Mae St. John Bramhall | |
Birth Name: | Mae Laws |
Birth Date: | c. 1861 |
Birth Place: | Richmond, Indiana, U.S. |
Death Date: | February 1897 |
Death Place: | Fordham, Bronx, New York, U.S. |
Occupation: | actress, writer |
Alma Mater: | St. Mary's School, Reddington, Ohio, U.S. |
Genre: | poetry |
Notable Works: | Japanese Jingles The Wee Ones of Japan |
Spouse: | Anson Dudley Bramhall (m. 1889) |
Relatives: | Cornelia Laws St. John (mother) |
Mae St. John Bramhall (Laws; after adoption, St. John; after marriage, St. John Bramhall; c. 1861 – February 1897) was a 19th-century American actress and versatile writer who contributed to many magazines and newspapers. She inherited the gifts of song and poesy from her mother, Cornelia Laws St. John.
Born Mae Laws, she was the second daughter of Joseph and Cornelia (Williams) Laws. Mae was born c. 1861, in Richmond, Indiana, and resided there until almost of adult age, when the family removed to Chicago, Illinois.
She received her education in the public schools of Richmond and Chicago, with a short period at St. Mary's School at Reddington, Ohio.
Before starting her theater career, she was regarded as the most beautiful woman in Chicago society.
Bramhall was performing in comic opera in the 1880s.
In 1889, she married Anson Dudley Bramhall, of New York City, and the following two years were spent in Japan. There, she wrote and published her first book, Japanese Jingles, which she dedicated to her uncle and aunt, Dr. and Mrs. James F. Hibberd. Charles Scribner & Sons had the exclusive sale of these books in America, which sale they deemed phenomenal. She also wrote letters for several prominent American newspapers during her stay in Japan. When financial reverses came, her husband failed in business, and separation followed.
While a resident of El Paso, Texas, Bramhall visited the World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893.[1] By 1894, she was a resident of New York City and was writing sketches of baby life in Japan for Harper's Bazaar . She expanded them into a volume which the Harpers brought out with illustrations by Charles Dater Weldon (1844-1935).[2] Entitled, The Wee Ones of Japan, it described the Japanese child from babyhood to its school days, including its dress, its ways, its play and study, and the customs which surround it.[3] She also published Around the World at Leisure Letters.
For the last two years of her life, Bramhall was a recluse and her friends and former admirers heard but little of her.[4] She suffered much before her death, which occurred February 5 or 7, 1897, age 36, at the Home for Incurables, Fordham, Bronx, New York. A number of unpublished manuscripts were the only legacy she left to her adopted son, Dudley Bramhall, of Chappaqua, New York.[5]