- Source: Belle Kellogg Towne
Isabella Electa Kellogg Towne (June 1, 1844–1923) was an author and journalist born in Sylvania, Wisconsin. In the 1880s, Belle Kellogg Towne was charged with coordinating and organizing young people's papers for the Young People's Weekly, published by the Chicago-based David C. Cook Publishing Company.
The Weekly, was one of the most notable periodicals of religious papers for the young. Kellogg earned the reputation as being '"one of America's first leading women in the literary and publishing fields.'"
Personal life
Belle Kellogg was born to Seth H. and Electa S. Kellogg. She married doctor, and musical composer Professor Thomas Martin Towne (1835-1912), of Chicago, Illinois. She died in 1923 and is buried with her husband and son, Walter Washburn Towne (1868-1941), at Rosehill Cemetery, Chicago.
Works
Around the Ranch, D. Lothrop & Company, ©1883
The Transformation of Job, and the Taking in of Martha Matilda, with Frederick Vining Fisher, Dodo Press, 2008, originally published in1900
On the Mountain Top, David C. Cook, 1904
Snowflakes and Heartaches, David C. Cook Publishing Company, 1912
References
External links
Works related to Woman of the Century/Belle Kellogg Towne at Wikisource
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Belle Kellogg Towne
- Rosehill Cemetery
- List of Woman's Christian Temperance Union people
- List of Michigan companies
- List of musicals: A to L
- List of abandoned and unfinished films
- List of Jewish Academy Award winners and nominees
- Notable American Women, 1607–1950
- Katharine Drexel
- Fairfield County, Connecticut