Margaret Junkin Preston

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Margaret Junkin Preston

Margaret Junkin Preston (May 19, 1820 – March 28, 1897)[1] was an American poet and author.[2]

Biography

She was born in Milton, Pennsylvania, in 1820.[3][4] Her father was George Junkin, a Presbyterian minister and college president.[2][3][4][5][6] She learned Latin and Ancient Greek at the age of twelve.[3] She married Major John Thomas Lewis Preston in 1857,[7] a professor of Latin at Virginia Military Institute.[2][3][4][5][6] Her sister, Elinor (Ellie), had in 1853 married Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson, a colleague of Preston's at VMI.[8] Major Preston served on the staff of Stonewall Jackson during the Civil War.[9]

She wrote many volumes of prose and poetry, and published some of her writing in the Southern Literary Messenger and Graham's Magazine.[10] She also published a few articles in Harper's Magazine.[11] She is remembered for espousing the Confederacy in her poems.[6]

She became blind in the late 1880s, and died in Baltimore in 1897.[3][5]

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

  1. New General Catalog of Old Books and Authors
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill biography
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Southern Writers: A Biographical Dictionary (Southern Literary Studies), Robert Bain (ed.), Jr. Louis D. Rubin (ed.), Joseph M. Flora (ed.), Louisiana State University Press, 1979, pp.365-366 [1]
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Southern Life in Southern Literature, Maurice Garland Fulton (ed.), Kessinger Publishing, 2003, p. 268 [2]
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Charles William Hubner, Representative Southern Poets, BiblioLife, 2008, p. 147 [3]
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 The University of South Carolina Press
  7. http://www.frontierfamilies.net/family/junkin/family/D1MJ.htm
  8. http://www.frontierfamilies.net/family/junkin/family/D4EJ.htm
  9. http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/p/Preston,Margaret_Junkin.html
  10. Book review
  11. Harper's Magazine

External links