Charles Frederic Goss
Charles Frederic Goss
c. 1900
Born (1852-06-14 ) June 14, 1852Died May 7, 1930(1930-05-07) (aged 77) Resting place
Spring Grove Cemetery
Charles Frederic Goss (June 14, 1852 - May 7, 1930) was an American clergyman and author. His 1900 novel The Redemption of David Corson was a best selling book of that year.[ 1] He also edited and partly authored a series of volumes on the history of Cincinnati .
Goss was born in Meridian, New York on June 14, 1852. He graduated from Hamilton College in New York in 1873 (he also later received a Doctor of Divinity degree from there in 1898),[ 2] and from the Auburn Theological Seminary in 1876.[ 3] He married Rosa E. Houghton in 1876 and was ordained as a Presbyterian minister.[ 4] After serving in churches in Texas, New York, Pennsylvania, and Chicago (at Moody Church ), he became pastor of Avondale Presbyterian Church in Cincinnati in 1894.[ 4] [ 5] Popular columns that Goss wrote for the Cincinnati Commercial Tribune as The Optimist were published as a book of the same name in 1897, and his writing career grew from there.[ 6]
In January 1906, a play based on Corson written by Charlotte Blair Parker debuted on Broadway , and ran for 16 performances.[ 7] In 1914, the book was made into a silent film .[ 8]
A 2012 episode[ 9] of the HBO television drama Boardwalk Empire featured a character reading The Redemption of David Corson .
References
↑ Annual Bestsellers, 1900-1909 Archived 2013-09-28 at the Wayback Machine (Rankings from Bowker's Annual/Publishers Weekly)
↑ Alumni Notes , The Hamilton Review (June 1900), p. 24
↑ Alumniana , p. 336 (Vol. IV, No. 8) (February 1901)
1 2 Cincinnati, the Queen City, 1788-1912, Volume 4 , p. 24-27 (1912) (biographical sketch)
↑ 1876 Graduates and Students , General biographical catalogue of Auburn Theological Seminary, 1818-1918, p. 179 (1918)
↑ Charles Frederic Goss , Book News (Vol. XIX, No. 219) (November 1900)
↑ (28 January 1906). More New Plays , Telegraph Herald
↑ "The Redemption of David Corson"
↑ Season 3, Episode 34, "A Man, a Plan..."
External links
International National Other