Background
Born in Saint Stephen, New Brunswick, Hamm grew up in Bangor, Maine, but left after high school to make her career as a reporter for the Boston Herald.
Born in Saint Stephen, New Brunswick, Hamm grew up in Bangor, Maine, but left after high school to make her career as a reporter for the Boston Herald.
She was also a prolific author of popular books, especially relating to travel and famous people. Hamm was both an active suffragette, and a supporter and defender of American overseas imperialism/colonialism at the time of the Spanish–American War, which she covered. By 1890 she had moved to New York, where she did freelance reporting for a number of newspapers.
She used the opportunity to establish herself as a foreign correspondent for New York newspapers.
She also began writing articles for popular magazines, eventually becoming editor of the Women"s Department of Peterson"s Magazine. She spent the next few years writing books and articles about the war and its aftermath, most from a patriotic perspective.
Titles included Manila and the Philippines (1898), America"s New Possessions and Spheres of Influence (1899), and Dewey the Defender: A Life Sketch of America"s Great Admiral. She even composed a hymn to George Dewey.
Hamm produced one relatively progressive book, Ghetto Silhouettes (1902) with David Warfield, but her favorite subject, following the war-related books, was the American and New York elite.
Titles in this series included Builders of the Republic (1902), Eminent Actors in their Homes (1902), and Famous Families of New York (1902). Hamm"s first marriage ended in divorce. Her second marriage, to a fellow journalist, occurred two days after the first one ended.
Hamm died young, at the age of 40.
On the outbreak of the Spanish–American War in 1898, Hamm became Chairman of the Women"s Congress of Patriotism and Independence in New York, a pro-war group, and soon followed the troops to Puerto Rico, sending back despatches from the front lines.
Hamm was also active in the National American Woman Suffrage Association, and was sufficiently well known by 1895 that an article of that year in the Boston Daily Globe entitled "If Women were Members of Congress" included her as a potential candidate, along with Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.