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Isabella Macdonald Alden

Isabella Macdonald Alden
Isabella Macdonald Alden, aka Pansy, aka Mrs. G. R. Alden, c. 1886.jpg
Isabella Macdonald Alden
Born November 3, 1841
Rochester, New York
Died August 5, 1930
Palo Alto, California
Spouse Reverend Gustavus Rossenberg Alden
Children Raymond

Isabella Macdonald Alden (November 3, 1841 – August 5, 1930) was an American author who wrote under the pseudonym of Pansy.

Alden was born in Rochester, New York to well-educated parents Myra Spafford Macdonald and Isaac Alden. The sixth of seven children, she was initially home-schooled by her father, who also gave her the nickname Pansy. She developed her writing skills early: as a child, she kept a daily journal which her father critiqued. Her first story, "Our Old Clock", was published in the village paper when she was 10.

She met her husband, Reverend Gustavus Rossenberg Alden, while teaching at Oneida Seminary in New York. His work took the couple to various parts of the country, including Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Washington D.C. After her marriage, Alden divided her time among writing, participating in church activities, teaching at several of the Chautauqua sessions, and raising her son Raymond, who was born in 1873. By 1900, the family had three residences: a home in Philadelphia; a summer residence in Chautauqua, New York; and a winter home in Winter Park, Florida.

Throughout her life, Isabella Alden combined her writing and her religion. She did much work with Christian periodicals, writing serialized stories for the Herald and Presbyter from about 1870 until 1900; editing The Pansy, a Sunday juvenile, from 1874 to 1894; editing the Primary Quarterly and producing the primary-grade Sunday School lessons for the Westminster Teacher for 20 years; and working on the editorial staff of Trained Motherhood and The Christian Endeavor.

From 1865 to 1929, Alden authored about 100 books. Most of her works are didactic fiction heavily salted with religious principles, which concentrate on translating Biblical precepts into acceptable Christian behavior in a modern world. Several of her books, such as her most popular work Ester Ried, were based on personal experiences; others, such as the Chautauqua Girls series, were motivated by her interest in the Chautauqua movement. She and her niece, Grace Livingston Hill, even make a brief appearance in the final chapter of the series' last book, Four Mothers at Chatauqua.


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