American educator, biologist, and author (1858–1923)
Cover of Donkey John of the toy valley. Chicago A. C. McClurg & Co. 1909
Margaret Warner Morley (February 17, 1858, in Montrose, Iowa – December 12, 1923, in Washington, D.C.) was an American educator, biologist, and author of many children's books on nature and biology.[1]
Biography
Morley grew up in Brooklyn. She studied at State University of New York at Oswego and Hunter College.[1] She continued her biology education at the Armour Institute (now the Illinois Institute of Technology) in Chicago and at the Woods Hole marine laboratory in Massachusetts.[1][2] She worked as a teacher and was considered an expert in agriculture and beekeeping.[3] She was most well known for her work as an illustrator, photographer, and author of books on nature.[1][3]
In one of her many trips she went to Europe to the Val Gardena the valley of toy carvers where she was inspired to write the novel Donkey John of the toy valley.[citation needed]
A collection of Morley's work is held at the Harriet Beecher Stowe Center in Hartford, Connecticut. The collection consists of travel logs and sketchbooks of rural North Carolina, and book manuscripts.[4]
The North Carolina Museum of History owns a collection of original photographs that Morley donated to the museum in 1914.[3]
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