Laura E. Richards
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Laura E. Richards (born February 27, 1850 in Boston, died January 14, 1943, in Gardiner, Maine) - American writer and poet, known as the author of books for children. Curriculum vitae
She was the daughter of Samuel Gridley Howe, an abolitionist and founder of Perkins School for the Blind, the first educational institution for the blind in the United States and Julia Ward Howe. The author's mother was a poet herself. She composed words to the song The Battle Hymn of the Republic.
In 1871 Laura Howe married Henry Richards, who in 1876 became the manager of a paper mill owned by his family in Gardiner, Maine. She had seven children: Alice Maud, Rosalind, Henry Howe, Julia Ward, Maud, John and Laura Elizabeth. In 1917, Laura E. Richards received the Pulitzer Prize for her mother's biography, written together with her sister, Maud Howe Elliott. She also wrote the biography of Florence Nightingale (Florence Nightingale: Angel of the Crimea, 1919). Bibliography
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