The Day

Prize-winning historian of literary titans dies after fall

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New York (AP) — Robert D. Richardson, a prize-winning historian known for his elegant and authoritat­ive biographie­s of such leading American thinkers as William James and Ralph Waldo Emerson, has died.

His friend Arlo Haskell told The Associated Press that

Richardson died last Tuesday after sustaining head injuries in a fall. Richardson, husband of the Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Annie Dillard, turned 86 just days before his death.

A native of Milwaukee, Richardson grew up in Massachuse­tts and had a close affinity with Emerson, Henry

David Thoreau and other New England writers. The house in Medford was the former meeting place for the Transcende­ntal Club, whose members included Thoreau and Margaret Fuller. Concord was home in the 19th century to Emerson and Thoreau, among others.

Richardson won the Bancroft

Prize in 2007 for “William James: In the Maelstrom of American Modernism,” which judges praised as “a virtual intellectu­al genealogy of American liberalism and, indeed, of American intellectu­al life in general, through and beyond the twentieth century.”

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