Rose Terry Cooke (born Feb. 17, 1827, near Hartford, Conn., U.S.—died July 18, 1892, Pittsfield, Mass.) was an American poet and author, remembered chiefly for her stories that presaged the local-colour movement in American literature.
Cooke was born of a well-to-do family. She graduated from the Hartford Female Seminary in 1843 and for some years thereafter taught school and was a governess in Burlington, New Jersey. From 1848 she devoted herself principally to writing. Her first published piece was a story in Graham’s Magazine in 1845; the first of note was a poem, characteristically titled “Trailing Arbutus,” which appeared in the New York Daily Tribune in April 1851. By 1857 her work had brought her sufficient reputation that she was invited by James Russell Lowell to contribute the leading story in the first issue of The Atlantic Monthly.
Cooke’s poems, which were collected in a volume in 1861 (and again in 1888), included generally facile nature lyrics and some frontier ballads of rather more originality, but it was her stories that brought her recognition. In them she faithfully captured the scenes and characters of backcountry New England in every homely detail and trick of speech. The melancholy often suggested by her subjects was frequently relieved by humour. As a forerunner of the later local colourists, she provided a valuable record of the time and place, although technically her fictions suffered on comparison with later writers. Her stories were collected in Happy Dodd; or, She Hath Done What She Could (1878), Somebody’s Neighbors (1881), The Deacon’s Week (1885), Root-Bound and Other Sketches (1885), The Sphinx’s Children and Other People’s (1886), and Huckleberries Gathered from New England Hills (1891). In addition, she published an unsuccessful novel and some 50 stories for children in various magazines.
In 1873 she married. Thereafter, much of her writing is of potboiler quality, in part the result of financial difficulties.