Picture of author.

Elbert Hubbard (1856–1915)

Author of A Message to Garcia

423+ Works 2,558 Members 21 Reviews 5 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Elbert Hubbard by Leon Gaspard in the 1908 Roycrofters book White Hyacinths.

Series

Works by Elbert Hubbard

A Message to Garcia (1899) 482 copies, 11 reviews
Elbert Hubbard's Scrap Book (1923) — Author — 300 copies, 1 review
The Note Book of Elbert Hubbard (1927) — Author — 129 copies
Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great {complete} (2015) — Author — 69 copies, 1 review
Little Journeys to the Homes of Great Businessmen {complete} (2005) — Author — 46 copies, 1 review
An American Bible (1911) 45 copies
Little Journeys to the Homes of American Statesmen {complete} (2006) — Author — 40 copies, 1 review
Little journeys to the homes of great teachers (1998) — Author — 33 copies
[Pamphlets] (1998) 16 copies
The Roycroft Dictionary (2005) 11 copies
Pig-Pen Pete or Some Chums of Mine (1914) 11 copies, 1 review
Health and wealth (2007) 10 copies
Abe Lincoln and Nancy Hanks (2003) — Author — 8 copies
Walt Whitman (1900) — Contributor — 6 copies
Justinian and Theodora (1906) 5 copies
Hollyhocks and Goldenglow (2005) 4 copies
Hundred point man (1998) 3 copies
Jesus Was an Anarchist (2017) 3 copies
The book of Job (2010) 3 copies
Scrapbook (1923) 3 copies
Dreams and Their Meaning (1922) 3 copies
Respectability (2010) 3 copies
The Fra 2 copies
John Alexander Dowie (2006) 2 copies
The Age Of The Auto (2012) 2 copies
The Elbert Hubbard book (1934) 2 copies
Courtesy As An Asset (2006) 2 copies
Initiative (2006) 1 copy
Vivisection - Pamphlet (2006) 1 copy
Dipsy Chanty (1899) — Designer — 1 copy
The Philistine (2014) 1 copy
John D. Rockefeller (2005) 1 copy
Frederick The Eighth (2010) 1 copy
Great Teachers (1928) 1 copy
Pensions For Mothers (2006) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Rubáiyat of Omar Khayyám (FitzGerald) (1120) — Illustrator, some editions — 6,050 copies, 87 reviews
Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (1751) — Designer, some editions — 334 copies, 3 reviews
Inspirational Classics for Latter-Day Saints (2000) — Contributor — 24 copies
Great Narrative Essays (1968) — Contributor — 19 copies
Utopiasosialistit (2009) 10 copies
The loving cup; original toasts (1909) — Contributor, some editions — 5 copies

Tagged

18th century (16) 19th century (50) 20th century (36) anthology (30) art (25) arts and crafts (29) bibliography (24) biography (205) education (20) Elbert Hubbard (60) England (28) essays (47) history (48) Hubbard (17) Kindle (19) leather (23) literature (28) Little Journeys (44) non-fiction (82) philosophy (88) politics (22) printing (20) quotations (22) Roycroft (97) Roycrofters (87) science (19) to-read (35) ~CAT~ (17) ~CVR~ (27) ~EDT~ (27)

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Hubbard, Elbert Green
Birthdate
1856-06-19
Date of death
1915-05-07
Gender
male
Occupations
editor
publisher
writer
artist
Organizations
Roycroft
Relationships
Hubbard, Alice (spouse)
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Bloomington, Illinois, USA
Places of residence
Hudson, Illinois, USA
New York, New York, USA
East Aurora, New York, USA
Buffalo, New York, USA
Place of death
At sea (RMS Lusitania)
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

23 reviews
Писмо до Гарсия всъщност не е книга, а кратко есе отпреди 150 г. относно достойнствата на разсъдливия и изпълнителен работник/служител, който не задава излишни въпроси, а просто върши каквото трябва. Написано е яко.

Трябва да има едно такова и за достойнствата на show more разсъдливия шеф обаче. Забележете, че есето почва с това как съветникът казва "Има един човек, който ще свърши работата". Правилният човек, за правилната работа няма нужда да задава излишни въпроси, ама първо трябва да го намериш и наемеш... show less
I found the story of the story as fascinating as the story itself.
The little article was written (the author explains in the forward "Apologia"), after a conversation between his young sons about who the 'real' hero of the Spanish-American War was. One son asserted that is was actually Col. Andrew Summers Rowan, whom had been summoned by Pres. McKinley to deliver a message secretly to the leader of the insurgents, General Garcia, in Cuba. The problem was that no one quite knew for sure show more where Garcia was. Rowan (only a Lt. at the time) was sent to find him and deliver the message as quickly as possible, alone and unguarded. He managed to find him in the (then) jungles on Cuba after only 4 days, and the later victory that happened was surely as a result of this. Rowan ended up being decorated for deed, and Pres. McKinley said "I regard this achievement as one of the most hazardous and heroic deeds in military warfare."
Upon reflecting on the conversation between his sons, the author realized that the one son was accurate, and wrote the article in the space of an hour for his magazines. He enlarged the meaning of the heroics Rowan did to apply to other areas of life-- labor, politics, family, etc. asking why are there not more Rowans in this world who are willing to go the extra mile and give something their all. He didn't highly regard it-- didn't even title it, but looked at it as more filler between the other stuff. When record numbers started pouring in for copies of reprints, he came figured out it was for this one article. It ended up in a visiting Prince from Russia's hands who took it back, had it translated and distributed to every soldier then serving in the Russian Army during the Russo-Japanese War. Upon taking Russian soldiers prisoners-of-war and finding a copy of this on each of them, the Japanese Government decided it must be very important and had it translated, and on order of the Mikado, had a copy distributed to every government employee-- soldier or civilian. By 1913, more copies had been printed world-wide than "any other literary venture has ever attained during the lifetime of its author, in all history-- thanks to a series of lucky accidents." (1913 figures)
The author, Elbert Hubbard, was well known at the time, not only for publishing his magazines "The Philistine" and "The Fra", but also printing fine editions of books out of publishing firm, The Roycroft Shop. He perished on board the Lusitania when it was sank by a German torpedo in 1915.
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Elbert Hubbard (1856-1915) was a writer, publisher, freethinker, and homespun philosopher. An account of his extraordinary life can be read online here: http://city-journal.org/html/17_2_urbanities-elbert_hubbard.html

Hubbard wrote many biographical sketches of famous people, which he published in a large series of books via his own Roycroft Press in upstate New York. The present work includes sketches on the eminent biologists Thomas Huxley, Ernst Haeckel, Alfred Russel Wallace, and Carl von show more Linne (Linnaeus), as well as John Tyndale and John Fiske. While there are much better sources of biographical material, these charming sketches contain telling anecdotes, and nuggets of information not available elsewhere.

Hubbard writes with uncommon wit and humanity, and his writing is peppered with aphorisms, clever bromides, and personal reflections. What emerges is the personal philosophy of a strong, independent thinker, though one not immune to the prejudices of his times.
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A quick and painless read. Unfortunately, it is one of those books that only really makes sense when you've been around long enough to tell someone else to read it. When it does make sense, though, there is no substitute for the way it illustrates its point.

Lists

1890s (1)

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Statistics

Works
423
Also by
7
Members
2,558
Popularity
#10,037
Rating
3.9
Reviews
21
ISBNs
267
Languages
4
Favorited
5

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