Luella Dowd Smith | |
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Born | Jane Luella Dowd June 16, 1847 Sheffield, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Died | July 4, 1941 Hudson, New York, U.S. |
Occupation | educator, author, reformer |
Language | English |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | South Egremont Academy, Charles F. Dowd's Seminary |
Genre | prose, verse |
Literary movement | temperance |
Spouse |
Henry Hadley Smith (m. 1875) |
Relatives | Alice Mary Dowd (sister) |
Luella Dowd Smith (née, Dowd; June 16, 1847 – July 4, 1941) was an American educator and author of prose and verse. She was active in social reform movements of the day. Smith taught school for ten years and was the principal of three high schools and one academy. She was also active in the areas of temperance, Sunday school, prohibition, and equal suffrage. Smith wrote for the National Temperance Society. She was the author of Wayside Leaves, 1879; Wind Flowers, 1887; Flowers from Foreign Fields, 1895; The Value of the Church, 1898; Thirteen Temperance Theses and Two Trilogies, 1901;[1] as well as Ways to win, 1904; Daily ideas and ideals, 1930; and Along the way; poems, 1938.