- Source: Helen M. Winslow
Helen M. Winslow (pen name, Aunt Philury; April 13, 1851 – March 27, 1938) was an American editor, author, publisher, and journalist. She began her work on Boston papers. Winslow served as dramatic editor on The Beacon, 1891–97; editor, Woman's Club Department, Boston Transcript, 1893–98; editor, Woman's Club Department of the Delineator, 1897, and again 1912; editor and publisher, The Club Woman, 1897-1904; and she was the publisher of the Official Register of Women's Clubs in America from 1897. She was the author of Salome Sheppard, Reformer. 1893; Concerning Cats, 1900; Concerning Polly, 1902; Literary Boston or To-day, 1902; The Woman of To-morrow, 1905; The President of Quex, 1906; Peggy at Spinster Farm, 1908; A Woman for Mayor, 1910; The Pleasuring of Susan Smith, 1912; and At the Sign of the Town Pump, 1913. She collaborated with Frances Willard in Occupations for Women, and with Marie Wright in Picturesque Mexico.
Early life and education
Helen Maria Winslow was born in Westfield, Vermont, April 13, 1851. She was in the ninth generation of descent from Kenelm Winslow, a brother of Governor Edward Winslow, of the Plymouth Colony. Her great-grandmother Winslow was Abigail Adams. In her infancy, her family removed to Greenfield, Massachusetts, and afterwards to St. Albans, Vermont, where her father, Don Avery Winslow (1824–1902), was a leader in musical circles. He was a musical composer of note and a member of the first English opera company organized in the United States. The mother, Mary F. (Newton) Winslow (died 1882), was a scholar, a linguist and a poet. Winslow's siblings included, Edward W. (drowned in early youth), Mary A., Isabel N., and Harriet P. After the father's second marriage in 1886, Amanda became Winslow's stepmother.
Winslow was educated at the Vermont Academy and State Normal schools, with special studies in languages and literature in Boston.
Career
Winslow became a writer early in life, sometimes using the pen name, "Aunt Philury". She published her "Aunt Philury Papers" first, which was followed by the story, "Jack," both of which were well received. After her mother's death and her father's remarriage, Winslow went to Boston, living in the Roxbury District with her three sisters. Her first serial story, "The Shawsheen Mills," was published in the Yankee Blade. In 1886, she published "A Bohemian Chapter" as a serial in the Boston Beacon, a story telling of the struggles of a woman artist in Boston. In addition to traditional stories, Winslow also wrote poetry. Many of her poems were devoted to nature.
As a journalist, she served first on the Boston Transcript, and later, she became one of the regular staff of the Boston Advertiser, doing work at the same time for the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette. Besides doing work on almost every Boston daily, The Christian Union, Christian at Work, Interior, Drake's Magazine, Demorest's Magazine, the Arena, Journal of Education, Wide Awake, Youth's Companion, Cottage Hearth, and other periodicals were mediums through which she addressed the public. Her work covered a wide range.
Winslow served as commissioner from Massachusetts to the Cotton States and International Exposition of Atlanta, 1893; director of Board of Trustees of the Frances Willard Hospital, Bedford, Massachusetts; and State regent of the Massachusetts Daughters of the American Revolution, 1901–02. She served as treasurer of the New England Woman's Press Association, and was one of its six founders. She was also the founder of the Boston Authors’ Club; and served as vice-president of the Press League.
Winslow lectured before many women's clubs and societies. She was a member of The National Society of the Colonial Dames of America, the Ex-Club of Boston, Pioneer Workers, the Lyceum Club of England, Professional Woman's Club, the Daughters of Vermont, Roxburghe Club, and the Altrurian Club.
Personal life
In religion, she was a Congregationalist. Winslow died March 27, 1938, in Shirley, Massachusetts, and was buried in Center Cemetery in Shirley.
Selected works
Salome Shepard, Reformer, 1893
Concerning Cats, 1900
Concerning Polly, 1902
Literary Boston or To-day, 1902
The Woman of To-morrow, 1905
The President of Quex, 1906
Peggy at Spinster Farm, 1908
A Woman for Mayor, 1910
The Pleasuring of Susan Smith, 1912
At the Sign of the Town Pump, 1913
References
= Attribution
=This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Leonard, John W. (1914). Woman's Who's who of America: A Biographical Dictionary of Contemporary Women of the United States and Canada, 1914-1915 (Public domain ed.). American commonwealth Company. p. 895.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Ullery, Jacob G (1894). Men of Vermont: An Illustrated Biographical History of Vermonters and Sons of Vermont (Public domain ed.). Transcript Publishing Company. p. 437.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life (Public domain ed.). Moulton. p. 791.
= Bibliography
=Faust, Langdon L. (1988). American women writers: a critical reference guide from colonial times to the present. Frederick Ungar A Book. ISBN 978-0-8044-3157-6.
External links
Works related to Woman of the Century/Helen M. Winslow at Wikisource
Works by Helen M. Winslow at Project Gutenberg
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