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Brave and Bold book cover 1
Brave and Bold book cover 2
Brave and Bold
Series · 3 books · 1872-1875

Books in series

Brave and Bold book cover
#1

Brave and Bold

1874

Purchase one of 1st World Library's Classic Books and help support our free internet library of downloadable eBooks. Visit us online at www.1stWorldLibrary.ORG - - The main schoolroom in the Millville Academy was brilliantly lighted, and the various desks were occupied by boys and girls of different ages from ten to eighteen, all busily writing under the general direction of Professor George W. Granville, Instructor in Plain and Ornamental Penmanship. Professor Granville, as he styled himself, was a traveling teacher, and generally had two or three evening schools in progress in different places at the same time. He was really a very good penman, and in a course of twelve lessons, for which he charged the very moderate price of a dollar, not, of course, inclu-ding stationery, he contrived to impart considerable instruction, and such pupils as chose to learn were likely to profit by his instructions. His venture in Millville had been unusually successful. There were a hundred pupils on his list, and there had been no disturbance during the course of lessons.
Jack's Ward book cover
#2

Jack's Ward

1875

Excerpt from Jack's Ward: Or, the Boy Guardian "Jack's Ward" is founded upon a story which the author published some years since anonymously. It has been wholly rewritten, considerably enlarge, and, it is hoped, improved. I offer it to my young readers in its present form as the second volume of the "Brave and Bold" Series. I shall have reason to be gratified if it receives as warm a welcome as its predecessor.
#3

Slow and Sure, Or, from the Street to the Shop

1872

Excerpt from Slow and Sure: The Story of Paul Hoffman, the Young Street-Merchant She came up and looked over his shoulder. He had been engaged in copying a humorous picture from the last page of Harper's Wee/z ly. It was an ambitious attempt on the part of so young a pupil, but he had succeeded re markably well, reproducing with close fidelity the grotesque expressions of the figures intro duced in the picture.

Author

Horatio Alger Jr.
Horatio Alger Jr.
Author · 43 books

Horatio Alger, Jr. (January 13, 1832 – July 18, 1899) was a prolific 19th-century American author, most famous for his novels following the adventures of bootblacks, newsboys, peddlers, buskers, and other impoverished children in their rise from humble backgrounds to lives of respectable middle-class security and comfort. His novels about boys who succeed under the tutelage of older mentors were hugely popular in their day. Born in Chelsea, Massachusetts, the son of a Unitarian minister, Alger entered Harvard University at the age of sixteen. Following graduation, he briefly worked in education before touring Europe for almost a year. He then entered the Harvard Divinity School, and, in 1864, took a position at a Unitarian church in Brewster, Massachusetts. Two years later, he resigned following allegations he had sexual relations with two teenage boys.[1] He retired from the ministry and moved to New York City where he formed an association with the Newsboys Lodging House and other agencies offering aid to impoverished children. His sympathy for the working boys of the city, coupled with the moral values learned at home, were the basis of his many juvenile rags to riches novels illustrating how down-and-out boys might be able to achieve the American Dream of wealth and success through hard work, courage, determination, and concern for others. This widely held view involves Alger's characters achieving extreme wealth and the subsequent remediation of their "old ghosts." Alger is noted as a significant figure in the history of American cultural and social ideals. He died in 1899. The first full-length Alger biography was commissioned in 1927 and published in 1928, and along with many others that borrowed from it later proved to be heavily fictionalized parodies perpetuating hoaxes and made up anecdotes that "would resemble the tell-all scandal biographies of the time."[2] Other biographies followed, sometimes citing the 1928 hoax as fact. In the last decades of the twentieth century a few more reliable biographies were published that attempt to correct the errors and fictionalizations of the past.

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