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Fanny Fern

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Fanny Fern Famous memorial

Original Name
Sara Payson Willis
Birth
Portland, Cumberland County, Maine, USA
Death
10 Oct 1872 (aged 61)
Manhattan, New York County, New York, USA
Burial
Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Author. Sara Payson Willis was born the fifth of eight children; her siblings included future author Nathaniel Parker Willis. She married her first husband, Charles H. Eldredge, in 1837, though he and their eldest of three daughters died. She remarried in 1849 to Samuel Farrington though she left him two years later, igniting a minor scandal. Her financial difficulties led to her writing using the pseudonym "Fanny Fern." By the 1850s, working for a New York newspaper, she was the first woman granted a regular newspaper column; her popularity allowed her to become one of the highest-paid magazine writers of her day. She also issued several books to great success including "Fern Leaves" in 1853. Her major work was "Ruth Hall" (1854), a thinly-veiled autobiographical novel which also lampooned her brother N. P. Willis, by then a highly-successful writer, and his refusal to provide financial or literary assistance to a struggling sister. Fern married James Parton, a former employee of her brother, in 1856. The couple moved from New York City to Manhattan. In her later years, Fern spoke out about social reform and women's rights, specifically women's suffrage.
Author. Sara Payson Willis was born the fifth of eight children; her siblings included future author Nathaniel Parker Willis. She married her first husband, Charles H. Eldredge, in 1837, though he and their eldest of three daughters died. She remarried in 1849 to Samuel Farrington though she left him two years later, igniting a minor scandal. Her financial difficulties led to her writing using the pseudonym "Fanny Fern." By the 1850s, working for a New York newspaper, she was the first woman granted a regular newspaper column; her popularity allowed her to become one of the highest-paid magazine writers of her day. She also issued several books to great success including "Fern Leaves" in 1853. Her major work was "Ruth Hall" (1854), a thinly-veiled autobiographical novel which also lampooned her brother N. P. Willis, by then a highly-successful writer, and his refusal to provide financial or literary assistance to a struggling sister. Fern married James Parton, a former employee of her brother, in 1856. The couple moved from New York City to Manhattan. In her later years, Fern spoke out about social reform and women's rights, specifically women's suffrage.

Bio by: Midnightdreary



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Originally Created by: Midnightdreary
  • Added: May 24, 2009
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37440541/fanny-fern: accessed ), memorial page for Fanny Fern (9 Jul 1811–10 Oct 1872), Find a Grave Memorial ID 37440541, citing Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Middlesex County, Massachusetts, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.