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  1. During the last eight years of her life she raised the daughter of her deceased sister. She died from a stroke in Boston on March 6, 1888, just two days after her father's death and was buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery.

  2. 6 days ago · How did Louisa May Alcott die? Louisa May Alcott died of a stroke in 1888. Her health had been flagging for decades prior, however, and she wrote in her journal that she frequently suffered from exhaustion, headaches, nerve issues, and digestive pain.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • How did Louisa May Alcott die?1
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  3. Alcott suffered from bouts of illness throughout her life. She attributed her poor health to mercury poisoning which she believed she contracted while she worked as a nurse during the Civil War. In 1888, she died at the age of 56 in Boston, Massachusetts.

  4. Apr 2, 2014 · Louisa May Alcott was an American author who wrote the classic novel 'Little Women,' as well as various works under pseudonyms.

  5. Born in Germantown, Pennsylvania, on November 29, 1832; died in Dunreath. Place, Roxbury, Massachusetts, on March 6, 1888; second child of Bronson (a writer, educator, and Transcendentalist) and Abigail (May) Alcott; never married; no children.

  6. Louisa May Alcott, (born Nov. 29, 1832, Germantown, Pa., U.S.—died March 6, 1888, Boston, Mass.), U.S. author. Daughter of the reformer Bronson Alcott, she grew up in Transcendentalist circles in Boston and Concord, Mass. She began writing to help support her mother and sisters.

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  8. louisamayalcott.org › louisa-may-alcottLouisa May Alcott

    A major critical milestone along her literary path was Hospital Sketches (1863), a truthful and poignant account of her service as a Civil War nurse in Washington, DC inspired by the letters she wrote home to her family in Concord. In 1868, when Louisa was 35 years old, her publisher, Thomas Niles, asked her to write "a girls' story."