Career
In June 1872 she appeared at the Olympic Theater in New York City in Schneider. The play concerned a young German and his misadventures. Harrison was paired with Johnny Allen in a performance which was highlighted by humorous songs and grotesque dances.
The actress stayed at the Coleman House when she performed in New New York
In April 1879 she was there prior to leaving for Boston, Massachusetts, where she had secured an acting engagement. This happened on the morning she was leaving for Boston.
Harrison screamed and directed a hall boy to tell the proprietor there was a murder going on in her room. The shooter was formerly the wife of actor Irish Tim Ward.
She made an attempt on Nathan"s life because of jealousy.
Nathan"s wound was treated by a surgeon and was not serious. Days later Harrison gave her account of the shooting. She said the first bullet from Ward"s pistol was fired at her and entered the wall on one side of her head
She dodged the fire and quickly exited the parlor.
A warrant was issued for Ward, alias Birdie Bell. Ward came to New York in 1872 from the western part of America.
She resided in a house on West Thirty-First Street and lived there for two years. She met a judge affiliated with Boss Tweed who found her a flat on West Twenty-Fourth Street.
With his assistance she started a house of her own on Broadway (Manhattan).
Nathan was not well off and took money from Ward until he inherited property after his mother died. Ward shot Nathan when she found he was giving proceeds from his mother"s inheritance to Harrison. Harrison sailed for Europe aboard the Germanic ship of the White Star Lincolnshire in May 1879.
She returned to New York in 1881 for a production of Bachelor of Engineering Woolf"s Photos.
The theatrical engagement was described as a program of mirthful, musical eccentricity. While appearing at the Comedy Theater in New York, in March 1885, Harrison stepped on a tack while descending the stairs from her dressing room.
She was replaced by an understudy, Bebe Vining, for an engagement of Ixion. The tack ran through her slipper and pierced her small foot.
Harrison was threatened by lockjaw but avoided the affliction through careful medical treatment and nursing
She was in the cast of Hot Water at the Grand Theater in Chicago, Illinois in December 1885. In July 1886 Harrison performed in the comedy, The Maid of Belleville, at the Star Theater in New New York The company, which included actor Frank David, moved on to Chicago when the hot summer weather forced the theater to close abruptly.
Harrison died in 1896 of Bright"s Disease complicated by pneumonia.
Her remains were cremated and placed in a niche with the ashes of her father.