American poet
Margaret Junkin Preston (May 19, 1820 – March 28, 1897) was an American poet and author.[ 1]
Biography
She was born in Milton, Pennsylvania , in 1820.[ 2] [ 3] Her father was George Junkin , a Presbyterian minister and college president.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] She learned Latin and Ancient Greek at the age of twelve.[ 2] She married Major John Thomas Lewis Preston in 1857,[ 6] a professor of Latin at Virginia Military Institute .[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] Her sister, Elinor (Ellie) , had in 1853 married Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson , a colleague of Preston's at VMI.[ 7] Major Preston served on the staff of Stonewall Jackson during the Civil War.[ 8]
She wrote many volumes of prose and poetry, and published some of her writing in the Southern Literary Messenger and Graham's Magazine .[ 9] She also published a few articles in Harper's Magazine .[ 10] Preston's 1856 novel Silverwood is a subtle exploration of the clash between traditional values of honor and family and the new market economy that was sweeping through the United States and the Shenandoah Valley.[ 11] She is remembered for espousing the Confederacy in her poems,[ 5] and she was known informally as the Poet Laureate of the Confederacy.[ 12]
She became blind in the late 1880s, and died in Baltimore in 1897.[ 2] [ 4]
Bibliography
Silverwood, a Book of Memories (1856) at Internet Archive
Beechenbrook: A Rhyme of War (1865)
Old Song and New (1870)
Cartoons (1875)
Centennial Poem for Washington and Lee University: Lexington, Virginia, 1775–1885 (1885)
A Handful of Monographs: Continental and English (1886)
For Love's Sake: Poems of Faith and Comfort (1886)
Colonial Ballads, Sonnets and Other Verse (1887)
Semi-Centennial Ode for the Virginia Military Institute: Lexington, Virginia, 1839–1889 (1889)
Aunt Dorothy: An Old Virginia Plantation Story (1890)
References
^ a b c "Margaret Junkin Preston Papers, 1812–1892, 1938, 1997" . Retrieved December 14, 2016 .
^ a b c d e Flora, Joseph M.; Vogel, Amber, eds. (2006). "Margaret Junkin Preston (1820-1897)". Southern Writers: A Biographical Dictionary . Louisiana State University Press . p. 325.
^ a b c Southern Life in Southern Literature , Maurice Garland Fulton (ed.), Kessinger Publishing, 2003, p. 268 [1]
^ a b c Charles William Hubner, Representative Southern Poets , BiblioLife, 2008, p. 147 [2]
^ a b c "Margaret Junkin Preston, Poet of the Confederacy" . Retrieved December 14, 2016 .
^ "Margaret Junkin Preston (1820–1897) – Poetess Laureate of the South" . Retrieved December 14, 2016 .
^ "Eleanor Junkin (1825–1854) – first wife of Confederate General Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson" . Retrieved December 14, 2016 .
^ "Margaret Junkin Preston Papers, 1812-1892, 1938, 1997" .
^ "History Cooperative – A Short History of Nearly Everything!" . Archived from the original on June 30, 2008. Retrieved December 14, 2016 .
^ "Margaret Junkin Preston – Harper's Magazine" . Retrieved December 14, 2016 .
^ Alfred L. Brophy & Douglas Thie, Land, Slaves, and Bonds: Probate in the Pre-Civil War Shenandoah Valley, West Virginia Law Review 116 (2016): 345, 348–50 (beginning exploration of trust law in the Shenandoah Valley with the central conflict in Silverwood – a trustee's stealing of the inheritance of the Irvine family).
^ Virginia is for Lovers (i.e., Virginia Tourism Corporation ). "Stonewall Jackson Memorial Cemetery" . Retrieved September 17, 2017 .
External links
International National People Other