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Elizabeth F. Ellet

Elizabeth Fries Ellet (née Lummis; October 18, 1818 – June 3, 1877) was an American writer, historian and poet. She was the first writer to record the lives of women who contributed to the American Revolutionary War.[1]

Elizabeth F. Ellet
Born
Elizabeth Fries Lummis

(1818-10-18)October 18, 1818
DiedJune 3, 1877(1877-06-03) (aged 58)
Occupation(s)Author, historian, poet, translator
Spouse(s)William Henry Ellet
(1806–1859)
Parent(s)William Nixon Lummis
(1775–1833)
Sarah Maxwell
(1780–1849)

Born Elizabeth Fries Lummis, in New York, she published her first book, Poems, Translated and Original, in 1835. She married the chemist William Henry Ellet and the couple moved to South Carolina. She had published several books and contributed to multiple journals. In 1845, she moved back to New York and took her place in the literary scene there.

She was involved with a public scandal involving Edgar Allan Poe and Frances Sargent Osgood and, later, another involving Rufus Wilmot Griswold. Ellet's most important work, The Women of the American Revolution, was published in 1845. The three volume book profiled the lives of patriotic women in the early history of the United States. She continued writing until her death in 1877.

Early life edit

Elizabeth Fries Lummis was born in Sodus Point, New York, on October 18, 1818. Her mother was Sarah Maxwell (1780–1849)[2] the daughter of American Revolutionary War captain John Maxwell. During the Revolution, John Maxwell was lieutenant of the first company raised in Sussex County, New Jersey. He was promoted to captain and attached to the Second Regiment Hunterdon County Militia.[3] He was also a captain in Colonel Spencer's regiment of the Continental Army from February 7, 1777, to April 11, 1778. He later joined the army of General George Washington as captain of a company of 100 volunteers known as Maxwell's Company.[4]

Her father was William Nixon Lummis (1775–1833), a prominent physician who studied medicine in Philadelphia under the famous Dr. Benjamin Rush.[4] In the early part of 1800, Dr. Lummis left Philadelphia and purchased the Pulteney estate in Sodus Point, Wayne County, New York.[5] Elizabeth Lummis attended Aurora Female Seminary in Aurora, New York, where she studied, among other subjects, French, German and Italian. Her first published work, at age 16, was a translation of Silvio Pellico's Euphemio of Messina.[6]

Career edit

In 1835, Elizabeth Lummis published her first book, entitled Poems, Translated and Original, which included her tragedy, Teresa Contarini, based on the history of Venice, that was successfully performed in New York and other cities. Around this time she married William Henry Ellet (1806–1859), a chemist from New York City.[7] The couple moved to Columbia, South Carolina, when he was made professor of chemistry, mineralogy and geology at South Carolina College in 1836.[8]

During this time, Ellet published several books. In 1839, she wrote The Characters of Schiller, a critical essay on the writer Friedrich Schiller including her translation of many of his poems.[9] She wrote Scenes in the Life of Joanna of Sicily, a history of the lifestyles of female nobility, and Rambles about the Country, a lively description of the scenery she had observed in her travels through the United States, in 1840.[10] She continued writing poems, translations and essays on European literature which she contributed to the American Monthly, the North American Review, the Southern Literary Messenger, the Southern Quarterly Review and other periodicals. Ellet wrote abundantly in a wide variety of genres.[11]

In 1845, Ellet left her husband in the south, moving back to New York City where she resumed her place as a member of literary society along with such writers as Margaret Fuller, Anne Lynch Botta, Edgar Allan Poe, Rufus Wilmot Griswold, Anna Cora Mowatt and Frances Sargent Osgood.[12]

 
Ellet became involved in a scandal involving Edgar Allan Poe and Frances Sargent Osgood (shown) in the mid-1840s.

Scandal edit

During this time, Ellet was a participant in a notorious scandal involving Edgar Allan Poe and Frances Sargent Osgood, both of whom were married to others. Accounts of the particulars of the scandal and the sequence of events differ. At the time, Poe was at the height of his fame, thanks to his work "The Raven". A number of women in literary society sent him letters, including Ellet and Osgood. Some of the letters sent may have been flirtatious or amorous ones. Ellet also spent time with Poe discussing literary matters. It is possible that Ellet felt herself in competition with Osgood for Poe's affections.[1] During this time, Poe had written several poems to and about Osgood, including "A Valentine".[13]

On one visit to Poe's home in January 1846,[14] Ellet allegedly observed letters from Osgood, shown to her by Poe's wife Virginia, and subsequently advised Osgood to ask for their return, implying to Osgood that they were an indiscretion.[14] On behalf of Osgood, Margaret Fuller and Anne Lynch Botta asked Poe to return the letters. Poe, angered by their interference, suggested that Ellet had better "look after her own letters".[15] One such letter, written in German, asked Poe to "call for it at her residence this evening", a phrase presumably meant to be seductive, though Poe either ignored it or did not understand its meaning.[16] He then gathered up these letters from Ellet and left them at her house.[14] Despite her letters having been returned, Ellet asked her brother "to demand of me the letters".[15] Her brother, Colonel William Lummis, did not believe that Poe had already returned them and threatened to kill him. In order to defend himself, Poe requested a pistol from Thomas Dunn English, who did not believe that Ellet ever sent Poe any letters.[14]

Osgood's husband, Samuel Stillman Osgood, threatened to sue Ellet unless she formally apologized. She retracted her statements in a letter to Osgood saying, "The letter shown me by Mrs Poe must have been a forgery created by Poe himself".[17] She put all the blame on Poe, suggesting the incident was because Poe was "intemperate and subject to acts of lunacy."[18] The rumor that Poe was insane was spread by Ellet and by other enemies of Poe and eventually reported in newspapers.[19] After Osgood reunited with her husband, the scandal died down.[18] Poe's sick wife Virginia, however, was deeply affected by the scandal. As early as July 1845 she had been receiving anonymous letters, possibly from Ellet, which reported her husband's alleged indiscretions. On her deathbed, Virginia claimed "Mrs. E. had been her murderer."[20] As Poe described years later, "I scorned Mrs. E simply because she revolted me, and to this day she has never ceased her anonymous persecutions."[21] It is believed that Poe wrote the short story "Hop-Frog" as a literary revenge on Ellet and others.[22]

The Women of the American Revolution edit

 
Frontispiece of The Women of the American Revolution (1856 edition)

Around 1846, Ellet began a major project in historical writing: to profile the life stories of women who sacrificed for, and were committed to, the American Revolution. She did this by searching out unpublished letters and diaries, and by interviewing descendants of Revolutionary era and frontier women, becoming the first historian of the Revolution to carry out such an effort.[7] She noted the "abundance of materials for the [masculine] history of action" and attempted to add balance by telling the feminine side, referring to the founding "mothers" as giving "nurture in the domestic sanctuary of that love of civil liberty which afterwards kindled into a flame and shed light on the world".[23]

She found so much information about female patriots that the first edition of The Women of the American Revolution (1848) had to be published in two volumes. These volumes were well received, and a third volume of additional material was published in 1850. Later historians consider these volumes to represent her most important work.[10] Ellet also authored Domestic History of the American Revolution summarizing the same material in narrative form and also published in 1850.

Ellet told the stories of women from every colony and from all ranks of society, with the exception of African Americans, whose role she chose to ignore. Some of the women she wrote about, such as Martha Washington, Abigail Adams, Mercy Otis Warren and Ann Eliza Bleecker, among others, were famous in their own right. She also wrote of the women who were more obscure but equally valuable: the wives of heroes who, during the American Revolutionary War, raised children and defended their homes.[24] She wrote, "It is almost impossible now to appreciate the vast influence of woman's patriotism upon the destinies of the infant republic."[24]

Anthologist and critic Rufus Wilmot Griswold had aided Ellet in the production of the book and granted her access to the records of the New-York Historical Society, of which he was a member. She did not acknowledge his assistance, angering the vindictive Griswold.[25] In a review, Griswold said, "with the assistance of a few gentlemen more familiar than herself with our public and domestic experience, she has made a valuable and interesting work."[26]

Further work edit

 
Cover of The Practical Housekeeper (1857)

Now an established and respected author, Ellet went on to write Family Pictures from the Bible in 1849. In 1850 she wrote Evenings at Woodlawn, a collection of German legends and traditions, and Domestic History of the American Revolution, possibly the only history of the American Revolution told from the perspective of both men and women. From 1851 to 1857 she wrote Watching Spirits, Pioneer Women of the West, Novelettes of the Musicians and Summer Rambles in the West. This book was inspired by a boating trip along the Minnesota River in 1852. The local town, Eden Prairie, Minnesota, got its name from Ellet and has dedicated a nature trail in her honor.[27]

In 1857, Ellet published a 600-page encyclopedia of American home economics entitled The Practical Housekeeper. The guide, which seemed to target middle to upper class readers, was organized into three parts: cooking, housekeeping and pharmaceutical concerns. Its contents included thousands of recipes and advice with references to philosophers, scientists, and ancient civilizations. There were also five hundred wood-engraved illustrations. She wrote in the preface, "No complete system of Domestic Economy, within the limits of a convenient manual, has been published in this country."[7]

Later works included Women Artists in All Ages and Countries (1859), the first book of its kind to represent a history of women artists.[28][29] She wroteThe Queens of American Society (1867), and Court Circles of the Republic (1869), a look at the social life of eighteen presidents from George Washington to Ulysses S. Grant.[26]

Later years edit

 
Grave of Elizabeth Ellet in Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn

In 1850, Ellet and her husband relocated to New York, where he spent his final years as a chemical consultant for the Manhattan Gas Company.

Ellet became involved with the divorce case between Rufus Griswold and his second wife, Charlotte Myers, in 1852. Ellet and Ann S. Stephens wrote to Myers telling her not to allow the divorce, as well as to Harriet McCrillis, who intended to marry Griswold after the divorce, to end her relationship with him.[30] After it was granted, Ellet and Stephens continued writing to Myers and persuaded her to repeal the divorce on September 23, 1853.[31] On February 24, 1856, the appeal went to court, with Ellet and Stephens providing lengthy testimony against Griswold's character. Neither Griswold nor Myers attended and the appeal was dismissed.[32] When Griswold died in 1857, Sarah Anna Lewis, a friend and writer, suggested that Ellet had worsened Griswold's illness and that she "goaded Griswold to his death".[33]

In 1857, Ellet replaced Ann Stephens as literary editor of the New York Evening Express.[34] Ellet's husband died two years later in 1859. She continued to write, and, although they had no children, she promoted charities for impoverished women and children by speaking in public to raise funds. An Episcopalian most of her life, she converted to Catholicism in her later years.[7] She died of Bright's disease in New York City on June 3, 1877, and was buried beside her husband at Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn.[2]

Legacy edit

Ellet was the first historian to write about the relationship of women to the American Revolution. She felt that women shaped history by their influence, which was done through "sentiment" and "feeling". This was so hard to define that she stated "History can do it no Justice".[35] Her book The Women of the American Revolution is still studied.

List of works edit

List of works taken from MSU Historic American project.[7]

  • Euphemio of Messina (1834) a translation
  • Poems, Translated and Original including the play Teresa Conarini (1835)
  • The Characters of Schiller (1839)
  • Joanna of Sicily (1840)
  • Rambles about the Country (1840)
  • The Women of the American Revolution (1848–50) (3 volumes)
  • Evenings at Woodlawn (1849)
  • Family Pictures from the Bible (1849)
  • Domestic History of the American Revolution (1850)
  • Watching Spirits (1851)
  • Nouvelettes of the Musicians (1851)
  • Pioneer Women of the West (1852)
  • Summer Rambles in the West (1853),
  • The Practical Housekeeper (1857)
  • Women Artists in All Ages and Countries (1859)
  • The Queens of American Society (1867)
  • Court Circles of the Republic (1869)

References edit

  1. ^ a b . Elizabeth F. Ellet. Archived from the original on January 2, 2011. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
  2. ^ a b Ellet, Elizabeth Fries (1998) [1848]. Diamant, Lincoln (ed.). Revolutionary Women in the War for American Independence. Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 0-275-96263-6.
  3. ^ "New Jersey State Library". Official Register of the Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War by William Stryker. Retrieved April 24, 2008.
  4. ^ a b . MARDOS Memorial Library. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved August 8, 2007.
  5. ^ "New York Times Archives" (PDF). Elizabeth Fries Ellet Obituary. June 4, 1877. Retrieved April 19, 2008.
  6. ^ "Britannica". Elizabeth-Fries-Lummis-Ellet. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
  7. ^ a b c d e "MSU Library". Historic American Project. Archived from the original on April 7, 2010. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
  8. ^ Drake, Francis Samuel (1872). Dictionary of American Biography. Boston: James R. Osgood and Co. pp. 301.
  9. ^ Elfe, Wolfgang; James N. Hardin; Günther Holst (1992). The Fortunes of German Writers in America: Studies in Literary Reception. South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press. pp. 22. ISBN 0-87249-786-0.
  10. ^ a b "Ellet, E. F. (Elizabeth Fries), 1818–1877". Literature Online Biography. Retrieved April 16, 2008.
  11. ^ . Elizabeth F. Lummis Ellet. Archived from the original on September 11, 2007. Retrieved May 1, 2007.
  12. ^ Anne C. Lynch Botta (1894). Memoirs of Anne C.L. Botta,: written by her friends. With selections from her correspondence and from her writings in prose and poetry. New York City: J. Selwin Tait & Sons. pp. 14, 175.
  13. ^ "E.A. Poe Society". Lectures and Articles on Edgar Allan Poe. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
  14. ^ a b c d Meyers, Jeffrey. Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Legacy. New York Cooper Square Press, 1992: 191. ISBN 0-684-19370-1.
  15. ^ a b Silverman, Kenneth. Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991: 290. ISBN 0-06-092331-8.
  16. ^ Silverman, Kenneth. Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991: 291. ISBN 0-06-092331-8.
  17. ^ Moss, Sidney P. Poe's Literary Battles: The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu. Southern Illinois University Press, 1969: 215
  18. ^ a b Silverman, Kenneth. Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991: 292. ISBN 0-06-092331-8.
  19. ^ Meyers, Jeffrey. Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Legacy. New York Cooper Square Press, 1992: 192. ISBN 0-684-19370-1.
  20. ^ Moss, Sidney P. Poe's Literary Battles: The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu. Southern Illinois University Press, 1969: 213–214
  21. ^ Phillips, Mary E. Edgar Allan Poe: The Man. Volume II. Chicago: The John C. Winston Co., 1926: 1388
  22. ^ Benton, Richard P. "Friends and Enemies: Women in the Life of Edgar Allan Poe" as collected in Myths and Reality: The Mysterious Mr. Poe. Baltimore: Edgar Allan Poe Society, 1987: 16.
  23. ^ Douglas, Ann. The Feminization of American Culture. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1977: 184. ISBN 0-394-40532-3
  24. ^ a b "History From America's Most Famous Valleys". The Women of the American Revolution. Retrieved October 13, 2007.
  25. ^ Bayless, Joy. Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor, Hardcover ed. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943. pp. 143–144.
  26. ^ a b "Legacy Profile by Carol Mattingly". Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet (1818–1877). Retrieved April 16, 2008.
  27. ^ Jerde, Lyn. "Elizabeth Fries Ellet Interpretive Trail is signed, dedicated" 2009-09-19 at the Wayback Machine, Eden Prairie Sun-Current. August 9, 2007. p. 9A
  28. ^ Langer, Sandra L.; Ellet, Elizabeth Fries Lummis (1980). "Women Artists in All Ages and Countries by Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet". Woman's Art Journal. Woman's Art Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2. 1 (2): 55–58. doi:10.2307/1358087. hdl:2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t3ws8mg0c. JSTOR 1358087.
  29. ^ Nunn, Pamela Geraldine (1982). "The Mid-Victorian Woman Artist: 1850-1879" (PDF). pp. 21–23.
  30. ^ Bayless, Joy. Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943: 217–220.
  31. ^ Bayless, Joy. Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943: 227.
  32. ^ Bayless, Joy. Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943: 251.
  33. ^ Phillips, Mary E. Edgar Allan Poe: The Man. Volume II. Chicago: The John C. Winston Co., 1926: 1575
  34. ^ Meyer, Annie Nathan; Julia Ward Howe (1891). Woman's Work in America. New York: Henry Holt and Company. pp. 128.
  35. ^ Kerber, Linda (1997). Toward an Intellectual History of Women: Essays. Chapel Hill, NC: UNC Press. pp. 67–68. ISBN 0-8078-4654-6.

Further reading edit

  • Casper, Scott (1992). "An Uneasy Marriage of Sentiment and Scholarship: Elizabeth F. Ellet and the Domestic Origins of American Women's History". Journal of Women's History. 4 (2): 10–35. doi:10.1353/jowh.2010.0299. S2CID 145393885.

External links edit

  • Works by Elizabeth Fries Ellet at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by Elizabeth Fries Ellet at Open Library
  • Works by or about Elizabeth Fries Ellet at Internet Archive
  • Works by Elizabeth F. Ellet at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Poems: Translated and Original (1835) by Elizabeth F. Ellet
  • Summer Rambles in the West (1853) by Elizabeth F. Ellet
  • Finding aid to the E.F. Ellet correspondence with index at the Library of Congress

elizabeth, ellet, elizabeth, fries, ellet, née, lummis, october, 1818, june, 1877, american, writer, historian, poet, first, writer, record, lives, women, contributed, american, revolutionary, bornelizabeth, fries, lummis, 1818, october, 1818sodus, point, york. Elizabeth Fries Ellet nee Lummis October 18 1818 June 3 1877 was an American writer historian and poet She was the first writer to record the lives of women who contributed to the American Revolutionary War 1 Elizabeth F ElletBornElizabeth Fries Lummis 1818 10 18 October 18 1818Sodus Point New York U S DiedJune 3 1877 1877 06 03 aged 58 New York City U S Occupation s Author historian poet translatorSpouse s William Henry Ellet 1806 1859 Parent s William Nixon Lummis 1775 1833 Sarah Maxwell 1780 1849 Born Elizabeth Fries Lummis in New York she published her first book Poems Translated and Original in 1835 She married the chemist William Henry Ellet and the couple moved to South Carolina She had published several books and contributed to multiple journals In 1845 she moved back to New York and took her place in the literary scene there She was involved with a public scandal involving Edgar Allan Poe and Frances Sargent Osgood and later another involving Rufus Wilmot Griswold Ellet s most important work The Women of the American Revolution was published in 1845 The three volume book profiled the lives of patriotic women in the early history of the United States She continued writing until her death in 1877 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Scandal 2 2 The Women of the American Revolution 2 3 Further work 3 Later years 4 Legacy 5 List of works 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksEarly life editElizabeth Fries Lummis was born in Sodus Point New York on October 18 1818 Her mother was Sarah Maxwell 1780 1849 2 the daughter of American Revolutionary War captain John Maxwell During the Revolution John Maxwell was lieutenant of the first company raised in Sussex County New Jersey He was promoted to captain and attached to the Second Regiment Hunterdon County Militia 3 He was also a captain in Colonel Spencer s regiment of the Continental Army from February 7 1777 to April 11 1778 He later joined the army of General George Washington as captain of a company of 100 volunteers known as Maxwell s Company 4 Her father was William Nixon Lummis 1775 1833 a prominent physician who studied medicine in Philadelphia under the famous Dr Benjamin Rush 4 In the early part of 1800 Dr Lummis left Philadelphia and purchased the Pulteney estate in Sodus Point Wayne County New York 5 Elizabeth Lummis attended Aurora Female Seminary in Aurora New York where she studied among other subjects French German and Italian Her first published work at age 16 was a translation of Silvio Pellico s Euphemio of Messina 6 Career editIn 1835 Elizabeth Lummis published her first book entitled Poems Translated and Original which included her tragedy Teresa Contarini based on the history of Venice that was successfully performed in New York and other cities Around this time she married William Henry Ellet 1806 1859 a chemist from New York City 7 The couple moved to Columbia South Carolina when he was made professor of chemistry mineralogy and geology at South Carolina College in 1836 8 During this time Ellet published several books In 1839 she wrote The Characters of Schiller a critical essay on the writer Friedrich Schiller including her translation of many of his poems 9 She wrote Scenes in the Life of Joanna of Sicily a history of the lifestyles of female nobility and Rambles about the Country a lively description of the scenery she had observed in her travels through the United States in 1840 10 She continued writing poems translations and essays on European literature which she contributed to the American Monthly the North American Review the Southern Literary Messenger the Southern Quarterly Review and other periodicals Ellet wrote abundantly in a wide variety of genres 11 In 1845 Ellet left her husband in the south moving back to New York City where she resumed her place as a member of literary society along with such writers as Margaret Fuller Anne Lynch Botta Edgar Allan Poe Rufus Wilmot Griswold Anna Cora Mowatt and Frances Sargent Osgood 12 nbsp Ellet became involved in a scandal involving Edgar Allan Poe and Frances Sargent Osgood shown in the mid 1840s Scandal edit During this time Ellet was a participant in a notorious scandal involving Edgar Allan Poe and Frances Sargent Osgood both of whom were married to others Accounts of the particulars of the scandal and the sequence of events differ At the time Poe was at the height of his fame thanks to his work The Raven A number of women in literary society sent him letters including Ellet and Osgood Some of the letters sent may have been flirtatious or amorous ones Ellet also spent time with Poe discussing literary matters It is possible that Ellet felt herself in competition with Osgood for Poe s affections 1 During this time Poe had written several poems to and about Osgood including A Valentine 13 On one visit to Poe s home in January 1846 14 Ellet allegedly observed letters from Osgood shown to her by Poe s wife Virginia and subsequently advised Osgood to ask for their return implying to Osgood that they were an indiscretion 14 On behalf of Osgood Margaret Fuller and Anne Lynch Botta asked Poe to return the letters Poe angered by their interference suggested that Ellet had better look after her own letters 15 One such letter written in German asked Poe to call for it at her residence this evening a phrase presumably meant to be seductive though Poe either ignored it or did not understand its meaning 16 He then gathered up these letters from Ellet and left them at her house 14 Despite her letters having been returned Ellet asked her brother to demand of me the letters 15 Her brother Colonel William Lummis did not believe that Poe had already returned them and threatened to kill him In order to defend himself Poe requested a pistol from Thomas Dunn English who did not believe that Ellet ever sent Poe any letters 14 Osgood s husband Samuel Stillman Osgood threatened to sue Ellet unless she formally apologized She retracted her statements in a letter to Osgood saying The letter shown me by Mrs Poe must have been a forgery created by Poe himself 17 She put all the blame on Poe suggesting the incident was because Poe was intemperate and subject to acts of lunacy 18 The rumor that Poe was insane was spread by Ellet and by other enemies of Poe and eventually reported in newspapers 19 After Osgood reunited with her husband the scandal died down 18 Poe s sick wife Virginia however was deeply affected by the scandal As early as July 1845 she had been receiving anonymous letters possibly from Ellet which reported her husband s alleged indiscretions On her deathbed Virginia claimed Mrs E had been her murderer 20 As Poe described years later I scorned Mrs E simply because she revolted me and to this day she has never ceased her anonymous persecutions 21 It is believed that Poe wrote the short story Hop Frog as a literary revenge on Ellet and others 22 The Women of the American Revolution edit nbsp Frontispiece of The Women of the American Revolution 1856 edition Around 1846 Ellet began a major project in historical writing to profile the life stories of women who sacrificed for and were committed to the American Revolution She did this by searching out unpublished letters and diaries and by interviewing descendants of Revolutionary era and frontier women becoming the first historian of the Revolution to carry out such an effort 7 She noted the abundance of materials for the masculine history of action and attempted to add balance by telling the feminine side referring to the founding mothers as giving nurture in the domestic sanctuary of that love of civil liberty which afterwards kindled into a flame and shed light on the world 23 She found so much information about female patriots that the first edition of The Women of the American Revolution 1848 had to be published in two volumes These volumes were well received and a third volume of additional material was published in 1850 Later historians consider these volumes to represent her most important work 10 Ellet also authored Domestic History of the American Revolution summarizing the same material in narrative form and also published in 1850 Ellet told the stories of women from every colony and from all ranks of society with the exception of African Americans whose role she chose to ignore Some of the women she wrote about such as Martha Washington Abigail Adams Mercy Otis Warren and Ann Eliza Bleecker among others were famous in their own right She also wrote of the women who were more obscure but equally valuable the wives of heroes who during the American Revolutionary War raised children and defended their homes 24 She wrote It is almost impossible now to appreciate the vast influence of woman s patriotism upon the destinies of the infant republic 24 Anthologist and critic Rufus Wilmot Griswold had aided Ellet in the production of the book and granted her access to the records of the New York Historical Society of which he was a member She did not acknowledge his assistance angering the vindictive Griswold 25 In a review Griswold said with the assistance of a few gentlemen more familiar than herself with our public and domestic experience she has made a valuable and interesting work 26 Further work edit nbsp Cover of The Practical Housekeeper 1857 Now an established and respected author Ellet went on to write Family Pictures from the Bible in 1849 In 1850 she wrote Evenings at Woodlawn a collection of German legends and traditions and Domestic History of the American Revolution possibly the only history of the American Revolution told from the perspective of both men and women From 1851 to 1857 she wrote Watching Spirits Pioneer Women of the West Novelettes of the Musicians and Summer Rambles in the West This book was inspired by a boating trip along the Minnesota River in 1852 The local town Eden Prairie Minnesota got its name from Ellet and has dedicated a nature trail in her honor 27 In 1857 Ellet published a 600 page encyclopedia of American home economics entitled The Practical Housekeeper The guide which seemed to target middle to upper class readers was organized into three parts cooking housekeeping and pharmaceutical concerns Its contents included thousands of recipes and advice with references to philosophers scientists and ancient civilizations There were also five hundred wood engraved illustrations She wrote in the preface No complete system of Domestic Economy within the limits of a convenient manual has been published in this country 7 Later works included Women Artists in All Ages and Countries 1859 the first book of its kind to represent a history of women artists 28 29 She wroteThe Queens of American Society 1867 and Court Circles of the Republic 1869 a look at the social life of eighteen presidents from George Washington to Ulysses S Grant 26 Later years edit nbsp Grave of Elizabeth Ellet in Green Wood Cemetery BrooklynIn 1850 Ellet and her husband relocated to New York where he spent his final years as a chemical consultant for the Manhattan Gas Company Ellet became involved with the divorce case between Rufus Griswold and his second wife Charlotte Myers in 1852 Ellet and Ann S Stephens wrote to Myers telling her not to allow the divorce as well as to Harriet McCrillis who intended to marry Griswold after the divorce to end her relationship with him 30 After it was granted Ellet and Stephens continued writing to Myers and persuaded her to repeal the divorce on September 23 1853 31 On February 24 1856 the appeal went to court with Ellet and Stephens providing lengthy testimony against Griswold s character Neither Griswold nor Myers attended and the appeal was dismissed 32 When Griswold died in 1857 Sarah Anna Lewis a friend and writer suggested that Ellet had worsened Griswold s illness and that she goaded Griswold to his death 33 In 1857 Ellet replaced Ann Stephens as literary editor of the New York Evening Express 34 Ellet s husband died two years later in 1859 She continued to write and although they had no children she promoted charities for impoverished women and children by speaking in public to raise funds An Episcopalian most of her life she converted to Catholicism in her later years 7 She died of Bright s disease in New York City on June 3 1877 and was buried beside her husband at Green Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn 2 Legacy editEllet was the first historian to write about the relationship of women to the American Revolution She felt that women shaped history by their influence which was done through sentiment and feeling This was so hard to define that she stated History can do it no Justice 35 Her book The Women of the American Revolution is still studied List of works editList of works taken from MSU Historic American project 7 Euphemio of Messina 1834 a translation Poems Translated and Original including the play Teresa Conarini 1835 The Characters of Schiller 1839 Joanna of Sicily 1840 Rambles about the Country 1840 The Women of the American Revolution 1848 50 3 volumes Evenings at Woodlawn 1849 Family Pictures from the Bible 1849 Domestic History of the American Revolution 1850 Watching Spirits 1851 Nouvelettes of the Musicians 1851 Pioneer Women of the West 1852 Summer Rambles in the West 1853 The Practical Housekeeper 1857 Women Artists in All Ages and Countries 1859 The Queens of American Society 1867 Court Circles of the Republic 1869 References edit a b Librarycompany Elizabeth F Ellet Archived from the original on January 2 2011 Retrieved May 1 2007 a b Ellet Elizabeth Fries 1998 1848 Diamant Lincoln ed Revolutionary Women in the War for American Independence Westport CT Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 275 96263 6 New Jersey State Library Official Register of the Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War by William Stryker Retrieved April 24 2008 a b Southern New York MARDOS Memorial Library Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved August 8 2007 New York Times Archives PDF Elizabeth Fries Ellet Obituary June 4 1877 Retrieved April 19 2008 Britannica Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet Retrieved May 1 2007 a b c d e MSU Library Historic American Project Archived from the original on April 7 2010 Retrieved May 1 2007 Drake Francis Samuel 1872 Dictionary of American Biography Boston James R Osgood and Co pp 301 Elfe Wolfgang James N Hardin Gunther Holst 1992 The Fortunes of German Writers in America Studies in Literary Reception South Carolina University of South Carolina Press pp 22 ISBN 0 87249 786 0 a b Ellet E F Elizabeth Fries 1818 1877 Literature Online Biography Retrieved April 16 2008 For women Elizabeth F Lummis Ellet Archived from the original on September 11 2007 Retrieved May 1 2007 Anne C Lynch Botta 1894 Memoirs of Anne C L Botta written by her friends With selections from her correspondence and from her writings in prose and poetry New York City J Selwin Tait amp Sons pp 14 175 E A Poe Society Lectures and Articles on Edgar Allan Poe Retrieved October 13 2007 a b c d Meyers Jeffrey Edgar Allan Poe His Life and Legacy New York Cooper Square Press 1992 191 ISBN 0 684 19370 1 a b Silverman Kenneth Edgar A Poe Mournful and Never ending Remembrance New York Harper Perennial 1991 290 ISBN 0 06 092331 8 Silverman Kenneth Edgar A Poe Mournful and Never ending Remembrance New York Harper Perennial 1991 291 ISBN 0 06 092331 8 Moss Sidney P Poe s Literary Battles The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu Southern Illinois University Press 1969 215 a b Silverman Kenneth Edgar A Poe Mournful and Never ending Remembrance New York Harper Perennial 1991 292 ISBN 0 06 092331 8 Meyers Jeffrey Edgar Allan Poe His Life and Legacy New York Cooper Square Press 1992 192 ISBN 0 684 19370 1 Moss Sidney P Poe s Literary Battles The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu Southern Illinois University Press 1969 213 214 Phillips Mary E Edgar Allan Poe The Man Volume II Chicago The John C Winston Co 1926 1388 Benton Richard P Friends and Enemies Women in the Life of Edgar Allan Poe as collected in Myths and Reality The Mysterious Mr Poe Baltimore Edgar Allan Poe Society 1987 16 Douglas Ann The Feminization of American Culture New York Alfred A Knopf 1977 184 ISBN 0 394 40532 3 a b History From America s Most Famous Valleys The Women of the American Revolution Retrieved October 13 2007 Bayless Joy Rufus Wilmot Griswold Poe s Literary Executor Hardcover ed Nashville Vanderbilt University Press 1943 pp 143 144 a b Legacy Profile by Carol Mattingly Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet 1818 1877 Retrieved April 16 2008 Jerde Lyn Elizabeth Fries Ellet Interpretive Trail is signed dedicated Archived 2009 09 19 at the Wayback Machine Eden Prairie Sun Current August 9 2007 p 9A Langer Sandra L Ellet Elizabeth Fries Lummis 1980 Women Artists in All Ages and Countries by Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet Woman s Art Journal Woman s Art Journal Vol 1 No 2 1 2 55 58 doi 10 2307 1358087 hdl 2027 uc2 ark 13960 t3ws8mg0c JSTOR 1358087 Nunn Pamela Geraldine 1982 The Mid Victorian Woman Artist 1850 1879 PDF pp 21 23 Bayless Joy Rufus Wilmot Griswold Poe s Literary Executor Nashville Vanderbilt University Press 1943 217 220 Bayless Joy Rufus Wilmot Griswold Poe s Literary Executor Nashville Vanderbilt University Press 1943 227 Bayless Joy Rufus Wilmot Griswold Poe s Literary Executor Nashville Vanderbilt University Press 1943 251 Phillips Mary E Edgar Allan Poe The Man Volume II Chicago The John C Winston Co 1926 1575 Meyer Annie Nathan Julia Ward Howe 1891 Woman s Work in America New York Henry Holt and Company pp 128 Kerber Linda 1997 Toward an Intellectual History of Women Essays Chapel Hill NC UNC Press pp 67 68 ISBN 0 8078 4654 6 Further reading editCasper Scott 1992 An Uneasy Marriage of Sentiment and Scholarship Elizabeth F Ellet and the Domestic Origins of American Women s History Journal of Women s History 4 2 10 35 doi 10 1353 jowh 2010 0299 S2CID 145393885 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Elizabeth F Ellet nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Elizabeth F Ellet Works by Elizabeth Fries Ellet at Project Gutenberg Works by Elizabeth Fries Ellet at Open Library Works by or about Elizabeth Fries Ellet at Internet Archive Works by Elizabeth F Ellet at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Poems Translated and Original 1835 by Elizabeth F Ellet Summer Rambles in the West 1853 by Elizabeth F Ellet Finding aid to the E F Ellet correspondence with index at the Library of Congress Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Elizabeth F Ellet amp oldid 1150039943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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