Mary Simmerson Cunningham Logan
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Mary Simmerson Cunningham Logan (née Mary Simmerson Cunningham;
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 ...
, Mrs. John A. Logan; August 15, 1838February 22, 1923) was an American writer and editor from Missouri.


Early years and education

It was near the present village of Sturgeon, Missouri then known as Petersburg, in Boone County, Missouri, that Mary Simmerson Cunningham was born, on August 15, 1838. Her American ancestry went back to an Irish settler of Virginia and a French pioneer of Louisiana. Her great-grandfather, Robert Cunningham, of Virginia, was a soldier of the war for Independence, after which he removed to Tennessee, thence to Alabama, and thence to Illinois, when still a Territory, and there manumitted his slaves. Her father, Captain John M. Cunningham of Marion, Illinois, had been engaged in both the
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and
Mexican-American Mexican Americans ( es, mexicano-estadounidenses, , or ) are Americans of full or partial Mexican heritage. In 2019, Mexican Americans comprised 11.3% of the US population and 61.5% of all Hispanic and Latino Americans. In 2019, 71% of Mexica ...
wars. He was twice elected sheriff and county clerk of Williamson County, Illinois, U. S. marshal of the southern district of Illinois, and President
Franklin Pierce Franklin Pierce (November 23, 1804October 8, 1869) was the 14th president of the United States, serving from 1853 to 1857. He was a northern Democrat who believed that the abolitionist movement was a fundamental threat to the nation's unity ...
appointed him register of the land office at Shawneetown, Illinois. He was also a member of the Legislature of Illinois in 1845 and 1846. Her mother was Miss Elizabeth Fontaine, of a distinguished family of that name which had arrived in Louisiana during the French occupancy of that country and had thence journeyed up the Mississippi River and settled in Missouri. It was here that John Cunningham met Elizabeth Fontaine and they married. When Mary was one year old, her parents removed to Illinois and settled at Marion, her father's home town. By the time she was nine years old, she encountered the dangers of a frontier home, when her father went forth to fight in the Mexican–American War, and braved the miner's life in the
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of California. Mary relieved her mother, who was not strong, of most of the household work, while attending the primitive school of the neighborhood, and trained herself in needlework. In 1853, she was sent to the Convent of St. Vincent, near Morganfield, Kentucky, a branch of the Nazareth Institute, the oldest institution of the kind in the US. This was the nearest educational establishment of sufficient advancement in the higher branches of education. During the time that her father was a captain of volunteers in the Mexican War,
John A. Logan John Alexander Logan (February 9, 1826 – December 26, 1886) was an American soldier and politician. He served in the Mexican–American War and was a general in the Union Army in the American Civil War. He served the state of Illinois as a stat ...
was in the same regiment. He and the captain became warm friends, and their friendship continued through life. Mary was the oldest of thirteen children, and the large family, with the modest circumstances of her father, compelled her to start working after her graduation from St. Vincent's in 1855. The instruction she received at Saint Vincent's aided her in the preparation of important papers which were needed by her father, the Captain, for example, acting as his clerk during his tenure as land register during President Pierce's administration.


Marriage and career

She met and formed an attachment with John A. Logan, 13 years her senior, while working with her father in Shawneetown. Mr. Logan was then an ambitious young lawyer, the prosecuting attorney for the third judicial circuit of Illinois, residing in the town of Benton, Illinois. They married November 27, 1855, when she was 16 years old, and at once went to the young attorney's home at Benton. Though she was reared a Baptist, after her marriage she joined the Methodist Church, the church of the Logan family. In Benton, Illinois, where he opened a law office. He was elected again to the Legislature in 1856, as a Democrat, in the celebrated Fremont campaign. During this term in the Legislature he became quite prominent through his advocacy of very important measures, and as early as 1857, was called by a colleague in the Legislature the "Black Eagle of the South." The title being suggested by his vigor and independence and very dark complexion. Mrs. Logan immediately identified her interests with those of her husband and in many ways she contributed to his many successes in the political world. She accompanied him on all his professional journeys, an undertaking in those days of wildernesses and no roads, often requiring great endurance and privation. A son, John Cunningham Logan, was born in 1856 but died the following year. Also in 1856, Mrs. Logan saw her husband elected a member of the Legislature, and in the Douglas and Lincoln Senatorial contest, he was elected as a Douglas Democrat to Congress. In all the political campaigns, the wife went with her husband, assisting in much of his Work of correspondence and copying, and frequently receiving his friends and conferring with them on the details of the campaign. When Mr. Logan came to Congress as a Representative, Mrs. Logan came with him. She remained with him in Washington until the outbreak of the American Civil War, when he resigned his seat in Congress to return to Illinois to go into the service of his country. With the war commencing in 1861, and Mr. Logan assigned to the command of the 31st Illinois Volunteers, Mrs. Logan and daughter Mary (nicknamed "Dollie", 1858–1940) returned to Capt Cunningham's home at Marion. The Illinois troops having been ordered into camp at Cairo, Mrs. Logan joined her husband there. During the battle of Belmont, Mrs. Logan cared for the wounded soldiers as they were brought back from the bloody field. When the army entered upon the Tennessee River campaign, Mrs. Logan again returned to her home, but was soon shocked by the news from Donelson that her husband had fallen at the head of his charging columns, dangerously wounded. She hastened to the scene to care for her husband, a struggle between life and death. At Memphis, in the winter of 1862–3, Mrs. Logan again joined her husband, now a general, and remained there until he led his troops in the campaign which ended in the surrender of Vicksburg. During this time, and to the end of the war, Mrs. Logan remained at Carbondale, where, out of the General's salary, they had bought an unpretentious home. Upon his return from the war, General Logan was nominated by acclamation for Congressman-at-large. After his election, Mrs. Logan returned to Washington and became a prominent figure in Washington society. After his service in the United States House of Representatives, General Logan was elected to the United States Senate. At the time of his nomination for the vice-presidency with
James G. Blaine James Gillespie Blaine (January 31, 1830January 27, 1893) was an American statesman and Republican politician who represented Maine in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1863 to 1876, serving as Speaker of the U.S. House of Representative ...
, it was she who restrained the impetuosity of her husband, who would have scorned the nomination, and prevented any differences between the leaders of the party. It came as a terrible blow to Mrs. Logan when the General became sick and died. She decided a change of scene would help her and so she traveled through Europe, chaperoning George Pullman's daughters. On her return, Mrs. Logan became the editor of ''The Home Magazine'', of Washington, which ran from 1888 to 1908, writing reminiscences of historic events. She served on the syndicate staff of Hearst news service, was a contributor to other magazine and newspapers, and wrote several books. President Benjamin Harrison appointed Mrs. Logan one of the women commissioners of the District of Columbia to the
Columbian Exposition The World's Columbian Exposition (also known as the Chicago World's Fair) was a world's fair held in Chicago in 1893 to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus's arrival in the New World in 1492. The centerpiece of the Fair, hel ...
(Chicago, 1893). She also worked on plans for the
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, having been president of the board nine years. Logan died in 1923.


Calumet Place

The family residence, "Calumet Place," Washington, in which Gen. Logan died, was then a new and long-desired home, but unpaid for. Friends of the General in Chicago voluntarily raised a fund and put it at Mrs. Logan's disposal. The first thing she did was to secure the homestead, and in it devoted what was once the studio of an artist and former owner to a "Memorial Hall," where all the General's books, army uniforms, portraits, busts, presents and souvenirs of life were gathered to form an interesting collection. She gave the collection of memorials, trophies and souvenirs of her husband and of her only son, Maj.
John Alexander Logan Jr. John Alexander Logan Jr., born Manning Alexander Logan (July 24, 1865 – November 11, 1899), was a United States Army Officer (armed forces), officer who posthumously received the Medal of Honor for actions during the Philippine–American War. ...
, who was killed Nov. 11, 1899, at the Battle of San Jacinto, to the State of Illinois.


Selected works

* 1889, ''The home manual : everybody's guide in social, domestic, and business life : a treasury of useful information for the million : profusely illustrated, the contents of one hundred books in a single volume : touches ten thousand topics : embracing etiquette, hygiene, household economy, beauty, method of money-making, care of children, nursing of invalids, outdoor sports, indoor games, fancy work, home decoration, business, civil service, history, geography, physiology, writing for the press, teaching, Italian art, etc., etc.'' * 1895, '' Official, diplomatic, and social etiquette of Washington'' (with Katherine Elwes Thomas) * 1901, ''Thirty years in Washington; or, Life and scenes in our national capital. Portraying the wonderful operations in all the great departments, and describing every important function of our national government ... With sketches of the presidents and their wives ... from Washington's to Roosevelt's administration'' * 1908, ''Our national government; or, Life and scenes in our national capital. Portraying the wonderful operations in all the great departments, and describing every important function of our law-making bodies, including its historical, executive, administrative, departmental, artistic, and social features. With sketches of the presidents and their wives ... from Washington's to Taft's administration'' * 1912, '' The part taken by women in American history'' * 1913, ''Reminiscences of a soldier's wife : an autobiography'' * 1922, ''How Memorial Day came to be. The story of the American Decoration Day is told by the widow of the man who originated the holiday''


References


Attribution

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Bibliography

* * * * * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Logan, Mary Simmerson Cunningham 1838 births 1923 deaths People from Boone County, Missouri 19th-century American writers 20th-century American non-fiction writers 19th-century American women writers American biographers American women biographers Women autobiographers American women editors People from Benton, Illinois 20th-century American women writers Historians from Illinois