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Mary Johnston, Novelist
b.21 Nov 1870 Buchanan, Botetourt County, Virginia
d.9 May 1936 Warm Springs, Bath County, Virginia
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Mary Johnston (November 21, 1870 – May 9, 1936) was an American novelist and women's rights advocate from Virginia. She was one of America's best selling authors during her writing career and had three silent films adapted from her novels.[1][2] Johnston was also an active member of the Equal Suffrage League of Virginia, using her writing skills and notability to draw attention to the cause of women's suffrage in Virginia.
[edit] Information on Mary JohnstonDictionary of Literary Biography on Mary Johnston: Mary Johnston, leading historical novelist, was born at Buchanan, Boutetourt County, Virginia. Her father, Maj. John William Johnston, had served under his cousin, Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, during the Civil War. Later he functioned as lawyer, state legislator, and railroad president. Her mother was Elizabeth Alexander Johnston. Both parents were of Scottish or Scotch-Irish ancestry. Mary Johnston was the eldest of six children, of whom the fourth and fifth were boys. Her education was largely through tutors and extensive reading, and what had been intended as a longer sojourn at a school in Atlanta was cut short by illness. When she was sixteen, her father's business connections took the family to Birmingham, and in 1889 her mother's death left Johnston in charge of the household. She also accompanied her grief-stricken father on a trip to Europe. Between 1892 and 1896 the family lived in New York, and Johnston's first novel, Prisoners of Hope (1898), undertaken for financial need, was written largely in Central Park.
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