Louisa Venable Kyle
Louisa Venable Kyle | |
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Born | August 11, 1903 |
Died | October 24, 1999 | (aged 96)
Alma mater | |
Occupations |
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Notable work | The Witch of Pungo(1973) |
Louisa Venable Kyle(August 11, 1903 – October 24, 1999) was an American historian, author and journalist. She wrote works of fiction based on the history of her home state ofVirginia.
Biography
[edit]Born inNorfolk,[1]she studied atMary Baldwin Seminaryand graduated fromLasell Seminary.[2]In the 1950s she wrote forThe Virginian-PilotandThe Portsmouth Star.She wrote about the first minister toKnotts IslandonCurrituck Soundto have lived there:[3]
Knotts Island has never before had its minister live on the island, with the people. From the beginning, the people who live here on Currituck Sound have had to depend on having the word of God brought to them by the old circuit riders, by the reading of church services in private homes, and by sharing a minister with another church.
In November 1956, she reported the opening of land betweenSeashore State Parkand Crystal Lake.[4]
Kyle was married to William Emmett Kyle (1896–1972). They had three daughters.[5]She was one of the founding members of the Princess Anne County Historical Society.[2]She died inVirginia Beach.[5]
Literary works
[edit]Kyle wroteHistorical Data on Little Neck Section of Princess Anne County,which was published in 1960.The History of Eastern Shore Chapel and Lynnhaven Parish, 1642–1969appeared in 1969.
The Witch of Pungo and Other Historical Stories of the Early Coloniesis a fiction book written for children, with the tales of seven folk tales from the history ofPrincess Anne County,including "Christmas at Adam Thoroughgood's House" andBlackbeard's Treasure.The historical background of each story is provided at the end of the story.[2]The Witch of Pungois based onGrace Sherwood,a woman who was accused of witchcraft in February 1706[6]and tried by ducking: "If Grace would float in consecrated water, as she did after being ducked in the Lynnhaven River off what is now calledWitchduck Point,then she was deemed guilty of witchcraft ".[2]Sherwood spent seven years in jail and then lived on a farm granted by GovernorAlexander Spotswood.[2]The book was published in 1973 by Printcraft Press, Portsmouth, Virginia,[7]reissued in 1978 in Four O'Clock Farms Publishing Company,[8]and again in 1988.
Kyle's bookRam Lam(1975) was published by the Four O'Clock Farms Publishing Company. Her memoir,My Virginia Childhood: The Years 1903-1914,was published in 1976. Other works includedA Country Woman's Scrapbook(1980)[9]andA Country Woman's Christmas(1993).
References
[edit]- ^ "Louisa Venable Kyle".palmspringsbum.org.Retrieved17 October2013.
- ^abcde "Grace Sherwood & The Witch of Pungo".Princess Anne County Historical Society.Retrieved17 October2013.
- ^ Austin, Sue Fentress (November 21, 2010)."Methodist Church History".kiscrapbook.knottsislandonline.com.Retrieved17 October2013.
- ^ Yarsinske, Amy Waters (2011).Lost Virginia Bach.The History Press. p. 102.ISBN9781609492045.
- ^ab "Louisa Venable Kyle".The Virginian-Pilot.October 25, 1999.Retrieved17 October2013.
- ^ "Grace Sherwood (ca. 1660–1740)".The Associated Press. 9 July 2013.Retrieved17 October2013.
- ^ "Grace Sherwood (ca. 1660–1740)".Encyclopedia Virginia.Retrieved17 October2013.
- ^ Kyle, Louisa Venable (1973).The Witch of Pungo: And Other Historical Stories of the Early Colonies.
- ^ Kyle, Louisa Venable (1980).A country woman's scrapbook.JCP Corporation of Virginia.ISBN9780938694021.
- 1903 births
- 1999 deaths
- Writers from Norfolk, Virginia
- American women historians
- Historians of Virginia
- 20th-century American historians
- 20th-century American women writers
- Mary Baldwin University alumni
- Lasell College alumni
- 20th-century American women journalists
- 20th-century American journalists
- History of Virginia Beach, Virginia
- Historians from Virginia