Pen name Carroll Watson Rankin Notable works Dandelion Cottage Nationality American Name Carroll Rankin | Citizenship American Died August 13, 1945 Genre Short stories, novels Spouse Ernest Rankin (m. 1886) | |
Books The Cinder Pond, The Adopting of Rosa Marie, Dandelion Cottage ‑ The Origi, Girls of Highland Hall: Furt, Dandelion Cottage |
The cinder pond full audiobook by carroll watson rankin by children s fiction audiobook
Carroll Watson Rankin is the pen name of American author Caroline Clement Watson Rankin (1864–1945).
Contents
- The cinder pond full audiobook by carroll watson rankin by children s fiction audiobook
- The Girls of Gardenville by Carroll Watson RANKIN read by Betsie Bush Full Audio Book
- Biography
- References
The Girls of Gardenville by Carroll Watson RANKIN read by Betsie Bush | Full Audio Book
Biography
Rankin was born May 11, 1864 in Marquette, Michigan, in the Upper Peninsula, and raised her four children there. Her first writing assignment came at the age of 16, when she was hired as a reporter for the Daily Mining Journal. She kept the job until her marriage to Ernest Rankin in 1886. Her free lance stories were published by Century, Harper's Monthly, Youth's Companion, St. Nicholas, Leslie's, Lippincott's, Metropolitan and other widely circulated periodicals. Her best known novel is Dandelion Cottage, published in 1904 by Henry Holt and Company. She first wrote the story serially for her own children. Considered a regional classic in the Midwest, it tells of four young girls who negotiate the use of a derelict cottage belonging to a church as a playhouse by pulling dandelions for the senior warden of the church, prosperous Mr. Black. The real life model for Mr. Black is generally acknowledged to be Marquette businessman and philanthropist, Peter White. The original Dandelion Cottage is located at 440 East Arch and is privately owned. Now that the book is in public domain, it is available from Project Gutenberg and a print edition is available from the Marquette Regional History Center, published by the Marquette County Historical Society.
Rankin allowed her characters much latitude in emotion and behavior at a time when writing for children was often tepid and tutelary. Other of her novels for youth include: