Margaret Warner Morley

Margaret Warner Morley (February 17, 1858 in Montrose, Iowa - December 12, 1923 in Washington, D.C.) was an American educator, biologist and writer, author of many books on nature and biology for children and novel writer.

Contents

Biography

She grew up in Brooklin and graduated from Hunter College in New York. Morley was a suffragette. She worked as an educator in several schools but her career of teacher was overshadowed by her books. [1]

As early as 1890 she visited Tryon, North Carolina with the painter Amelia Watson where she resided in the cottage of playwright William Gillette. She finally acquired her own home in Tryon where she lived for many years.

In one of her many trips she went to Europe to the Val Gardena the vally of toy carvers where she was inspired to write the novel Donkey John of the toy valley.

Some of her documents ar held at the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center Margaret Warner Morley Collection at the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center at Hartford, CT. The collection consists of travel logs and sketchbooks of rural North Carolina, and book manuscripts. The North Carolina Museum of History owns a collection of the 244 original photographs that Morley donated to the museum in 1914 [2]

Writings

Drawings by Morley from the original Val Gardena toys from Donkey John of the toy valley

Bibliography

Michael J MacCue, Margaret Morley in Tryon artists, 1892-1942. Columbus, N.C.: Condar, 2001.

Weblinks

References

  1. ^ Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. ^ Photographs by Margaret Warner Morley in the North Carolina Museum of History
  3. ^ The Insect Folk - online book
  4. ^ The Renewal of Life: How and When to Tell the Story to the Young - online book
  5. ^ Donkey John of the toy valley - online book
  6. ^ The Carolina Mountains