Emily Post Author
Emily Post
Emily was born in Baltimore, Maryland, on
October 27, 1872, and educated by governesses and at private schools in
Baltimore and New York. She spent her summers at Bar Harbor, Maine, and
Tuxedo Park, New York, which her father Bruce Price, a prominent
architect, had been commissioned to design and develop.
The
season of her debut Emily Price met Edwin Post, her husband-to-be, at a
ball in one of Fifth Avenue’s elegant mansions. Following a fashionable
wedding and a honeymoon tour of the Continent, Mrs. Post’s first home
was in New York’s Washington Square. When her two sons were old enough
to attend boarding school, she turned her attention to writing. Her
romantic stories of European and American society were serialized in
several popular magazines, and many were successfully published in book
form. She became a “traveling correspondent,” crossing the United States
by car and touring Europe on the eve of World War I. Her stories were
published in Vanity Fair, Collier’s and McCall’s.
Upon
publication in 1922 her book, “Etiquette: In Society, In Business, In
Politics and At Home,” topped the nonfiction bestseller list, and the
phrase “according to Emily Post” soon entered our language as the final
word on the subject of social conduct. Mrs. Post, who as a girl had been
told that well-bred women cannot work, was suddenly a celebrity and an
outstanding American career woman, a position she maintained throughout
her lifetime. Her numerous books, a syndicated newspaper column, and a
regular network radio program made Emily Post a figure of national
stature and importance.
Emily Post’s successor, Elizabeth Post,
completed her first revision of the basic etiquette book in 1965 and
until 1995 updated four major editions, in addition to other books on
the subject of etiquette.