Miriam Clark, Grace Nash, Katherine Clark, Catherine Clarke, Jane Clarke
Occupation
Singer
Grace Miriam Kerns (August 27, 1879[1] – September 10, 1936) was an American soprano, called the "Nightingale of the Trenches" for her popularity during World War I. She made over a hundred recordings during the 1910s.
Early life
Kerns was born in Norfolk, Virginia,[2] and lived in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, a daughter in the large family of Andrew Jackson Kerns and Catharine Marinda Clark Kerns. Her father was a saw manufacturer.[1] She studied voice with Emma Cecilia Thursby.[3] She studied in Europe in the summer of 1913.[4]
During World War I, she went to France to entertain the troops,[11][12] earning the nickname "Nightingale of the Trenches."[13] After the war, she returned to church soloist work, and giving concerts.[14][15] She also sang in radio broadcasts.[16] In her later years she taught voice at Randolph-Macon Women's College in Virginia.[17][18]
^ abSome sources give her birth year as 1880 (her grave stone) or 1886 (her death certificate); however, she appears in her family's household as a child under one year of age in the 1880 Federal Census returns. (via Ancestry)
^"Miss Grace Kerns". Virginian-Pilot and the Norfolk Landmark. March 3, 1913. p. 5. Retrieved October 7, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.