Maud Howe Elliott
| Maud Howe Elliott | |
|---|---|
| Born | Maud Howe November 9, 1854 Boston, Massachusetts, US | 
| Died | March 19, 1948 (aged 93) Newport, Rhode Island, US | 
| Occupation | Novelist | 
| Notable awards | 1917 Pulitzer Prize | 
| Spouse | John Elliott | 
Maud Howe Elliott (November 9, 1854 – March 19, 1948) was an American novelist, most notable for her Pulitzer Prize-winning collaboration with her sisters, Laura E. Richards and Florence Hall, on their mother's biography The Life of Julia Ward Howe (1916). Her other works included A Newport Aquarelle (1883); Phillida (1891); Kasper Craig (1892); Mammon, later published as Honor: A Novel (1893); Roma Beata, Letters from the Eternal City (1903); Sun and Shadow in Spain (1908);The Eleventh Hour in the Life of Julia Ward Howe (1911); Three Generations (1923); Lord Byron's Helmet (1927); John Elliott, The Story of an Artist (1930); My Cousin, F. Marion Crawford (1934); and This Was My Newport (1944).