Annette Lucile Noble (July 12, 1844 – November 27, 1932) was an American novelist and travel writer.
Annette Lucile Noble was born on July 12, 1844, in
Albion, New York.[1] She was the daughter of Dr. William Noble, a physician, and Amelia Stiles Denio, a descendant of
Ezra Stiles.[2] She was educated at
Phipps Union Seminary in Albion. Noble was a prolific author, and her most popular work was the novel Uncle Jack’s Executors (1880).[3] She was a frequent traveler and was said to have crossed the
Atlantic Ocean forty times.[4]
Annette Lucile Noble died on November 27, 1932, in Albion.[3]
Annette Lucile Noble (July 12, 1844 – November 27, 1932) was an American novelist and travel writer.
Annette Lucile Noble was born on July 12, 1844, in
Albion, New York.[1] She was the daughter of Dr. William Noble, a physician, and Amelia Stiles Denio, a descendant of
Ezra Stiles.[2] She was educated at
Phipps Union Seminary in Albion. Noble was a prolific author, and her most popular work was the novel Uncle Jack’s Executors (1880).[3] She was a frequent traveler and was said to have crossed the
Atlantic Ocean forty times.[4]
Annette Lucile Noble died on November 27, 1932, in Albion.[3]