Edith Ballinger Price
Edith Ballinger Price was born in
New Brunswick, New Jersey, on April 26, 1897, the daughter of Eleanor
French Richards Price and William Farmer Price. Influenced by her grandfather,
landscape painter William Trost Richards, she started drawing at an early
age and filled many notebooks with lively illustrations of scenes from
books she read and the world around her. As a teenager Price studied at
the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and later at the New York
Art Students League and the National Academy of Design.
In 1918 Price submitted a story, "Blue Magic," to
St. Nicholas magazine for children. The story was accepted for
publication in the magazine and in 1920 was published in book form. The
success of this first story encouraged the author to keep writing and
many stories and eighteen books eventually followed. Price's serials,
short stories, poetry, and illustrations were published in such magazines
as Collier's, The Portal, and Youth's Companion.
Though Price's primary interest and love was for illustration, her publishers
often hired other artists to illustrate her stories. This apparently still
rankled many years later because the artist mentioned it more than once
in her letters to Special Collections.
Edith Ballinger Price was interested
in Girl Scouting and was instrumental in starting the Brownie Scouts program
in the United States. She was the national chair or "Great Brown
Owl" of the Brownies from 1925 to 1932. She wrote the first Brownie
handbook as well as stories for Girl Scout magazines
In the early 1920s Price adopted Burchey May Perry, a child
of two who had been born without sight. This daughter was Price's companion
and primary interest throughout the rest of her life. My Lady Lee,
published in 1925, is a fictionalized account of their early years together.
Ms. Price lived for many years
in Newport, Rhode Island, and taught artistic anatomy at the school of
the Art Association of Newport, of which she was a council member for
twenty-eight years. In 1962 Price moved to Virginia Beach, Virginia, where
she worked at A.R.E. Press, a publisher of the works of psychic Edgar
Cayce.
Edith Ballinger Price died in
Virginia Beach on September 29, 1997, at the age of one hundred.
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