`

Nebraska Authors

Dorothy Canfield Fisher

AKA: Dorothy Canfield or Dorothea Frances Canfield

Born 1879-02-17 Lawrence, KS (USA)

Died 1958-11-09
Arlington, VT (USA)

Buried
Arlington, VT (USA)
Saint James Episcopal Church Cemetery
Image of Dorothy Canfield Fisher

Image of Dorothy Canfield Fisher

Fisher's father was Chancellor of the University of Nebraska, 1891-1895. At the University, in Lincoln, she and classmate Willa Cather became friends and maintained an occasionally troubled but lasting friendship and correspondence over more that 50 years. She had a varied career as an editor and writer. She was on the first editorial board of the Book-of-the-Month Club. She played a leading role in bringing the teachings of Maria Montessori to the United States. Perhaps she is best known for Understood Betsy, 1919, a children's book. The Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award, an annual award co-sponsored by the Vermont Department of Libraries and the Vermont Congress of Parents and Teachers, is the second oldest selected children's book award in the country. In the early twentieth century, Dorothy Canfield was considered to be one of the best-selling American authors of the period.

Places Lived

Lawrence, KS
Lincoln, NE
Columbus, OH
Paris, FRANCE
New York, NY
Arlington, VT

Author Of

  • Fiction
  • Nonfiction

Keywords

Novels; Children's Fiction; Adolescent Psychology; Montessori Method; Education;

Education

Bachelor of Arts Degree, 1899, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH
Graduate Study, University of Paris, Paris, FRANCE
Ph.D. in French, 1904, Columbia University, New York, NY

Occupation

Secretary
Teacher
Author

Honors

1944, second prize, O. Henry Memorial Award for "The Knot-Hole"
1946, winner, O. Henry Memorial Awards for "Sex Education"
She was the first woman to receive an Honorary Degree from Dartmouth College and the University of Nebraska.
Honorary Degrees from Middlebury College, Swarthmore College, Smith College, Williams College, Ohio State University, and the University of Vermont
She was called "one of the ten most influential women in the country" by Eleanor Roosevelt.
Her novel The Brimming Cup was the second best-selling novel of 1921.

Associations

Book-of-the-Month Club
Adult Education Association, Founder

Bibliography

Gunhild. 1907.
A Montessori Mother. 1912.
The Squirrel-Cage. 1912.
A Montessori Manual. 1913.
Mothers and Children. 1914.
Hillsboro People. 1915.
The Bent Twig. 1915.
The Real Motive. 1916.
Fellow Captains. 1916. (with Sarah N. Cleghorn)
Self-Reliance. 1916.
Understood Betsy. 1917.
Home Fires in France. 1918.
The Day of Glory. 1919.
The Brimming Cup. 1921.
Rough-Hewn. 1922.
What Grandmother Did Not Know. 1922.
Raw Material. 1923.
The Home-Maker. 1924.
Made-to-Order Stories. 1925.
Her Son's Wife. 1926.
Why Stop Learning?. 1927.
Learn or Perish. 1930.
The Deepening Stream. 1930.
Basque People. 1931.
Tourists Accommodated. 1932.
Bonfire. 1933.
Fables for Parents. 1937.
On a Rainy Day. 1938.
Seasoned Timber. 1939.
Runaway Toys. 1940.
Nothing Ever Happens and How It Does. 1940. (with Sarah N. Cleghorn)
Tell Me a Story. 1940.
In the City and on the Farm. 1941.
To School and Home Again. 1941.
Under the Roof. 1941.
Under the Sun. 1941.
Our Young Folks. 1943.
American Portraits. 1946.
Four-Square. 1949.
Our Independence and the Constitution. 1950.
Paul Revere and the Minute Men. 1950.
A Fair World for All. 1952.
Vermont Tradition: The Biography of an Outlook on Life. 1953.
A Harvest of Stories. 1956.
Memories of Arlington, Vermont. 1957.
And Long Remember. 1959.

We appreciate corrections and additions to our information about authors, but please read the following guidelines and caveats carefully.

  • The Nebraska Authors database is based on publicly available sources. Unless you are the author contacting us in person, it helps us if you cite the source or sources of your information. We cannot include unsourced information in the database.
  • We may be appreciative of information we choose not to include in the publicly available database.
  • To include an image on an author profile, please send jpg attachment to nebraskaauthors@lincoln.ne.gov. A photo-release agreement is required before the image will be published on this site.
  • Because of the way we are staffed, expect corrections or additions to take time, sometimes up to three months.
  • While we initially included some actual links to external URLs in the database, we will in the future no longer provide functioning links. We will instead record the presence of specific external materials in language that we hope will help intelligent users find it themselves. Web rot, in which actual materials remain online but undergo changes in their URLs, is too demanding in terms of staff time for us to hope to keep external links current.

Please copy, fill out the form below, and email it to heritage@lincoln.ne.gov to suggest a change.

/
Dorothy Canfield Fisher
dorothy-canfield-fisher

Do you have corrections for the above information or other information to add?:

(e.g. Author is buried in Fremont, not in David City / Also wrote for the Daily Nebraskan during her time as a student)