Helen M. Winslow

Helen M. Winslow (pen name, Aunt Philury; April 13, 1851 – March 27, 1938) was an American editor, author, publisher, and journalist.

In her infancy, her family removed to Greenfield, Massachusetts, and afterwards to St. Albans, Vermont, where her father, Don Avery Winslow (1824–1902), was a leader in musical circles.

He was a musical composer of note and a member of the first English opera company organized in the United States.

[3] Winslow was educated at the Vermont Academy and State Normal schools,[2] with special studies in languages and literature in Boston.

After her mother's death and her father's remarriage, Winslow went to Boston, living in the Roxbury District with her three sisters.

Besides doing work on almost every Boston daily, The Christian Union, Christian at Work, Interior, Drake's Magazine, Demorest's Magazine, the Arena, Journal of Education, Wide Awake, Youth's Companion, Cottage Hearth, and other periodicals were mediums through which she addressed the public.

Helen M. Winslow (1897)
Salome Shepard: Reformer (1893)