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Crandall's father served in various capacities as a public official within the state of New York. These included as a member of the legislature, assistant assessor, internal revenue collector, money order clerk in the post office and a number of positions in the New York Custom House. Crandall
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150:, but did not matriculate from an institution of higher learning. After spending the first seventeen years of his life as a farmer, he went into the mercantile business for five years, then began a literary career.
206:, along with others. His early collections often had a rural theme and his poems and prose would often involve farming life, as he became a serious farmer. A 1914 article in
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In 1923, feeling despondent over increasingly ill health after penning a thank you note to his housekeeper, he committed suicide in his barn, with a pistol.
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Osborn, Norris Galpin, editor, Men of mark in
Connecticut: ideals of American life ... Vol 3, p. 196. W. R. Goodspeed, Hartford, Connecticut 1906-1910
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in Google digitized format from New York Public
Library
125:(June 19, 1858 – March 23, 1923) was an American
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Google digitized format from
University of California
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Stamford
History, list of Crandall's Poems and Essays
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in Google digitized format from
Princeton University
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208:Guide to Nature Magazine
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