Harriet Lincoln Coolidge
Harriet Lincoln Coolidge | |
|---|---|
Photo in A Woman of the Century | |
| Born | Harriet Abbott Lincoln 1849 Boston, Massachusetts, U.S. |
| Died | May 17/18, 1902 |
| Occupation | Author, philanthropist, reformer |
| Spouse |
George Austin Coolidge
(m. 1872) |
| Children | 4 |
| Relatives | Frederic W. Lincoln (father) |
Harriet Abbott Coolidge (née Lincoln; 1849 - May 17/18, 1902) was an American philanthropist, author and reformer. She did much in the way of instructing young mothers in the care and clothing of infants, and furthered the cause to improve the condition of infants in foundling hospitals. She contributed a variety of articles on kindergarten matters to the daily press, and while living in Washington, D.C., she gave a series of "nursery talks" for mothers at her home, where she fitted up a model nursery. Coolidge was the editor of Trained Motherhood, as well as the author of In the Story Land, Kindergarten Stories, Talks to Mothers, The Model Nursery, and What a Young Girl Ought to Know. She was one of the original signers of the Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution, and was an active member of four charity organizations in Washington.