Hildegarde Hawthorne
Hildegarde Hawthorne | |
---|---|
Born | September 25, 1871 New York, United States |
Died | December 10, 1952 Danbury, Connecticut, United States |
Other names | Hildegarde Oskison |
Occupations |
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Spouse | |
Parent(s) | Julian Hawthorne Minnie Amelung |
Hildegarde Hawthorne (September 25, 1871 – December 10, 1952) was an American writer of supernatural and ghost stories, a poet and biographer.
Family
[edit]Born on September 25, 1871, in New York City, Hildegarde Hawthorne was the granddaughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804–1864) and eldest child of Julian Hawthorne (1846–1934) and Minnie Amelung Hawthorne.[1][2] She lived in Germany, England, and Jamaica as a child.[3]
Career
[edit]At age sixteen Hildegarde began selling articles to the children's magazine St. Nicholas. Her supernatural short story "Perdita," was published in the March 1897 Harper's Magazine.[4] She wrote biographies of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Thomas Paine, Matthew Fontaine Maury, and Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.[1]
Hawthorne also wrote travel narratives, including Old Seaport Towns of New England (1916),[5] Rambles in Old College Towns (1917),[6] Corsica: The Surprising Island (1926),[7] Romantic Cities of California (1939),[8] and Williamsburg, Old and New (1941).[9]
Hawthorne marched in the 1913 women's suffrage parade in New York City.[10] She lived in California in the 1920s and 1930s.[11]
A collection of ghost stories by Hawthorne, The Faded Garden, was published in 1985, edited by Jessica Amanda Salmonson. Her work is sometimes found in anthologies of American women's writing.[3] Hawthorne co-authored Enos Mills of the Rockies with Esther Burnell Mills.[12]
Personal life
[edit]Hildegarde Hawthorne married John Milton Oskison in 1920. She died in 1952, aged 81 years, in Danbury, Connecticut.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Hanley, Terence E. (2012-12-06). "Tellers of Weird Tales: Hildegarde Hawthorne (1871-1952)". Tellers of Weird Tales. Retrieved 2020-01-04.
- ^ "Genius of Writing in Hawthorne Kin". Lansing State Journal. 1930-03-21. p. 14. Retrieved 2020-01-04 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ a b Lundie, Catherine A. (1996). Restless Spirits: Ghost Stories by American Women, 1872-1926. Univ of Massachusetts Press. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-55849-056-7.
- ^ Hawthorne, Hildegarde (March 1897). "Perdita". Harper's Magazine. ISSN 0017-789X. Retrieved 2020-01-04.
- ^ Hawthorne, Hildegarde (1916). Old Seaport Towns of New England. Dodd, Mead.
- ^ Hawthorne, Hildegarde. (1917). Rambles in old college towns. New York: Dodd, Mead & Co.
- ^ "Corsica the Surprising Island by Hildegarde Hawthorne". The Kelmscott Bookshop. Retrieved 2020-01-04.
- ^ Hawthorne, Hildegarde. Romantic Cities of California (1939), in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- ^ Hawthorne, Hildegarde (1941). Williamsburg, Old and New. D. Appleton-Century Company.
- ^ Seger, Donna (2016-09-11). "Hildegarde Hawthorne Hits Salem". Streets of Salem. Retrieved 2020-01-04.
- ^ "Story Treat for Children at Ukiah Library". Ukiah Republican Press. 1935-05-15. p. 4. Retrieved 2020-01-04 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Drummond, Alexander (1995). Enos Mills : citizen of nature. Nivot, Colorado: University Press of Colorado. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-87081-407-5.
External links
[edit]- Works by or about Hildegarde Hawthorne at the Internet Archive
- Hildegarde Hawthorne at ISFDb
- Works by Hildegarde Hawthorne at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Hildegarde Hawthorne at Find a Grave
- A photograph of Hildegarde Hawthorne taken later in life, on Calisphere