Emily Katherine Bell Tippetts (March 11, 1865 – December 20, 1950) was an American businesswoman, clubwoman, and conservationist based in St. Petersburg, Florida.
[6] She contributed to the establishment of wildlife sanctuaries in Florida, and the passage of the Migratory Bird Act of 1913.
[3] She successfully petitioned the state to protect the American robin, and holly plants, and to form the Florida Fish and Game Commission.
[3] Under the pen-name "Jerome Cable", Tippetts published a novel, Prince Arengzeba: A Romance of Lake George (1892).
[13] Bell married newspaperman William Henry Tippetts in 1890, and moved to Florida for his health in 1902; he died in 1909.