Sneha Girap (Editor)

Mary Mapes Dodge

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Occupation
  
Writer

Nationality
  
American


Name
  
Mary Dodge

Role
  
Writer

Mary Mapes Dodge httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
Mary Elizabeth MapesJanuary 26, 1831New York City (
1831-01-26
)

Died
  
August 21, 1905, Tannersville, New York, United States

Spouse
  
William Dodge (m. 1851–1858)

Movies
  
Hans Brinker, Hans Brinker, or the Silver Skates

Children
  
Harrington Dodge, James Dodge

Books
  
Hans Brinker; or - The Silve, The Silver Skates: A Story of Li, Rhymes and Jingles, Donald and Dorothy, The Boy Who Held Back the

Similar People
  
Thomas Locker, Lenny Hort, Norman Foster, Robert Scheerer

Snow by mary mapes dodge


Mary Mapes Dodge (January 26, 1831 – August 21, 1905) was an American children's writer and editor, best known for her novel Hans Brinker.

Contents

Mary Mapes Dodge Mary Mapes Dodge The Poetry Foundation

The grass world mary mapes dodge


Biography

Mary Mapes Dodge biographies

Mary was born Mary Elizabeth Mapes to Prof. James Jay Mapes and Sophia Furman in New York City. She acquired a good education under private tutors. In 1851 she married the lawyer William Dodge. Within the next four years she gave birth to two sons, James and Harrington. In 1857, William faced serious financial difficulties and left his family in 1858. A month after his disappearance his body was found dead from an apparent drowning, and Mary Mapes Dodge became a widow.

Mary Mapes Dodge Mary Mapes Dodge Poor Crow YouTube

In 1859 she began writing and editing, working with her father to publish two magazines, the Working Farmer and the United States Journal. Within a few years she had great success with a collection of short stories, The Irvington Stories (1864), and a novel was solicited. Dodge then wrote Hans Brinker, or the Silver Skates, which became an instant bestseller and was awarded a prize of fifteen hundred francs by the French Academy.

Her daughter-in-law, Mrs. James Mapes Dodge (Josephine Kern), was the sculptor of The Good Fairy Statue in 1916.

Later in life Mary was an associate editor of Hearth and Home, edited by Harriet Beecher Stowe. She had charge of the household and children's departments of that paper for many years. She became an editor in her own right with the children's St. Nicholas Magazine, for she was able to solicit stories from a number of well-known writers including Mark Twain, Louisa May Alcott, and Robert Louis Stevenson. St. Nicholas became one of the most successful magazines for children during the second half of the nineteenth century, with a circulation of almost 70,000 copies.

Dodge died at her summer cottage in Tannersville, New York, in 1905.

Selected works

Prose

  • The Irvington Stories (1864)
  • Hans Brinker, or The Silver Skates (1865)
  • A Few Friends and How They Amused Themselves (1869)
  • Baby Days (1876)
  • Theophilus and Others (1876)
  • Donald and Dorothy (1883)
  • Baby World (1884)
  • The Land of Pluck (1894)
  • Verse

  • Rhymes and Jingles (1874)
  • Along the Way (1879)
  • When Life Is Young (1894)
  • References

    Mary Mapes Dodge Wikipedia