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Florence Van Leer Earle Coates

Florence Van Leer Earle Nicholson Coates (July 1, 1850 – April 6, 1927) was an American poet, whose prolific output was published in many literary magazines, some of it set to music. She was mentored by the English poet Matthew Arnold, with whom she maintained a lifelong friendship. She was famous for her many nature poems, inspired by the flora and fauna of the Adirondacks, where she lived. She was elected poet laureate of Pennsylvania by the state Federation of Women's Clubs in 1915.[1]

Florence Van Leer Earle Coates
Florence Van Leer Earle Coates, pre-1916
BornFlorence Van Leer Earle
(1850-07-01)July 1, 1850
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedApril 6, 1927(1927-04-06) (aged 76)
Hahnemann Hospital, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Resting placeChurch of the Redeemer, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Occupation
Spouse
  • William Nicholson
    (m. 1872; died 1877)
  • (m. 1879; died 1921)
Relatives
Signature

Biography

Coates was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania the eldest daughter of Philadelphia lawyer George Hussey Earle Sr. and Mrs. Frances ("Fanny") Van Leer Earle.[2] She was the granddaughter of noted abolitionist and philanthropist Thomas Earle and a member of the influential Van Leer family.[3] She gained fame both at home and abroad for her works of poetry—nearly three hundred of which were published in literary magazines such as the Atlantic Monthly, Scribner's Magazine, The Literary Digest, Lippincott's, The Century Magazine, and Harper's. Many of her poems were set to music by notable composers such as Amy Beach. She attended school in New England under the instruction of abolitionist and teacher Theodore Dwight Weld, and would further her education abroad at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Paris (Rue de Varenne),[4] and by studying music in Brussels under noted instructors of the day.

 
Coates, pre-1894
 
Tulip-tree

"My remembrance of our last visit and of your tulip-trees and maples I shall never lose ..." —Matthew Arnold, in a letter to Coates[5]

Literary and social critic Matthew Arnold both encouraged and inspired Coates's writing of poetry. He was a guest at the Coates' Germantown home when his lecture tours brought him to Philadelphia. Coates and Arnold first met in New York—during Arnold's first visit and lecture tour of America—at the home of Andrew Carnegie, "where they formed a lasting friendship".[6] The tour (which lasted from October 1883 to March 1884) brought Arnold to Philadelphia in December 1883, where he lectured at Association Hall on the topics of the "Doctrine of the Remnant" and on "Emerson".[7] His second visit and tour of America took place in 1886, and brought him to Philadelphia in early June where he was again hosted by the Coates and spoke on the topic of "Foreign Education" at the University of Pennsylvania chapel.[8] Arnold wrote to Coates in 1887[9] and 1888[5] from his home at Pains Hill Cottage in Cobham, Surrey, England describing his remembrance of and fondness for her "tulip-trees and maples" at her Germantown home, "Willing Terrace". Rarely did Coates write or publish prose work, but in April 1894 and again in December 1909, she contributed personal reminiscences of her mentor to The Century and Lippincott's magazines respectively.

Between 1887 and 1912, Coates published over two dozen poems in The Century Magazine. Her correspondence between Century editor Richard Watson Gilder and others is documented at the New York Public Library Digital Collections website.[10] In one letter dated March 12, 1905, Coates submitted to Mr. Gilder a poem she wrote after being inspired by a photograph of Helen Keller holding a rose which was published in The Century the previous January. Coates requested that, if published, the poem also be accompanied by a copy of the photograph, and shared that Ms. Keller sent word that she "accord[ed] [Coates] any permission" to use the photo for that purpose. The poem, "Helen Keller with a Rose", was published in the July 1905 issue—without the accompanying photograph, but with reference to the issue in which it first appeared.

The Coates often spent their summer months in the Adirondacks, where they maintained "Camp Elsinore"—their summer camp by the Upper St. Regis Lake. It was there that they entertained, rested and escaped the humidity of Philadelphia summers, welcoming friends such as Otis Skinner, Violet Oakley, Henry Mills Alden, and Agnes Repplier.[11] In the early 1900s, the Coates seasonally opened their camp to Anna Roosevelt Cowles ("Bamie")—the elder sister of Theodore Roosevelt. Among Cowles's visitors during her stays at Elsinore was Alice Roosevelt, President Theodore Roosevelt's daughter.[12] Many of Coates's nature poems were inspired by the flora and fauna of the Adirondacks. Of her "spot in the mountains", Coates sings:

There's a cabin in the mountains, where the fare, dear,
      Is frugal as the cheer of Arden blest;
But contentment sweet and fellowship are there, dear,
      And Love, that makes the feast he honors—best!

 
Upper St. Regis Lake

 There's a lake upon
 the mountains...—FEC

In the March 1913 issue of Lippincott's Monthly Magazine, noted anthologist and poet, William Stanley Braithwaite (1878–1962), gives a detailed nine-page review of Coates's poetry, relating how "she draws from the Olympian world figures that typify some motive or desire in human conduct, and in the modern world the praise of men and women, heroic in attainment or sacrifice; or laments events that effect social and ethical progress, showing how beneficently she has brought her art, without modifying in the least its abstract function as a creator of beauty and pleasure, into the service of profound and vital problems".[13] Much of Coates's later published work was written during the years spanning World War I and showcased her concern for such "profound and vital problems" as her voice joined the chorus of "singers" in support of American involvement in the war—evidenced in her privately published pamphlet of war poetry, Pro Patria (1917). Coates also penned several other works of fugitive (i.e. uncollected) verse, much of which is patriotic and war-related, describing the selfless sacrifices made by soldiers and citizens alike for the cause of freedom and liberty.

 
Invitation to the 1895–96 Browning Society elections, the year Coates was elected president.

Coates was a founder of the Contemporary Club of Philadelphia in 1886; one of twenty founders of the Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania[14] in 1896—herself being a ninth generation descendant of Pilgrim John Howland;[15] and twice president of the Browning Society of Philadelphia from 1895 to 1903, and again from 1907 to 1908. In 1915, Coates was unanimously elected poet laureate of Pennsylvania by the state's Federation of Women's Clubs.[16]

Coates married William Nicholson in 1872. He died in 1877. On January 7, 1879, she married Edward Hornor Coates at Christ Church in Philadelphia. Edward Coates would eventually adopt Florence's daughter from her first marriage—Alice Earle Nicholson (born October 21, 1873). Florence and Edward had one child together in 1881, but the baby—Josephine Wisner Coates[17]—died in infancy on March 5, 1881. Edward Coates was president of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts from 1890 to 1906. He died on December 23, 1921. In 1923, Florence Coates presented The Edward H. Coates Memorial Collection to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia. The exhibition, representing French and American schools,[18] included 27 paintings and 3 pieces of sculpture, and was displayed from November 4, 1923, to January 10, 1924.

Coates died at Hahnemann Hospital in Philadelphia on April 6, 1927. She is buried at the Church of the Redeemer churchyard in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania alongside her husband and her brother George Howard Earle, Jr. and many of his descendants, including his son, former Pennsylvania Governor, George Howard Earle III—Florence's nephew.[19]

List of works

 
 
POEMS. (1898)
MINE AND THINE. (1904)
LYRICS OF LIFE. (1909)
THE UNCONQUERED AIR AND OTHER POEMS. (1912)
POEMS. 2 vols. (1916)[20]
PRO PATRIA. (1917) Privately published.
Fugitive verse.
On Matthew Arnold. (1894, 1909)
INDEX OF TITLES
INDEX OF FIRST LINES
List of categorized lists of works.
Other works.

Gallery

Citations

  1. ^ "Florence Van Leer Earle Nicholson Coates". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved August 6, 2022.
  2. ^ "Florence Van Leer Earle Nicholson Coates". www.britannica.com. Britannica. Retrieved August 3, 2022.
  3. ^ "WILLIAM VAN LEER GENERATION 9.3 – THIRD CHILD OF SAMUEL VANLEER". www.vanleerarchives.org. Van Leer Archives. Retrieved August 3, 2022.
  4. ^ The Sacré Cœur (Sacred Heart) in Paris, France was a convent school for young girls run by nuns that fell to the French government as a result of the "religious orders" law of 1904, which involved the separation of church and state, and prohibited religious orders from teaching. The site of the former convent is now the Rodin Museum.
  5. ^ a b Russell 1895, p. 376.
  6. ^ Notable Women of Pennsylvania (1947), edited by Gertrude B. Biddle and Sarah D. Lowrie.
  7. ^ "Matthew Arnold on the Doctrine of the Remnant." Philadelphia Inquirer, December 28, 1883.
  8. ^ "Reception to Matthew Arnold." Philadelphia Inquirer, June 11, 1886.
  9. ^ Russell 1895, pp. 362–363.
  10. ^ Manuscripts and Archives Division, The New York Public Library. "Coates, Florence Van Leer Earle" The New York Public Library Digital Collections. 1886 – 1914. https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/ab8d1c90-6238-0134-2dec-00505686a51c
  11. ^ "Florence Earle Coates: Some Phases of Her Life and Poetry" by Elizabeth Clendenning Ring. Book News Monthly (December 1917)
  12. ^ New York Times, June 28, July 19 & 26, and August 30, 1903. Cowles's stays are also mentioned (along with a photograph) in Lilian Rixey's biographical book, Bamie: Theodore Roosevelt's Remarkable Sister.
  13. ^ Braithwaite, William Stanley (1913). McBride's Magazine, Volume 91. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company. p. 303. Retrieved August 3, 2022.
  14. ^ "PA Society Members". www.sail1620.org. Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (SMDPA). Retrieved August 3, 2022.
  15. ^ "Register of Members" (Philadelphia: Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania) 1996, p. 57.
  16. ^ Walker, Robert H. "Coates, Florence Earle." Notable American Women: 1607–1950. Cambridge, MA:Belknap Press of the Harvard Univ. Press, 1974:354.
  17. ^ likely named after Josephine Wisner, great-great granddaughter of Henry Wisner—delegate of the 1st and 2nd Continental Congress and among signers of the original draft of the Declaration of Independence. Josephine Wisner's mother, Eleanor Bowne Hornor, was Edward Coates's second cousin.
  18. ^ Philadelphia: A Guide to the Nation's Birthplace. Pennsylvania Historical Commission, 1937. p. 456.
  19. ^ The Lower Merion Historical Society website (see Coates, Florence Earle).
  20. ^ Historically listed and referenced as a "Collected edition," Robert H. Walker—in his biographical sketch of Coates ("Coates, Florence Van Leer Earle Nicholson." Notable American women: a biographical dictionary (1971, 1974 (third printing); pp. 353–4)—notes that the two-volume set is "really selected."

Sources

  • Russell, George W.E. (1895). Letters of Matthew Arnold, 1848-1888, Volume 2. Macmillan and Co.

External links

  •   Works by or about Florence Earle Coates at Wikisource
  •   Quotations related to Florence Van Leer Earle Coates at Wikiquote
  • Florence Earle Coates informational blog
  • Works by or about Florence Van Leer Earle Coates at Internet Archive
  • Works by Florence Van Leer Earle Coates at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Florence Van Leer Earle Coates at Find a Grave

florence, leer, earle, coates, florence, leer, earle, nicholson, coates, july, 1850, april, 1927, american, poet, whose, prolific, output, published, many, literary, magazines, some, music, mentored, english, poet, matthew, arnold, with, whom, maintained, life. Florence Van Leer Earle Nicholson Coates July 1 1850 April 6 1927 was an American poet whose prolific output was published in many literary magazines some of it set to music She was mentored by the English poet Matthew Arnold with whom she maintained a lifelong friendship She was famous for her many nature poems inspired by the flora and fauna of the Adirondacks where she lived She was elected poet laureate of Pennsylvania by the state Federation of Women s Clubs in 1915 1 Florence Van Leer Earle CoatesFlorence Van Leer Earle Coates pre 1916BornFlorence Van Leer Earle 1850 07 01 July 1 1850Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedApril 6 1927 1927 04 06 aged 76 Hahnemann Hospital Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S Resting placeChurch of the Redeemer Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania U S OccupationPoetPhilanthropistSpouseWilliam Nicholson m 1872 died 1877 wbr Edward Hornor Coates m 1879 died 1921 wbr RelativesGeorge Hussey Earle Sr father George Howard Earle II brother Thomas Earle grandfather Samuel Van Leer great grandfather Anthony Wayne great uncle Signature Contents 1 Biography 2 List of works 3 Gallery 4 Citations 5 Sources 6 External linksBiography EditCoates was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania the eldest daughter of Philadelphia lawyer George Hussey Earle Sr and Mrs Frances Fanny Van Leer Earle 2 She was the granddaughter of noted abolitionist and philanthropist Thomas Earle and a member of the influential Van Leer family 3 She gained fame both at home and abroad for her works of poetry nearly three hundred of which were published in literary magazines such as the Atlantic Monthly Scribner s Magazine The Literary Digest Lippincott s The Century Magazine and Harper s Many of her poems were set to music by notable composers such as Amy Beach She attended school in New England under the instruction of abolitionist and teacher Theodore Dwight Weld and would further her education abroad at the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Paris Rue de Varenne 4 and by studying music in Brussels under noted instructors of the day Coates pre 1894 Tulip tree My remembrance of our last visit and of your tulip trees and maples I shall never lose Matthew Arnold in a letter to Coates 5 Literary and social critic Matthew Arnold both encouraged and inspired Coates s writing of poetry He was a guest at the Coates Germantown home when his lecture tours brought him to Philadelphia Coates and Arnold first met in New York during Arnold s first visit and lecture tour of America at the home of Andrew Carnegie where they formed a lasting friendship 6 The tour which lasted from October 1883 to March 1884 brought Arnold to Philadelphia in December 1883 where he lectured at Association Hall on the topics of the Doctrine of the Remnant and on Emerson 7 His second visit and tour of America took place in 1886 and brought him to Philadelphia in early June where he was again hosted by the Coates and spoke on the topic of Foreign Education at the University of Pennsylvania chapel 8 Arnold wrote to Coates in 1887 9 and 1888 5 from his home at Pains Hill Cottage in Cobham Surrey England describing his remembrance of and fondness for her tulip trees and maples at her Germantown home Willing Terrace Rarely did Coates write or publish prose work but in April 1894 and again in December 1909 she contributed personal reminiscences of her mentor to The Century and Lippincott s magazines respectively Between 1887 and 1912 Coates published over two dozen poems in The Century Magazine Her correspondence between Century editor Richard Watson Gilder and others is documented at the New York Public Library Digital Collections website 10 In one letter dated March 12 1905 Coates submitted to Mr Gilder a poem she wrote after being inspired by a photograph of Helen Keller holding a rose which was published in The Century the previous January Coates requested that if published the poem also be accompanied by a copy of the photograph and shared that Ms Keller sent word that she accord ed Coates any permission to use the photo for that purpose The poem Helen Keller with a Rose was published in the July 1905 issue without the accompanying photograph but with reference to the issue in which it first appeared The Coates often spent their summer months in the Adirondacks where they maintained Camp Elsinore their summer camp by the Upper St Regis Lake It was there that they entertained rested and escaped the humidity of Philadelphia summers welcoming friends such as Otis Skinner Violet Oakley Henry Mills Alden and Agnes Repplier 11 In the early 1900s the Coates seasonally opened their camp to Anna Roosevelt Cowles Bamie the elder sister of Theodore Roosevelt Among Cowles s visitors during her stays at Elsinore was Alice Roosevelt President Theodore Roosevelt s daughter 12 Many of Coates s nature poems were inspired by the flora and fauna of the Adirondacks Of her spot in the mountains Coates sings There s a cabin in the mountains where the fare dear Is frugal as the cheer of Arden blest But contentment sweet and fellowship are there dear And Love that makes the feast he honors best Upper St Regis Lake There s a lake upon the mountains FEC In the March 1913 issue of Lippincott s Monthly Magazine noted anthologist and poet William Stanley Braithwaite 1878 1962 gives a detailed nine page review of Coates s poetry relating how she draws from the Olympian world figures that typify some motive or desire in human conduct and in the modern world the praise of men and women heroic in attainment or sacrifice or laments events that effect social and ethical progress showing how beneficently she has brought her art without modifying in the least its abstract function as a creator of beauty and pleasure into the service of profound and vital problems 13 Much of Coates s later published work was written during the years spanning World War I and showcased her concern for such profound and vital problems as her voice joined the chorus of singers in support of American involvement in the war evidenced in her privately published pamphlet of war poetry Pro Patria 1917 Coates also penned several other works of fugitive i e uncollected verse much of which is patriotic and war related describing the selfless sacrifices made by soldiers and citizens alike for the cause of freedom and liberty Invitation to the 1895 96 Browning Society elections the year Coates was elected president Coates was a founder of the Contemporary Club of Philadelphia in 1886 one of twenty founders of the Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 14 in 1896 herself being a ninth generation descendant of Pilgrim John Howland 15 and twice president of the Browning Society of Philadelphia from 1895 to 1903 and again from 1907 to 1908 In 1915 Coates was unanimously elected poet laureate of Pennsylvania by the state s Federation of Women s Clubs 16 Coates married William Nicholson in 1872 He died in 1877 On January 7 1879 she married Edward Hornor Coates at Christ Church in Philadelphia Edward Coates would eventually adopt Florence s daughter from her first marriage Alice Earle Nicholson born October 21 1873 Florence and Edward had one child together in 1881 but the baby Josephine Wisner Coates 17 died in infancy on March 5 1881 Edward Coates was president of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts from 1890 to 1906 He died on December 23 1921 In 1923 Florence Coates presented The Edward H Coates Memorial Collection to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia The exhibition representing French and American schools 18 included 27 paintings and 3 pieces of sculpture and was displayed from November 4 1923 to January 10 1924 Coates died at Hahnemann Hospital in Philadelphia on April 6 1927 She is buried at the Church of the Redeemer churchyard in Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania alongside her husband and her brother George Howard Earle Jr and many of his descendants including his son former Pennsylvania Governor George Howard Earle III Florence s nephew 19 List of works Edit POEMS 1898 MINE AND THINE 1904 LYRICS OF LIFE 1909 THE UNCONQUERED AIR AND OTHER POEMS 1912 POEMS 2 vols 1916 20 PRO PATRIA 1917 Privately published Fugitive verse On Matthew Arnold 1894 1909 INDEX OF TITLESINDEX OF FIRST LINESList of categorized lists of works Other works Gallery Edit A platinum print photograph of Coates Edward Hornor Coates 1903 by Charles Grafly at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Digital drawing of the headstones of Coates and husband in Pennsylvania Hymn written for the Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 1900 Citations Edit Florence Van Leer Earle Nicholson Coates Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved August 6 2022 Florence Van Leer Earle Nicholson Coates www britannica com Britannica Retrieved August 3 2022 WILLIAM VAN LEER GENERATION 9 3 THIRD CHILD OF SAMUEL VANLEER www vanleerarchives org Van Leer Archives Retrieved August 3 2022 The Sacre Cœur Sacred Heart in Paris France was a convent school for young girls run by nuns that fell to the French government as a result of the religious orders law of 1904 which involved the separation of church and state and prohibited religious orders from teaching The site of the former convent is now the Rodin Museum a b Russell 1895 p 376 Notable Women of Pennsylvania 1947 edited by Gertrude B Biddle and Sarah D Lowrie Matthew Arnold on the Doctrine of the Remnant Philadelphia Inquirer December 28 1883 Reception to Matthew Arnold Philadelphia Inquirer June 11 1886 Russell 1895 pp 362 363 Manuscripts and Archives Division The New York Public Library Coates Florence Van Leer Earle The New York Public Library Digital Collections 1886 1914 https digitalcollections nypl org items ab8d1c90 6238 0134 2dec 00505686a51c Florence Earle Coates Some Phases of Her Life and Poetry by Elizabeth Clendenning Ring Book News Monthly December 1917 New York Times June 28 July 19 amp 26 and August 30 1903 Cowles s stays are also mentioned along with a photograph in Lilian Rixey s biographical book Bamie Theodore Roosevelt s Remarkable Sister Braithwaite William Stanley 1913 McBride s Magazine Volume 91 Philadelphia J B Lippincott Company p 303 Retrieved August 3 2022 PA Society Members www sail1620 org Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania SMDPA Retrieved August 3 2022 Register of Members Philadelphia Society of Mayflower Descendants in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania 1996 p 57 Walker Robert H Coates Florence Earle Notable American Women 1607 1950 Cambridge MA Belknap Press of the Harvard Univ Press 1974 354 likely named after Josephine Wisner great great granddaughter of Henry Wisner delegate of the 1st and 2nd Continental Congress and among signers of the original draft of the Declaration of Independence Josephine Wisner s mother Eleanor Bowne Hornor was Edward Coates s second cousin Philadelphia A Guide to the Nation s Birthplace Pennsylvania Historical Commission 1937 p 456 The Lower Merion Historical Society website see Coates Florence Earle Historically listed and referenced as a Collected edition Robert H Walker in his biographical sketch of Coates Coates Florence Van Leer Earle Nicholson Notable American women a biographical dictionary 1971 1974 third printing pp 353 4 notes that the two volume set is really selected Sources EditRussell George W E 1895 Letters of Matthew Arnold 1848 1888 Volume 2 Macmillan and Co External links Edit Works by or about Florence Earle Coates at Wikisource Quotations related to Florence Van Leer Earle Coates at Wikiquote Florence Earle Coates informational blog Works by or about Florence Van Leer Earle Coates at Internet Archive Works by Florence Van Leer Earle Coates at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Florence Van Leer Earle Coates at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Florence Van Leer Earle Coates amp oldid 1133433043, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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