Kathrene Pinkerton

Kathrene Pinkerton (June 9, 1887 – September 6, 1967) was both a fiction and non fiction writer whose writings focused on life in the northern wilderness of Canada.[1]

Life

Pinkerton was born Kathrene Sutherland Gedney on June 9, 1887 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Later, she went on to earn a BA at the University of Wisconsin in 1909.[2] Upon graduating, Pinkerton went on to conduct social work, focusing on tuberculosis outbreaks in rural Wisconsin.[1] On March 24, 1911, she would marry Robert E. Pinkerton, also a writer. In 1912, the couple moved to the wilderness of northern Ontario. There, they built their own cabin and learned how to survive in a region where the nearest village was eight miles away and could only be reached by canoe in summer and by dogsled in winter.[2] There the couple focused on nonfiction writings, making a decent living submitting them to wilderness magazines. They remained there for some time, only emerging from the back country briefly for the birth of their daughter, Bobs Pinkerton. They returned to their cabin seven weeks after her birth.[2]

In 1917, the family moved to Colorado and later California before choosing to live on a fifty-foot boat off of the British Columbian and Alaskan coasts from 1924–1931.[1] Originally only intending to live there three months, the family spent those seven years with Kathrene as the mate, Robert as the skipper, and daughter Bobs as the quartermaster when on vacation from boarding school.[3] It was during this time that Kathrene focused on her writing, having started in 1922.

Pinkerton died on September 6, 1967 at the New York Infirmary after suffering from cancer. She was 80 years old.[1]

Writing career

Pinkerton wrote in many different mediums of writing, including newspaper and magazine articles, fictional works, and short stories, but her non-fiction works are what she is most known for. Some of her most famous autobiographical books are Wilderness Wife (1939), Three's a Crew (1940), and Two Ends to Our Shoestring (1941).[4] She chose to write from and about her experiences, as much of her content matter revolved around the wilderness that she and her family lived in and explored.

Works

  • Wilderness Wife (1939)[4]
  • Three's a Crew (1940)[4]
  • Adventure North (1940)[4]
  • Two Ends to Our Shoestring (1941)[1]
  • Fox Island (1942)[4]
  • Farther North (1944)[4]
  • Bright With Silver (1947)[4]
  • Hidden Harbor (1950)[4]
  • Year of Enchantment (1950)[4]
  • Peddler's Crew (1954)[4]
  • Steer North! (1962)[4]
gollark: Oh, never mind, this graph is of APPLICATIONS per year, I may still be right.
gollark: Ah.
gollark: But Turkey having 5x more with ~1.2x the population is implausible.
gollark: Oh, I was wrong (not even within an order of magnitude): it is in fact 0.5 million people a year here who go to university.
gollark: So... every year, 3% of your population sits university exams? That seems... kind of high.

References

  1. "Kathrene pinkerton dies at 80; wrote about wilderness life". New York Times. Sep 7, 1967.
  2. "Archives West: Robert E. Pinkerton and Kathrene Pinkerton papers, 1911–1967". archiveswest.orbiscascade.org. Retrieved 2017-11-15.
  3. "Three who sailed pacific waters". New York Times. Feb 25, 1940.
  4. "Authors clippings : "B" [surname] folder". www.worldcat.org. Retrieved 2017-11-17.
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