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Edith Wharton: An American Hero

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“Edith Wharton” Edith Wharton was born on January 24th 1862, going by the name Edith Newbold Jones, to the couple George Fredrick Jones and Lucretia Stevens Rhinelander in New York City. Her first engagement was broken up by her fiancés mother. In 1885 she married Edward Robbens Wharton whom she later divorced in 1913 after 28 years of marriage. Wharon died August 11, 1937 in France due to a stroke. Throughout those 75 years that she was alive she has accomplished a lot. For example, she won the French Legion of Honor during her work in WWI. She also won the Pulitzer prize on her 12th book The Age of Innocence. During Wharton’s work in World War I she served in as an American war correspondent and refugee aid worker. “Wharton’s World War I articles have been published together in a book called Fighting France: From Dunkerque to Belfort.” (Mead pg.51) Her war work has also earned her a French Legion of Honor medal in 1916. That means although she may look like one of the Gilded Age society matrons out of her novels like The Age of Innocence or House of Mirth she can roll her sleeves up and prove anyone can help in a …show more content…
Through the 75 years she was alive she has won many awards, traveled the world, had a long full life, and had played a big role in the first world war. Some of the awards she had received throughout her life are the French Legion of Honor, the Pulitzer prize, and an Honorary doctorates degree from Yale. Though in her younger days she did not get any formal schooling she still managed to get a doctorate degree from Yale. Therefore, this proves that you don’t need a good beginning to end successfully. She has impacted many people through the things she has done in her life, and she still impacts us today with her short stories, novels, and poems. Due to the people Wharton has impacted, she truly is an American

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