Occupation Writer Role Writer Name Grace Hallock | Period 1922–1950s Nationality American Awards John Newbery Medal | |
Genre Children's novels, health education Books Marie Curie and the Story, The Land of Health: How Chil, Health Heroes, The Boy Who Was, Health Observation of School Similar People Walter Camp, Charles‑Edward Amory Winslow, John Newbery |
Grace Taber Hallock (April 10, 1893 – August 17, 1967) was an American children's writer of the early to mid-20th century. Many of her books explained health and science issues, including Florence Nightingale and the Founding of Professional Nursing and Marie Curie (both published by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. as part of a series called Health Heroes).
She was born in 1893 on the farm that belonged to her parents, Robin W. Hallock and Isabel Taber Hallock. She lived there her whole life. She graduated from Mount Holyoke College in 1914 and afterward helped organize the suffragette organization in Ulster County, New York.
Newbery Award
Hallock was recognized with a Newbery Honor in 1929 for The Boy Who Was, published in 1928.
References
Grace Hallock Wikipedia(Text) CC BY-SA