Anna Steese Richardson

Anna Steese Richardson (April 5, 1865 – May 10, 1949) was an American writer and editor.

Anna Steese Sausser Richardson was born on April 5, 1865, in Massillon, Ohio. She began her career as a newspaper reporter in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and worked at several other papers before joining the Woman's Home Companion. She came to New York City about 1921. As of 1938, when she gave a commencement speech at Hunter College, she was an associate editor of the Companion. She died on May 10, 1949, at 903 Park Avenue, Manhattan, New York.

Publications

 * Miss Mosher of Colorado; or, A Mountain Psyche (play, 1899)
 * Better Babies and Their Care (1914) Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York
 * The Girl Who Earns Her Own Living (1909) B.W. Dodge & Co., New York
 * Adventures in Thrift (1916)
 * Why Not Marry (1917) The Bobbs-Merrill Co., Indianapolis.
 * Standard Etiquette (1923)
 * "The Danger Age for Children: A Message to Mothers". Compliments of Fletcher's Castoria, New York, N.Y.
 * Etiquette at a Glance (1927)
 * A Manual For Club Women (1929) I.C. Smith & Corona Typewriters, Inc, New York.
 * "Is the women’s club dying?", Harpers Magazine, October, 1929
 * Big Hearted Herbert (with Sophie Kerr), Samuel French, New York, 1934. (film: Big Hearted Herbert)

In popular culture
In the 1927 silent crime-drama film Chicago, a minor character, Charleston Lou, is in one scene reading a passage of Richardson's Standard Etiquette.