Olive Sanxay

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BornJune 1, 1873
DiedOctober 11, 1965(1965-10-11) (aged 92)
Madison State Hospital, Madison, Indiana, U.S.
OthernamesOlive Sanxey
OccupationWriter
Olive Sanxay
A young white woman with dark hair center-parted and dressed to the nape, wearing a high-collared shirtwaist with a brooch pinned to the throat
Olive Sanxay, from a 1902 publication
BornJune 1, 1873
DiedOctober 11, 1965(1965-10-11) (aged 92)
Madison State Hospital, Madison, Indiana, U.S.
Other namesOlive Sanxey
OccupationWriter

Olive Sanxay (June 1, 1873 – October 11, 1965), also seen as Olive Sanxey, was an American poet and short story writer.

Sanxay was born in Ravenswood in Jefferson County, Indiana, the tenth and final child of Henry Campbell Sanxay and Sarah (Sally) Parker Stringfellow Sanxay.[1] She began to lose her hearing as a girl.[2] She graduated from Madison High School in 1890.[3][4] In 1895, she was admitted to the Indiana School for the Deaf.

Career

Sanxay taught at the Indiana State School for the Deaf,[5][6] and wrote stories and poems as a young woman.[7] Two of her poems, "Genius" and "Sabbath Chimes", were included in Poets and Poetry of Indiana (1900).[1] "A Summer Girl" appeared in Indiana Writers of Poems and Prose (1902).[8] She wrote poem, "The Dream and the Deed", for a 1907 ceremony at the school,[9] and it was included in the Indiana State School's annual report in 1908.[5] In 1918, one of her poems was included in the poem-a-day collection The Hoosier Year of 366 Indiana Writers and Speakers.[10] Other poems by Sanxay appeared in newspapers,[11] including the Indianapolis Star,[12] the Indianapolis Journal[13][14][15] and The Inter Ocean.[16] She also published at least one story, "Jim's Baby" (1899).[17]

Personal life

References

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