Partner Sarah Orne Jewett
Queer Places:
148 Charles St, Boston, MA 02114, Stati Uniti
Gambrel Cottage, Thunderbolt Hill, overlooking Singing Beach, Manchester-by-the-Sea, MA 01944
Mount Auburn Cemetery, 580 Mt Auburn St, Cambridge, MA 02138, Stati Uniti
Annie Adams Fields (June 6, 1834 – January 5, 1915) was an American writer. She wrote "A Shelf of Old Books," "How to Help the Poor," "Memoirs of James T. Fields," "Whittier: Notes of His Life and Friendship," "Authors and Friends," "Under the Olive," "The Sighing Shepherd and Other Poems." But it is in the world of philanthropic work that she found her greatest pleasure.[1] The Boston marriage of Alice James' and Katharine Peabody Loring's close friends, Sarah Orne Jewett and Annie Adams Fields, was similarly idealized as that of the same James and Loring. Fields' diaries were used by M.A. DeWolfe Howe in his 1922 publication Memories of a Hostess. When her husband, the publisher James T. Fields, died in 1881, Howe notes that Annie's "need... for an absorbing affectionate intimacy was met through her friendship with Sarah Orne Jewett." The depth of their love was vast. "Oh my dear darling I had forgotten that we loved each other so much a year ago, for it all seems so new to me every day. There is so much for us to remember already, but a year ago last winter seems a great way off for us to have loved so much since." Annie was related to the Alcotts and confidante of Harriet Beecher Stowe, and later in life she was friends with Amy Lowell, Willa Cather, Jane Addams, and Edith Wharton-a social circle that included many of the leading female intellectuals of the day.
Born in Boston, Massachusetts, she was the second wife of the publisher and author James Thomas Fields, whom she married in 1854, and with whom she encouraged up and coming writers such as Sarah Orne Jewett, Mary Freeman, and Emma Lazarus. She was equally at home with great and established figures including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Harriet Beecher Stowe, whose biography she fearlessly compiled. She was a philanthropist and social reformer; in particular, she founded the Holly Tree Inns, coffeehouses serving inexpensive and nutritious meals, and the Lincoln Street Home, a safe and inexpensive residence for unmarried working women.[2]
Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, MA
After Fields' husband died in 1881, she continued to occupy the center of Boston literary life. The hallmark of Fields' work is a sympathetic understanding of her friends, who happened to be the leading literary figures of her time.
Her closest friend was Sarah Orne Jewett, a novelist and story writer whom her husband had published in The Atlantic. Fields and Jewett lived together for the rest of Jewett's life (Jewett died in 1909).[3]
The two were friends with many of the main literary figures of their time, including Willa Cather, Mary Ellen Chase, William Dean Howells, Henry James, Rudyard Kipling, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Alfred Tennyson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Mark Twain, Sarah Wyman Whitman, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Lydia Maria Child, Charles Dudley Warner and John Greenleaf Whittier.
Fields was a forward-looking, philanthropic and multi-talented woman, who encouraged the talents of others even as she followed the good of the intellect. Although Fields often turns up in the pantheons of 19th century poetry, it is for her short sympathetic biographies that she is now remembered.
Along with the sympathy that Fields brings to her portraits, one will find the clear-eyed judgments that great criticism requires. As Samuel Johnson's "observation with extensive view" had surveyed the eighteenth century scene, Annie Fields' sharp decisive portraits etch the nineteenth-century American literary scene.
Fields' literary importance lies primarily in two areas: one is the influence she exerted over her husband in the selection of works to be published by Ticknor and Fields, the major publishing house of the time. He valued her judgement as reflecting a woman's point of view.
Second, Fields edited important collections of letters and biographical sketches. Her subjects included her husband, James T. Fields, John Greenleaf Whittier, Celia Thaxter, and Harriet Beecher Stowe, as well as the Jewett letter collection. While these are not critical, scholarly works (the Jewett collection, especially, is heavily edited), they do provide primary material for the researcher. Her Authors and Friends (1896) is a series of sketches, the best of which are of Harriet Beecher Stowe and Celia Thaxter. Fields' diaries remain unpublished, except for excerpts published by M. A. DeWolfe Howe in 1922.
Fields remains a somewhat puzzling figure. Her writings reflect a traditional orientation toward sentimentalism and the cult of true womanhood. However, she was a supporter of "women's emancipation," and her association with Jewett and others suggests a less traditional side. She left for posterity a carefully polished public persona, that of the perfect hostess, the genteel lady, and it is difficult to find the real person underneath.
Fields died in 1915 and is buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, alongside her husband.
The site of her Charles Street home is a stop on the Boston Women's Heritage Trail.[4]
Linda Hunt (born 1945), Annie Adams Field (1834-1915), Charles Adams (1770-1800) and David Ogden Stiers (1942-2018), all descend from the same Mayflower Pilgrims, William Mullins and Alice Mullins.
Tony Scupham-Bilton -
Mayflower 400 Queer Bloodlines
My published books: