Peggy pond church biography
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2 Nature and the Nuclear Southwest: Peggy Pond Church and J. Robert Oppenheimer
Daw, Sarah. "2 Nature and the Nuclear Southwest: Peggy Pond Church and J. Robert Oppenheimer". Writing Nature in Cold War American Literature, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, , pp.
Daw, S. (). 2 Nature and the Nuclear Southwest: Peggy Pond Church and J. Robert Oppenheimer. In Writing Nature in Cold War American Literature (pp. ). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
Daw, S. 2 Nature and the Nuclear Southwest: Peggy Pond Church and J. Robert Oppenheimer. Writing Nature in Cold War American Literature. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, pp.
Daw, Sarah. "2 Nature and the Nuclear Southwest: Peggy Pond Church and J. Robert Oppenheimer" In Writing Nature in Cold War American Literature, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press,
Daw S. 2 Nature and the Nuclear Southwest: Peggy Pond Church and J. Robert Oppenheimer. In: Writing Nature in Cold War American Literature. Edinburgh: Edinb
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Peggy Pond Church
American writer (–)
Peggy Pond Church | |
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Born | Margaret Hallett Pond ()December 1, Valmora, New Mexico, US |
Died | October 23, () (aged82) Santa Fe, New Mexico, US |
Occupation | Author |
Yearsactive | |
Knownfor | Poetry and stories |
Notable work | Foretaste Familiar Journey The House at Otowi Bridge |
Margaret Hallett Pond (December 1, October 23, ), known under the pen namePeggy Pond Church, was an American author and poet. She was known as "one of the American west's major poets" and was compared to poet Witter Bynner.[1]
Born in New Mexico, her family had to return to her grandfather's home city of Detroit after a flood destroyed her father's under-construction school when she was a baby. She grew up in the area of Three Mile Lake and the family moved back to New Mexico when she was nine years old. Her father established a new school named the Los Alamos Ranch School, which she returned to after obt
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Peggy Pond Church
A noted author for her poetry, novels, and memoirs, she captured the unique beauty of New Mexico’s nation and people, leaving a legacy in her literature that both described and shaped the culture of the state. Shortly before her death in , she was named a Living Treasure of Santa Fe.
Drawing from a childhood spent freely in the Jemez Mountains exploring Pajarito Canyon on horseback and playing in cliff dwellings with her siblings, Peggy Pond Church spent her life writing about the beauty of New Mexico, in poetry, novels, and memoirs. Widely recognized for her unique voice and contributions to New Mexico literature and culture, she is “the First Lady of New Mexican Poetry.”
Peggy Pond was born in the Territory of New Mexico in near Watrous, at a place known as Valmora. Her father was Ashley Pond, Jr., the son of a wealthy stad attorney. He had been in Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders before falling ill with typhoid fever and coming to New Mexico to rec