Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Susan Augusta Fenimore Cooper (April 17, 1813 – December 31, 1894) was an American writer and amateur naturalist. She founded an orphanage in Cooperstown, New York and made it a successful charity.

  2. Susan Fenimore Cooper Nasceu em Scarsdale, Nova Iorque, filha de James Fenimore Cooper. Durante os últimos dias da vida de seu pai, tornou-se sua secretária e amanuense . Em 1873 , fundou um orfanato em Cooperstown que sob a sua supervisão se tornaria numa próspera instituição de caridade.

  3. 23 de abr. de 2024 · Susan Augusta Fenimore Cooper (born April 17, 1813, Mamaroneck, N.Y., U.S.—died Dec. 31, 1894, Cooperstown, N.Y.) was a 19th-century American writer and philanthropist, remembered for her writing and essays on nature and the rural life.

  4. 8 de jan. de 2021 · Meet Susan Fenimore Cooper, Americas First Recognized Female Nature Writer. In 1850, Cooper anonymously published a book whose call for conservation won praise from Charles Darwin. It was largely forgotten—until recently. Words by Michelle T. Harris. Reporter, Audubon Magazine.

  5. Susan Fenimore Cooper was an American writer, best known for her nature diary Rural Hours. She was the daughter of James Fenimore Cooper. ...more.

  6. 25 de dez. de 2023 · Born in Mamaroneck, New York, where she began her botanical studies, Susan Fenimore Cooper was the first American woman to produce a work of literature which can be classified as nature writing. Through this pioneering nature writing, she laid the foundations for a female-led bird protection crusade which would last into the 20th ...

  7. 31 de mai. de 2018 · Although she’s traditionally described rather narrowly as her father James Fenimore Cooper’s secretary and caretaker, Susan Fenimore Cooper (1813-1894) was an artist, naturalist, and author of nonfiction and fiction in her own right.