Background
Her maiden name was Winship and although information about her early life is limited, there is one reference that says her father was a butcher. This would probably make her the great granddaughter of Ebenezer Winship.
Her maiden name was Winship and although information about her early life is limited, there is one reference that says her father was a butcher. This would probably make her the great granddaughter of Ebenezer Winship.
She attended Rutgers Female College and by the age of eighteen she was married with her first child - James.
She wrote under the pen-names of Margaret Winship Eytinge, Madge Elliot, Bell Thorne and Allie Vernon. He was from Lexington and fought in the American Revolutionary War before moving to New York with six sons, all of whom were butchers. Her daughter, Pearl, was born in about 1855.
Her husband, James B. Wyckoff, was working in "dry goods" but later trained to be a physician.
At some period in the 1850s the couple divorced. James continued to practise in New York for a period before moving to Jerseyville, Illinois where he had family connections and where he died in 1864.
By the age of fifteen Margaret"s work was published under the pen-name of Allie Vernon. Later she had work published in the New York Picayune under the name of Bell Thorne.
Margaret’s son became a teacher before moving to Illinois and taking up a new career in horticulture.
The Eytinges did not have children of their own. An electronic version of this can be viewed at The Baldwin Library of Historical Children’s Literature web-page. A list of other works may be viewed at the Lehigh University web-site.
Her work was published in many American newspapers and periodicals such as Harper"s Magazine and Our Young Folk as well as being syndicated to countries such as Britain and Australia.
Margaret and Sol Eytinge lived for many years in Bayonne, New Jersey. She died on January 26, 1916.