Lela Cole Kitson
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Lela Margaret Cole Kitson (May 25, 1891 in Hill City, South Dakota – November 25, 1970 in El Paso, Texas) was a
freelance ''Freelance'' (sometimes spelled ''free-lance'' or ''free lance''), ''freelancer'', or ''freelance worker'', are terms commonly used for a person who is self-employed and not necessarily committed to a particular employer long-term. Freelance w ...
writer of primarily western romances from 1920 to 1955.


Newspapers

Later she worked in the newspaper and radio industries in El Paso, Texas. Besides her own name, Kitson wrote under the
pen name A pen name, also called a ''nom de plume'' or a literary double, is a pseudonym (or, in some cases, a variant form of a real name) adopted by an author and printed on the title page or by-line of their works in place of their real name. A pen na ...
s Lupe Loya, Elsie Kay, Cole Kitson, Shirley Manners and Susan Cole. Her newspaper career included: ''The Tucson Star'' 1912–14; ''The Los Angeles Times'' 1922–? as feature writer; ''The El Paso Herald Post'' 1943–50 as Woman's Page Editor and the ''Hudsbeth County News'' 1964–1970 as "The Observer", a political commentary column.


History

She was born to David Cole of New York and Maude Carr of Wisconsin, and was the eldest and only daughter of six children. Her father's upward move in the mining plant design and reduction machinery design led the family in 1896 to Chicago, Illinois, in 1900 to Aspen, Colorado, and in 1902 to Cananea, Mexico. Higher education was not available in Cananea so she was sent to the Marlborough School for Girls located in Los Angeles, where other Cole family members resided, including her great-granduncle
U.S. Senator The United States Senate is the upper chamber of the United States Congress, with the House of Representatives being the lower chamber. Together they compose the national bicameral legislature of the United States. The composition and powe ...
Cornelius Cole Cornelius Cole (September 17, 1822 – November 3, 1924) was an American politician who served a single term in the United States House of Representatives as a Republican Party (United States), Republican representing California from 1863 to 18 ...
. Following her graduation from Marlborough and a 1911 trip to Japan with the Mining Association, she joined her family in Tucson, Arizona in 1912, working for the '' Tucson Star Newspaper'' as Society Editor. In 1914 she married Howard Waldo Kitson of New York City, a 1909 Columbia College graduate specializing in mining and geology, in Morenci, Arizona where he was employed. Following the death of their son in late 1917, the Kitsons moved to New York City, where they boarded with his mother, silent film actress
May Kitson May Kitson (born Mary Ann Morrell, October 29, 1866 – June 17, 1945), was a British-born American silent film character actor active between 1917 and 1925. Family Kitson was born in London, England, to Tom and Elizabeth (née Chandler) Morrel ...
. In early 1918 Mrs. Kitson joined the Author's League of America. For the birth of their daughter she removed to El Paso where her parents had moved in 1917. Between 1919 and the 1931 suicide of her husband Waldo in Long Beach, the Kitsons lived in Arizona and California. Whenever Waldo was out in the field, Lela and their daughter temporarily moved back to El Paso, Texas where they resided with her parents. In 1921 Street & Smith was the first publisher of her short romantic stories written under Lupe Loya. Their publication was ''Western Story Magazine''. Between 1927 and 1931 she also wrote under the name Elsie Kay. Lela wrote advice stories in ''Picture Play'', also a Street & Smith publication. In 1926 The Clayton Magazines Inc. added Lela to their stable of writers. As Lupe Loya, her romantic tales were published in ''Ranch Romances'', ''Western Love Stories'' and ''Ranchland Love Stories''. In 1933 Warner Publishing Inc took over Street & Smith and continued publishing Lupe Loya stories in RANCH ROMANCES. More than twice her stories were featured on the magazine cover. In the 40s and 50s her pseudonym was Shirley Manners and her publisher was Standard Magazines Inc, "Thrilling Love". Lela also wrote freelance for the '' Los Angeles Times'' and other publications. In 1943 Lela joined the
El Paso Herald-Post The ''El Paso Herald-Post'' was an afternoon daily newspaper in El Paso, Texas, USA. It was the successor to the El Paso Herald, first published in 1881, and the El Paso Post, founded by the E. W. Scripps Company in 1922. The papers merged in 19 ...
a Scripps-Howard News publication as the Woman's Page Editor, a position she held until 1950. She then began a radio show "Woman to Woman" on KTSM El Paso Texas, a CBS affiliate. In 1964, under the pen name "The Observer", Lela wrote a political column for the '' Hudsbeth County News'', a bi-monthly newspaper published in
Dell City, Texas Dell City is a city in Hudspeth County, Texas. The population was 365 at the time of the 2010 census, down from 413 at the time of the 2000 census. It is near the former location of Paulville, a failed Ron Paul-inspired Libertarian cooperativ ...
, which she continued until her death.


Selected works

* Loya, Lupe; pseudonym of Lela Cole Kitson, (1891–1970) (chron.) * Archibald Tries Life in the Open, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' May 6, 1922 * Cactus Turns the Other Cheek, (ss) ''The Live Wire'' June 1925 * Clementine, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' April 16, 1921 * Cosey Corner Changes Cooks, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' February 17, 1923 * Desert Vistas, (ar) ''Western Story Magazine'' July 16, 1921 * The Dog That Isn’t a Dog, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' October 1, 1921 * Has the Coon Butte Mystery Been Solved?, (ar) ''Western Story Magazine'' September 16, 1922 * Joe’s Pets, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' November 29, 1924 * Peace on Earth, (nv) ''Ranch Romances'' December 3, 1932 * Puncher vs. Poet, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' June 24, 1922 * Rio Grande Romance, (ss) ''Ranch Romances'' April 2, 1941 * The Rodeo at El Paso, (ar) ''Western Story Magazine'' July 9, 1921 * The Sea in the Desert, (ar) ''Western Story Magazine'' October 29, 1921 * Temperamental Tillie, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' October 21, 1922 * Uncle Caleb Dodges Matrimony, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' September 3, 1921 * The White Chink, (ss) ''Western Story Magazine'' December 23, 1922 * Will Big Game Come Back?, (ar) ''Western Story Magazine'' September 24, 1921


References

*''Arizona Record Newspaper'', Globe, Arizona May 7, 1922 "Arizona Girl Pens Unique Version of Tenderfoot Guest" *''The Scripps-Howard News Company Magazine'' Vol 2 Number 4 January 1948, page 7 "El Paso Herald-Post, Lela Cole Kitson" *''Torture Trek'', Johnson, Ryerson, Barricade Books Inc., New York 1995 pages 6, 12 *Street & Smith 79–89 Seventh Ave, New York City, New York *Clayton Magazines Inc 155 East 44th Street, New York City, New York *Warner Publishing Inc. 578 Madison Ave, New York City, New York
''Time''


External links



{{DEFAULTSORT:Kitson, Lela Margaret Cole 1891 births 1970 deaths American romantic fiction writers American women novelists American women short story writers American women journalists 20th-century American novelists American Western (genre) novelists Women romantic fiction writers 20th-century American women writers 20th-century American short story writers 20th-century American non-fiction writers People from Hill City, South Dakota