Dorothy Dix
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As the forerunner of today’s popular advice
columnists, Elizabeth Meriwether Gilmer (1861-1951) writing
under the pen name Dorothy Dix, was America’s most widely read
and highest paid journalist at the time of her death. Her
advice on love and marriage was syndicated in newspapers around
the world. A most famous aphorism of hers was
Dictates for a Happy Life. With an estimated
audience of 60 million readers around the world she was a highly
popular, respected and recognized personality
The Dorothy Dix Collection at Austin
Peay State University
The Dorothy Dix Collection
is housed in the Felix G. Woodward Library at Austin Peay
State University. It is the most comprehensive collection
available on Dorothy Dix and her writings. The collection
consists of autobiographical and biographical information on
Dix; all books written by and about her; column and advice
writings; investigative writings; 40th anniversary
articles as a columnist; correspondence between her and
professional colleagues, friends and relatives; articles, book
chapters, thesis, dissertations written about Dix and her work;
research papers from the
Dorothy Dix Symposium; professional honors and awards;
travel diaries; memorabilia and passport depicting many of her
travels; product testimonials; books from her library;
childhood autograph book; scrapbooks from her school days;
photographs and slides of Dix, her relatives, friends and homes
she and her family owned; Dorothy Dix Collection administration.
Links
Research Guide
(annotated listing of collection material).
Time Line/Selected Bibliography
Research Papers
Letters and Diaries
Dorothy Dix Symposium
Dictates for a Happy Life
Dorothy Dix Collections at Other
Institutions
Historic New Orleans Collection
Hollins University
Le Petit Salon
Louisiana and Lower Mississippi Valley Collection,
Louisiana State University
Picayune Newspaper Collection
Tulane University Archival Collection and Louisiana
Collection
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Woodward Library
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FilippoI@apsu.edu.
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a background from
Ender
Design with additional contributions and updates by Michael Hooper,
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This site is listed as an important Montgomery
County web site by the
Montgomery County Historical Society.
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