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Our Church Choir by Isabella MacDonald Alden
Our Church Choir by Isabella MacDonald Alden











Our Church Choir by Isabella MacDonald Alden

When she was ten years old, she wrote a story titled Our Old Clock. The letters she wrote to absent family members formed a habit of expressing her thoughts which proved to be useful in her career. She developed her writing skills early: as a child, she kept a daily journal which her father critiqued. The father, seeing the disappointed look on the little girl's face, picked her up, seated her on his shoulder and said, "Never mind, baby, you shall always be my little pansy-blossom." Macdonald, seeing the flowers, and thinking there was no one more deserving of them than her mother, picked them and threw them into her mother's lap exclaiming, "I pulled every one for you." She could not understand her mother's look of distress. Her mother had taken great pride in a bed of pansy blossoms. The sixth of seven children, she was initially home-schooled by her father, who also gave her the nickname Pansy, because of an incident that occurred in her childhood. Her mother was devoted to everything that was "pure and of good report."

Our Church Choir by Isabella MacDonald Alden Our Church Choir by Isabella MacDonald Alden

Her father was a temperance man with pronounced convictions upon subjects regarding social reform, as well as an abolitionist, believing slavery to be a sin. Isabella Macdonald was born in Rochester, New York to well-educated parents, Isaac and Myra Spafford Macdonald. Four of her books, Three People, The King's Daughter, One Commonplace Day, and Little Fishers and their Nets, were distinctively temperance books, while the principle of total abstinence was maintained in all her writings.

Our Church Choir by Isabella MacDonald Alden

She was interested in temperance also, and was involved in the Woman's Christian Temperance Union. Alden was interested in Sunday school primary teaching, and had charge of more than a hundred children every Sunday for many years. She also wrote the primary lesson department of the Westminster Teacher, edited the Presbyterian Primary Quarterly and the children's magazine Pansy, and wrote a serial story for the Herald and Presbyter of Cincinnati every winter. Harry Harper's Awakening, The Measure, and Spun from Fact. Her best known works were: Four Girls at Chautauqua, Chautauqua Girls at Home, Tip Lewis and his Lamp, Three People, Links in Rebecca's Life, Julia Ried, Ruth Erskine's Crosses, The King's Daughter, The Browning Boys, From Different Standpoints, Mrs. Isabella Macdonald Alden ( nickname and pen name, Pansy Novem– August 5, 1930) was an American author.













Our Church Choir by Isabella MacDonald Alden