Lillien Blanche Fearing Explained

Lillien Blanche Fearing
Birth Date:27 November 1863
Birth Place:Davenport, Iowa, U.S.
Death Place:Eureka Springs, Arkansas, U.S.
Occupation:Lawyer, poet

Lillien Blanche Fearing (November 27, 1863 – August 13, 1900) was an American lawyer and poet who was blind.[1]

Life

Fearing was born in Davenport, Iowa in 1863. She lost her sight as the result of an accident whilst playing with other children when she was five or six. She was taught in college in Vinton, Iowa until 1884.

Four years later she moved to Chicago to study at the Union College of Law and graduated in 1890. Her sister and mother served as her amanuensis while she learned, and she became a leading pupil and she also started to write poetry.[2] She was one of four students who shared the scholarship prize when they graduated in 1890. She was the only woman studying law in her year.

She was admitted to the Illinois Bar at Springfield[3] and was able to practice law from her office in Chicago.

She died in Eureka Springs, Arkansas on August 13, 1900, after a long illness.[4] Her final book, Mildred, was published the following year.[5]

Works

Notes and References

  1. Frances E. Willard, Mary A. Livermore (eds) "Lillian (sic) Blanche Fearing", Woman of the Century 1893
  2. Web site: Profiles. chicagobar.org. 24 September 2017.
  3. Book: Willard, Frances E.. Occupations for women: a book of practical suggestions for the material advancement, the mental and physical development, and the moral and spiritual uplift of women. 1897. Success Co. 1087441933.
  4. News: Remarkable Life Closes . . 9 . 1900-08-15 . 2024-07-17 . NewspaperArchive.
  5. Web site: Fearing, Lillien Blanche. 2021-02-08. lawlit.net.