John Holland (14 March 1794 â 28 December 1872) was an English poet, newspaper editor and writer on mining, botany, geology, topography and metallurgy.
Holland was born in a cottage in the grounds of the ancient Sheffield Manor in Yorkshire and initially trained by his father to follow him as a maker of optical instruments. However, he was a bookish young man, who taught himself Latin and soon began publishing his own poems. These eventually brought him to the notice of a local poet, James Montgomery, editor of the Sheffield Iris, who published both articles and poems of his in the paper, although commenting on the latter's "inaccuracies and imperfections" and remarking that "they would be twice as good if they were as short again." By 1813 Holland had become a Sunday School teacher and turned his hand to composing religious poetry and hymns. Some five years later he was appointed as a secretary of the Sheffield Sunday School Union.
In 1825, Holland was appointed as editor of the Sheffield Iris by a new owner, John Blackwell. In 1832, he moved to Northumberland to edit the Newcastle Courant, which Blackwell had bought, but returned to Sheffield in the new year and was elected curator of the Sheffield Literary and Philosophical Society, a position he held until his death. In 1835 he became co-editor of the Sheffield Mercury, serving until the paper was closed down by its new owner in 1848. Throughout his journalistic life, he wrote numerous works on botany, geology, local history and topography, in addition to biographies and sermons.
In 1819 Holland wrote a long topographical poem on Sheffield Park and sent it to Montgomery for corrections and suggestions. Previously his output had largely been anonymous or appeared under his initials; the poem now became the first published under his name and was followed by another in 1821 on the "plague village" of Eyam. That year he also published "The Cottage of Pella", a narrative poem in imitation of Montgomery's "The Wanderer of Switzerland". Another strong influence on him was the poet Thomas Campbell. Holland's poem "The Rainbow" (1820), published at the same time as one on the same subject by Campbell, was as frequently anthologised as the latter's. Holland then took Campbell's The Pleasures of Hope as a model for his own The Hopes of Matrimony (1822). As well as later productions, a good deal of poetry was included in some prose works, such as the serialised The Old Arm Chair (1823), his botanical work Memoirs of the Rose (1824), and his consideration of the Crucifixion, Cruciana: Illustrations of the most striking Aspects under which the Cross of Christ and Symbols derived from it have been contemplated by Piety, Superstition, Imagination and Taste (Liverpool, 1835). Since he continued to write at length on all occasions, much of his work is derivative and diffuse.
In 1827, Holland published the compendium, Crispin: anecdotes: comprising interesting notices of shoemakers who have been distinguished for genius, enterprise, or eccentricity, which included the history of shoes, the writings of shoemakers, and a survey of the manufacture of shoes. His The History and Description of Fossil Fuel, The Collieries and Coal Trade of Great Britain (1835, 2nd edition 1841) gave an equally encyclopaedic coverage of its subject. Its title page further identifies Holland as the author of A treatise on the progressive improvement & present state of the manufactures in metal (1831), published in three volumes as part of Dionysius Lardner's Cabinet Cyclopaedia.