Elizabeth Bogart (pen names, Adelaide and Estelle; 1795 – May 12, 1879) was an American author of prose and poetry from New York City.
Her father, Reverend David Schuyler Bogart, was a Columbia College graduate and Presbyterian minister with Huguenot heritage whose family had been in New York for generations.
Bogart grew up in and received her education in Southampton, which at that time was an isolated town on the eastern part of Long Island.
"[2] Though she wrote prose rarely, her short stories earned her several awards over the course of her life, beginning with a prize from the Memorial in Boston in 1828 for "The Effect of a Single Folly."
"[3] Bogart was a contemporary of writer Edgar Allan Poe, who included a short description of her in a collection of his opinions on his literary peers.