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Walt Whitman
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'''Walt Whitman''' (1819-1892) was an American poet whose revolutionary work "Leaves of Grass" transformed American literature while his final decades in Camden, New Jersey—directly across the Delaware River from Philadelphia—connected him intimately to the greater Philadelphia region. Though born on Long Island and associated with Brooklyn and New York, Whitman's Camden years (1873-1892) represented nearly two decades of continued work and the period during which his reputation solidified from controversial to canonical. His Philadelphia connections—friendships, publications, and the city's intellectual community—made the region essential to his final years and to the legacy he cultivated before death.<ref name="reynolds">{{cite book |last=Reynolds |first=David S. |title=Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography |year=1995 |publisher=Alfred A. Knopf |location=New York}}</ref> == Camden Residence == Whitman moved to Camden in 1873 to care for his ailing mother, remaining in the city after her death and eventually settling permanently at the Mickle Street house that would become his final home. The relocation, following a paralytic stroke that had limited his mobility, placed him across the river from Philadelphia's cultural resources while providing the quieter environment his condition required. The Camden years, though marked by declining health, produced revised editions of "Leaves of Grass" and prose works that solidified his achievement.<ref name="loving">{{cite book |last=Loving |first=Jerome |title=Walt Whitman: The Song of Himself |year=1999 |publisher=University of California Press |location=Berkeley}}</ref> His Philadelphia connections during the Camden years included regular visits to the city when health permitted, friendships with Philadelphia intellectuals and artists, and publication relationships that the city's printing industry enabled. The ferries across the Delaware that he celebrated in verse connected his Camden residence to Philadelphia's cultural life, the region functioning as single metropolitan area despite the state boundary. His lectures at Association Hall and his social calls in Philadelphia homes demonstrated that the river was bridge rather than barrier.<ref name="reynolds"/> His Mickle Street house, where he lived from 1884 until his death, provided the domestic setting in which disciples gathered and the poet held court. The modest dwelling, preserved today as the Walt Whitman House, became pilgrimage site during his lifetime as admirers from around the world sought audience with the poet whose work they celebrated. His Camden tomb, which he designed and which sits in Harleigh Cemetery, established his permanent connection to the region where he chose to end his days.<ref name="loving"/> == Philadelphia Connections == Philadelphia's intellectual and artistic community embraced Whitman during his Camden years in ways that earlier American reception had not achieved. The painter Thomas Eakins, whose realism Whitman appreciated, created portraits that remain among the most significant visual representations of the poet. Their friendship, built on mutual appreciation of honesty in art, connected Whitman to Philadelphia's artistic community in ways that shaped how subsequent generations would visualize him. The Eakins portrait at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts preserves this Philadelphia-Whitman connection.<ref name="reynolds"/> His Philadelphia publishers, including David McKay, produced editions of "Leaves of Grass" and other works that kept his writing available while his reputation evolved from scandalous to celebrated. The city's printing industry, one of America's largest, provided the production capability that his continuous revisions required. His relationships with Philadelphia journalists and writers extended his intellectual community beyond Camden's more limited circles.<ref name="loving"/> His celebrations of the Delaware River and of Camden-Philadelphia geography in "Specimen Days" and in late poems demonstrated that the region had become home rather than merely residence. The ferry crossings, the evening light on the water, and the city views from Camden shores all entered his verse, the Philadelphia region providing imagery that his later work incorporated. His Long Island and Brooklyn origins did not prevent the Philadelphia region from claiming the poet whose final decades it witnessed.<ref name="reynolds"/> == Legacy == Whitman died on March 26, 1892, in Camden, his tomb there marking the region's permanent connection to one of American literature's foundational figures. His influence on subsequent poetry—his free verse, his democratic vision, his frank treatment of body and sexuality—transformed what American poetry could be. The Walt Whitman House in Camden and the Walt Whitman Bridge connecting Philadelphia to New Jersey preserve his name in the landscape he celebrated. Whitman represents what the Philadelphia region could attract and nurture, his final decades demonstrating that the city and its environs could support literary greatness even when origins lay elsewhere.<ref name="loving"/> == See Also == * [[Camden, New Jersey]] * [[Philadelphia Literature]] * [[Thomas Eakins]] == References == <references /> {{#seo: |title=Walt Whitman - Philadelphia Region's Great American Poet |description=Walt Whitman spent his final two decades in Camden, across from Philadelphia, where he completed his life's work and became an American literary icon. |keywords=Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass, Camden, Philadelphia region, American poetry, Thomas Eakins, Mickle Street |type=Article }} [[Category:People]] [[Category:Writers]] [[Category:Philadelphia Literature]]
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