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Thank you my friend SGT (Join to see) for making us aware that on March 6, 1888 American author (Little Women) Louisa May Alcott died of a stroke at the age of 55.


10 Facts About Louisa May Alcott | Author of Little Women
Do you ever research the history and biographies of your favorite authors? I took a deep dive into the life of Louisa May Alcott, author of Little Women, and wanted to share some tidbits about her unique history. I hope you enjoy this one!

My favorite facts/sections of this video are definitely:
Her Unique Upbringing 4:56
Her Service in the Civil War 14:39
Her Lifelong Illness 17:35
The Strange Connection Between Her and Her Father's Deaths 30:30
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUYRUYaAoOM

Images:
1. Portrait of Louisa May Alcott, American novelist.
2. Louisa May Alcott 'I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my own ship'.jpg
3. U.S. Scott #862 1940 5¢ Louisa May Alcott Famous Americans Series
4. Louisa May Alcott. Photo - Orchard House


Background from {[https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/louisa-may-alcott]}
Louisa May Alcott [1832-1888] by Arlisha R. Norwood, NWHM Fellow | 2017

Famed author Louisa May Alcott created colorful relatable characters in 19th century novels. Her work introduced readers to educated strong female heroines. As a result, her writing style greatly impacted American literature.

Alcott was born on November 29, 1832 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Alcott’s parents were a part of the 19th century transcendentalist movement, a popular religious movement. Their religious and political beliefs deeply inspired Alcott as child. Her father, Bronson Alcott, was a popular educator who believed that children should enjoy learning. Therefore, at an early age, Alcott took to reading and writing. While most of her schooling came from her parents she also studied under famed philosopher Henry David Thoreau and popular authors Ralph Waldo Emerson and Nathanial Hawthorne. Much like her novel Little Women, Alcott was one of four daughters and she remained close with her sisters throughout her life. Many times, Alcott’s family suffered from financial woes, forcing her to attend school irregularly. She took many jobs to help alleviate financial struggles, working as teacher and washing laundry. She turned to writing for both emotional and financial support.

Her first poem, “Sunlight,” was published in a magazine under a pseudonym. Her first book, a compilation of short stories, was published in 1854. When the Civil War started in 1861, Alcott served as a nurse in a Union hospital. Unfortunately, in the middle of her assignment she contracted typhoid fever. Her experience in the hospital as a patient and a nurse, inspired the novel Hospital Sketches. After the war, Alcott published several other works and gained a following. Her audience included both adults and children. She also released many of her earlier works under the name, A.M. Barnard.

During this time, one of Alcott’s publishers asked her to write a novel for young women. To do so, she simply reflected back on to her childhood with her sisters. In 1868, Alcott published her most popular work, Little Women. The novel was published in a series of short stories, but was eventually compiled into one book. Little Women was an instant success and the book cemented Alcott as one of the foremost novelist of the 19th and early 20th century. In 1870, with one successful book, Alcott moved to Europe with her sister May. There she published, another classic Little Men. She also joined the women’s suffrage movement. Throughout her life, she would contribute to several publications which promoted women’s rights. She was also the first woman to register to vote in Concord, Connecticut.

Alcott never married nor had any children, however, when her sister died, she adopted her niece. Afterwards she moved to Boston, Massachusetts and continued publishing more works that followed the characters from Little Women. Alcott suffered from bouts of illness throughout her life. She attributed her poor health to mercury poisoning which she believed she contracted while she worked as a nurse during the Civil War. In 1888, she died at the age of 56 in Boston, Massachusetts. Today, readers continue to enjoy Alcott’s writings and her novels still appear on bestseller list throughout the world.'

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Susan Cheever - Louisa May Alcott: A Personal Biography
Susan Cheever, novelist, memoirist, literary historian, and daughter of John Cheever, discusses her exploration of America's literary past, "Louisa May Alcott: A Personal Biography." Louisa May Alcott never intended to write "Little Women." Written out of necessity to support her family, the book had an astounding success that changed her life. Presented by Harvard Book Store.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AB9KjryUmcM

Images:
1. A general view of The Orchard House, the home of Louisa May Alcott, on November 4, 2014 in Concord, MA. Paul Marotta
2. Louisa May Alcott 'I ask not for any crown But that which all may win; Nor try to conquer any world Except the one within.'
3. Portrait of Louisa May Alcott, American novelist. Culture Club
4. Title page: Little Women by Louisa M Alcott. Illustrations by M V Wheelhouse (1895-1933). Culture Club

Background from {[https://www.thoughtco.com/biography-of-louisa-may-alcott-american-novelist-4800340]}
Biography of Louisa May Alcott, American Writer
By Claire Carroll;
Updated November 15, 2020
Louisa May Alcott (November 29, 1832 – March 6, 1888) was an American writer. A vocal North American 19-century anti-enslavement activist and feminist, she is notable for the moral tales she wrote for a young audience. Her work imbued the cares and internal lives of girls with worth and literary attention.

Fast Facts: Louisa May Alcott
Known For: Writing Little Women and several novels about the March family
Also Known As: She used the noms de plume A.M. Barnard and Flora Fairfield
Born: November 29, 1832 in Germantown, Pennsylvania
Parents: Amos Bronson and Abigail May Alcott
Died: March 6, 1888 in Boston, Massachusetts
Education: none
Select Published Works: Little Women, Good Wives, Little Men, Aunt Jo’s Scrap Bag, Jo’s Boys
Awards and Honors: none
Spouse: none
Children: Lulu Nieriker (adopted)
Notable Quote: “I’ve had lots of troubles, so I write jolly tales.”

Early Life and Family
Louisa May Alcott was born the second daughter to Abigail and Amos Bronson Alcott in Germantown, Pennsylvania. She had an older sister, Anna (later the inspiration for Meg March), who was described as a gentle sweet child, while Louisa was described as “vivid, energetic” and “fit for the scuffle of things.”
While the family had noble ancestry, poverty would dog them throughout Louisa’s childhood. Abigail, or Abba as Louisa called her, was descended from the Quincy, Sewell, and “Fighting May” families, all prominent American families since the American Revolution. However, much of the family’s earlier wealth was diminished by Abigail’s father, so while some of their relatives were wealthy, the Alcotts themselves were relatively poor.
In 1834, Bronson’s unorthodox teaching in Philadelphia led to the dissolution of his school, and the Alcott family moved to Boston so that Bronson could run Elizabeth Peabody’s co-ed Temple School. An anti-enslavement activist, radical educational reformer, and Transcendentalist, he educated all his daughters, which helped expose Louisa to great writers and thinkers at an early age. He was great friends with contemporary intellectuals including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Nathaniel Hawthorne.
In 1835, Abigail gave birth to Lizzie Alcott (the model for Beth March) and in 1840 she gave birth to Abigail May Alcott (the model for Amy March). To help combat postpartum depression, Abigal began working as one of the first social workers in Boston, which put the family in contact with many immigrant families who were even worse off than the impoverished Alcotts, which contributed to Louisa’s focus on charity and her commitment to providing for her own family.

In 1843, the Alcotts moved with the Lane and Wright families to establish Fruitlands, a utopian commune in Harvard, Massachusetts. While there, the family sought ways to subjugate their bodies and soul based on Bronson’s teachings. They wore only linen, as it wasn’t tainted by enslaved labor the way cotton was, and consumed fruit and water. They did not use any animal labor to farm the land and took cold baths. Louisa did not enjoy this forced restraint, writing in her diary that “I wish I was rich, I was good, and we were all a happy family.”

After the dissolution of the unsustainable Fruitlands in 1845, the Alcott family relocated to Concord, Massachusetts, at the request of Emerson to join his new agrarian community center of intellectual and literary thought. Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry David Thoreau also moved to Concord around this time, and their words and ideas helped expand Louisa’s early education. However, the Alcotts were remarkably poor; their only source of income was the small salary Bronson earned by lecturing with Horace Mann and Emerson. Late in 1845, Louisa joined a school in Concord taught by John Hosmer, an aged revolutionary, but her formal education was sporadic. She grew to be very close friends with a roughhousing boy named Frank. Early in 1848, Louisa wrote her first story, “The Rival Painters. A Tale of Rome.”

In 1851, Louisa published the poem “Sunlight” in Peterson’s Magazine under the nom de plume Flora Fairfield, and on May 8, 1852, “The Rival Painters” was published in the Olive Branch. Thus, Louisa began her career as a published (and paid) writer.

That fall, Nathaniel Hawthorne bought “Hillside” from the Alcotts, who then moved back to Boston with the funds. Anna and Louisa ran a school in their parlor. In 1853, Anna took a teaching job in Syracuse, but Louisa continued running schools and tutoring seasonally through 1857, working in Walpole, New Hampshire, during the summers to help direct the productions of the Walpole Amateur Dramatic Company. She wrote several plays throughout her life, and tried to become an actress herself, with much less success than her literary creations.
Early Work and Little Women (1854-69)

Flower Fables (1854)
Hospital Sketches (1863)
Little Women (1868)
Good Wives (Little Women Part II) (1869)

In 1854, Alcott published Flower Fables based on nursery stories she’d been told by Thoreau. Her advance—$300 from a friend of the Emersons—was her first substantial income from her writing. The book was a success and earned out, which Louisa viewed with great pride even when she was making much greater sums later in life.

Abby and Lizzie contracted scarlet fever in the summer of 1856, and their health prompted the family to relocate back to Concord in 1857, when they moved into Orchard House. However, the country air was not enough and Lizzie died of congestive heart failure on March 14, 1858. Two weeks later, Anna announced her engagement to John Pratt. The pair weren't married until 1860.

In 1862, Louisa decided that she wanted to contribute more formally to the anti-enslavement cause and signed on to work as a nurse for the Union Army; she was stationed at Georgetown Hospital. She wrote letters and observations back to her family, which were first serialized in the Boston Commonwealth and were then compiled into Hospital Sketches. She stayed at the hospital until she contracted typhoid fever, and her poor health forced her to return to Boston. While there, she made money writing thrillers under the nom de plume A.M. Barnard, even as her own literary fame was on the rise.

After the war, Louisa traveled around Europe for a year with her sister, Abigail May. While there, May fell in love and settled down with Ernest Nieriker in Paris. For her part, Louisa flirted with a younger Polish man named Laddie, who is often considered the basis for Laurie. Yet she was determined to remain unmarried, so she left Europe without an engagement.

In May 1868, Alcott’s publisher Niles famously asked Alcott to write a “girls’ story” and so she began rapid work on what would become Little Women. However, she was not convinced at first of the worthiness of the endeavor. She wrote in her diary that “Never liked girls or knew many, except my sisters; but our queer plays and experiences may prove interesting, though I doubt it.” The book contained many autobiographical elements, and each key character had their real-life foil.

When Little Women was published in September 1868, it had a first printing of two thousand copies, which sold out in two weeks. On this success, Louisa was granted a contract for a second part, Good Wives. She intentionally gave her heroine, Jo, a peculiar husband in the sequel, to spite readers who want to know “who the little women marry, as if that was the only end and aim of a woman’s life.” Little Women has never been out of print since its publication, and since Louisa held her copyright, it brought her fortune as well as fame.
Later Work (1870-87)

Little Men (1871)
Aunt Jo’s Scrap Bag (1872, 73, 77, 79, 82)
Jo’s Boys (1886)

While the Little Women trilogy was never officially marked as such, (with Little Women and Good Wives reprinted as a contiguous book under the heading Little Women), Little Men is widely considered the sequel to Little Women, as it follows Jo’s school for boys at Plumfield. Even though Louisa began to tire of writing tales for children, readers eagerly purchased more stories about the Marches and in 1871, the Alcott family needed the money.

Alcott wrote six volumes of short magical stories under the heading Aunt Jo’s Scrap Bag, which were widely popular. While they were not about the March family, the clever marketing ensured that fans of Little Women would purchase the stories.

Abba died in 1877, which was a grave blow to Louisa. In 1879, May died following complications relating to childbirth, and her daughter, Lulu, was sent to live with Louisa as her surrogate mother. While Alcott never gave birth to children of her own, she considered Lulu her true daughter and raised her as such.

In October 1882, Alcott began work on Jo’s Boys. While she’d written her previous novels very rapidly, she now faced family responsibilities, which slowed progress. She felt that she could not write about the characters of Amy or Marmee “since the original[s] of [those] character[s] died, it has been impossible for me to write of [them] as when [they were] here.” Instead, she focused on Jo as a literary mentor and theatrical director and followed the jovial youthful antics of one of her charges, Dan.

Bronson suffered a stroke in late 1882 and became paralyzed, after which Louisa worked even more diligently to care for him. Starting in 1885, Alcott experienced frequent cases of vertigo and nervous breaks, which impacted her writing and adherence to publishing deadlines for Jo’s Boys. Her doctor, Dr. Conrad Wesselhoeft, forbade her to write for six months, but eventually, she allowed herself to write for up to two hours a day. After completing the book in 1886, Alcott dedicated it to Wesselhoeft. Like the previous March novels, Jo’s Boys was a wild publishing success. Over time, her maladies shifted and broadened to include insomnia, anxiety, and lethargy.
Literary Style and Themes

Alcott read a wide range of material, from political treatises to plays to novels, and was especially influenced by the work of Charlotte Brontë and George Sand. Alcott’s writing was canny, candid, and humorous. While her voice matured and tempered through war reporting and crushing family deaths, her work sustained a conviction in the ultimate joy to be found in love and God’s grace, despite affliction and poverty. Little Women and its sequels are beloved for their charming and realistic portrayal of the lives and inner thoughts of American girls, an anomaly in the publishing landscape of Louisa’s time. Alcott wrote about women’s work and creative potential and some critics consider her a proto-feminist; scholars Alberghene and Clark say “To engage with Little Women is to engage with the feminist imagination.”

Alcott also incorporated radical morality and intellectual instruction into fabulistic anecdotes, often in line with the teachings of Transcendentalists such as Bronson. Yet she always managed to stay true-to-life, never straying too far into the symbolism common in Romantic writers of the period.
Death

As her health declined, Alcott legally adopted her nephew John Pratt, and transferred all the Little Women copyrights to him, stipulating that he would share the royalties with his brother, Lulu, and mother. Shortly thereafter, Alcott left the responsibilities of Boston behind to retreat with her friend Dr. Rhoda Lawrence in Roxbury, Massachusetts for the winter of 1887. When she returned to Boston to visit her ailing father on March 1, 1888 she caught a cold. By March 3, it had developed into spinal meningitis. On March 4, Bronson Alcott died, and on March 6, Louisa died. Since Louisa was very close to her father, the press applied much symbolism to their linked deaths; her New York Times obituary spent several inches describing Bronson’s funeral.
Legacy

Alcott’s work is widely read by students across the country and the world, and none of her eight young adult novels have ever been out of print. Little Women remains Alcott’s most impactful work, as it brought her to acclaim. In 1927, a scandalous study suggested that Little Women had more influence on American high schoolers than the Bible. The text is regularly adapted for the stage, television, and screen.

Writers and thinkers around the world have been influenced by Little Women, including Margaret Atwood, Jane Addams, Simone de Beauvoir, A. S. Byatt, Theodore Roosevelt, Elena Ferrante, Nora Ephron, Barbara Kingsolver, Jhumpa Lahiri, Cynthia Ozick, Gloria Steinem, and Jane Smiley. Ursula Le Guin credits Jo March as a model that showed her that even girls can write.

There have been six feature film adaptations of Little Women, (two of which were silent films) often starring big celebrities like Katherine Hepburn and Winona Ryder. Greta Gerwig’s 2019 adaptation is notable for diverging from the book to include elements of Alcott’s life and highlight the autobiographical nature of the book.

Little Men has also been adapted as a movie four times, in America in 1934 and 1940, in Japan as an anime in 1993, and in Canada as a family drama in 1998.
Sources

Acocella, Joan. “How ‘Little Women’ Got Big.” The New Yorker, 17 Oct. 2019, http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/08/27/how-little-women-got-big.
Alberghene, Janice M., and Beverly Lyon Clark, editors. Little Women and the Feminist Imagination: Criticism, Controversy, Personal Essays. Garland, 2014.
Alcott, Louisa May. “Aunt Jo's Scrap Bag.” The Project Gutenberg EBook of Aunt Jo's Scrap Bag, by Louisa M. Alcott., http://www.gutenberg.org/files/26041/26041-h/26041-h.htm.
Alcott, Louisa May. The Selected Letters of Louisa May Alcott. Edited by Joel Myerson, Univ. of Georgia Press, 2010.
Alcott, Louisa May. Little Women. Golgotha Press, 2011.
“All the Little Women: A List of Little Women Adaptations.” PBS, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/specialfeatures/little-women-adaptations/.
Brockell, Gillian. “Girls Adored 'Little Women.' Louisa May Alcott Did Not.” The Washington Post, 25 Dec. 2019, http://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/12/25/girls-adored-little-women-louisa-may-alcott-did-not/.
Little Women II: Jo's Boys, Nippon Animation, web.archive.org/web/ [login to see] 2452/http://www.nipponanimation.com/catalogue/080/index.html.
“Little Women Leads Poll; Novel Rated Ahead of Bible for Influence on High School Pupils.” The New York Times, 22 Mar. 1927.
“Louisa M. Alcott Dead.” The New York Times, 7 Mar. 1888.
Reisen, Harriet. Louisa May Alcott: the Woman behind: Little Women. Picador, 2010.

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In a Nutshell: The Life & Work of Louisa May Alcott
Louisa May Alcott was an American novelist, short story writer and poet best known as the author of the novel Little Women and its sequels Little Men and Jo's Boys. But did you know she was a nurse during the American Civil War? Or that she grew up among many well-known intellectuals such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry David Thoreau, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDzYPCtjjzY

Images:
1. The American novelist Louisa May Alcott (1831-1888) best known for her popular children's stories including Little Women and Good Wives. ca. 1860
2. Louisa May Alcott 'Keep good company, read good books, love good things and cultivate soul and body as faithfully as you can.'.
3. Actresses Margaret O'Brien, Janet Leigh, June Allyson, Elyzabeth Taylor and Mary Astor on the set of Little Women, based on the novel by Louisa May Alcott and directed by George Cukor. Corbis
4. Louisa May Alcott 'We all have own life to pursue, our own kind of dream to be weaving, and we all have the power to make wishes come true, as long as we keep believing'

Background from {[https://www.poemhunter.com/louisa-may-alcott/biography/]}
Louisa May Alcott Biography

Louisa May Alcott was an American novelist. She is best known for the novel Little Women, written and set in the Alcott family home, Orchard House in Concord, Massachusetts and published in 1868. This novel is loosely based on her childhood experiences with her three sisters.

In 1840, after several setbacks with the school, the Alcott family moved to a cottage 2 acres (8,100 m2) along the Sudbury River in Concord, Massachusetts. The Alcott family moved to the Utopian Fruitlands community for a brief interval in 1843-1844 and then, after its collapse, to rented rooms and finally to a house in Concord purchased with her mother's inheritance and financial help from Emerson. Alcott's early education included lessons from the naturalist Henry David Thoreau. She received the majority of her schooling from her father. She also received some instruction from writers and educators such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Margaret Fuller, who were all family friends. She later described these early years in a newspaper sketch entitled "Transcendental Wild Oats." The sketch was reprinted in the volume Silver Pitchers (1876), which relates the family's experiment in "plain living and high thinking" at Fruitlands.

As an adult, Alcott was an abolitionist and a feminist. In 1847, the family housed a fugitive slave for one week. In 1848 Alcott read and admired the "Declaration of Sentiments" published by the Seneca Falls Convention on women's rights.

Poverty made it necessary for Alcott to go to work at an early age as an occasional teacher, seamstress, governess, domestic helper, and writer. Her first book was Flower Fables (1855), a book of tales originally written for Ellen Emerson, daughter of Ralph Waldo Emerson. In 1860, Alcott began writing for the Atlantic Monthly. She was a nurse in the Union Hospital at Georgetown, D.C., for six weeks in 1862-1863. Her letters home, revised and published in the Commonwealth and collected as Hospital Sketches (1863, republished with additions in 1869), garnered her first critical recognition for her observations and humor. Her novel Moods (1864), based on her own experience, was also promising.

She also wrote passionate, fiery novels and sensation stories under the nom de plume A. M. Barnard. Among these are A Long Fatal Love Chase and Pauline's Passion and Punishment . Her protagonists for these tales are willful and relentless in their pursuit of their own aims, which often include revenge on those who have humiliated or thwarted them. These works achieved immediate commercial success in their day.

Alcott also produced moralistic and wholesome stories for children, and, with the exceptions of the semi-autobiographical tale Work (1873), and the anonymous novelette A Modern Mephistopheles (1875), which attracted suspicion that it was written by Julian Hawthorne, she did not return to creating works for adults.

Alcott wrote until her death, which was attributed to the after-effects of mercury poisoning contracted during her American Civil War service. She had received calomel treatments for the effects of typhoid. She died in Boston on March 6, 1888 at age 55, two days after visiting her father on his deathbed. Her last words were "Is it not meningitis?"

Poems
1. Fairy Song by Louisa May Alcott
The moonlight fades from flower and rose
And the stars dim one by one;
The tale is told, the song is sung,
And the Fairy feast is done.
The night-wind rocks the sleeping flowers,
And sings to them, soft and low.
The early birds erelong will wake:
'T is time for the Elves to go.

O'er the sleeping earth we silently pass,

Unseen by mortal eye,
And send sweet dreams, as we lightly float
Through the quiet moonlit sky;--
For the stars' soft eyes alone may see,
And the flowers alone may know,
The feasts we hold, the tales we tell;
So't is time for the Elves to go.

From bird, and blossom, and bee,
We learn the lessons they teach;

And seek, by kindly deeds, to win
A loving friend in each.
And though unseen on earth we dwell,
Sweet voices whisper low,
And gentle hearts most joyously greet
The Elves where'er they go.

When next we meet in the Fairy dell,
May the silver moon's soft light
Shine then on faces gay as now,
And Elfin hearts as light.
Now spread each wing, for the eastern sky
With sunlight soon shall glow.
The morning star shall light us home:
Farewell! for the Elves must go.

2. Don't Drive Me Away by Louisa May Alcott
'Don't drive me away,
But hear what I say:
Bad men want the gold;
They will steal it to-night,
And you must take flight;
So be quiet and busy and bold.'

'Slip away with me,
And you will see
What a wise little thing am I;

For the road I show
No man can know,
Since it's up in the pathless sky.'

3. My Kingdom by Louisa May Alcott
A little kingdom I possess
where thoughts and feelings dwell,
And very hard I find the task
of governing it well;
For passion tempts and troubles me,
A wayward will misleads,
And selfishness its shadow casts
On all my words and deeds.

How can I learn to rule myself,

to be the child I should,
Honest and brave, nor ever tire
Of trying to be good?
How can I keep a sunny soul
To shine along life's way?
How can I tune my little heart
To sweetly sing all day?

Dear Father, help me with the love
that casteth out my fear;

Teach me to lean on thee, and feel
That thou art very near,
That no temptation is unseen
No childish grief too small,
Since thou, with patience infinite,
Doth soothe and comfort all.

I do not ask for any crown
But that which all may win
Nor seek to conquer any world
Except the one within.
Be thou my guide until I find,
Led by a tender hand,
Thy happy kingdom in myself
And dare to take command.


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