Elia W. Peattie 18621935. Newspaperwoman, Author, and Reviewer. Social Activist and Bluestocking. Mother. Bibliography. Biography. Home. Last Updated 7 December 1998 by Judy Boss. . http://www.unk.edu/departments/english/george/Peattie
Elia W. Peattie Elia W. Peattie Frontier Newswoman, Writer, and Poet. 18621935. EliaWilkinson Peattie was born and reared in southwestern Michigan http://www.unk.edu/departments/english/george/Peattie/ewpbio.htm
Extractions: Elia Wilkinson Peattie was born and reared in southwestern Michigan in near poverty, discovered books and her future husband, Robert Burns Peattie, about the same time, and then worked as the first "girl reporter" on the Chicago Tribune . This activity sent her roaming about on a variety of news assignments, including a visit to Omaha, Nebraska, which she found intriguing. When her husband came to Omaha as managing editor of the Omaha Daily Herald , Mrs. Peattie accompanied him and became a reporter for the Herald during his editorship the first "girl reporter" in Omaha. During the eight years Mrs. Peattie lived in Omaha, she travelled the region on news stories as well, some of the people and incidents she encountered finding their way into her short stories. As an Omaha citizen, though, she worked for prohibition and women's suffrage, was a founding member of the Omaha Woman's Club, was active in the Press Club, and with the Rev. W. J. Harsha, began the practice of collecting and delivering Christmas donations to the homes of poor families. However, she also wrote numerous poems short stories essays , and books , ranging from the romance of the frontier and its unique characters to stories of old New England and even ghost stories for children, as even a partial bibliography reveals. While writing these stories and occasional poems, she continued to write daily columns for the
Elia W. Peattie Elia W. Peattie. 18621935. Journalist, Author, Social Reformer, and Mother http://www.unk.edu/acad/english/faculty/bloomfields/Peattie
Stories, Listed By Author Peattie, Elia A. (chron.) * The Place of Dragons, (sl) Everybodys MagazineMar, Apr 1903. Peattie, Elia W(ilkinson) (18621935) (chron.) * Anne St. http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/fictionmag/s784.htm
Thorkild Viborg Thorkild Viborg. Peattie, Elia Wilkinson, 18621935. Creation of machine-readable version of Use http//etext.lib.virginia.edu/conditions. html. Peattie, Elia W. " Thorkild Viborg http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/browse-mixed-new?id=PeaThor&tag=public&
Chronological List, Part 69 1964); Peattie, Elia; Peattie, Elia A. Peattie, Elia W(ilkinson) (18621935);Peattie, LOUISE (Redfield) (1900-1965); Peattie, MARGARET http://users.ev1.net/~homeville/fictionmag/e69.htm
Extractions: Previous Table-of-Contents PARTRIDGE, ANTHONY ; pseudonym of E. Phillips Oppenheim PARTRIDGE, ARTHUR GILLET PARTRIDGE, (Edward) BELLAMY PARTRIDGE, DAVID ... PATRICK, Q. ; pseudonym of Richard Wilson Webb Hugh Callingham Wheeler PATRICK, ROBERT PATRICK, ZILLA ... PATTEN, GILBERT ; pseudonym of William George Patten PATTEN, JAMES A. PATTEN, JOHN PATTEN, KATHARINE ... PATTEN, WILLIAM GEORGE (1866-1945); see pseudonyms Gilbert Patten Burt L. Standish PATTERSON, ADA PATTERSON, ALICIA ... PAUL, CHARLOTTE ; [i.e., Charlotte Paul Reese] (1916-1989) PAUL, CLIFFORD PAUL, DOROTHY PAUL, EDEN PAUL, ELLIOT (Harold) ... PAUL, F. W. ; pseudonym of Paul W. Fairman PAUL, FRANK R(udolph) PAUL, GEORGE F. PAUL, H. R. J. ... PAUL, L. ; pseudonym of Ludwig Paul Kuhring PAUL, LOUIS ; pseudonym of Leroi Placet PAUL, LOUISE PAUL, NINA HOWARD PAUL, NORMAN L. ... PAULL, H(arry) M(ajor) (1854-1934); see pseudonym Paul Blake PAULSEN, DARLENE PAULSEN, GARY (Melvin) PAULSON, JACK ... PAUST, GIL(bert Harry) (1912-1988); see pseudonym Roy James PAUST, GILBERT PAUSTOVSKY, KONSTANTIN PAUTZ, PETER D(ennis) ... PEABODY, JOSEPHINE PRESTON ; [Mrs. Lionel S. Marks] (1874-1925) PEABODY, L. K.
The Esmeralda Herders The Esmeralda Herders. Peattie, Elia Wilkinson, 18621935. Creation of machine-readable version Judy Boss The Atlantic Monthly. Elai W. Peattie. 1st Edition http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/etcbin/browse-mixed-new?id=PeaEsme&tag=public&
Thorkild Viborg Peattie, Elia Wilkinson, 18621935. Thorkild Header; Story Peattie,Elia W. Thorkild Viborg. Atlantic Monthly 91 (1903) 228-235. http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/PeaThor.html
Painted Windows Painted Windows Peattie, Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 18621935 Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 1862-1935 Peattie http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.archive.org/texts/texts-details-db.p
Their Dear Little Ghost 18621935 . Their Dear Little Ghost Electronic Text Center, University of VirginiaLibrary. Header; Story Their Dear Little Ghost 1 By Elia W. Peattie. http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/PeaThei.html
Shape Of Fear, The Shape of Fear, The Peattie, Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 18621935 Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 1862-1935 Peattie http://rdre1.inktomi.com/click?u=http://www.archive.org/texts/texts-details-db.p
Index And Other Stories Peacock, Thomas Love (17851866) Crotchet CastleMaid Marian Peattie, Elia W. (1862-1935) A Mountain Woman Painted http://www.eshunet.com/list1/en3000/titles/index-p.htm
NetLibrary Note On Elia W. Peattie, From "Chronicle and Comment" Subject Peattie, Elia Wilkinson 18621935. Language English http://www.netlibrary.com/urlapi.asp?action=summary&v=1&bookid=2011372
Wacky Anne's Christmas Library: Author Information the Guns . Elia W. Peattie (18621935) Their Dear Little Ghost ,1898 From The Shape of Fear; And Other Ghostly Tales . Beatrix http://members.tripod.com/~wackyanne/library/xlinfo.htm
Extractions: Hans Christian Andersen Hans Christian Anderson's fairy tales are beautiful, but are written with strong morals and possibly disturbing conclusions, the protagonist usually dying. You might want to pre-read them before telling them to younger children. The Fir Tree Published in 1845, and translated by H.P. Paull in 1872. Another translation, called The Pine Tree , was published in Good Stories for Great Holidays The Goblin and the Huckster Published in The Little Match-Girl Published in 1846, and translated by H.P. Paull in 1872. Another translation of this story was published in Good Stories for Great Holidays , 1914. It is a lovely story that always makes me cry.
Text Details For Painted Windows Author Peattie, Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 18621935 Keywords Authors PPeattie, Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 1862-1935; Titles P ; Literature. http://www.archive.org/texts/texts-details-db.php?id=55150
Browse Top Level > Texts > Project Gutenberg > Authors > P 18801937. Peattie, Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 1862-1935; Pedler, Margaret;Pedley, Ethel C. Pedro Calderon De La Barca; Pellico, Silvio http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au
Index Translate this page Gutenberg Peacock, Thomas Love, 1785-1866 Gutenberg Pearson, Edmund Lester, 1880-1937Gutenberg Peattie, Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 1862-1935 Gutenberg Pedler http://www.elbooks.sk/angautP.html
Index Of Life; a collection of essays, 18571881, by Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 1809-1894Painted Windows, by Peattie, Elia W. (Elia Wilkinson), 1862-1935 Pair of Blue http://www.elbooks.sk/angdieloP.html
Illinois Comes Of Age Peattie, Elia WILKINSON, 18621935. The Angel with a Broom, by Elia W. Peattie.Chicago Published by Ralph Fletcher Seymour for The Cordon, 1915. 29p. http://mccoy.lib.siu.edu/illinois/chap4-nq.htm
Extractions: A B C-D E ... T-Z 1123. NABLO, JAMES BENSON, 1910- The Long November, Fighting with the Allied Forces in Italy during World War II, Joe Mack is wounded behind enemy lines. While waiting for darkness, he reviews his life, including the Prohibition and Depression years. Although set basically in Canada, the novel includes a Chicago episode that reveals the destitution evident in many areas of the city, and the work of the Salvation Army in feeding, housing, and finding work for the poor and homeless. Book Review Digest, 1946, p. 598-9. 1124. NEARING, SCOTT, 1883-1983. Free Born, An unpublishable novel by Scott Nearing. New York: Urquhart Press; 108 Greenwich Street, [1932.] 237p. Persecution in its vilest forms is the theme around which this unpleasant novel is constructed. Jim Rogers, a Negro, first encounters hate and prejudice as a child in Georgia when irate whites burn the all-Negro school that he attends. Later, after his best friend is hunted down and murdered by whites, his parents fall victim to a lynching party, his girlfriend is raped and murdered by white men, and a friend and co-worker is killed in a race riot, Jim thinks he fully understands race and prejudice. It is then that an encounter with Jane Wilson, a Chicago laundry worker, broadens his perspective. Jane, an active union worker and left-wing radical, convinces Jim that it is the laborer rather than the black who is oppressed. This starts him on a radical course which terminates in his imprisonment for organizing and leading a labor revolt.
Illinois! Illinois! Book Review Digest, 1915, pp. 3756. 636. Peattie, Elia WILKINSON, 1862-1935.The Newcomers, by Elia W. Peattie. With Illustrations by BF Rosenmeyer. http://mccoy.lib.siu.edu/illinois/chap3-pq.htm
Extractions: A B C D ... T-Z PARKER, MARY MONCURE PAYNTER. A Girl of Chicago, by Mary Moncure Parker. Author of "A Fair Maid of Florida," "A Gentleman of Cuba," "A Lucky Hazard," etc. New York, Chicago, [and] London: F. Tennyson Neely Co., [1901.] 140p. Undistinguished plot and style are apparent throughout this temperance tract masquerading as fiction. Set in 1880s Chicago, the novel concerns Medora Allene, daughter of a fabulously rich Prairie Avenue family, who is pressured into a betrothal of convenience by her social climbing mother. Prior to the wedding, the bridegroom's former wife and child are discovered, and Medora is saved from total degradation. The unfortunate affair is blamed entirely on the bridegroom's overindulgence in spirits, and the theme is further carried out through a subplot involving a drunken husband and an understanding wife. PARRISH, RANDALL, 1858-1923. Don MacGrath; Adventure runs high and credibility low in this action-filled story promoting courage, chivalry, and honor. Stowing away on a river boat, Don escapes from the tough MacGrath gang, the only family he can remember, and begins a series of perilous adventures involving a down-and-out actor, a showboat destroyed by arson, and desperate encounters with treacherous kidnappers. Lacking the historical significance and adult plot of most of Parrish's other novels, this one is set mostly on the Mississippi River and along the Illinois shore, but mentions few familiar towns.