Astrid Rosing Sawyer Explained
Astrid Rosing Sawyer |
Other Names: | A. R. Sawyer |
Birth Name: | Astrid Scheel Rosing |
Birth Date: | 15 May 1874 |
Birth Place: | Denmark |
Death Date: | January 31, 1954 |
Death Place: | Chicago, Illinois, US |
Occupation: | Businesswoman, translator |
Astrid Scheel Rosing Sawyer (15 May 1874 – January 31, 1954) was a Danish-born businesswoman and translator.
Early life
Astrid Scheel Rosing was from Copenhagen, Denmark, the daughter of Ulrik Rosing and Anna Gustien. She emigrated to the United States as a girl in 1888,[1] with her siblings and their widowed mother.[2] [3]
Career
In her teens, hoping to earn money for singing lessons,[4] Rosing worked as a stenographer and typist at a building materials company in Chicago. In time, she learned the business, and formed the Astrid S. Rosing Inc., a successful building materials dealer.[5] She owned a fleet of motor trucks (still a novelty in 1915 Chicago)[6] and several warehouses and supply yards. "Men told me it was no business for a woman," she recalled later. "No, that didn't discourage me and I never for a minute had any notion of giving up." She spoke to the Illinois Clay Manufacturers' Association convention in 1917.[7]
Later in life, Sawyer did literary translations from Danish to English, including a children's book by,[8] The Castle of Contentment: Letters from a Jutland Farm (1937) by Gunnar Nislev,[9] [10] Kaj Munk's VIctory and He Sits at the Crucible (1944).[11] She also translated Hjalmar Meidell's Henry VIII and Catherine Howard from Norwegian to English.[12]
Sawyer was also co-founder and vice-president of the Chicago Equestrian Association.[13] [14]
Personal life
Astrid Rosing married American engineer, Walter Percy Sawyer, in 1918, in Chicago.[15] He worked at Astrid S. Rosing, Inc. "Never leave your work to find yourself a husband," she advised. "Let him find you."[16] They had a daughter, Helen Marion Sawyer. Astrid Rosing Sawyer died in 1954, aged 79 years, in Illinois.[17]
Notes and References
- Chase, M. E. "From Stenographer to the Ownership of a $100,000 Business" Fort Dearborn Magazine (1922): 8, 30.
- News: 1928-03-08. Once Failed as Typist; Now Makes Million Yearly. 6. The Alexander City Outlook. 2021-04-02. Newspapers.com.
- Foley. Margaret. November 1919. At the End of a Hollow Tile. The Green Book Magazine. 22. 85–88.
- News: 1931-07-07. Woman Singer Heads Business. 8. Calgary Herald. 2021-04-02. Newspapers.com.
- News: 1921-02-12. Making More Money: The 'Hollow-Tile Girl'. 6. Dayton Daily News. 2021-04-02. Newspapers.com.
- December 1915. Truck to Deliver Building Materials. Municipal Engineering. 49. 239.
- News: 1917-01-16. Woman Talks to Workers in Clay. 9. The Champaign Daily News. 2021-04-02. Newspapers.com.
- Book: Gredsted, Torry. Jorn. 1938. Reilly & Lee. en.
- News: Sydney. Walter. 1937-05-15. Passed in Review. 8. The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 2021-04-02. Newspapers.com.
- Book: Plov. Jaegermester. The Castle of Contentment: Letters from a Jutland Farm. Nislev. Gunnar. 1937. Literary Licensing, LLC. 978-1-258-14864-5. en.
- Book: Library of Congress Copyright Office. Catalog of Copyright Entries. Part 1. [C] Group 3. Dramatic Composition and Motion Pictures. New Series]. 1943. 16, 67. en.
- Book: Office, Library of Congress Copyright. Catalog of Copyright Entries. Part 1. [C] Group 3. Dramatic Composition and Motion Pictures. New Series]. 1945. 33. en.
- Book: Chicago Equestrian Association. Chicago Equestrian Association : Organized 1908. 1921. Internet Archive.
- News: November 25, 1910. Equestrians Defy Mail in Fifteen-Mile Ride; Woman Leads the Dash from Lincolin Park. 6. Chicago Examiner. April 2, 2021. NewspaperArchive.com.
- October 8, 1918. Astrid S. Rosing Forms Life Partnership. Brick and Clay Record. 53. 622.
- News: Gibbons. Roy. 1922-04-07. She Found Success and Romance in Sewer Pipes. 6. The Buffalo Times. 2021-04-02. Newspapers.com.
- News: 1954-02-02. Obituary for Astrid SAWYER. 45. Chicago Tribune. 2021-04-02. Newspapers.com.