Harriet Newell Ralston

Harriet Newell Ralston (October 21, 1828 - February 6, 1920) was an American poet.

Harriet Newell Ralston, "A woman of the century"

Biography

Ralston was born in Waverly, Tioga County, New York, October 21, 1828. She was the daughter of Rev. Aaron Jackson. Her youth was passed in New York, Massachusetts, and Illinois. She received her education in the schools of the first two named States.[1]

Upon her removal to Quincy, Illinois, she formed the acquaintance of Hon. James Hervey Ralston (1807–1864), and they married shortly afterward, in 1853.[2] Judge Ralston was a leading man in Illinois and held various important offices in that State. After serving as an officer in the Mexican War, he turned his attention again to the practice of law, settling in the then new State of California. On their wedding day, Judge and Mrs. Ralston set out from New York for the Pacific coast, enjoying on the way the tropical beauties of the Nicaraguan Isthmus.[1] They had two children, Jackson Harvey Ralston and Mary Aurora Ralston. Her married life was spent in Sacramento, California, and Virginia City and Austin, Nevada. Judge Ralston died in 1864 near Austin, which came to be known as Ralston Desert.[3]

Ralston wrote many poems, which, although never published in a collected volume, were published and widely copied by the press in single form.[1] She was the author of "Fatherless Joe," "Decoration Day," "The Spectral Feast," "The Queen's Jewels" and "The White Cross of Savoy," for which poem King Humbert of Italy sent her a letter of thanks and appreciation. Among her numerous poems may be specially mentioned "The Queen's Jewels", written for the occasion of a banquet given by the National Woman's Press Association of Washington, D.C., of which she was a member, to the delegates of the Pan-American Congress assembled in that city, and for which poem she has received many acknowledgments from the representatives of Central and South American governments. Her best work was her poem, "Columbus and Isabella — The Immortals".[4] She took an active interest in philanthropic and social movements.[5]

In 1883,[6][2] Ralston came to Washington, D.C. and lived in that city and in Hyattsville, Maryland thereafter. She died at her son's home in Washington, D.C., February 6, 1920.[3]

Publications

  • The spectral feast, 1878
  • Columbus and Isabella — The Immortals, 1893

References

Citations

  1. Willard & Livermore 1893, p. 594.
  2. "HARRIET N. RALSTON". Newspapers.com. The Washington Post. 7 Feb 1920. p. 2. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  3. "MRS. H. N. RALSTON DIES; MOTHER OF D. C. LAWYER". Newspapers.com. Washington, D.C.: Evening Star. 6 February 1920. p. 3. Retrieved 31 October 2020.
  4. Moulton (ed.) 1895, p. 63.
  5. Willard & Livermore 1893, p. 595.
  6. "MRS. HARRIET N. RALSTON". Newspapers.com. The Washington Times. 6 February 1920. p. 17. Retrieved 31 October 2020.

Attribution

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.