Charlotte Reeve Conover | |
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Born | Charlotte Reeve June 14, 1855 Dayton, Ohio |
Died | September 23, 1940 | (aged 85)
Resting place | Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum |
Genre | History |
Charlotte Reeve Conover (June 14, 1855 – September 23, 1940) was an American author, lecturer, political activist, educator, and " Dayton's historian". [1] [2]
Conover was born to physician Dr. John Charles and Emma Barlow Reeve on June 14, 1855. [1] She attended Dayton Central High School, Cooper Seminary, and the University of Geneva. [1]
Conover wrote books about Dayton history and articles for Ladies' Home Journal, Harper's and The Atlantic. She wrote a regular column called "Mrs. Conover's Corner" for the Dayton Daily News [1] and served as editor of the Women's Page for four years. [3] Her four-volume history Dayton and Montgomery County was in 1965 considered "the most authentic public record of Dayton and its pioneer citizens." [1] She was noted for her "pioneering studies" of area history. [3]
In her later years she lost her eyesight but continued to write columns for the Dayton Daily News; friends visited to help her read, and the paper's owner and editor, Governor Cox, never knew that she was blind. [1]
In 1901, Conover martialled the Young Women's League of Dayton to take over the publication of the Dayton Daily News – known as "The Day The Women Got Out The News" – on March 30, 1901, as a fundraiser for the organization. [4] Conover was a leader of the Woman's Suffrage Party of Montgomery County. In The Importance for Women to have Suffrage: An Address before the Woman Suffrage Association she spoke of the importance of suffrage and equality of the sexes to the country's future. [2] Conover was a founder of the Dayton Woman's Literary Club and served as its fourth president, from 1895 to 1897. [1] She encouraged other writers, among them fellow Daytonian Paul Laurence Dunbar. [3]
In 1932, one of her lectures, Ramblings of an Ancient Daytonian, was reprinted in its entirety in the Dayton Daily News. [3]
The Dayton Daily News in 1940 called her "Dayton's foremost historian." [5] This obituary appeared on the front pages of the Dayton Daily News [6] and the Dayton Herald, [7] and on the editorial page of the Dayton Journal. [8] NCR chairman of the board E. A. Deeds called her "perhaps Dayton's most outstanding citizen." [5]
Conover married lawyer Frank K. Conover on October 14, 1879. [1] [9] They had four children, [1] Elizabeth Dickson, John Charles Reeve, Wilbur Dickson, and Charlotte Mary. [2]
Conover was inducted into the Dayton Walk of Fame in 2007. Paul Laurence Dunbar dedicated his Lyrics of Sunshine and Shadow to her. [1] She is listed in Woman's Who's Who of America 1914–1915.
Charlotte Reeve Conover | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Born | Charlotte Reeve June 14, 1855 Dayton, Ohio |
Died | September 23, 1940 | (aged 85)
Resting place | Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum |
Genre | History |
Charlotte Reeve Conover (June 14, 1855 – September 23, 1940) was an American author, lecturer, political activist, educator, and " Dayton's historian". [1] [2]
Conover was born to physician Dr. John Charles and Emma Barlow Reeve on June 14, 1855. [1] She attended Dayton Central High School, Cooper Seminary, and the University of Geneva. [1]
Conover wrote books about Dayton history and articles for Ladies' Home Journal, Harper's and The Atlantic. She wrote a regular column called "Mrs. Conover's Corner" for the Dayton Daily News [1] and served as editor of the Women's Page for four years. [3] Her four-volume history Dayton and Montgomery County was in 1965 considered "the most authentic public record of Dayton and its pioneer citizens." [1] She was noted for her "pioneering studies" of area history. [3]
In her later years she lost her eyesight but continued to write columns for the Dayton Daily News; friends visited to help her read, and the paper's owner and editor, Governor Cox, never knew that she was blind. [1]
In 1901, Conover martialled the Young Women's League of Dayton to take over the publication of the Dayton Daily News – known as "The Day The Women Got Out The News" – on March 30, 1901, as a fundraiser for the organization. [4] Conover was a leader of the Woman's Suffrage Party of Montgomery County. In The Importance for Women to have Suffrage: An Address before the Woman Suffrage Association she spoke of the importance of suffrage and equality of the sexes to the country's future. [2] Conover was a founder of the Dayton Woman's Literary Club and served as its fourth president, from 1895 to 1897. [1] She encouraged other writers, among them fellow Daytonian Paul Laurence Dunbar. [3]
In 1932, one of her lectures, Ramblings of an Ancient Daytonian, was reprinted in its entirety in the Dayton Daily News. [3]
The Dayton Daily News in 1940 called her "Dayton's foremost historian." [5] This obituary appeared on the front pages of the Dayton Daily News [6] and the Dayton Herald, [7] and on the editorial page of the Dayton Journal. [8] NCR chairman of the board E. A. Deeds called her "perhaps Dayton's most outstanding citizen." [5]
Conover married lawyer Frank K. Conover on October 14, 1879. [1] [9] They had four children, [1] Elizabeth Dickson, John Charles Reeve, Wilbur Dickson, and Charlotte Mary. [2]
Conover was inducted into the Dayton Walk of Fame in 2007. Paul Laurence Dunbar dedicated his Lyrics of Sunshine and Shadow to her. [1] She is listed in Woman's Who's Who of America 1914–1915.