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Part Taken by Women in American History


great attention. In 1889, she wrote, in conjunction with George W. Cable, "The Haunted House on Royal Street." She has written also for Lippincott's, Louisiana Journal of Education and Practical Housekeeper.

CLARA JESSUP MOORE.

Poet, novelist and philanthropist; was born February 16, 1824, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her mother's family name is found in the Doomsday Book compiled in 1086. She is of distinguished ancestry, and descended from some of the prominent families of Virginia, Massachusetts and other states of the Union. One of her ancestors was lieutenant in King Phillip's War, and many of the prominent men of pioneer days are among Mrs. Moore's ancestors. She became the wife of Bloomfield Haines Moore, of Philadelphia, Pa., in October, 1842. After her marriage her home in Philadelphia became the resort of literary people, among them some of the most gifted authors of the day, and at this time she began her literary work. In 1855 she was widely known as a writer of prose and poetry, and her name appears in "Hart's Female Prose Writers of America." She is the author of a long list of novels and short stories. She did splendid work on the Sanitary Commission during the war, being corresponding secretary of the Women's Pennsylvania Branch. She also organized the special relief committee, which took such an active part in hospital work during the Civil War, a non-sectional organization. After the war Mrs. Moore resumed her literary work, and has given from the proceeds of her labors liberally to works of charity. One of her articles, which appeared in Lippincott's Magazine in 1873, under the title "Unsettled Points of Etiquette," drew upon her much unfavorable comment. In 1873 she published a revised edition of "The Young Lady's Friend," and in 1875 a collection of verses, followed by many others; one "On Dangerous Ground" reached its seventh edition, and was translated into Swedish and French. It is eminently a book for women. She at one time maintained her residence in London, England, which was a center for literary and scientific men and women of the day.

E. PAULINE JOHNSON.

E. Pauline Johnson was born in Brant county, Ontario, at the city of Brantfort. Her father, George Henry Martin Johnson, was head chief of the Mohawks. Her mother, Emily S. Howells, an English woman, was born in Bristol, England. Her paternal grandfather was the distinguished John "Sakayenkwaeaghton" (Disappearing Mist) Johnson, a pure Mohawk, and the speaker of the Six Nation Council for forty years. During the War of 1812 he fought for the British. His paternal great-grandfather, Tekahionwake, was given the name of Johnson by Sir William Johnson, hence the family name which they now use. Mrs. Johnson is a writer of verse and a contributor to many of the leading papers in Canada and the United States, of the latter the Boston Transcript.

GENIE CLARK POMEROY.

Born in April, 1867, in Iowa City, Iowa. Her father, Rush Clark, was one of the early pioneers of Iowa, her mother, a teacher, who died when Mrs. Pome-