About: Harriet McEwen Kimball     Goto   Sponge   NotDistinct   Permalink

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Harriet McEwen Kimball (November 2, 1834 – September 3, 1917) was an American poet, hymnwriter, philanthropist, and hospital co-founder. “The Poetess of the Church” as she was long called, Kimball's life was largely devoted to literature and to church work. She was one of that group of 19th—century poets of which Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was most prominent and which ministered so greatly to the American love of poetry and appreciation of it that the members of the group were in some sense literary pioneers. Kimball was the last of the group to survive. She died in 1917.

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  • Harriet McEwen Kimball (en)
rdfs:comment
  • Harriet McEwen Kimball (November 2, 1834 – September 3, 1917) was an American poet, hymnwriter, philanthropist, and hospital co-founder. “The Poetess of the Church” as she was long called, Kimball's life was largely devoted to literature and to church work. She was one of that group of 19th—century poets of which Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was most prominent and which ministered so greatly to the American love of poetry and appreciation of it that the members of the group were in some sense literary pioneers. Kimball was the last of the group to survive. She died in 1917. (en)
foaf:name
  • Harriet McEwen Kimball (en)
name
  • Harriet McEwen Kimball (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/HARRIET_McEWEN_KIMBALL_A_woman_of_the_century_(page_446_crop).jpg
birth place
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  • Portsmouth (en)
death date
birth place
  • Portsmouth, New Hampshire, U.S. (en)
birth date
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resting place
  • Harmony Grove Cemetery, Portsmouth (en)
birth date
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  • "A Woman of the Century" (en)
death date
language
  • English (en)
nationality
  • American (en)
occupation
  • poet, hymnwriter, philanthropist, hospital co-founder (en)
has abstract
  • Harriet McEwen Kimball (November 2, 1834 – September 3, 1917) was an American poet, hymnwriter, philanthropist, and hospital co-founder. “The Poetess of the Church” as she was long called, Kimball's life was largely devoted to literature and to church work. She was one of that group of 19th—century poets of which Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was most prominent and which ministered so greatly to the American love of poetry and appreciation of it that the members of the group were in some sense literary pioneers. Kimball was the last of the group to survive. She died in 1917. (en)
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