(This Strategy based winning and proven Pick 3 Lottery Sys...)
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Robert Walsh, the son of Robert and Elizabeth (Steel) Walsh, was born in Baltimore, where his father, since his arrival about 1770, had become a substantial merchant. The elder Walsh may have been born in County Longford, Ireland, or in France, and according to tradition, he succeeded to the title of Count Walsh and Baron Shannon. The Steel family was of Pennsylvania Quaker stock.
Education
The younger Robert was prepared by the French Sulpicians of St. Mary's Seminary, Baltimore, for Georgetown College, where he delivered an address on the occasion of Washington's visit to the college. In 1806, as soon as St. Mary's Seminary was empowered by the legislature to grant academic degrees, both the bachelor's and master's degrees were conferred upon him.
Career
He had read law under Robert Goodloe Harper and had become an ardent Federalist. A youth of means, he traveled and studied in France and the British Isles for three years, gaining a wide acquaintance in France through his family connections and in London through William Pinkney, whom for a time he served as a secretary. He contributed to the Parisian press, became an intimate of Canning, some of whose speeches he later edited, and is said to have written the article on military conscription in France which appeared in the Edinburgh Review of January 1809. On his return to America, Walsh settled in Philadelphia, and edited during its last years (1809 - 10) the American Register. For a brief period, Walsh practised law in a cursory way, but his interest was in books, in journalism, and in conducting a salon, which attracted local and visiting scholars and writers. In 1810, he published a brochure entitled A Letter on the Genius and Dispositions of the French Government, which was republished in England and favorably noticed in the Edinburgh Review and in the Quarterly Review (London). When illness compelled Joseph Dennie to relinquish in 1811 the active editorship of the Port Folio, to which Walsh had contributed, the latter founded the first American quarterly, The American Review of History and Politics, which survived only through eight issues because of its Federalist tone and the War of 1812. In 1813 he published Essay on the Future State of Europe and Correspondence Respecting Russia Between Robert Goodloe Harper, Esq. , and Robert Walsh, Jun. In 1817 he founded another American Register, which survived for about a year. He wrote biographical sketches for the Encyclopædia Americana (1829 - 33), edited by Francis Lieber, and a life of Franklin for Delaplaine's Repository of the Lives and Portraits of Distinguished American Characters (1815). In 1819 he published An Appeal from the Judgments of Great Britain Respecting the United States of America, which brought congratulatory notes from Jefferson, John Adams, and John Quincy Adams and a vote of thanks from the Pennsylvania legislature, but occasioned denunciatory notices in British publications. In 1820, Walsh in association with William Fry founded the National Gazette and Literary Register, with which he maintained his connection for fifteen years. A successful liberal tri-weekly, it soon became a daily despite its unpopular support of abolition. In the meantime, Walsh edited (1822 - 23) the Museum of Foreign Literature and Science, founded by Eliakim Littell, and in 1827 established the American Quarterly Review, which he conducted for ten years. He also edited with introductory material many volumes of The Works of the British Poets, issued first by Mitchell, Ames & White and later by S. F. Bradford of Philadelphia, contributed an article on Madame de Stael to the Philadelphia Year Book (1836), and published Didactics: Social, Literary and Political (2 vols. , 1836), in which he expressed his views on a multiplicity of subjects. Edgar Allan Poe described him as "one of the finest writers, one of the most accomplished scholars, and when not in too great a hurry, one of the most accurate thinkers in the country". Aside from his literary activity, Walsh won some reputation as an educator, serving as professor of English in the University of Pennsylvania (1818 - 28), as a trustee (1828 - 33), and as a manager of Rumford's Military Academy at Mount Airy, Pa. On January 17, 1812, he was elected to membership in the American Philosophical Society. Ill health finally forced his retirement from many of his activities and in 1837 he settled permanently in Paris. For both financial and social reasons, he welcomed an appointment as consul-general in 1844, in which position he served until 1851. He died in Paris and was buried at Versailles.
(This Strategy based winning and proven Pick 3 Lottery Sys...)
Connections
On May 8, 1810, he was married by Bishop Michael Egan to Anna Maria, daughter of Jasper Moylan and a niece of Stephen Moylan and of Bishop Moylan of Cork. They had twelve children. He married as his second wife a Mrs. Stocker of Philadelphia.