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Bertha Eaton Raffetto |
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At a glance:
Biography:
Bertha Eaton, born in Bloomfield, Iowa on March 15, 1885, was the daughter of Enoch Henry and Susan Frances Walker Eaton. "Appreciation of good literature was fostered by Mother's nightly Bible reading; all of the classics and fiction of that period; philosophy and science," said Ms. Raffetto in her later life. By the age of thirteen, she had read Shakespeare, Ivanhoe, Thomas Paine, Voltaire. She and her three sisters were encouraged in self-expression by animated discussions at the family supper table. She gave her first poetry recital at the age of three from her grandfather's pulpit where she "lisped" out a couple of verses. She wrote her first poem at age five. Music was a part of her daily enjoyment with special attention to sacred music. Bertha was a school marm in the Ozarks. She went with the men on turkey shoots; She was an independent, free-thinking woman in an era when the woman's place presumably was in the home. Bertha Eaton married Henry Clyde Hough. They had two sons, one of whom died. She later married Fiore Raffetto, the man she had selected as her Reno divorce attorney. They were married for 30 years and had one daughter, Frances Cornelia. "In view of all the places my mother both visited and lived in for varying lengths of time, I have no doubt mother felt and meant it when she said 'Home Means Nevada,'" said Mrs. Frances McDonald of Reno in 1952.
She was also a member of The Womens Relief Corps, Reno Civic Club, Nevada and General Federation of Womens Clubs, Order of Eastern Star, Daughters of the Nile, National Poetry Society, Poets of the Pacific, Virginia Poetry Society. As a delegate to a convention at Long Beach, California, of the Womens Relief Corps and Grand Army of the Republic, she obtained the nucleus for the G.A.R. scholarship at the University of Nevada. She also attended the General Federation of Womens Clubs at Boston in 1950 and the Pen Womens Convention in Washington that same year. Mrs. Raftettos major achievements include her composition, "Home Means Nevada," the state song (for copy of song). Mrs. Raffettos poetry, articles and stories were published in many well-known magazines and newspapers. Another musical composition was "The Spirit of Democracy," a concert march for band, which was broadcast from Washington, DC, by the U.S. Marine Band (date of broadcast unknown). "Home Means Nevada" was made the official Nevada State Song by an act of the legislature on February 6, 1933. She also published a narrative poem, "The Ballad of Katie Hoskins," which was widely lauded by literary critics as "an outstanding example of fine American balladry." It was used as a text by Columbia University. Constantly asked why she wrote the song, "Home Means Nevada," she eventually answered the question in an essay entitled "Why I Wrote Home Means Nevada." (Click here to read) Mrs Raffetto died September 6, 1952. Biographical sketch by Sally Wilkins
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