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187,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/187,"WINSLOW, Mrs. Celeste M.A.",,"Celeste M. A. Winslow was born in Charlemont, Massachusetts, on November 22, 1837.
A prolific writer, Celeste penned articles for numerous periodicals. Her poem ""Perplexed"" appeared in The Atlantic Monthly in June 1876, while her poem ""Ah, Dawn, Delay"" graced the pages of the same magazine in October 1879. Another poem, ""Change,"" was published in Scribner's Monthly in October 1881. She also wrote for The Independent, penning ""The Robin"", which was reprinted in other periodicals, in 1886.""",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-8111887.0155433 5255466.2017895)|POINT(-8235124.4805173 4977706.1336166)|POINT(-9762045.4864363 5139085.0038897)|POINT(-10172497.399164 4922977.2213718)|POINT(-10236952.326092 4972019.93531)|13|-8111650.3145503|5255236.7864451|osm
Celeste M. A. Winslow was born in Charlemont, MA on November 22, 1837. She later lived in Keosauqua, IA, Keokuk, IA, Chicago, IL, and New York, NY.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Celeste Mary Augusta Hall Winslow Fnd A Grave^^St. Landry democrat. (Opelousas, La.), June 12, 1886, Image 6",,,"November 22, 1837","Charlemont, MA","June 17, 1908",Author^^Editor^^Journalist,,"
^^",Author,"Winslow, Celeste M.A.",,"WINSLOW, Mrs. Celeste M.A.",,1831-1840,Female,American,,,,,,MA,Married,,Yes,,1837,"Keokuk Female Seminary",,,"Charlemont, MA; Keosauqua, IA; Keokuk, IA; Chicago, IL; New York, NY","Hall, Mary Richards",,Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"791",,,,"Charlemont, MA^^Keosauqua, IA^^Keokuk, IA^^Chicago, IL^^New York, NY",,,"Happy Hours^^Winslow's Monthly","ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^BROOKLYN MAGAZINE^^CHICAGO ADVANCE^^GOOD COMPANY^^HAPPY HOURS^^INDEPENDENT^^LIPPINCOTT'S^^MANHATTAN MAGAZINE^^SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE^^SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY^^WINSLOW'S MONTHLY",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Hall, Celeste Mary Augusta",,,,"1831-1840,1837,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,Brooklyn Magazine,Celeste Winslow,Charlemont,Chicago Advance,editor,Good Company,Happy Hours,Independent,journalist,Keokuk Female Seminary,Lippincott's Magazine,MA,Manhattan Magazine,November,Scribner's Magazine,Scribner's Monthly,Winslow's Monthly,women as authors,Writing/Publishing",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/fc720053e5e2e8248f92abe5ebcfea48.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
181,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/181,"MILLER, Mrs. Emily Huntington",,"Emily Huntington Miller was born in Brooklyn, Connecticut, on October 22, 1833. She was a writer from a young age, and she graduated from Oberlin College.
In 1860, Emily married John E. Miller, whose career achievements included being a principal, a professor, and the publisher of Little Corporal, which later merged with St. Nicholas. Emily, John, and their children lived in Granville, Illinois, Plainfield, Illinois, Evanston, Illinois, and St. Paul, Minnesota. Emily wrote for and edited Little Corporal, and she contributed to newspapers and periodicals such as Harper's Magazine,The Independent, and Our Young Folks. A prolific author, Emily penned several books, including The Royal Road to Fortune (1869), Hang Up the Baby's Stocking (1870), The Parish of Fair Haven (1876), What Tommy Did (1876), The Bears' Den (1877), Captain Fritz: His Friends and Adventures (1877), Summer Days at Kirkwood (1877), A Year at Riverside Farm (1877), and Little Neighbors (1879). Also a lyricist, she wrote the words for Only Four! Song and Chorus (1868), by George F. Root. In addition to her literary career, she was involved with missionary and Sunday school work for the Methodist Episcopal Church. From its start in 1874, Emily was active in the Chautauqua Literary and Scientific Circle. She also was an early temperance advocate.
After John's death in 1882, Emily continued her literary activity. She wrote for various periodicals, including Atlantic Monthly and Ladies' Home Journal,and published books of prose, poetry, and lyrics, including Home Talks about the Word: For Mothers and Children (1894), Songs from the Nest (1894), From Avalon, and Other Poems (1896), and An Offering of Thanks (1899).
Emily became president of the Woman's College of Northwestern University in 1891, and served as president of the Chautauqua Woman's Club for several years.
She passed away on November 2, 1913.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-8009375.1074167 5129284.4929618)|POINT(-10374406.107933 5607141.7720503)|POINT(-9764408.7640881 5166895.5417318)|POINT(-9932681.1495577 5050868.0143789)|POINT(-9817991.1209086 5105019.7673436)|POINT(-9152323.1367448 5055821.7906921)|12|-8008806.6816650|5128870.5088225|osm
Emily Huntington Miller was born in Brooklyn, CT on October 22, 1833. She later lived in Oberlin, OH, Gransville, IL, Plainfield, IL, Evanston, IL, and St. Paul, MN.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Emily Huntington Miller. Hymntimc.com^^Chicago tribune. (Chicago, Ill.), January 23, 1866, Image 1^^Cleveland daily leader. ([Cleveland, Ohio]), May 12, 1866, Morning Edition., Image 4",,,"October 22, 1833","Brooklyn, CT",,"Author^^Journalist^^Poet^^Lyricist^^editor^^College administrator^^Temperance reformer^^Missionary^^Sunday school teacher^^Public Speaker",,"Emily Huntington Miller. Hymntimc.com^^Chicago tribune. (Chicago, Ill.), 23 Jan. 1866. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. <http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn82014064/1866-01-23/ed-1/seq-1/>^^Cleveland daily leader. ([Cleveland, Ohio]), 12 May 1866. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Lib. of Congress. <http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn85042437/1866-05-12/ed-1/seq-4/>","author and educator","Miller, Emily Huntington, 1833-1913","Miller, Emily Huntington, 1833-1913","MILLER, Mrs. Emily Huntington","E. H. M.",1831-1840,Female,American,,,,,"Miller, Emily Huntington. Captain Fritz: His Friends and Adventures. New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, 1877.
^^Root, Geroge F. Only Four: Song and Chorus . Words by Emily Huntington Miller. Chicago: Root & Cady, 1868.
^^Miller, Emily Huntington. From Avalon, and Other Poems Chicago: A.C. McClurg and Company, 1896.",CT,Married,"26 or 27",Yes,,1833,"Oberlin College",,,"Brooklyn, CT; Oberlin, OH, Gransville, IL; Plainfield, IL; Evanston, IL; St. Paul, MN; Evanston, IL","Miller, John E.^^Root, George F. (George Frederick), 1820-1895",,"Education^^Music^^Public Speaking^^Reform^^Religion/Missionary^^Temperance^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"505-506",,,,"Brooklyn, CT^^Oberlin, OH^^Gransville, IL^^Plainfield, IL^^Evanston, IL^^St. Paul, MN",,Chautaquia,,"ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^HARPER'S MAGAZINE^^INDEPENDENT^^LADIES' HOME JOURNAL^^LITTLE CORPORAL (CHICAGO)^^OUR YOUNG FOLKS",,,Yes,Yes,,,,,,,,"E.P. Dutton (Firm)^^Root & Cady^^A.C. McClurg & Co.",,"Huntington, Emily","Northwestern University (Evanston Ill.).",,,"1831-1840,1833,AC McClurg & Co.,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,Brooklyn,Chautauqua,Chautauqua Woman's Club,college president,CT,E P Dutton,Education,educational administrator,Emily Huntington Miller,George F. Root,Harper's Magazine,Independent,journalist,juvenile literature,Little Corporal,lyricist,missionary work,Music,Northwestern University,Oberlin College,October,Our Young Folks,poet,Poets,pseudonym,Reform,reformer,Religion/Missionary,Root & Cady,Sunday School teaching,Temperance,temperance reformer,women as authors,Writing/Publishing",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/3ff80b0f5e123142db8651e9d5223ffb.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
170,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/170,"WALLACE, Mrs. Susan Arnold Elston",,"Susan Arnold Elston Wallace was born in Crawfordsville, Indiana, on December 25, 1830. After going to school in Quaker Hill, New York, Susan returned to Crawfordsville and later married Lew Wallace and became a mother.
Since her husband's career took the family to Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Constantinople, Turkey, Susan had a great deal of material to write about. She wrote several books, including The Land of the Pueblos, and contributed to The Atlantic Monthly, The Independent, Literature, The New York Tribune, and other periodicals. In addition to his political work, Lew Wallace was an author who penned Ben-Hur. Zerelda Gray Wallace, his stepmother, was a temperance reformer, woman suffragist, and author. She is also in A Woman of the Century.
The Wallaces retired to Crawfordsville, Indiana. Both wrote, and their home was ""a literary and social center"" (A Woman of the Century, 742). Susan passed away on October 1, 1907.",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate","Both of the Susan Arnold Elston Wallace images are courtesy of The General Lew Wallace Study & Museum.",,,,,,"POINT(-11792473.022453 4246968.7404763)|POINT(-9673756.8372111 4874289.8201827)|POINT(3227018.4596947 5017200.7878275)|POINT(-8186770.5116036 5098197.7065855)|9|-9666152.5472266|4865602.2741874|osm
Susan Arnold Elston Wallace was born in Crawfordsville, IN on December 25, 1830. She later lived in Quaker Hill, NY, Santa Fe, NM, and Constantinople, Turkey.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Susan Ellston Wallace. General Lew Wallace Study & Museum. - includes a photo^^Susan Arnold Elston Wallace Find A Grave - includes a photo^^Wallace, Lew. Lew Wallace; An Autobiography. 2v. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1906.^^Morning appeal. [volume] (Carson City, Nev.), April 15, 1888, Image 2^^The Indianapolis journal. [volume] (Indianapolis [Ind.]), September 29, 1883, Page 5, Image 5^^The Indianapolis journal. [volume] (Indianapolis [Ind.]), April 01, 1886, Page 5, Image 5
A very interesting letter from Susan about the writing of Ben-Hur.
^^Savannah morning news. [volume] (Savannah), November 01, 1886, Page 7, Image 7^^The Indianapolis journal. [volume] (Indianapolis [Ind.]), July 30, 1887, Page 4, Image 4^^The Indiana State sentinel. [volume] (Indianapolis), December 14, 1887, Page 6, Image 6^^Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]), May 06, 1906, Page 2, Image 26^^The Lake County times. [volume] (Hammond, Ind.), October 03, 1907, EVENING EDITION, Image 1
Obituary^^Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.), October 06, 1907, Page 8, Image 24
Funeral information and a detailed obituary",,,"December 25, 1830","Crawfordsville, IN","October 1, 1907",Author^^Poet^^Philanthropist,,"^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^The Indiana State sentinel. [volume] (Indianapolis), December 14, 1887, Page 6, Image 6^^^^",author,"Wallace, Susan E. (Susan Elston), 1830-1907","Wallace, Susan E. (Susan Elston) 1830-1907","WALLACE, Mrs. Susan Arnold Elston",,1821-1830,Female,American,,,,Methodist,"Wallace, Susan E. The Storied Sea. Boston: James R. Osgood, Indianapolis: Bowen, Steward & Co., 1883.
^^Wallace, Susan E. The Land of the Pueblos. New York: John B. Alden, 1888.",IN,Married,21,Yes,Yes,1830,"Quaker school, Quaker Hill, NY",,,"Crawfordsville, IN; Poughkeepsie, NY,;Santa Fe, NM; Constantinople, Turkey.","Wallace, Lew, 1827-1905^^Wallace, Zerelda G.",,Philanthropy^^Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"742",,,,"Crawfordsville, IN^^Poughkeepsie, NY^^Santa Fe, NM^^Constantinople, Turkey",,"Crawfordsville Literary Society",,"ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^INDEPENDENT^^INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL^^LITERATURE^^NEW YORK TRIBUNE",,,,,,,,,,,,"Alden, John B. (John Berry), 1847-1924^^Bowen, Stewart and Company^^James R. Osgood and Company",,"Elston, Susan Arnold",,,,"1821-1830,1830,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,Bowen Stewart and Company,Constantinople,Crawfordsville,Crawfordsville Literary Society,December,IN,Independent,Indianapolis Journal,James R. Osgood and Company,Lew Wallace,Literature,Methodist,New York Tribune,philanthropist,Philanthropists,Philanthropy,poet,Susan Arnold Elston Wallace,Turkey,Writing/Publishing,Zerelda Gray Wallace","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/15b73875d0b1160de94d34a31fe8cf32.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/3ccd926d9da5195ab44fcacb0eda68de.JPG,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/3d0259e8fcf515a7e999d8804d241b64.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/f60ee8041094e322ef3696ca76e3c6a5.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/ffa5522e15df359cbf39b75d20321f58.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
112,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/112,"BURNHAM, Mrs. Clara Louise",,"Clara Louise Burnham, born in Newton, Massachusetts,
on May 25, 1854, spent her early years in New York City. However, her family moved to Chicago when Clara Louise was a young girl, and she lived most of her life there. She was the daughter of Mary Olive Woodman and popular composer George F. Root. Clara Louise, who married Walter Burnham, was a very popular novelist who also penned the lyrics to some of her father's works.
Sometimes known as ""Edith Douglas,"" Clara Louise wrote for
Wide Awake early in her career. Her works also appeared in
St. Nicholas and
Youth's Companion.
Her early fiction from the 1880s was published by Chicago’s Henry A. Sumner and Company, while her later work was published by Houghton, Mifflin and Company of Boston and New York and by Grosset & Dunlap of New York. May O. Root, Clara Louise's sister, illustrated her 1884 novel
Dearly Bought.
Literary World reviewed eight books by “Edith Douglas,” while
Critic, reviewed seven of her works. In addition, Clara Louise's books were noticed in
Atheneum (London),
Atlantic Monthly,
Catholic World,
Chautauquan,
Dial,
New Orleans Daily Picayune, and
Overland Monthly.
While she lived in Chicago, Clara Louise spent the summer months at her home, the Moorings, on Bailey Island, Maine. In 1915, she hosted actor Robert Dempster, her collaborator on an upcoming novel, at the Moorings.
Female screen director Lois Weber adapted
Jewel: A Chapter in Her Life, Clara Louise's 1903 Christian Science novel
, as the film
Jewel in 1915 and later as
A Chapter in Her Life in 1923.
In 1926, Clara Louise was one of many women honored at a breakfast during the Woman's World Fair in Chicago. The next year, she was honored at a dinner by the Society of Midland Authors.
Clara Louise passed away on Monday, June 20, 1927, at the Moorings. She was buried in Harmony Vale Cemetery, North Reading, Massachusetts.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-9755237.5150233 5141149.4008176)|POINT(-7927972.1356064 5210051.4101641)|POINT(-7792058.7390345 5424018.4706941)|7|-7880065.2281356|5279799.3027182|osm
Clara Louise Burnham was born in Newton, MA on May 25, 1854. She lived most of her life in Chicago, IL. and spent many Summers in Bailey Island, ME.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Casco Bay breeze. [volume] (South Harpswell, Me.), July 08, 1915, Image 1^^Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.), June 22, 1927, Page 13, Image 13^^Evening star. [volume] (Washington, D.C.), April 23, 1925, Page 12, Image 12^^The Indianapolis times. [volume] (Indianapolis [Ind.]), September 07, 1926, Home Edition, Page PAGE 4, Image 4^^Perth Amboy evening news. [volume] (Perth Amboy, N.J.), November 14, 1923, FINAL EDITION, Page FOUR, Image 4^^Clara Louise Root Burnham Find A Grave",,,"May 25, 1854","Newton, MA","June 20, 1927",Author^^Novelist^^Lyricist,,"^^^^^^^^^^^^",novelist,"Burnham, Clara Louise, 1854-1927",,"BURNHAM, Mrs. Clara Louise","Douglas, Edith",1851-1860,Female,American,,,,"Christian Scientist","Burnham, Clara Louise. No Gentlemen. Chicago: Henry A. Sumner & Company, 1881.^^Burnham, Clara Louise. A Sane Lunatic. Chicago: Henry A. Sumner & Company, 1882.^^Burnham, Clara Louise. Dearly Bought. A Novel. With 12 illustrations by May O. Root. Chicago: Henry A. Sumney & Company. Boston: Charles H. Whiting. 1884.^^Burnham, Clara Louise. Young Maids and Old. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1889.^^Burnham, Clara Louise. Jewel's Story Book. New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1904.",MA,Married,,Yes,,1854,,,,"Newton, MA; New York, NY; Chicago, IL; ","Dempster, Robert ^^Root, George F. (George Frederick), 1820-1895^^Root, May O.^^Weber, Lois, 1879-1939",,Music^^Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"139",,,,"Newton, MA^^New York, NY^^Chicago, IL",,,,"ST NICHOLAS^^WIDE AWAKE^^YOUTH'S COMPANION",,,,,,,,,,,,"Henry A. Sumner & Company^^Houghton, Mifflin and Company^^Grosset & Dunlap",,"Root, Clara Louise",,,,"1851-1860,1854,Atheneum,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,Catholic World,Chatauquan,Christian Scientist,Clara Louise Burnham,Dial,George F. Root,Grosset & Dunlap,Henry A. Sumner & Company,Houghton Mifflin & Company,Lois Weber,lyricist,MA,May,New Orleans Picayune,Newton,novelist,Novelists,Overland Monthly,pianist,pseudonym,Robert Dempster,St. Nicholas,Wide Awake,women as authors,Writing/Publishing,Youth's Companion","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/1bdefee7bd9d2e10a4b5b8f953a357ab.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/cb5fe6fc6ac9b3c614fac4ab49aa5a45.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/773e1668268341bac80855f0201e1472.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
104,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/104,"AUSTIN, Jane Goodwin",,"Jane Goodwin Austin was born in Worcester, MA on February 25, 1831. She married Loring H. Austin in 1850 and became the mother of three children.
A prolific writer, Jane was a frequent contributor to
Atlantic Monthly,
Galaxy,
Harper’s Monthly,
Peterson’s Magazine, and
Putnam’s Magazine.
Austin wrote many books, several related to the Plymouth Colony. She had a variety of publishers over the course of her career, including J. E. Tilton and Company, Sheldon and Company, J. R. Osgood and Company, Houghton, Mifflin and Company, F. M. Lupton Publishing Company.
Her books were widely noticed in periodicals, with
The Desmond Hundred (1882),
Standish of Standish (1889), and
Dr. LeBaron and His Daughters (1890) being reviewed by at least nine periodicals.
Over the course of her life, Jane also lived in Lincoln, MA, Concord, MA, and Roxbury, MA. She passed away on March 30, 1894.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-7992532.760613106 5200302.449687032)|POINT(-7942511.8169333 5230142.7489283)|POINT(-7914294.5355689 5209711.3701362)|POINT(-7937533.8554671 5224973.6948911)|9|-7989742.8090813|5193303.6842856|osm
Jane Goodwin Austin was born in Worcester, MA on February 25, 1831. She later lived in Lincoln, MA, Concord, MA, and Roxbury, MA. ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"February 25, 1831","Worcester, MA","March 30, 1894",Author,,"
- Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, State Census, 1855 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014.
Original data: Massachusetts. 1855–1865 Massachusetts State Census [microform]. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
^^
- Ancestry.com. Massachusetts, State Census, 1865 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.,2014.
Original data: Massachusetts. 1855–1865 Massachusetts State Census [microform]. New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
",author,"Austin, Jane G. (Jane Goodwin), 1831-1894","Austin, Jane G. (Jane Goodwin) 1831-1894","AUSTIN, Jane Goodwin",,1831-1840,Female,American,,,,,"Austin, Jane G. Mrs. Beauchamp Brown. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1880.
in
Internet Archive",MA,Married,"18 or 19",Yes,,1831,,,,"Worcester, MA; Lincoln, MA; Concord, MA; Roxbury, MA","Austin, Loring H.^^Goodwin, Isaac, 1786-1832^^Goodwin, John",,Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"36",,,,"Worcester, MA^^Lincoln, MA^^Concord, MA^^Roxbury, MA",,,,"ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^GALAXY^^HARPER'S MAGAZINE^^PETERSON'S MAGAZINE^^PUTNAM'S MONTHLY",,,,,,,,,,,,"Roberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.)",,"Goodwin, Jane",,,,"1831,1831-1840,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,Galaxy,Harper's Magazine,Isaac Goodwin,Jane Goodwin Austin,John Goodwin,Loring H. Austin,MA,Peterson's Magazine,Putnam's Monthly,September,women as authors,Worcester,Writing/Publishing",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/d2ce66418e8124028964561fe8c38ccc.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
101,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/101,"JACKSON, Mrs. Helen Maria Fiske",,"Helen Maria Fiske Jackson, better known as Helen Hunt Jackson, or ""H. H."", was an extremely popular writer. She was born in Amherst, Massachusetts, on October 18, 1831.
Jackson was a contributor to The Atlantic Monthly, Galaxy, Hearth and Home, The Independent, Nation, and Scribner’s Monthly.
During the 1870s, Helen began publishing juvenile fiction with Roberts Brothers. Mercy Philbrick’s Choice, a fictional work published by in 1876, was noticed in numerous periodicals. She continued to publish with Roberts Brothers as more and more readers knew of “H. H.”
Helen capitalized on her known name to support the Native American cause. However, for her A Century of Dishonor (1881), she chose Harper Brothers. When ""H. H."" published Ramona, her fictional work about Native Americans in 1884, she published it through Roberts Brothers. At least eleven periodicals reviewed this popular work.
She passed away on August 12, 1885.",,,,,"Ellis, Mallory ^^McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-8072624.434302 5217710.1913896)|9|-8071444.4376776|5214839.8170019|osm
Helen Maria Fiske Jackson was born on October 18, 1831 in Amherst, MA.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"October 18, 1831","Amherst, MA","August 12th, 1885",Author^^Novelist^^Philanthropist,,,author^^poet^^philanthropist,"Jackson, Helen Hunt, 1830-1885","Jackson, Helen Hunt 1830-1885","JACKSON, Mrs. Helen Maria Fiske","H.H^^Saxe Holme",1831-1840,Female,American,,,,,,MA,Married,21,Yes,,1831,"Ipswich Female Seminary (Ipswich, Mass.)",,,"Amherst, MA; Newport, RI; Colorado Springs, CO; New Mexico; San Francisco, CA; New York, NY","Bowen, Henry Chandler, 1813-1896^^Coronel, Mariana W.^^Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 1823-1911^^Loughead, Flora Haines^^Parkhurst, Emelie Tracy Y. Swett^^Thomas, Edith Matilda, 1854-1925",,Philanthropy^^Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"414",,,,"Amherst, MA^^Newport, RI^^Colorado Springs, Colorado ^^New Mexico^^San Francisco, California^^New York City, NY",,"New York Nation ",,"ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^HEARTH AND HOME^^INDEPENDENT^^NATION^^SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY^^WIDE AWAKE",,,,,,,,,,,,"Roberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.)^^Harper & Brothers",,"Fiske, Helen Maria",,,,"1831,1831-1840,Amherst,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,Edith Matilda Thomas,Harper & Brothers,Hearth and Home,Helen Hunt Jackson,Independent,Ipswich Female Seminary,MA,Mariana W. Coronel,Nation,October,philanthropist,Philanthropists,Philanthropy,poet,Poets,pseudonym,Roberts Brothers,Scribner's Monthly,Thomas Wentworth Higginson,Wide Awake,Writing/Publishing",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/3c3fef336a37177e69ccdadd6ffe5b2e.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
92,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/92,"MOULTON, Mrs. Louise Chandler",,"Author Louise Chandler Moulton was born on April 5, 1835. A native of Pomfret, Connecticut, she left her hometown to attend Emma Willard's Troy Female Seminary. Louise published her first works with Phillips, Sampson and Company and, as her friend Harriet Prescott Spofford noted in A Little Book of Friends, her publisher Moses Dresser Phillips said that the talented young author ""was more fit to be President of the United States than any man he knew"" (160).
During her career, Louise wrote several books and contributed to periodicals, including Atlantic Monthly, Century Magazine, Galaxy, Harper's Monthly, Independent, Scribner's Monthly, and Woman's Journal. In addition to Spofford and Phillips, Louise's friends included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, and Sarah Helen Whitman.
She passed away on August 10, 1908.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-8010380.8067151 5147100.1055785)|12|-8009224.6966629|5149065.7541718|osm
Louise Chandler Moulton was born on April 5, 1835 in Pomfret, CT.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"April 5, 1835","Pomfret, CT","1908
","Author^^Biographer^^Editor^^Poet^^Lecturer^^Travel writer",,"Moulton, Mrs. Ellen Louise [Chandler]
p. 264
in
Adams, Oscar Fay, 1855-1919 A Dictionary of American Authors. Fifth Edition. Revised and Enlarged. Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin and Company, 1905.
^^Fairbanks, Mary Mason. Emma Willard and her pupils; or, Fifty years of Troy female seminary, 1822-1872. New York: Mrs. Russell Sage, 1898
^^Spofford, Harriet Prescott. A little book of friends. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1916.","poet and author","Moulton, Louise Chandler, 1835-1908","Moulton, Louise Chandler 1835-1908","MOULTON, Mrs. Louise Chandler","Louise, Ellen",1831-1840,Female,American,,,,Congregationalist,"Book of the Boudoir; or, Memento of Friendship. A Gift for All Seasons. Edited by Ellen Louise. (1853) Boston: Phillips, Sampson & Company, 1853
in
Haithi Trust^^This, That, and the Other. With Illustrations by Rowse (1854 , 10th Thousand 1856 1857 1858) Boston: Phillips, Sampson & Company.^^Arthur O'Shaughnessy : his life and his work, with selections from his poems / by Louise Chandler Moulton. Cambridge [Mass.] : Stone & Kimball ; 1894.
in
Haithi Trust
^^Lazy tours in Spain and elsewhere, by Louise Chandler Moulton. London [etc.] Ward, Lock and co., limited, 1896
in
Haithi Trust
^^Bed-time stories. By Louise Chandler Moulton. With illustrations by Addie Ledyard. Boston, Roberts brothers, 1877.
in
Haithi Trust
",CT,Married,"19 or 20",Yes,Yes,1835,"Troy Female Seminary",,,"Pomfret, CT; Boston, MA (28 Rutland Square)","Bowen, Henry Chandler, 1813-1896^^Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882^^Hastings, Mary A.^^Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 1809-1894^^Ledyard, Addie^^Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 1807-1882^^Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891^^Marston, Philip Bourke, 1850-1887^^Miller, Joaquin, 1837-1913^^Moulton, William Upham^^O'Shaughnessy, Arthur William Edgar, 1844-1881^^Phillips, Moses Dresser, 1813-1859^^Seton, Bruce^^Sigourney, L. H. (Lydia Howard), 1791-1865^^Spofford, Harriet Elizabeth Prescott, 1835-1921^^Stedman, Edmund Clarence, 1833-1908^^Whitman, Sarah Helen, 1803-1878^^Whistler, James McNeill, 1834-1903^^Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892",,Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"526-527",,,,"Pomfret, CT^^Boston, MA","Ellen Louise Chandler Moulton was related to Henry Chandler Bowen, publisher of The Independent (New York). Phillips, Sampson and Company published many ads in The Independent and the firm's books were reviewed in The Independent.",,,"ACADEMY^^APPLETON'S^^ATHENAEUM^^ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^BOSTON SUNDAY HERALD^^CENTURY^^GALAXY^^HARPER'S MAGAZINE^^INDEPENDENT^^LITERARY WORLD^^LONDON QUARTERLY^^NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE (BAY STATE MONTHLY 1884-1886)^^NEW YORK TRIBUNE^^SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY^^WOMAN'S JOURNAL",,,,,,,,,,,,"Phillips, Sampson & Company^^Roberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.)^^Stone & Kimball^^Ward, Lock & Co.",,"Chandler, Ellen Louise",,,,"1831-1840,1835,Academy,Appleton's,April,Arthur William Edgar O'Shauugnessy,Atheneum,Atlantic Monthly,author,biographer,Biographers,Biography,Boston Sunday Herald,Century,Congregationalist,CT,editor,Galaxy,Harper's Magazine,Henry Chandler Bowen,Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,James Russell Lowell,Joaquin Miller,John Greenleaf Whittier,lecturer,literary annuals,Literary World,London Quarterly,Louise Chandler Moulton,Lydia Huntley Sigourney,Mary A. Hastings,Moses Dresser Phillips,New England Magazine,New York Tribune,Oliver Wendell Holmes,Philip Bourke Marston,Phillips Sampson & Company,poet,Poets,Pomfret,Public Speaking,Ralph Waldo Emerson,Roberts Brothers,Scribner's Monthly,travel writing,Troy Female Seminary,Woman's Journal,Writing/Publishing","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/1b05a731c1e167136ca8c3b38597b469.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/b7d9f83fe34ef6dddd5975555a344487.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/434133106939f274b1d92564414c48a5.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,1
90,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/90,"SPOFFORD, Mrs. Harriet Prescott",,"Harriet Prescott Spofford, born on April 3, 1835, was an author, biographer, novelist, and poet. A native of Calais, Maine, she attended Pinkerton Academy. Harriet became known in the literary world in 1859 when, as A Woman of the Century notes, ""she published her Parisian story, 'In A Cellar,' in the 'Atlantic Monthly,' which at once brought her into notice"" (674).
In addition to Atlantic Monthly, she published in several periodicals, including Harper's Magazine, Independent, The North American Review, and Scribner's Magazine.
Talented in a variety of fields, Harriet wrote several different types of books, including Art Decoration Applied to Furniture and The Marquis Of Carabas. Her A Little Book of Friends was about ten of her friends. Most of these women, including Louise Chandler Moulton, are in A Woman of the Century.
In addition to her literary activity, Harriet Prescott Spofford was a wife and mother who was very involved in the National Congress of Mothers.
Harriet passed away in Amesbury, Massachusetts on August 14, 1921, and was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Newburyport, Massachusetts.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-7488495.6938125 5649415.6581046)|POINT(-7890255.5818128 5283017.5249555)|POINT(-8576630.5360861 4709066.2115848)|POINT(-7899656.4032215 5214124.4730732)|POINT(-7940001.904568 5293716.3202568)|7|-7488531.5236699|5649069.676048|osm
Harriet Prescott Spofford was born on April 3, 1835, in Calais, ME. She later lived in Newburyport, MA, Derry, NH, Washington, DC, and Deer Island, MA.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Chicago tribune. (Chicago, Ill.), March 12, 1867, Image 2^^The Bedford gazette. (Bedford, Pa.), August 30, 1867, Image 3^^The Bedford gazette. (Bedford, Pa.), January 24, 1868, Image 2^^The Wichita daily eagle. (Wichita, Kan.), April 30, 1899, Image 15^^Harriet Elizabeth Prescott Spofford Find A Grave",,,"April 3, 1835","Calais, ME","August 14, 1921",Author^^Biographer^^Novelist^^Poet,,"^^^^^^^^Spofford, Harriet Prescott. A little book of friends. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1916.^^",author,"Spofford, Harriet Elizabeth Prescott, 1835-1921","Spofford, Harriet Elizabeth Prescott 1835-1921","SPOFFORD, Mrs. Harriet Prescott",,1831-1840,Female,American,,,,,"The Marquis Of Carabas. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1882^^Hester Stanley at St. Mark's. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1883.^^A Scarlet Poppy, and Other Stories. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1894.^^Art Decoration Applied to Furniture. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1878^^Spofford, Harriet Prescott. A little book of friends. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, 1916.",ME,Married,"29 or 30",Yes,,1835,"Putnam School (Newburyport, MA)^^Pinkerton Academy (Derry, N.H.)",,,"Calais, ME; Newburyport, MA; Derry, NH; Washington, DC; Deer Island, MA","Andrews, Jane, 1833-1887^^Booth, Mary L. (Mary Louise), 1831-1889^^Cooke, Rose Terry, 1827-1892^^Dodge, Mary Abigail, 1833-1896^^Fields, Annie, 1834-1915^^Higginson, Thomas Wentworth, 1823-1911^^Hopkins, Louisa Parsons Stone, 1834-1895^^Jewett, Sarah Orne, 1849-1909^^Moulton, Louise Chandler, 1835-1908^^Spofford, Richard S. (Richard Smith), 1833-1888^^Thaxter, Celia, 1835-1894^^Whitney, Anne, 1821-1915",,"Art/Design^^Reform^^Women's Rights^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"673-674",,,,"Calais, ME^^Newburyport, MA^^Derry, NH^^Washington, DC^^Deer Island, MA",,"National Congress of Mothers",,"ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^CENTURY^^GALAXY^^HARPER'S MAGAZINE^^INDEPENDENT^^NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW^^NORTHERN MONTHLY^^SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE^^SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY",,,,,,,,,,,,"Roberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.)^^Harper & Brothers^^Little, Brown and Company",,"Prescott, Harriet Elizabeth",,,,"1831-1840,1835,Annie Fields,April,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,biographer,Biographers,Biography,Calais,Celia Thaxter,Century,decorating,furniture,Galaxy,Harper & Brothers,Harper's Magazine,Harriet Elizabeth Prescott Spofford,Independent,interior decoration,Jane Andrews,Little Brown and Company,Louisa Stone Hopkins,Louise Chandler Moulton,Mary Abigail Dodge,Mary Louise Booth,ME,National Congress of Mothers,North American Review,novelist,Pinkerton Academy,poet,Poets,Putnam School,Reform,reformer,Richard Smith Spofford,Roberts Brothers,Rose Terry Cooke,Sarah Orne Jewett,Scribner's Magazine,Scribner's Monthly,Thomas Wentworth Higginson,Women's Rights",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/4443310c5b1650ef14cfdc38c4958331.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
54,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/54,"DORR, Mrs. Julia C. R.",,"Julia Caroline Ripley Dorr was born on February 13, 1825, in Charleston, South Carolina. She was the daughter of William Young Ripley and Zulma DeLacy Thomas. When Julia was a young girl, her father moved the family to his native Vermont, where he devoted himself to the Rutland marble quarries. After William built the Rutland Opera House, Julia worked to develop women’s appreciation for the arts.
In 1847, Julia married Hon. Seneca M. Dorr, a lawyer and legislator from New York. They had five children. Seneca encouraged her writing, and he sent Julia's first published poem to “Union Magazine” without her knowledge. Her first published short story, “Isabel Leslie,” won her one hundred dollars in prize money. Julia's novel “Farmingdale” was published under her pseudonym, Caroline Thomas, again with assistance and support from her husband. In addition to being a wife and mother, Julia was a prolific poet, an author, a wife, a mother, and an inspirational community member.
After Seneca passed away in 1884, Julia devoted some of her time to another cause. According to her “A Women of the Century” profile, ""she became the leader of a band of women who founded the Rutland Free Library, the success of which has been so remarkable"" (253). Surely, her works were in that library, as Julia’s poetry, stories, essays and letters won respect from her townspeople and famous male writers such as Longfellow, Emerson, Whittier, and Holmes. She rightfully earned her place in American literary history. Julia was honored as Vermont’s “unofficial poet laureate,” and she was bestowed the honor of Doctor of Letters from Middlebury College in 1910.
Julia Caroline Riley Dorr died on January 18, 1913, and was buried in Rutland's Evergreen Cemetery.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate^^Osher, Alana",,,,,,,"POINT(-8899047.2520633 3867151.3554872)|POINT(-8123498.0539327 5402272.6213461)|POINT(-8194816.0593401 5210267.6442841)|8|-8864555.1771829|3863960.7670789|osm
Julia C. R. Dorr was born in Charleston, SC on February 15, 1825. She moved to Rutland, VT at an early age, lived in Ghent, NY, during her early married life, and then returned to Rutland. ",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Rutlandhistory.com^^The Bennington evening banner. (Bennington, Vt.), June 04, 1910, Image 3^^Middlebury register. (Middlebury, Vt.), January 24, 1913, Page 7, Image 7^^The Barre daily times. (Barre, Vt.), January 20, 1913, Page 4, Image 4^^Knoxville daily chronicle. [volume] (Knoxville, Tenn.), February 11, 1871, Image 1^^Pittsburg dispatch. [volume] (Pittsburg [Pa.]), August 02, 1891, Page 13, Image 13^^The Topeka state journal. [volume] (Topeka, Kansas), September 05, 1914, HOME EDITION, Image 15",,,"February 13, 1825","Charleston, SC","January 18, 1913","Author^^Poet^^Library Founder",,"^^^^^^^^^^",poet,"Dorr, Julia C. R. (Julia Caroline Ripley), 1825-1913",,"DORR, Mrs. Julia C. R.","Thomas, Caroline",1821-1830,Female,American,,,,Congregationalist,"The Magazine of Poetry and Literary Review v.3 (1891). 15-18. This excerpt also includes her image and a biographical sketch by Mrs. George Archibald.
in
Haithi Trust",SC,Married,"21 or 22",Yes,,1825,"Middlebury Female Seminary^^Troy Conference Academy",,,"Charleston, SC; New York, NY; Middlebury, VT; Rutland, VT; Ghent, NY; Rutland, VT","Dorr, Seneca M.^^Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882^^Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 1809-1894^^Howells, William Dean, 1837-1920^^Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 1807-1882^^Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891^^Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892",,Libraries^^Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"253",,,,"Charleston, SC, ^^New York, NY^^Middlebury, VT^^Rutland, VT^^Ghent, NY",,"Rutland Free Library (Rutland, VT)^^Rutland Fortnightly Club",,"ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^GALAXY^^HARPER'S MAGAZINE^^HOUSEHOLD^^LADIES' REPOSITORY^^MAGAZINE OF POETRY^^NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE (BAY STATE MONTHLY 1884-1886)^^PITTSBURGH DISPATCH^^PUTNAM'S MONTHLY^^SARTAIN'S MAGAZINE^^SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE^^SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY^^UNION MAGAZINE",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Ripley, Julia C.",,,,"1821-1830,1825,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,Caroline Thomas,Century,Charleston,Congregationalist,February,Galaxy,Harper's Magazine,Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,Household,James Russell Lowell,John Greenleaf Whittier,Julia Caroline Ripley Dorr,Ladies' Repository,Libraries,Magazine of Poetry,Middlebury Female Seminary,New England Magazine,poet,Poets,pseudonym,Putnam's Monthly,Ralph Waldo Emerson,Rutland Free Library,Sartain's Magazine,SC,Scribner's Magazine,Scribner's Monthly,Seneca M. Dorr,Troy Conference Academy,Union Magazine,William Dean Howells,women as authors,Writing/Publishing","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/6f93b01d356d820d6732629415906583.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/03345bee51c22b4664cf1439c9977e6f.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/afa2fe5d333e6f24e6c0841ea66208d0.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/2b90eab758f86fa17d9fffe70074fc71.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
40,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/40,"ALCOTT, Miss Louisa May",,"Louisa May Alcott, author of Little Women and several other books, was born in Germantown, PA on November 29, 1832, but she spent most of her life in Concord, MA.
Alcott lived in Boston with her family during her youth and moved with them to Harvard where her father, transcendentalist Amos Bronson Alcott, had formed the Fruitlands community. Later, the family moved back to Concord. During the Civil War, Louisa worked as a nurse in Washington, D.C. While an illness halted her service shortly after it had started, the experience was the inspiration for Hospital Sketches (1863). James Redpath, her publisher, also published her On Picket Duty, and Other Tales the next year.
During her career, Louisa wrote numerous books under her own name and several thrillers under her pseudonym, A. M. Barnard. Her most famous book was Little Women published by Roberts Brothers in 1868. This book was illustrated by her sister May Alcott Nieriker, an artist whose profile is in A Woman of the Century. Louisa also edited Merry's Museum from 1868 to 1879 and wrote pieces for periodicals such as The Atlantic Monthly and The Independent.
Louisa's extensive social network included authors Ednah Dow Cheney, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Elizabeth Powell Bond, Henry David Thoreau, and her uncle, reformer Samuel Joseph May.
By 1883, Louisa was living in Concord and caring for both her elderly father and her niece Lu, whose mother May had passed away shortly after her birth. The Indianapolis Journal reprinted Louisa's letter to Lucy Stone that while she was interested in woman's suffrage, her family obligations prevented her from attending the Woman's Suffrage National Convention. Louisa also expressed her frustration at the lack of interest in the topic by many of Concord's women and hoped that the women at the Convention could help to provide motivation for ""these slothful sisters."" Later that year, Louisa was one of ten women who sent a joint letter to the Massachusetts and Republican State Central Committees. As The Greenville Times notes, ""They believe that the establishment of political rights for women is essential to the highest good of the state."" The other women were Lucy Stone, Julia Ward Howe, Mary G. Ames, Mary A. Livermore, Mary F. Eastman, Ednah D. Cheney, Mary C. Shannon, Mary Shannon, and Susan E. B. Channing. Louisa continued to support the cause during the 1880s.
She passed away on March 6, 1888 at age fifty-five and was buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetry in Concord, MA.",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-8368091.7670971 4871436.8678184)|POINT(-7941174.5421662 5229912.5997028)|POINT(-7911247.9526861 5214616.5818193)|POINT(-7968650.2947818 5236163.4634928)|POINT(-8575194.9093857 4700787.7685007)|POINT(-7856765.6692905 5212882.4167402)|7|-8326473.5966947|4845645.4917095|osm
Louisa May Alcott was born in Germantown, PA on November 29, 1832. While she was born in Pennsylvania, Alcott spent most of her life in Concord, MA. She also lived in Boston, MA, Harvard, MA, and Washington, DC.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"The Salt Lake herald. (Salt Lake City [Utah), March 25, 1888, Page 15, Image 15^^Louisa May Alcott Find A Grave^^Louisa May Alcott's Orchard House^^The Vancouver independent. (Vancouver, W.T. [Wash.]), January 03, 1878, Image 7^^Chicago daily tribune. [volume] (Chicago, Ill.), May 21, 1880, Page 11, Image 11^^The Indianapolis journal. [volume] (Indianapolis [Ind.]), January 27, 1883, Page 4, Image 4^^The Greenville times. [volume] (Greenville, Miss.), September 22, 1883, Image 1^^The Indianapolis journal. [volume] (Indianapolis [Ind.]), November 07, 1885, Page 2, Image 2",,,"November 29, 1832","Germantown, PA","March 6, 1888",Author^^Novelist^^Nurse^^Poet^^Editor^^Teacher^^Suffragist,,"^^^^^^^^^^^^
",author,"Alcott, Louisa May, 1832-1888","Alcott, Louisa May 1832-1888","ALCOTT, Miss Louisa May","Fairfield, Flora^^Barnard, A. M.",1831-1840,Female,American,,,,,"Alcott, Loisa M. Moods. Boston: Loring, 1865. In Haithi Trust^^Alcott, Louisa M. An Old Fashoned Girl. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1870. In Haithi Trst.^^Alcott, Louisa May. Rose In Bloom: A Sequel o ""Eight Cousins."" Boson: Robets Brothers, 1876. In Haithi Trust^^Alcott, L. M. Hospital Sketches. Boston: James Redpath, 1863. In Haithi Trust^^Alcott, Louisa M. Little Women or, Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy. By Louisa M. Alcott. Illustrated by May Alcott. Boston: Roberts Brothers, 1868. In Haithi Trust",PA,Single,,,Yes,1832,,,,"Germantown, PA, Boston, MA, Concord, MA, Harvard, MA, Concord, MA, Boston, MA, Washington, DC, Concord, MA","Alcott, Abba May, 1800-1877^^Alcott, Amos Bronson, 1799-1888^^Bok, Edward William, 1863-1930^^Cheney, Ednah Dow, 1824-1904^^Conway, Moncure Daniel, 1832-1907^^Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882^^Howe, Julia Ward, 1819-1910^^James, Henry, 1811-1882^^James, Henry, 1843-1916^^Livermore, Mary A. (Mary Ashton), 1820-1905^^Loring, Aaron Kimball, 1826-1911^^May, Samuel J. (Samuel Joseph), 1797-1871^^Nieriker, Mme. May Alcott
For Authority Heading, use: Alcott, May, 1840-1879^^Niles, Thomas, 1825-1894^^Parker, Theodore, 1810-1860^^Redpath, James, 1833-1891^^Sanborn, F. B. (Franklin Benjamin), 1831-1917^^Stone, Lucy, 1818-1893^^Thoreau, Henry David, 1817-1862^^Ticknor, William Davis, 1810-1864",,"Medicine^^Writing/Publishing^^Education^^Women's Rights",,,,,,"12-13",,,,"Germantown, PA^^Boston, MA^^Concord, MA^^Harvard, MA^^Washington, DC",,"Fruitlands (Harvard, Mass.)",,"ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^COMMONWEALTH^^INDEPENDENT^^NORWALK REFLECTOR (OHIO)^^PUTNAM'S MONTHLY",,,,,,,,,,,,"Redpath, James, 1833-1891^^Loring, Aaron Kimball, 1826-1911^^Roberts Brothers (Boston, Mass.)",,"ALCOTT, Miss Louisa May",,,,"1831-1840,1832,A. M. Barnard,Aaron Kimball Loring,Amos Bronson Alcott,Atlantic Monthly,Authors,Commonwealth,Concord,Education,Edward William Bok,Elizabeth Powell Bond,Fiction,Flora Fairfield,Franklin Benjamin Sanborn,Germantown,Henry Chandler Bowen,Henry David Thoreau,Henry James,Independent,James Redpath,Julia Ward Howe,Louisa May Alcott,Lucy Stone,MA,Mary Ashton Livermore,May Alcott Nieriker,Moncure Daniel Conway,Moods,Norwalk Reflector,November,Old-Fashioned Girl,PA,pseudonym,Putnam's Monthly,Ralph Waldo Emerson,Roberts Brothers,Rose In Bloom,teacher,Theodore Parker,Thomas NIles,William David Ticknor,Women's Rights,Writing/Publishing","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/70ad914d5ad2aa08933ccaa7bcf41e12.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/34f2948b9667e3b71f458b77464b7639.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/5a6698b428ff159094c9b65233943559.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
37,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/37,"DIAZ, Mrs. Abby Morton",,"Abby Morton Diaz was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts, on November 22, 1821. During the 1840s, Abby and some of her family members spent time at Brook Farm, the Uptopian community in West Roxbury, Massachusetts. Recalling her friends hip with Abby there, Ora Gannett Sedgwick later commented: ""Among these I must not omit to mention Abby Morton (Mrs. Diaz), who became very dear to me, and whose peculiar combination of liveliness and dignity, together with her beautiful singing, made her a favorite with all the members, old and new"" [Atlantic Monthly, 85 (509): 401].
Abby's career included being an industrial reformer, an Anti-Slavery advocate, a teacher, a housekeeper, a social worker, and an author. She was writing fiction by her early forties and contributed to The Arena, The Atlantic Monthly, Hearth and Home, The Independent, New England Magazine, Our Young Folks, and Wide Awake.
Diaz's three 1864 pieces in The Atlantic Monthly were ""The Schoolmaster's Story,"" ""Some Account of the Early Life of an Old Bachelor,"" and ""The Little Country-Girl.""
A popular juvenile fiction writer, she often published with James R. Osgood and Company. Her The William Henry Letters was published in 1872. During the Christmas holiday of 1877, her The Jimmyjohns & Other Stories received high praise from The Independent: ""The Jimmyjohns and Other Stories, by the charming juvenile writer, Mrs. A. M. Diaz, is one of the very best children's books of the year."" Some of her other works were: William Henry and His Friends, The Cats' Arabian Nights, or King Grimalkum, and Bybury to Beacon Street,
While writing, she also continued lecturing on topics such as ""Women's Work for the Millenium.""
In 1889, Abby wrote a piece about her hometown, ""A Plymouth Pilgrimage,"" for New England Magazine. Ten years later, Diaz penned ""Antislavery Times in Plymouth"" for the same periodical.
Abby continued to write and publish into the new century. Her The Flatiron and the Red Cloak; Old Times at X-Roads was published by T. Y. Crowell % Company in 1901. She passed away in Belmont, Massachusetts on April 1, 1904 and was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-7867118.4078894 5153791.9658614)|11|-7868351.2535525|5155028.6930923|osm
Abby Morton Diaz was born in Plymouth, MA on November 22, 1821.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"St. Paul daily globe. (Saint Paul, Minn.), November 08, 1889, Page 2, Image 2
^^The Wichita daily eagle. (Wichita, Kan.), August 23, 1903, Editorial Section, Image 22^^Abagail “Abby” Morton Diaz Find A Grave
^^Sedgwick, Ora Gannett, ""A Girl of Sixteen at Brook Farm,"" Atlantic Monthly, 85 (509):401.^^The Toledo chronicle. [volume] (Toledo, Tama County, Iowa), December 27, 1877, Image 2^^The Portland daily press. [volume] (Portland, Me.), December 15, 1883, Image 4",,,"November 22, 1821","Plymouth, MA",1904,"Author^^Housekeeper^^Public Speaker^^Reformer^^Social worker^^Teacher",,"^^^^^^^^^^","industrial reformer","Diaz, Abby Morton, 1821-1904","Diaz, Abby Morton 1821-1904","DIAZ, Mrs. Abby Morton",,1821-1830,Female,American,,,,"Christian Scientist",,MA,Married,,Yes,,1821,,,,"Plymouth, MA; West Roxbury, MA; Belmont, MA","Bowen, Henry Chandler, 1813-1896^^Eggleston, Edward, 1837-1902^^Farman, Ella^^Fields, James Thomas, 1817-1881^^Howells, William Dean, 1837-1920^^Livermore, Mary A. (Mary Ashton), 1820-1905^^Sedgwick, Ora Gannett",,"Anti-Slavery^^Education^^Public Speaking^^Reform^^Social Work^^Women's Rights^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"240-241",,,,"Plymouth, MA^^West Roxbury, MA^^Belmont, MA",,"Brook Farm Association for Industry and Education (West Roxbury, Boston, Mass.)^^Woman's Congress^^Woman's Educational and Industrial Union of Boston, Massachusetts",,"ARENA^^ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^HEARTH AND HOME^^INDEPENDENT^^NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE (BAY STATE MONTHLY 1884-1886)^^OUR YOUNG FOLKS^^WIDE AWAKE",,,Yes,Yes,,"Business Women's Club of St. Paul, Minnesota",,,,,,"James R. Osgood and Company^^D. Lothrop & Company^^Thomas Y. Crowell Company",,"Morton, Abagail.",,,,"1821,1821-1830,Abby Morton Diaz,Anti-Slavery,Arena,Atlantic Monthly,Christian Scientist,Education,Edward Eggleston,Ella Farman,Hearth and Home,Henry Chandler Bowen,Independent,industrial reformer,James Thomas Fields,MA,Mary Ashton Livermore,Massachusetts,New England Monthly,November,Our Young Folks,Plymouth,Public Speaking,Reform,Social Work,Wide Awake,William Dean Howells,Woman's Congress,Woman's Educational and Industrial Union of Boston,Women's Rights,Writing/Publishing","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/afc4e82663b6245dda6e95d44986ded0.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/f6c34a0beb4f4111ad3f37c1d452c476.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
30,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/30,"CHILD, Mrs. Lydia Maria",,"Lydia Maria Child was born on February 11, 1802, in Medford, Massachusetts. She gained early readers through her fiction, her biographies, and her periodical, Juvenile Miscellany. She bravely risked her established reputation in support of the anti-slavery cause in 1833. Lydia's An Appeal in favor of that class of Americans called Africans brought her intense, yet mixed, public attention. The next year, she again toiled for the cause by editing The Oasis.
Throughout her life, Lydia continued both her reform work and her writing. She authored several more books and contributed to periodicals such as Ladies' Repository, Living Age, and The United States Democratic Review. ""Harriet E. Hosmer. A Biographical Sketch,"" Lydia's contribution to the January 1861 volume of Ladies' Repository, focused on Hosmer, another woman in A Woman of the Century.
In addition to Hosmer, Child's large personal network included Rosa Miller Avery, Dr. Martha H. Mowry, and John Greenleaf Whittier.
Lydia passed away in Wayland, Massachusetts, on October 20, 1880, and was buried in that town's North Cemetery.",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-7915455.5722266 5223335.3296483)|POINT(-7923882.7545939 5216679.3365456)|POINT(-7943947.474516 5215434.2490147)|POINT(-8234637.4930441 4977867.9651375)|POINT(-7926825.5801826 5211186.0223027)|POINT(-7769097.7723381 5576315.5545773)|10|-7913984.1594325|5221287.6533206|osm
Lydia Maria Child was born on February 11, 1802 in Medford, MA. She later lived in Noridgewock, ME, Watertown, MA, Boston, MA, New York, NY, Newton, MA, and Wayland, MA.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Lydia Maria Francis Child Find A Grave",,,"February 11, 1802","Medford, MA","October 20, 1880",Author^^Editor^^Reformer,,"",author,"Child, Lydia Maria, 1802-1880","Child, Lydia Maria 1802-1880","CHILD, Mrs. Lydia Maria",,1801-1810,Female,American,,,,,"The coronal. A collection of miscellaneous pieces, written at various times. By Mrs. Child. Boston: Carter and Hendee, 1832.^^An Appeal in favor of that class of Americans called Africans. By Mrs. Child. Boston: Allen and Ticknor, 1833.^^The Oasis. Edited by Mrs. Child. Boston: Allen and Ticknor, 1834.^^The Rebels : or, Boston before the Revolution / by the author of ""Hobomok."" Boston: Phillips, Sampson and Company, 1850.^^Child, L. Maria, ""Harriet Hosmer. A Biographical Sketch."" Ladies Repository (Vol. 21, Isse 1, January 1861): 1-7. Courtesy of Making of America Michigan",MA,,,,,1802,,,,"Medford, MA; Norridgewock, ME; Watertown, MA; Boston, MA; New York, NY; Newton, MA; Wayland, MA","Avery, Rosa Miller^^Child, David Lee, 1794-1874^^Francis, Convers, 1795-1863^^Hosmer, Harriet Goodhue, 1830-1908^^Mowry, Martha H.^^Phillips, Moses Dresser, 1813-1859^^ Phillips, Wendell, 1811-1884^^Sedgwick, Catharine Maria, 1789-1867^^Whittier, John Greenleaf, 1807-1892",,"Anti-Slavery^^Public Speaking^^Reform^^Women's Rights^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"173-174",,,,"Medford, MA^^Norridgewock, ME^^Watertown, MA^^Boston, MA^^New York, NY^^Newton, MA^^Wayland, MA","Needs additional research and synthesis",,,"ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^COLUMBIAN MAGAZINE^^LADIES' REPOSITORY^^LIVING AGE^^UNITED STATES DEMOCRATIC REVIEW",,,Yes,Yes,,,,,,,,"Carter and Hendee^^Allen & Ticknor^^Phillips, Sampson & Company",,"Francis, Lydia Maria",,,,"1801-1810,1802,Anti-Slavery,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,biographer,Biographers,Biography,Columbian Magazine,David Lee Child,editor,February,Fiction,Harriet G. Hosmer,John Greenleaf Whittier,Juvenile Miscellany,Ladies' Repository,Living Age,Lydia Maria Child,MA,Medford,Moses Dresser Phillips,Public Speaking,Reform,reformer,Rosa Miller Avery,United States Democratic Review,Wendell Phillips,women as authors,Women's Rights,Writing/Publishing","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/cc9f2c39c78e8f6dd6997223ca2459ae.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/538faa167f5708226d450bea5f232ed9.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
23,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/23,"Atlantic Monthly",,"Periodical founded in Boston, MA in 1857","Phillips, Moses Dresser, 1813-1859",,"Phillips, Sampson & Company^^Ticknor and Fields",1857,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,,"Atlantic Monthly 1857-1901 at Haithi Trust, from Making of America Cornell",,,,,,Paper,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Atlantic Monthly",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Agassiz, Elizabeth Cabot Cary, 1822-1907^^Alcott, Louisa May, 1832-1888^^Austin, Jane G. (Jane Goodwin), 1831-1894^^Barr, Amelia E., 1831-1919^^Bates, Katharine Lee, 1859-1929^^Blackwell, Antoinette Louisa Brown, 1825-1921^^Blake, Lillie Devereux, 1833-1913^^Brotherton, Alice Williams^^Brown, Emma E.^^Catherwood, Mary Hartwell, 1847-1902^^Chandler, Amélie Rives
for LC Authority, use
Rives, Amélie, 1863-1945^^Child, Lydia Maria, 1802-1880^^Coates, Florence Earle, 1850-1927^^Cone, Helen Gray, 1859-1934^^Cooke, Rose Terry, 1827-1892^^Dall, Caroline Wells Healey, 1822-1912^^Davis, Rebecca Harding, 1831-1910^^Diaz, Abby Morton, 1821-1904^^Dodge, Mary Abigail, 1833-1896^^Dodge, Mary Mapes, 1830-1905^^Dorr, Julia C. R. (Julia Caroline Ripley), 1825-1913^^Foote, Mary Hallock, 1847-1938^^French, Alice
for LC Authority, use
Thanet, Octave, 1850-1934^^Goodale, D. H. R. (Dora Hill Read)^^Guiney, Louise Imogen, 1861-1920^^Hapgood, Isabel Florence, 1850-1928^^Hosmer, Harriet Goodhue, 1830-1908^^Jackson, Helen Hunt, 1830-1885^^Jewett, Sarah Orne, 1849-1909^^Kirk, Ellen Olney, 1842-1928^^Larcom, Lucy, 1824-1893^^Lathrop, Rose Hawthorne, 1851-1926^^Lippincott, Sara Jane
For LC Authority, use
Greenwood, Grace, 1823-1904^^Litchfield, Grace Denio, 1849-1944^^Miller, Emily Huntington, 1833-1913^^Moulton, Louise Chandler, 1835-1908^^Murfree, Mary Noailles, 1850-1922^^Oliver, Grace A. (Grace Atkinson), 1844-1899^^Peabody, Elizabeth Palmer, 1804-1894^^Perry, Nora, 1831-1896^^Piatt, Sarah M. B. (Sarah Morgan Bryan), 1836-1919^^Sherwood, M. E. W. (Mary Elizabeth Wilson), 1826-1903^^Spofford, Harriet Elizabeth Prescott, 1835-1921^^Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 1811-1896^^Thaxter, Celia, 1835-1894^^Wallace, Susan E. (Susan Elston), 1830-1907^^Ward, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, 1844-1911^^Wiggin, Kate Douglas Smith, 1856-1923^^Wilcox, Ella Wheeler, 1850-1919^^Winslow, Celeste M. A.^^Woolson, Constance Fenimore, 1840-1894",,,"Phillips, Sampson & Company^^Ticknor and Fields",,,,,,"1857,Abby Morton Diaz,Alice French,Alice Williams Brotherton,Amelia E. Barr,Amélie Rives,Amélie Rives Chandler,Antoinette Louisa Brown Blackwell,Atlantic Monthly,Boston,Caroline Wells Healey Dall,Celeste Winslow,Celia Thaxter,Constance Fenimore Woolson,Dora Read Goodale,Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz,Elizabeth Palmer Peabody,Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward,Ella Wheeler Wilcox,Ellen Olney Kirk,Emily Huntington Miller,Emma Elizabeth Brown,Florence Earle Coates,Grace Atkinson Oliver,Grace Denio Litchfield,Grace Greenwood,Harriet Beecher Stowe,Harriet Elizabeth Prescott Spofford,Helen Gray Cone,Helen Hunt Jackson,Isabel Florence Hapgood,Jane Goodwin Austin,Julia Caroline Ripley Dorr,Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin,Katharine Lee Bates,Lillie Devereux Blake,Louisa May Alcott,Louise Chandler Moulton,Louise Imogen Guiney,Lucy Larcom,Lydia Maria Child,MA,Mary Abigail Dodge,Mary Elizabeth Wilson Sherwood,Mary Hallock Foote,Mary Hartwell Catherwood,Mary Mapes Dodge,Mary Noailles Murfree,Moses Dresser Phillips,Nora Perry,Octave Thanet,periodical,Phillips,Rebecca Harding Davis,Rose Hawthorne Lathrop,Rose Terry Cooke,Sampson & Company,Sarah Morgan Bryan Piatt,Sarah Orne Jewett,Susan Arnold Elston Wallace,Ticknor and Fields",,Text,"A Woman of the Century Periodicals",1,0
19,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/19,"LIPPINCOTT, Mrs. Sara Jane"," ","Sara Jane Lippincott, an author and journalist, was born in Pompey, New York on September 23, 1823. She grew up in Rochester, New York and lived in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania after her 1853 marriage to Leander K. Lippincott. Later, she lived in Washington, D.C. and New Rochelle, New York.
Professionally, Sara was best known as ""Grace Greenwood."" Beginning in the mid-1850s, she edited The Little Pilgrim, a periodical for children. A very popular writer and journalist, Sara contributed to many periodicals, including All The Year Round, Atlantic Monthly, Harper's Magazine, Hearth and Home, Home Journal, Household Words, Independent, New York Mirror, New York Times, and New York Tribune. She also wrote several books, including Greenwood Leaves, Recollections of my childhood, and other stories, and Stories and Sketches.
Sara passed away on April 20, 1904, and was buried in Grove Cemetery in New Brighton, Pennsylvania.",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,Authors,,"POINT(-8462094.9799319 5295874.0694807)|POINT(-8641030.2375389 5334379.6610165)|POINT(-8368302.9206554 4855578.1159049)|POINT(-8575477.8439568 4705850.7185748)|POINT(-8213804.5807545 4999188.0042771)|12|-8460852.8782226|5295590.4164461|osm
Sara Jane Lippincott was born in Pompey, NY on September 23, 1823. She grew up in Rochester, NY and lived in Philadelphia, PA after her 1853 marriage to Leander K. Lippincott. Later, she lived in Washington, DC and New Rochelle, NY.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Los Angeles daily herald. (Los Angeles [Calif.]), October 03, 1873, Image 3
^^Los Angeles daily herald. (Los Angeles [Calif.]), February 13, 1874, Image 1
^^Daily Los Angeles herald [microform]. (Los Angeles [Calif.]), August 24, 1881, Image 2^^Sacramento daily record-union. (Sacramento [Calif.]), June 01, 1890, Image 1^^The Universalist. [volume] (Chicago [Ill.]), June 15, 1895, Image 1^^Sara Jane Clarke Lippincott Find A Grave",,,"September 23, 1823","Pompey, Onondaga County, NY"," April 20, 1904",Author^^Journalist^^Editor,"LIPPINCOTT, Mrs. Sara Jane","Sara Jane Clarke Lippincott Find A Grave^^",author,"Greenwood, Grace, 1823-1904","Greenwood, Grace, 1823-1904","LIPPINCOTT, Mrs. Sara Jane","Greenwood, Grace",1821-1830,Female,American,,,,,"Greenwood, Grace. Greenwood Leaves: A Collection of Sketches and Letters. Second Series. Boston: Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, 1852. ^^Greenwood, Grace. Recollections of my childhood, and other stories. With engravings from designs by Billings. Boston: Ticknor, Reed, and Fields, 1853.
^^Greenwood, Grace. Stories and Sketches. New York: Tait, Sons & Company, 1892.",NY,Married,"19 or 20",Yes,Yes,1823,"Greenwood Institute",,,"Pompey, NY; Rochester, NY; Philadelphia, PA","Billings, Hammatt, 1818-1874^^Byers, Mary^^Clarke, Sarah M.^^Clarke, Thaddeus^^Hawthorne, Julian, 1846-1934^^Hawthorne, Una, 1844-1877^^Lippincott, L. K. (Leander K.)^^Lincoln, Abraham, 1809-1865^^Mann, Georg^^Mann, Horace, 1796-1859^^Olmstead, Elizabeth Martha",,"Reform^^Women's Rights^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"465",,,,"Pompey, NY^^Rochester, NY^^Philadelphia, PA^^Washington, DC^^New Rochelle, NY",,,,"ALL THE YEAR ROUND (ENGLAND)^^ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^HARPER'S MAGAZINE^^HEARTH AND HOME^^HOME JOURNAL (NY)^^HOUSEHOLD WORDS (ENGLAND)^^INDEPENDENT^^LITTLE PILGRIM (PHILADELPHIA)^^NEW YORK MIRROR^^NEW YORK TIMES^^NEW YORK TRIBUNE",,,,,,,,,,,,"Ticknor, Reed, and Fields^^Tait, Sons & Company",,"Clarke, Sara Jane",,,,"1821-1830,1823,Abraham Lincoln,All The Year Round,and Fields,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,editor,George Mann,George R. Graham,Grace Greenwood,Graham's Magazine,Greenwood Institute,Hammatt Billings,Harper's Magazine,Hearth and Home,Home Journal,Horace Mann,Household Words,Independent,journalist,Julian Hawthorne,Little Pilgrim,Mary Byers,New York Mirror,New York Times,New York Tribune,NY,Onondaga County,Pompey,pseudonym,Reed,Sara Jane Lippincott,September,Tait Sons & Company,Ticknor,Una Hawthorne,Women's Rights,Writing/Publishing","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/3f14dadebe01a6fc3d317d9c39a19b94.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/c07a554e39e53a4fab3ccd95f137f67f.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
18,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/18,"BROWN, Miss Emma Elizabeth",,"Author Emma Elizabeth Brown was born on October 18, 1847. Emma's literary career began in her native town, Concord, New Hampshire, when she submitted a poem to the Concord Monitor.
Once she moved to Boston, Emma wrote a book of poems and contributed to several periodicals. Often writing as ""E. E. Brown,"" she penned several biographical sketches, poems, and short stories for periodicals such as Aldine, Atlantic Monthly, Living Age, and Wide Awake.
Noticing her piece ""The Child Toilers of Boston Streets"" in the February 1878 edition of Wide Awake, The Ottawa Free Trader of Illinois said that ""Emma E. Brown gives us a glimpse of Boston New Boys' life."" Sharing what she learned in her travels, Emma wrote ""Easter in Florence."" This piece of travel writing was published for that holiday in 1895 in the Turner County Herald of Hurley, South Dakota.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-7962445.2353586 5339941.807774)|9|-7962598.1094151|5323608.1702946|osm
Emma Elizabeth Brown was born in Concord, NH on October 18, 1847.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"The Ottawa free trader. (Ottawa, Ill.), January 26, 1878, Page 2, Image 2^^Public ledger. (Memphis, Tenn.), January 22, 1879, Image 2
^^Turner County herald. (Hurley, Dakota [S.D.]), April 11, 1895, Image 2
^^The Democratic banner. (Mt. Vernon, Ohio), May 09, 1916, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3",,,"October 18, 1847","Concord, NH",,Author^^Biographer^^Poet,"BROWN, Miss Emma Elizabeth
BROWN, Miss Emma Elizabeth 2","^^^^^^",author,,,"BROWN, Miss Emma Elizabeth","""E. E. Brown""",1841-1850,Female,American,,,,,,NH,Single,,,Yes,1847,,,,"Concord, NH; Boston, MA; Newton Highlands, MA",,,Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"126-127",,,,"Concord, NH^^Boston, MA^^Newton Highlands, MA",,,,"ALDINE^^ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^CONCORD MONITOR (NH)^^LIVING AGE^^WIDE AWAKE",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Brown, Emma Elizabeth",,,,"1841-1850,1847,Aldine,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,biographer,Biographers,Concord,Concord Monitor (NH),Emma Elizabeth Brown,Living Age,NH,October,poet,Poets,pseudonym,Wide Awake,Writing/Publishing",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/8d9973c130f7e68828030b90b0ee11fe.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
17,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/17,"BROTHERTON, Mrs. Alice Williams",,"Alice Williams Brotherton was born in Cambridge, Indiana on April 4, 1848. Her A Woman of the Century profile notes the important roles that being raised in a home with books and a mother who encouraged writing played in setting Alice on the road to a writing career. In addition to being a prolific writer, Alice also devoted much time to being a mother and wife.
One of her passions was her work with women's clubs. In 1910, The Guthrie Daily Leader commented on Alice's club work, noted her husband's reaction to hearing about it, and praised her writing:
""Has A Thoughtful Husband.
Mrs. Alice Williams Brotherton, who is prominent as a club woman in Cincinnati, says that her husband declared that he was willing to hear clubs talked three times a day at meals, but he drew the line at curtain lectures on the subject. Mrs. Brotherton is a successful writer and has made quite a reputation as a poet.""
Alice's work was published in periodicals such as Aldine, Atlantic Monthly, Century, Independent, Magazine of Poetry, New England Magazine, Scribner's Monthly, and St. Nicholas.
She passed away on February 9, 1930, and was buried in Cincinnati's Spring Grove Cemetery.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,Authors^^Poets,,"POINT(-9481803.1556284 4838322.0182295)|POINT(-9408517.9604416 4735326.1084511)|POINT(-10039000.427864354 4667278.04402962)|12|-9482013.3574566|4839108.4835906|osm
Alice Williams Brotherton was born in Cambridge, IN on April 4, 1848. She later lived in Cincinnati, OH and St. Louis, MO.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"The Vancouver independent. (Vancouver, W.T. [Wash.]), May 11, 1877, Image 2^^The Highland weekly news. (Hillsborough [Hillsboro], Highland County, Ohio), October 31, 1878, Image 2^^New-York tribune. (New York [N.Y.]), June 09, 1887, Image 6^^The state chronicle. volume (Raleigh, N.C.), September 15, 1887, Image 4^^The National tribune. (Washington, D.C.), January 12, 1888, Page 8, Image 8^^The Indianapolis journal. (Indianapolis [Ind.]), October 08, 1888, Page 5, Image 5^^The Indianapolis journal. (Indianapolis [Ind.]), December 28, 1890, PART TWO, Page 12, Image 12^^The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.), December 23, 1891, Image 4^^The Indianapolis journal. (Indianapolis [Ind.]), February 04, 1892, Page 6, Image 6^^The News-Herald. (Hillsboro, Highland Co., Ohio), December 20, 1894, Image 7^^The Indianapolis journal. (Indianapolis [Ind.]), May 31, 1896, The Sunday Journal, Part Two, Image 9^^Ottumwa semi-weekly courier. (Ottumwa, Iowa), June 07, 1900, Image 12^^Wood County reporter. (Grand Rapids [i.e. Wisconsin Rapids], Wis.), June 07, 1900, Image 2^^The Guthrie daily leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), November 21, 1910, LAST EDITION, 5 O'CLOCK, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2",,,"April 4, 1848","Cambridge, IN",,"Author^^Poet^^Public Speaker^^Reformer","BROTHERTON, Mrs. Alice Williams
BROTHERTON, Mrs. Alice Williams 2",,author,"Brotherton, Alice Williams","Brotherton, Mrs. Alice Williams","BROTHERTON, Mrs. Alice Williams",,1841-1850,Female,American,,,,,,IN,Married,,Yes,,1848,"Woodward High School (Cincinnati, Ohio)",,,"Cambridge, IN; Cincinnati, OH; St. Louis, MO; ",,,"Public Speaking^^Reform^^Women's Rights^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"124-125",,,,"Cambridge, IN^^Cincinnati, OH^^St. Louis, MO",,"Federation of the Women's Literary Clubs of Ohio^^ General Federation of Women's Clubs^^Western Association of Writers",,"ALDINE^^ATLANTIC MONTHLY^^CENTURY^^INDEPENDENT^^MAGAZINE OF POETRY^^NEW ENGLAND MAGAZINE (BAY STATE MONTHLY 1884-1886)^^SCRIBNER'S MONTHLY^^ST NICHOLAS",,,Yes,Yes,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"1841-1850,1848,1851-1860,Aldine,Alice Williams Brotherton,April,Atlantic Monthly,author,Authors,Cambridge,Century,Federation of the Women's Literary Clubs of Ohio,General Federation of Women's Clubs,IN,Independent,Magazine of Poetry,New England Magazine,Public Speaking,Scribner's Monthly,St. Nicholas,Western Association of Writers,Writing/Publishing",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/2fba7932188b6c796b6279c633af85be.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0