Kate Scott Turner

Kate Scott Turner (March 12, 1831, Cooperstown, New York – 1917) was a friend of Emily Dickinson and a poet herself.[1] She was also known as Kate Anthon.

In September 2012, the Amherst College Archives and Special Collections unveiled this daguerreotype, proposing it to be Dickinson and her friend Kate Scott Turner (ca. 1859); it has not been authenticated.

Overview

Catherine Mary ("Kate") Scott was the daughter of Henry Scott of Cooperstown, New York.[2] She attended the Utica Female Seminary, where in 1848 she met Susan Gilbert, who married Emily Dickinson's brother Austin Dickinson.[3] The women remained friends until Susan's death[4] in 1913.[5]

In 1855, she married Campbell Ladd Turner, who died in 1857 of tuberculosis.[2][4] Turner was acquainted with Emily Dickinson through Susan, and they remained so until the mid-1860s.[3] Turner married for a second time in 1866 to John Hone Anthon, who died eight years later. She died in 1917 in England, having lived most of her life outside of the United States.[2]

Emily Dickinson

She met Emily Dickinson in 1859.[2] From that time until about 1862, Dickinson sent her four poems.[3] One poem was sent with a pair of garters that Dickinson had knitted for her:

When Katie walks, this simple pair accompany her side,
When Katie runs unwearied they follow on the road,
When Katie kneels, their loving hands still clasp her pious knee —
Ah! Katie! Smile at Fortune, with two so knit to thee!

Emily Dickinson[3]
gollark: I shall preinstall a flight program for your inconvenience.
gollark: It should.
gollark: Fine, I'll log on, I have a spare.
gollark: I can bundle some useful neural interface programs if you want.
gollark: It works fine.

References

  1. Rebecca Patterson (1951). The Riddle of Emily Dickinson. Houghton Mifflin.
  2. 'The World Is Not Acquainted With Us': A New Dickinson Daguerreotype?" Amherst College Archives and Special Collections Website. September 6, 2012.
  3. Emily Dickinson (June 1998). The Poems of Emily Dickinson. Harvard University Press. p. 1189. ISBN 978-0-674-67601-5.
  4. Wathira Nganga (September 5, 2012). "Amherst College claims to have rare photograph of Emily Dickinson". Amherst University. Archived from the original on March 23, 2016. Retrieved July 21, 2017.
  5. "Susan Huntington Gilbert Dickinson (1830–1913), sister-in-law". Emily Dickinson Museum. Retrieved July 21, 2017.

Further reading

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