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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