Banning, Margaret Culkin (1891–1982)
Banning, Margaret Culkin (1891–1982)
American author. Born Margaret Culkin in Buffalo, Minnesota, on March 18, 1891; died on January 4, 1982, in Tryon, North Carolina; daughter of William Edgar Culkin and Hannah Alice (Young) Culkin; graduated Vassar College. B.A., 1912; certificate from Chicago School of Civics and Philanthropy, 1913; research fellow of the Russell Sage Foundation; married Archibald Tanner Banning, in 1914; children: two daughters and two sons.
Margaret Culkin Banning wrote over 40 books and 400 short stories. Her works, consisting chiefly of light fiction, were widely read. Her novels, which often dealt with social issues, included Too Young to Marry (1938), Clever Sister (1947), Give Us Our Years (1949), Fallen Away (1951), and The Vine and the Olive. Among her nonfictional writings are Women for Defense (1942), Letters from England (1943), and, with Mabel Louise Culkin, Conduct Yourself Accordingly (1944) and Salud: A South American Journal.