Zoe Dana Underhill

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Zoe Dana Underhill
BornMarch 4, 1847 Edit this on Wikidata
Brook Farm Edit this on Wikidata
DiedDecember 5, 1934 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 87)
Resting placeWoodlawn Cemetery Edit this on Wikidata
OccupationWriter, translator Edit this on Wikidata
ChildrenRuth Underhill Edit this on Wikidata
Parent(s)

Zoe Dana Underhill (March 4, 1847 – December 5, 1934)[1] was an American translator and author.

Zoe Dana was born on March 4, 1847 at Brook Farm, Massachusetts.[1] She was the daughter of Charles Anderson Dana, editor of the New York Tribune and the New York Sun, and Eunice McDaniel. In 1872, she married Walter Mitchell Underhill. They had two children, including writer and golfer Ruth Underhill.[2]

Charles Dana was a translator of German and taught German at Brook Farm.[2] Zoe Underhill became a translator herself, compiling and translating a book of fairy tales, The Dwarfs' Tailor. Several of these were translated from German collections of fairy tales by Ludwig Bechstein and Richard von Volkmann.[3]

Underhill also published a number of short stories in magazines. Her story "The Inn of San Jacinto" is collected in Under the Sunset (1906), a volume of stories from Harper's Magazine,[4] and her story "The Conductor's Story" is collected in The Platform Edge: Uncanny Tales of the Railways (2019), published by the British Library.

During the American Civil War, her father served as Assistant Secretary of War. She regularly visited Abraham Lincoln in the White House with her father. When she died in 1934, it was reported that she was thought to be the last living friend of President Lincoln.[5]

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References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Burke, William Jeremiah (1972). American authors and books, 1640 to the present day. New York, Crown Publishers. ISBN 978-0-517-50139-9.
  2. ^ a b Dana, Elizabeth Ellery (1856). The Dana Family In America. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Wright and Porter Printing Co.
  3. ^ David Blamires (2009-10-01). Telling Tales: The Impact of Germany on English Children's Books 1780-1918. Open Book Publishers. ISBN 978-1-906924-09-6.
  4. ^ Jean Hawkins, ed. (1909). Ghost stories and tales of the supernatural. Bulletin of Bibliography Pamphlets.
  5. ^ "Zoe Dana Underhill, Lincoln's Friend". The Spokesman-Review. Spokane, Washington. AP. Dec 7, 1934. p. 2 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ The Annual American Catalogue 1886-1900: Being the Full Titles, with Descriptive Notes, of All ... Publishers' weekly. 1897.
  7. ^ Kirk, John Foster; Allibone, Samuel Austin (1902). A supplement to Allibone's Critical dictionary of English literature and British and American authors : containing over thirty-seven thousand articles (authors), and enumerating over ninety-three thousand titles. Philadelphia: Lippincott.

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