Blanche Willis Howard Explained

Blanche Willis Howard
Birth Date:July 20, 1847
Birth Place:Bangor, Maine, United States
Death Place:Munich, Germany
Nationality:American
Other Names:Blanche Willis Howard von Teuffel
Occupation:writer
Known For:genre of Sentimentalism to Realism to the New Woman
Notable Works:One Summer

Blanche Willis Howard (July 20, 1847 – October 7, 1898) (married name: Blanche Willis Howard von Teuffel) was an American writer whose novels developed out of the genre of Sentimentalism to Realism to the New Woman. Her first novel, One Summer, and subsequent novels received critical praise. Howard lived most of her productive years in Stuttgart, Germany. She died in Munich, Germany, after a short illness.

Early years

Howard was born and raised in Bangor, Maine. Her father was in the insurance industry and her mother came from a mercantile family. She had three siblings. After graduating from Bangor High School, she boarded at a New York City school where she developed her musical talents. She then lived for a year in Chicago with her sister Marion Howard Smith, who was married to Benjamin Fuller Smith, a son of former Maine Governor Samuel E. Smith.[1]

Career

Howard gained success with her first novel, One Summer (Boston, 1875), set in the coastal town Edgecomb, Maine, which is located near Wiscasset, Maine, the home of her married sister Marion's family. An 1877 edition of One Summer was illustrated by Augustus Hoppin. The publisher of One Summer was James R. Osgood, who began his career with Ticknor and Fields and later was in partnership with Henry Houghton. Osgood would be her most important publishing contact for much of her career.

Following publication of One Summer, Howard went to Europe, having received an assignment from the Boston Evening Transcript for a series of articles. Her articles were subsequently published as the travel book One Year Abroad (Boston, 1877).

Howard settled in Stuttgart, Germany and continued to write, producing novels, short fiction, poems, and essays. For two years, she was editor of Hallberger's Illustrated Magazine, an English-language magazine first edited by the German poet Ferdinand Freiligrath and funded by the publishing firm directed by Eduard Hallberger.

To supplement her income, Howard supervised the education of American girls in Stuttgart. Among her students were the three daughters of the actor Lawrence Barrett and the two daughters of Harriet Hubbard Ayer, founder of the cosmetics and patent medicine company Recamier Manufacturing.

In 1890, Howard married Baron Julius von Teuffel, a court physician to King Charles I of Württemberg, thereby becoming the Baroness von Teuffel. Howard died in Munich in 1898.[2] [3] [4]

Some of Howard's publications were translated into several European languages, including French, German, and Italian. Howard was among the American novelists of this era who wrote about Americans abroad. The iconic example is Henry James. Howard was an accomplished pianist and she wrote about meeting Franz Liszt. Subsequent news reporting states that Liszt complimented her playing following a performance.[5]

Works

Notes and References

  1. Legacy Profile: Blanche Willis Howard. Gustafson. Melanie. 2010. Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers. October 16, 2015.
  2. News: Obituary notice. The New York Times. October 10, 1898. June 19, 2010.
  3. News: Authors at Home, XXXI: Blanche Willis Howard in Dresden . July 16, 1898 . June 19, 2010 . Dunbar, Olivia Howard . The New York Times . Olivia Howard Dunbar.
  4. News: Blanche Willis Howard Married. The New York Times. August 10, 1890. From the Bangor (Me.) Commercial, Aug.4. June 19, 2010.
  5. Book: Edward T.. James. James, Janet Wilson; Boyer, Paul S.. Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary 1607-1950. II: G-O. c. 1971 . The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. Cambridge, MA. 0-674-62734-2. 223–224. Howard, Blanche Willis.
  6. Web site: Blanche Willis Howard (1847 - 1898). June 6, 2007. Maine Writer's Index. Waterboro (ME) Public Library. June 19, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20110718010508/http://www.waterborolibrary.org/MWI_detail.php?authID=345. 2011-07-18. dead.