Hildegarde Dolson Lockridge
Hildegarde Dolson Lockridge (1908–1981) was a prolific writer whose career spanned nearly fifty years. Her work appeared in major magazines, plus she was the author of fifteen books—all published under her maiden name of Hildegarde Dolson.
| Hildegarde Dolson Lockridge | |
|---|---|
| .png.webp) Book jacket photograph | |
| Born | August 31, 1908 Franklin, Pennsylvania | 
| Died | January 15, 1981 (aged 72) Columbus, North Carolina | 
| Pen name | Hildegarde Dolson | 
| Occupation | Freelance Writer | 
| Nationality | American | 
| Genre | Mystery, humorous essays, nonfiction history | 
| Notable works | We Shook the Family Tree, The Great Oildorado | 
Early life
    
Hildegarde was born and raised in Franklin, Pennsylvania, the oldest of four children born to Clifford and Katherine Dolson.[1] From 1926 to 1929 she attended Allegheny College, in Meadville, Pennsylvania, but left at the beginning of her senior year to live in New York City. She would later joke: "The day I arrived in New York, in October 1929, the stock market crashed with a bang."[1]
After holding down numerous jobs, Dolson found work as an advertising copywriter for Gimbels, Macy's, Franklin-Simon, and Bamberger stores.[2] She sold her first manuscript to The New Yorker,[1] and was later published in other major magazines, including Harper's, Ladies Home Journal, McCall's, and Reader's Digest. After her first book was published in 1938, Dolson became a full-time freelance writer.[2]
Marriage to Richard Lockridge
    
Dolson once wrote "I'm a self-made spinster who crows too much about it, especially when I get paid by the word."[3] She had at least one article published on the subject of why she should never marry.[4]
In 1965, when she was 56, she met mystery writer Richard Lockridge, and Lockridge quickly decided he wanted to marry her.[5] Dolson loved her Greenwich Village apartment,[6] and Mr. Lockridge lived in the country. He had two beloved Siamese cats, and she preferred dogs.[5]
Despite the obstacles, within a few months of their first meeting Lockridge and Miss Dolson married in May 1965.[7] Lockridge would refer to Hildegarde as either Hildy, or The Lady.[5]
Hildegarde Dolson Lockridge died on January 15, 1981, at St. Luke's Hospital in Columbus, North Carolina. She was 72 years old, and had been living in Tyron, North Carolina.[8]
Published books
    
- How About a Man, 1938
- We Shook the Family Tree, 1946
- The Husband Who Ran Away, 1948
- The Form Divine, 1951
- Sorry To Be So Cheerful, 1955
- My Brother Adlai (with Elizabeth Stevenson), 1956
- A Growing Wonder, 1957
- The Great Oildorado: The Gaudy & Turbulent Years of the First Oil Rush: Pennsylvania 1859–1880, 1959
- William Penn, Quaker Hero, 1961
- Guess Whose Hair I'm Wearing, 1963
- Adventures of a Light-Headed Blonde, 1964
- Disaster at Johnstown, The Great Flood, 1965
- Open the Door, 1966
- Heat Lightning, 1970
- To Spite Her Face, 1971
- A Dying Fall, 1973
- Please Omit Funeral, 1975
- Beauty Sleep, 1977
- "How Beautiful With Mud", 1978
References
    
- We Shook the Family Tree, by Hildegard Dolson, 1946
- Contemporary Authors, First Revision, Vol. 5–8, Gale Research Company, 1969
- About the Author section of Sorry To Be So Cheerful, by Hildegarde Dolson, 1955
- "I'd Make a Terrible Wife!", McCall's, March 1962, reprinted in Reader's Digest, July 1962
- One Lady, Two Cats, by Richard Lockridge, 1967, J. B. Lippincott Co.
- Guess Whose Hair I'm Wearing, by Hildegarde Dolson, 1963
- Contemporary Authors, First Revision, Vol. 5–8, Gale Research Company, 1969
- The New York Times, January 17, 1981