Gertrude Strohm Explained

Gertrude Strohm
Birth Date:July 14, 1843
Birth Place:Greene County, Ohio, U.S.
Death Date:November 4, 1927 (aged 84)
Death Place:Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio, U.S.
Resting Place:Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum, Dayton, Ohio
Language:English
Alma Mater:Washington Female Seminary

Gertrude Strohm (July 14, 1843 – November 4, 1927) was an American author, compiler, and game designer of Dayton, Ohio.[1] Between 1875 and 1892, she engaged in various types of compilations including cookbooks, social fireside games, and calendars.[2] Strohm also contributed to magazines. She died in 1927.

Background and education

Gertrude Strohm was born in Greene County, Ohio, July 14, 1843, and always lived in a country home from Dayton, Ohio. She was the oldest of four children. Her paternal grandparents were Henry Strohm, born in Hesse Darmstadt, and Mary Le Fevre, a descendant of the Huguenots. Her mother, Margaret Guthrie, was the daughter of James Guthrie, who went from the Eastern U.S. to Greene County in the early part of the 19th-century. Her mother was Elizabeth Ainsworth, whose first husband was Hugh Andrews. Gertrude's father, Isaac Strohm, was engaged nearly all his life in Government service in Washington, D.C., first in the Treasury Department, then for sixteen years the chief enrolling and engrossing clerk in the Congress, and latterly in the War Department. He wrote much for the press. When a young man, he was a contributor to Horace Greeley's New Yorker, and wrote poems and sketches for Sartain's Magazine, the Southern Literary Messenger, and other periodicals.[3] Gertrude's siblings included Elizabeth, Mary, Harry, and Edwin.[4]

Strohm was educated at home and at Girls' Seminary, Washington, D.C.,[5] but her studies were interrupted by ill health.

Career

Stroh engaged in various types of compilations. She also made many reward cards and Sunday school concert exercises.

Game designer

Her first publication was a social game she made and arranged, entitled, "Popping the Question". It was published in Boston and afterward sold to a New York firm, who republished it, and it was again brought out in an attractive edition for the holiday trade of 1891. She made three games for a Springfield, Massachusetts, firm, the last called "Novel Fortune Telling", composed wholly of titles of novels.

Author

Flower Idyls (1871), edited by Strohm, was an adaptation of many flowers to people and their occupations, suggested by poems of well-known writers. It was illustrated by photo-etchings of the different flowers, printed in the colors of the original, and bound in a jacqueminot vellum.[6]

The Universal Cookery Book (New York : White, Stokes Allen. Detroit: Phillips & Hunt; 1887) was largely a selection of the best receipts from standard authorities already approved by the public. Strohm's compilation contained practical recipes for household use from the most eminent authorities, including Marion Harland, Miss Parloa, Mrs. Washington, Thomas J. Murrey, Miss Carson, and others. Containing some 250 pages, it covered the field from soup to confectionery, with an additional chapter on "herb tea" and other "home remedies". Several blank pages were also included whereon a person could inscribe additional recipes. (New York : White, Stokes Allen. Detroit: Phillips & Hunt.)[7] Lippincott's Monthly Magazine stated that it "... showed patience and industry on the part of the compiler, and praiseworthy courtesy on the part of the authors who have allowed her to lay their works under contribution".[8]

Another compilation, The Young Scholar's Calendar (1891), included Scripture texts for daily living.[9] Other book compilations included, Word Pictures (Boston, 1875), The universal common sense cookery book (1892).[10] Scripture Exercises for Sunday Schools, and Social Games for Home Amusement. Strohm was also a contributor to magazines.[11]

Later life

Unmarried, Strohm made her home in Dayton.

In 1923, she had for sale a number of gourds -fine specimens and in various sizes- including, Dipper, Hercules, Club, Bottle, Spoon, Eggs, Peas, Apple, Onion, and others. Giving her address as Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio, she advertised that she would sell them as a whole, not individually.[12]

Gertrude Strohm died at Miami Valley Hospital, Dayton, Ohio, November 4, 1927. Interment was at Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum, Dayton.[13]

Selected works

Books

Games

Notes and References

  1. Book: Herringshaw's American Blue Book Of Biography . 1915 . American Publishers' Association . 1097 . Public domain . https://books.google.com/books?id=UUM6AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1097 . 5 January 2022 . en . STROHM, GERTRUDE.
  2. Book: Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society . Ohio Centennial Anniversary Celebration at Chillicothe, May 20-21, 1903: Under the Auspices of the Ohio State Archælogical and Historical Society : Complete Proceedings . 1903 . Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society . 661 . Public domain . https://books.google.com/books?id=fjEWAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA661 . 5 January 2022 . en . STROHM, GERTRUDE.
  3. Book: Willard. Frances Elizabeth. Frances Willard. Livermore. Mary Ashton Rice. Mary Livermore. A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life. Public domain. 1893 . 699–700. . STROHM, Miss Gertrude.
  4. Book: Dills . R. S. . History of Greene County: Together with Historic Notes on the Northwest, and the State of Ohio ... . 1881 . Odell & Mayer . 735 . Public domain . 5 January 2022 . en . BATH TOWNSHIP.
  5. Book: Leonard . John William . Marquis . Albert Nelson . Who's who in America . 1899 . A.N. Marquis . 703 . 1 . Public domain . https://books.google.com/books?id=0fYLAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA703 . 5 January 2022 . en . STROHM, Gertrude.
  6. News: FLOWER IDYLS . 4 January 2022 . The Boston Globe . . 15 December 1889 . 5 . en.
  7. News: COOKERY . 4 January 2022 . Detroit Free Press . . 30 April 1887 . 8 . en.
  8. Book: Lippincott's Monthly Magazine: A Popular Journal of General Literature . 1887 . J.B. Lippincott and Company . 168 . 40 . Public domain . https://books.google.com/books?id=DspGAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA168 . 4 January 2022 . en . BOOK-TALK.
  9. Book: The American Catalogue . 1896 . A.C. Armstrong & Son . 428 . Public domain . 5 January 2022 . en.
  10. News: COOK BOOKS . 4 January 2022 . Chicago Tribune . . 15 November 1892 . 5 . en.
  11. Web site: Dayton, Ohio - An Intimate History . www.daytonhistorybooks.com . 5 January 2022.
  12. News: GOURDS . 4 January 2022 . The Dayton Herald . . 16 May 1923 . 21 . en.
  13. Web site: Ohio Deaths, 1908-1953 1927 62801-65700 . familysearch.org . 5 January 2022.