Person, Alice Morgan, 1840-1913
Name Entries
person
Person, Alice Morgan, 1840-1913
Name Components
Name :
Person, Alice Morgan, 1840-1913
Person, Joe Mrs. 1840-1913
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Person, Joe Mrs. 1840-1913
Person, Mrs. Joe 1840-1913
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Person, Mrs. Joe 1840-1913
Morgan, Alice 1840-1913
Name Components
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Morgan, Alice 1840-1913
Mrs. Joe Person 1840-1913
Name Components
Name :
Mrs. Joe Person 1840-1913
Genders
Female
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Alice Morgan Person of Franklin County, N.C., was, beginning in 1882, the producer and distributor of Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy, a proprietary medicine. In 1857, she married Joseph Arrington Person, a planter from Franklin County, N.C., with whom she had nine children.
Pianist, arranger of popular music, and businesswoman; born in Petersburg, Virginia; lived in Franklin County, Charlotte, Tarboro, and Kittrell, North Carolina.
Alice Morgan was born in 1840 near Petersburg, Va. She received most of her education at home. In 1857, she married Joseph Arrington Person, a wealthy planter from Franklin County, N.C. The couple settled at Person's plantation and had nine children.
In 1863, Joseph Person organized a company of North Carolina volunteers. He soon was discharged from service, however, because of a disability. Shortly after returning home, he suffered a debilitating stroke that prevented him from working for the rest of his life. Her husband's disability, coupled with the economic consequences of the Civil War, led Alice Morgan Person to market a patent medicine, the recipe for which had been given her by a neighbor.
In 1882, she began selling Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy door-to-door in Charlotte, Raleigh, and other major North Carolina towns. The Remedy proved quite popular, and Person was soon known throughout the South for her medicine and for her piano playing. She performed popular tunes at fairs in North Carolina, Georgia, Texas, and Virginia, and made a recording of her music at Victor Records in New Jersey.
Alice Person travelled extensively during her lifetime for both business and pleasure. In 1913, during one such trip to the West Coast, she suffered a seizure and died. She left a considerable estate, most of which had been accumulated as a result of her business activities. Also surviving her is an autobiography that offers a detailed account of her public life, including the challenges of starting and sustaining a business as a woman in a man's world.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/88415084
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n2009033046
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n2009033046
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Languages Used
Subjects
Teachers
Autobiographies
Autobiographies
Businesswomen
Businesswomen
Families
Popular music
Patent medicines
Patent medicines
Women
Women
Women inventors
Women musicians
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Southern States
AssociatedPlace
North Carolina
AssociatedPlace
North Carolina
AssociatedPlace
Hickory (N.C.)
AssociatedPlace
North Carolina
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>