Author:Samuel Williams Cooper

Samuel Williams Cooper
(1860–1939)

Cooper was born March 5, 1860 in Philadelphia’s Germantown section, to one of the city’s colonial families. He was fifth of the eight children of Colin Campbell Cooper, MD, and Emily Williams Cooper. He was educated by his parents and private tutors until he entered the University of Pennsylvania Law School, where he graduated in 1881. He specialized in business and commercial law, and was a member of the American Anti-Imperialist League. In 1893 he married the opera singer Homie Weldon, who bore a daughter, Margaret, in 1895. After a distinguished career in law and active leadership in the city’s Lawyers Club, The Arts Club, Nameless Club, Plays and Players, and Art Alliance, Cooper died on January 13, 1939 of bronchial pneumonia, leaving behind one daughter, Margaret Homie Cooper.

Works

  • Abuse of Police Powers, The North American Review, 1890
  • The Present Legal Rights of Women (October 1890)
  • The Confessions of a Society Man[1], 1887 anonymous publication under the pseudonym "Miss Blanche Conscience"
  • Think and Thank: A Tale, 1890 story recounts a Jewish boy's victory over his classmates who harassed him in Victorian England.

Fiction

  • Hazard, as published in The Septameron
  • His Lawyer's Bag
  • Three Days: A Midsummer Love-story, 1889 short story about flirting at Narragansett Pier, illustrated by Hal Hurst and CC Cooper, Jr.
  • The Nineteenth Hole, 1921

Verse

Periodical articles

Other

Some or all works by this author are in the public domain in the United States because they were published before January 1, 1930.


This author died in 1939, so works by this author are in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 85 years or less. These works may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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