Cynthia May Alden
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Cynthia May (Westover) Alden (1862 - 1931) was an American journalist, author and New York municipal employee.
She was born in Afton, Indiana. She was educated at the University of Colorado and the Denver Business College.
In 1887 she was appointed an inspector of customs, in which position she was involved in the seizure of smuggled goods. She lived and worked in New York City as a music teacher and as soloist in church choirs. She was secretary to the New York City Commissioner of Street Cleaning for two years. For a time she was also employed at the New York Museum of Natural History.
She entered journalism as editor of the woman's department, first, of the New York Recorder, and later of the New York Tribune. During her three years with the Tribune she planned and founded the International Sunshine Society, of which she became president-general.
Alden accepted a position on the editorial staff of the Ladies' Home Journal, but she continued to reside in New York City, where she died. Her published writings include: Manhattan, Historic: Artistic; Bushy: Child Life in the Far West; Women's Ways of Earning Money (1904).
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This article incorporates text from an edition of the New International Encyclopedia that is in the public domain.