Mary Elizabeth Perley | |
Nickname: | May |
Birth Date: | July 2, 1863 |
Birth Place: | Lempster, New Hampshire, U.S. |
Death Date: | ? |
Mary Elizabeth Perley (July 2, 1863 – ?) was an American writer, professor, and poet. She taught at Tilden Ladies' Seminary, New Hampshire Conference Seminary, Tabor College, Fargo College, and the University of North Dakota. In addition to two books, she wrote poems, newspaper articles, short stories, and plays.
Mary (nickname, "May") Elizabeth Perley was born in Lempster, New Hampshire, July 2, 1863. Her parents were Asbury F., an active Methodist, and Sarah J. (Dodge) Perley. She had three sisters, Louise S. and Maria R. (twins) and Jennie M., and two brothers, George E. and Ben F.
Perley was well-educated. She studied in the Tilden Ladies' Seminary of West Lebanon, New Hampshire, New Hampshire Conference Seminary, Tilton, New Hampshire, and Boston schools (high). She was a student in Hanover, 1890–1891; and attended summer school in the English Department at Harvard University in 1897. She studied at the University of Berlin, 1901–1902; and in 1902, graduated from Frau Dr. Hempel's Normal Seminar, Berlin. She also studied at the Cours Maintenan and Alliance Francaise of Paris; the Berlitz School; and the Lafayette College of Languages at the Boston University, 1902. Perley graduated from Washington State University (A.B., 1908); and did graduate study at the University of Wisconsin in summers of 1909 and 1910, where she received a master's degree in German. In 1912, she attended summer school at the University of Oregon.[1]
Perley served as a teacher of modern languages in Tilton Seminary six years and taught French and German in the New Hampshire Conference Seminary. She was a professor of modern languages at Tabor College, Tabor, Iowa, 1904–1906. She served as professor of German at Fargo College, Fargo, North Dakota, from 1906; her brother, George E. Perley, sat on the college's Board of Incorporators. Beginning in 1921, she was an instructor in French, University of North Dakota.[2] [3]
At an early age, she began to contribute poems to the press. Her poems received extensive publication in the periodical press. Sketches of her life and poems from her pen appear in several compilations. She was known as a graceful and finished poet. As an avocation, she wrote occasional Sunday newspaper articles and short stories. She also wrote German playlets, adapted to high school or college dramatics, several of which were presented in the schools of North Dakota and Wisconsin. She published French fairy plays (with Mathurin Marius Dondo; New York, London Oxford University Press, 1923) and The Last of the Bodyguard: Smith Stimmel (Chicago, Methodist Book Concern, 1935).[4] In 1919, Perley resided in Fargo.