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19291,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/19291,"BATES, Mrs. Clara Doty",,"Clara Doty Bates was born in Ann Arbor, Michigan on December 22, 1838. A writer from an early age, Clara attended private schools. She married Morgan Bates, a newspaperman, in 1876 and the couple moved to Chicago, Illinois.
A well-known writer of juvenile literature, Clara published several books under the imprint of Boston's D. Lothrop & Company. From its beginnings in 1875, she was a frequent contributor to Wide Awake, a children's periodical that was published by that firm. Her sister, Charlotte Doty Finley, was the illustrator for Clara's poem ""Silver Locks and the Bears"" in the December 1875 volume. Clara's poems also appeared in Babyland,Harper's Young People, St. Nicholas, and Youth's Companion, and Farm, Field, and Firesode.
In addiiton to publishing her own work and contributing to periodicals, Clara contributed ""LIT-TLE TO-TOTE"" to an edited volume, Baby World: Stories, Rhymes, and Pictures for Little Folks. (Century, 1884).
While living in Chicago, Clara was vice-president of the Fortnightly women's literary club. She also was very involved with the Woman's Branch of the World's Congress Auxiliary. During the early 1890s, Clara was a contributor to A Woman of the Century. She was very involed with the Columbian Exposition and arranged the children's library with Alice L. Williams. In July of 1893, she spoke at the Educational Congress in Chicago.
She passed away in Chicago on October 14, 1895, at age fifty-six, and was buried in Ann Arbor's Forest Hills Cemetery. Clara's friend Elia W. Peattie wrote a lengthy obituary that was published in The Omaha Nebraska-Herald and reprinted in The Hartford Herald (Hartford, KY) on February 12, 1896. Elia certainly captured Clara's essence in this beautiful tribute.",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Clara Doty Bates Find A Grave^^Red Lodge picket. [volume] (Red Lodge, Mont.), July 22, 1893, Image 1^^Tribute - The Hartford herald. [volume] (Hartford, Ky.), February 12, 1896, Image 2^^The herald. [microfilm reel] (Los Angeles [Calif.]), July 02, 1893, Page 12, Image 12^^The evening world. [volume] (New York, N.Y.), January 05, 1893, SPORTING EXTRA, Page 4, Image 4",,,"December 22, 1838","Ann Arbor, MI"," October 14, 1895.",Author^^Poet^^Orator,,"
^^^^^^^^",author,"Bates, Clara Doty, 1838-1895","Bates, Clara Doty 1838-1895","BATES, Mrs. Clara Doty",,1831-1840,Female,American,,,,,,MI,Married,"31 or 32",,,1838,,,,"Ann Arbor, MI; Chicago, IL","Bates, Morgan^^Finley, Charlotte Doty",,"Writing/Publishing^^Public Speaking",,,,,,"63",,,,"Ann Arbor, MI^^Chicago, Il","A Woman of the Century contributor","Fortnightly (Women's club)^^World's Congress of Representative Women (1893 : Chicago, Ill.)",,"BABYLAND^^FARM, FIELD, AND FIRESIDE^^HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE^^ST NICHOLAS^^WIDE AWAKE^^YOUTH'S COMPANION",,,,,,,,,,,,"D. Lothrop & Company",,"Doty, Clara",,,,"1831-1840,1838,A Woman of the Century Contributor,Ann Arbor,author,Authors,Babyland,Charlotte Doty Finley,Chicago,Clara Doty Bates,D. Lothrop Company,December,Fortnightly,Harper's Young People,juvenile literature,MI,orator,poet,Poets,Public Speaking,St. Nicholas,Wide Awake,World's Congress Auxilliary,Writing/Publishing,Youth's Companion",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/5a54e3333aa43b8afc114fa2021185d8.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
185,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/185,"BISHOP, Mrs. Mary Agnes Dalrymple",,"Mary Agnes Dalyrmple Bishop was born in Springfield, Massachusetts on August 12, 1857. Her family moved to Grafton, Massachusetts when she was less than two years old. Mary Agnes began writing for local papers at age eleven and was editor of The Grafton Herald when she was just sixteen.
After graduating from high school, she taught in the public schools of Grafton and Sutton, Massachusetts for many years Mary Agnes also lectured frequently in her area and acted in home dramas, often as Lady Macbeth She continued writing and was a frequent contributorm although often an anonymous one, to Youth’s Companion and other periodicals
Mary Agnes was one of the earliest members of the New England Woman’s Press Association , attending meetings since 1886, and she served on its Executive Committee. Writing of her career at the time that the New England Woman's Press Association began, she noted that she was a """"regular correspondent of the Boston Globe and with the Associated Press"" (Lord, 23). Some of her colleagues in the New England Woman's Press Association were Estelle M. Hatch, Sallie Joy White, Kate Tannatt Woods, Alice Stone Blackwell, Cora Stuart Wheeler, Helen Maria Winslow, and Lavinia Stella Goodwin, Esther T. Housh, Maud Howe Elliott, and Lucy Stone.
In 1887, Mary Agnes became editor on the Massachusetts Ploughman. As her A Woman of the Century profile notes:
“The position offered her had never been taken by a woman, and, indeed, the work that she did was never attempted previously, for she had the charge of almost the entire journal from the first. A few months after she accepted the position, the proprietor died, and the entire paper was in her hands for six months.”
(A Woman of the Century, p. 86)
Mary Agnes married Frederick Herbert Bishop, a Boston businessman, in 1889, and the couple lived in Wollaston Heights, Massachusetts. She continued her editorial work and was a practical reportorial stenographer. In addition, Mary Agnes still found time to pursue her literary career.
She served as
""toastmistress"" at a New England Press Association tribute to journalist Mary Boyle O'Reilly in 1917. Helen Maria Winslow introduced O'Reilly, who spoke about her journalistic activities during World War I at this Hotel Bellevue event. The next year, she represented the New England Woman's Press Association at a woman's conference in Arkansas.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-8081220.4951952 5175878.3458092)|POINT(-7979788.5586748 5191777.2476903)|POINT(-7905916.4708386 5200580.0863388)|10|-8081521.9441919|5173109.2553716|osm
Mary Agnes Dalyrmple Bishop was born in Springfield, MA on August 12, 1857. She later lived in Grafton, MA and Wollaston Heights, MA.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Lord, Myra Belle Horne, History of the New England Woman's Press Association, 1885-1931. Newton: The Graphic Press, 1932.^^The Republican journal. [volume] (Belfast, Me.), April 19, 1917, Page 7, Image 7^^The Sentinel=record. (Hot Springs, Ark.), May 03, 1918, Page 2, Image 2",,,"August 12, 1857","Springfield, MA",,Journalist^^Teacher^^Lecturer^^Actress,,"
- Lord, Myra Belle Horne, History of the New England Woman's Press Association, 1885-1931. Newton: The Graphic Press, 1932.
^^^^",journalist,,,"BISHOP, Mrs. Mary Agnes Dalrymple",,1851-1860,Female,American,,,,,,MA,Married,"29 or 30",,,1857,,,,"Springfield, MA; Grafton, MA; Wollaston Heights, MA","Bishop, Frederick Herbert^^Blackwell, Alice Stone, 1857-1950^^Elliott, Maud Howe, 1854-1948^^Goodwin, Lavinia S. (Lavinia Stella), 1833-1911^^Hatch, Estelle M.^^Housh, Esther T.^^Stone, Lucy, 1818-1893^^Wheeler, Cora Stuart^^White, Sallie Joy^^Winslow, Helen M. (Helen Maria), 1851-1938",,"Education^^Public Speaking^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"86",,,,"Springfield, MA^^Grafton, MA^^Wollaston Heights, MA",,"New England Woman's Press Association",,"BOSTON GLOBE^^GRAFTON HERALD^^MASSACHUSETTS PLOUGHMAN^^YOUTH'S COMPANION",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Dalrymple, Mary Agnes",,,,"1851-1860,1857,actress,August,author,Authors,Boston Globe,Esther T. Housh,Grafton Herald,home dramas,journalist,lecturer,MA,Mary Agnes Dalrymple Bishop,Massachusetts Ploughman,Maud Howe Elliott,New England Woman's Press Association,Public Speaking,Springfield,Theatre,Writing/Publishing,Youth's Companion",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/6a7c3fa06e301e7970caf5dcad4d52dd.jpg,Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
142,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/142,"THORPE, Mrs. Rose Hartwick",,"Rose Hartwick Thorpe was born in Mishawaka, Indiana on July 18, 1850, and she spent her teenage years in Litchfield, Michigan.
She became famous for her poem ""Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight,"" which was published in the Detroit Commercial Advertiser in 1870.
Rose married Edmund C. Thorpe in 1871. Their family expanded to include a daughter, and the Thorpe family lived in Chicago, Illinois.
She became the editor of three monthly periodicals, Temperance Tales, Well-Spring, about the home, and Words of Life, a Sunday School monthly, all published by Chicago publisher Fleming H. Revell.
Later, while she was living in Grand Rapids, Michigan in 1883, Rose was awarded an honorary M.A. degree from Hillsdale College. The same year, ""Curfew Must Not Ring To-Night"" was published as a book.
Due to Mr. Thorpe's health issues, the family then moved to San Antonio, Texas and resided there for four years. In the late 1880s, Rose and her family moved again, this time to San Diego, California. She kept writing, and Ringing Ballads, including Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight made its debut in 1887.
During her long and successful career, Christian Science Journal, Detroit Free Press, Happy Days, Our Continent, St. Nicholas, Wide Awake, and Youth's Companion published Rose's work.
In 1895, ""Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight"" was published as a song, with music by Stanley Hawley. During the same year, Rose wrote the ""Introduction"" to As Others See Us, or, The Rules and Customs of Refined Homes and Polite Society. She published The Poetical Works of Rose Hartwick Thorpe, Compiled by the Author in 1912.
When Litchfield, Michigan celebrated its anniversary in 1934, Rose wrote the Centennial Theme Song. In addition, July 21 was designated Rose Hartwick Thorpe Day and the Rose Hartwick Thorpe Memorial was dedicated.
Rose passed away in 1939.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-9591110.4947187 5110205.1687528)|POINT(-9435276.2948168 5167589.838518)|POINT(-13042440.579856 3857513.7211173)|POINT(-9536424.5783029 5297290.3192242)|POINT(-9762448.8709107 5140649.3503755)|POINT(-10963886.081329 3435191.1528284)|7|-9627766.8270911|5173464.7220766|osm
Rose Hartwick Thorpe was born in Mishawaka, IN on July 18, 1850. She later lived in Litchfield, MI, Chicago, IL, Grand Rapids, MI, San Antonio, TX, and San Diego, CA.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"The Washington herald. (Washington, D.C.), July 18, 1915, Page 3, Image 6^^Belen news. (Belen, N.M.), February 10, 1916, Image 2^^The Maui news. (Wailuku, Maui, H.I.), April 01, 1921, Page SEVEN, Image 7^^James, George Wharton. Rose Hartwich Thorpe and the story of ""The Curfew Must Not Ring To-Night."" Pasadena: Radiant Life Press, 1916.^^Celebrating the one hundredth birthday of Litchfield, Michigan. Litchfield, Mich: Centennial Committee, 1934.",,,"July 18, 1850","Mishawaka, IN",,"author^^poet^^editor^^public speaker^^temperance advocate^^woman suffragist",,"^^^^^^^^",poet,"Thorpe, Rose Hartwick, 1850-1939","Thorpe, Rose Hartwick 1850-1939","THORPE, Mrs. Rose Hartwick",,1841-1850,Female,American,,,,,"""Curfew Must Not Ring To-Night,"" Boston: Lee and Shepard, New York: Charles T. Dillingham, 1883.^^Ringing ballads, including Curfew must not ring to-night. Boston: D. Lathrop Company, 1887.^^The Poetical Works of Rose Hartwick Thorpe, Compiled by the Author. New York: The Neale Publishing Company, 1912.",IN,Married,21,Yes,,1850,"Hillsdale College (Honorary M.A. 1883)",,,,"Durgin, D. W. C.^^Goodhue, Edward Solon, 1863-1935^^Hawley, Stanley, 1867-1916^^Johnson, Rossiter, 1840-1931^^Revell, Fleming H.^^Tourgée, Albion W., 1838-1905",,"Public Speaking^^Reform^^Temperance^^Women's Rights^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"715",,,,,,,,"DETROIT COMMERCIAL ADVERTISER^^CHICAGO INTERIOR^^CHRISTIAN SCIENCE JOURNAL^^DETROIT FREE PRESS^^HAPPY DAYS (PHILADELPHIA)^^OUR CONTINENT^^ST NICHOLAS^^WIDE AWAKE^^YOUTH'S COMPANION",,,,,,,,,,,,"Lee and Shepard^^Dillingham, Charles Theodore, 1842-^^D. Lathrop Company^^Neale Publishing Company",,"Hartwick Rose",,,,"1841-1850,1850,Albion W. Tourgée,author,Charles T. Dillingham,Christian Science Journal,D. Lothrop Company,D. W. C. Durgin,Detroit Commercial Advertiser,Detroit Free Press,editor,Edward Solon Goodhue,Fleming H. Revell,Happy Days,Hillsdale College,IN,Lee and Shepard,Litchfield,MI,Mishawaka,Neale Publishing Company,orator,Orators,Our Continent,poet,Public Speaking,Reform,reformer,Rose Hartwick Thorpe,Rossiter Johnson,St. Nicholas,Stanley Hawley,Temperance,temperance reformer,Wide Awake,Women's Rights,Writing/Publishing,Youth's Companion",https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/368f0e35e35b9d70f50afb1b1081e2d3.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
102,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/102,"BAKER, Mrs. Harriette Newell Woods",,"Harriette Newell Woods Baker, an Andover, Massachusetts native, was born on August 19, 1815.
Better known by her pseudonyms ""Madeline Leslie"" and ""Aunt Hattie,"" Harriette was an author, editor, playwright and publisher. As her A Woman of the Century profile notes, Baker penned ""nearly two-hundred moral and religious tales"" (46). Tim, The Scissors Grinder was an extremely popular work. She also wrote Reminiscences and Records of My Father, Leonard Woods, D. D., of Andover. In addition to her books and play, she also wrote for the Boston Recorder, the Congregationalist, Harper's Magazine, the New York Observer, The Puritan, and Youth's Companion.
Later in life, Harriette wrote her autobiography: Leslie, Madeline. The autobiography of a very remarkable woman / edited by Walter Baker. London : A.T. Roberts, 1894. She passed away in Brooklyn, New York on April 26, 1893.",,,,,"Ellis, Mallory ^^McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-7919583.1717534 5259834.0106491)|12|-7918914.347756|5258633.1132752|osm Harriette Newell Woods Baker is born on August 19, 1815 in Andover, MA.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Leslie, Madeline. The autobiography of a very remarkable woman / edited by Walter Baker. London : A.T. Roberts, 1894.
in
Haithi Trust^^Vol 1855 v.1: The Happy home
Edited by Abijah Richardson Baker and Madeline Leslie
in
Internet Archive^^https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AHarriette_Newell_Woods_Baker.png
By G. Derby & J. T. White [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons^^The herald. (Los Angeles [Calif.]), May 21, 1893, Page 13, Image 13^^The evening world. (New York, N.Y.), April 28, 1893, BROOKLYN LAST EDITION, Page 3, Image 3",,,"August 19, 1815","Andover, MA","April 26, 1893",Publisher^^Editor^^Author^^Playwright^^Philanthropist,,"^^",Author,"Leslie, Madeline, 1815-1893","Leslie, Madeline 1815-1893","BAKER, Mrs. Harriette Newell Woods
","Leslie, Madeline, 1815-1893^^Aunt Hattie^^Alice Green^^H. N. W. B.",1811-1820,Female,American,,,,Congregationalist,,MA,Married,,Yes,,1815,,,,"Andover, MA; Medford, MA; Wellesley, MA; Dorchester, MA; Batavia, NY; Northboro, MA; Brooklyn, NY; Waltham, MA; Covington, KY; Brooklyn, NY","Baker, A. R. (Abijah Richardson), 1805-1876^^Baker, Charles R. (Charles Richard), 1842-1898^^Baker, Frank W.^^Baker, George^^Baker, Walter, 1849-1897^^Baker, William H. (William Henry), 1845-1914^^Irving, Washington, 1783-1859^^Woods, Leonard, 1774-1854^^Woods, Leonard, 1807-1878",,Philanthropy^^Theatre^^Writing/Publishing,,,,,,"46",,,,"Andover, MA^^Medford, MA^^Wellesley, MA^^Dorchester, MA^^Batavia, NY^^Northboro, MA^^Brooklyn, NY^^Waltham, MA^^Covington, KY",,"Free Hospital for Women (Brookline, Mass.)",,"BOSTON RECORDER^^CONGREGATIONALIST^^HARPER'S MAGAZINE^^NEW YORK OBSERVER^^YOUTH'S COMPANION",,,,,,,,,,,,,,"Woods, Harriette Newell",,,,"1811-1820,1815,Abijah Richardson Baker,Andover,author,Authors,Boston Recorder,Congregationalist,editor,Free Hospital for Women,Harper's Magazine,Harriette Newell Woods Baker,juvenile literature,Leonard Woods,MA,Madeline Leslie,New York Observer,philanthropist,Philanthropy,playwright,pseudonym,Washington Irving,Writing/Publishing,Youth's Companion","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/d997ac5cc83851f288460ba8e3449352.png,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/e7299c800aec224ff4591e29131f8b09.png",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0
86,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/items/show/86,"WETHERALD, Miss Agnes Ethelwyn",,"Agnes Ethelwyn Wetherald, a Canadian poet, novelist, and journalist, was born in Rockwood, Ontario, on April 26, 1857. A Quaker, she came to the United States to attend the Friends Boarding School in Union Springs, New York. A writer from an early age, Ethelwyn published in St. Nicholas when she was just seventeen. She returned to Canada and graduated from Pickering College in Ontario.
In addition to using her own name, Wetherald was known as ""Bel Thistlewaite."" Her publications included The House of the Trees & Other Poems and a collaboration with Graeme Mercer Adam, An Algonquin Maiden: A Romance of the Early Days of Upper Canada.
She contributed to both Canadian and American periodicals, including Canadian Monthly, Wide Awake, and Youth's Companion. Agnes and Elizabeth Cameron collaborated as publishers of Our Wives and Daughters, a Canadian periodical.
Agnes passed away on March 10, 1940, at the age of eighty-two, and was buried in Friends Brick Church Grounds in Pelham, Ontario.
",,,,,"McMaster, MaryKate",,,,,,,"POINT(-8922417.8734585 5406315.4235445)|9|-8882441.3076708|5427653.2977187|osm
Agnes Ethelwyn Wetherald was born in Rockwood, Ontario, CA on April 26, 1857.",,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,"The Minneapolis journal. (Minneapolis, Minn.), April 02, 1904, The Journal Junior, Page 8, Image 37^^The Globe-republican. (Dodge City, Kan.), December 17, 1890, Image 6^^Sullivan republican. (Laporte, Pa.), April 05, 1895, Image 1^^Agnes Ethelwyn Wetherald Find A Grave^^Rungeling, Dorothy Wetherald. ""Calendar 1978: Ethelwyn Wetherald."" Pelham Historical Society. ^^Rungeling, Dorothy Wetherald. Pelham Historical Calendar 1992: ""Ethelwyn Wetherald: Our Famous Fenwick Poetess."" Pelham Historical Society.",,,"April 26, 1857","Rockwood, Ontario, CAN","March 10, 1940",Author^^Novelist^^Poet^^Publisher,,"^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^","poet, novelist and journalist","Wetherald, A. Ethelwyn","Wetherald A. Ethelwyn","WETHERALD, Miss Agnes Ethelwyn","Thistlewaite, Bel",1851-1860,Female,Canadian,,,,Quaker,"Adam, G. Mercer and Wetherald, A. Ethelwyn. An Algonquin maiden : a romance of the early days of Upper Canada. Montreal : J. Lovell & Son ; Toronto : Williamson & Co., 1887.^^Wetherald, Ethelwyn. The house of the trees : & other poems. Boston [Mass.] : Lamson, ©1895.",CAN,Married,,Yes,Yes,1857,"Friends' Boarding School, Union Springs, NY^^Pickering College (Pickering, Ontario, Canada)",,,"Rockwood, Ontario, CAN; Union Springs, NY; Pickering, Ontario, CAN; Fenwick, Ontario, CAN","Adam, G. Mercer (Graeme Mercer), 1830-1912^^Cameron, Elizabeth",,"Business/Banking^^Women's Rights^^Writing/Publishing",,,,,,"762",,,,"Rockwood, Ontario, CAN^^Union Springs, NY^^ Pickering, Ontario, CAN^^Fenwick, Ontario, CAN",,,"London, Ontario Advertiser^^Our Wives and Daughters^^Toronto Globe","CANADIAN MONTHLY^^CHIICAGO CURRENT^^CHRISTIAN UNION^^HARPER'S WEEKLY^^LONDON CANADA ADVERTISER^^MAGAZINE OF POETRY^^OUR WIVES AND DAUGHTERS^^ST NICHOLAS^^TORONTO GLOBE^^TORONTO SATURDAY NIGHT^^WIDE AWAKE^^WOMAN'S JOURNAL^^YOUTH'S COMPANION",,,,,,,,,,,,"J. Lovell & Son^^Williamson & Co.",,"Wetherald, Agnes Ethelwyn",,,,"1851-1860,1857,Agnes Ethelwyn Wetherald,An Algonquin Maiden,April,author,Authors,Bel Thistlewaite,Business/Banking,businesswoman,CAN,Canada,Canadian Monthly,Chicago Current,Christian Union,editor,Elizabeth Cameron,Friends' Boarding School,Graeme Mercer Adam,Harper's Weekly,J. Lovell & Son,journalist,London Canada Advertiser,Magazine of Poetry,novelist,NY,Ontario,Our Wives and Daughters,Pickering College,poet,Poets,pseudonym,publisher,Quaker,Rockwood,St. Nicholas,Toronto Globe,Toronto Saturday Night,Union Springs,Williamson & Co.,Woman's Journal,Women's Rights,Youth's Companion","https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/c15583a0f6712d00a4bec8a37466bb39.jpg,https://marykatemcmaster.org/WOC/files/original/5ac20e1852c1ca98b1b035b850bf91a7.jpg",Person,"A Woman of the Century Women",1,0