Anne Elizabeth Wilson

Anne Elizabeth Wilson (November 28, 1901 - October 17, 1946) was an American-born Canadian poet.

Life
Wilson was born in Frankfort, Kentucky, the daughter of Anne (Hendrick), a concert singer, and Robert Burns Wilson, a poet and painter. She was educated at Barnard College (and possibly Columbia University). After some time as a social welfare worker, she turned to journalism, becoming assistant advertising manager for the McClure's Newspaper Syndicate.

She moved to Canada in 1920, working as literary editor and publicity manager for Musson and Hodder & Stoughton between 1920 and 1925. She then became associate editor of Canadian Home and Garden and Mayfair, women's editor of Maclean's, and, in 1927, the first editor of Chatelaine.

In 1929 she married Victor Blochin, and resigned from Chatelaine. The couple moved to a farm outside Aurora, Ontario, where they raised dogs.

During World War II Wilson returned to publishing, as an editor at Macmillan of Canada, in 1943. She resigned in 1946, and died later that year.