Jennie Terrill Ruprecht | |
---|---|
![]() Portrait from A Woman of the Century | |
Born | Jane Elizabeth Terrill May 23, 1839 Liverpool Township, Medina County, Ohio, U.S. |
Died | January 19, 1916 Cleveland, Ohio, U.S. |
Pen name | Jenny Terrill Ruprecht |
Occupation | writer |
Genre |
|
Spouse | Charles Ruprecht |
Jane Elizabeth Terrill Ruprecht (pen name, Jenny Terrill Ruprecht; nickname, Jennie Terrill Ruprecht; May 23, 1839 – January 19, 1916) was an American writer. She published poems, sketches, and juvenile stories in magazines and newspapers.[1] Her poems were widely copied. She also did a large amount of work for children, consisting of poems, stories, and articles.[2]
Jane Elizabeth Terrill[3] was born in Liverpool Township, Medina County, Ohio, May 23, 1839.[4][a] She was of New England parentage, both of her parents, Nelson Terrill (1798-1862) and Elizabeth (née) Prindle (1798-1867) having been born in Vermont.[4][5] Many of her ancestors fought in the Revolutionary War.[2]
She received limited encouragement to cultivate her early talent for writing as her parents feared that writing, along with the ordinary routine of study, would prove too great a strain on their child's sensitivities.[1] Ruprecht's childhood, with the exception of two or three years, was spent in the countryside. For this reason, many of her poems deal with nature.[2]
After a brief experience as a school teacher, Terrill married Charles Ruprecht,[6] in Cuyahoga, Ohio, on June 20, 1861.[5] He was a native of Baden, Germany. For many years, Ruprecht's home was in Cleveland, Ohio.[1]
While she contributed largely to the local press, many of Ruprecht's poems and sketches appeared in eastern and other magazines and papers, as well as in many religious weeklies.[2] Some of her poems were published under a pseudonym. She wrote numerous juvenile stories and poems, as well as a volume entitled Home Rhymes.[1]
Ruprecht was a charter member of the Cleveland Woman's Press Association and a member of the Ohio Woman's Press Association. She was also a member of the Cleveland Sorosis, and other literary and social organizations.[1]
For many years, Ruprecht was engaged in home missionary work, particularly in areas of Cleveland where emigrants lived. Many emigrant children became members of the Sunday school, organized and put under her supervision while she was superintendent.[1]
Jenny Terrill Ruprecht died in Cleveland, Ohio, on January 19, 1916.[4]