205:, Harrington included a children's corner with tales about taming and raising animals and of a cat who adopted orphan chicks. Harrington also wrote other children’s books, including a primer and a speller. Pollard's work in the field of reading represented a pioneer effort in terms of creating a sequential reading program of intensive synthetic
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Her series is important for its high correlation of spelling and reading instruction, for its concern for the interests of children, for its incorporation of music into the process of learning to read, and as the forerunner for other phonics systems. Her readers were used in every state in the Union
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said, "We have read this book. We pronounce the plot an excellent one and the style charming, but she has failed to fulfill the intended mission of the book." It accused her of also showing prejudice and fanaticism typical of the politicians that she tried to defend.
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to be held in the United States. The volume included many poems about Iowa, as well as selected poems of
Harrington's father, Prof. N.R. Smith, and illustrations of the Centennial grounds in Philadelphia.
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Kate
Harrington, or Rebecca Harrington Smith Pollard wrote all of her life. She was 79 years old when she produced the poem, "Althea" or "Morning Glory," which relates to Iowa. She died in
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and were still in use in Keokuk, Iowa, as late as 1937. Few women have single-handedly contributed so much to the field of
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would later recall "setting up" the type for some of her poems published in his brother's newspaper office.
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123:. Her father's work on public presenting became the basis for Samuel Kirkham's
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on May 29, 1917. She was interred in
Farmington, Van Buren County, Iowa.
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poet and editor Oliver I. Taylor. Harrington was the anonymous author of
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457:"SMU Clement Center for Southwest Studies Newsletter, Fall 2008"
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on
September 20, 1831. She spent her most productive years in
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received mixed reviews when it was published in 1856. The
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337:"Welcome to a New Era of The History of Reading News"
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224:In 1869, she published a book of poems entitled
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346:. Vol. XXVI, no. 1. Archived from
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324:Country Facts and Folklore, by Andy Reddick
137:Emma Bartlett, or Prejudice and Fanaticism
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184:. She began her writing career with the
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145:, intended to expose the hypocrisy of
406:(Fort Madison, IA, 31 May 1917, p. 4"
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426:"History of Reading News, Fall 2002"
402:"Rebecca S. Pollard passes to rest"
248:In Memoriam, Maymie, April 6th, 1869
238:gave her a very good review but the
211:graded series of literature readers
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529:American women children's writers
253:In 1876, Harrington published
246:In 1870, Harrington published
203:Letters from a Prairie Cottage
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152:Harrington’s family moved to
335:Zimmer, Joseph (Fall 2002).
499:American children's writers
259:Declaration of Independence
255:Centennial, and Other Poems
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293:Centennial and Other Poems
371:Marie Hefner (May 1931).
291:Harrington, Kate (1876).
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295:. Kessinger Publishing.
89:Rebecca Harrington Smith
78:teacher, writer and poet
524:Reading skill advocates
344:History of Reading News
139:, a fictional reply to
105:Allegheny, Pennsylvania
51:Allegheny, Pennsylvania
269:, the first official
263:Centennial Exposition
131:. She was married to
93:Rebecca Smith Pollard
494:American women poets
91:and later known as
519:American educators
373:"An American Lady"
187:Louisville Journal
68:Fort Madison, Iowa
48:September 20, 1831
514:Writers from Iowa
302:978-0-548-43372-0
142:Uncle Tom’s Cabin
121:John Wilkes Booth
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509:1917 deaths
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279:Ft. Madison
178:Ft. Madison
113:Shakespeare
488:Categories
473:2008-11-10
442:2008-11-10
411:2023-03-07
387:2023-03-07
357:2008-11-10
311:References
261:, and the
174:Burlington
166:Farmington
75:Occupation
44:1831-09-20
170:Keosauqua
99:Biography
158:Kentucky
219:reading
207:phonics
201:In her
162:Chicago
156:, then
87:, born
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226:Maymie
182:Keokuk
467:(PDF)
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192:Union
297:ISBN
180:and
154:Ohio
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109:Iowa
58:Died
38:Born
383:(5)
381:XII
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