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Mary H. C. Booth
Mary Booth and Mathilde Franziska Anneke.jpg
Mary Booth (seated) with Mathilde Franziska Anneke
Born 1831 Edit this on Wikidata
Connecticut Edit this on Wikidata
Died April 11, 1865 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 33–34)
New York City Edit this on Wikidata
Occupation Poet Edit this on Wikidata
Spouse(s) Sherman Booth Edit this on Wikidata
Partner(s) Mathilde Franziska Anneke Edit this on Wikidata

Mary Humphrey Corss Booth (1831 – April 11, 1865) was an American poet and abolitionist. She published the collection Wayside Blossoms Among Flowers from German Gardens (1865).

Mary Humphrey Corss was born in 1831 in Connecticut, the daughter of John and Adelaide Corss. She was visiting relatives Milwaukee, Wisconsin when she met Sherman Booth, the recently-widowed abolitionist journalist and speaker. Over the objections of her parents and only two months after the death of his first wife, the 18-year-old Corss and the 36-year-old Booth married in 1849. They had three daughters: Mary Ella, Alice, and Lillian May. Alice died in infancy.

In March 1860, Sherman Booth was arrested for assisting in the escape of fugitive slave Joshua Glover. Mary Booth helped organized two failed attempts to forcibly free Sherman Booth from prison before leaving him and the United States in June 1860.

Booth moved to Zurich with one of her daughters and the German writer, radical, and feminist Mathilde Franziska Anneke. Booth and Anneke worked as freelance journalists and collaborated on an unpublished anthology of abolitionist stories. In June 1864, Booth and her daughter returned to the United States due to Booth's worsening tuberculosis and desire to be reunited with her family.

Booth lived in a New York City boarding house and died on April 11, 1865.

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