
Olive Woolley Burt (1894–1981)
Author of Luther Burbank: Boy Wizard
About the Author
Works by Olive Woolley Burt
Jayhawker Johnny 2 copies
JAYHAWKER JOHNNY 1 copy
John Alden Young Puritan 1 copy
Peter turns sheepman; 1 copy
Het uranium dal 1 copy
Prince of the ranch 1 copy
The Oak's Long Shadow, A Story of the Basque Sheepherders in Idaho, the Land of the Free series 1 copy
John Alden young Puritan 1 copy
Associated Works
Utah Historical Quarterly - Vol. 37, No. 3, Summer 1969 - Visitors of Utah (1969) — Contributor — 2 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1894-05-26
- Date of death
- 1981-09-10
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Utah University (BA|1918)
University of Chicago
Columbia University (graduate student) - Occupations
- journalist
columnist
children's book author - Organizations
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Salt Lake Tribune
Deseret News
National Federation of Press Women (Utah chapter founder)
Utah State Historical Society (fellow) - Awards and honors
- Fellow of the Utah State Historical Society (1964)
Service to Journalism (Sigma Delta Chi|1965)
Distinguished Alumni Award, University of Utah (1978) - Nationality
- USA
- Birthplace
- Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
- Places of residence
- Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA - Place of death
- Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Utah, USA
Members
Reviews
Brief biographies of thirteen Negro men and two women who were among the first
explorers, trappers, soldiers, businessmen, cowboys, and settlers in the "early West.
explorers, trappers, soldiers, businessmen, cowboys, and settlers in the "early West.
From the book flap:
"In 1827 Sarah Hale astonished America by editing the first magazine for women. She stirred their imagination with her daring articles on women's rights, flattered them by her edicts on fashions and manners. At a time when few "females" dared to wrte for publication, her first novel was a sensational success. She was a crusader, a reformer and a champion of women's rights long before the suffragist movement caught fire.
As a young girl Sarah created controversy in her New show more Hampshire village by her advanced methods in teaching children. At twenty-three she married lawyer David Hale. When he died, leaving her with five children to support, she tried to sell bonnets but failed, and turned to writing. Her NORTHWOOD was the first novel to raise the issue of slavery. It became a best seller and attracted the interest of a Boston publisher who hired Sarah to edit THE LADIES' MAGAZINE.
This was a daring project, unprecedented in American publishing. Since Sarah had no contributing authors, she wrote most of the first issue herself - stories, aticles and poems. Men were disturbed by this "female" novelty, but women were delighted. Gradually as circulation grew, Sarah become bolder in her editorials, pleading for higher education for girls, for women doctors and teachers. She formed the first women's organization in America - the Seamen's Aid Society - and proved on many occasions that women could solve problems as effectively as men.
Louis Godey tried vainly to imitate Sarah's policies in his LADY'S BOOK. Then he begged her to work for him, but she refused to leave LADIES' MAGAZINE, so he bought it. As his editor she began her most dramatic crusades, working almost till her death at the age of ninety.
Sarah Hale was beautiful, compassionate, courageous. She never misused her incredible power in molding public opinion, and she forsook a lost cause. The author brings a dynamic and romantic figure to vivid life." show less
"In 1827 Sarah Hale astonished America by editing the first magazine for women. She stirred their imagination with her daring articles on women's rights, flattered them by her edicts on fashions and manners. At a time when few "females" dared to wrte for publication, her first novel was a sensational success. She was a crusader, a reformer and a champion of women's rights long before the suffragist movement caught fire.
As a young girl Sarah created controversy in her New show more Hampshire village by her advanced methods in teaching children. At twenty-three she married lawyer David Hale. When he died, leaving her with five children to support, she tried to sell bonnets but failed, and turned to writing. Her NORTHWOOD was the first novel to raise the issue of slavery. It became a best seller and attracted the interest of a Boston publisher who hired Sarah to edit THE LADIES' MAGAZINE.
This was a daring project, unprecedented in American publishing. Since Sarah had no contributing authors, she wrote most of the first issue herself - stories, aticles and poems. Men were disturbed by this "female" novelty, but women were delighted. Gradually as circulation grew, Sarah become bolder in her editorials, pleading for higher education for girls, for women doctors and teachers. She formed the first women's organization in America - the Seamen's Aid Society - and proved on many occasions that women could solve problems as effectively as men.
Louis Godey tried vainly to imitate Sarah's policies in his LADY'S BOOK. Then he begged her to work for him, but she refused to leave LADIES' MAGAZINE, so he bought it. As his editor she began her most dramatic crusades, working almost till her death at the age of ninety.
Sarah Hale was beautiful, compassionate, courageous. She never misused her incredible power in molding public opinion, and she forsook a lost cause. The author brings a dynamic and romantic figure to vivid life." show less
Lists
1964 Project (1)
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 58
- Also by
- 12
- Members
- 779
- Popularity
- #32,679
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 29






