Louisa Jane Hall

Louisa Jane Hall
BornLouisa Jane Park
February 7, 1802
Newburyport, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedSeptember 8, 1892 (aged 90)
Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
OccupationPoet, essayist, literary critic
Alma materBoston Lyceum for Young Ladies
Spouse
Edward B. Hall
(m. 1840; died 1866)

Louisa Jane Hall (née Park; February 7, 1802 – September 8, 1892) was an American poet, essayist, and literary critic.[1] None of her poems appeared in print until after she was twenty; they were then published anonymously in the Literary Gazette, and other periodicals. Miriam, a Dramatic Sketch, her most notable work, was begun in the summer of 1826, finished the following summer, and published ten years later. Her other principal work is in prose, Joanna of Naples, an Historical Tale, published in 1838. Hannah, the Mother of Samuel the Prophet and Judge of Israel (1839) was, like Miriam, a verse play.[2] She and her father moved to Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1831, and they lived together until October 1840, when she married the Rev. E. B. Hall, of Providence, Rhode Island.

  1. ^ Samuel Atkins Eliot (1910). Heralds of a Liberal Faith. American Unitarian Association. p. 151.
  2. ^ Baillie 1999, p. 947.