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Sarah Josepha Hale Award

One of New England's oldest and most distinguished literary awards

Hale Award Winners | Members of the Board of Judges |
 Hale Award Criteria
  I 
In the News

Henry Louis Gates Winner of 2009 Sarah Josepha Hale Award

The Trustees of the Richards Free Library and the Judges of the Sarah Josepha Hale award are pleased to announce that, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. has won the 2009 Hale Award.  He will accept the award on October 3, 2009 at 8:00 p.m. at the Newport Opera House.
Henry Louis Gates is an author, literary scholar and historian.  He is the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and the Director of the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research at Harvard University.  He is a graduate of Yale University and Cambridge University.  He has received many awards including a MacArthur Grant, an American Book Award and was named to Time magazine’s “25 Most Influential Americans” list in 1997. 
    Former editor of the Concord Monitor Mike Pride says of Gates: “In a long, distinguished career, he has operated with vigor and eloquence in both the academic realm and the popular culture in his quest to enrich the American literary canon with African American voices and to bring these voices to the public.”
   


Hale Award Winners
1956 Robert Frost
1957 John P. Marquand
1958 Archibald MacLeish and Dorothy Canfield Fisher
1959 Mary Ellen Chase
1960 Mark Van Doren
1961 Catherine Drinker Bowen
1962 David McCord
1963 John Hersey
1964 Ogden Nash
1965 Louis Untermeyer and Raymond Holden
1966 Robert Lowell
1967 John Kenneth Galbraith
1968 Richard Wilbur
1969 Lawrance Thompson
1970 Elizabeth Yates
1971 Norman Cousins
1972 May Sarton
1973 Henry Steele Commager
1974 Nancy Hale
1975 Edwin Way Teale
1976 John Ciardi
1977 Roger Tory Peterson
1978/79 James MacGregor Burns
1982 Richard Eberhart
1983 Donald Hall
1984 Barbara W. Tuchman
1985 Stephen Jay Gould
1986 Robert M. Coles
1987 David McCullough
1988 Hayden Carruth
1989 Doris Kearns Goodwin
1990 Arthur Miller
1991 Michael Dorris
1992 Maxine Kumin
1993 William Manchester
1994 Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
1995 Jill Ker Conway
1996 Tom Wicker
1997 Wesley McNair
1998 Tracy Kidder
1999 Russell Banks
2000 Robert B. Parker
2001 Anita Shreve
2002 Ernest Hebert
2003 Jay Parini
2004 Charles Simic
2005 Grace Paley
2006 Ellen Goodman
2007 Tomie dePaola
2008  Ken Burns


Members of the Board of Judges

John N. Berry III, editor, Library Journal

Nancy Marashio, professor, River Valley Community College

Wesley McNair, poet

Mike Pride, editor, The Concord Monitor

Deborah Stone, professor, Dartmouth College

Kendall Wiggin, State Librarian, Connecticut

Barbara Holden Yeomans, associated with the Richards Library since 1949 and with the Sarah Josepha Hale Award since its inception.  

Monica Wood, novelist

Michael York, State Librarian, New Hampshire
 

Hale Award Criteria

    The Sarah Josepha Hale Award, presented annually since 1956, is a New England award given by the trustees of the Richards Free Library, Newport, New Hampshire, in recognition of a distinguished body of work in the field of literature and letters.

    Named for Sarah Josepha Hale, the award honors the contribution of one of America’s most powerful women of the Nineteenth Century. The Newport author of several books and hundreds of poems shaped the opinion of American women for forty years through her editorials in Godey’s Lady’s Magazine.

    The award consists of a bronze medal and $1000.00 honorarium with funding provided by the Holden-Yeomans Memorial Fund.
    Selection is handled by a national Board of Judges and may not be applied for either by author or publisher.  Judges submit nominations under the following criteria.
•    Nominees Must have been born in New England, or reside here for a least part of the year as a regular practice.
•    Nominees should be a literary person (poet, dramatist, novelist, historian, journalist, writer, etc.).
•    Nominee must, if he/she doesn’t meet the conditions of birth and residence, be associated primarily with New England through his/her work.
•    The award is based on the full body of the nominee’s work.
•    Nominees must be able and willing to be present at the award ceremony and deliver a talk or reading of twenty to forty minutes duration.
 
Sarah Josepha Hale
Sarah Josepha Hale
1788-1879


Gentle Crusader: New Hampshire’s  Sarah Josepha Hale
by Judith Freeman Clark

Throughout the 19th century, most Americans viewed proponents of equal opportunity for women as lunatics or anarchists bent on destroying polite society.  In such a society women were generally tied to domestic responsibilities, and their educational and professional choices were severely limited by virtue of their gender.  Happily, some, like New Hampshire’s Sarah Josepha (Buell) Hale, born in Newport in 1788, cherished the opinion that society would be improved, not damaged, by women’s contributions.

Editor of Godey’s Lady’s Book from 1837 to 1877, Sarah believed women should seek “a more respectable station in social life than merely that of a household drudge or a pretty trifler.”  Sarah was neither of these things.  Her family believed education was important, and although she had no formal schooling, she was tutored by her brother Horatio, a Dartmouth College Student.

Sarah’s first job as a schoolteacher may have been inevitable, but her commitment to educating boys and girls was far from ordinary.  Sarah taught reading, mathematics – even Latin – with indifference to the fact that her pedagogy was atypical.  Unlike most teachers, she allowed each student to proceed at an individual pace instead of requiring group recitation.  In addition to being applauded for her instructional methods she became well known for her poems.  One became a children’s classic.  “Mary’s Lamb” (better known as “Mary Had a Little Lamb”) has been memorized, sung, and recited by generations of Americans, but few know that the author was a self-educated village schoolmistress with a penchant for innovative teaching.

Sarah was courted by lawyer David Hale, whom she married in 1813, quitting her school post to do so.  Despite the birth of four children, she studied in the evenings and diligently plugged away at her writing.  In 1822, when David died of pneumonia, she had published essays, poems, and short stories, and had started a novel.  Sarah (who gave birth to her fifth child days after David’s death) knew a teacher’s pay would be insufficient for her family’s needs, so she opened a millinery business in Newport with her sister-in-law.  In the midst of increased business and domestic responsibilities, Sarah continued writing during her “spare” time.

Within a few years she had published a book of poems and was writing regularly for The American Monthly Magazine, The Minerva, The New York Mirror, The Spectator and the U.S. Literary Gazette.  However, the tour de force of Sarah’s literary output was a novel, Northwood, published in 1827.  Preceding Uncle Tom’s Cabin by more than two decades, it introduced a new American genre: novels about slavery.  Praised by critics at home and abroad, Northwood became the passport to an editorial career to which Sarah dedicated the next 50 years.

Following Northwood’s success Sarah Moved to Boston to become editor of the American Ladies’ Magazine.  There she defined her journalistic mission – to educated and enlighten readers, not merely entertain them.  She did this by presenting, as she stated, “whatever is calculated to illustrate and improve the female character.”  By the time her magazine emerged in 1836 with Louis Godey’s Lady’s Book, Sarah had become well known as an editor of perception, discernment, and demanding literary standards.

Over the course of her career her position enabled he to become acquainted with many who devoted themselves to education in all of its forms.  These notables included writer Oliver Wendell Holmes, Samuel Gridley Howe, a Harvard professor and founder of the Perkins Institute for the Blind, and musician Lowell Mason, who published many of Sarah’s verses in his songbook the Juvenile Lyre, used in public schools throughout America.  Sarah also became a good friend of Emma Willard, founder of a “female seminary” in Troy, New York.. Its goal - to educate young women as schoolteachers – was dear to Sarah’s heart.  Not only did she appeal in her magazine for donations to the school, but she sent both of her daughters there.

Among her charitable and philanthropic efforts during these Boston years, the Bunker Hill Monument was Sarah’s most ambitious.  Learning in 1825 that group formed to commemorate the Battle of Bunker Hill had run out of money, Sarah asked each Lady’s Book reader to send a dollar to help the cause.  Male skeptics derided the idea that women could actually raise the needed funds, but Sarah shrugged off criticism.  Ultimately, she joined the thousands who cheered the monument’s dedication in 1843 – a ceremony attended by President Tyler and made memorable by an oration delivered by another New Hampshire native, Daniel Webster.  Eighteen years after placement of the original cornerstone, Sarah and her  lady readers had ensured the project’s completion.

While monitoring the Bunker Hill campaign, in 1833, Sarah also helped found the Seamen’s Aid Society.  The first such organization of its kind, the Society was dedicated to improving economic conditions for men who spent their lives in the merchant marine, as well as to helping their families obtain financial and other assistance.  Thanks to Sarah’s energy the Society grew into a multi-purpose institution that endures today.

When she left Boston in 1841 for Philadelphia, where the Lady’s Book offices were located, she had thirteen years of managerial, editorial, and philanthropic experience. Yet her most productive years were ahead of her.  From the early 1840’s until her retirement in 1877, Sarah’s social conscience blossomed as her editorial influence expanded.  Her commentary varied: she counseled on infant nutrition, recommended moderation in women’s dress (she tolerated the fashion plates for which the Lady’s Book was famous, knowing that they promoted the magazine), and advocated equality for girls and women.  Urging construction of playgrounds and advocating exercise for boys and girls, Sarah anticipated Progressive Era reforms by nearly six decades.   As she praised female physicians, she ignored critics who said women were unsuited for the medical profession, criticizing those who warned that women doctors would cause economic ruin among their male counterparts.  Not surprisingly, the Lady’s Book warmly congratulated Elizabeth Blackwell in 1848 when she became the first American woman to earn a medical degree.

Sarah’s determination may be credited to her early education and the challenges she faced upon her husband’s death, or she may have been naturally assertive at a time when the majority of American women remained silent at home.   But unlike some of her contemporaries – notably Susan B. Anthony, Lucy Stone, and Amelia Bloomer – feminists who sought dissolution of gender stereotypes and demanded full equal rights for women, Sarah remained a moderate.  Promoting opportunities for women, she nevertheless valued their traditional roles.  Her chief concern was that all women use common sense, and that each be given an education that would foster constructive use of her intelligence.

In 1855, she canvassed readers for money to preserve George Washington’s former home.  Her campaign to make Mt. Vernon a nation shrine wore the veneer of sentimental patriotism common at the time, but Sarah believed that commemorating the first president was important.  She hoped it would offer a symbol around which the nation might rally as it struggled with sectional disputes.  In 1860 the Mt. Vernon Ladies Association purchased the Virginia property – an accomplishment Sarah duly reported in the Lady’s Book as “a happy harbinger of faith”

But her most cherished victory was neither preservation of a building nor publication of a best-seller.  Starting in 1846, Sarah had appealed to each president, asking him to announce an annual Thanksgiving observance.  Abraham Lincoln’s decision to do so may have been motivated more by the notion that such a holiday presented a unifying device for a divided nation than by any conviction that Americans needed a day off.  Whatever the reason, in 1863 Sarah’s efforts were rewarded by Lincoln’s Thanksgiving Day Proclamation (although it would be 1941 before Congress declared it a federal holiday).

While Sarah Josepha Hale cannot be placed in the same category as 19th century feminists such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton or Susan B. Anthony, she nevertheless played a central role in promoting equality for women.  Through the pages of Godey’s Lady’s Book, which at its peak reached 150,000 subscribers, Sarah’s influence probably affected many more women than did the strident proselytizing of feminist reformers.  Having faced the multiple demands of marriage and motherhood, she understood what subscribers wanted to find in the pages of the Lady’s Book, and, continuing her life-long crusade to prove that women could accomplish whatever they attempted, she provided it.



For further information please contact Andrea Thorpe, Sarah Josepha Hale Award Administrator or call (603) 863-3430


58 N. Main St., Newport, NH ~(603)863-3430~fax: (603) 863-3022 ~rfl@newport.lib.nh.us