Mary Abigail Dodge

{{Short description|American writer and essayist}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2019}}

{{Infobox person/Wikidata

| fetchwikidata=ALL

| dateformat = mdy|suppressfields=citizenship|nationality=American

}}

Mary Abigail Dodge (March 31, 1833 – August 17, 1896) was an American writer and essayist, who wrote under the pseudonym Gail Hamilton. Her writing is noted for its wit and promotion of equality of education and occupation for women. She was an abolitionist.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ArkACwAAQBAJ&pg=PA23|title=The Indian Reform Letters of Helen Hunt Jackson, 1879–1885|first=Helen Hunt|last=Jackson|date=October 15, 2015|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|isbn=9780806153735|via=Google Books}}

Biography

Mary Abigail Dodge was born March 31, 1833, in Hamilton, Massachusetts. She was born on a farm, the seventh child of Hannah and James Dodge. A childhood accident left her blind in one eye.Goodman, Susan. Republic of Words: The Atlantic Monthly and Its Writers 1857–1925. Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England, 2011: 69. {{ISBN|978-1-58465-985-3}} At 12, she was sent to a boarding school in Cambridge, Massachusetts, before enrolling at the Ipswich Female Seminary.Sizer, Lyde Cullen. The Political Work of Northern Women Writers and the Civil War, 1850–1872. The University of North Carolina Press, 2000: 44. {{ISBN|0-8078-2554-9}} She graduated in 1850, and proceeded to teach there for four years, until she got a position at Hartford Female Seminary. She disliked the job, however, and decided to write poetry.

Editor Gamaliel Bailey read her work in 1856 and, by 1858, she had moved to Washington, D.C. to serve as a governess for his children.Newman, Louise Michele. White Women's Rights: The Racial Origins of Feminism in the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999: 79. {{ISBN|0-19-508692-9}} From there, she sent in her publications to anti-slavery newspapers. She disliked attention, however, and chose the pen name Gail Hamilton, combining the last part of her middle name with her place of birth. Among her writings were political commentaries, making her one of the first female political correspondents in Washington.Newman, Louise Michele. White Women's Rights: The Racial Origins of Feminism in the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999: 80. {{ISBN|0-19-508692-9}} Her essays were best known for their harshness towards men.

In 1860, after Bailey's death, Dodge returned to her native town and contributed to The Atlantic Monthly. Her father died in 1864 and she helped support her mother until she died in 1868. By 1871, she returned to Washington to live with the family of James G. Blaine, who was married to her first cousin, but returned to Hamilton in summers.

Dodge became known for her personality as much as her writing. When asked for a description for a compilation about eminent women of the day, she responded with a variation of Edgar Allan Poe's poem "The Bells" that she was "Neither man nor woman / I am neither brute nor human / I am a ghoul!" One of her admirers later wrote, "She is incisive, even combative, by nature, and thoroughly enjoys a good, hot old-fashioned controversies." From its inception in 1865 to 1867, Dodge was a regular contributor to Our Young Folks, the children's magazine.

Dodge was also interested in publishing matters and criticized the assumption that women writers were "an eternal child" when it came to understanding the business side of authorship.Everton, Michael J. The Grand Chorus of Complain: Authors and the Business Ethics of American Publishing. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2011: 151. {{ISBN|978-0-19-975178-5}} In 1868, after reading an article in The Congregationalist titled "Pay of Authors", she realized her royalty payment of 15 cents per book sold was less than the average author pay of 10%. She wrote to her publisher James T. Fields, who initially ignored her, and eventually claimed that he spent more money on publishing and advertising her books than average.Goodman, Susan. Republic of Words: The Atlantic Monthly and Its Writers 1857–1925. Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England, 2011: 70–71. {{ISBN|978-1-58465-985-3}} She learned, too, that Sophia Hawthorne, widow of the author Nathaniel Hawthorne, was also having similar trouble with Field's publishing house Ticknor and Fields.Everton, Michael J. The Grand Chorus of Complain: Authors and the Business Ethics of American Publishing. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2011: 171. {{ISBN|978-0-19-975178-5}} She abruptly ended her friendship with Ticknor's wife Annie Adams Fields in February 1868, and Mrs. Fields eventually destroyed all the letters from her former friend. In her journal a month later, she wrote of her distress, "We do not forget to feel still the savagery... of Gail Hamilton... I really thought she cared for me! And now to find it was a pretense or a stepping-stone merely is something to shudder over. And all for a little of this world's poor money!"Gollin, Rita K. Annie Adams Fields: Woman of Letters. Boston, MA.: University of Massachusetts Press, 2002: 89–90. {{ISBN|1-55849-313-1}} After months of back and forth, during which Dodge came to distrust Ticknor and Fields and wrote to other authors including Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Harriet Beecher Stowe to discredit them, she anonymously published A Battle of the Books in 1870 chronicling her negative experiences.Goodman, Susan. Republic of Words: The Atlantic Monthly and Its Writers 1857–1925. Lebanon, NH: University Press of New England, 2011: 71. {{ISBN|978-1-58465-985-3}}

While working on a biography of James Blaine, she had a stroke, leaving her in a coma that lasted for several weeks. Her strength recovered, aided by her sister Hannah, and she was able to enjoy company with friends and relatives. During these months, she wrote her final work, "X-Rays", which was intentionally self-published, and dedicated to her sister.[https://books.google.com/books?id=wmwuZfjSkHoC Hamilton, Gail. "X-Rays", Copyright: M.A. Dodge, May 4, 1896.] She died of a cerebral hemorrhage on August 17, 1896.

Selected writings

File:1868 WomansWrongs byGailHamilton.png

  • Country Living and Country Thinking (1863)
  • "Gala Days" (1863)
  • "Stumbling Blocks" (1864)
  • "A New Atmosphere" (1865)
  • "Skirmishes and Sketches" (1865)
  • "Summer Rest" (1866)
  • "Red-Letter Days in Applethorpe" (1866)
  • "Wool Gathering" (1867)
  • Woman's Wrongs: A Counter-irritant (1868)
  • A Battle of the Books (1870)
  • Gala-Days (1871)
  • Woman's Worth and Worthlessness (1872)
  • "Little Folk Life" (1872)
  • "Child World" (1873)
  • "Twelve Miles From A Lemon" (1874)
  • "Nursery Noonings" (1875)
  • "First Love is Best; A Sentimental Sketch" (1877)
  • "Divine Guidance Memorial of Allen W. Dodge" (1881)
  • "Biography of James G. Blaine" (1895)
  • "X-Rays" (1896)

Posthumously compiled:

  • "Gail Hamilton's Life In Letters" (2 volumes.,1901)[https://archive.org/details/gailhamiltonslif01dodgiala Dodge, H. Augusta, Ed. "Gail Hamilton's Life and Letters, Volume 1", Lee and Shepard, Boston, 1901.][https://archive.org/details/gailhamiltonslif02dodgiala Dodge, H. Augusta, Ed. "Gail Hamilton's Life and Letters, Volume 2", Lee and Shepard, Boston, 1901.]
  • "Chips, Fragments, and Vestiges" (1902)[https://archive.org/details/chipsfragmentsve00dodgiala Hamilton, Gail. H. Augusta Dodge, Ed., "Chips, Fragments, and Vestiges", Lee and Shepard, Boston, 1902.]

References

{{reflist}}