Marion Ames Taggart
Marion Ames Taggart (1866-1945) was an American writer of verses, stories, and Catholic literature.
Taggart wrote for many secular and Catholic publications, and most of her writing was for children.
Biography
Marion Ames Taggart was born in Haverhill, Massachusetts. She was descended on the mother's side from English Puritans. Her great grandfather was Captain Benjamin Ames of Bunker Hill. The Taggarts, originally MacTaggarts, came from Scotland to New Hampshire five generations earlier. Taggart was unable to attend a school due to ill health. Except for languages and music, her mother provided for her education. At the age of 10, she learned more about the claims of rival religious sects and tried to discover which possessed the truth. In her teens, she began to study Catholic teaching, and was baptised in Boston. Her father was Catholic and her mother converted to Catholicism. Taggart began to write verses and stories at the age of 13. Except for a few which appeared in newspapers, nothing was published until she contributed regularly to The Young Catholic while still under the age of 20. She wrote for many secular and Catholic publications, and most of her writing was for children. She is known to have lived with her mother at Plainfield, New Jersey.[1]
Works
- The Blissylvania Post-Office (1897)
- Winnetou, The Apache Knight (1898)
- The Wyndham Girls (1902)
- The Little Grey House (1904)
- Six Girls and Bob: A Story of Patty-Pans and Green Fields (1906)
- The Daughters of the Little Grey House (1907)
- Six Girls and the Tea Room (1907)
- A Pilgrim Maid: A Story of Plymouth Colony in 1620 (1920)
References
- McBride, D.H. (1897). Immortelles of Catholic Columbian Literature: Compiled from the Work of American Catholic Women Writers. D. H. McBride. p. 180.
External links
- Catalogue of online books by Marion Ames Taggart, from The Online Books Page
- Works by Marion Ames Taggart at Project Gutenberg
- Works by Marion Ames Taggart at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)