- Edith Nash
Infobox Person
name = Edith Nash
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birth_date = July 12, 1913
birth_place =Oak Park, Illinois
death_date = November 9, 2003
death_place =Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin
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nationality =Edith Nash (
July 12 ,1913 -November 9 ,2003 ) was an educator and poet.Edith Henriet (Rosenfels) Nash was born in
Oak Park, Illinois , where she was a childhood friend of a sister ofErnest Hemingway . [http://www.ninthstreetcenter.org/Nash.htm] She met her future husband, Wisconsin anthropologist and politicianPhilleo Nash , while in college in Chicago. OnNovember 2 ,1935 , they married. Edith Nash, trained as an anthropologist, did field work in the American West among Native Americans in the 1930s. In the 1940s through the 1950s, she was the second director and co-founder of theGeorgetown Day School , the first racially integrated school inWashington, D.C. .Edith Nash also wrote poetry and critical essays. "Practice: The Here and Now" (Cross+Roads Press, 2001), her best-known book, includes a sample of her poetry and prose. She spent three decades of her life in her husband's home town,
Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin , from which she managed aBiron, Wisconsin , cranberry marsh and became a major player in local and state politics. She was an early supporter of U.S. SenatorRuss Feingold , a Wisconsin Democrat.She wrote about her 1930s "coming out" party at a Chicago speakeasy, meeting "Ernie" Hemingway at his Oak Park parent's home in 1929, and the progressive causes she championed all the years of her life. Nash's husband was targeted (and condemned on the floor of the U.S. Senate) by Wisconsin U.S. Senator
Joseph McCarthy , a Republican whose name is now linked forever to the tactic of unfounded political attacks. However, that didn't stop his wife from soliciting money for the Georgetown Day School from McCarthy when she met him by chance in the 1950s. Her life was celebrated in the poem "When You're Eighty-Five," which was published by her friendMark Scarborough in the summer 2001 issue of the "Wisconsin Academy Review."Among Nash's other writer friends were
Muriel Rukeyser andFrances Hamerstrom . Nash, an inspiration for generations of writers in central Wisconsin, also was a tireless advocate of free expression during her tenure as a member of a book review committee of the Wisconsin Rapids Public Schools and as a co-founder (with then Lincoln High School student Elisa Derickson) of the Elisa Derickson Fund for Creative Writing, South Wood County Community Foundation,Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin .Edith Nash's other volumes of poetry include "White Line on the Left" (Round Robin Press, no date, but circa 1990), "The Words" (Home Brew Press, 1992), "Now is the Time" (Round Robin Press, 1996), and "A Christmas Offering: Selected Poems, 1985-2000" (privately printed, 2000). Her poetry was also included in the anthologies "The Poetry of Cold" (Home Brew Press, 1997) and "At the Heart of Riverwood" (Round Robin Press, 2000). Her poems and essays were published in publications as varied as "Free Verse," "Wisconsin Poet's Calendar," and "Wisconsin River Valley Journal." She was the founder of the Riverwood Roundtable, a central Wisconsin literary society.
Edith Nash died in
Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin .Resources
* [http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/Literature.PracticeNash Practice the here and now: selected writings of Edith Nash. Nash, Edith (2001)]
* [http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/Literature.PracticeNashSup Practice the here and now: supplement to the selected writings of Edith Nash. Nash, Edith (2004)]Notes
Persondata
NAME=Nash, Edith
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION=Educator and poet
DATE OF BIRTH=July 12, 1913
PLACE OF BIRTH=Oak Park, Illinois
DATE OF DEATH=November 9, 2003
PLACE OF DEATH=Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin
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