1661:
122:
409:
471:
525:. The guide, which seemed to target middle to upper class readers, was organized into three parts: cooking, housekeeping and pharmaceutical concerns. Its contents included thousands of recipes and advice with references to philosophers, scientists, and ancient civilizations. There were also five hundred wood-engraved illustrations. She wrote in the preface, "No complete system of Domestic Economy, within the limits of a convenient manual, has been published in this country."
553:
31:
1680:
390:
the scandal died down. Poe's sick wife
Virginia, however, was deeply affected by the scandal. As early as July 1845 she had been receiving anonymous letters, possibly from Ellet, which reported her husband's alleged indiscretions. On her deathbed, Virginia claimed "Mrs. E. had been her murderer." As Poe described years later, "I scorned Mrs. E simply because she revolted me, and to this day she has never ceased her
321:
421:
women, becoming the first historian of the
Revolution to carry out such an effort. She noted the "abundance of materials for the history of action" and attempted to add balance by telling the feminine side, referring to the founding "mothers" as giving "nurture in the domestic sanctuary of that love of civil liberty which afterwards kindled into a flame and shed light on the world".
346:". A number of women in literary society sent him letters, including Ellet and Osgood. Some of the letters sent may have been flirtatious or amorous ones. Ellet also spent time with Poe discussing literary matters. It is possible that Ellet felt herself in competition with Osgood for Poe's affections. During this time, Poe had written several poems to and about Osgood, including "
451:, among others, were famous in their own right. She also wrote of the women who were more obscure but equally valuable: the wives of heroes who, during the American Revolutionary War, raised children and defended their homes. She wrote, "It is almost impossible now to appreciate the vast influence of woman's patriotism upon the destinies of the infant republic."
576:
On
February 24, 1856, the appeal went to court, with Ellet and Stephens providing lengthy testimony against Griswold's character. Neither Griswold nor Myers attended and the appeal was dismissed. When Griswold died in 1857, Sarah Anna Lewis, a friend and writer, suggested that Ellet had worsened Griswold's illness and that she "goaded Griswold to his death".
575:
wrote to Myers telling her not to allow the divorce, as well as to
Harriet McCrillis, who intended to marry Griswold after the divorce, to end her relationship with him. After it was granted, Ellet and Stephens continued writing to Myers and persuaded her to repeal the divorce on September 23, 1853.
389:
created by Poe himself". She put all the blame on Poe, suggesting the incident was because Poe was "intemperate and subject to acts of lunacy." The rumor that Poe was insane was spread by Ellet and by other enemies of Poe and eventually reported in newspapers. After Osgood reunited with her husband,
341:
During this time, Ellet was a participant in a notorious scandal involving Edgar Allan Poe and
Frances Sargent Osgood, both of whom were married to others. Accounts of the particulars of the scandal and the sequence of events differ. At the time, Poe was at the height of his fame, thanks to his work
420:
Around 1846, Ellet began a major project in historical writing: to profile the life stories of women who sacrificed for, and were committed to, the
American Revolution. She did this by searching out unpublished letters and diaries, and by interviewing descendants of Revolutionary era and frontier
369:
letters". One such letter, written in German, asked Poe to "call for it at her residence this evening", a phrase presumably meant to be seductive, though Poe either ignored it or did not understand its meaning. He then gathered up these letters from Ellet and left them at her house. Despite her
615:
Ellet was the first historian to write about the relationship of women to the
American Revolution. She felt that women shaped history by their influence, which was done through "sentiment" and "feeling". This was so hard to define that she stated "History can do it no Justice". Her book
462:, of which he was a member. She did not acknowledge his assistance, angering the vindictive Griswold. In a review, Griswold said, "with the assistance of a few gentlemen more familiar than herself with our public and domestic experience, she has made a valuable and interesting work."
150:, in 1835. She married the chemist William Henry Ellet and the couple moved to South Carolina. She had published several books and contributed to multiple journals. In 1845, she moved back to New York and took her place in the literary scene there.
189:. He was promoted to captain and attached to the Second Regiment Hunterdon County Militia. He was also a captain in Colonel Spencer's regiment of the Continental Army from February 7, 1777, to April 11, 1778. He later joined the army of General
428:(1848) had to be published in two volumes. These volumes were well received, and a third volume of additional material was published in 1850. Later historians consider these volumes to represent her most important work. Ellet also authored
270:, a lively description of the scenery she had observed in her travels through the United States, in 1840. She continued writing poems, translations and essays on European literature which she contributed to the
587:. Ellet's husband died two years later in 1859. She continued to write, and, although they had no children, she promoted charities for impoverished women and children by speaking in public to raise funds. An
435:
Ellet told the stories of women from every colony and from all ranks of society, with the exception of
African Americans, whose role she chose to ignore. Some of the women she wrote about, such as
1032:
374:". Her brother, Colonel William Lummis, did not believe that Poe had already returned them and threatened to kill him. In order to defend himself, Poe requested a pistol from
169:, was published in 1845. The three volume book profiled the lives of patriotic women in the early history of the United States. She continued writing until her death in 1877.
239:, based on the history of Venice, that was successfully performed in New York and other cities. Around this time she married William Henry Ellet (1806–1859), a chemist from
817:
293:
In 1845, Ellet left her husband in the south, moving back to New York City where she resumed her place as a member of literary society along with such writers as
139:
Lummis; October 18, 1818 – June 3, 1877) was an
American writer, historian and poet. She was the first writer to record the lives of women who contributed to the
1733:
1411:
943:
850:
385:, threatened to sue Ellet unless she formally apologized. She retracted her statements in a letter to Osgood saying, "The letter shown me by Mrs Poe
588:
1608:
Casper, Scott (1992). "An Uneasy
Marriage of Sentiment and Scholarship: Elizabeth F. Ellet and the Domestic Origins of American Women's History".
1758:
1753:
1090:
Memoirs of Anne C.L. Botta,: written by her friends. With selections from her correspondence and from her writings in prose and poetry
1793:
1773:
755:
494:, possibly the only history of the American Revolution told from the perspective of both men and women. From 1851 to 1857 she wrote
1788:
357:, and subsequently advised Osgood to ask for their return, implying to Osgood that they were an indiscretion. On behalf of Osgood,
1743:
216:, where she studied, among other subjects, French, German and Italian. Her first published work, at age 16, was a translation of
196:
Her father was William Nixon Lummis (1775–1833), a prominent physician who studied medicine in Philadelphia under the famous Dr.
1057:
571:
Ellet became involved with the divorce case between Rufus Griswold and his second wife, Charlotte Myers, in 1852. Ellet and
1783:
1763:
825:
1768:
1210:
1001:
564:
In 1850, Ellet and her husband relocated to New York, where he spent his final years as a chemical consultant for the
347:
1589:
1318:
1255:
1234:
1193:
1172:
1144:
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365:
asked Poe to return the letters. Poe, angered by their interference, suggested that Ellet had better "look after her
353:
On one visit to Poe's home in January 1846, Ellet allegedly observed letters from Osgood, shown to her by Poe's wife
1333:
1408:
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1088:
213:
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951:
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909:
858:
1367:
459:
280:
880:
185:
captain John Maxwell. During the Revolution, John Maxwell was lieutenant of the first company raised in
793:
182:
140:
286:
186:
822:
Official Register of the Officers and Men of New Jersey in the Revolutionary War by William Stryker
354:
244:
201:
121:
1562:
980:
1306:
515:
1383:
135:
1458:
1293:
Benton, Richard P. "Friends and Enemies: Women in the Life of Edgar Allan Poe" as collected in
382:
329:
314:
248:
209:
158:
1482:
1005:
995:
455:
306:
205:
178:
162:
55:
1728:
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458:
had aided Ellet in the production of the book and granted her access to the records of the
763:
8:
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1189:
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532:(1859), the first book of its kind to represent a history of women artists. She wrote
521:
In 1857, Ellet published a 600-page encyclopedia of American home economics entitled
444:
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190:
1104:
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540:(1869), a look at the social life of eighteen presidents from George Washington to
362:
310:
298:
1552:
1415:
580:
572:
511:
358:
325:
302:
294:
154:
1643:
181:, on October 18, 1818. Her mother was Sarah Maxwell (1780–1849) the daughter of
217:
1702:
424:
She found so much information about female patriots that the first edition of
1717:
1652:
440:
240:
197:
74:
432:
summarizing the same material in narrative form and also published in 1850.
200:. In the early part of 1800, Dr. Lummis left Philadelphia and purchased the
1656:
1621:
290:
and other periodicals. Ellet wrote abundantly in a wide variety of genres.
30:
1434:"Women Artists in All Ages and Countries by Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet"
592:
518:, got its name from Ellet and has dedicated a nature trail in her honor.
1341:
1269:
Poe's Literary Battles: The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu
1207:
Poe's Literary Battles: The Critic in the Context of His Literary Milieu
997:
The Fortunes of German Writers in America: Studies in Literary Reception
552:
146:
Born Elizabeth Fries Lummis, in New York, she published her first book,
1467:
599:
in New York City on June 3, 1877, and was buried beside her husband at
193:
as captain of a company of 100 volunteers known as Maxwell's Company.
1581:
343:
247:, when he was made professor of chemistry, mineralogy and geology at
1670:
1449:
254:
During this time, Ellet published several books. In 1839, she wrote
1674:
604:
395:
993:
482:
Now an established and respected author, Ellet went on to write
320:
1409:"Elizabeth Fries Ellet Interpretive Trail is signed, dedicated"
394:
persecutions." It is believed that Poe wrote the short story "
1093:. New York City: J. Selwin Tait & Sons. pp. 14, 175.
231:
In 1835, Elizabeth Lummis published her first book, entitled
378:, who did not believe that Ellet ever sent Poe any letters.
370:
letters having been returned, Ellet asked her brother "to
262:
including her translation of many of his poems. She wrote
1541:. Volume II. Chicago: The John C. Winston Co., 1926: 1575
1432:
Langer, Sandra L.; Ellet, Elizabeth Fries Lummis (1980).
1284:. Volume II. Chicago: The John C. Winston Co., 1926: 1388
1502:. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943: 217–220.
790:
Revolutionary Women in the War for American Independence
788:
Ellet, Elizabeth Fries (1998) . Diamant, Lincoln (ed.).
628:
List of works taken from MSU Historic American project.
1706:
994:
Elfe, Wolfgang; James N. Hardin; Günther Holst (1992).
401:
266:, a history of the lifestyles of female nobility, and
212:. Elizabeth Lummis attended Aurora Female Seminary in
510:. This book was inspired by a boating trip along the
490:, a collection of German legends and traditions, and
1550:
1528:. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943: 251.
1515:. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1943: 227.
1271:. Southern Illinois University Press, 1969: 213–214
1227:
Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance
1186:
Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance
1161:
Edgar A. Poe: Mournful and Never-ending Remembrance
1086:
153:She was involved with a public scandal involving
1715:
1444:(2). Woman's Art Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2: 55–58.
750:
748:
1578:Toward an Intellectual History of Women: Essays
1425:
1297:. Baltimore: Edgar Allan Poe Society, 1987: 16.
1221:
1219:
1155:
1153:
1734:Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism
1526:Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor
1513:Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor
1500:Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor
1364:Rufus Wilmot Griswold: Poe's Literary Executor
1561:. New York: Henry Holt and Company. pp.
1050:
745:
398:" as a literary revenge on Ellet and others.
324:Ellet became involved in a scandal involving
1334:"History From America's Most Famous Valleys"
1216:
1150:
1131:
1129:
1127:
1125:
1027:
1025:
783:
781:
1544:
1483:"The Mid-Victorian Woman Artist: 1850-1879"
1431:
1250:. New York Cooper Square Press, 1992: 192.
1139:. New York Cooper Square Press, 1992: 191.
1033:"Ellet, E. F. (Elizabeth Fries), 1818–1877"
979:. Boston: James R. Osgood and Co. pp.
685:Domestic History of the American Revolution
492:Domestic History of the American Revolution
430:Domestic History of the American Revolution
1328:
1326:
1457:
1378:
1376:
1295:Myths and Reality: The Mysterious Mr. Poe
1229:. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991: 292.
1188:. New York: Harper Perennial, 1991: 291.
1122:
1022:
902:
778:
1388:Elizabeth Fries Lummis Ellet (1818–1877)
1313:. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1977: 184.
1109:Lectures and Articles on Edgar Allan Poe
551:
469:
407:
319:
1662:Works by or about Elizabeth Fries Ellet
1323:
987:
721:Women Artists in All Ages and Countries
530:Women Artists in All Ages and Countries
1716:
1607:
1575:
1569:
1373:
966:
938:
936:
934:
932:
930:
810:
264:Scenes in the Life of Joanna of Sicily
1759:Historians of the American Revolution
972:
845:
843:
787:
134:
1703:E.F. Ellet correspondence with index
1480:
1338:The Women of the American Revolution
1311:The Feminization of American Culture
1248:Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Legacy
1137:Edgar Allan Poe: His Life and Legacy
667:The Women of the American Revolution
618:The Women of the American Revolution
426:The Women of the American Revolution
414:The Women of the American Revolution
403:The Women of the American Revolution
167:The Women of the American Revolution
1754:19th-century American women writers
1384:"Legacy Profile by Carol Mattingly"
1097:
927:
591:most of her life, she converted to
583:as literary editor of the New York
177:Elizabeth Fries Lummis was born in
86:Author, historian, poet, translator
13:
1601:
1211:Southern Illinois University Press
1002:University of South Carolina Press
873:
840:
14:
1805:
1637:
258:, a critical essay on the writer
16:American writer, poet, translator
1794:Historians from New York (state)
1774:19th-century American historians
1678:
976:Dictionary of American Biography
623:
595:in her later years. She died of
120:
29:
1789:Catholics from New York (state)
1531:
1518:
1505:
1492:
1481:Nunn, Pamela Geraldine (1982).
1474:
1401:
1356:
1300:
1287:
1274:
1261:
1240:
1199:
1178:
1080:
465:
165:. Ellet's most important work,
1744:Burials at Green-Wood Cemetery
1687:Poems: Translated and Original
1653:Works by Elizabeth Fries Ellet
1644:Works by Elizabeth Fries Ellet
973:Drake, Francis Samuel (1872).
888:Elizabeth Fries Ellet Obituary
727:The Queens of American Society
679:Family Pictures from the Bible
639:Poems, Translated and Original
547:
534:The Queens of American Society
484:Family Pictures from the Bible
235:, which included her tragedy,
233:Poems, Translated and Original
161:and, later, another involving
148:Poems, Translated and Original
1:
1459:2027/uc2.ark:/13960/t3ws8mg0c
739:
733:Court Circles of the Republic
538:Court Circles of the Republic
172:
1698:(1853) by Elizabeth F. Ellet
1690:(1835) by Elizabeth F. Ellet
1087:Anne C. Lynch Botta (1894).
914:Elizabeth-Fries-Lummis-Ellet
697:Nouvelettes of the Musicians
556:Grave of Elizabeth Ellet in
7:
1784:19th-century American poets
1764:People from Sodus, New York
1677:(public domain audiobooks)
1671:Works by Elizabeth F. Ellet
1368:Vanderbilt University Press
1366:, Hardcover ed. Nashville:
1037:Literature Online Biography
504:Novelettes of the Musicians
486:in 1849. In 1850 she wrote
460:New-York Historical Society
281:Southern Literary Messenger
10:
1810:
1695:Summer Rambles in the West
1610:Journal of Women's History
818:"New Jersey State Library"
794:Greenwood Publishing Group
709:Summer Rambles in the West
649:The Characters of Schiller
508:Summer Rambles in the West
336:
256:The Characters of Schiller
183:American Revolutionary War
141:American Revolutionary War
1769:American women historians
1062:Elizabeth F. Lummis Ellet
948:Historic American Project
881:"New York Times Archives"
715:The Practical Housekeeper
703:Pioneer Women of the West
661:Rambles about the Country
610:
523:The Practical Housekeeper
514:in 1852. The local town,
500:Pioneer Women of the West
476:The Practical Housekeeper
332:(shown) in the mid-1840s.
287:Southern Quarterly Review
268:Rambles about the Country
226:
187:Sussex County, New Jersey
119:
114:
100:
90:
82:
63:
37:
28:
21:
1539:Edgar Allan Poe: The Man
1420:Eden Prairie Sun-Current
1282:Edgar Allan Poe: The Man
579:In 1857, Ellet replaced
387:must have been a forgery
372:demand of me the letters
245:Columbia, South Carolina
1558:Woman's Work in America
1422:. August 9, 2007. p. 9A
855:MARDOS Memorial Library
516:Eden Prairie, Minnesota
454:Anthologist and critic
1779:Women military writers
1622:10.1353/jowh.2010.0299
1576:Kerber, Linda (1997).
561:
479:
417:
383:Samuel Stillman Osgood
333:
330:Frances Sargent Osgood
315:Frances Sargent Osgood
249:South Carolina College
243:. The couple moved to
210:Wayne County, New York
159:Frances Sargent Osgood
42:Elizabeth Fries Lummis
1749:Deaths from nephritis
1551:Meyer, Annie Nathan;
1068:on September 11, 2007
861:on September 30, 2007
669:(1848–50) (3 volumes)
566:Manhattan Gas Company
555:
528:Later works included
473:
456:Rufus Wilmot Griswold
411:
323:
307:Rufus Wilmot Griswold
276:North American Review
179:Sodus Point, New York
163:Rufus Wilmot Griswold
131:Elizabeth Fries Ellet
56:Sodus Point, New York
1739:American women poets
1370:, 1943. pp. 143–144.
1225:Silverman, Kenneth.
1184:Silverman, Kenneth.
1159:Silverman, Kenneth.
673:Evenings at Woodlawn
635:(1834) a translation
488:Evenings at Woodlawn
104:William Nixon Lummis
1707:Library of Congress
1701:Finding aid to the
1580:. Chapel Hill, NC:
1438:Woman's Art Journal
851:"Southern New York"
641:including the play
633:Euphemio of Messina
601:Green-Wood Cemetery
558:Green-Wood Cemetery
376:Thomas Dunn English
221:Euphemio of Messina
94:William Henry Ellet
1584:. pp. 67–68.
1537:Phillips, Mary E.
1414:2009-09-19 at the
1280:Phillips, Mary E.
1105:"E.A. Poe Society"
1000:. South Carolina:
766:on January 2, 2011
760:Elizabeth F. Ellet
620:is still studied.
562:
480:
449:Ann Eliza Bleecker
418:
381:Osgood's husband,
334:
260:Friedrich Schiller
23:Elizabeth F. Ellet
1648:Project Gutenberg
1488:. pp. 21–23.
1246:Meyers, Jeffrey.
1135:Meyers, Jeffrey.
828:on March 18, 2008
445:Mercy Otis Warren
437:Martha Washington
191:George Washington
128:
127:
1801:
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1681:
1666:Internet Archive
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1340:. Archived from
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1285:
1278:
1272:
1267:Moss, Sidney P.
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1205:Moss, Sidney P.
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950:. Archived from
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857:. Archived from
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824:. Archived from
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792:. Westport, CT:
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762:. Archived from
756:"Librarycompany"
752:
691:Watching Spirits
655:Joanna of Sicily
597:Bright's disease
542:Ulysses S. Grant
496:Watching Spirits
412:Frontispiece of
363:Anne Lynch Botta
311:Anna Cora Mowatt
299:Anne Lynch Botta
272:American Monthly
237:Teresa Contarini
218:Silvio Pellico's
214:Aurora, New York
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52:October 18, 1818
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585:Evening Express
573:Ann S. Stephens
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512:Minnesota River
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359:Margaret Fuller
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326:Edgar Allan Poe
303:Edgar Allan Poe
295:Margaret Fuller
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1348:October 13,
1213:, 1969: 215
1114:October 13,
1058:"For women"
1004:. pp.
593:Catholicism
548:Later years
348:A Valentine
206:Sodus Point
110:(1780–1849)
106:(1775–1833)
96:(1806–1859)
1718:Categories
740:References
560:, Brooklyn
173:Early life
48:1818-10-18
1630:145393885
1582:UNC Press
1393:April 16,
1042:April 16,
894:April 19,
865:August 8,
832:April 24,
474:Cover of
392:anonymous
344:The Raven
251:in 1836.
115:Signature
101:Parent(s)
91:Spouse(s)
1675:LibriVox
1555:(1891).
1412:Archived
605:Brooklyn
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355:Virginia
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611:Legacy
478:(1857)
284:, the
278:, the
274:, the
227:Career
77:, U.S.
58:, U.S.
1626:S2CID
1486:(PDF)
1464:JSTOR
884:(PDF)
1586:ISBN
1395:2008
1350:2007
1315:ISBN
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1074:2007
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1010:ISBN
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834:2008
798:ISBN
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38:Born
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