Emily Pomona Edson Briggs (born Sept. 14, 1830, Burton, Ohio, U.S.—died July 3, 1910, Washington, D.C.) was an American journalist, one of the first women to acquire a national reputation in the field.
Emily Edson grew up in Burton, Ohio, and, from 1840, near Chicago, attending local schools. She taught briefly and, about 1854, married John R. Briggs. In 1861, when her husband secured appointment as assistant clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives, Emily Briggs began to discover a taste for observing and commenting on the political scene. Her letter to the Washington Chronicle defending the employment of women in government caught the attention of the paper’s owner. Hired to write a daily column, Briggs published under the pseudonym Olivia for more than 20 years for the Chronicle and its sister paper, the Philadelphia Press. Her comments on public affairs were always incisive, and her column, while paying some attention to society and fashion, was quite unusual for a woman journalist of the day.
During the Lincoln administration Briggs became the first woman to report directly from the White House—she became personally close to the Lincoln family—and later she was among the first to be admitted to the congressional press gallery. She was elected first president of the Woman’s National Press Association upon its organization in 1882. In later years she became a noted Washington hostess. In 1906 a collection of her columns was published in volume form as The Olivia Letters.