Farley, Harriet (1813–1907)
Farley, Harriet (1813–1907)
American writer and editor. Born Feb 18, 1813 (some sources cite 1815 or 1817), in Claremont, New Hampshire; died Nov 12, 1907, in New York, NY; dau. of Stephen Farley (Congregational minister and school administrator) and Lucy (Sanders) Farley; attended Atkinson Academy in Atkinson, New Hampshire (where her father was the principal); m. John Intaglio Donlevy (engraver and inventor), 1854 (died 1880); children: Inez Donlevy; (stepdau.) Alice Heighes Donlevy.
Took a job in one of the textile mills in Lowell, Massachusetts (1837); became editor of the Offering (1842), a journal published by and for the "mill girls," which tended to paint a rosy picture of life in the mill; published Shells from the Strand of the Sea of Genius (1847), a collection of homilies, many of which had appeared in the Offering; contributed to Godey's Lady's Book and published a children's book, Happy Nights at Hazel Nook (1853).
See also Women in World History.