Fanny Fern (1811–1872)
Author of Ruth Hall: A Domestic Tale of the Present Time
About the Author
Works by Fanny Fern
“A Law More Nice Than Just” 1 copy
Nightcaps 1 copy
Associated Works
The Heath Anthology of American Literature, Volume 1 (1990) — Contributor, some editions — 259 copies
The Glorious American Essay: One Hundred Essays from Colonial Times to the Present (2020) — Contributor — 92 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Parton, Sara Willis (final married name)
- Other names
- Willis, Sarah Payson (birth name)
Fern, Fanny (nom de plume) - Birthdate
- 1811-07-09
- Date of death
- 1872-10-10
- Burial location
- Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Portland, Maine, USA
- Place of death
- New York, New York, USA
- Places of residence
- Hartford, Connecticut, USA
Brooklyn, New York, USA - Education
- Hartford Female Seminary
Saugus Female Seminary - Occupations
- columnist
journalist
humorist
children's writer - Relationships
- Willis, Nathaniel Parker (brother)
Parton, Ethel (granddaughter) - Organizations
- Sorosis
- Short biography
- Fanny Fern was the pen name of Sara Willis, born in Portland, Maine. She spent her youth in Boston, where her father founded a religious newspaper. She seems to have inherited her interest in journalism from him. In 1837, she married Charles Eldredge, a bank clerk; but when he died in 1846, soon after the death of the eldest of their three daughters, she was reduced to relative poverty. In 1849 she married Samuel Farrington, a Boston merchant; they quickly separated. With the need to earn a living, she tried sewing and teaching, and then published a collection of sketches called Leaves from Fanny’s Portfolio (1853), under the name Fanny Fern, that became an instant bestseller. By 1855, she was the highest-paid columnist in the USA, commanding the huge sum of $100 per week for her New York Ledger column. She also had great success as a humorist, novelist, and author of children's stories. In 1856, she married James Parton and the couple lived in a brownstone in New York City with one of her surviving daughters. Fanny Fern's fictional autobiography Ruth Hall (1854) has become a popular subject among feminist literary scholars.
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Statistics
- Works
- 18
- Also by
- 7
- Members
- 487
- Popularity
- #50,715
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 6
- ISBNs
- 74
- Favorited
- 1
It is by excerpts from Fern Leaves that she is represented here, although other of her texts appear elsewhere in the archive. Outspoken and satirical, "Fanny Fern" made some reviewers very uncomfortable (she was, for example, the first woman to go on record praising Whitman's poetry), but she almost invariably delighted readers. She writes from within the values of mid-century sentimental culture, but usually has a mischievous glint rather than a tear in her eye. http://utc.iath.virginia.edu/sentimnt/fernhp.html… (more)