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Louise Boynton

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Louise Boynton
A drawing of a white woman with her hair up in a top bun; she is wearing a high-collared blouse with a bow at the neck.
Louise Boynton, from a 1901 newspaper.
Born
Mary Louise Boynton

1868
Georgetown, Massachusetts
DiedMarch 3, 1951
Tannersville, New York
Occupation(s)Newspaper publisher, editor
PartnerMaude Adams
RelativesGeorgie Boynton Child(sister)

Mary Louise Boynton(1868 – March 3, 1951) was an American newspaper publisher and editor. She was the personal secretary and partner of actressMaude Adams.

Early life

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Louise Boynton was born inGeorgetown, Massachusetts,the eldest child of Casimir Whitman Boynton and Eunice Adelia Harriman Boynton.[1]She graduated fromVassar Collegein 1894.[2][3]

Career

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In 1897, Boynton and her sisterGeorgie[4]bought a New Jersey newspaper, thePerth Amboy Republican,[5]and ran it as a daily newspaper until 1903,[6]with Louise Boynton as editor in chief.[7][8]She was credited as editor of her sister's 1914 book,The Efficient Kitchen,[9]and the sisters co-wrote a book of economical recipes,The Golden Grains(1932).[10]

From 1905, Boynton was closely associated with actress Maude Adams, usually described as her personal secretary.[11][12]A 1913 profile of Adams inGood Housekeepingelaborated, calling Boynton "a companion who is consulted on every momentous question of costume or farm produce; who is present at the trial of every stage effect and is the companion of every country drive; a true helpmeet in the small things of life as well as in the large."[13]

Personal life

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Boynton and Adams lived and traveled together from 1905 until Boynton's death in 1951,[14]from an apparent heart attack.[15]Their graves are under a shared headstone, on the grounds of theCenacle ConventinRonkonkoma, Long Island.[16]

References

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  1. ^"Perth Amboy".The Central New Jersey Home News.1937-06-06. p. 11.Retrieved2020-06-24– via Newspapers.
  2. ^Boynton, Mary Louise (November 1893)."Humps".The Vassar Miscellany.23:55.
  3. ^Boynton, Mary Louise (December 1892)."Home Life at Vassar".The Homemaker.9:248–250.
  4. ^"Two Sisters Who Own and Edit a Newspaper".The Kansas Weekly Capital.1901-07-05. p. 6.Retrieved2020-06-24– via Newspapers.
  5. ^"Run by Women".The Fall River Daily Herald.1898-01-21. p. 5.Retrieved2020-06-24– via Newspapers.
  6. ^"With Woman at the Helm".Chillicothe Gazette.1902-12-11. p. 3.Retrieved2020-06-24– via Newspapers.
  7. ^"Daily Run by Women".Fourth Estate:10. June 1, 1901.
  8. ^"Two Women Conduct a Daily Newspaper".The Philipsburg Mail.1901-08-02. p. 2.Retrieved2020-06-24– via Newspapers.
  9. ^Child, Georgie Boynton (1914).The Efficient Kitchen: Definite Directions for the Planning, Arranging and Equipping of the Modern Labor-saving Kitchen. A Practical Book For the Home-maker.McBridge, Nast.
  10. ^Boynton, Louise; Child, Georgie Boynton (1932).The Golden Grains.Clark-Sprague Company.
  11. ^Wolf, Rennold (August 1912)."Maude Adams, the Lonesomest Woman on the Stage".The Green Book Magazine.8:214.
  12. ^Patterson, Ada (1907).Maude Adams: A Biography.Meyer bros. & Company. p. 73.ISBN9780795003318.
  13. ^Dean, Frederic (May 1913)."Maude Adams".Good Housekeeping Magazine.56:606.
  14. ^"Memories of Maude".The Central New Jersey Home News.2004-07-08. p. 105.Retrieved2020-06-24– via Newspapers.
  15. ^Fields, Armond (2004-07-08).Maude Adams: Idol of American Theater, 1872-1953.McFarland. p. 301.ISBN978-0-7864-1927-2.
  16. ^McDonald, Joel (2019-02-07)."Maude Adams: Mormon, Lesbian and the Broadway's First Peter Pan".Affirmation: LGBTQ Mormons, Families & Friends.Retrieved2020-06-24.
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