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Eliza Frances Andrews (1840–1931)

Auteur van The War-Time Journal of a Georgia Girl, 1864-1865

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Fotografie: (1847- ) Buffalo Electrotype and Engraving Co., Buffalo, N.Y.

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A Day at a Time (1985) — Medewerker — 77 exemplaren

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Geboortedatum
1840-08-10
Overlijdensdatum
1931-01-21
Graflocatie
Resthaven Cemetery, Washington, D.C., USA
Geslacht
female
Nationaliteit
USA
Geboorteplaats
Washington, Georgia, USA
Plaats van overlijden
Rome, Georgia USA
Woonplaatsen
Rome, Georgia, USA
Macon, Georgia, USA
Montgomery, Alabama, USA
Yazoo, Mississippi, USA
Opleiding
LaGrange Female College, Georgia
Beroepen
novelist
essayist
textbook writer
journalist
social critic
scientist (toon alle 7)
teacher
Organisaties
American Forestry Association
United Daughters of the Confederacy
Prijzen en onderscheidingen
Georgia Women of Achievement (2006)
Korte biografie
Eliza Frances "Fanny" Andrews was born to a prominent family in Washington, Georgia. Her parents were Annulet Ball and her husband Garnett Andrews, a Georgia lawyer, superior court judge, and plantation owner. She attended a girls' school near her home and in 1857 graduated among the first class of students at the LaGrange Female College (later LaGrange College) in Georgia. She studied literature, music, and the arts, and learned French and Latin. Late in the Civil War, when the Union troops of General William T. Sherman were approaching their home, Fanny and a sister fled to live with an older sister in southwest Georgia. Fanny recorded both her trip and her stay in a diary, later published in 1908 under the title Wartime Journal of a Georgia Girl: 1864-65. A second diary, Journal of a Georgia Woman, 1870-1872 (2002), documented her transition from an antebellum Southern belle to an independent woman. After her father's death in 1873, she supported herself as a writer and contributed articles to The New York World, Scott's Monthly, and a variety of other publications. Her first novel, A Family Secret, was published in 1876. She briefly edited the Washington Gazette, but was fired when the editor discovered she was a woman. She became the principal of the Girl's High School in Yazoo, Mississippi, where she remained for seven years. She then returned to Georgia, where she become the principal at her former high school and then a professor of French and literature. Later in life, she devoted herself full-time to lecturing and writing. Fanny had a lifelong interest in botany and wrote two textbooks on the subject, Botany All the Year Around (1903) for high school students and A Practical Course in Botany (1911) for college students. The latter received international acclaim and was translated into French for use in French schools.

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Statistieken

Werken
7
Ook door
1
Leden
92
Populariteit
#202,476
Waardering
½ 3.6
ISBNs
12

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