Susan Dabney Smedes Explained

Susan C. née Dabney Smedes (August 20, 1840July 4, 1913) was a teacher, newspaper correspondent, and author who wrote about her father's plantation.[1]

She was born in Raymond, Mississippi, the eighth child[2] of Thomas S. Dabney, a wealthy plantation owner, and Sophia Hill Dabney. She married Lyell Smedes who died a few months later, 16 Jan 1861. She and her sisters were benefactors of the Bishop Green training-school at Dry Grove, Mississippi where she taught. She moved with her family to Baltimore after their plantation, Burleigh, was lost to creditors. Her father died in 1885. She wrote Memorials of a Southern Planter about his life. It was published by Baltimore: Cushings & Bailey in 1887. In 1887 she became a teacher at the U.S. government's Big Oak School of the Rosebud Agency in Dakota Territory.

Fletcher Melvin Green edited and wrote an introduction to a 1963 reissue of her book.

Her brother Virginius Dabney was also a writer and the grandfather of Virginius Dabney.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Giselle. Roberts. Susan Dabney Smedes. 2021-01-19. July 11, 2017. Mississippi Encyclopedia. en-US.
  2. Web site: Summary of Memorials of a Southern Planter. 2021-01-19. docsouth.unc.edu. Jennifer L.. Larson.