Ruth Pine Furniss

Ruth Pine Furniss (18931957), was an American writer who published several short stories and novels.

Contents

Biography

Ruth Kellogg Pine Furniss was born on March 2, 1893, to Charles LeRoy and Grace Eddy Kellogg Pine in Lansingburg, New York.[1] She attended the Emma Willard School (Troy, New York) and Miss Porter’s School (Farmington, Connecticut). She studied short story writing with Dr. Blanche Colton Williams at Columbia University and went on to publish a number of short stories and novels.[2]

It is believed Furniss suffered from manic-depression, which was treated with periods of institutionalization, shock-therapy, a topectomy, and ultimately, a lobotomy.[3] Furniss’s writings drew on her struggle with illness and her exposure to various medical treatments, as can be seen in her novels Gay (1928), Snow: A Love Story (1929), and The Dreamland Tree (an unpublished novel completed in 1952 after Furniss received a topectomy and shock therapy). Furniss published The Layman Looks at Doctors (1929) under the pseudonyms S.W. and J.T. Pierce, who were a fictional couple.[4]

In 1912 Furniss married Dr. Henry Dawson Furniss (d. 1942), with whom she had five children, three of whom survived childhood (Henry Dawson, James P., and W. Todd).[5] The Furniss family lived in Pelham, New York, and in New York City. During World War II Furniss served as a Gray Lady with the Red Cross.[6] Furniss was hospitalized at several points during her life, including periods at Pilgrim Psychiatric Center and Central Islip Psychiatric Center (Long Island).[7] Furniss died of a heart attack in December 1957, at the age of 64.[8]

Bibliography

Novels

Short Stories

Articles

Archive

Notes

  1. ^ Hopkins, Timothy. The Kelloggs in the Old World and The New. San Francisco: Sunset Press, 1903. Accessed December 6, 2010.
  2. ^ Pelham Sun. July 29, 1932.
  3. ^ Ruth Pine Furniss Papers. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
  4. ^ Ruth Pine Furniss Papers. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
  5. ^ Pelham Sun. July 29, 1932.
  6. ^ New York Times. December 16, 1957.
  7. ^ Ruth Pine Furniss Papers. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University.
  8. ^ New York Times. December 16, 1957.