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| You are in: Museum of History >> Hall of North and South Americans >> Margaret Maxwell Martin | |
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MARTIN, Margaret Maxwell, author, born in Dumfries, Scotland, 12 July, 1807. She was brought to the United States in 1815. Her parents ultimately settled in Columbia, South Carolina, where she received her education, and married in 1836 the Reverend William Martin. For more than seventeen years she taught a female seminary in Columbia. She is the author of " Day-Spring, or Light to them that Sit in Darkness" (Nashville, 1854) ; "Sabbath-School Offering," a collection of poems and tales (1854); "Christianity in Earnest";" Heroines of Early Methodism," conjointly with her husband (1858) ; "Religious Poems" (1858) ; "Flowers and Fruits, or Poems for Young People"; and "Scenes and Scenery of South Carolina" (1869).
Samuel
Huntington
First President of the
United States of America
in Congress Assembled
March 1, 1781 to July 6, 1781
President Who? Forgotten
Founders Part II Unauthorized Site:
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