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Other Kansas Women
in Literature
Bessie May Bellman and June Bellman Henthorne, her daughter, hail from Winfield. They write both prose and verse and Mrs. Henthorne was a reporter for years. Mrs. Bellman, when a girl, lived five years on a cattle ranch and to those five lonely years she credits her habit of introspection, meditation and writing. Much of her poetry and short stories are used in platform work.
Georgiana Freeman McCoy, Wichita, has taught music in Kansas longer than any other teacher in the state and incidently writes verse. She remodeled Elizabeth Browning's
"A Drama of Exile'' and wrote the musical setting for Simon Buchhalter, the Viennese pianist and composer. A sister,
Mary Freeman Startzman, while living in Fort Scott, wrote a volume of
poems, "Wild Flowers.''
Topeka gives us Anna Deming Gray, a writer of negro dialect stories, stories for children, and some verse.
Elizabeth Barr Arthur, has written a number of books, histories of several Kansas counties and some volumes of poems,
"Washburn Ballads.'' Mrs. Sarah E. Roby is a writer of both prose and verse.
A granddaughter, Marjory Roby, has written a number of stories and plays.
Eva Bland Black contributes poems and song lyrics to the magazines. She served her apprenticeship as reporter and city editor of the Journal and Evening News of Garnett and as associate
editor of the Concordia "Magnet.'' Mrs. Isabel McArthur is a natural poet and song writer.
She has published one volume of verse, "Every Body Loves a Lover.'' Her last song,
"When The Bloom Is On The Cherry At Sardou'' is widely sung. Edna E. Haywood is author of
"Fifty Common Birds Around the Capital.''
Mrs. Mary A. Cornelius, while a resident of Topeka, wrote four books,
"Little Wolf,'' "Uncle Nathan's Farm,'' "The White Flame,'' and "Why? A Kansas Girl's Query.'' Another
book is ready for publication. Mrs. Mary Worrall Hudson, wife of the late General J. K. Hudson, former editor of the Topeka Capital, is author of
"Two Little Maids And Their Friends,'' "Esther, The Gentile,'' and many short stories and poems. Her classic
prosepoem: "In The Missouri Woods'' is considered her masterpiece. Mrs. Sara Josephine
Albright, formerly of Topeka, now of Leavenworth, is a sweet singer of childlife. Her volume of verse,
"With The Children'' is lullabies and mother-love poems. A book of stories for children will soon be ready for publication.
Jessie Lewellyn Call, deceased, the clever and beautiful daughter of the first Populist governor of Kansas, was a well-known essayist and short story writer. For many years she was one of the editors of the Chicago Inter-Ocean.
Lawrence claims Dorothy Canfield Fisher, a writer of both fiction and text-books and many short stories. She is the author of
"Corneille And Racine In England,'' "English Rhetoric And Composition,''
"What Shall We Do Now,'' "Gunhild,'' "The Squirrel Cage'' and "The Montessori Mother.'' Louise C. Don Carlos has written
"A Battle In The Smoke,'' one of the best Kansas works on fiction. She did special work on the Nashville Tennessee Banner and writes a great deal of magazine verse.
Mrs. Anna W. Arnett, a Lawrence teacher, writes verse and songs. In addition, she has issued a primer, the Kansas text-book and a primary reading chart for which she has a United States patent.
Margaret Lynn, one of the faculty of Kansas University, is a writer of short stories and
"A Step-Daughter Of The Prairies.''
Mrs. A. B. Butler of Manhattan wrote
"The Trial And Condemnation of Jesus Christ From a Lawyer's Point of View;'' a novel,
"Ad Astra Per Aspera;'' and much newspaper work. Mrs. Elizabeth
Champney, a former teacher in the Kansas State Agricultural College, is the author of more than twenty books and many short stories.
"Three Vassar Girls Abroad,'' "Witch Winnie Series,'' "Dames And Daughters of Colonial Days,''
"Romance of French Abbeys,'' Romance of Italian Villas,'' and "Romance of Imperial Rome'' are her most popular works.
Sadie E. Lewis, Hutchinson, is the author of
"Hard Times In Kansas'' and other verse.
Her daughter, Ida Margaret Glazier, is a poet and song writer.
Mrs Alice McAllily wrote "Terra-Cotta'' and many other books.
Lillian W. Hale, Kansas City, is author of verse, short stories, and a novel. Another novel will be ready for publication this autumn.
Lois Oldham Henrici, a one-time Sabetha and Parsons woman, is the author of
"Representative Women'' and many good short stories.
Laura D. Congdon, a Newton pioneer, is a verse and short story writer.
Mary H. Finn, Sedgwick, writes beautiful verse and much prose.
Jennie C. Graves, Pittsburg, writes poetry and moving picture plays.
Mrs. Johannas Bennett, another Pittsburg woman, has written an historical novel,
"La Belle San Antone.'' Florence L. Snow, Neosho Falls, is an artistic and finished writer of verse and prose. She is the author of
"The Lamp of Gold.'' Sharlot M. Hall, Lincoln, writes prose and verse. A volume of poems,
"Cactus And Pine,'' "History of Arizona,'' "A Woman of the Frontier,''
"The Price of The Star'' and short stories are her important works. Mrs. A. S.
McMillan, Lyons, a poetess, song writer and licensed preacher, writes clever verse, much of which has been set to music.
"Land Where Dreams Come True'' is her best known poem. Kittie Skidmore
Cowen, a former Columbus woman, is author of "An Unconditional Surrender,'' a civil war story.
"The Message of Hagar,'' a study of the Mormon question will be in the press soon.
Miss Mary E. Upshaw, McPherson, wrote verse at the age of seven and published her first story at fifteen. She has a book in preparation which she expects to publish at an early date.
Jeanette Scott Benton, formerly of Fort Scott, writes short stories novelettes, and stories for children.
May Belleville Brown of Salina, has a very clever pen, as has, also
Mrs. Lulu R. Fuhr of Meade, the author of "Tenderfoot Tales.''
Mrs. E. M. Adams, Mound City, writes exquisite verse and in the past, had many short stories to her credit.
Mrs. C. W. Smith, Stockton, writes both prose and verse. Cara A. Thomas
Hoover, formerly of Halstead, Harvey County, now living in Rialto, California, writes prose and beautiful verse.
Rose Hartwick Thorpe, the author of "Curfew Shall Not Ring To-night,'' was a Kansan in the early sixties. She lived at Wilmington.
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Miss Margaret Stevenson, Olathe, is a writer of books for the blind. She has some
short stories, nature and text-books published.
Lelia Hardin Bugg, Wichita, has written
"The Prodigal Daughter,'' "The People of Our
Parish,'' and "Orchids.'' Edna Thacher Russ, also of Wichita, writes short stories and
educational articles.
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Mrs. E. Hamilton Myers, Englewood, is a dramatic writer and a poet of rare talents. Being a musician, much of her verse is used for songs.
Mrs. Myers contributes to the English papers. Her first story was published by a magazine which had accepted writings of her
mother's.
Other than literature proper, we have
Mrs. Lillian M. Mitchner, of Topeka, a scientific writer; Mrs. Lumina C. R. Smythe, a writer of verse, also of Topeka, who is co-author with
her late husband in the revised "Flora And Check List of Kansas.''
Among the clever newspaper women of the state are
Margie Webb Tennal, Sabetha; Maud C. Thompson, Howard;
Frances Garside, formerly of Atchison, now with the New York Journal;
Mrs. E. E. Kelley, Toronto; Anna Carlson, Lindsborg;
Mrs. Mary Riley, Kansas City; and Isabel Worrel Ball, a Larned woman, who bears the distinction of being the only woman given a seat in the congressional press gallery.
Grace D. Brewer, Girard, has been a newspaper woman and magazine short story writer for ten years.
Among the early Kansas writers are Clarinda Howard Nichols, Mrs. A. B. Bartlett, Lucy B. Armstrong, Sarah Richart, Mrs. Porter Sherman, and Mary Tenny
Gray, all of Wyandotte and Mrs. C. H. Cushing of Leavenworth.
Sara T. D. Robinson, the wife of the first governor of Kansas, was one of the very first
women writers of the state. Her "Kansas, Interior And Exterior'' was published in 1856 and went through ten editions up to 1889.
Source: "Kansas Women in
Literature", Nettie Garmer Barker, S. I. Messeraull & Son, Kansas
City, Kansas, 1915
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