Anna Bartlett Warner

Anna Bartlett Warner
Born August 31, 1827(1827-08-31)
Long Island, New York.
Died January 22, 1915(1915-01-22) (aged 87)
Highland Falls, New York.
Resting place United States Military Academy, West Point, New York.
Pen name Amy Lothrop

Anna Bartlett Warner (August 31, 1827 – January 22, 1915) was an American writer, the author of several books, and of poems set to music as hymns and religious songs for children. She was born on Long Island and died in Highland Falls, New York.

The best known of the hymns is almost certainly "Jesus Loves Me, This I Know"; however some stanzas of this appear in modern hymnals rewritten by David Rutherford McGuire.

She wrote some books jointly with her sister Susan Warner (Elizabeth Wetherell) which included Wych Hazel (1853), Mr. Rutherford's Children (1855) and The Hills of the Shatemuc (1856).[1] She sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Amy Lothrop. She wrote thirty-one novels on her own, the most popular of which was Dollars and Cents (1852), Others were Gold of Chickaree, In West Point Colors (1904), Stories of Blackberry Hollow and Stories of Vinegar Hill (1872).[1] She also wrote a biography of her sister Susan.[2]

Her former family home is now a museum on the grounds of The United States Military Academy, [1] which was opposite the house during her lifetime and where her uncle had been chaplain from 1828-1838.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c Joel Benton in The Hudson River in Literature (1980), Arthur Adams Ed., State University of New York Press, Albany ISBN 0-87395-407-6
  2. ^ a b Anna Bartlett Warner (1909) Susan Warner, G.P. Putnam's Sons

External links