This Goodly Land

Martha Young (January 11, 1862–May 9, 1941)

Other Names Used

Alabama Connections

Selected Works

Biographical Information

Martha Young was born on her family’s plantation near Newbern, Ala. When she was about six, the family moved to Greensboro, Ala. Young attended the Greensboro Female Academy, where two of her teachers were Louise Clarke Pyrnelle and her aunt Julia Strudwick Tutwiler. Later, she attended Greene Springs School (owned and operated by her grandfather, Henry Tutwiler), Tuscaloosa Female Academy, and Livingston Female Academy (now the University of West Alabama). Young graduated from Livingston in 1880 and returned to her family home. In Greensboro, she cared for her father and siblings and speculated in real estate. Young also began writing down the black dialect stories and songs which had interested her since childhood.

Young’s first story, “A Nurse’s Tale,” appeared in the New Orleans Times-Democrat in 1884. Her stories, poems, and essays were published in other newspapers and in magazines such as Cosmopolitan and The Century Magazine. Young’s dialect stories were popular and were compared to the work of Joel Chandler Harris, creator of “Uncle Remus.” Her first two books, Plantation Songs for My Lady’s Banjo and Plantation Bird Legends, were published in 1901 and 1902, respectively. At this point, Young began writing stories for children as well. Her first children’s book was Bessie Bell, published in 1903. In addition to her writing, Young began giving public readings of her work, which she continued to do for several decades. Her last book was published in 1921. In the last two decades of her life, Young wrote and published poems on religious and sentimental subjects.

Interests and Themes

Martha Young recorded and published folk songs and stories in black dialect. She also wrote stories for children, nonfiction essays, and poetry.

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Reference Books

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Location of Papers

Photo from Martha Young, Alabama's Foremost Folklorist, 1982.

Last updated on May 30, 2008.

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