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Lucy Foster Madison

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Cause of death
  
Stroke

Occupation
  
Writer, teacher


Name
  
Lucy Madison

Role
  
Novelist

Born
  
April 8, 1865
Kirksville, Missouri

Died
  
1932, Hudson Falls, New York, United States

Books
  
Joan of Arc - the warrior m, A Maid at King Alfred’s C, In Doublet and Hose: A Story fo, Peggy Owen and Liberty, A Daughter of the Union

Lucy Foster Madison (April 8, 1865 – March 16, 1932) was an American novelist and teacher.

Born Lucy Foster in Kirksville, Missouri, the daughter of George W. Foster and Almira Parker, she graduated from high school in Louisiana, Missouri. Her father, mother, and brother all died while she was a teen, leaving her to care for her two younger sisters. She became a school teacher in Louisiana, Missouri, then in Kansas City, Missouri. In 1890 she was married to Winfield Scott Madison.

In 1893, the offer of a prize by a New York newspaper interested her enough to enter a short story and she won second place. She became a writer of both short stories and novels, plus a compiler of various Chautauqua assemblies. Her series of "Peggy Owens" stories and other tales for girls were popular early in the twentieth century. Her husband began to suffer ill health, so they moved to a farm near Hudson Falls, New York in 1924. She died there in 1932, a few days after she had a stroke.

References

Lucy Foster Madison Wikipedia