Woodrow, Nancy Mann Waddel (c. 1866–1935)
Woodrow, Nancy Mann Waddel (c. 1866–1935)
American writer. Name variations: Mrs. Wilson Woodrow, Jane Wade. Born Nancy Mann Waddle (later changed the spelling to "Waddel"), c. 1866 in Chillicothe, OH; died Sept 7, 1935, in New York, NY; dau. of William (physician) and Jane S. (McCoy) Waddle; sister of Charles Carey Waddell (mystery writer), Eleanor Waddel (writer and editor of Vogue Magazine); m. James Wilson Woodrow (prospector and cousin of President Woodrow Wilson), Aug 4, 1897 (sep. c. 1900).
Prolific contributor of short stories and articles to magazines such as McClure's, Cosmopolitan, Life, Harper's, American, and Good Housekeeping, wrote in a masculine voice, leading many editors to believe she was male using a female pseudonym; her style set her apart from sentimental female novelists and earnest feminists of the day; wrote 1 play and 13 novels, including The New Missioner (1907), The Silver Butterfly (1908), and The Black Pearl (1912); published series of satires of popular novels in Life (1905–06).