Frances Gaither (original) (raw)

About DBpedia

Frances Ormond Jones Gaither (May 21, 1889 – October 28, 1955) was an American novelist whose major works depict slavery in the plantation South. Gaither was born in Somerville, Tennessee, but her family moved to Corinth, Mississippi, soon after her birth. She graduated from the Mississippi State College for Women in 1909 and briefly taught high school English in Corinth. Gaither and her husband, Rice, moved to New York City in 1929, where he worked as a journalist and she pursued a writing career. She produced four books for children in the 1930s—three works of fiction, The Painted Arrow (1931), The Scarlet Coat (1934), Little Miss Cappo (1937), and a biography of La Salle entitled The Fatal River (1931)

Property Value
dbo:abstract Frances Ormond Jones Gaither (May 21, 1889 – October 28, 1955) was an American novelist whose major works depict slavery in the plantation South. Gaither was born in Somerville, Tennessee, but her family moved to Corinth, Mississippi, soon after her birth. She graduated from the Mississippi State College for Women in 1909 and briefly taught high school English in Corinth. Gaither and her husband, Rice, moved to New York City in 1929, where he worked as a journalist and she pursued a writing career. She produced four books for children in the 1930s—three works of fiction, The Painted Arrow (1931), The Scarlet Coat (1934), Little Miss Cappo (1937), and a biography of La Salle entitled The Fatal River (1931) Gaither is most renowned, however, for her trinity of novels for adult readers about American slavery—Follow the Drinking Gourd (1940), The Red Cock Crows (1944), and Double Muscadine (1949). While long out of print, the second of these works is probably Gaither's most significant work—a dramatic tale of a slave rebellion based on historical events in Hinds County, Mississippi in 1835. (en)
dbo:wikiPageExternalLink http://www.followthedrinkinggourd.org/Appendix_Adult_Books.htm%23Gaither http://mlsandy.home.tsixroads.com/Corinth_MLSANDY/mw003.html
dbo:wikiPageID 16217332 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 2828 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1091799190 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbc:Mississippi_University_for_Women_alumni dbr:Novelist dbc:20th-century_American_novelists dbc:20th-century_American_women_writers dbc:American_women_novelists dbr:Corinth,_Mississippi dbr:Out_of_print dbr:Slavery dbr:Mississippi_State_College_for_Women dbc:1889_births dbc:1955_deaths dbc:People_from_Corinth,_Mississippi dbc:American_historical_novelists dbc:People_from_Somerville,_Tennessee dbr:Journalist dbr:High_school dbr:Hinds_County,_Mississippi dbc:Women_historical_novelists dbc:Novelists_from_Mississippi dbc:Novelists_from_Tennessee dbr:Somerville,_Tennessee dbr:New_York_City dbr:Slave_rebellion dbr:American_slavery
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Authority_control dbt:Reflist dbt:Short_description
dct:subject dbc:Mississippi_University_for_Women_alumni dbc:20th-century_American_novelists dbc:20th-century_American_women_writers dbc:American_women_novelists dbc:1889_births dbc:1955_deaths dbc:People_from_Corinth,_Mississippi dbc:American_historical_novelists dbc:People_from_Somerville,_Tennessee dbc:Women_historical_novelists dbc:Novelists_from_Mississippi dbc:Novelists_from_Tennessee
gold:hypernym dbr:Novelist
schema:sameAs http://viaf.org/viaf/26150738
rdf:type owl:Thing dbo:Person yago:WikicatAmericanHistoricalNovelists yago:CausalAgent100007347 yago:Communicator109610660 yago:LivingThing100004258 yago:Novelist110363573 yago:Object100002684 yago:Organism100004475 yago:Person100007846 yago:PhysicalEntity100001930 yago:Writer110794014 yago:YagoLegalActor yago:YagoLegalActorGeo yago:Whole100003553
rdfs:comment Frances Ormond Jones Gaither (May 21, 1889 – October 28, 1955) was an American novelist whose major works depict slavery in the plantation South. Gaither was born in Somerville, Tennessee, but her family moved to Corinth, Mississippi, soon after her birth. She graduated from the Mississippi State College for Women in 1909 and briefly taught high school English in Corinth. Gaither and her husband, Rice, moved to New York City in 1929, where he worked as a journalist and she pursued a writing career. She produced four books for children in the 1930s—three works of fiction, The Painted Arrow (1931), The Scarlet Coat (1934), Little Miss Cappo (1937), and a biography of La Salle entitled The Fatal River (1931) (en)
rdfs:label Frances Gaither (en)
owl:sameAs freebase:Frances Gaither yago-res:Frances Gaither http://viaf.org/viaf/26150738 http://d-nb.info/gnd/114634631X http://d-nb.info/gnd/174083629 wikidata:Frances Gaither https://global.dbpedia.org/id/4jKbt
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Frances_Gaither?oldid=1091799190&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Frances_Gaither
is dbo:wikiPageDisambiguates of dbr:Gaither
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of dbr:Frances_gaither
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:Gaither dbr:Corinth,_Mississippi dbr:Ainslee's_Magazine dbr:Hildegard_Woodward dbr:Frances_gaither
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Frances_Gaither