Brown, Alice (1856–1948)

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Brown, Alice (1856–1948)

American novelist and dramatist. Born in Hampton Falls, New Hampshire, on December 5, 1856; died in Boston, Massachusetts, on June 21, 1948; attended local school and Robinson Seminary in Exeter.

Best known for her analysis of New England characters and consciences in her short stories and novels, Alice Brown also authored biographies of Mercy Otis Warren (1896) and Louise Guiney (1921), some verse, and a book on English travels. In 1913, Winthrop Ames offered a prize of $10,000 to the best play (to be submitted anonymously) by an American playwright. In June 1914, judges Augustus Thomas, Adolph Klauber, and Ames selected Children of Earth, by Alice Brown above nearly 1,700 other manuscripts. In January 1915, Ames produced the play at the Booth Theater in New York.

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Brown, Alice (1856–1948)

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