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OPINION: The loss that gave the world Dorothy

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They say the happiest days are those when babies arrive. Frank and his wife, Maud, felt that way in the spring of 1898. Because this coming child carried special significance.

The father was Maud鈥檚 brother, Thomas Clarkson Gage. Clarky, as his family called him, was a classic American success story. After graduating first in his class at Cornell, he struck out for Dakota Territory. There, he started a successful store and helped his family invest in Western real estate.

While Clarky was successful at starting businesses, he and his wife, Sophie, struggled to build the big family they wanted.

Their first daughter, Matilda, was born in 1886. After that, pregnancy proved elusive. It was five years until daughter Alice was born 鈥 only to die that same day. The tragedy was made worse, coming just before Christmas 1891.

Despite their grief, Clarky and Sophie kept trying to have another child. And trying. And trying.

Then, just when it was starting to seem hopeless, fortune smiled. Sophie became pregnant a third time, with the baby expected in June. The child they had longed for since losing little Alice was now within reach.

Frank and Maud were ecstatic for their extended family. Maud and Clarky were close; the little sister wanted only happiness for her big brother. Besides, looking forward to her new niece or nephew鈥檚 arrival helped Maud take her mind off her own less-than-ideal circumstances.

Though she dearly loved husband Frank, his career had been as haphazard and checkered as her brother鈥檚 had been successful.

Frank had hopscotched from one random job to another. He had been an actor, a playwright, a theatre manager, a general store owner, a chicken farmer and a newspaper editor. Many positions, but always the same result: failure.

With the 19th century winding down and now in his early 40s, he was living with Maud and their quartet of growing boys on Chicago鈥檚 West Side. Although he alternated between newspaper reporter and traveling salesman to keep his family fed, he was itching to jump into yet another new field, one that worried Maud most of all.

Frank wanted to write children鈥檚 books. An 鈥渋ffy鈥 proposition at best.

So, Maud channeled her anxiety into something positive by looking forward to her relatives鈥 coming blessed event and praying that it would soothe the lingering hurt from the daughter they had lost.

Sure enough, Frank and Maud were over the moon happy when word finally came on June 11, 1898. Dorothy Louise Gage had arrived. The couple rushed to Bloomington, Illinois, where Clarky, Sophie and now 12-year-old Matilda lived.

Aunt Maud instantly fell in love with her tiny niece, doting on her nonstop. Dorothy was a sweet baby, smiling sooner than most infants. Maud went to Bloomington every time she could, swaddling Dorothy with nonstop attention and affection.

But as the leaves began turning that fall, Dorothy suddenly became sick. Her condition worsened, her little body growing weaker each week. The doctor diagnosed it as 鈥渃ongestion of the brain.鈥

On Nov. 15, Dorothy closed her eyes for the final time. She was 5 months old.

Maud was devastated, taking to her bed and staying there for long periods. Frank tried to console his grieving wife. Since he was working on his first children鈥檚 book, he decided to lift her spirits by giving the best gift an author can bestow.

He named the story鈥檚 lead character, a young farmgirl from Kansas, Dorothy Gale, in honor of little Dorothy Gage. Maud was deeply touched by the thoughtfulness. It was the tale of a girl who runs away from home, is blown over the rainbow by a twister, and has fabulous adventures with a trio of friends while being chased by a wicked witch.

When 鈥淭he Wonderful Wizard of Oz鈥 was released in September 1900, it was a huge hit, selling more than 3 million copies over the next half-century. Frank would write 14 Oz books, and the story would be adapted into a classic 1939 movie starring Judy Garland.

It took a while, but L. Frank Baum finally found the success that had eluded him for so long. And by touching countless readers and even more moviegoers over the decades, he assured his lost niece鈥檚 legacy will live on.

J. Mark Powell is a former television journalist. His nonfiction book 鈥淲itness to War: The Story of the Civil War Told by Those Living Through It鈥 is available at . He wrote this for .