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[Description and date of item], [Box/folder number], Margaret Prescott Montague, Author, Letters, A&M 1348, West Virginia and Regional History Center, West Virginia University Libraries, Morgantown, West Virginia.
Margaret Prescott Montague (1978-1955) was an American short story writer and novelist in the early twentieth century; she penned some of her work under the pseudonym Jane Steger. Montague was born in White Sulpher Springs, West Virginia, on November 29, 1878. In 1919 she won the O'Henry Award for her story "England to America," which had been published in the Atlantic Monthly in September 1918. In addition to publishing stories in the Atlantic Monthly and Harper's , Montague also published novels with Houghton Mifflin Company and the Baker & Taylor Company. Some of her other works include "Why It Was W-On-The-Eyes" (1913), "The Will to Go" (1913), The Sowing of Alderson Cree (1907), Closed Doors: Studies of Deaf and Blind Children (1915), Of Water and the Spirit (1916), England to America (1920), and Up Eel River (1928). She also published Leaves from a Secret Journal as Jane Steger in 1926. Several of her books were made into movies. Margaret Prescott Montague died in September 1955.
Six letters by Margaret Prescott Montague to a Mr. Paddock concerning her own poems and writings, and the poetry of Angela Morgan.
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