Jump to content

Mabel Fuller Blodgett

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mabel Fuller Blodgett (1869–1959) was a novelist and writer of children's books.

Biography

[edit]

Born on April 10, 1869, as Mabel Louise Fuller in Bangor, Maine, she was the daughter of Ransom Burritt Fuller and Louise White.[1] Her father became the president of two insurance companies in Boston. She graduated from the Sacred Heart Convent at Elmhurst in Providence, Rhode Island, and wrote her first novel At the Queen’s Mercy (1897) at the age of 19.[2][3] Her subsequent works include:

  • The Aspen Shade: A Romance (1889)
  • Fairy Tales with illustrations by Ethel Reed (Boston, 1896)
  • A Mother's Prayer (1900)
  • The Giant's Ruby and Other Fairy Tales (1903)
  • When Christmas Came Too Early (1912)
  • The Strange Story of Mr. Dog and Mr. Bear (1915)
  • Peasblossom: The Adventures of the Pine Tree Fairy and Others (1917)
  • The Magic Slippers (1917)

She also published a non-fiction work, The Life and Letters of Richard Ashley Blodgett, First Lieutenant United States Air Service in 1919. Richard Blodgett was her son, and he was killed in action during World War I (1918).

Blodgett was living with her husband, attorney Edward E. Blodgett, in Brookline, Massachusetts by 1897, when Richard was born. She is buried in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Lineage Book of the Charter Members of the Daughters of the American Revolution, vol. XIII, page 268
  2. ^ Obituary, Berkshire (Mass.) Eagle, June 8, 1959, p. 19
  3. ^ "Pre-1950 Utopias and Science Fiction by WomenAn Annotated Reading List of Online Editions of Speculative Fiction". Digital Library, University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 2024-07-12.
[edit]