Augusta Huiell Seaman

Augusta Huiell Seaman (April 3, 1879 – June 5, 1950) was an American author of children's literature.

Augusta Huiell Seaman was born Augusta Curtiss Huiell in New York City, on April 3, 1879, the daughter of the bookkeeper John Valentine Huiell and his third wife, Anna Curtiss. Augusta's mother died in 1888.

She graduated from Normal College (later renamed Hunter College) in New York City in 1900 and went on to teach elementary school. She married Robert Seaman in 1906. Following her marriage, she devoted her time to writing children's books.

Her only child, Helen Roberta (Bobbie) was born in 1915. Her husband Robert died in 1927. In 1928 she married her second husband, Francis Parkman Freeman, foreman of the Phipps estate in Island Beach, New Jersey (now part of Berkeley Township, the setting for several of her later books).[1] While living in Island Beach, Augusta held various offices in the local government, including Borough clerk, Tax Collector, and Borough Registrar.[2]

Books

A few of Seaman's books have been reprinted, but many remain out of print. The rarest of her books are much sought after by collectors. Several of her novels were translated into Norwegian, Danish, and French.

gollark: Sure, it's trivial for humans, but something something Moravec's paradox.
gollark: Because OCR is actually a Hard Problemâ„¢, presumably.
gollark: You can either use Tesseract (bad), or some accursed neural network things which are available now, which consume all resources and have the usual ML dependency nightmares.
gollark: Good OCR is hard then.
gollark: But OCRing things locally is hard.

References


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