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A Minnesota Century: Maud Hart Lovelace
By Annie Feidt
September 1999
Click for audio RealAudio 3.0 | Slide show

When asked to name some of the state's best-known authors of the early 1900s, most Minnesotans will name F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sinclair Lewis and Laura Ingalls Wilder. After all, who hasn't heard of "The Great Gatsby" and Lewis's "Main Street," or the series of stories written by Ingalls Wilder that immortalized her frontier life in the popular television series "Little House on the Prairie." With all this home-grown literary success, it is perhaps surprising that after selling nearly a million children's books based on two young heroines named Betsy and Tacy, writer Maud Hart Lovelace does not share in the same universal fame.

This month in our Minnesota Century series, the story of a woman who had mixed success as a novelist but eventually found her voice in the character of Betsy, whose antics and adventures mirrored Maud's real-life childhood in Mankato at the turn of the century.


MAUD HART LOVELACE did not have an extraordinary childhood. She lived with her parents and two sisters in a modest home at the foot of a big hill in Mankato. When she was five years old, she found a friend for life when a little girl named Bic moved in just across the street. That meeting became the first chapter of Maud's first children's book, Betsy-Tacy.

In the book, Mankato was called Deep Valley, Maud named herself Betsy and Bic became Tacy.

It was difficult, later, to think of a time when Betsy and Tacy had not been friends. Hill Street came to regard them almost as one person. Betsy's brown braids went with Tacy's red curls, Betsy's plump legs with Tacy's spindly ones, to school and from school, up hill and down, on errands and in play. So that when Tacy had the mumps and Betsy was obliged to make her journeys alone, saucy boys teased her: "Where's the cheese, apple pie?" "Where's your mush milk?" As though she didn't feel lonesome enough already! And Hill Street knew when Sunday came, even without listening to the rolling bells, for Betsy Ray and Tacy Kelly (whose parents attended different churches), set off down Hill Street separately, looking uncomfortable and strange.
Baxter: Maud wanted to be a writer from the time she was a small child.
Kathy Baxter is an Anoka County Librarian and a member of the Betsy-Tacy Society.
Baxter: Her mother remembered her asking her "How do you spell going down the street?" She'd sit up in a maple tree with a cigar box full of pencils and notepads from her father's shoe store, which is what Betsy does in the book, and write stories.
At a time when most girls were being groomed to become wives and mothers, Maud's family encouraged her writing career. Again, Kathy Baxter.
Baxter: The Hart family - Tom Hart and his wife - were very supportive of their daughters, they had three daughters, and they wanted them to become things, to do things and this at the turn of the century.
Maud's father knew the editor of the Mankato Free Press and convinced the man to bind 12 of Maud's poems in a small booklet titled "Selections from the Poems of Maud Palmer Hart."

By the time she was 12, Maud was sending a constant stream of her stories and poems to national publications, and collecting a pile of rejections. Maud finally sold her first story many years later - in the spring of 1911 - to the Los Angeles Times. The story was called "Number Eight."

In 1917, Maud married a newspaper reporter, Delos Lovelace, and moved to New York City. They had a daughter, Merian, in 1931; but Maud still found time for her writing. She wrote short stories, selling them to national magazines like "Today's House Wife" and "Peoples Home Journal." She also wrote novels, publishing six by 1937, but she hadn't found great success. Then came Betsy-Tacy. On November 22nd 1938, Maud Hart Lovelace took out her diary and wrote "Began Betsy and Tacy. Let's see what comes of it."

The first Betsy-Tacy book was an instant hit when it was published in 1940 and hasn't been out of print since. Baxter says that's because kids can relate to Betsy's genuine struggle.
Baxter: Her imperfections make her so wonderful. Something imperfect about her; she defines the emotions, she describes the friendships, the family relationships, she's just a wonderful, wonderful writer.
Fifth graders Dursitu Hassan (left), Pa Kou Vang (middle), and Stephanie Flores-Camano (right) in the MPR studio read from the Betsy-Tacy books.
 
Ten year olds Pa Kou Vang and Stephanie Flores-Camano, second language learners at Northstar Community School, say they can't get enough of Betsy and Tacy.
Vang: It's like you don't like to read other books, but just that one.
Flores-Camano: They sometimes they do things they're not supposed to do and then they're like "oops," and they do it on accident and sometimes I do the same things.
I thought that they were kind of cool, because they were kind of humorous and they were kind of like your own life, they weren't kind of really silly like other books.
Their classmate Dursitu Hassan says her favorite story is when Betsy, Tacy and Tib decide they want to learn to fly. The girls think that if they keep jumping off higher and higher objects, flight will just come naturally.
Betsy got to the lowest branch and sat on it. She held on tight and swung her legs. She didn't fly though.
"When are you going to fly?" asked Tib.
"In a minute, "answered Betsy. She sat there and swung her legs.
"What kind of bird are you, Betsy?" Tacy asked.
"I'm a Betsin," answered Betsy. " I'm a Betsin bird."
She looked up into the leafy world above her, and she looked down at the ground. The ground was a long way off.
"Don't Betsin birds like to fly?" asked Tib.
"Oh, yes, " said Betsy. "They love to fly." But still she didn't fly. She looked up again into the cool green branches.
"They like to fly so well," she said at last, "that its a wonder they ever stopped doing it. But they did. Do you want to know why?"
"Why?" asked Tacy and Tib.
"Sit down and I'll tell you, " said Betsy. "It's very interesting."
Betsy-Tacy readers clearly would have liked the series to go on forever, but they will have to settle for just 10 books. Maud decided to stop the series with "Betsy's Wedding," in 1955. She explained:
In "Betsy's Wedding," Betsy's husband went off to the first world war and many letters have begged me to bring him safely home. The letters even offer me titles for another book obviously in the friendly assumption that when a writer has found a title, he is over the hump. Some have even hit upon the title I have selected myself, "Betsy's Bettina." But that won't be written until I feel it, and I want to write it. It isn't stubbornness. I can't write a book any other way.
Seven years after publication of Betsy's Wedding, Maud wrote:
I have tried again and again to write Betsy's Bettina but it didn't come, which means with me that it isn't meant to be.
She did, however, publish two more books, "What Cabrillo Found," a biography of explorer, Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo, and "The Valentine Box," the story of a fifth-grade girl who moves from the city to the suburbs. She wrote and lived in Claremont, California, until her death in 1980.