Prentiss Ingraham

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Colonel Prentiss Ingraham (December 28, 1843 – August 16, 1904) was a Colonel in the Confederate Army, a professional military officer throughout the 1860s and a fiction writer.

Biography

Prentiss Ingraham was born near Natchez, Mississippi in Adams County. He studied at St. Timothy's Military Academy, Maryland, and at Jefferson College, Mississippi.

Later he entered the Mobile Medical College, but soon left to enter the Confederate Army where he became a Colonel in the Adacus Company Regiment.[1] He was also commander of scouts in Lawrence Sullivan Ross' Brigade, the Texas Cavalry. After the close of the war, he went to Mexico and fought with Juárez against the French, and still later went to South America.

He saw service on General Hoffmann's staff in the Battle of Sadowa, Austria, in 1866 was in Crete against the Turks, and in the Khedive's army in Egypt. In 1869 he went to London but soon came back to the United States and took up with the Cuban rebels against Spain, running the blockade in the Hornet several times before it was surrendered to the U. S. Navy. He was a Colonel in the Cuban army as well as a Captain in their navy, and was captured, tried as a filibuster and condemned to death by the Spaniards, but escaped.[2] Ingraham moved to the West where he met up with Buffalo Bill. Ingraham soon worked as an advance agent for Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show.

Writing career

Ingraham's literary career began in London in 1869. The author of The Masked Spy (1872) and is best known for his Buffalo Bill series. Other major works include the Buck Taylor series, Merle Monte series, and Dick Doom series. Ingraham claimed in 1900 to have written over 600 novels.

Pen names

As well as writing under his own name, Ingraham published under a number of pen names including:

  • Dr. Noel Dunbar
  • Dangerfield Burr
  • Major Henry B. Stoddard
  • Colonel Leon Lafitte
  • Frank Powell
  • Harry Dennies Perry
  • Midshipman Tom W. Hall
  • Lieut. Preston Graham

Death

Prentiss Ingraham spent his final days at the Beauvoir Confederate Home in Biloxi, Mississippi where he died of Bright's Disease, known to modern medicine as nephritis, on August 16, 1904, aged 60.

References

External links