Andover Author - Elizabeth Stuart Phelps: Difference between revisions

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Mary Gray Phelps was born on August 31, 1844. After her mother died Mary Gray took her mother's name: Elizabeth Stuart. She was educated in Andover at the Abbot Female Seminary. She championed the working class and worked to improved conditions for them.
Elizabeth Stuart Phelps was born in 1844 and was educated at Abbot Academy. Her birth name was Mary Gray, but, after her mother died when Mary was eight, she took her mother's name, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. She published her first piece of work at age 18, and her first book, ''The Gates Ajar'', in 1869, when she was 24. It proved to be a 19th Century bestseller. She went on to author 57 books.  She also challenged the prevailing idea that women were meant to lead a life of domestic pursuits. She championed a woman's right to keep her maiden name after marriage, believed that women could be financially independent, and challenged the need to wear a corset. At 44 she married Herbert Dickinson Ward, a man 17 years younger. She died in 1911 and is buried in Newton MA.
 
She was a prolific author, having written 57 books. Her books are held in a special author collection in the Andover Room.


*[http://andover.mvlc.org/opac/en-US/skin/default/xml/rdetail.xml?r=790511&t=elizabeth%20phelps&tp=author&l=5&d=0&hc=17&rt=author&s=pubdate&sd=asc ''The Gates Ajar''] 1868 (A novel that presented a comforting view of the afterlife for Civil War widows.)
*[http://andover.mvlc.org/opac/en-US/skin/default/xml/rdetail.xml?r=790511&t=elizabeth%20phelps&tp=author&l=5&d=0&hc=17&rt=author&s=pubdate&sd=asc ''The Gates Ajar''] 1868 (A novel that presented a comforting view of the afterlife for Civil War widows.)

Revision as of 16:48, 13 March 2012

Elizabeth Stuart Phelps was born in 1844 and was educated at Abbot Academy. Her birth name was Mary Gray, but, after her mother died when Mary was eight, she took her mother's name, Elizabeth Stuart Phelps. She published her first piece of work at age 18, and her first book, The Gates Ajar, in 1869, when she was 24. It proved to be a 19th Century bestseller. She went on to author 57 books. She also challenged the prevailing idea that women were meant to lead a life of domestic pursuits. She championed a woman's right to keep her maiden name after marriage, believed that women could be financially independent, and challenged the need to wear a corset. At 44 she married Herbert Dickinson Ward, a man 17 years younger. She died in 1911 and is buried in Newton MA.






--Eleanor 15:46, March 13, 2012 (EDT)

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