Della Gould Emmons

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Della Gould Emmons

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1890-1983

History

Della Gould Emmons (1890-1983) was a writer of historical fiction based in the Northwest. Her first novel, Sacajawea of the Shoshones (1943), was written from Sacajawea’s point of view and told the story of her life and participation in the Lewis and Clark expedition. Emmons invested ten years of research, travel, and correspondence with historians before its publication, and she included brief references at relevant chapter ends. She assisted with an adaptation of the book for Hollywood in 1953, as The Far Horizons, which starred Charlton Heston, Fred McMurray and Donna Reed. Nothing in Life is Free (1953) focused on the pioneer experience and the Puget Sound settlers who crossed the Cascade Mountains at Naches Pass. She next wrote the story of Leschi of the Nisquallies (1965), an account of his involvement in the Medicine Creek Treaty and ensuing Puget Sound War, his two trials for murder, and subsequent death by hanging. Her fourth book was a compilation of 12 plays, Northwest History in Action (1960). Lastly she wrote a biography of her oldest brother, titled Jay Gould’s Million Dollar Gems (1974), which served additionally as a memoir as she related their early upbringing together.

She was born in Glencoe, Minnesota August 12, 1890, where she spent her early life. She graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1912 and the following year she taught high school in Sisseton, South Dakota. Her tenure there culminated in the production of a musical and theatrical presentation at the local opera house as well as the nearby Sioux agency [1, 2, 3]. Her marriage to Allan Burdette Emmons (1887-1958), a train dispatcher, in 1913, led to their subsequent travel west along the railroad line as his job required. They lived in Seattle for nineteen years, and when her daughter’s fourth grade class at Green Lake School studied history, Emmons was motivated to write pageants for the students’ participation. The pageants were popular and restaged multiple times and Emmons was encouraged to submit radio plays to local stations where they were aired in the 1920s and 1930s. By 1936 her husband had been transferred to Tacoma and she was involved in civic life there for her remaining 47 years. She served on the Board of the Washington State Historical Society, was appointed Historian for the Fort Nisqually Restoration Council, and was adopted by the Lummi Nation in 1955. She gave talks and presentations at events and on the air, and received numerous awards. A plaque was placed in Point Defiance Park dedicating the rose arbor to her in 1981. She died in Tacoma at the age of 93, November 6, 1983, and was buried in Glencoe, Minnesota [5,6,7].

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6.1.4

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Written by Ruth Keller, 2022.

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Sources

[1] "Autobiographic Information" Box 6 Della Gould Emmons Papers (Collection 6.1.4), Northwest Room at Tacoma Public Library
[2] “A Dandy Minstrel Show” The Sisseton Weekly Standard (Sisseton, South Dakota), 3/21/1913, p.2
[3] “Della Gould Emmons” Tacoma Public Library Book Notes Radio Program (Collection 1.4.5), Northwest Room at Tacoma Public Library
[4] Plaque. Metro Parks Permanent Collection.
[5] “Della Gould Emmons is Dead: Writer About Era of Pioneers” New York Times, 11/11/1983, p.D-17
[6] “Writer Della Gould Emmons Dead at 93” Tacoma News Tribune, 11/7/1983, p.A-1
[7] “Funeral Notices - Emmons” Tacoma News Tribune, 11/9/1983, p.C-1

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