The poems of Frank O. Ticknor, M.D.
Ticknor, Francis Orray
J.B. Lippincott & Co (1879)
In Collection
#5065
0*
Poet
Medical
Hardcover 
Product Details
Nationality American
Pub Place Philadelphia
Dust Jacket New York
First Edition Yes
Personal Details
Read It Yes
User Defined
Conflict Amer Civil War
Notes
BAL 7873 First ed. Contemporary Inscription "for mr. richards from his friend" signed 1896

Physician, poet, and horticulturist, Francis Orray Ticknor 1822-1874 wrote memorable Civil War (1861-65) poetry and earned a lasting literary reputation on the merit of a single poem, "Little Giffen," a ballad about a young Tennessee soldier named Isaac Newton Giffen. he poem describes how during the war Ticknor treated and befriended the wounded Confederate lad, only to see him return to the ranks and presumably to his battlefield death

Francis "Frank" Orray Ticknor, the youngest of Harriot Coolidge and Orray Ticknor's three children, was born in Fortville, in Jones County. He earned a medical degree from the Philadelphia College of Medicine, in Pennsylvania, in 1842 and began his practice in rural Shell Creek, Georgia. He married Rosalie "Rosa" Nelson in 1847 and settled at Torch Hill, their home in Columbus. They had eight children.

The country doctor published poetry and horticultural articles in numerous periodicals, especially the Southern Cultivator. "Little Giffen" first appeared in November 1867 in The Land We Love, a Charlotte, North Carolina, magazine. Two collections of his poetry were published posthumously. In 1879 Kate Mason Rowland edited and southern poet Paul Hamilton Hayne wrote the introduction for The Poems of Frank O. Ticknor, M. D. An expanded edition, The Poems of Francis Orray Ticknor, edited by Ticknor's granddaughter, Michelle Cutliff Ticknor, appeared in 1911. In addition to his popular southern martial poetry, the collections include memorial and religious poems, humorous verses, and songs about home and nature.
Ticknor died in Columbus and was buried in Linwood Cemetery.