Greely was born in
Ellsworth, Maine on October 15, 1831. Greely attended
private schools and Reverend
Peter Nourse's school. Greely was likely influenced by Nourse to become a
Unitarian Universalist. Greely was part of the First Unitarian Society in Ellsworth, founded in 1865. She was later involved in the building of a Unitarian Church in Ellsworth, which was opened in August o 1867. She was one of the first women to open her own business in Ellsworth and one of the first businesswomen in Maine. In 1853, she married Everard H. Greely, and Ann Greely continued to operate her own business. That March,
Susan B. Anthony was one of their speakers and she gave a lecture to a crowded room at Whiting Hall. Greely was also an
abolitionist and supported the
temperance movement. In 1873, Greely was at the organizing meeting of the Maine Woman Suffrage Association (MWSA). She was involved in writing and signing many different women's suffrage petitions to the Maine Legislature. She also likely wrote
opinion columns under the pen name, "Qui Est." Greely also earned a special certificate to
practice medicine in 1895. However, she never "engaged in general practice." She did act as a
nurse to friends, family, and animals. She died on October 22, 1914. ==References==