and
Henry Bacon, Cambridge, Massachusetts Longfellow said the poem was a tribute to his ancestor Stephen Longfellow, who had been a blacksmith, a schoolmaster, then a town clerk. In 1745, this ancestor was the first Longfellow to make his way to
Portland, Maine, the town where the poet would be born. The poem was written early in Longfellow's poetic career, around the same time he published his first collection,
Voices of the Night, in 1839. The book included his poem "
A Psalm of Life". On October 5, 1839, he recorded in his journal: "Wrote a new Psalm of Life. It is 'The Village Blacksmith.'" It would be another year before the poem was published, however. Longfellow wrote to his father on October 25, 1840: "There will be a kind of Ballad on a Blacksmith in the next
Knickerbocker, which you may consider, if you please, as a song in praise of your ancestors at Newbury." The actual village blacksmith in the poem, however, was a Cambridge resident named Dexter Pratt, a neighbor of Longfellow's. Pratt's house is still standing at
54 Brattle Street in Cambridge. Several other blacksmiths have been posited as inspirations for the character in the poem, including "The Learned Blacksmith"
Elihu Burritt, to whom Longfellow once offered a scholarship to attend
Harvard College. Several people, both in the United States and in England, took credit for inspiring the poem with varying amounts of evidence. The Longfellow family became annoyed with the preponderance of claims. In 1922, the poet's son
Ernest Wadsworth Longfellow responded to these people in his book
Random Memories. In a section called "Quips and Cranks", he wrote: ==Publication and response==