Page:Woman's who's who of America, 1914-15.djvu/226

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
238
DE KERMEN—DELANO

Craven, Sidney Gilder. Interested in domestic missions and various philanthropies, and when a young girl at U.S. Sanitary Commission. Episcopalian. Mem. Colonial Dames of America, Women's Municipal League. Mem. Ass'n Opposed to Woman Suffrage.

DE KERMEN, Madame Valerie Louise, 31 W. Ninety-third St., N.Y. City.

Professor, lecturer; b. Paris, 1857; dau. Louis and Bazin de la (Chesnays) Chantrelle; ed. Paris, privately; obtained the superior diploma at Sorbonne, Paris; m. Paris, 1878, Count Henry Tancrede de Kermen (no-w deceased); children: Alta Gracia, b. 1886, and one deceased. Has had success in lecturing in French and English; has been in relation with some great men, among others Edmund Rostand. Professor of French and lecturer in French and English. Favors woman suffrage; second vice-pres. Joan of Arc Woman Suffrage League. Author: The Meaning of Chanticler; Maeterlinck, or the High Road (now in press), and several articles in different Socialist papers. Socialist. Mem. Branch No. 14 Socialist Party, Riverside Hall. Resident in America about 20 years; naturalized as American citizen, 1912.

DeKOVEN, Anna Farwell (Mrs. Reginald DeKoven), 1025 Park Av., N.Y. City.

Writer; b. Chicago, Ill.; dau. Hon. Charles B. (U.S. Senator) and Mary E. (Smith) Farwell; ed. Lake Forest Univ. (valedictorian) A.B.; m. Lake Forest, Ill., May 1, 1884. Reginald DeKoven (distinguished composer); one daughter: Ethel LeRoy DeKoven (married N.Y., 1911, H. Kierstede Hudson). Author: By the Waters of Babylon; Life of John Paul Jones; A Sawdust Doll. Translator of Pierre Loti's Iceland Fisherman (Pècheur d'Islande) in Laurel Crowned Series. Had a musical salon in N.Y. City, where the artists of the Metropolitan and Manhattan Opera companies sang. Mem. Colony Club, N.Y. City. Favors woman suffrage.

DE KRAFFT, Frances Blatchford, 1834 I St., N.W., Washington, D.C.

Clerk; b. Quincy, Ill., Mar. 23, 1855; dau. Rear Admiral J. C. P. de Krafft, U.S. Navy, and Elizabeth Sellers (Pearson) de Krafft; ed. in private schools and with masters in languages and music. Has been 22 years in Navy Dep't in responsible positions; now in Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. Favors woman suffrage. Episcopalian. Republican.

DE KROYFT, Susan Helen Aidrich (Mrs. William De Kroyft), Dansville, N.Y.

Authoress; b. Rochester, N.Y., Oct. 29, 1818; dau. Obed and Melintha Hart (Potter) Aldrich; ed. Westfield (N.Y.) Acad. and Genesee Wesleyan Sem., Lima, N.Y. (valedictorian); m. Rochester, N.Y., July 25, 1845, William De Kroyft, M.D. Widowed on wedding day by a carriage accident, and awoke blind one month later. Studied music until first book was published. With an amanuensis traveled all over the U.S. and Canada. Author: A Place in Thy Memory; The Story of Little Jakey; Mortara; The Soul of Eve; The foreshadowed Way. Honorary mem. Shakespeare Club of America and England (Stratford). Recreation: Reading. Episcopalian.

DELAFIELD, Elizabeth Ray, 5 W. Fiftieth St., N.Y. City.

Born N.Y. City, Sept. 15, 1872; dau. Dr. Francis and Katherine (Van Rensselaer) Delafield; ed. at home. Pres. of the Woman's Auxiliary to the Board of Missions, diocese of N.Y.; sec. of the Bryson Day Nursery. Protestant Episcopal. Favors woman suffrage.

DE LAGUNA, Grace Andrus de Leo (Mrs. Theodore de Leo de Laguna), Bryn Mawr, Pa.

Teacher of philosophy; b. East Berlin, Conn., Sept. 28, 1878; dau. Wallace R. and Annis (Mead) Andrus; grad. Cornell Univ., A.B. '03, Ph.D. '06; m. Tacoma, Wash., 1905, Theodore de Leo de Laguna; children: Frederica, Annis, Wallace. Associate in philosophy, Bryn Mawr Coll. Joint author (with husband) of Dogmatism and Evolution.

DE LA MATER, Jacqueline Montague Newton (Mrs. Van Ness De Lamater), Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

Former teacher; b. Oberlin, O., Jan. 15, 1875; dau. James King and Frances (Estabrook) Newton; ed. Univ. of Cal., Ph.B. '98 (Phoebe Hearst scholar); grad. student Univ. of Cal., 1898-99; grad. student Cornell Univ., 1900-01; m. Washington, D.C, Oct. 20, 1904, Van Ness De Lamater, M.E.; children: Frances Anna. b. Dec. 7, 1905; Van Ness, b. Dec. 23, 1907; Edward Estabrook and James Newton (twins), b. Jan. 24, 1912. Former teacher at Benecia, Cal.; Berea Coll., Ky., 1899-1900; Philippine Islands (appointed by Cornell Univ.), 1901-02; Campbell High School, Cal., 1902-04. Unitarian. Mem. Ass'n of Collegiate Alumnae, College Club of Plainfield, N.J.

DE LA MOTTE, Anna Christesen (Mrs. Johannes de la Motte), 70 S. Tenth St., Brooklyn, N.Y.

Physician; b. Denmark, April 1, 1862; dau. Martin A. and Johanna (Cramer) Christesen; ed. Höhere Tōchterschule in Souderburg, Schleswig-Holstein, Germany, and Cornell Univ., M.D. 1900; m. 1883, Johannes de la Motte; adopted son: Charles E. de la Motte. Attached to Williamsburg Hospital Dispensary (Brooklyn), pediatrics and gynecology, 1903-09. Engaged in general medical practice in Brooklyn, N.Y. Mem. Y.W.C.A., Child's Welfare Soc. Favors woman suffrage (occasional speaker for cause). Unitarian.

DELAND, Ellen Douglas, Dedham, Mass.

Author; b. Lake Mahopac, N.Y., Sept. 3, 1860; dau. Thorndike and Elizabeth (Rawle) Deland; ed. in private school, N.Y. City, Interested in literary, philanthropic and social life. Trustee Dedham Public Library. Vice-pres. Woman's Auxiliary of St. Paul's Parish, Dedham, Mass. Mem. Dedham Discussion Club, Boston Authors' Club. Author: Oakleigh; In the Old Herrick House; Alan Ransford; Josephine; A Little Son of Sunshine; Miss Betty of New York; Malvern; A Successful Venture; Kathrine; Three Girls of Hazlemere; The Friendship of Anne; The Girls of Dudley School; The Fortunes of Phoebe. Also several monologues which she gives in public and short stories in magazines. Recreations: Gardening, walking, bicycling, reading. Episcopalian. Favors woman suffrage; mem. Boston Equal Suffrage Ass'n of Good Government.

DE LAND, Helen Parce, Fairport, N.Y.

Born Fairport, N.Y.; grad Smith Coll., B.L. '92. Teacher Stetson Univ., De Land, Fla., 1894-96; Medina (N.Y.) High School, 1896-99; since then engaged in business life. Mem. Smith Coll. Alumnae Ass'n. Pres. Historical Club of Fairport.

DELAND, Margaretta Wade (Mrs. Lorin Fuller Deland), 35 Newbury St., Boston, Mass.

Author; b. Allegheny, Pa., Feb. 23, 1857; dau. Sample and Margaretta (Wade) Campbell; ed. private schools and Pelham Priory, N.Y.; m. May 12, 1880, Lorin Fuller Deland. Author: An Old Garden and Other Verses; John Ward—Preacher; Florida Days; Sidney; Tommy Dove and Other Stories; Philip and His Wife; Old Chester Tales; The Wisdom of Fools; Dr. Lavendar and His Friends; The Common Way; An Encore; The Awakening of Helena Richie; R. T.'s Mother and Some Other People; The Way to Peace; The Iron Woman; The Voice. Recreation: Gardening. Unitarian. Favors conditional or qualified woman suffrage.

DELANO, Aline P. (Mrs. James H. Delano), 42 Shepard St., Cambridge, Mass.

Lecturer, translator; b. Archangel, Russia; dau. Paul and Eudoxia (Shafrov) Kuzmistchev; grad. Patriotic School for Daughters of Nobility, St. Petersburg, Russia; m. St. Petersburg, Russia, Jan. 1, 1900, James H. Delano (U.S.N.; died 1900). Since death of husband engaged as translator from French and Russian. Lecturer on Russian literature. Has translated Victor Hugo's Ninety-Three, Tolstoi's The Kingdom of God Is Within You; Resurrection and other works, as well as Rubinstein's Autobiography and various works of other Russian authors. Unitarian. Republican.