Page:Sketches of representative women of New England.djvu/88

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
REPRESENTATIVE WOMEN OF NEW ENGLAND
65

whose immigrant ancestor, Robert1 Starkweather, was at Roxbury in 1640, and later settled at Ipswich.

The Hon. John Locke (Harv. Coll. 1792) served six years as a member of Congress. He married Hannah" Goodwin, daughter of Nathaniel Goodwin, Jr., of Plymouth, and granddaughter of Nathaniel Goodwin, Sr., and his wife, Lydia3 Le Baron (great-great-grandmother of Mrs. Upham). Lydia was a daughter of Lazarus Le Baron and grand-daughter of Dr. Francis Le Baron, the "Nameless Nobleman" from France, whose romantic story furnished a fruitful theme for the pen of Mrs. Jane G. Austin, and whose grave is to-day hell sacred in historic Plymouth. It is said that in Mrs. Grace Le Baron Upham are evidenced the manners and looks of her distinguished French progenitor.

To the "Mayflower" and Plymouth Rock Mrs. Upham traces back through three Bartlett generations, thus: The wife of Lazarus Le Baron and mother of his daughter Lydia, above named, was Lydia3 Bartlett, daughter of Joseph3 Bartlett (Joseph.2 Robert1). Robert1 Bartlett, who came in the "Ann" in 1623, married Mary Warren, daughter of Richard1 Warren, one of the signers of the Compact in November, 1620.

Mrs. Jane E. Locke, singularly sweet and gracious in character, had a fine mind. She was a writer for the magazines and periodicals of the day, and published several volumes of poems. She was a contemporary and friend of William Cullen Bryant, Nathaniel P. Willis, and Edgar Allan Poe. In the years directly preceding her death, which occurred in 1859, Grace was her constant companion, and was privileged to meet such well-known literary folk as Poe, Lydia Maria Child, Fanny Fern, Mrs. Sigourney, not to mention other authors of lesser note in their day.

Mr. Locke was equally well known in his sphere of intellectual activity. He preserved the family history by compiling and publishing "The Book of the Lockes."

As a girl, and indeed from earliest infancy, Grace had to contend with delicate health. In 1850 her parents moved to Boston, and, since all but the first five years of her life have been passed in this city, she may be called a Bostonian. She was graduated from every grade of the Boston public schools, primary, grammar, high, and normal. In 1870 she became the wife of Henry M. Upham, son of Captain William and Margaret (Folger) Upham, of Nantucket. The Folgers, his maternal ancestors, were of the same family as the mother of Benjamin Franklin. Mr. Upham, late of the firm of Damrell & Upham, has recently retired from business, having been identified for thirty-six years with that ancient landmark of Boston, "The Old Corner Bookstore," which has borne his name. Thus by her marriage was another incentive given Mrs. Upham to use the talent inherited from her parents.

When she first began to write, she did not anticipate making authorship a profession, and so abbreviated her name. But the instantaneous success of her first book, "Little Miss Faith," published in 1894 by Lee & Shepard, Boston, encouraged her to go on. In the same year "The Ban of the Golden Rod" was published by a New York house. Following these came "Little Daughter," 1895; "The Rosebud Club," 1896; "Queer Janet," 1897; "Told under the Cherry-trees," 1890; "Jessica's Triumph," 1901—all published by Lee & Shepard. In 1898 Little, Brown & Co. issued "'Twixt You and Me." She has now in Preparation the last of the "Janet Series" for children and a novel for their elders. The latter has been urged upon Mrs. Upham by readers who have enjoyed her short stories, which have appeared at intervals in the current periodicals and magazines. Mrs. Upham says, however, that she shall always give her best strength to the young, who have been her most sincere friends from the first. Her stories are written with a purpose, the purpose of purifying and ennobling the lives of children. And she has richly earned her title, "The Children's Friend." Many are the letters she has received from her youthful admirers, letters filled with such earnest gratitude and appreciation that she counts herself rich indeed, .to have inspired them. That she might be sure of doing work uncolored and unbiassed by others in a similar line of literature, she has entirely abstained from reading juvenile books. This may, in a meas-