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Catherwood developed a signature style of incorporating
Midwestern culture, dialect, and local color into her stories and novels. Although most of her earlier stories and books are set in Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, in the second half of her career she developed an interest in early
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when she was 15, drawing the attention of the editor, who was surprised to learn how young she was. She began publishing in the paper, and shortly thereafter began publishing outside of Ohio as well. She published her poems and later her short stories in periodicals such as
213:, a businessman and later a postmaster. They had a daughter, Hazel (b. 1884). The Catherwoods lived mainly in Hoopeston, where a Mary Hartwell Catherwood Club was formed after she gained recognition as a writer. They also spent three years in
202:. She graduated in 1868, completing the four-year course in three years. She taught school again for a time thereafter, and in 1875 moved to Cincinnati for a year to work as a writer. She left when the economic downturn of the
280:(1884). With her interest in the details of locality and daily life, she is said to have helped move American juvenile literature away from the extreme sentimentality of the era.
164:(December 16, 1847 – December 26, 1902) was an American writer of popular historical romances, short stories, and poetry. Early in her career she published under her birth name,
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172:(Hartwell spelled backwards, with the final letter dropped). She was known for setting her works in the Midwest, for a strong interest in American
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Catherwood did a great deal of research for her historical novels, and made several research trips to Europe and Canada. The eminent historian
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A Woman of the
Century: Fourteen Hundred-Seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life
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188:, one of three children of Marcus Hartwell and Pheba (Thompson) Hartwell. When she was nine, her father, a physician, moved the family to
328:, when in 1902 she died of cancer in Chicago, Illinois. She was buried in Floral Hill Cemetery in Hoopeston. Her papers are held by the
298:, with whom she shared a strong interest in American dialects and whose career she helped to launch. In 1886, Catherwood joined Riley,
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to be nearer her publishers and for her daughter's schooling, so she took an apartment there that was her second home until she died.
192:. Both of her parents died shortly afterward, and Mary and her siblings were raised by their maternal grandfather in Hebron, Ohio.
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Price, Robert. "A Critical
Biography of Mary Hartwell Catherwood". Unpublished doctoral dissertation, Ohio State University, 1943.
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Mary obtained a teacher's certificate when she was just 13 and began teaching children in local schools the following year.
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praised the historical accuracy of her novels, and she was called the "Parkman of the West". Parkman wrote a preface for
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Who's Who in Music and Drama: An
Encyclopedia of Biography of Notable Men and Women in Music and Drama
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217:(1879–1882). In 1899, Catherwood decided she needed to spend more time in
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Chase of Saint-Castin and Other
Stories of the French in the New World
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While living in
Indianapolis, she became friends with the poet
712:"Inventory of the Mary Hartwell Catherwood Papers, 185-1945"
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Notable
American Women, 1607–1950: A Biographical Dictionary
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The Oxford
Illustrated Literary Guide to the United States
317:(1901), into a stage play in 1902; the cast included
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Catherwood began sending poems and news items to the
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519:The Queen of the Swamp, and Other Plain Americans
739:Hanaford, Harry Prescott, and Dixie Hines, eds.
646:. Newark, Ohio: American Tribune Printery, 1904.
332:in Chicago and the Ohioana Library in Columbus.
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184:She was born Mary Hartwell in
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862:20th-century American writers
693:. Radcliffe College, p. 309.
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852:19th-century American poets
797:(public domain audiobooks)
354:By Mary Hartwell Catherwood
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583:Constance Fenimore Woolson
382:(1875, as Mary Hartwell) (
168:, and under the pseudonym
552:Heroes of the Middle West
463:The Lady of Fort St. John
430:The Secrets at Roseladies
365:Resources in your library
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816:Mary Hartwell Catherwood
806:Mary Hartwell Catherwood
730:. Moulton, 1893, p. 161.
564:(1901; illustrations by
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162:Mary Hartwell Catherwood
116:Granville Female College
25:Mary Hartwell Catherwood
133:James Steele Catherwood
289:The Romance of Dollard
231:Newark (Ohio) American
91:Mary Hartwell; Lewtrah
80:Floral Hill Cemetery,
336:Selected publications
237:Lippincott's Magazine
296:James Whitcomb Riley
180:Family and education
842:Novelists from Ohio
810:Library of Congress
769:at Newberry Library
714:. Newberry Library.
211:Hoopeston, Illinois
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453:The Story of Tonty
390:The Dogberry Bunch
270:The Dogberry Bunch
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278:Old Caravan Days
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837:1902 deaths
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186:Luray, Ohio
104:Nationality
55:Luray, Ohio
826:Categories
589:References
570:HathiTrust
556:HathiTrust
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410:Rocky Fork
404:HathiTrust
394:HathiTrust
384:HathiTrust
326:Tippicanoe
309:The actor
274:Rocky Fork
246:, and the
96:Occupation
48:1847-12-16
485:Kaskaskia
146:Signature
82:Hoopeston
795:LibriVox
577:See also
554:(1901) (
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174:dialects
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107:American
88:Pen name
784:at the
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442:Dollard
315:Lazarre
219:Chicago
170:Lewtrah
262:Quebec
225:Career
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99:Writer
122:Genre
483:Old
61:Died
40:Born
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568:) (
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