Edith May (poet)

Last updated
Anne Drinker
Annie Drinker.jpg
BornAnne Drinker
3 December 1827
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died23 February 1903 (aged 75)
Edgemont, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Resting place Rockdale, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Pen nameEdith May
Occupationwriter
Relatives Elizabeth Sandwith Drinker
Signature
Annie Drinker (Edith May) signature (cropped).tif

Edith May was the pen name of Anne Drinker (3 December 1827 - 23 February 1903), an American writer of verse and other matter for literary journals and magazines. [1] [2] [3] Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, she summered in Montrose [4] where she resided chiefly during most of her life. [2] [5] In her early days, she was an esteemed member of society in Philadelphia, New York City, and Washington, D.C. [1] For ten years, she was confined against her will in a state lunatic asylum. Persisting on her behalf, and with the passage of improved legislation, she was released and became a recluse.

Contents

Early life and education

Anne (or Anna or Annie) Drinker (or Drinkwater) [6] was born in Philadelphia, December 3, 1827. [4] Her parents were Joseph D. Drinker (1796-1881), a wealthy Philadelphia merchant, and Eleanor/Elinor Skyrin Drinker (died 1877), daughter of John and Ann (Drinker) Skyrin, a land owner. [4] [7]

May was the eldest of eight children, including the siblings Joseph ("Joe"), Charles Frances, Frances, Eleanor. [7] Her lineage dates back to an old English family of the same name. The first of the Drinkers to arrive in the United States came about 15-18 years subsequent to the landing of the Pilgrims on Plymouth Rock. This was Philip Drinker who, with his wife and several children, took up his residence in New England, and immediately identified himself with the life of the Puritans in that section of the country. He became rich and influential. One of his sons became Governor of Cape Colony, and during the early days of the Colonial history preceding the breaking out of the Revolution, others of the name occupied conspicuous positions. The passing of years and the growth of the country brought about divisions in the family. Some remained in New England, others removed to New York state, while the remainder passed over into Pennsylvania. The first of the Drinkers to settle in Philadelphia was John Drinker. With his wife, Ruth Balch, he came there a few years before the founding of the city by William Penn in 1682, when the riverfront was occupied by a few Swedish settlers and by Native Americans. Edward Drinker was born in Philadelphia in 1680. His children married into some of the best families of the period. Among these were the Benezets, of distinguished French ancestry. It was a daughter of this family who was the mother of Edith May. [8]

Her great-grandfather, Henry Drinker, founded the family estate of 500,000 acres (200,000 ha) in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania and neighboring counties of the state. [9] She was also a descendant of Elizabeth Sandwith Drinker, the diarist. [10]

May was reared amid refined surroundings, and as she got older, she received the best education that the private schools of Philadelphia could provide. Following the education in her native city, she was sent abroad, where special attention was given to her musical development and also to the study of German, French and Spanish. When she returned to Philadelphia, she was prepared to make her formal entrance into society. Though she was received into the most exclusive circles, this admiration did not affect May. Thoughtful and studious, she devoted her attention to the poor, needy, and sick of the city. [8]

Career

Beginning in 1848, her literary ambitions were encouraged by Nathaniel Parker Willis, of the Home Journal, while she also wrote for Peterson's Magazine and other periodicals, such as Sartain's Magazine . Using the pen name of "Edith May", the poems she wrote at an early age were considered to have the strength and finish of a more experienced writer. [11] Spofford & Gibbon (1893) described them as being "fellicities of expression, dramatic faculty, and occasional imaginative power". [2] [2]

May published three books: Poems by Edith May (Philadelphia 1854), Tales and Verses for Children (1855), and Katy's Story or Poems and Tales. [2] [6]

Confinement

May's family pressured her to marry. She became attached to a prominent young society man, the editor, Nathaniel Parker Willis, who had been one of her most earnest suitors. This match was broken off after the discovery by May that he was carrying on a relationship with another woman. This event instilled a resolve in May that she would never marry. [8] A subsequent depression led her, in 1874, to check into a private asylum in Philadelphia, seeking rest. May's mother, Elinor, died in 1877 and left all her land to her children. [4]

May's father was forced to mortgage the family home. [8] By one account (Press Sun Bulletin , 1984), the father's greed may have led him to want May to be declared insane and incapable of handling her estate, [9] as, in 1878, a Montrose court declared May to be insane at the request of her father who died in 1881. [4]

By another account (The Philadelphia Inquirer, 1903), William Cooper, a banker and May's guardian, had her committed to a sanitarium on the ground that she was insane. What means he took to accomplish this or what evidence there was of insanity was unknown. Some hinted that it was disappointment in love, while others maintained that back of it was a plot by which Cooper hoped to gain possession of the May's share in the estate. [8]

One night, in 1884, May's brother, Joe, waited for William Cooper on one of the main streets in Montrose. As Cooper passed, Joe fired a shot from a pistol and Cooper fell. Almost instantly, another shot was fired and Joe fell a victim of his own bullet, following which Joe also swallowed poison. Cooper was taken to a hospital, where he died two weeks later, while Joe recovered. [8] At the time, May was residing in the Danville Insane Asylum (now, Danville State Hospital). According to Joe, May's confinement was one of the reasons why he shot Cooper as Cooper did not use his influence years earlier to prevent the incarceration of his sister. The newspapers wrote that the same psychological disorder that affected May's reasoning prompted her brother to shoot Cooper in order to avenge his sister. [12]

In 1885, the asylum's authorities granted May a month's leave of absence, and she was taken to the convalescent's retreat at the Pennsylvania State Lunatic Hospital (now, Harrisburg State Hospital). After her arrival there, she showed no symptoms of insanity, and the leave of absence was extended indefinitely. Persisting on her behalf, and with the passage of improved legislation, May was released from the Pennsylvania State Lunatic Hospital later that year, after being confined for a total of ten years. [1]

Then came Joe's trial on the charge of murder. He boldly asserted his fearlessness of death and said he had avenged his sister and was satisfied. May came at once to her brother's side and spent the greater part of her inheritance to save Joe's life. The jury rendered a verdict of insanity. Joe was sent to an insane asylum and May retired from society, [8] but continued to write poetry, including a poem in 1887 celebrating the centennial of the Montrose historical society. [9]

Death and legacy

Annie Drinker home in Edgemont, Pennsylvania (1903) Annie Drinker home in Edgemont, Pennsylvania (1903).png
Annie Drinker home in Edgemont, Pennsylvania (1903)

In her later years, May possessed sufficient income to enjoy a good life. She became reclusive and died in Edgemont, Pennsylvania in 1903. [4] She was buried at the Episcopal Churchyard in Rockdale, Pennsylvania. [8]

May's portrait was painted by Thomas Sully in 1850. [10]

A play honoring May's life, The Rage of Society, written by playwright Jan Quackenbush, was produced in 1984 in Susquehanna, Pennsylvania. [4]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Conolly</span> English psychiatrist

John Conolly was an English psychiatrist. He published the volume Indications of Insanity in 1830. In 1839, he was appointed resident physician to the Middlesex County Asylum where he introduced the principle of non-restraint into the treatment of the insane, which led to non-restraint became accepted practice throughout England. With colleagues he founded the 'Provincial Medical and Surgical Association', and founded the 'British and Foreign Medical Review, or, A Quarterly Journal of Practical Medicine'.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pliny Earle (physician)</span> American psychiatrist

Pliny Earle II, MD was an American physician, psychiatrist, and poet. He was the son of the inventor Pliny Earle of the Earle family.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thomas Story Kirkbride</span> American psychiatrist (1809–1883)

Thomas Story Kirkbride was a physician, alienist, hospital superintendent for the Institute of the Pennsylvania Hospital, and primary founder of the Association of Medical Superintendents of American Institutions for the Insane (AMSAII), the organizational precursor to the American Psychiatric Association. Along with Benjamin Rush he is considered to be the father of the modern American practice of psychiatry as a specific medical discipline. His directive and organization of institutions for the insane were the gold-standard of clinical care in psychiatry throughout the 19th century.

The Association of Medical Superintendents of American Institutions for the Insane, also known as The Superintendents' Association, was organized in Philadelphia in October, 1844 at a meeting of 13 superintendents, making it the first professional medical specialty organization in the U.S.

<i>Ten Days in a Mad-House</i> American literature by Nellie Bly

Ten Days in a Mad-House is a book by American journalist Nellie Bly. It was initially published as a series of articles for the New York World. Bly later compiled the articles into a book, being published by Norman Munro in New York City in 1887.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alleged Lunatics' Friend Society</span>

The Alleged Lunatics' Friend Society was an advocacy group started by former asylum patients and their supporters in 19th-century Britain. The Society campaigned for greater protection against wrongful confinement or cruel and improper treatment, and for reform of the lunacy laws. The Society is recognised today as a pioneer of the psychiatric survivors movement.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Batty Tuke</span> Scottish psychiatrist

Sir John Batty Tuke PRCPE FRSE LLD was one of the most influential psychiatrists in Scotland in the late nineteenth century, and a Unionist Member of Parliament (MP) from 1900 to 1910. Tuke's career in Edinburgh from 1863 to 1910 spanned a period of significant social and political changes in asylum governance and care in Scotland. Tuke's professional success in public and private practice and his powerful role in several prominent medical societies allowed him to influence his colleagues toward a more physiological understanding of mental illness and its treatment.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lunatic asylum</span> Place for housing the insane, an aspect of history

The lunatic asylum, insane asylum or mental asylum was an institution where people with mental illness were confined. It was an early precursor of the modern psychiatric hospital.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Charles Bucknill</span>

Sir John Charles Bucknill was an English psychiatrist and mental health reformer. He was the father of judge Sir Thomas Townsend Bucknill QC MP.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">L. Forbes Winslow</span> British psychiatrist (1844–1913)

Lyttelton Stewart Forbes Winslow MRCP was a British psychiatrist famous for his involvement in the Jack the Ripper and Georgina Weldon cases during the late Victorian era.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Thomas Arnold (physician)</span> English physician and writer

Thomas Arnold was an English physician and writer on mental illness.

Robert Boyd (1808–1883), was a physician and writer on mental illness, who, in 1870 became president of the Medico-Psychological Association.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Margaret Cleaves</span> American physician

Margaret Abigail Cleaves, M.D., was an American physician and scientific writer. She was a pioneer of electrotherapy and brachytherapy, instructor in Electro-Therapeutics New York Post-Graduate Medical School, President of the Women's Medical Society of New York, a Fellow of the American Electro-Therapeutic Association, a member of the Société Francaise d'Electrothérapie, a Fellow of the New York Academy of Medicine, Editor of Asylum Notes: Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1891–2, a member of the Medical Society of the County of New York, a member of the American Medical Association, and a member of the New York Electrical Society.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edward William Davies</span> Australian politician

Edward William Davies (1855-1904) was elected mayor of Fremantle, Western Australia, in 1901, but was removed two months later on the grounds of insanity.

John Curwen (1821–1901) was Superintendent of the first public mental hospital in Pennsylvania. He personally knew the thirteen founders of the Association of Medical Superintendents of American Institutions of the Insane (AMSAII), now the American Psychiatric Association. He served as secretary-treasurer of the Association for 34 years (1856–1890).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Clarissa Caldwell Lathrop</span> American social reformer and autobiographer

Clarissa Caldwell Lathrop was an American social reformer and autobiographer. Her prominence came from her remarkable experience, being confined and unlawfully imprisoned in the Utica Lunatic Asylum for 26 months, through a plot of a secret enemy to kill her. She eventually managed to communicate with James Bailey Silkman, a lawyer who, like herself, was confined in the same asylum under similar circumstances. He succeeded in obtaining a writ of habeas corpus, and Judge George G. Barnard of the New York Supreme Court pronounced Lathrop sane and unlawfully incarcerated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Helen Taggart Clark</span> American journalist, poet

Helen Taggart Clark was an American columnist, short story writer, and poet. She wrote a weekly column for the Sudbury, Massachusetts News, and was a contributor to Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper, the Christian Union, the Woman's Journal, and the Springfield Republican.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anne Hazen McFarland</span> American physician, medical journal editor

Anne Hazen McFarland was an American physician and medical journal editor who specialized in the treatment of mental illness in women. She criticized the contemporary idea that gynecological disorders caused insanity and nervousness in women.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jennie McCowen</span> American physician, writer, lecturer, medical journal editor, suffragist

Jennie McCowen was an American physician, writer, and medical journal editor. She lectured on and supported woman's suffrage.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arminta Victoria Scott Haensler</span> American physician, lecturer, author (1842–1931)

Arminta Victoria Scott Haensler (1842–1931) was an American physician, lecturer, and author. In Pennsylvania, she was resident physician to the Mission hospital; gynaecologist to the Stockton sanitarium; consulting gynaecologist to the Pennsylvania asylum for the insane; and consulting physician to the Woman's Christian Association. She served with distinction as lecturer to the Woman's Christian Association; and lecturer to the Working Women's Club.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Annie Drinker". Mississippian. 20 October 1885. p. 3. Retrieved 16 January 2021 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Spofford & Gibbon 1893, p. 111.
  3. Shifrin 2017, p. 169.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Treneman, Ann (4 October 1984). "Play recalls troubled life of Montrose's 'mad' poetess". Press and Sun-Bulletin. p. 25. Retrieved 16 January 2021 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  5. Adams 1904, p. 105.
  6. 1 2 Carty 2015, p. 410.
  7. 1 2 Biddle 1893, p. 22.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Once Society Belle a Recluse at Death. Daughter of Distinguished Philadelphia Ancestry Left Scenes of Social Triumphs to End Her Days in Solitude After Dramatic Life". The Philadelphia Inquirer. 2 March 1903. p. 16. Retrieved 16 January 2021 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  9. 1 2 3 "Annie's poetry lives on". Press and Sun-Bulletin. 4 October 1984. p. 30. Retrieved 16 January 2021 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  10. 1 2 "EDITH MAY aka Annie Drinker (b. 1827)". librarycompany.org. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
  11. Read 1849, p. 289.
  12. "The Brother of Edith May". The Boston Globe. 24 June 1884. p. 1. Retrieved 16 January 2021 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg

Attribution

Bibliography