Jessie Wilson Manning

Jessie Wilson Manning (October 26, 1855 – ?) was an American author and lecturer. Born in Iowa in 1855, she was an active worker and eloquent speaker on literary subjects and for the cause of temperance.[1]

Jessie Wilson Manning
BornJessie Wilson
October 26, 1855
Mount Pleasant, Iowa, U.S.
Occupationauthor, lecturer
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Alma materIowa Wesleyan University
Notable worksThe passion of life
Spouse
Eli Manning
(
m. 1889)

Early years and education

Jessie Wilson was born in Mount Pleasant, Iowa, October 26, 1855.[1] She spent her childhood and received her education in Mount Pleasant. She graduated from the Iowa Wesleyan University, in 1874.[2]

Career

Manning entered the held of platform work immediately after graduation, and was for five years a speaker on literary subjects and for the cause of temperance. In the fall of 1889, she married Eli Manning, of Chariton, Iowa, prominent in business and political circles in that State. Since her marriage, Manning devoted herself to her home and family of three sons. Her first book, published in 1887, titled Passion of Life, was her most ambitious work and achieved a moderate success.[2] She wrote a large number of articles for the Iowa press, among them a series of literary criticism, and poems, and essays for magazines, besides stories under a pen-name. Her Chariton home was a social and literary center. [3]

Selected works

  • The Passion of Life, 1867
gollark: Intel actually *only* have open-source drivers, probably because their GPUs are mostly bad anyway and nobody buys them individually, so they can hardly get much out of artificial segmentation like Nvidia.
gollark: AMD and Intel are very good with open source drivers. Nvidia is pure evil, which is why Torvalds famously middle-fingered them.
gollark: You do, however, get nice things like package management, scripting which is actually good, that kind of thing.
gollark: Outside of servers, though, I don't think there's *generally* a huge performance advantage.
gollark: Well, you mostly avoid the random Windows background services messing things up.

References

Bibliography

  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Logan, Mrs. John A. (1912). The Part Taken by Women in American History (Public domain ed.). Perry-Nalle publishing Company. p. 670.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Willard, Frances Elizabeth; Livermore, Mary Ashton Rice (1893). A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in All Walks of Life (Public domain ed.). Moulton. p. 491.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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