This is volume 3 of the six-volume compilation of the letters of a forgotten American writer. Volume 3 begins with a letter from Emily E. Chubbuck to Anna Maria Anable telling in awestruck tones that her innocent flirtation with Adoniram Judson has blossomed into something much more serious. That was resolved rather quickly when he proposed formally on January 20. Over the next several months the letters reflect her great joy in this wonderful love that both came to believe was ordained by God. They also reflect Emily's personal angst as she fought with her perceptions of what she had been in...
This is volume 3 of the six-volume compilation of the letters of a forgotten American writer. Volume 3 begins with a letter from Emily E. Chubbuck to ...
Emily Chubbuck Judson (1817 - 1854) was a nationally known writer of the mid-nineteenth century. Volume 5 covers October 1, 1851 - September 30, 1852, and is filled with letters from prominent ministers and missionaries of that time, all of whom were involved in the mission movement, and whose lives and ministries had been greatly impacted by Adoniram Judson.
Emily Chubbuck Judson (1817 - 1854) was a nationally known writer of the mid-nineteenth century. Volume 5 covers October 1, 1851 - September 30, 1852,...
Volume 6 covers the last twenty months of Emily Chubbuck Judson's life. She is increasingly impaired by the illness that was to claim her life on June 2, 1854. Most of the letters in this volume are from the Judson children Abby Ann, Adoniram "Addy," Elnathan "Elly," Henry, and Edward, as well as George Dana Boardman, the son of George and Sarah Boardman (who became the second "Mrs. Judson"). They all addressed Emily as "Mamma." An appendix on the Judson children encompasses the time after Emily's death through 1914.
Volume 6 covers the last twenty months of Emily Chubbuck Judson's life. She is increasingly impaired by the illness that was to claim her life on June...
Emily Chubbuck Judson (1817 1854) was a nationally known writer of the mid-nineteenth century. Writing as Fanny Forester, her creations appeared in the national magazines (The Columbian, The Knickerbocker, Graham's Magazine, The New Mirror) alongside works by Edgar Allan Poe, James Fenimore Cooper, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and other literary icons of the era. Her work included children's books, essays, poetry, and fictional stories. She was a prolific letter writer. Volume 7 begins with a poem written when Emily was nine years old (1826) and ends with "My Angel Guide," written in 1853...
Emily Chubbuck Judson (1817 1854) was a nationally known writer of the mid-nineteenth century. Writing as Fanny Forester, her creations appeared in th...