Elsie Dinsmore

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley

    ALLISON) ELSIE VIOLET HERBERT ROSIE EDWARD HAROLD LILY . WALTER FRIENDS OF MR. & MRS. CARRINGTON (NEPHEW-GEORGE BOYD) I MR. & MRS. HOWARD HERBERT HAROLD (SOPHIE ALLISON) ARCHIE META HERBERT HARRY LUCY (PHILIP ROSS) r1 PHILIP JOHN ...

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley, Hendrickson Publishers

    Enter the world of Elsie Dinsmore!

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley

    You look very much distressed; will you not tell me the cause of your sorrow?

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley

    The school-room at Roselands was a very pleasant apartment; the ceiling, it is true, was somewhat lower than in the more modern portion of the building, for the wing in...

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley

    The school-room at Roselands was a very pleasant apartment; the ceiling, it is true, was somewhat lower than in the more modern portion of the building, for the wing in which it was situated dated back to the old-fashioned days prior to the ...

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley

    Elsie Dinsmore (1896). This book, Elsie Dinsmore, by Martha Finley, is a replication of a book originally published before 1896.

  • Elsie Dinsmore: By Martha Finley- Illustrated
    By Martha Martha Finley

    Before her father comes back she becomes good friends with Rose Allison, with whom she studies the Bible. Her father was in Europe until she was almost eight years old as the first book begins.

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley

    Elsie Dinsmore

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Finley Martha

    Elsie Dinsmore

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley

    Martha Finley (1828-1909) who sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Martha Farquharson, was the author of Black Steve (1865), Elsie Dinsmore (1867), Casella (1869), Holidays at Roselands (1873), Elsie's Girlhood (1873), Elsie's Womanhood ...

  • Elsie Dinsmore
    By Martha Finley

    The school-room at Roselands was a very pleasant apartment; the ceiling, it is true, was somewhat lower than in the more modern portion of the building, for the wing in which it was situated dated back to the old-fashioned days prior to the ...