Kate Brownlee Sherwood

Kate Brownlee Sherwood
B&W portrait photo of a woman with her hair in an up-do, wearing a pale-colored blouse.
Portrait photo from A Woman of the Century
Born
Katharine Margaret Brownlee

September 24, 1841/September 25, 1841 (disputed)
DiedFebruary 15, 1914 (aged 72)
EducationPoland Union Seminary
Occupations
  • Poet
  • journalist
  • translator
Organization(s)Second National President, Woman's Relief Corps
SpouseIsaac R. Sherwood
Signature

Kate Brownlee Sherwood (née, Brownlee; September 24, 1841 – February 15, 1914) was an American poet, journalist, translator and story writer of the long nineteenth century, as well as a philanthropist, and patron of the arts and literature.[1] Sherwood was also the founder of the Woman's Relief Corps (WRC) and served as its second president.[2]

After marriage, she entered into her husband's journalistic work, where she learned to typeset, proofread, and manage all the details pertaining to the work in order to assist him. She contributed to various magazines and periodicals, and from 1883, was an editor of the Woman's Department of the National Tribune at Washington, D.C., a paper devoted to the interest of soldiers.[3]

She is best known as the author of army lyrics and poems written for the celebration of military occasions.[2] She was the author of: Camp-Fire and Memorial Poems (1885); Dreams of the Ages; a Poem of Columbia (1893); The Memorial of the Flowers (1888), and Guarding the Flags (1890).[4] Sherwood's memorial poem, Albert Sidney Johnston, was written at the invitation of the executive committee for the Unveiling Ceremonies of the General Albert Sidney Johnston Equestrian Statue, held under the auspices of the Army of the Tennessee Louisiana Division (Ex-Confederate) at New Orleans.[citation needed] Helen Louisa Bostwick Bird and Alice Williams Brotherton were contemporary poets from Ohio.[5]

  1. ^ Moulton 1891, p. 21.
  2. ^ a b Stevens & Stevens 1917, p. 115.
  3. ^ Rutherford 1894, p. 693.
  4. ^ Johnson & Brown 1904, p. 368.
  5. ^ Bond 1943, p. 447.