Gold, Daisy ("Mabel") Hendley
By Richard Walser, 1986
26 Oct. 1893–7 Apr. 1975
Daisy "Mabel" Hendley Gold, journalist and writer, was born in Iredell County, the daughter of Alvis Francis and Celeste Rimmer Norris Hendley. By her father's first marriage, she was a half sister of Charles, Myrtle and Alvis Eugene Hendley. Floyd F. Hendley was a full brother. Her ancestors were Scotch-Irish, French, and English. After attending local schools, she went to the North Carolina State Normal and Industrial College in Greensboro for three years but did not graduate. Her newspaper career began with the Statesville Landmark and continued with the Greenville (S.C.) Piedmont . In 1920, she became managing editor of the Wilson Daily Times . During World War I, she was invited to accept a post as foreign correspondent in Europe, but her parents dissuaded her from accepting it.
On 7 Feb. 1924, she married John Daniel Gold (1867–1954), a widower who was editor and publisher of the Wilson paper, and acquired three stepdaughters. Her own children were Celeste and John Daniel, Jr. After her marriage Mrs. Gold worked irregularly at the Times until 1947, taking particular pleasure in turning out feature stories on coastal and eastern North Carolina. Tides of Life (1932) was a book of lyric poems. At Morehead City, where she and her husband built a second home in 1935, she embarked on a novel of the North Carolina coast. It Was Forever (1940) tells the story of a young married woman from coastal North Carolina who is in love with a British sea captain. A Democrat and a Presbyterian, Mrs. Gold was always active in civic and church affairs. She was able to complete a second (unpublished) novel and was writing a history of Wilson County before her health failed. She died in a nursing home in Lillington and was buried in Wilson.
References:
Mrs. Celeste Gold Broughton, interview, 11 Dec. 1975, Raleigh
Raleigh News and Observer, 1 Dec. 1940
Wilson Daily Times , 8 Apr. 1975
Image Credits:
"Daisy Hendley Gold, author of “It Was Forever,” 1940." Photo courtesy of Digital Forsyth. Available from http://www.digitalforsyth.org/photos/12070 (accessed April 17, 2012).
1 January 1986 | Walser, Richard