Caroline Howard Gilman

American writer and publisher
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Also known as: Caroline Howard, Clarissa Packard
Quick Facts
Née:
Caroline Howard
Born:
Oct. 8, 1794, Boston, Mass., U.S.
Died:
Sept. 15, 1888, Washington, D.C. (aged 93)
Also Known As:
Caroline Howard
Clarissa Packard

Caroline Howard Gilman (born Oct. 8, 1794, Boston, Mass., U.S.—died Sept. 15, 1888, Washington, D.C.) was a popular American writer and publisher, much of whose work reflected her conviction of the importance of the family as a foundation for societal harmony.

Caroline Howard grew up in a succession of towns near Boston until her widowed mother settled in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1804. She wrote verse for her private amusement from an early age, but she was mortified when one of her poems was printed without her permission in a local newspaper about 1811. In 1817 she allowed a second poem to appear in the North American Review. In December 1819 she married Samuel Gilman, a Unitarian minister with whom she moved to Charleston, South Carolina.

Gilman’s writing career was slow to develop. In 1832 she began publishing the weekly Rose-Bud, or Youth’s Gazette, one of the earliest children’s magazines in the United States. In 1835 it became the Southern Rose, with a somewhat broader family audience, and Gilman continued to edit and publish it until 1839. In it she serialized her first novel, published in book form in 1834 as Recollections of a Housekeeper under the pseudonym Clarissa Packard. The book was a portrait of domestic life in New England; its Southern counterpart, Recollections of a Southern Matron, appeared in 1838. In these books, as in much of her writing, Gilman’s aim was to explain one section of the nation to the other, to point out the essential unity between them that she perceived as founded on the domestic level, and to offset thereby the growing political stresses between North and South.

Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960) portrait by Carl Van Vecht April 3, 1938. Writer, folklorist and anthropologist celebrated African American culture of the rural South.
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Subsequent books included humorous sketches published as The Poetry of Travelling in the United States (1838), The Lady’s Annual Register and Housewife’s Memorandum-Book for 1838 (1838), The Letters of Eliza Wilkinson During the Invasion of Charleston (1839), Tales and Ballads (1839), Love’s Progress (1840), Ruth Raymond (1840), Oracles from the Poets (1844), The Sibyl; or, New Oracles from the Poets (1848), Verses of a Life Time (1849), A Gift Book of Stories and Poems for Children (1850), and Oracles for Youth (1852). During the American Civil War she lived in Greenville, South Carolina, and was active in Confederate volunteer and relief work. Her home and possessions in Charleston were destroyed, but she returned to that city in 1865 and lived there until 1882, when she joined a daughter in Washington, D.C.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.