Florida Scott-Maxwell
Florida Pier Scott-Maxwell (14 September 1883 - 6 March 1979) was a playwright, author and psychologist.
Biography
Florida Pier was born in Orange Park, Florida, and educated at home until the age of ten.[1] She grew up in Pittsburgh, then moved to New York City at age 15 to become an actress. In 1910 she married John Maxwell Scott-Maxwell and moved to her husband's native Scotland, and lived in Baillieston House 6 miles east of Glasgow where she worked for women's suffrage and as a playwright.[1]
They had four children: sons Stephen, Peter and Denis, and a daughter Hilary. The couple divorced in 1929 and she moved to London. In 1933 she studied Jungian psychology under Carl Jung and practised as an analytical psychologist in both England and Scotland. Her most famous book is The Measure of My Days (1968).[1]
Scott-Maxwell died in Exeter, England on 6 March 1979.[2]
Selected works
- The Power of Ancestors (short story, 1906)[3]
- Musty, Dusty Mr. Cullender (short story, 1910)[4]
- Mrs Nolly's Real Self (short story, 1911)[5]
- The Flash-Point. A play in three acts. 1914[6]
- The Kinsmen Knew How to Die (as "Florida Pier", with Sophie Botcharsky, 1931).[7]
- Pray for the Princess (short story, 1931)[8]
- Many Women (play) 1932. Produced at the Arts Theatre, London.
- Towards relationship (non-fiction) 1939[9]
- I Said to Myself (play) 1946. Produced at the Mercury Theatre, London[10]
- Women and Sometimes Men (non-fiction) 1957 [11]
- The Measure of My Days (autobiography) 1968[12]
References
- ^ a b c Harmon, Gary (1992). McCarthy, Kevin (ed.). The Book-lovers' Guide to Florida. Sarasota, FL: Pineapple. p. 54. ISBN 978-1-56164-012-6.
- ^ Harris, Mirian Kalman. "Scott-Maxwell, Florida". American Women Writers: A Critical Reference Guide from Colonial Times to the Present. www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 24 June 2019.
- ^ Pier, Florida (1906). "The Power of Ancestors". The Century Magazine. 71: 445.
- ^ Pier, Florida (1910). "Musty, Dusty Mr. Cullender". Munsey's Magazine. 42: 389.
- ^ Pier, Florida (1911). "Mrs Nolly's Real Self". Harper's Magazine. Vol. 123. p. 786.
- ^ British Library Catalogue #002433558
- ^ British Library Catalogue #007561320
- ^ Pier, Florida (1931). "Pray for the Princess". Life and Letters. 6: 50.
- ^ British Library Catalogue #007571811
- ^ "The Theatres". The Times. London. 26 May 1947. p. 6.
- ^ British Library Catalogue #002433561
- ^ "Scott-Maxwell, Florida 1883-1979" at the OCLC
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- 1883 births
- 1979 deaths
- American expatriates in the United Kingdom
- American suffragists
- 20th-century American dramatists and playwrights
- People from Orange Park, Florida
- 20th-century American women writers