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"Margaret Sidney," as hostess
reigns well, and exhibits one secret of her success in the writing
of books...she puts aside her own personality and throws her
whole heart into whatever interests those around her. It is impossible
to forget this when talking to her, and the delightful atmosphere...was
due largely to this influence.
Boston Evening
Transcript, 1887
Harriett
M. Stone was born on June 22, 1844 in New Haven, Connecticut.
Although her life spanned more than half of the 19th century,
we know little about her until the 1880s when her "Five
Little Peppers and How They Grew" appeared in Wide Awake
and she met and married the publisher of that magazine, Daniel
Lothrop. Together they bought Hawthorne's home, The Wayside in
Concord, MA. From that time on, her boundless energy and sunny
disposition can be seen in all that she undertook - raising her
daughter Margaret (born at The Wayside in 1884), writing for
children (under the pen name Margaret Sidney), founding the National
Society, Children of the American Revolution in 1895, saving
historic houses and celebrating with grand fetes the rich heritage
of The Wayside and the people who lived there. From 1881 to 1892
she and Daniel Lothrop worked together. After his death, Harriett
pursued their goals alone.
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Writing at The Wayside
Harriett
Lothrop greatly admired Nathaniel Hawthorne's writing and she
and Daniel bought The Wayside because it had been his home. Her
own written works, however, were of a very different stamp. Her
children's stories did not grow out of her actual childhood like
Louisa May Alcott's or from the depths of her heart and soul
as did Hawthorne's; they were products of her vivid imagination.
Using the penname Margaret Sidney, she brought forth the popular
adventures of "The Little Peppers", a family of five
children prone to mischief to be sure, but most responsive to
kindness and good deeds. Eleven "Pepper" books were
written at The Wayside - the best known were The Five Little
Peppers Midway and The Five Little Peppers Grown Up.
Today,
at The Wayside, you can still see Harriett's favorite rocking
chair, where she thought up many of her children's stories.
Harriett's love of Concord can be seen in two books and four
houses. A Little Maid of Concord Town pays tribute to
Concord's special role in the American Revolution, while Old
Concord Her Hiways and Byways captures the town's charm at
the end of the 19th century.
Harriett gave her heart to Concord not only in her written words,
but by saving The Wayside, the Alcotts' Orchard House (next to
The Wayside), the "Grapevine Cottage" (where the Concord
grape was first produced), and the "Old Tolman House"
on Monument Square. All these homes and the original grapevine
still remain in Concord today thanks to Harriett's hard work.
For
those people who visit The Wayside, Harriett's greatest legacy
was the love of children, of history, of Concord and The Wayside
that she instilled in her daughter, Margaret. Margaret Lothrop,
a Concord native and last private owner of The Wayside, devoted
forty years of her life to saving her home, opening it for tours
and gathering every scrap of information she could about the
house's history. In 1940, Margaret published her book that established
The Wayside as the home of authors. The Wayside: Home of Authors
- it still remains.
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