Page:Woman of the Century.djvu/730

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TICKER.
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educated. In her early years she was inclined to poetical cumposition. and in her seventeenth MARY FRANCES TUCKER. she published her two poems, "Going Up and Coming Down " and "Cometh a Blessing Down," which have gone round the world. In 1856 she year became the wife of Dr. E. L. Tucker, of Fulton, N. Y., arising physician of cultured tastes. They removed to Michigan, where they lived until 1863, when Dr. Tucker recruited a cavalry company for a Michigan regiment, and went with them into active service as first lieutenant. He died in camp in Chattanooga, Tenn. Soon after his death Mrs. Tucker and her two daughters and son removed to Omro, Wis., where they now reside. The older daughter, Ada, died several years ago. The youngest daughter, Grace, and the son, Frank, are successful teachers, and the son has added law to his work. Since her daughter's death, Mrs. Tucker has been an invalid, writing only occasionally for publication, and living in close retirement. As a journalist she achieved considerable distinction, but it is through her poems that she is best known to the literary world. She has contributed to the "Magazine of Poetry," the "Home Journal" and other prominent periodicals. Her work is in the moral vein.


TUCKER, Miss Rosa Lee, State Librarian of Mississippi, born in Houston, Miss., 1st September, 1868. ROSA LEE TUCKER. She is a daughter of the late General W. F. Tucker, who served in the Confederate army during the Civil War. After the war. General Tucker, like most of the southern men, impoverished by the long struggle, resumed the practice of his profession, that of law, and became one of the most successful lawyers in Mississippi. Like the majority of the men of the South, he lived beyond his means. Consequently, when he died, in 1881, his family was left in straitened circumstances. Rosa Lee, who was then thirteen years old, remained in school until she was sixteen. After her graduation she taught school for one year. In 1886 she became the manager of the post-office in Okolona, Miss., where her mother was postmaster. She managed the office acceptably for two years. In 1888 she