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Florence Morse Kingsley

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Full Name
  
Florence Morse

Role
  
Writer

Occupation
  
Writer

Alma mater
  
Wellesley College


Years active
  
1879–1914

Home town
  
Brecksville

Name
  
Florence Kingsley

Movies
  
Cupid Forecloses


Born
  
July 14, 1859 (
1859-07-14
)
Medina County, Ohio, U.S.

Died
  
November 7, 1937, Staten Island, New York City, New York, United States

People also search for
  
Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman

Books
  
Titus - a comrade of the cross, An Alabaster Box, The transfiguration of Miss P, And So They Were Married, The Life of Henry Fowle Du

Florence Morse Kingsley Audiobook


Florence Morse Kingsley (July 14, 1859 – November 7, 1937) was an American author of popular and religious fiction.

Contents

Early life

Florence Morse Kingsley was born in Poe, Medina County, Ohio, to artists Eleanor Ecob and Jonathan Bradley Morse. Florence grew up in Brecksville Township, Ohio where her parents were educators in the local school district.

Personal life

Florence Morse was a student at Wellesley College from 1876 to 1879. However, she had to leave before graduating because of a severe eye problem. She married Reverend Charles Rawson Kingsley, son of Frances Elizabeth Rawson and Charles Clark Kingsley on July 12, 1882 in Utica, New York. Dr. Charles and Mrs Florence Kingsley had five children: Charles Rawson Kingsley, Jr., Donald Morse Kingsley, Grace Ecob Kingsley, James Morse Kingsley, and John Bradley Kingsley.

Professional life

Florence Morse Kingsley was a contemporary of fellow writer Lew Wallace, the author of Ben-Hur. The influence of her early Wellesley days were captured in her books:

  • The Hired Baby
  • And so They were Married
  • The Wounds of a Friend
  • The Princess and the Ploughman
  • To the Highest Bidder
  • The Singular Miss Smith
  • When Kingsley was thirty-five, a publisher held a writing competition to obtain the best manuscript that would inspire a child’s faith for Christ. It was in this contest that Florence Kingsley submitted her manuscript for Titus: A Comrade of the Cross. In six weeks, 200,000 copies had been printed to meet demand. She later published two other works of Christian fiction: the sequel to her original entitled Stephen: A Soldier of the Cross, and the epic tale The Cross Triumphant.

    Kingsley was featured in, and a contributing writer to, the Ladies' Home Journal.

    References

    Florence Morse Kingsley Wikipedia