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'''Mary Adella Wolcott''' ({{date|13 November 1879|MDY}} – ?) was a [[Jamaica|Jamaican]] poet who wrote under the pen name '''Tropica'''.
'''Mary Adella Wolcott''' ({{date|13 November 1879|MDY}} – ?) was a [[Jamaica|Jamaican]] poet who wrote under the pen name '''Tropica'''.


Mary Adella Wolcott was born on {{date|13 November 1879|MDY}} in [[Saint Mary Parish, Jamaica|St. Mary's, Jamaica]], the daughter of white American missionaries Henry Berdin Wolcott and Sarah Boardman Paddock.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Wolcott |first=Chandler |url=http://archive.org/details/wolcottgenealogy00wolc |title=Wolcott genealogy : the family of Henry Wolcott, one of the first settlers of Windsor, Conn. |date=1912 |publisher=Rochester, N.Y. : Genese Press |others=Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center}}</ref> Her grandfather, a white American Baptist missionary named Seth Taylor Wolcott, purchased an estate named [[Richmond, Jamaica|Richmond]] in Saint Mary Parish and created a small [[Manual labor college|manual labor school]] for blacks. Her father had been disinterested in Richmond and in 1941 after she unsuccessfully attempted to engage the Jamaican government in creating "an industrial school, a baby [[Tuskegee University|Tuskegee]]".<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/contentiousliber0000kenn/page/146/ | isbn=978-0-8203-3399-1 | title=Contentious liberties : American abolitionists in post-emancipation Jamaica, 1834-1866 | date=2010 | last1=Kenny | first1=Gale L. | publisher=University of Georgia Press }}</ref>
Mary Adella Wolcott was born on {{date|13 November 1879|MDY}} in [[Saint Mary Parish, Jamaica|St. Mary's, Jamaica]], the daughter of white American missionaries Henry Berdin Wolcott and Sarah Boardman Paddock.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Wolcott |first=Chandler |url=http://archive.org/details/wolcottgenealogy00wolc |title=Wolcott genealogy : the family of Henry Wolcott, one of the first settlers of Windsor, Conn. |date=1912 |publisher=Rochester, N.Y. : Genese Press |others=Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center}}</ref> Her grandfather, a white American Baptist missionary named Seth Taylor Wolcott, purchased an estate named [[Richmond, Jamaica|Richmond]] in Saint Mary Parish and created a small [[Manual labor college|manual labor school]] for blacks. Her father had been disinterested in Richmond and in 1941 she unsuccessfully attempted to engage the Jamaican government in creating "an industrial school, a baby [[Tuskegee University|Tuskegee]]".<ref>{{cite book | url=https://archive.org/details/contentiousliber0000kenn/page/146/ | isbn=978-0-8203-3399-1 | title=Contentious liberties : American abolitionists in post-emancipation Jamaica, 1834-1866 | date=2010 | last1=Kenny | first1=Gale L. | publisher=University of Georgia Press }}</ref>


Wolcott attended [[Oberlin Academy]] in [[Oberlin, Ohio]] from 1896 to 1898<ref>Ancestry.com, U.S., School Catalogs, 1765-1935, Oberlin College 1908, page 1078.</ref> and graduated from the [[Drexel Institute]] Library School in 1908.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=American Library Association |url=http://archive.org/details/libraryjournal32ameruoft |title=Library journal |last2=Library Association |date=1876 |publisher=New York, R.R. Bowker [etc.] |others=Robarts - University of Toronto}}</ref>
Wolcott attended [[Oberlin Academy]] in [[Oberlin, Ohio]] from 1896 to 1898<ref>Ancestry.com, U.S., School Catalogs, 1765-1935, Oberlin College 1908, page 1078.</ref> and graduated from the [[Drexel Institute]] Library School in 1908.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=American Library Association |url=http://archive.org/details/libraryjournal32ameruoft |title=Library journal |last2=Library Association |date=1876 |publisher=New York, R.R. Bowker [etc.] |others=Robarts - University of Toronto}}</ref>

Latest revision as of 15:16, 22 May 2024

Mary Adella Wolcott
BornNovember 13, 1879 Edit this on Wikidata
Saint Mary Parish Edit this on Wikidata
OccupationPoet Edit this on Wikidata

Mary Adella Wolcott (November 13, 1879 – ?) was a Jamaican poet who wrote under the pen name Tropica.

Mary Adella Wolcott was born on November 13, 1879 in St. Mary's, Jamaica, the daughter of white American missionaries Henry Berdin Wolcott and Sarah Boardman Paddock.[1] Her grandfather, a white American Baptist missionary named Seth Taylor Wolcott, purchased an estate named Richmond in Saint Mary Parish and created a small manual labor school for blacks. Her father had been disinterested in Richmond and in 1941 she unsuccessfully attempted to engage the Jamaican government in creating "an industrial school, a baby Tuskegee".[2]

Wolcott attended Oberlin Academy in Oberlin, Ohio from 1896 to 1898[3] and graduated from the Drexel Institute Library School in 1908.[4]

Wolcott published a single volume of poetry, The Island of Sunshine. Her work romanticizes plantation-era Jamaica from an ethnographic and colonial perspective. Her "Nana" is an elegy for a black nanny and her disappearing cultural traditions, while "Busha's Song" frames an overseer as the pastor of the plantation.[5] Her work was later anthologized by J. E. Clare McFarlane.

In 1923, Wolcott was a founder of the Jamaica Poetry League, an offshoot of the Empire Poetry League.[6]

Bibliography[edit]

  • The Island of Sunshine, New York, Knickerbocker Press, c. 1904 [7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Wolcott, Chandler (1912). Wolcott genealogy : the family of Henry Wolcott, one of the first settlers of Windsor, Conn. Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. Rochester, N.Y. : Genese Press.
  2. ^ Kenny, Gale L. (2010). Contentious liberties : American abolitionists in post-emancipation Jamaica, 1834-1866. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 978-0-8203-3399-1.
  3. ^ Ancestry.com, U.S., School Catalogs, 1765-1935, Oberlin College 1908, page 1078.
  4. ^ American Library Association; Library Association (1876). Library journal. Robarts - University of Toronto. New York, R.R. Bowker [etc.]
  5. ^ Donnell, Alison; Lawson Welsh, Sarah (1996). The Routledge reader in Caribbean literature. The Archive of Contemporary Music. London ; New York : Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-12048-7.
  6. ^ Delia Jarrett-Macauley (1998). The life of Una Marson, 1905-65. Internet Archive. Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-5284-2.
  7. ^ Herdick, Donald, ed. (1979). Caribbean writers (1st ed.). Three Continents Press. ISBN 978-0-914478-74-4 – via Internet Archive.