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Mary C. Ames
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Everything about Mary C Ames totally explained

Mary Clemmer Ames (aka Mrs. Edmund Hudson) (6 May, 1839 -18 August, 1884) American author was born to Abraham Clemmer and Margaret Kneale in Utica, New York. On 7 May, 1851 she married the Rev. Daniel Ames, from whom she was divorced in 1874. Her early newspaper experience was gained on the Springfield, Massachusetts Republican, the New York Press (1865), and the Brooklyn Daily Union (1869-71). In 1871 she received $5000 for her work, the largest salary ever paid a newspaper woman up to that time. In later life she moved to Washington, D.C., where her home was a literary and social centre, and on 19 June, 1883 she married Edmund Hudson, editor of the Army and Navy Register. She became best known for her "Woman's Letter from Washington", contributed for many years to the New York City Independent.
   She wrote both poetry and prose, including novels. Her complete works were published at Boston (four volumes, 1885). Her works include:
  • Victoria (1864)
  • Eirene (1870)
  • Ten Years in Washington (1871)
  • Memorials of Alice and Phœbe Cary (twenty-sixth edition, 1885)
  • Outlines of Men, Women, and Things (1873)
  • His Two Wives (1874)
  • Poems of Life and Nature (1886)

    Publications

  • Hudson, Memorial Biography of Mary C. Ames (Boston, 1886)
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