Ruth Imogen Stout in
Girard, Kansas, the fifth child of
Quaker parents John Wallace Stout and Lucetta Elizabeth Todhunter Stout. Her younger brother
Rex Stout, also an author, was famous for the
Nero Wolfe detective stories. At age 16 Stout accompanied
temperance activist
Carrie Nation in a 'joint hatchetation', smashing the windows of a Topeka
bar to protest against the public sale of alcohol. Nation was arrested but Stout was ignored by the police and proceeded to deal more damage. Stout moved to
New York when she was 18 and was employed at various times as a baby nurse, a
bookkeeper, a secretary, a business manager, and a factory worker. She was a lecturer and coordinated lectures and debates, and she owned a small tea shop in
Greenwich Village and worked for a fake
mind-reading act. In 1923, she accompanied fellow
Quakers to
Russia to assist in famine relief. Rossiter, the son of an American businessman, was born in Germany in 1882. His family relocated to New York City in 1894. In March 1930, the couple moved to a farm in Poverty Hollow, Redding Ridge, on the outskirts of
Redding,
Connecticut. ==Roots of the no-work method==