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Zoe Anderson Norris (February 29, 1860 – February 13, 1914) was a Kentucky-born journalist, novelist, short story writer and publisher, known for her bimonthly magazine, ''The East Side'' (1909–1914), which focused on impoverished immigrants in New York. She also contributed to publications including ''The New York Times'', ''New York Sun'', ''Frank Leslie's Monthly'', ''Harper's Weekly'' and ''Argosy.'' She investigated journalistic topics including corrupt charity executives and child abuse cases. Her fiction plots often centered around starving artists, women deceived by hypocritical suitors and farmers battling the elements. She founded the Ragged Edge Klub, a group of writers, filmmakers, politicians and performers who met for weekly dinners. She was considered "one of the most popular writers of newspaper sketches in the country" and known as a Queen of Bohemia. An exhibition, ''To Fight for the Poor With My Pen: Zoe Anderson Norris, Queen of Bohemia'', ran March 1-May 13, 2023, at the
Grolier Club The Grolier Club is a private club and society of bibliophiles in New York City. Founded in January 1884, it is the oldest existing bibliophilic club in North America. The club is named after Jean Grolier de Servières, Viscount d'Aguisy, T ...
museum in New York.


Biography

Zoe was the 11th of 13 children of Henry Tompkins Anderson (1812–1872) and Henrietta Ducker Anderson (1819–1897). Henry, a Virginia native, was the son of Martha Tompkins and John Burbridge Anderson and a grandson of the politician Garland Anderson (1742–1811). Relatives and direct and collateral ancestors included
George Washington George Washington (, 1799) was a Founding Fathers of the United States, Founding Father and the first president of the United States, serving from 1789 to 1797. As commander of the Continental Army, Washington led Patriot (American Revoluti ...
,
Edward III Edward III (13 November 1312 – 21 June 1377), also known as Edward of Windsor before his accession, was King of England from January 1327 until his death in 1377. He is noted for his military success and for restoring royal authority after t ...
, and
Stephen Gano Burbridge Stephen Gano Burbridge (August 19, 1831 – December 2, 1894), also known as "Butcher" Burbridge or the "Butcher of Kentucky", was a controversial Union general during the American Civil War. In June 1864 he was given command over the Commonweal ...
. Henry (whose brother Robert Tompkins Anderson ran an innovative school for the Deaf near Hopkinsville, Kentucky) had two children from a previous marriage when he married Henrietta in 1841. (The couple's descendants include Rear Admiral Robert M. Morris, Rear Admiral Creed Cardwell Burlingame, Kentucky soldiers from the
192nd Tank Battalion The 192nd Tank Battalion of the United States Army was a federalized Army National Guard unit activated in November 1940. Deployed to the Philippines, the battalion was engaged in combat during the Japanese invasion and the US retreat to the Bata ...
who were captured in the
Bataan Death March The Bataan Death March was the Death march, forcible transfer by the Imperial Japanese Army of around 72,000 to 78,000 American and Filipino prisoners of war (POWs) from the municipalities of Bagac and Mariveles on the Bataan Peninsula to Camp ...
, the singer and teacher Mary Chelf Jones, a founder of the Ragged Edge Theatre, investigative journalist and photojournalis
J. Carl Ganter
and the actors
Sara Rue Sara Rue (born Sara Schlackman; January 26, 1979) is an American actress. She is best known for her performances as Carmen Ferrara on '' Popular'', as Claude Casey on ''Less than Perfect'', and as the Attorney General in '' Idiocracy''. In 2011, s ...
and Chris Stack.) Henry served as a
Christian Church In ecclesiology, the Christian Church is what different Christian denominations conceive of as being the true body of Christians or the original institution established by Jesus Christ. "Christian Church" has also been used in academia as a syn ...
pastor and teacher in Kentucky while creating a new translation of the New Testament based on ancient Greek manuscripts. Zoe was born in Harrodsburg, Kentucky, where John Augustus Williams and his wife Mary, who ran Daughters College (now the Beaumont Inn), took in the impoverished Anderson family. Henry, shortly before his death, moved to Washington, D.C., to preach at a church that
James A. Garfield James Abram Garfield (November 19, 1831 – September 19, 1881) was the 20th president of the United States, serving from March 1881 until his death in September that year after being shot two months earlier. A preacher, lawyer, and Civi ...
attended. Henrietta, as a widow, briefly farmed near Ellsworth, Kansas, with Zoe and other children. (Around 1889, Henrietta was deemed a "lunatic" and sent to Eastern State asylum in Lexington, where she died.) In 1878, Zoe graduated from Daughters College and married a Missouri native, Spencer William Norris (1856–1904). She painted portraits of Harrodsburg residents and family members and taught art at Daughters College. By 1887, the couple had settled in Wichita, Kansas, with their two children, Robert Grimes Norris (1879–1948) and Mary Clarence Norris, known as Clarence (1881–1967). The family settled on North Market Street. Zoe joined cultural groups for women including Hypatia, taught art at Lewis Academy and exhibited paintings on canvas and china at venues including the
World's Columbian Exposition The World's Columbian Exposition, also known as the Chicago World's Fair, was a world's fair held in Chicago from May 5 to October 31, 1893, to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Christopher Columbus's arrival in the New World in 1492. The ...
in Chicago. Spencer ran a store specializing in fruit and ice cream at 104 North Main Street. By the late 1890s, Zoe had discovered Spencer's infidelities (the couple divorced in 1898) and started writing fiction and journalism for magazines as well as a gossip column for ''The Wichita Eagle'' (under the pseudonym Nancy Yanks). She traveled to the Rockies and hiked along
Pikes Peak Pikes Peak is the List of mountain ranges of Colorado#Mountain ranges, highest summit of the southern Front Range of the Rocky Mountains in North America. The Ultra-prominent peak, ultra-prominent fourteener is located in Pike National Forest, ...
wearing thin slippers. Zoe and Clarence then spent more than a year in Europe (Robert Norris became a railroad executive) and settled afterwards in New York with Clarence's infant son Robert M. Morris (1901–1984). In 1902, Zoe married an illustrator, J. K. “Jack” Bryans, but she left him upon realizing that he could not support her and did not tolerate her daughter and grandson. (Clarence and Robert eventually returned to Harrodsburg, where Clarence married Fletcher Chelf, a seed company owner, and had two more children; her daughter Mary Chelf Jones was voice teacher at
Interlochen Center for the Arts Interlochen Center for the Arts ( '; also known as I.C.A. or Inty) is a Nonprofit organization, non-profit corporation which operates Visual arts education, arts education institutions and Music venue, performance venues. Established in 1928 b ...
and a mentor of the pianist Kevin Cole.) Around 1906, Zoe moved to a seventh-floor apartment at 338 East 15th Street, and in 1909, she began issuing ''The East Side'', which was illustrated pro bono by
William Oberhardt William Oberhardt (1882–1958) was an American artist, portrait painter, illustrator and sculptor. His illustration of Joseph Gurney Cannon, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, appeared on the cover of the first edition of '' ...
(Zoe also supplied photographs and small sketches for the bimonthly). Ragged Edge members were known for dancing between meal courses and for smoking cigarettes while simultaneously feasting on spaghetti. Their favorite restaurants included Cafe Boulevard at 156 Second Avenue, Little Hungary on East Houston Street, and Keens steakhouse on West 36th Street. Club members, attendees and other ''East Side'' readers included writers, editors and activists such as Edith and
Rex Beach Rex Ellingwood Beach (September 1, 1877 – December 7, 1949) was an American novelist, playwright, and Olympic water polo player. Early life Rex Beach was born in Atwood, Michigan, and moved to Tampa, Florida, with his family where his father ...
, Grace Duffie Boylan,
Guido Bruno Guido Bruno (1884–1942) was a well-known Greenwich Village character, and small press publisher and editor, sometimes called "the Barnum of Bohemia." He was based at his "Garret on Washington Square" where for an admission fee tourists coul ...
, Charles E. Chapin,
Kathleen Blake Coleman Kathleen Blake "Kit" Coleman (born Catherine Ferguson, 20 February 1856 – 16 May 1915) was an Irish-Canadian newspaper columnist. Coleman was one of the earliest accredited female war correspondents, covering the Spanish–American War for ...
, Winnifred Harper Cooley, James D. Corrothers,
Maria Thompson Daviess Maria Thompson Daviess (November 28, 1872 – September 3, 1924) was an American artist and feminist author. She is best known for her popular novels written in the early 20th century, with a " Pollyanna" outlook, as well as several short sto ...
,
Benjamin De Casseres Benjamin De Casseres (April 3, 1873 – December 7, 1945) (often DeCasseres) was an American journalist, critic, essayist and poet. He was born in Philadelphia and began working at the Philadelphia Press at an early age, but spent most of his prof ...
,
Helen Hamilton Gardener Helen Hamilton Gardener (1853–1925), born Alice Chenoweth, was an American author, rationalism, rationalist public intellectual, political activist, and government functionary. Gardener produced many lectures, articles, and books during the 188 ...
,
Eustace Hale Ball Eustace Hale Ball (1881 - 1931) was a writer, screenwriter, and director of short films in the United States. He wrote ''The Voice on the Wire'', ''Bubbles from Gotham's Pierian Spring'', ''Traffic In Souls: A Novel Of Crime And Its Cure'', and ...
,
Sadakichi Hartmann Carl Sadakichi Hartmann (November 8, 1867 – November 22, 1944) was an American art critic, poet, and anarchist. Biography Hartmann, born on the artificial island of Dejima, Nagasaki, to a Japanese mother Osada Hartmann (who died soon after ...
, Waldemar Kaempffert, Leita and Owen Kildare,
Richard Le Gallienne Richard Le Gallienne (20 January 1866 – 15 September 1947) was an English author and poet. The British-American actress Eva Le Gallienne (1899–1991) was his daughter by his second marriage to Danish journalist Julie Nørregaard (1863–19 ...
,
Miriam Leslie Miriam Leslie (née Follin; after first marriage, Peacock; after second marriage, Squier; after third marriage, Leslie; after fourth marriage, Wilde; claimed title, Baroness de Bazus; June 5, 1836 – September 18, 1914) was an American publisher ...
,
Sophie Irene Loeb Sophie Irene Loeb (July 4, 1876, Rivne, Volhynia, Russian Empire (now part of Ukraine) – January 18, 1929) was an American journalist and social-welfare advocate. Biography She was born Sophie Irene Simon. She was a school teacher in McKeespor ...
,
Edwin Markham Edwin Markham (born Charles Edward Anson Markham; April 23, 1852 – March 7, 1940) was an American poet. From 1923 to 1931 he was Poet Laureate of Oregon. Early life and education Edwin Markham was born in Oregon City, Oregon Oregon Cit ...
,
Roy McCardell Roy Larcom McCardell (June 30, 1870 – after 1940) was an American journalist, scenarist, humorist and writer. Early life Roy McCardell was born in 1870 in Hagerstown, Maryland. His father was the editor of the '' Hagerstown Mail''. When his fat ...
,
Shaemas O'Sheel Shaemas O'Sheel (September 19, 1886 – April 2, 1954) was an Irish American poet and critic. Born James Shields,O'Sheel, Shaemas, and Sophocles. ''Antigone'', University of Pennsylvania Press, 1961, p.8 he changed his name to an anglicized spelli ...
, John Milton Oskison,
Patrick L. Quinlan Arthur Patrick L. "Pat" Quinlan (1883–1948) was an Irish people, Irish trade union organizer, journalist, and socialism, socialist political activist. Quinlan is best remembered for the part he played as an organizer for the Industrial Workers ...
,
Ameen Rihani Ameen Rihani (Amīn Fāris Anṭūn ar-Rīḥānī; / ALA-LC: ''Amīn ar-Rīḥānī''; November 24, 1876 – September 13, 1940) was a Lebanese-American writer, intellectual and political activist. He was also a major figure in the ''mah ...
, Nellie Revell,
Sydney Rosenfeld Sydney Rosenfeld (1855–1931) was an American playwright who wrote numerous plays, and adapted many foreign plays. Close to fifty of his creations played on Broadway theatre, Broadway. Some of his better known plays (though none achieved long ...
, Helen Rowland, Ida Vera Simonton, Clinton Stagg, Sallie Toler (mother of the actor
Sidney Toler Sidney Toler (born Hooper G. Toler Jr., April 28, 1874 – February 12, 1947) was an American actor, playwright, and theatre director. The second non-Asian actor to play the role of Charlie Chan on screen, he is best remembered for his portrayal ...
),
Edward Owings Towne Edward Owings Towne, Jr. (February 19, 1859 or February 19, 1860 – March 6, 1938) was an American lawyer in Chicago, who became a writer. He wrote poems, stories, plays, and comedies. Early life and education He was born on either Febru ...
, Gertrude Ogden Tubby, Grace Miller White and
Ella Wheeler Wilcox Ella Wheeler Wilcox (November 5, 1850October 30, 1919) was an American author and poet. Her works include the collection '' Poems of Passion'' and the poem "Solitude", which contains the lines "Laugh, and the world laughs with you; weep, and you ...
. Zoe's works were also lauded and read by the philosopher and tastemaker
Elbert Hubbard Elbert Green Hubbard (June 19, 1856 – May 7, 1915) was an American writer, publisher, artist, and philosopher. Raised in Hudson, Illinois, he had early success as a traveling salesman for the Larkin Soap Company. Hubbard is known best as th ...
and the academics
David Starr Jordan David Starr Jordan (January 19, 1851 – September 19, 1931) was the founding president of Stanford University, serving from 1891 to 1913. He was an ichthyologist during his research career. Prior to serving as president of Stanford Universi ...
,
James Hardy Ropes James Hardy Ropes (September 3, 1866January 7, 1933) was an American theologian. He graduated from Harvard College in 1889 and was an instructor there from 1895 to 1898 and an assistant professor until 1903. Ropes was then appointed the Bussey Pro ...
,
Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman (1861–1939) was an American economist who spent his entire academic career at Columbia University in New York City. Seligman is best remembered for his pioneering work involving taxation and public finance. His pr ...
and
Benjamin Ide Wheeler Benjamin Ide Wheeler (July 15, 1854– May 2, 1927) was a professor of Greek and comparative philology at Cornell University, writer, and President of the University of California from 1899 to 1919. Life and career Early years Benjamin ...
. Her writings and parties appealed to politicians, lawyers, scientists, and businessmen as well, including John F. Ahearn, Carrie Astor Wilson, Bird Sim Coler,
Lee de Forest #REDIRECT Lee de Forest {{redirect category shell, {{R from move{{R from other capitalisation ...
,
Big Bill Edwards William Hanford "Big Bill" Edwards (February 23, 1877 – January 4, 1943) was an American football player who played guard for the Princeton Tigers football team of Princeton University from 1896 to 1899. Biography He was born on February 23, ...
, Henry DeWitt Hamilton, John Temple Graves,
Clifford B. Harmon Clifford Burke Harmon (July 1, 1866 – June 25, 1945) was a wealthy American real estate developer and founding partner of Wood, Harmon & Co., as well as a noted early amateur aviator. Early life Clifford Burke Harmon was born on July 1, 18 ...
,
Hudson Maxim Hudson Maxim (February 3, 1853 – May 6, 1927), was an American inventor and chemist who invented a variety of explosives, including smokeless gunpowder, Thomas Edison referred to him as "the most versatile man in America". He was the brot ...
,
James Clark McReynolds James Clark McReynolds (February 3, 1862 – August 24, 1946) was an American lawyer and judge from Tennessee who served as United States Attorney General under President Woodrow Wilson and as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the Unit ...
,
Herman A. Metz Herman August Metz (October 19, 1867 – May 17, 1934) was an American businessman and politician who served one term as a U.S. Representative from New York from 1913 to 1915. He was also the New York City Comptroller from 1906 to 1909. He was ...
, Theodore Shonts, William I. Sirovich,
Arthur Stilwell Arthur Edward Stilwell (October 21, 1859 – September 26, 1928) was the founder of the Kansas City, Pittsburg and Gulf Railroad, predecessor to the Kansas City Southern Railway. He served as KCPG's president from 1897 to 1900. He was also t ...
and John Francis Tucker (president of the Twilight Club). Artists, photographers, performers and theater and film executives were in her circle (many of them also involved in
Tin Pan Alley Tin Pan Alley was a collection of History of music publishing, music publishers and songwriters in New York City that dominated the American popular music, popular music of the United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Originally ...
), too, such as Arthur Bairnsfather,
Jessie Tarbox Beals Jessie Tarbox Beals (December 23, 1870 – May 30, 1942) was an American photographer, the first published female photojournalist in the United States and the first female night photography, night photographer. She is best known for her freelan ...
, Libby Blondell (first wife of actor Edward Blondell, father of
Joan Blondell Rose Joan Blondell (August 30, 1906 – December 25, 1979) was an American actress who performed in film and television for 50 years. Blondell began her career in vaudeville. After winning a beauty pageant, she embarked on a film career, estab ...
), Platon Brounoff, Louis H. Chalif,
Jane Corcoran Jane Corcoran (August 13, 1881 – August 27, 1961) was an American stage actress. Early life Jane Eleanor Corcoran was born in San Francisco, the daughter of actress Estha (or Esta) Williams and Joseph T. Corcoran, and stepdaughter of direc ...
,
Beatrice deMille Matilda Beatrice deMille (January 30, 1853 – October 8, 1923) (born Matilda Beatrice Samuel; also known as ''Beatrice C. deMille, Agnes Graham, Tillie Samuel, Mrs. Henry deMille)'' was an English-American play broker, screenwriter, playwright, ...
, Beatrice Forbes-Robertson Hale, Mary Theresa Hart, Burling Hull,
Ovide Musin Ovide Musin (September 22, 1854 – November 25, 1929) was a Belgian violinist and composer. Life Musin was born in Nandrin Nandrin () is a Municipalities of Belgium, municipality of Wallonia located in the Liège Province, province of Li� ...
, Charles M. Payne,
Wray Physioc Wray Bartlett Physioc (November 23, 1890 – May 8, 1933) was an American film director, producer and artist. His film ''The Gulf Between'' (1917) was the first Technicolor film ever produced. Early years Wray Physioc was born on November 23 ...
, Betty and
Will Rogers William Penn Adair Rogers (November 4, 1879 – August 15, 1935) was an American vaudeville performer, actor, and humorous social commentator. He was born as a citizen of the Cherokee Nation, in the Indian Territory (now part of Oklahoma ...
and
Laurette Taylor Laurette Taylor (born Loretta Helen Cooney; April 1, 1883Source Citation: Year: 1900; Census Place: Manhattan, New York, New York; Roll: 1119; Page: 3A; Enumeration District: 859; FHL microfilm: 1241119. Source Information: Ancestry.com. 1900 Un ...
. Zoe also befriended restaurateurs, including
Joel Rinaldo Joel Rinaldo (June 11, 1870, New York City– December 23, 1956) was a restaurateur whose restaurant and hotel, Joel's Bohemia, near Times Square, was a Manhattan institution from 1902 to 1925.Benjamin De Casseres, "Joel's", ''The American Me ...
, as well as aviators such as
Lincoln Beachey Lincoln Beachey (March 3, 1887 – March 14, 1915) was a Aviation in the pioneer era, pioneer American aviator and barnstorming, barnstormer. He became famous and wealthy from flying exhibitions, staging aerial stunts, helping invent aerobati ...
and
Mortimer Delano Colonel Mortimer L. Delano was head of the Aero-Military War College of America and the First Aviation Corps and The Aero Military Service Federation of America. Around 1914, he was issuing pilots licenses and selling pilots uniforms and selling ...
. ''The East Side'''s January/February 1914 issue described Zoe's recent dream that her mother Henrietta had appeared at her bedside and warned of imminent death. Soon after the issue was mailed, Zoe collapsed after a Ragged Edge dinner and died of heart failure at People's Hospital at 203 Second Avenue. (She is buried in Spring Hill Cemetery in Harrodsburg.) Her magazine's premonition was noted in obituaries around the U.S. and in Canada, including in ''The New York Times'', ''The Washington Post'' and ''San Francisco Chronicle''.


Works

The villain of Norris's first novel ''The Color of His Soul'' (New York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1902, and New York: R. F. Fenno & Co., 1903) was a hypocritical socialist orator, Cecil Mallon, who encourages rebellion among "wage slaves" but sponges off friends and relatives and abandons his pregnant mistress. The book was described as "a keen and relentless satire." Funk & Wagnalls withdrew the 1902 edition after Courtenay Lemon, a chess player turned socialist orator (son of the writer Margaret Lemon, brother of the artis
Joseph Lemon
and eventually the husband of
Djuna Barnes Djuna Barnes ( ; June 12, 1892 – June 18, 1982) was an American artist, illustrator, journalist, and writer who is perhaps best known for her novel '' Nightwood'' (1936), a cult classic of lesbian fiction and an important work of modernist lite ...
), recognized himself caricatured in the book and threatened to sue. Norris's novel
The Quest of Polly Locke
' (New York: J. S. Ogilvie, 1902), about a young American woman traveling alone in Europe seeking true love, was said to have a "brilliant, vivacious style." Her final novel,
The Way of the Wind
' (New York: self-published, 1911), portrayed a Kansas farmer, abandoned by his wife, who loses their son to illness and commits suicide, bequeathing valuable real estate (Wichita is built there) to a young female friend who goes insane. Norris collected her short fiction published in the ''New York Sun'' in ''Twelve Kentucky Colonel Stories. Describing Scenes and Incidents in a Kentucky Colonel's Life in the Southland'' (New York: J. S. Ogilvie, 1905). The
Kentucky colonel Kentucky Colonel is the highest title of honor bestowed by the US state of Kentucky. It is the most well-known colonelcy in the United States. A Kentucky Colonel Commission (the certificate) is awarded in the name of the Commonwealth by the go ...
raconteur was based on her brother-in-law John Burton Thompson Jr.'s twin Philip Burton Thompson; they were the sons of the politician
John Burton Thompson John Burton Thompson (December 14, 1810 – January 7, 1874) was an American politician who was a U.S. Representative and Senator from Kentucky and the 15th Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky. Early life Born near Harrodsburg, Kentucky, Thompson ...
. Her fiction and poetry appeared in publications including ''10 Story Book'', ''Ainslee's'', ''The Arena'', ''Argosy'', ''The Bankers Magazine'', ''The Bohemian'', ''The Book-Lover'', ''Boston Ideas'', ''The Bostonian'', ''Brooklyn Life'', ''The Clack Book'', ''Demorest's'', ''Etude and Musical World'', ''Ev'ry Month'', ''Everybody's'', ''Four o'Clock'', ''Frank Leslie's Monthly'', ''Harper's Weekly'', ''The Home Magazine of New York'', ''The Ladies' World'', ''The Midland Monthly'', ''The Mirror'', ''The Monthly Illustrator'', ''Munsey's'', ''The New Age'', ''The New Bohemian'', ''
People's People's, branded as ''People's ViennaLine'' until May 2018, and legally ''Altenrhein Luftfahrt GmbH'', is an Austro-Swiss airline headquartered in Vienna, Austria. It operates scheduled and charter passenger flights mainly from its base at St. ...
'', ''Pearson's'', ''The Peterson Magazine'', ''The Puritan'', ''The Red Letter'', ''Satire'', ''The Smart Set'', ''Success'', ''The Symposium'', ''The Valley Magazine'', ''Wisdom Monthly'', ''Woman's Home Companion'' and ''Woman's World''. About 50 of her short stories were widely syndicated in newspapers through services including the American Press Association founded by Orlando J. Smith. Recurring characters include male and female writers and artists running out of money, lovers reuniting after quarrels and lonely older people grateful for visitors to listen to their gossip. She included African-American characters such as cakewalk performers, and she wrote about Jewish immigrants traumatized by pogroms in their homelands. Her journalism appeared in '' The American Agriculturist'', ''The Bohemian'', '' The Bookman'', ''
The Criterion ''The Criterion'' was a British literary magazine published from October 1922 to January 1939. ''The Criterion'' (or the ''Criterion'') was, for most of its run, a quarterly journal, although for a period in 1927–28 it was published monthly. It ...
'', ''The Manuscript'', ''New York Press'', ''New York Sun'', ''New York Times,'' ''The Thistle'' (edited by Lee Fairchild) and ''
The Writer ''The Writer'' is a United States magazine for writers, published monthly by Madavor Media. History ''The Writer'' was first established by William H. Hills and Robert Luce, two ''Boston Globe'' reporters, as "a monthly magazine to interest an ...
''. She was a member of the Woman's Press Club. Her topics ranged from exhausted child laborers to Mark Twain's escaped cat Bambino. Her interviewees included Cynthia Alden, David M. Bressler, Phebe Hanaford, Alexander Harkavy,
Lillie Devereux Blake Lillie Devereux Blake, pen name, Tiger Lily; (August 12, 1833 – December 30, 1913) was an Americans, American Women's suffrage in the United States, woman suffragist, reformer, and writer, born in Raleigh, North Carolina and educated in New Have ...
, Charles H. Parkhurst, George C. Lorimer,
George Roe Van De Water George Roe Van De Water (April 25, 1854 – March 15, 1925) was an Episcopal priest and a major proponent of the compatibility of Freemasonry with Christianity. A prominent American of Dutch descent, he was a graduate of the General Theologic ...
, William T. Jerome,
De Lancey Nicoll De Lancey Nicoll (June 24, 1854 – March 31, 1931) was a New York County District Attorney. Early life De Lancey Nicoll was born on Shelter Island (town), New York, Shelter Island on June 24, 1854. He was the son of Solomon Townsend Nicoll (18 ...
, John J. Delaney, Alice Fischer,
Bat Masterson Bartholemew William Barclay "Bat" Masterson (November 26, 1853 – October 25, 1921) was a U.S. Army scout, lawman, professional gambler, and journalist known for his exploits in the late 19th and early 20th-century American Old West. He was bo ...
,
Gutzon Borglum John Gutzon de la Mothe Borglum (March 25, 1867 – March 6, 1941) was an American sculpture, sculptor best known for his work on Mount Rushmore. He is also associated with various other public works of art across the U.S., including Stone Moun ...
,
Nat Goodwin Nathaniel Carl Goodwin (July 25, 1857 – January 31, 1919) was an American male actor born in Boston. In his early career he was chiefly known for his performances in musical theatre and light opera; making his Broadway theatre, Broadway debut ...
,
Oliver Herford Oliver Herford (2 December 1860 – 5 July 1935) was an Anglo-American writer, artist, and illustrator known for his pithy ''bon mots'' and skewed sense of humor. He was born in Sheffield, England on 2 December 1860 to Rev. Brooke Herford a ...
and
Mary Elizabeth Lease Mary Elizabeth Lease (September 11, 1850 – October 29, 1933) was an American lecturer, writer, Georgist, and political activist. She was an advocate of the suffrage movement as well as temperance, but she was best known for her work with the ...
. ''The East Side'' documented immigrants overcrowded in tenements, working in sweatshops and suffering from disease and starvation. Norris also wrote about her own struggles to make ends meet. The publication was lauded as "written with great vivacity, though evidently inspired by a sincere, earnest, and sympathetic spirit.” Her masthead titles for herself included office boy, bootblack, printer's devil, circulation liar and "the whole shebang." She sometimes reported undercover, dressed as a blind street accordionist, unhoused scrubwoman, or bedraggled recent arrival from Ellis Island, to see how policemen, streetcar conductors, charity workers and passersby treated her.


Papers

Correspondence from Norris survives in a few institutional collections including New York University's Pleiades Club Collection, Wagner College's Edwin Markham Archive, Stanford University's David Starr Jordan papers and Eastern Kentucky University's John Wilson Townsend papers.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Norris, Zoe Anderson 1860 births 1914 deaths 20th-century American novelists American women novelists American women journalists People from Harrodsburg, Kentucky 20th-century American women writers