Background
Marchant was the daughter of Langworthy and Maude Marchant, and moved with her family to Washington, District of Columbia
Marchant was the daughter of Langworthy and Maude Marchant, and moved with her family to Washington, District of Columbia
George Washington University.
At age six. After earning her undergraduate degree, followed in 1933 by her law degree from the National University of Washington, District of Columbia (now George Washington University), she was admitted to practice in Virginia and Washington District of Columbia, and before the United States Court of Claims and the United States Supreme Court. One of the first women to pass the bar in Washington District of Columbia, she served the World Bank as an attorney in the Legal Department for 18 years until retiring in 1972. As Sarah Aldridge, she was the author of many literary works.
Her first published work was a short story issued by The Ladder, the periodical released by the Daughters of Bilitis.
The fourteen lesbian novels she wrote include All True Lovers, Tottie, A Flight of Angels, The Latecomer, and The Nesting Place. She met legal secretary Muriel Inez Crawford in 1947.
The couple was together for 57 years until Aldridge"s death. Aldridge died at her home in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware on January 11, 2006.
She was 94. She was awarded the Golden Crown Literary Society Trailblazer Award posthumously in June 2007.
Her first novel The Latecomer was reissued in 2009 in a 35th anniversary edition by Agricultural and Mechanical Books. In addition to the novel, editor Fay Jacobs collected essays from a vast array of lesbian icons attesting to Aldridge"s lasting impact as a pioneer of early lesbian writing. This volume became the first of her work to appear in digital format in 2009.