Ruth Putnam (author)
Ruth Putnam (18 July 1856, Yonkers, New York – 12 February 1931, Geneva, Switzerland) was an author, suffragist, and alumni trustee of Cornell University.[1]
One of eleven children of the publisher George Palmer Putnam and his wife Victorine Haven Putnam, Ruth Putnam received her bachelor's degree in 1878 from Cornell University. (In 1873 Emma Sheffield Eastman was the first woman to graduate from Cornell University.) Ruth Putnam wrote a number of historical works and consulted original sources in Dutch, French, and German, as well as English. She also wrote a biography of her eldest sibling Mary Corinna Putnam Jacobi, who was a famous physician and suffragist.
Selected publications[]
- as collaborator with Alfred John Church: The count of the Saxon shore; of, The villa in Vectis. A tale of the departure of the Romans from Britain. Putnam. 1887. (historical novel)
- William the Silent, Prince of Orange, the moderate man of the sixteenth century: the story of his life as told from his own letters, from those of his friends and enemies, and from official documents. 2 vols. Putnam. 1895. ISBN 9780790582078. (translated into Dutch as Willem de Zwijger, Prins van Oranje (1900) by Dirk Christiaan Nijhoff)
- Annetje Jans' farm. Half Moon Series,v. 1, no. 3. G. P. Putnam's. 1897.
- as editor with Eva Palmer Brownell, Maud Wilder Goodwin, and Alice Carrington Royce: Historic New York. vol. 1, 1897, vol. 2, 1898. G.P. Putnam's sons.
|volume=
has extra text (help) - as translator with Oscar Albert Bierstadt: History of the people of the Netherlands. 5 vols., 1898–1912. G. P. Putnam's sons.; a translation and abridgment of the 8-volume Geschiedenis van het Nederlandsche volk by Petrus Johannes Blok
- A mediæval Princess; being a true record of the changing fortunes which brought divers titles to Jacqueline, countess of Holland, together with an account of her conflict with Philip, duke of Burgundy (1401–1436). G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1904.
- Charles the Bold, last duke of Burgundy. Heroes of the Nations. G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1908.[2]
- William the Silent: prince of Orange (1533–1584) and the revolt of the Netherlands. Heroes of the Nations. G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1911.
- Alsace Lorraine from Cæsar to Kaiser, 58 B.C.–1871 A.D. G.P. Putnam's Sons. 1915.
- with the collaboration of Herbert Ingram Priestley: California: the name. Berkeley, University of California press. 1917.[3]
- Luxembourg and her neighbours: a record of the political fortunes of the present grand duchy from the eve of the French revolution to the great war, with a preliminary sketch of events from 963 to 1780. G. P. Putnam's sons. 1918.
References[]
- ^ "Putnam, Ruth". Who's Who in America, 1920–1921. 11: 2318.
- ^ "Review of Charles the Bold by Ruth Putnam". The Literary Digest. 36 (19): 656. 2 May 1908.
- ^ Austin, Herbert D. (1923). "Review of California: the name by Ruth Putnam with the collaboration of Herbert I. Priestley". Southern Californian Review. 12: 29–31.
External links[]
Wikisource has original works written by or about: Ruth Putnam |
Works by Ruth Putnam at Project Gutenberg
- Works by Ruth Putnam at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
Categories:
- 1856 births
- 1931 deaths
- Cornell University alumni
- 19th-century American women writers
- 20th-century American women writers
- American women's rights activists
- American feminists
- American suffragists
- People from Yonkers, New York