Poetry Crosby's earliest published poem was sent without her knowledge to
P. T. Barnum, who published it in his
The Herald of Freedom. She was examined by
George Combe, a visiting Scottish
phrenologist, who pronounced her a "born poetess". She had experienced some temporary opposition to her poetry by the faculty of the Blind Institution, but her inclination to write was encouraged by this experience. The Institution found Hamilton Murray to teach her poetic composition, though he admitted his own inability to compose poetry. In 1841,
New York Herald published Crosby's
eulogy on the death of President
William Henry Harrison, thus beginning her literary career. Her poems were published frequently in
The Saturday Evening Post, the
Clinton Signal, the ''Fireman's Journal
, and the Saturday Emporium''. of
The Blind Girl (1844) Crosby was reluctant to have her poems published, as she considered them to be "unfinished productions", but she acquiesced eventually because it would publicize the Institution and raise funds for it. (She had had an illness that caused her to leave the NYIB in order to recuperate.) Her first book
A Blind Girl and Other Poems was published in April 1844 after encouragement by the Institution, including "An Evening Hymn" based on Psalm 4:8, which she described as her first published hymn. In 1853, her
Monterey and Other Poems was published which included poems focusing on the recent
Mexican–American War, and a poem pleading for the US to help those affected by the
Great Famine of Ireland. She stated in her 1903 autobiography, edited by
Will Carleton, that she "was under a feeling of sadness and depression at this time". In 1853, Crosby's poem "The Blind Orphan Girl" was included in Caroline M. Sawyer's
The History of the Blind Vocalists. Her third book ''A Wreath of Columbia's Flowers'' was published in 1858 at about the time when she resigned from the Blind Institution and got married. It contains four short stories and 30 poems.
Popular songs Crosby had been inspired by the success of the melodies of
Stephen Foster, so she and
George F. Root wrote at least 60 secular "people's songs" or
parlour songs between August 1851 and 1857, some for the popular
minstrel shows. (Root had taught music at the Blind Institution from 1845–50). The minstrel shows had a negative reputation among some Christians and classical musicians, so their participation in these compositions was deliberately obscured. "Like many cultured people of the day," writes Bernard Ruffin, "[Root] considered native American music rather crude." He chose to "Europeanize" his name (like many American artists and musicians of that era) to "George Friederich Wurzel" (German for Root), In the summer of 1851, George Root and Crosby both taught at the North Reading Musical Institute in
North Reading, Massachusetts. Their first song was "Fare Thee Well, Kitty Dear" (1851) which evoked old-South imagery. Crosby's lyrics were based on a suggestion by Root, which she described as "the grief of a colored man on the death of his beloved." It was written for and performed exclusively by Henry Wood's Minstrels and published by John Andrews, who specialized in printing "neat, quick & cheap," according to Karen Linn. "This song was not a hit, and had no lasting influence," according to Linn, as "its style is far too literary, the words not in dialect, the cause of sorrow seems to be a lover (rather than 'massa', or Little Eva, or homesickness: all more appropriate causes for slave sorrow according to the popular culture)". It was a hit that was "one of the most popular songs in the country" because of its performance by both Henry Wood's Minstrels and
Christy's Minstrels, selling more than 200,000 copies of
sheet music. It is described as being on "the fringes of blackface minstrelsy, although it lacks dialect or any hint of buffoonery", about a beautiful girl who died young. An article in the December 1854 issue of
New York Musical Review proclaimed the death of "Negro minstrelsy." It listed "Hazel Dell," along with
Stephen Foster's songs "
Old Folks at Home" (1851) and "
My Old Kentucky Home" (1853), as popular songs that were evidence of the "
bleaching process... observable in the gradual rejection of the plantation, and the adoption of sentiments and poetic forms of expression, characteristic rather of the intelligent Caucasian". Toward the end of 1853, William Hall & Son released "Greenwood Bell" at the same time as "Hazel Dell", but credited it to Root and Crosby. "Greenwood Bell" describes the funerals of a child, a young man, and an aged person, and the tolling of the bell at the
Greenwood Cemetery. and "They Have Sold Me Down the River (The Negro Father's Lament)" (1853). Their song "There's Music in the Air" (1854) became a hit song and was listed in
Variety Music Cavalcade as one of the most popular songs of 1854; it was in songbooks until at least the 1930s and became a college song at
Princeton University. "Honeysuckle Glen," "The Church in the Wood," "All Together Now," and "Proud World, Good-by." The most popular of these songs was "Rosalie, the Prairie Flower", about the death of a young girl. It was popularized in the 1850s by the Christy Minstrels; it sold more than 125,000 copies of
sheet music and earned nearly $3,000 (~$ in ) in
royalties for Root — and almost nothing for Crosby. Crosby also wrote the words for popular songs for other composers, including "There is a Bright and Sunny Spot" (1856) for Clare W. Beames.
Cantatas Between 1852 and 1854, Crosby wrote the
librettos of three
cantatas for Root. Their first was
The Flower Queen; The Coronation of the Rose (1852), often described as "the first secular cantata written by an American." It is an opera "in all but name," described as a "popular
operetta" which "illustrated nineteenth-century
American romanticism." In her 1906 autobiography, Crosby explained the theme of this cantata:
The Flower Queen was written as "a work for teenage girls (scored for first and second
soprano and
alto)." It was performed first on March 11, 1853, by the young ladies of
Jacob Abbott's Springer Institute, and almost immediately repeated by Root's students at the Rutgers Female Institute; it was praised by R. Storrs Willis. It was performed an estimated 1,000 times throughout the United States in the first four years after its publication. The success of
The Flower Queen and subsequent cantatas brought great acclaim and fortune to Root, with little of either for Crosby. The second Root-Crosby cantata was
Daniel, or the Captivity and Restoration, based on the Old Testament's story of
Daniel. It was composed in 1853 for Root's choir at the Mercer Street Presbyterian Church in Manhattan. This cantata comprised 35 songs, with music composed with
William Batchelder Bradbury and words by Crosby and
Union Theological Seminary student
Chauncey Marvin Cady. Some of its principal choruses were first performed on July 15, 1853, by the students at Root's New York Normal Institute. In 1854, Root and Crosby collaborated to compose
The Pilgrim Fathers, described as an "antebellum landmark" in dramatic cantatas. According to Blumhofer, it "featured the contemporary evangelical reading of American history." Crosby wrote the libretto for a cantata entitled
The Excursion, with music by Baptist music professor Theodore Edson Perkins, one of the founders of New York music publishing house Brown & Perkins. In 1886, Crosby and William Howard Doane wrote ''Santa Claus' Home; or, The Christmas Excursion'', a
Christmas cantata published by Biglow & Main.
Political songs In addition to poems of welcome to visiting dignitaries, Crosby wrote songs of a political nature, such as about the major battles of the
Mexican–American War and the
American Civil War. By the
1840 US Presidential election, she was "an ardent
Democrat" and wrote verse against Whig candidate (and ultimate winner)
William Henry Harrison. By 1852, she switched her political allegiance from support for the pro-slavery
Democrats to the
anti-slavery Whigs, writing the poem "Carry Me On" for them in 1852. After the election of Democrat
Franklin Pierce as US President in November 1852, she wrote: Though she considered herself a Democrat at the time, Crosby was a keen admirer of the leading
Whig,
U.S. Senator Henry Clay of
Kentucky, who in 1848 made a tour of large eastern cities. He visited the New York Institution for the Blind in
New York City, where Crosby lived. The visit came two years after the death of
Henry Clay Jr., in the
Mexican–American War. Crosby recalled that "the great statesman was never quite himself after his son's death, and I purposely avoided all mention of it in the address of welcome on the day he came to visit us, lest I mighty wound the heart of the man whom I had learned not only to venerate but to love; for Mr. Clay was always an especial favorite among public men. There was a strength in his character and an earnestness in his speeches that appealed to me more than I can tell. ... I would have challenged any person, whether Whig or Democrat, Northerner or Southerner to come within range of the man's eloquence without being moved to admiration and profound respect; for his personal magnetism was wonderful." Crosby was a strict
abolitionist and supported
Abraham Lincoln and the newly created
Republican Party. written before the outbreak of hostilities to the tune of
Dixie (the tune adopted later by the
Confederate States of America as a patriotic anthem). The first of the five
stanzas is: Crosby wrote the words and
William B. Bradbury composed the music, soon after they met in February 1864, for the popular patriotic Civil War song "There is a Sound Among the Forest Trees". Her text encourages volunteers to join the Union forces and incorporates references to the history of the United States, including the
Pilgrim Fathers and the
Battle of Bunker Hill. Also during the American Civil War, Crosby wrote "Song to Jeff Davis" directed at
Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederate States of America, which expressed her belief in the morality of the Union cause: "Our stars and stripes are waving, And Heav'n will speed our cause". She also wrote "Good-By, Old Arm," a tribute to wounded soldiers with music by Philip Philips, which extolls the virtues of her adopted state of Connecticut. ==Marriage and family==