In August 1812, she was married John Dumont, who was a member of the
Indiana Legislature in 1822–1823, and was afterward a candidate for the office of
Governor, against
David Wallace, and the following October they removed to Ohio. They moved to Vevay, Indiana in March 1814, and made it her home till death. Her husband being a lawyer, was, according to the custom of those times, away from home a lot, attending the courts of other counties. The care of the family fell upon her. As schools were scarce and poor, she instructed her own children herself. She opened a school, and thereafter, much of her life was spent in the school-room as a western pioneer teacher. Dumont was also a writer. She was a frequent contributor to the
Literary Gazette, published at Cincinnati. Several of the best poems she wrote were first printed in the
Gazette, among which are "Poverty," "The Pauper to the Rich Man," and "The Orphan Emigrant." In the years 1834, 1835 and 1836, she wrote frequently for the
Cincinnati Mirror, but chiefly in prose. She was awarded two prizes by the publishers of the
Mirror for stories on Western themes. One of those stories, "Ashton Grey," with others, contributed to the
Western Literary Journal, and ''The Ladies' Repository
, are collected in a volume entitled Life Sketches''. ==Personal life==