Marie Manning
Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.
Marie Manning (born Jan. 22, 1873?, Washington, D.C., U.S.—died Nov. 28, 1945, Washington, D.C.) was an American journalist, best known for her popular advice column that addressed matters of etiquette and personal concern.
Manning was educated in New York City and London. Her long-held ambition to become a journalist came to fruition after a chance meeting at a Washington dinner party with Arthur Brisbane, an editor at the New York World. At his invitation she went to New York and took a job at space rates (on which basis she was paid only for the quantity of submitted material that was actually printed) at the World. An exclusive interview with President Grover Cleveland shortly afterward won Manning a regular staff position.
In 1897 she joined Brisbane and much of the rest of the World’s staff in transferring to William Randolph Hearst’s New York Evening Journal. There, after a year or so of turning out standard women’s-page fare and sensational crime stories, Manning was asked by Brisbane to produce an advice column. On July 20, 1898, the column made its first appearance under the byline of Beatrice Fairfax, a name Manning had compounded from Dante’s Beatrice and Fairfax county, Virginia, where her family owned a home. The column was an instant success, and within a short time letters were arriving at the rate of more than a thousand a day. Questions of the etiquette of romance—how to win a man, how to hold a woman, what little intimacies were allowable in various circumstances—apparently troubled or at least interested thousands of readers. Beatrice Fairfax’s replies relied generally on a firm code of conduct and the motto “Dry your eyes, roll up your sleeves, and dig for a practical solution.” In the newspaper advice field she was rivaled only by Dorothy Dix (Elizabeth M. Gilmer).
While conducting the column Manning continued as a reporter, contributed short stories to Harper’s Magazine, and wrote two novels, Lord Allingham, Bankrupt (1902) and Judith of the Plains (1903). After her marriage in 1905 she retired to devote herself to her family. The stock market crash of 1929, in which she lost heavily, brought her out of retirement. Manning resumed the column, now syndicated through Hearst’s King Features to 200 newspapers across the country, and dealt in her accustomed manner with a new generation of problems. She also wrote Personal Reply (1943), a book of advice for servicemen and their families, and Ladies Now and Then (1944), an autobiography. In late years she also covered women’s news from Washington for the International News Service.