Georgine Milmine

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Georgine Milmine Welles Adams
Born
Georgine Milmine

1871[1] or 1874[2]
Ontario, Canada
Died27 August 1950
OccupationWriter
Notable work
The Life of Mary Baker G. Eddy and the History of Christian Science
Spouse(s)Benjamin Welles
(m. 1905-1911 d.)
Arthur A. Adams
(m. 1914-1950 her d.)[2]

Georgine Milmine Welles Adams (187? – 27 August 1950) best known as Georgine Milmine, was a Canadian-American journalist most known for writing about Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of Christian Science. Milmine, along with Willa Cather and others, worked on 14 investigative articles about Eddy that were published by McClure's in 1907–1908. One of the only major investigative works on Eddy to be published in her lifetime, besides Sibyl Wilbur's Human Life articles, the articles were instigated by Milmine: S. S. McClure purchased her freelance research before assigning a group of reporters to verify, expand and write it up.[3]

Although Willa Cather was declared the main author by a 1993 printing of the book, this assessment has been questioned by more recent scholarship which again puts Milmine as the primary author.[4]

Biography[]

Early life[]

Georgine Milmine was born in Ontario, Canada, but later moved to live in Upstate New York[1] She pursued a career in journalism and wrote for the St. Louis Star,[5] the Buffalo Courier,[6] and apparently tried to start her own periodical, named The Chiel, although its fate is unknown.[1] She went to work as a proofreader for the Syracuse Herald around 1894.[7]

At the Herald she met Benjamin Welles, who was her managing editor. Welles was forced to resign because of his drinking habit but was later reinstated. Although married, there was gossip of an affair between Welles and Milmine, and she was then asked to resign, so she went to work for some New York papers instead. In 1905, Welles got a divorce from is wife and married Milmine, creating somewhat of a local scandal.[7] They were married on 22 August 1905, and made their home in Auburn, New York, where Milmine went to work for the Auburn Citizen.[2]

McClure's articles[]

Before McClure's published her work, Milmine had been collecting material about Eddy for roughly three years, or since about 1903.[8][2] Her research included court records, newspaper articles from the 1880s, and a first edition of Science and Health, which were hard to obtain.[9]

Lacking the resources to verify and write up the material, she sold it to S. S. McClure, who assigned several writers to check and expand it, including Willa Cather, Burton J. Hendrick, and William Henry Irwin. It was published in 14 installments between January 1907 and June 1908, and in 1909 as a book under Milmine's byline.[10]

When McClure's itself was sold, the new owner apparently threw away the research files, including the first edition of Science and Health.[9] At least some of Milmine's research survived; it was purchased in June 1920 by The First Church of Christ, Scientist, from a New York Manuscript dealer.[2] The church's Mary Baker Eddy Library has made available three early drafts of the work.[11][12]

Later life[]

After her first husband's death in January 1912,[13] Milmine remarried, this time to a pharmacist in Auburn, Arthur A. Adams, on 14 August 1914.[2][14][15] She and her second husband moved to Falmouth, Massachusetts, in 1937.[2] That year, by then known as Georgine Milmine Adams, she renewed the copyright of the Eddy biography.[16] She died in August 1950, three weeks before her husband. They were buried in Fort Hill Cemetery, Auburn.[14]

Selected works[]

  • Milmine, Georgine, Cather, Willa, et al. (January 1907 – June 1908). "Mary Baker G. Eddy: The Story of Her Life and the History of Christian Science", McClure's (14 installments).
  • Milmine, Georgine (1909). The Life of Mary Baker G. Eddy and the History of Christian Science. New York: Doubleday, Page & Company. OCLC 752797135

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c McNeil, Keith. A Story Untold: A History of the Quimby-Eddy Debate. v1. Carmel, IN: Hawthorne Publishing, 2020. p. 218
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g "Georgine Milmine Collection" (PDF). Boston: Mary Baker Eddy Library, The First Church of Christ, Scientist. Archived (PDF) from the original on 12 December 2013.
  3. ^ Bohlke, L. Brent (May 1982). "Willa Cather and The Life of Mary Baker G. Eddy". American Literature. 54 (2): 289 (288–294). doi:10.2307/2926137. JSTOR 2926137.
  4. ^ Squires, Ashley. “The Standard Oil Treatment: Willa Cather, The Life of Mary Baker G. Eddy, and Early Twentieth Century Collaborative Authorship.” Studies in the Novel 45.3 (2013): 328–348. Web.
  5. ^ Milmine, Georgine (January 1899). "A Gypsy Queen". St. Louis Star.
  6. ^ Milmine, Georgine (12 February 1899). "Among Women". Buffalo Courier, p. 2.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b McNeil 2020, 220.
  8. ^ "McClure's for 1907", The Daily Republican, 11 December 1906, p. 1.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b Bohlke 1982, p. 292.
  10. ^ Stouck 1993, p. xv.
  11. ^ Stouck 1993, p. xxvii–xxviii, footnote 12.
  12. ^ Squires, L. Ashley (2017). Healing the Nation: Literature, Progress, and Christian Science. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press. p. 133. ISBN 978-0253030375.
  13. ^ "Editor Wells' Death". Auburn Semi-Weekly Journal, 5 January 1912.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b "Arthur E. Adams" (23 September 1950). Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester, New York), p. 40.
  15. ^ "She Feared Death: Auburn writer of Mrs. Eddy's Life Gives Interview". Auburn Citizen, 19 December 1910.
  16. ^ Milmine, Georgine (1971). The Life of Mary Baker G. Eddy and the History of Christian Science. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, edition notice.

Further reading[]

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