Lucie Caroline Hager Explained

Lucie Caroline Hager
Birth Name:Lucie Caroline Gilson
Birth Date:December 29, 1853
Birth Place:Littleton, Massachusetts, US
Death Date:1903
Death Place:Boxborough, Massachusetts
Occupation:poet; author
Alma Mater:Normal School, Framingham, Massachusetts
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Children:1 son
Signature:Lucie C. Hager signature (Boxborough, 1891).png

Lucie Caroline Hager (Gilson; December 29, 1853 – 1903) was an American author of poetry and prose. She also taught in country schools and worked as a bookkeeper.

Early life and education

Lucie Caroline Gilson was born in Littleton, Massachusetts, December 29, 1853. Her parents were Robert Dunn Gilson and Lydia Gilson. There were nine children in the family, of whom Lucie was the youngest.

Her education was acquired in adverse circumstances. Having entered the normal school in Framingham, Massachusetts, in 1875, she was recalled to her home during the first weeks of the school year, and her studies were exchanged for days of patient watching with the sick, or such employment as she could obtain near her home. Her first poems appeared at that time. With such private instruction as her country home afforded, she continued her studies.

Career

She became a successful teacher of country schools and a bookkeeper.

Most of her poems appeared over the name "Lucie C. Gilson". Her poems show a deep insight into nature, and the experiences of the human heart. Many of them are religious in sentiment, and all have a high moral tone. Some evince poetic merit, and, as a collection, they would make an interesting, fair-sized, volume. "The Hills Beyond", "Faith", "Arbutus", and "Limerick Bells" are among her poems which deserve special mention. Several of her poems were included in collections. Her first published poem entitled, "We All Do Fade as a Leaf", appeared in the Watchman and Reflector, of Boston, in November, 1875. She wrote a number of short stories for the papers; her estimate of her own work was modest. She wrote and published the history of the town in which she resided, entitled Boxborough: A New England Town and its People.

Personal life

In October, 1882, she married Simon B. Hager, of Boxborough, Massachusetts, in which town they resided thereafter, settling on the Whitman Wetherbee place. They had one son, Milton Blanchard, born August 15, 1888. She died in Boxborough, 1903.

Selected works

Books

Poems