Nellie Blessing Eyster


Nellie Blessing Eyster was an American journalist, writer, lecturer, and social reformer.
Eyster, the first President of the Pacific Coast Women's Press Association, was a grand-niece of Barbara Fritchie. Her first book, Sunny Hours of the Child Life of Tom and Mary, received the endorsement of Oliver Wendell Holmes. In 1870, she published "A Dame of the Quakers" in Harper's Magazine, and later, "How the Star Spangled Banner Found Its Tune". "The Colonial Boy" was published in 1890 and was adopted by most of the school and church libraries in the United States. "A Chinese Quaker", published in 1902, was quoted as introducing a valuable history of the Chinese immigration in San Francisco. Other books included, Chincapin Charlie, On the Wing, and Tom Harding and His Friends. She wrote for the New-York Tribune and Riverside Magazine; and edited with Gail Hamilton.
Eyster assisted In the purchase of Mount Vernon for the U.S.; and served as an officer of the Great Sanitary Commission during the American Civil War. Eyster's teaching extended to California's Chinese immigrants; she was also a teacher of music, rhetoric and belles lettres in various seminaries; and was a state lecturer on scientific temperance in colleges and public schools. She was State President of Juvenile Work of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union of California, president of the California Women's Indian Association, and president emeritus of the League of American Pen Women.

Early years and education

Penelope Ann Margaret Blessing was born in Frederick, Maryland, December 7, 1836. Her parents were Abraham and Mary M. E. Blessing. Her ancestry included Huguenot and Anglo-Saxon background. On the maternal side, she was a granddaughter of Captain George W. Ent, a commander at Fort McHenry in the war of 1812 and a friend of Francis Scott Key. On the same side, she was related to Barbara Frietchie. Abraham Blessing, Eyster's father, who died when she was 10 years old, was the youngest brother of George Blessing of Maryland, who served during the American Civil War, and was known as, "The Hero of the Highlands." The mother had poetic taste, and was a devout Christian.
The eldest of the five children, Nellie, baptized Penelope, showed early promise of literary ability. She was educated by private tutors and at Barleywood Seminary, Virginia.

Career

Eyster's first work was assisting with the purchase of Mt. Vernon, and she was active in the Sanitary Commission during the American Civil War. She became a newspaper correspondent and wrote reminiscences of the war and its notable people for Harper's Magazine. She wrote for California journals, including stories for the Overland and Illustrated Californian. She was associated with Gail Hamilton in the editing of Wood's Magazine, and was also the editor of The Pacific Ensign, the organ of the State WCTU.
Eyster wrote the "Sunny Hour Series", and after moving to San Jose, California, she wrote "A Colonial Boy" for children in 1890. She helped in the education of Chinese residents in California; her work, "A Chinese Quaker", attracted wide attention in Europe and the Orient.
Active in woman suffrage and other movements for the advancement of women, her temperance lectures on the subject of the "House Beautiful and the Man Wonderful" made her well known. She also served as California state lecturer in public schools on scientific temperance.
She was president of the San Jose Ladies Benevolent Society, president of the California Women's Indian Association, first president of the Pacific Coast Women's Press Association, State President of Juvenile Work of the WCTU of California, and president emeritus of the League of American Pen Women. She was also secretary of the Woman's Missionary Society of the Presbyterian Church, and treasurer of the Political Equality Club of Berkeley, California.

Personal life

In 1853, when she was 16 years old, she married her private tutor, David A. S. Eyster, a young lawyer of, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. They had one daughter, Mary, born a year after the marriage, and one son, who died at the age of 10, in 1872. David was employed as a financial clerk of the Pennsylvania State Board of Education. The death of the son and her mother the following year caused Eyster's health to fail. In 1876, the family moved from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, to San Jose, California, which helped Eyster rally from her depression and regain interest in religious and benevolent work. In Pennsylvania, the family had been members of the English Lutheran Church, but in San Jose, they became connected with the Presbyterian denomination, and Eyster was linked with some of its enterprises.
In 1900, after the death of the husband, Eyster moved to San Francisco to live with her daughter, Mary A. Elder. Her grandson, Paul Elder, became a San Francisco publisher and bookseller. She passed away at the home of her daughter at Berkeley, California, on February 21, 1922.

Selected works

Attribution

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