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Laurel Louisa <I>Fletcher</I> Connely

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Laurel Louisa Fletcher Connely

Birth
Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, USA
Death
7 Feb 1957 (aged 78)
Providence, Providence County, Rhode Island, USA
Burial
Barrington, Bristol County, Rhode Island, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Daughter of Stoughton Jesse Fletcher and Lizzie Laurel Locke Fletcher. Usually called by her middle name, Louisa, in adult life. Her family called her "Abbess". She is often confused with her niece and namesake, Laurel Louisa Fletcher (1903-1927), who was the daughter of her brother, Stoughton A. Fletcher.

Poet and author, who collaborated with her famous first husband in arranging many of his works as plays for Broadway. His book "The Magnificent Ambersons" is thought to have been based on her colorful and flamboyant family.

She attended Smith College. Her most famous poem is "The Land of Beginning Again", which she wrote after her first divorce. This poem is said to have been the origin of the song of the same name sung by Bing Crosby in the movie "The Bells of St. Mary".

Married, first, [Newton] Booth Tarkington, 18 Jun 1902 in Indianapolis, IN (divorced 1911).

Child:
1. Laurel Louisa, b. 6 Feb 1906, d. 13 Apr 1923 of pneumonia in Indianapolis. Laurel also suffered from what was then called dementia praecox, now known as schizophrenia.

Married, second, [James] Willard Connely, a newspaperman, biographer, and professor of English at Brown University, 16 May 1915 in Washington, DC (divorced 1925)

Child:
2. Nancy Willard, b. 9 Dec 1922, d. 12 Nov 2008; m. Albert Van Nostrand, 3 Sep 1943; five children.

Married, third, Dr. Peter K. Knoefel, October 19, 1931 in Carson City, NV (divorced 1932). No children. Louisa resumed the surname of her previous husband, and was called by it in her obituary in 1957.
Daughter of Stoughton Jesse Fletcher and Lizzie Laurel Locke Fletcher. Usually called by her middle name, Louisa, in adult life. Her family called her "Abbess". She is often confused with her niece and namesake, Laurel Louisa Fletcher (1903-1927), who was the daughter of her brother, Stoughton A. Fletcher.

Poet and author, who collaborated with her famous first husband in arranging many of his works as plays for Broadway. His book "The Magnificent Ambersons" is thought to have been based on her colorful and flamboyant family.

She attended Smith College. Her most famous poem is "The Land of Beginning Again", which she wrote after her first divorce. This poem is said to have been the origin of the song of the same name sung by Bing Crosby in the movie "The Bells of St. Mary".

Married, first, [Newton] Booth Tarkington, 18 Jun 1902 in Indianapolis, IN (divorced 1911).

Child:
1. Laurel Louisa, b. 6 Feb 1906, d. 13 Apr 1923 of pneumonia in Indianapolis. Laurel also suffered from what was then called dementia praecox, now known as schizophrenia.

Married, second, [James] Willard Connely, a newspaperman, biographer, and professor of English at Brown University, 16 May 1915 in Washington, DC (divorced 1925)

Child:
2. Nancy Willard, b. 9 Dec 1922, d. 12 Nov 2008; m. Albert Van Nostrand, 3 Sep 1943; five children.

Married, third, Dr. Peter K. Knoefel, October 19, 1931 in Carson City, NV (divorced 1932). No children. Louisa resumed the surname of her previous husband, and was called by it in her obituary in 1957.


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  • Created by: HWA
  • Added: Jan 2, 2014
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/122628572/laurel_louisa-connely: accessed ), memorial page for Laurel Louisa Fletcher Connely (12 Dec 1878–7 Feb 1957), Find a Grave Memorial ID 122628572, citing Forest Chapel Cemetery, Barrington, Bristol County, Rhode Island, USA; Maintained by HWA (contributor 46565033).