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  1. Maud Howe Elliott (November 9, 1854 – March 19, 1948) was an American novelist, most notable for her Pulitzer prize-winning collaboration with her sisters, Laura E. Richards and Florence Hall, on their mother's biography The Life of Julia Ward Howe (1916).

  2. Maud Howe Elliott was an American writer, artist, political activist, patron of the arts, and philanthropist. She and her sister, Laura E. Richards, shared a Pulitzer Prize for the biography of their mother, The Life of Julia Ward Howe.

  3. Mar 28, 2024 · “Carrying the Torch: Maud Howe Elliott and the American Renaissance,” by Nancy Whipple Grinnell, former curator of the Newport Art Museum, has an apt title. We learn in the book that Elliott carried the torch not only as an early political progressive, but also as an early advocate for the recognition of American artists.

  4. Jan 6, 2020 · Learn about Maud Howe Elliott, a Newporter who was a women's suffrage advocate, author, and Progressive Party member. Explore her papers and legacy at the Newport Historical Society.

  5. Maud Howe Elliott (November 9, 1854 – March 19, 1948) was an American novelist, most notable for her Pulitzer prize -winning collaboration with her sisters, Laura E. Richards and Florence Hall, on their mother's biography The Life of Julia Ward Howe (1916).

  6. Maud Howe Elliott (1854-1948) was a social and political activist, Pulitzer prize-winning author, and founder of the Newport Art Association. She was the daughter of social activists Julia Ward Howe and Samuel Gridley Howe.

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  8. Elliott, Maud Howe (1854–1948) American novelist and historian. Name variations: Maud Howe. Born Maud Howe at the Perkins Institute in Boston, Massachusetts, on November 9, 1854; died at her summer home in Newport, Rhode Island, on March 19, 1948; daughter of Samuel Gridley Howe (founder of the Perkins Institute for the Blind) and Julia Ward ...

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