Dorothy Clarke Wilson
Dorothy Clarke Wilson (1904–2003) was an American author and playwright.
Dorothy Clarke was born in Gardiner, Maine in 1904. She attended Bates College and graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1925 and married classmate, Elwin L. Wilson. After Elwin attended Seminary, they returned to Maine and were both engaged in various Methodist activities.
Clarke's first play that she sold was written for a church. Her best known book was, Prince of Egypt, which won the Westminster prize for the best religious book the year it was published and was also one of the sources for the film The Ten Commandments (1956 film). Clarke was not a fan of the movie and used the term 'flimflammery' to describe the scene in which Moses parted the Red Sea. Wilson is also well known for her biographies about women such as Dorothea Dix and Elizabeth Blackwell as well as Dolley Madison and Martha Washington.
The Wilson Center at the University of Maine was named in Dorothy and Elwin's honor. Dorothy Wilson received numerous awards through her lifetime before she died in 2003.
In addition to her many plays, essays, and lectures, Wilson's work includes:
- Twelve Months of Drama for the Average Church (1933; plays and worship services)
- The Herdsman (1946; novel about Amos)
- Prince of Egypt (1949; novel about Moses)
- House of Earth (1952, a novel about India)
- Fly with Me to India (1954; a travel book)
- That Heaven of Freedom: A One-Act Play of India (1954)
- Jezebel (1955)
- The Gifts: The Story of the Boyhood of Jesus (1957, fiction)
- Dr. Ida: The Story of Dr. Ida Scudder of Vellore [India] (1959)
- The Journey (1962)
- Take My Hands: The Remarkable Story of Dr. Mary Verghese (1963)
- The Tree Gifts (1963)
- Ten Fingers for God (1966/1983; about Paul Brand, a missionary to lepers in India)
- Handicap Race: The Inspiring Story of Roger Arnett (1967)
- Palace of Healing: The Story of Dr. Clara Swain, first woman missionary doctor, and the hospital she founded (1968)
- Lone Woman: The Story of Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman doctor (1970; published in 1983 as I Will Be a Doctor! The Story of America's First Physician)
- The Big-Little World of Doc Pritham, a Greenville doctor (1971; only book set in Maine; reissued for fifth time in 1999)
- Hilary: The Brave World of Hilary Pole (1972)
- Bright Eyes: The Story of Susette La Flesche, an Omaha Indian (1974)
- Stranger & Traveler: The Story of Dorothea Dix, American Reformer (1975)
- Granny Brand: Her Story (1976; aka Climb Every Mountain: The Story of Granny Brand)
- Twelve Who Cared: My Aventures with Christian Courage (1977)
- Apostle of Sight (1980)
- Lincoln's Mothers (1981)
- Lady Washington (1984, about Martha Washington)
- The Brother (1984, a novel about St. James)
- Queen Dolley: The Life and Times of Dolley Madison (1987)
- Alice and Edith: The Two Wives of Teddy Roosevelt (1989)
- Leaves in the Wind: A Lifetime in Verse (1995)
- Live for Hundred Years: A History of the Maine Christian Association (1996)
- Union in Diversity (1999, 2nd ed., memoirs)
References and external links
- Maine State Library
- Bates College Obituary
- Works by or about Dorothy Clarke Wilson in libraries (WorldCat catalog)