Anna Marie Nolan was born in Las Vegas, Nevada, on December 6, 1898. She attended New Mexico Highland University studying English. On August 6, 1919, Anna married Thomas Patrick Clark. Their only child, Thomas Patrick, Jr., was later killed in World War II.
After teaching English at Highlands University in Las Vegas, New Mexico, Clark began a 25 year career with the United States government’s schools for Indian children. In her work Clark became alarmed by the lack of instructional material in the students’ own language and connected with their Indian culture. As a result Clark began writing her own materials, resulting in a series of books: Little Herder in Spring (1940),The Pine Ridge Porcupine (1941), Young Hunter of Picuris (1943), Singing Sioux Cowboy Reader (1947), and Little Navajo Herder (1951). Many of these books were bilingual, featuring both the English and various Native America Indian translations.
During the 1940s, Clark also supervised the production of materials in Central and South America for the Institute of Inter-American Affairs. This experience led her to write Magic Money (1950), Looking-for-Something (1952), and the 1953 Newbery Medal winner, Secret of the Andes.
During the 1950s and 1960s, Clark worked at the Intermountain Indian School in Brigham City, Utah. It was while she working there that she wrote Blue Canyon Horse (1955). Between 1930—1960 Clark regularly published stories in the New Mexico Magazine, which became the basis for “We Made This Land,” which was subsequently published as; These Were the Valiant, Calvin Horn Publisher Inc, Albuquerque, New Mexico. 1969 (Book Collection 16, C-34). Ann Nolan Clark died in 1995.
Source: University of Southern Mississippi, archive collection DG 0188:
http://www.lib.usm.edu/%7Edegrum/html/research/findaids/clark.htm
These Were the Valiant is a historical book chronicling westward expansion into America’s southwestern states, specifically New Mexico, and takes an in-depth look at some of the New Mexico’s most prominent historical characters, such as Kit Carson, Bishop Lamy, General Kearny, The Hermit of Hermit’s Peak, and the Romeros of Romeroville.
Box 2: First typescript of “We Made This Land”