Edith Franklin Wyatt
American writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edith Franklin Wyatt (September 14, 1873 – October 26, 1958) was an American writer.
Edith Franklin Wyatt was born on September 14, 1873, in Tomah, Wisconsin.[1] Her family moved to Chicago when she was young.[1] She attended Miss Rice's Higher School for Girls, in Chicago,[2] and studied at Bryn Mawr College from 1892 to 1894.[3] In Chicago, she taught at Hull House.[1] She died on October 26, 1958, in Chicago.[4]
Works
- Every One His Own Way (1901)[1]
- True Love (1903)[1]
- The Whole Family (collaborative novel, 1908)
- Making Both Ends Meet: The Income and Outlay of New York Working Girls (with Sue Ainslie Clark, 1911)
- Great Companions (1917)[3]
- Wyatt, Edith (1917). The Wind in the Corn and Other Poems. New York: D. Appleton & Company. OCLC 1158379612.
- The Invisible Gods (1923)[1][5][6]
- The Satyr's Children: A Fable (1939)[3]
References
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