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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Scott_JoplinScott Joplin - Wikipedia

    In June 1904, Joplin married Freddie Alexander of Little Rock, Arkansas, the young woman to whom he had dedicated "The Chrysanthemum". She died on September 10, 1904, of complications resulting from a cold, ten weeks after their wedding. [44] "

  2. There, he met Freddie Alexander, a 19-year-old woman, and was so taken with her that he dedicated The Chrysanthemum to her. The music was published by Stark in the early spring of 1904, and in April, Joplin returned to Sedalia, where he distributed copies and gave several concerts.

  3. In June 1904, Joplin married Freddie Alexander. She died on September 10, 1904, ten weeks after their wedding, of complications resulting from a cold. In 1909, he married Lottie Stokes, remaining with her until his death in 1917.

  4. Oct 8, 2020 · Then, on a visit to family in Arkansas, he met the 19-year-old Freddie Alexander. They fell in love and he dedicated several pieces to her, among them, The Chrysanthemum , subtitled ‘An African-American Intermezzo’.

  5. Jun 16, 2023 · He married his second wife, Freddie Alexander, in Little Rock (Pulaski County) on June 14, 1904, but she died of pneumonia ten weeks later. Finding solace in his work, Joplin went to New York City, where Stark had opened a new piano store and publishing company.

  6. Freddie Alexander's influence on Scott Joplin lasted far beyond her short lifetime.

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  8. Perhaps his dearest love, Freddie Alexander, died at age twenty of complications resulting from a cold, just two months after their wedding. The first work copyrighted after Freddie's death, Bethena (1905), is a very sad, musically complex ragtime waltz.

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