Cornelia Richards


Cornelia Richards was a 19th-century American writer who was born in Hudson, New York. Writing under the pen name "Mrs. Manners," she authored a variety of books, including At Home and Abroad, Aspiration, an Autobiography, and a memoir of her sister, the writer Alice Bradley Haven. She was married to a magazine editor and poet and had six children. She died in Detroit, Michigan, at the age of 69.

Biography

Cornelia Holroyd Bradley was born in Hudson, New York, November 1, 1822. She was the daughter of George and Sarah Bradley. Her siblings were George Thomas Bradley and the writer, Alice Bradley Haven.
In 1841, she graduated from the Hampton Literary institute, and the same year, on September 21, married William Carey Richards, a magazine editor, poet and scientific lecturer. Their children were William, Herbert, Mabel, Cornelia, Harold, and Cecil.
Richards wrote under the pen name of "Mrs. Manners". She was the author of: At Home and Abroad, or How to Behave ; Pleasure and Profit, or Lessons on the Lord's Prayer ; Aspiration, an Autobiography ; Sedgemoor, or Home Lessons ; Hester and I, or Beware of Worldliness ; Springs of Adion ; and Cousin Alice, a memoir of her sister, Alice B. Haven.
She died in Detroit, Michigan, May 1, 1892.

Selected works

At Home and Abroad: Or, How to Behave, 1853 Pleasure and Profit, Or, Lessons on the Lord's Prayer: In a Series of Stories, 1853 Aspiration: An Autobiography of Girlhood, 1856 Sedgemoor, or Home Lessons, 1857 Hester and I; Or, Beware of Worldliness, Etc. , 1860 Springs of Adion, 1863Cousin Alice: A Memoir of Alice B. Haven, 1865