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Anna Chapin Ray

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Author

Alma mater
  
Smith College

Died
  
1945

Occupation
  
Writer

Education
  
Smith College

Name
  
Anna Ray


Anna Chapin Ray SIDNEY HER SUMMER ON THE ST LAWRENCE Anna Chapin Ray

Born
  
January 3, 1865
Westfield, Massachusetts

Books
  
The dominant strain, Half a Dozen Girls, The Brentons, Teddy: Her Book: A Story of S, In Blue Creek Canon

Anna Chapin Ray (January 3, 1865 – December 13, 1945) was an American author.

Biography

Born in Westfield, Massachusetts, she was the daughter of Edward Addison Ray and Helen M. (Chapin). In 1881 she was one of the first three women to take the Yale University entrance exam. She studied at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts where she received a B.A. in 1885 and an M.A. in modern European history in 1888.

Beginning in 1889, Anna became a prolific author; her works included many children's books, but she also published adult novels. She wrote during the summer in New Haven, Connecticut, then spent the winter in Quebec. Most of her works were written using the pseudonym Sidney Howard. Her older brother Nathaniel (1858–1917) was a mining engineer and a California state legislator. The two frequently corresponded.

References

Anna Chapin Ray Wikipedia