LETTER: Autograph letter signed, "Grace Greenwood," to "Dear Mr. Ridfaste?," May 15th, 1869, 510 New Jersey Avenue, Washington, D.C.
ALS, "Grace Greenwood," to "Dear Mr. Ridfaste?," May 15th, 1869, 510 New Jersey Avenue, Washington, D.C.
8vo.; one leaf, three pages.
Greenwood writes of future writing projects.
Greenwood (1823-1904), a.k.a. Sarah J. Clarke, a.k.a. Mrs. Leander Lippincott, grew up in and around Rochester, NY. Clarke first published her poems in Rochester newspapers; soon thereafter Nathaniel Willis began to solicit her work for his periodicals New Mirror and Home Journal. As she contributed more frequently to the widely-read magazines adopted the pseudonym "Grace Greenwood" both in print and, eventually, in her personal life as well.
In 1849 she took on an editorial position at Louis Godev's Godey's Lady's Book, but Godey, determined to keep his periodical politically neutral, fired her after she published an antislavery tract in the National Era. Continuing to write for the National Era and the Saturday Evening from Washington D.C., she initiated a series of "Washington Letters" in the latter paper which appeared regularly for the next fifty years. In 1850 she released Greenwood Leaves, a collection of her magazine pieces, and though critics assessed her work as overly sentimental, the collection achieved popular success.
Joining the lecture circuits in the 1850s, she spoke on the need for peace, prison reform, and the abolition of capital punishment. During the Civil War she sold her writing to raise money for the U.S. Sanitary Commission and frequently lectured to patriotic organizations and troops, earning the title "Grace Greenwood the Patriot" from President Lincoln. After the war she resumed her residence in Washington and worked as a correspondent for the New York Times. From this point on, her "Letters" and other writing took on a more unabashedly political tone as she advocated social reform and renewed her interest in women's rights.
In 1853, she married Leander Lippincott. Their marriage crumbled as his infidelities became fodder for gossip columnists. The couple had one child, a daughter named Annie, at whose home Grace Greenwood died of bronchitis in 1904.
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