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Kate Douglas Wiggin

Kate Douglas Wiggin (September 28, 1856 – August 24, 1923) was an American educator, author and composer. She wrote children's stories, most notably the classic children's novel Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm, and composed collections of children's songs. She started the first free kindergarten in San Francisco in 1878 (the Silver Street Free Kindergarten). With her sister during the 1880s, she also established a training school for kindergarten teachers. Kate Wiggin devoted her adult life to the welfare of children in an era when children were commonly thought of as cheap labor.

Kate Douglas Wiggin
BornKate Douglas Smith
(1856-09-28)September 28, 1856
Philadelphia
DiedAugust 24, 1923(1923-08-24) (aged 66)
Harrow, Middlesex, England
OccupationAuthor
NationalityAmerican
Alma materGorham Female Seminary; Morison Academy (Baltimore)
SpouseBradley Wiggin, George Christopher Riggs
Signature

Wiggin went to California to study kindergarten methods. She began to teach in San Francisco with her sister Nora assisting her, and the two were instrumental in the establishment of over 60 kindergartens for the poor in San Francisco and Oakland. She moved from California to New York, and having no kindergarten work on hand, devoted herself to literature. She sent The Story of Patsy and The Bird's Christmas Carol to Houghton, Mifflin & Co. who accepted them at once. Besides the talent for story-telling, she was a musician, sang well, and composed settings for her poems. She was also an excellent elocutionist. Her first literary work was Half a Dozen Housekeepers, a serial story which she sent to St. Nicholas. After the death of her husband in 1889, she returned to California to resume her kindergarten work, serving as the head of a Kindergarten Normal School. Some of her other works included Cathedral Courtship, A Summer in a Canon, Timothy's Quest, The Story Hour, Kindergarten Chimes, Polly Oliver's Problem, and Children's Rights.[1]

Early life

 
Kate Douglas Wiggin House in the Salmon Falls section of Hollis, Maine

Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin was born in Philadelphia, the daughter of lawyer Robert N. Smith, and of Welsh descent.[2][3] Kate experienced a happy childhood, even though it was colored by the American Civil War and her father's death. Kate and her sister Nora were still quite young when their widowed mother moved her little family from Philadelphia to Portland, Maine, then, three years later, upon her remarriage, to the little village of Hollis. There Kate matured in rural surroundings, with her sister and her new baby brother Philip.

Notably, she once met the novelist Charles Dickens. Her mother and another relative had gone to hear Dickens read in Portland, but Wiggin, aged 11, was thought to be too young to warrant an expensive ticket. The following day, she found herself on the same train as Dickens and engaged him in a lively conversation for the course of the journey, an experience which she later detailed in a short memoir titled A Child's Journey with Dickens (1912).

Her education was spotty, consisting of a short stint at a dame school, some home schooling under the "capable, slightly impatient, somewhat sporadic" instruction of Albion Bradbury (her stepfather), a brief spell at the district school, a year as a boarder at the Gorham Female Seminary, a winter term at Morison Academy in Baltimore, Maryland, and a few months' stay at Abbot Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, where she graduated with the class of 1873. Although rather casual, this was more education than most women received at the time.

Early career

In 1873, hoping to ease Albion Bradbury's lung disease, Kate's family moved to Santa Barbara, California, where Kate's stepfather died three years later. A kindergarten training class was opening in Los Angeles under Emma Marwedel (1818–1893),[3][4] and Kate enrolled. After graduation, in 1878, she headed the first free kindergarten in California, on Silver Street in the slums of San Francisco. The children were "street Arabs of the wildest type", but Kate had a loving personality and dramatic flair. By 1880 she was forming a teacher-training school in conjunction with the Silver Street kindergarten.

In 1881, Kate married (Samuel) Bradley Wiggin, a San Francisco lawyer.[3] According to the customs of the time, she was required to resign her teaching job.[5] Still devoted to her school, she began to raise money for it through writing, first The Story of Patsy (1883), then The Birds' Christmas Carol (1887). Both privately printed books were issued commercially by Houghton Mifflin in 1889, with enormous success.

Kate Wiggin had no children. She moved to New York City in 1888.[3] When her husband died suddenly in 1889, Kate relocated to Maine. For the rest of her life she grieved, but she also traveled as frequently as she could, dividing her time between writing, visits to Europe, and giving public reading for the benefit of various children's charities.

Wiggin traveled abroad and back from Liverpool in the United Kingdom at least three times. Records from the Ellis Island logs show that she arrived back in New York City from Liverpool in October 1892, July 1893, and July 1894.[6] On the logs for the 1892 trip, Wiggin describes her occupation as "Wife",[7] despite her former husband dying three years prior. In 1893 and 1894, she describes herself as an "Authoress".[8]

Wiggin met dry goods (specifically, linen) importer George Christopher Riggs on her way to England in 1894. The pair are said to have hit it off and had agreed to marry even before the ship docked in England.[9] In the Ellis Island logs from Wiggin's 1894 trip back to New York City from Liverpool, the two sign their names next to each other, indicating their closeness.[10] The pair married in New York City on March 30, 1895, at All Souls Church. George Riggs soon became one of Wiggin's biggest advocates as she became more successful.

 
Photo of Wiggin (c. 1895)

After the marriage she continued to write under the name of Wiggin. Her literary output included popular books for adults; with her sister, Nora A. Smith, she published scholarly work on the educational principles of Friedrich Fröbel: Froebel's Gifts (1895), Froebel's Occupations (1896), and Kindergarten Principles and Practice (1896);[3] and she wrote the classic children's novel Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1903), as well as the 1905 best-seller Rose o' the River. Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm became an immediate bestseller; both it and Mother Carey's Chickens (1911) were adapted to the stage. Houghton Mifflin collected her writings in 10 volumes in 1917.

 
Photo of Wiggin (c. 1903)

For a time, she lived at Quillcote, her summer home in Hollis, Maine (now listed on the National Register of Historic Places). Quillcote is around the corner from the town's library, the Salmon Falls Library, which Wiggin founded in 1911.[11] Wiggin founded the Dorcas Society of Hollis & Buxton, Maine in 1897. The Tory Hill Meeting House in the adjacent town of Buxton, Maine inspired her book (and later play) The Old Peabody Pew (1907).

Later life and death

Wiggin was an active and popular hostess in New York and in the community of Upper Largo, Scotland, where she had a summer home and where she organized plays for many years, as detailed in her memoir My Garden of Memory.

In 1921, Wiggin and her sister Nora Archibald Smith edited an edition of Jane Porter's The Scottish Chiefs, an 1809 novel of William Wallace, for the Scribner's Illustrated Classics series, illustrated by N.C. Wyeth.[12] During the spring of 1923, Kate Wiggin traveled to England as a New York delegate to the Dickens Fellowship. There she became ill and died, at age 66, of bronchial pneumonia. At her request, her ashes were brought home to Maine and scattered over the Saco River. Her autobiography, My Garden of Memory, was published after her death. In sorting through material for her autobiography, she put many items in a box she and her sister labelled "posthumous". Her sister Nora A. Smith later published her own reminiscences, titled Kate Douglas Wiggin as her Sister Knew Her, from these materials.

Wiggin was also a songwriter and composer. For "Kindergarten Chimes" (1885) and other collections for children, she wrote some of the lyrics, music, and arrangements. For "Nine Love Songs and a Carol" (1896), she composed all of the music.

Legacy

In the 1980s and 1990s, Wiggin's first husband's distant cousin, Eric E. Wiggin, published updated versions of some books in Kate Douglas Wiggin's Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm series. He later published his own addition to the series, entitled, Rebecca Returns to Sunnybrook.[13] Eric E. Wiggin extended Kate Douglas Wiggin's series after years of writing Christian literature, newspaper articles, and other children's books. Eric E. Wiggin's books sold best among his target audience of homeschoolers; with their help, his updated novels and his new addition to the series have sold more than 50,000 copies.[citation needed]

Many of Kate Douglas Wiggin's novels were made into movies. Perhaps the most famous film adaptation of her books is the 1938 film, which stars Shirley Temple.

Selected works

 
Cover of The Romance of a Christmas Card (1916)
  • The Story of Patsy (1883)
  • The Birds' Christmas Carol (1887)
  • Timothy's Quest (1890), illustrated by Oliver Herford
  • Polly Oliver's Problem (1893)
  • A Cathedral Courtship, and Penelope's English Experiences (1893)
  • The Village Watch-Tower (1895)
  • Penelope's Progress (1898)
  • Penelope's Travels in Scotland (1898)
  • Penelope's Irish Experiences (1901)
  • The Diary of a Goose Girl (1902), illus. Claude A. Shepperson
  • Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1903)
  • Half-a-Dozen Housekeepers (1903)
  • Rose o' the River (1905)
  • New Chronicles of Rebecca (1907)
  • Homespun Tales (1907)
  • The Old Peabody Pew (1907)
  • Susanna and Sue (1909)
  • Mother Carey's Chickens (1911)
  • Robinetta (1911)
  • A Child's Journey with Dickens (1912)
  • The Story of Waitstill Baxter (1913)[14]
  • The Romance of a Christmas Card (1916)
  • A Summer in a Canyon: A California Story (1893)
  • Marm Lisa
  • My Garden of Memory (autobiography, published posthumously in 1923)
With Nora A. Smith
  • The Story Hour: a book for the home and kindergarten (1890), LCCN 14-19353
  • Golden Numbers: a book of verse for youth, eds. (1902), LCCN 02-27230
  • The Posy Ring: a book of verse for children, eds. (1903) – "companion volume", LCCN 03-5775
  • The Fairy Ring, eds. (1906); truncated as Fairy Stories Every Child Should Know (1942), illus. Elizabeth MacKinstry LCCN 42-51972
  • Magic Casements: A Second Fairy Book, eds. (1907)
  • Pinafore Palace: a book of rhymes for the nursery, eds. (1907)
  • Tales of Laughter: A Third Fairy Book, eds. (1908)
  • The Arabian Nights: their best-known tales, eds. (1909), illus. Maxfield Parrish
  • Tales of Wonder: A Fourth Fairy Book, eds. (1909)
  • The Talking Beasts: a book of fable wisdom, eds. (1911)
  • An Hour with the Fairies (1911)
  • Twilight Stories: more tales for the story hour, eds. (1925), LCCN 25-17938
  • The Story Hour. A Book for the Home and Kingergarten
  • Children's Rights
  • The Republic of Childhood (3 volumes)
  • Marm Lisa
About Kate Douglas Wiggin
  • Kate Douglas Wiggin as Her Sister Knew Her (1925)

Filmography

References

  1. ^ Rutherford 1894, pp. 640–41.
  2. ^ Welsh Americans at www.everyculture.com
  3. ^ a b c d e Gilman, D. C.; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "Wiggin, Kate Douglas" . New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
  4. ^ Emma Marwedel, 1818–1893 : pioneer of the kindergarten in California. worldcat.org. OCLC 4457643.
  5. ^ "Kate Douglas Wiggin Collection M187". library.bowdoin.edu.
  6. ^ Ellis Island Records, Type in "Kate D. Wiggin"
  7. ^ 1892 Ellis Island logs, passenger logs for this ship
  8. ^ 1893 Ellis island logs, 1893 passenger logs
  9. ^ "Wiggin, Kate Douglas (1856-1923)", Encyclopedia.com article
  10. ^ 1894 Ellis Island logs, 1894 ship passenger logs
  11. ^ My Garden of Memory, pp.365–366
  12. ^ Porter, Jane. The Scottish Chiefs, Scribner's Illustrated Classic series, reissued 1991, ISBN 0-684-19340-X, dust jacket copy
  13. ^ "Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm", Loyal Books, Source explaining Eric's contributions
  14. ^ Wiggin, Kate Douglas Smith (1 April 1999). "The Story of Waitstill Baxter" – via Project Gutenberg.

Bibliography

  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Rutherford, Mildred Lewis (1894). American Authors: A Hand-book of American Literature from Early Colonial to Living Writers. Franklin printing and publishing Company.
  • "Living Authors: Kate Douglas Wiggin". The Intelligence: A Journal of Education: 64–65. January 15, 1900.

External links

  •   Works related to Woman of the Century/Kate Douglas Wiggin at Wikisource
  • Works by Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Kate Douglas Wiggin at Internet Archive
  • Works by Kate Douglas Wiggin at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin at Library of Congress Authorities, with 146 catalog records
  • Kate Douglas Wiggin at IMDb
  • Bowdoin collection and brief biography
  • Full text of The Diary of a Goose Girl, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1902.
  • Kate Wiggin Papers Dartmouth College Library

kate, douglas, wiggin, september, 1856, august, 1923, american, educator, author, composer, wrote, children, stories, most, notably, classic, children, novel, rebecca, sunnybrook, farm, composed, collections, children, songs, started, first, free, kindergarten. Kate Douglas Wiggin September 28 1856 August 24 1923 was an American educator author and composer She wrote children s stories most notably the classic children s novel Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm and composed collections of children s songs She started the first free kindergarten in San Francisco in 1878 the Silver Street Free Kindergarten With her sister during the 1880s she also established a training school for kindergarten teachers Kate Wiggin devoted her adult life to the welfare of children in an era when children were commonly thought of as cheap labor Kate Douglas Wiggin A Woman of the Century BornKate Douglas Smith 1856 09 28 September 28 1856PhiladelphiaDiedAugust 24 1923 1923 08 24 aged 66 Harrow Middlesex EnglandOccupationAuthorNationalityAmericanAlma materGorham Female Seminary Morison Academy Baltimore SpouseBradley Wiggin George Christopher RiggsSignatureWiggin went to California to study kindergarten methods She began to teach in San Francisco with her sister Nora assisting her and the two were instrumental in the establishment of over 60 kindergartens for the poor in San Francisco and Oakland She moved from California to New York and having no kindergarten work on hand devoted herself to literature She sent The Story of Patsy and The Bird s Christmas Carol to Houghton Mifflin amp Co who accepted them at once Besides the talent for story telling she was a musician sang well and composed settings for her poems She was also an excellent elocutionist Her first literary work was Half a Dozen Housekeepers a serial story which she sent to St Nicholas After the death of her husband in 1889 she returned to California to resume her kindergarten work serving as the head of a Kindergarten Normal School Some of her other works included Cathedral Courtship A Summer in a Canon Timothy s Quest The Story Hour Kindergarten Chimes Polly Oliver s Problem and Children s Rights 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 Later life and death 4 Legacy 5 Selected works 6 Filmography 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly life Edit Kate Douglas Wiggin House in the Salmon Falls section of Hollis Maine Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin was born in Philadelphia the daughter of lawyer Robert N Smith and of Welsh descent 2 3 Kate experienced a happy childhood even though it was colored by the American Civil War and her father s death Kate and her sister Nora were still quite young when their widowed mother moved her little family from Philadelphia to Portland Maine then three years later upon her remarriage to the little village of Hollis There Kate matured in rural surroundings with her sister and her new baby brother Philip Notably she once met the novelist Charles Dickens Her mother and another relative had gone to hear Dickens read in Portland but Wiggin aged 11 was thought to be too young to warrant an expensive ticket The following day she found herself on the same train as Dickens and engaged him in a lively conversation for the course of the journey an experience which she later detailed in a short memoir titled A Child s Journey with Dickens 1912 Her education was spotty consisting of a short stint at a dame school some home schooling under the capable slightly impatient somewhat sporadic instruction of Albion Bradbury her stepfather a brief spell at the district school a year as a boarder at the Gorham Female Seminary a winter term at Morison Academy in Baltimore Maryland and a few months stay at Abbot Academy in Andover Massachusetts where she graduated with the class of 1873 Although rather casual this was more education than most women received at the time Early career EditIn 1873 hoping to ease Albion Bradbury s lung disease Kate s family moved to Santa Barbara California where Kate s stepfather died three years later A kindergarten training class was opening in Los Angeles under Emma Marwedel 1818 1893 3 4 and Kate enrolled After graduation in 1878 she headed the first free kindergarten in California on Silver Street in the slums of San Francisco The children were street Arabs of the wildest type but Kate had a loving personality and dramatic flair By 1880 she was forming a teacher training school in conjunction with the Silver Street kindergarten In 1881 Kate married Samuel Bradley Wiggin a San Francisco lawyer 3 According to the customs of the time she was required to resign her teaching job 5 Still devoted to her school she began to raise money for it through writing first The Story of Patsy 1883 then The Birds Christmas Carol 1887 Both privately printed books were issued commercially by Houghton Mifflin in 1889 with enormous success Kate Wiggin had no children She moved to New York City in 1888 3 When her husband died suddenly in 1889 Kate relocated to Maine For the rest of her life she grieved but she also traveled as frequently as she could dividing her time between writing visits to Europe and giving public reading for the benefit of various children s charities Wiggin traveled abroad and back from Liverpool in the United Kingdom at least three times Records from the Ellis Island logs show that she arrived back in New York City from Liverpool in October 1892 July 1893 and July 1894 6 On the logs for the 1892 trip Wiggin describes her occupation as Wife 7 despite her former husband dying three years prior In 1893 and 1894 she describes herself as an Authoress 8 Wiggin met dry goods specifically linen importer George Christopher Riggs on her way to England in 1894 The pair are said to have hit it off and had agreed to marry even before the ship docked in England 9 In the Ellis Island logs from Wiggin s 1894 trip back to New York City from Liverpool the two sign their names next to each other indicating their closeness 10 The pair married in New York City on March 30 1895 at All Souls Church George Riggs soon became one of Wiggin s biggest advocates as she became more successful Photo of Wiggin c 1895 After the marriage she continued to write under the name of Wiggin Her literary output included popular books for adults with her sister Nora A Smith she published scholarly work on the educational principles of Friedrich Frobel Froebel s Gifts 1895 Froebel s Occupations 1896 and Kindergarten Principles and Practice 1896 3 and she wrote the classic children s novel Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm 1903 as well as the 1905 best seller Rose o the River Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm became an immediate bestseller both it and Mother Carey s Chickens 1911 were adapted to the stage Houghton Mifflin collected her writings in 10 volumes in 1917 Photo of Wiggin c 1903 For a time she lived at Quillcote her summer home in Hollis Maine now listed on the National Register of Historic Places Quillcote is around the corner from the town s library the Salmon Falls Library which Wiggin founded in 1911 11 Wiggin founded the Dorcas Society of Hollis amp Buxton Maine in 1897 The Tory Hill Meeting House in the adjacent town of Buxton Maine inspired her book and later play The Old Peabody Pew 1907 Later life and death EditWiggin was an active and popular hostess in New York and in the community of Upper Largo Scotland where she had a summer home and where she organized plays for many years as detailed in her memoir My Garden of Memory In 1921 Wiggin and her sister Nora Archibald Smith edited an edition of Jane Porter s The Scottish Chiefs an 1809 novel of William Wallace for the Scribner s Illustrated Classics series illustrated by N C Wyeth 12 During the spring of 1923 Kate Wiggin traveled to England as a New York delegate to the Dickens Fellowship There she became ill and died at age 66 of bronchial pneumonia At her request her ashes were brought home to Maine and scattered over the Saco River Her autobiography My Garden of Memory was published after her death In sorting through material for her autobiography she put many items in a box she and her sister labelled posthumous Her sister Nora A Smith later published her own reminiscences titled Kate Douglas Wiggin as her Sister Knew Her from these materials Wiggin was also a songwriter and composer For Kindergarten Chimes 1885 and other collections for children she wrote some of the lyrics music and arrangements For Nine Love Songs and a Carol 1896 she composed all of the music Legacy EditIn the 1980s and 1990s Wiggin s first husband s distant cousin Eric E Wiggin published updated versions of some books in Kate Douglas Wiggin s Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm series He later published his own addition to the series entitled Rebecca Returns to Sunnybrook 13 Eric E Wiggin extended Kate Douglas Wiggin s series after years of writing Christian literature newspaper articles and other children s books Eric E Wiggin s books sold best among his target audience of homeschoolers with their help his updated novels and his new addition to the series have sold more than 50 000 copies citation needed Many of Kate Douglas Wiggin s novels were made into movies Perhaps the most famous film adaptation of her books is the 1938 film which stars Shirley Temple Selected works Edit Cover of The Romance of a Christmas Card 1916 The Story of Patsy 1883 The Birds Christmas Carol 1887 Timothy s Quest 1890 illustrated by Oliver Herford Polly Oliver s Problem 1893 A Cathedral Courtship and Penelope s English Experiences 1893 The Village Watch Tower 1895 Penelope s Progress 1898 Penelope s Travels in Scotland 1898 Penelope s Irish Experiences 1901 The Diary of a Goose Girl 1902 illus Claude A Shepperson Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm 1903 Half a Dozen Housekeepers 1903 Rose o the River 1905 New Chronicles of Rebecca 1907 Homespun Tales 1907 The Old Peabody Pew 1907 Susanna and Sue 1909 Mother Carey s Chickens 1911 Robinetta 1911 A Child s Journey with Dickens 1912 The Story of Waitstill Baxter 1913 14 The Romance of a Christmas Card 1916 A Summer in a Canyon A California Story 1893 Marm Lisa My Garden of Memory autobiography published posthumously in 1923 With Nora A SmithThe Story Hour a book for the home and kindergarten 1890 LCCN 14 19353 Golden Numbers a book of verse for youth eds 1902 LCCN 02 27230 The Posy Ring a book of verse for children eds 1903 companion volume LCCN 03 5775 The Fairy Ring eds 1906 truncated as Fairy Stories Every Child Should Know 1942 illus Elizabeth MacKinstry LCCN 42 51972 Magic Casements A Second Fairy Book eds 1907 Pinafore Palace a book of rhymes for the nursery eds 1907 Tales of Laughter A Third Fairy Book eds 1908 The Arabian Nights their best known tales eds 1909 illus Maxfield Parrish Tales of Wonder A Fourth Fairy Book eds 1909 The Talking Beasts a book of fable wisdom eds 1911 An Hour with the Fairies 1911 Twilight Stories more tales for the story hour eds 1925 LCCN 25 17938 The Story Hour A Book for the Home and Kingergarten Children s Rights The Republic of Childhood 3 volumes Marm LisaAbout Kate Douglas WigginKate Douglas Wiggin as Her Sister Knew Her 1925 Filmography EditA Bit o Heaven 1917 directed by Lule Warrenton based on the novel The Birds Christmas Carol Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm 1917 starring Mary Pickford directed by Marshall Neilan based on the novel Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Rose o the River 1919 directed by Robert Thornby based on the novel Rose o the River Timothy s Quest 1922 directed by Sidney Olcott based on the story Timothy s Quest Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm 1932 directed by Alfred Santell based on the novel Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Timothy s Quest 1936 directed by Charles Barton based on the story Timothy s Quest Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm 1938 starring Shirley Temple directed by Allan Dwan based on the novel Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Mother Carey s Chickens 1938 directed by Rowland V Lee based on the novel Mother Carey s Chickens Summer Magic 1963 a Walt Disney production starring Hayley Mills directed by James Neilson based on the novel Mother Carey s Chickens Christmas World The Bird s Christmas Carol 2019 a Once Upon a Tale Entertainment presentation directed by James Arrow uncreditedly based on the novel The Birds Christmas Carol References Edit Rutherford 1894 pp 640 41 Welsh Americans at www everyculture com a b c d e Gilman D C Peck H T Colby F M eds 1905 Wiggin Kate Douglas New International Encyclopedia 1st ed New York Dodd Mead Emma Marwedel 1818 1893 pioneer of the kindergarten in California worldcat org OCLC 4457643 Kate Douglas Wiggin Collection M187 library bowdoin edu Ellis Island Records Type in Kate D Wiggin 1892 Ellis Island logs passenger logs for this ship 1893 Ellis island logs 1893 passenger logs Wiggin Kate Douglas 1856 1923 Encyclopedia com article 1894 Ellis Island logs 1894 ship passenger logs My Garden of Memory pp 365 366 Porter Jane The Scottish Chiefs Scribner s Illustrated Classic series reissued 1991 ISBN 0 684 19340 X dust jacket copy Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm Loyal Books Source explaining Eric s contributions Wiggin Kate Douglas Smith 1 April 1999 The Story of Waitstill Baxter via Project Gutenberg Bibliography Edit This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Rutherford Mildred Lewis 1894 American Authors A Hand book of American Literature from Early Colonial to Living Writers Franklin printing and publishing Company Living Authors Kate Douglas Wiggin The Intelligence A Journal of Education 64 65 January 15 1900 External links Edit Children s literature portal Works related to Woman of the Century Kate Douglas Wiggin at Wikisource Works by Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Kate Douglas Wiggin at Internet Archive Works by Kate Douglas Wiggin at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin at Library of Congress Authorities with 146 catalog records Kate Douglas Wiggin at IMDb Bowdoin collection and brief biography The Dorcas Society of Hollis amp Buxton Maine free online sheet music of Nine Love Songs and a Carol by Kate Douglas Wiggin Full text of The Diary of a Goose Girl Houghton Mifflin Company 1902 Kate Wiggin Papers Dartmouth College Library Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kate Douglas Wiggin amp oldid 1133593075, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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