Ozella Shields Head Explained

Mary Ozella Shields Head (October 19, 1869 – May 16, 1948)[1] was an American writer.

Biography

Mary Ozella Shields was born in Macon, Georgia, on October 19, 1869, to Adolphus A. Shields, a butcher, and Mary Anne Westcott. She was educated in Atlanta, Georgia.Her taste for literature and her talent for production were shown in childhood, when she wrote a number of love stories. Her first published work, a sensational love story of thirty chapters, was "Sundered Hearts." published in the Philadelphia Saturday Night, when Shields was eighteen years old. Her next works were "Verona's Mistake" and "A Sinless Crime," published in the same journal. Other stories followed in quick succession. In 1889 she brought out her "Izma, or Sunshine and Shadow" through a New York house.[2]

In November 1889, she married Daniel B. Head, of Greenville, Mississippi, and had one son, Dan.[3]

She died in Los Angeles in 1948.

Notes and References

  1. California, U.S., Death Index, 1940-1997
  2. Book: Shields. M. Ozella. Izma, or, Sunshine and shadow. A novel. 1889. New York, Chicago, J. S. Ogilvie. 4 October 2017.
  3. Book: Willard. Frances Elizabeth, 1839-1898. Livermore. Mary Ashton Rice, 1820-1905. A woman of the century; fourteen hundred-seventy biographical sketches accompanied by portraits of leading American women in all walks of life. 1893. Buffalo, N.Y., Moulton. 369. 8 August 2017.