Anna Cabot Quincy Waterston (née, Quincy; pen names, A. C. Q. W. and W. A. C. Q.; June 27, 1812 – October 14, 1899) was a 19th-century American writer of poems, novels, hymns, and a diary.[1]
On April 21, 1840, she married Rev. Robert C. Waterston (1812–93).[5] After passing two years in Europe, and, just as they were all about to return home, their daughter, Helen Ruthven Waterston (1841 - July 25, 1858), died at Naples, Italy.[6]
Career
Some of Waterston's verses were printed in 1863, in a small volume.[3] She also published articles in The Atlantic Monthly.[7] Her pen names included, "A. C. Q. W.",[8][9] and "W. A. C. Q.".[10]
In 1870, after visiting Jeanne Carr, Waterston left Oakland, California, for Yosemite.[9] Waterston was able to gather around her a wide circle of friends and acquaintances. She knew well and was intimately associated with many of the most distinguished people of the former generation. When her father entertained Lafayette, she was a school girl, but the occasions made such an impression upon her mind that she retained a vivid remembrance of it in later years. The cause of the blind was important to her ever since the establishment of the Perkins Institution and Massachusetts School for the Blind.[8]
Death and legacy
Waterston died October 14, 1899,[2] at her home, No. 526 Massachusetts Avenue, in Newton, Massachusetts, where she lived since 1860, and was buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery. Her carved marble bust was sculpted by Edmonia Lewis and is held by the Smithsonian American Art Museum.[11] In 2003, her diary, written at the age of seventeen, was posthumously published under the title A Woman's Wit and Whimsy.[7]
Selected works
Quincy
Sketchbook, ca. 1835
Together, 1863
Verses, 1863
Edmonia Lewis. (The young colored woman who has successfully modelled the bust of Colonel Shaw.)., 1865
Adelaide Phillipps: A Record. Boston: A. Williams and Company, 1883.
Posthumously published
A Woman's Wit & Whimsy: The 1833 Diary of Anna Cabot Lowell Quincy, edited by Beverly Wilson Palmer. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 2003.
This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: American Antiquarian Society (1893). Proceedings (Public domain ed.). American Antiquarian Society.