Ella Cheever Thayer

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Ella Cheever Thayer
Born(1849-09-14)September 14, 1849
Portland, Maine, United States
DiedOctober 28, 1925(1925-10-28) (aged 76)
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
OccupationNovelist
Playwright
Telegraphist
Period1879–1897
GenreFiction
SubjectRomance
Literary movementSuffragette

Ella Cheever Thayer (September 14, 1849 – October 28, 1925) was an American playwright and novelist. Born in Maine, she worked as a telegraph operator and published several works in her lifetime, including the hit 1879 novel Wired Love: A Romance in Dots and Dashes.[1]

Biography

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She was the daughter of apothecary George Augusta Thayer (1824-1863) and Rachel Ella Cheever Thayer (1823-1907). One sister, Mary Georgie Thayer (1869-1912), was a schoolteacher. Thayer eventually became a telegraph operator[2] at the Brunswick Hotel[3] in Boston, Massachusetts, who used her experience on the telegraph as the basis for her book Wired Love, A Romance of Dots and Dashes,[4] which became a bestseller for 10 years.[5]

She was also a playwright, having written The Lords of Creation[6] in 1883. Her play is reviewed in the book On to Victory: Propaganda Plays of the Woman's Suffrage Movement by Bettina Friedl, published in 1990 (Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).) and it was one of the first suffragette plays.[7]

She also wrote Amber, a Daughter of Bohemia,[8] a drama in five acts, in 1883. She also wrote short stories for magazines including "The Forgotten Past" in Argosy (January 1897).

Later life and death

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She lived in Saugus, Massachusetts.[9] Thayer died of liver cancer; her ashes were placed in Bigelow Chapel, Mount Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Massachusetts on November 1, 1925.[citation needed]

References

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  1. ^ "What Mark Zuckerberg Should Learn From Horny 19th-Century Telegraph Operators. No, really." by Megan Ward, Slate, May 27, 2024.
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