Rebecca Blaine Harding Davis (born June 24, 1831, Washington, Pa., U.S.—died Sept. 29, 1910, Mount Kisco, N.Y.) was an American essayist and writer, remembered primarily for her story “Life in the Iron Mills,” which is considered a transitional work of American realism.
Rebecca Harding graduated from the Washington Female Seminary in 1848. An avid reader, she had begun dabbling in the writing of verse and stories in her youth. Some of her early pieces were published, but her reputation as an author of startlingly realistic, sometimes grim, portraits of life began only with the publication of her story “Life in the Iron Mills” in the Atlantic Monthly in April 1861. From 1861 to 1862 the Atlantic serialized a story that appeared in book form in the latter year as Margaret Howth. In March 1863 Harding married L. Clarke Davis of Philadelphia, later an editor of the Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia Public Ledger.
Over the next three decades Rebecca Davis’s fiction, children’s stories, essays, and articles appeared regularly in most of the leading magazines of the day, and from 1869 she was for several years also a contributing editor of the New York Tribune. Her books include Waiting for the Verdict (1868), Pro Aris et Focis—A Plea for Our Altars and Hearths (1870), John Andross (1874), A Law unto Herself (1878), Natasqua (1886), Silhouettes of American Life (1892), Frances Waldeaux (1896), and the autobiographical Bits of Gossip (1904). Her later fiction failed to live up to the promise of her early work and grew instead increasingly conventional.
Davis was the mother of journalist and novelist Richard Harding Davis.