Helen Taggart Clark

Helen Taggart Clark (pen name, H. T. C.; April 24, 1849–?) was an American journalist and poet.

Helen Taggart Clark
"A woman of the century"
BornHelen Taggart
April 24, 1849
Northumberland, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Pen nameH. T. C.
Occupationjournalist, poet
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Alma materFriends' Central School
Spouse
David Henry Clark (m. 1870)
RelativesCol. David Taggart

Early years

Helen Taggart was born in Northumberland, Pennsylvania, April 24, 1849. She was the oldest of three children of the Col. David Taggart and Annie Pleasants (Cowden) Taggart.[1] There were three siblings, John C., Hanna C. H., and James.[2]

She was educated in the Friends' Central School, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In October, 1869, she made a six months' stay in Charleston, South Carolina to make a visit to her father, then stationed in that city as paymaster in the United States army.[1]

Career

In 1870, she married Rev. David Henry Clark, a Unitarian minister settled over the church in Northumberland. Four years later, they removed to New Milford, Pennsylvania, to take charge of a Free Religious Society there. In 1875. Rev. Clark was called to the Free Congregational Society in Florence, Massachusetts. [1]

Attention was first drawn to "H. T. C .", by which some of her earlier work was signed, in 1880, by her occasional poems in the Boston Index, of which her husband was for a time assistant editor, and in the Springfield, Republican. Her life, as she put it, had been one of intellectual aspirations and clamorous dish-washing and bread-winning. Clark left Florence, Massachusetts in 1884, returning to her father's house in Northumberland with her youngest child, an only daughter, her two older children being boys. There, for two years, she was a teacher in the high school, varying her duties by teaching music and German outside of school hours, story and verse writing, and leading a Shakespeare class. In August, 1887, she accepted a position in the Good Cheer office, Greenfield, Massachusetts, till she was recalled to Northumberland the following February by the illness of her father. He died a little later, after which time Clark has made her home in her native town.

Clark has a large circle of friends, and her social duties took up much of her time, but she made time write a weekly column for the Sudbury, Massachusetts News, to perform the duties pertaining to her office as secretary of the Woman's Relief Corps in her town, to lead a young people's literary society, and to contribute stories and poems to Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, the Christian Union, the Woman's Journal, and the Springfield Republican. [3] Her Verses was published in 1891 in Philadelphia by Lippincott.[4]

Personal life

The Clark's had at least one child, a son, John.[4] By 1911, she was living in Brooklyn, New York.[2]

Selected works

  • Verses, 1891

References

Attribution

  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Duzee, Edward P. Van (1902). Catalogue of Poetry in the English Language: In the Grosvenor Library, Buffalo, N.Y. (Public domain ed.). London: Grosvenor Library.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: J.L. Floyd & Company (1911). Genealogical and Biographical Annals of Northumberland County, Pennsylvania: Containing a Genealogical Record of Representative Families, Including Many of the Early Settlers, and Biographical Sketches of Prominent Citizens, Prepared from Data Obtained from Original Sources of Information (Public domain ed.). Chicago: J.L. Floyd & Company.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life (Public domain ed.). Moulton.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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