Martha Finley (born April 26, 1828, Chillicothe, Ohio, U.S.—died Jan. 29, 1909, Elkton, Md.) was a prolific and, in her day, immensely popular American writer of children’s books about pious youngsters rewarded for their virtue.
In 1853, after the deaths of both her parents, Finley moved to New York City; later she moved to Philadelphia and then to Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. She taught school for a time and then turned to writing. A few early attempts at children’s novels were not particularly successful, but with Elsie Dinsmore (1867) she found a formula that would bring her fame and fortune.
The tale of a preternaturally virtuous young girl valiantly resisting various relatively petty temptations in the name of a somewhat fundamentalist Christianity found a wide audience that grew, over the course of 27 sequels that took Elsie to grandmotherhood, to some 25 million readers in the United States and Britain. In addition to the Elsie Dinsmore series, Finley also produced a 7-volume series beginning with Mildred Keith (1878), a 9-volume Do-Good Library, a 12-volume Pewit’s Nest series, and a Finley series of books for adults—a total of more than a hundred books. Finley’s books were generally ignored in their day by critics, though they were enormously popular with the public. When the fashion for priggishness in literary children passed, they were all but forgotten. Finley lived in Elkton, Maryland, from 1876 until her death.