Carrie Renfrew

American writer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican writer
PlacesUnited States of America
wasWriter
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Female
Birth1858
Death6 July 1948 (aged 90 years)
The details

Biography

Carolyn "Carrie" Renfrew (c. 1858 – July 6, 1948) was a well-regarded female author from Hastings, Nebraska in the United States. Renfrew was born in Marseilles, Illinois about 1858 to Silvester and Mercy Clark Renfrew, and moved to Nebraska with her family as a child. She began contributing to publications including the Chicago Inter Ocean in 1885. Her works include Songs of Hope (book of poems 1923); The Last of the Strozzi and The Lure (poetic plays 1923), Footprints Across the Prairie (novel, 1930), My Garden (poem collection, 1933), and John Golding's Vision (1938). Though not broadly known, Renfrew was one of the most prominent persons from Hastings, being listed as a resident of the town in the 1930s Federal Writers' Project volume on Nebraska, and being the subject of biographical entries in the 1932 volume Nebraskana, and the 1890s American Women compilation, to which she contributed entries on Nebraska citizens. Renfrew died in Hastings on July 6, 1948, survived by her brother Herman and sister Jennie Babcock.

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