Nellie Marie Burns

American poet
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican poet
A.K.A.Ellen Marie Sherman
A.K.A.Ellen Marie Sherman
PlacesUnited States of America
wasWriter Poet
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Female
Birth1850, Waltham, USA
Death16 June 1897Waltham, USA (aged 47 years)
The details

Biography

Nellie Marie Burns, "A woman of the century"

Nellie Marie Burns (ca. 1850 – June 16, 1897) was a 19th-century American actor and poet.

Biography

Ellen Marie Sherman was born and educated in Waltham, Massachusetts, about 1850. She was a daughter of Dr. Newell Sherman, of Waltham, a descendant of Rev. John Sherman and Mary Launce, a grand-daughter of Thomas Darcy, the Earl Rivers. Rev. Sherman had been a Fellow of Harvard. From him were also descended General William Tecumseh Sherman and Hon. John Sherman of Ohio. The family came to the United States from Dedham, Essex, England, in 1642. Her mother's maiden name was Kimball, and she came from the English Brights and Bonds, of Bury St Edmunds.

By her first marriage, she was the mother of George C. Cooper, editor of the Rochester, New York, Union.

For some years, Nellie was on the stage. It was there that she met the actor and comedian, Thomas N. Burns, whom she married in 1878. At the suggestion of her husband, she left the stage a few years after her marriage.

Burns had been an actress, and she left the stage after marriage, at the suggestion of her husband. They made their summer home in Kittery Point, Maine. She wrote much from 1886 and prepared her manuscript for publication in book form. She was a contributor to The Boston Globe, the Portsmouth Times, the Waltham Tribune, Biddeford Journal, and other journals.

She died June 16, 1897 (aged 49–50) at Kittery Point, and was buried at Grove Hill Cemetery in Waltham.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 29 Feb 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.