Clarke, Mary Bayard (1827–1886)
Clarke, Mary Bayard (1827–1886)
American author and editor. Name variations: (pseudonyms) Tenella; Stuart Leigh. Born Mary Bayard Devereux, May 13, 1827, in Raleigh, North Carolina; died Mar30, 1886, in New Bern, North Carolina; dau. of Thomas PollokDevereux (planter and lawyer) and Catharine Anne (Johnson) Devereux(died 1836); 1st cousin of Lillie Devereux Blake (writer and suffragist); m. Capt. William John Clarke (veteran of Mexican War and lawyer), April 6, 1848; children: Francis Devereux Clarke, William Edwards Clarke, Thomas Pollok Clarke, and Mary D. Clarke.
Edited 2-vol. Wood-Notes; or Carolina Carols (1854), the 1st anthology of NC verse; published patriotic poems during Civil War in Southern Illustrated News; after war, published fiction and other prose under pseudonym "Stuart Leigh"; served as assistant editor of Southern Field and Fireside and as contributor to The Old Guard and The Land We Love; known for promoting literary culture of NC. Other works include Mosses from a Rolling Stone (verse, 1866) and Clytie and Zenobia (narrative poem, 1871).