Kinzie, Juliette Magill (1806–1870)

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Kinzie, Juliette Magill (1806–1870)

American pioneer and author. Born Juliette Augusta Magill, Sept 11, 1806, in Middletown, CT; died Sept 15, 1870, in Amagansett, NY; dau. of Frances (Wolcott) Magill (dau. of Alexander Wolcott, leader of Republican Party in CT) and Arthur William Magill; dau.-in-law of John Kinzie (Chicago pioneer); attended Troy Female Seminary; m. John H. Kinzie (Indian agent at Fort Winnebago in WI), Aug 9, 1830; children: Eleanor Kinzie Gordon.

Moved to the newly incorporated town of Chicago (1834) where she became a social and cultural leader; published works include A Narrative of the Massacre at Chicago (anonymous, 1844) and the successful Waubun: The "Early Days" in the North-west (1856) which helped establish the reputation of her father-in-law John Kinzie as Chicago's founding father; also wrote novels Walter Ogilby (1869) and Mark Logan, the Bourgeois (published posthumously, 1887).

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