Susanna Anthony
Susanna Anthony (October 25, 1726 – June 23, 1791) was an American diarist.
Biography
Born in Newport, Rhode Island as the youngest daughter of a goldsmith, she was raised as a Quaker but converted to a Congregationalist in the midst of the First Great Awakening in 1741. Anthony never married and lived an uneventful life but her diary chronicles a complicated spiritual existence.
Career
She penned over a thousand pages of diary entries which were excerpted by pastor Samuel Hopkins for his 1796 book The Life and Character of Miss Susanna Anthony. She kept a daily account of her life until 1769 (or none following that date were preserved by the time of Hopkins' book) but of those only a single volume (covering November 1, 1748 to May 5, 1751) currently survives, owned by the Connecticut Historical Society. The most notable highlight excerpted by Hopkins was the account of her 1741 conversion written years later at age 28. Some of her many letters to Hopkins and others, most frequently her friend Sarah Osborn, were collected as Familiar Letters in 1807.
References
- Donovan, Ellen Butler. "Susanna Anthony." Mulford, Carla, Vietto, Angela, and Winans, Amy E., American women prose writers to 1820, Dictionary of Literary Biography vol. 200, Gale, 1999.
External links
- The life and character of Miss Susanna Anthony at Google Books
- Familiar Letters at Google Books
- "Anthony, Susanna". Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. 1900.