John Keats: Lost and Found
- by Bruce E. McKinney
John Keats: Lost and Found
John Keats, the 19th century romantic poet, only appears on front pages anymore when something prized was stolen or sold for giant sums. He’s in the news again. Recently a volume of his letters to Fanny Brawne, his fiancée and muse, written during 1819-1820, were rediscovered after a previously undisclosed theft dating back to the 1980’s. The present owners, descendants of John Hay “Jock” Whitney and his wife Betsey, have been reunited with this absconded volume and have announced it will be sold at auction.
We know this because this story was widely mentioned in newspapers, among them on the front page of the New York Times.
The particulars of this case are almost standard issue. Something was taken a long time ago and decades later the material casually reappears. Ten years ago, that might have worked but anymore, it’s relatively easy to identify material that is thought to be lost or stolen.
The resolution of the theft of Keats’s bound letters was publicly announced on Monday, April 20, 2026, when the Manhattan District Attorney's office officially returned the bound volume containing 37 letters to the heirs of the Whitney family.
The Disappearance: The letters were part of the private collection of John Hay "Jock" Whitney, a former US ambassador and publisher. They were reported stolen from his Long Island estate sometime between 1982 and 1989.
The Recovery: In January 2025, a young man walked into B&B Rare Books in Manhattan attempting to sell the collection, claiming he had inherited it from his grandfather. The dealers, suspicious of the "bounty," checked the Art Loss Register and alerted authorities.
The total recovered haul (which also included works by Oscar Wilde and James Joyce) is valued at roughly $3 million, with the Keats letters alone accounting for about $2 million.
The Whitney family has announced they plan to auction the letters and donate the proceeds to their family foundation.