Sorbonne in Paris, and other French universities. After this visit he wroteThe France of Today.[6]
Photograph of his son, William Greenough Wendel, betweenc. 1914-1920
On June 1, 1880, Wendell was married to Edith Greenough (1859–1938) atQuincy, Massachusetts.[8] Edith was a daughter ofWilliam Whitwell Greenough and Catharine Scollay (née Curtis) Greenough. Edith was a national leader of movements to preserve historical sites.[9] Together, they were the parents of four children:[8]
Mary Barrett Wendell (1883–1975), who married Geoffrey Manilus Wheelock. They divorced and she married Reinier van der Woude.[8]
William Greenough Wendell (1888–1967), who married Ruth Appleton, a daughter ofFrancis R. Appleton. They divorced in 1938 and he married Evelyn Fahnestock, a daughter of Ernest Fahnestock.[8][11]