Laura Holloway-Langford: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Associates of HPB|Holloway-Langford, Laura]]
[[Category:Clairvoyants|Holloway-Langford, Laura]]
[[Category:Writers|Holloway-Langford, Laura]]
[[Category:Journalists|Holloway-Langford, Laura]]
[[Category:Chelas|Holloway-Langford, Laura]]
[[Category:Nationality American|Holloway-Langford, Laura]]
 
Laura C. Holloway-Langford
 
Caldwell, Daniel H., ''Mrs. Holloway and the Mahatmas: including Articles by Laura C. Holloway and Letters from H.P. Blavatsky, the
Mahatma K.H. and the Mahatma M,''
 
== Early life ==
 
Laura Carter Holloway-Langford was born in Nashville in 1843 to farmer Sam Carter and his wife Ann, who had fourteen children. Laura was educated at the Nashville Female Academy. She married Junius Brutus Holloway, Lieutenant in the Union Army, in 1862. They had one child, Charles, in 1864. However, the marriage quickly fell apart, and ended in divorce. Laura moved to New York.<ref>Claudia J. Keenan, ''Laura Carter Holloway Langford (1843-1930),'' The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture.[http://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entry.php?rec=1623]</ref>
 
== Writing career ==
 
In New York, Mrs. Holloway took up writing to support herself. By 1870 she had published a bestselling anthology called ''Ladies of the White House; or, In the Home of the Presidents.'' It sold nearly 150,000 copies worldwide, and gave Laura a degree of financial independence. That same year, she advanced in her journalistic career at the ''Brooklyn Daily Eagle,'' being promoted from reporter to associate editor.She held that position for twelve years.
 
She gave readings of literature and poetry and lectured on such topics as coeducation and women journalists. Her most famous lecture, “The Perils of the Hour” (1870), concerned “the obstacles that check the advancement of woman.” A suffragist who knew Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Susan B. Anthony, and Anna Dickinson, Laura nonetheless criticized “strong-minded women” and their masculine habits. She supported temperance, urging the New York City Board of Education to adopt anti-alcohol textbooks, and continued to write books herself, including An Hour with Charlotte Bronte (1883), The Hearthstone, or Life at Home, a Household Manual (1883), and The Woman’s Story (1888).

Latest revision as of 12:57, 7 December 2019

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