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Emilie Blackmore Stapp : ウィキペディア英語版 | Emilie Blackmore Stapp
Emilie Blackmore Stapp (1876–1962) was an American children's author and philanthropist whose writing career spanned over 50 years. She was born in Madison, Indiana on July 4, 1876 and died June 29, 1962, in Wiggins, Mississippi where she is buried. Her first book ''Bread and ‘Lasses: Sketches of Child Life'' was published in 1902. == Life == Emilie Stapp's father, David Wilbur Stapp, and her mother, Carrie Blackmore, moved their family which included their oldest daughter Florence, sons Hal and Fred and youngest daughters Emilie and Marie to Des Moines, Iowa in 1883. Following the sudden death of her mother at the age of 50, in 1893, and upon her graduation from high school, Emilie went to work as an associate editor with a weekly newspaper in Des Moines. Soon she found herself hired as editor of the literary page of the ''Des Moines Capital'', the sister newspaper of ''The Des Moines Register'', which served as the daily evening newspaper for the Des Moines area. In 1902, her first book, ''Bread and ‘Lasses: Sketches of Child Life'' was published. This was followed by ''The Trail of the Go-Hawks'' in 1908; ''Uncle Peter-Heathen'' in 1912; ''The Squaw Lady'' in 1913 and ''Little Billy Bowlegs'' in 1916.
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