From the age of 11, Clara supported herself. When 12 years old, she wrote for the press, but she shrank from public criticism and seldom wrote over her own name. At the age of 14, she began teaching in a private school. She also taught in the public schools of
Ripley County, Indiana. During the
American Civil War, Clara lived in Indiana. She returned, briefly, to Kansas but, upon the death of her father in 1868, she again went to Indiana, where she attended school. On December 27, 1877, she married W. A. Hazelrigg of
Greensburg, Indiana. They had one child, a girl. In 1883, or 1884, they moved to Kansas and located in
Butler County, where Hazelrigg resumed her work as a teacher. She was also principal of one of the city schools in
El Dorado, Kansas. Hazelrigg attended business college at
Emporia, Kansas and was elected superintendent of the Butler County schools. After the family moved to
Topeka, their vacations were spent at her husband's ranch in
New Mexico. Hazelrigg traveled during her vacations, and wrote constantly during the entire year for the press. She wrote for prominent periodicals in various States. She was a department editor for a prominent
Chicago paper, and was a regular contributor to the Topeka
Lancet. In 1895, she published a
History of Kansas; this was her best known literary work. In 1897, Hazelrigg was ordained and began holding
revival meetings. Hazelrigg was the pastor who converted
Jesse Bader. As an evangelist, she devoted much time to act church work, and covered eight states in the West and Midwest. She was known as "the Walking Preacher." Hazelrigg spoke at the national General Missionary Convention held October 10–17, 1901 in
Minneapolis, Minnesota. Hazelrigg raised the money to build a church in Topeka, the West Side Christian Church. She was its minister from 1914–1931. ==Death==