Francis Parkman, whose epic seven-volume study, "France and England in North America," established him as one of this country's greatest historians, was born in Boston on September 16, 1823. His father was a prominent minister and the son of a wealthy merchant; his mother was descended from Reverend John Cotton, the famous New England Congregationalist. Frail health compelled Parkman to spend his early childhood on a farm in neighboring Medford, where he came to love outdoor life. After attending the Chauncy Hall School in Boston he entered Harvard in 1840. Under the influence of Jared Sparks, the college's first professor of modern history, the eighteen-year-old sophomore initially envisioned his monumental account of the conquest of North America. 'My theme fascinated me, and I was haunted with wilderness images day and night, ' recalled Parkman, who visited many of the battlefields of the French and Indian Wars during summer holidays. Though illness forced him to temporarily abandon his studies, he earned an undergraduate degree in 1844, with highest honors in history as well as election to Phi Beta Kappa, and completed Harvard Law School two years later.
In the spring of 1846 Parkman set out with his cousin Quincy Adams Shaw on a strenuous five-month expedition to the Far West. Shortly after returning to Boston he suffered a complete nervous and physical collapse and remained a partial invalid for the remainder of his life. While recuperating he dictated "The California and Oregon Trail" (1849), a gripping account of his wilderness adventures. Subsequently reissued as "The Oregon Trail, " the perennially popular travelogue was praised by Herman Melville and later hailed by Bernard DeVoto as 'one of the exuberant masterpieces of American literature.' Still battling severe headaches and partial blindness, Parkman finished "History of the Conspiracy of Pontiac" (1851), a prelude to his epic lifework. Over the next decade recurring neurological problems impeded progress on "France and England in North America, " but he managed to write "Vassall Morton" (1856), a semiautobiographical novel, "and The Book of Roses" (1866), a study of horticulture.
"Pioneers of France in the New World, " the first volume of Parkman's monumental account of the struggle between England and France for dominance of North America, was published in 1865. 'Faithfulness to the truth of history involves far more than a research, however patient and scrupulous, into special facts, ' wrote Parkman in his Preface to Pioneers. 'The narrator must seek to imbue himself with the life and spirit of the time.' He expanded his dramatic 'history of the American forest' with "The Jesuits in North America in the Seventeenth Century" (1867), "The Discovery of the Great West" (1869), "The Old Regime in Canada" (1874), and "Count Frontenac and New France under Louis XIV" (1877). 'Like fellow historians of the Romantic school, Parkman believed that the re-creation of the past demanded imaginative and literary art, ' observed historian C. Vann Woodward. 'He looked to such writers as Sir Walter Scott, James Fenimore Cooper and Lord Byron more than to historians for inspiration in his narrative style.'
Fearing he might not live to complete his vast work, Parkman next wrote "Montcalm and Wolfe" (1884), the climactic final volume of "France and England in North America.