Baltimore Literary Culture tour–or, Field Trip 2.0

Hey Aperio Log followers– we have a new class working on the Parole Femine/Woman’s Lit Club of Baltimore project, and things are kicking into high gear.

We went on a field trip yesterday to get a sense of the literary environs of Mount Vernon, where many of the early members of the WLCB lived, and a neighborhood that served as the cultural center of Baltimore for much of its history. This tour was a follow-on to a tour I organized for last year’s class, which focused on the homes of writers in the Bolton Hill and Midtown/Belvedere neighborhoods, just north and west of where we were this weekend.

We visited the Maryland Historical Society, where the WLCB papers are housed, and took a walking tour of bookstores and authors’ residences, including the home of Hester Dorsey Richardson, one of the brainchilds behind the club. And of course we had to have lunch at Mt. Vernon Marketplace.

Baltimore Literary Culture Tour itinerary
Baltimore Literary Culture Tour–Mt. Vernon

Here’s where we went–including a few stops that were planned but we didn’t quite get to. Bookstores and libraries are cross-referenced to my “Books in Baltimore, Then and Now” tour on the izi.TRAVEL app.

  1. Maryland Historical Society
  2. 113 W. Monument, former home of Hester Dorsey Richardson
  3. 711, 825, and 829 Park Ave., residences of Maud Graham Early (and daughters Lily & Eveline), Eliza Ridgely, first secretary of the WLCB, and Elizabeth King, the WLCB Vice President who led the faction wanting to expand the scope of the Club in 1893
  4. 515 N. Howard, site of Frigate Book Shop (#14 on Books in Baltimore tour)
  5. SW corner of Mulberry & Park, in Baltimore’s old Chinatown, former site of Abe Sherman’s bookstore (#4 (#14 on Books in Baltimore tour)
  6. 408 Park Ave., site of New Era radical bookstore (#5)
  7. Mt. Vernon Marketplace (LUNCH!)
  8. Enoch Pratt Free Library (#6)
  9. SE corner Mulberry & N. Charles, site of Remington’s Book Shop (#7), shop frequented by the ladies of the WLCB (and publisher of some of their works)
  10. 411 N. Charles, former home of Jane Zacharias
  11. 18 E. Franklin, former home of Annie Weston Whitney
  12. 516 N. Charles, site of A People United clothing store, Cokesbury religious bookstore (#8), and Haughton & Haughton dressmakers (owned by Louisa C. O. Haughton; read a post about Haughton & Haughton here)
  13. 518 N. Charles, site of Louie’s Bookstore & Café (#9)
  14. Peabody Library (#10)
  15. Peabody Book Shop and Beer Stube (#11)
  16. 115 E. Eager, former residence of Mary Spear Tiernan
  17. 1024 St. Paul, former residence of Louise Clarkson Whitelock (she later moved about a block away to 5 W. Biddle St)
  18. 1037 N. Calvert, home of Letitia & Katharine Wrenshall
  19. 937 N. Calvert, home of Elizabeth Mullin

Here are some pictures.

The only letdown was that we had hoped to see the gorgeous interior of the Peabody Library reading room at 17 E. Mt. Vernon Place. The library was established by George Peabody and opened in 1878, just a few years before the Enoch Pratt Free Library a few blocks away. Like the Pratt, it was intended “for the free use of all persons who desire to consult it.” After becoming part of the Pratt Library system, it was absorbed into the Johns Hopkins University system in 1982 and now houses part of their Special Collections department.

As a wholly inadequate consolation prize, here are some images of the interior taken by others.

And we hit the Baltimore Book Thing in Waverly on our way back to campus– where all the books are free! (Which still doesn’t seem to help Garrison Keillor <cue sad trombones>…)

Book Thing
More Garrison Keillor than you could ever possibly want — free for the taking at the Baltimore Book Thing

We had a great time– but I can’t help but wish all those old bookstores were still open.

Haughton & Haughton, dressmakers to the (Baltimore) stars

I’ve been trying to find out more about Louisa Courtauld Osburne Haughton, one of the original founders of the WLCB in 1890 and its final president—for twenty-three years (1918-1941). Very little about her remains in the “official” historical record: she is not included in biographical encyclopedias of Maryland society women and did not descend from or marry into any prominent Maryland families. Remaining single for her entire life, she left few traces of herself in ways that were considered worth documenting at the time.

She is referred to on occasion in newspaper accounts of the WLCB as a successful dressmaker, co-owner with her sister Maud (who, so far as I know, never belonged to the WLCB) of the firm Haughton & Haughton, So I went to the Baltimore Sun historical archive to see what I could find.

It turns out that by the early years of the twentieth century the two were in a shop at 713 N. Howard St., in the area now known as “Antique Row” (though to tell the truth, very few antique stores remain). By 1909 they were ensconced at 516 N. Charles St.—most recently, interestingly, the longtime home of the imported clothing and home furnishing store A People United.

Interior of A People United at 516 N. Charles St. It’s fascinating to imagine how the interior was configured when it was the Haughton & Haughton dressmaking establishment.

The Haughton “modistes,” as they were called, employed several dozen people at the height of their success, and frequently advertised for dressmakers, apprentices, “waist drapers,” “skirt helpers,” and “finishers,” sometimes in as many as three different ads in a single issue of the Sun. For the most part, the workers they sought were women, but in one Oct. 1909 ad, they placed an ad for a male “first-class ladies’ tailor.”

For two women to run a successful clothing business would not be unprecedented at the time. Edith Wharton’s hapless character Lily Bart in The House of Mirth (1905) even entertains the thought of establishing her own millinery business, though she—predictably—fails to succeed, having been brought up to be adorned by hats rather than to be able to adorn them.

Nevertheless, I find it striking that the Haughton sisters were able so clearly to succeed in the socially conservative world of turn-of-the-century Baltimore. Here’s a great article from the 1948 Sun, written just a few years before Haughton’s death and decades after Haughton & Haughton shut its doors in the mid-1910s, which gives a sense of how Miss L. C. O Haughton— as she preferred to be called— remembered the atmosphere and clientele of the shop.

“From neck to hem line, [Haughton related,] dresses of that period were heavy with passementerie jets that gleamed like trappings of circus horses; or else were loaded with bows of satin ribbon or loops of velvet ribbon. It was not unusual to use on one dress several bolts of ribbon, each bolt carrying about a dozen yards. In the trade we facetiously called such decorations ‘soup-dippers,’ because they frequently dangled into dishes on the table.

“Bands of fur, even costly ermine, were used as trimming on dresses, sometimes 8-inch bands around the bottom of a skirt, and narrower bands for waist or sleeves” . . .  Miss Haughton explained that these elaborate dresses belonged to settings of the period: large town houses of the wealthy; in drawing rooms the walls of which were covered with satin brocades; to the ballrooms of these homes, gleaming with crystal chandeliers, draped with yards upon yards of amilax, and with a string orchestra concealed behind palms, ferns and banks of roses or other flowers from hothouses on the country estates of the hosts. . . .

When the Misses Haughton were in business, gowns, except in emergencies, had to be ordered far in advance. Many and minute were the measurements taken of the customer, and the dress was designed to suit just her and no one else, to accentuate her good features and to conceal imperfect ones.

The foundations for the costumes constituted first a drafting problem in which a tight-fitted waist with standing high collar, skin and sleeve linings were cut to exact measurements. Nothing was haphazard, A fitting was then given, and alterations, if necessary, were made in the lining which was usually was of taffeta.

The many basted seams then were stitched, bound with narrow binding ribbon or pinked on a pinking iron of that day. Down the front of the waist lining were sewed numerous hooks and eyes. At least six sturdy covered whalebones were sewed into the waist, giving the foundation a rigid support. The high collar was lined with canvas and wired with “collar bones.”

From the many adjustable wire “Marias,” or dress forms, in the workroom one was selected that approximated the proportions of the customer’s figure. The foundation was placed on it and any gaps were filled in with cotton wadding or rags for padding. . .

All the foregoing preparations were in a way equivalent to the preparation of canvas for a painting. At this point the real creative work started. The modiste, either verbally or by drawing (if she could draw) communicated the special design that had been germinating in her mind. Highly specialized sewing women, including foreladies, fitters, drapers and others were called into play to execute the design.

Materials were brought from a stockroom and necessary lengths to drape on the foundation were cut with shears . . . Walls were whitewashed at the end of each season. Floors were bare. Into the cracks between the wide planks dressmaker pins fell and formed a thin line of silver. In addition to the “wire Marias,” sewing machines, tables, chairs (their legs sawed off to make them low), a large cabinet stocked with spools of sewing silk, and a clock completed the furnishings of the room, or rooms as the case may be, dependent upon the size of the establishment.

On the low seats sat the sewing women. They were usually slight of build and stoop-shouldered because of their occupation . . . Under their long slender fingers, which were pricked from needles and pins. fell their dreams, translated in a perky bow, the flow of beautiful drapery. They were articulate as poets in satins, linens, silks.

—Amelia Muller, “Carriage-Trade Modiste: Magician with Shears,” Baltimore Sun, Feb. 29, 1948: A5)

It was not a simpler time, nor was it likely a better one, especially for those “sewing women.”. But fun to reimagine nevertheless.

The Celebrities of John Street

To add to the WLCB team publications list, I recently published “The Celebrities of John Street” as the inaugural installment of a new column, Long Ago and Right Here, which will be appearing in the Bolton Hill Bulletin. The piece focuses on a looooong newspaper article that Club member Emily Lantz wrote when she was a reporter for the Baltimore Sun, on the supposed “celebrities” living on a quiet little street in my neighborhood (which we briefly visited while on our WLCB writers’ walking tour in April).

Woods
Katharine Pearson Woods, whose picture appeared in a 1906 Baltimore Sun piece about writers, artists, and intellectuals living on John Street in Baltimore.

Featured in the article—withhold your astonishment–are several Club members, including Lucy Meacham Thruston (who didn’t actually live on John Street), and Katharine Pearson Woods (who wasn’t living there at the time).

Clearly, Lantz was using her post at the Sun to help make the work of women writers visible and found creative ways of doing so. She continued to feature women writers, artists, and professionals throughout her long career. You can read many of her pieces in the Virtual Library section of the site.

Rereading this piece, I realized that it included a picture of one of the authors we had not been able to locate during the semester: Katharine Pearson Woods. It’s a terrible reproduction (scanned from microfilm, it looks like) but at least we get a glimpse of her. I’ve now included it in her bio on the WLCB website.

Meanwhile, Marina has been working on collecting all the publication information for the Parole Femine anthology into a provenance list which we’ll be including in the book. She also has found a whole bunch of publications from a newly discovered published Club member, Mary (Marian V.) Dorsey, sister of Hester Dorsey Richardson, which I’ll eventually be including in the Virtual Library. Mary Dorsey published recipes and pieces on home decor and entertaining, as well as some pieces on Maryland history and folklore, in newspapers and magazines such as Good Housekeeping and Harper’s Bazar. 

And Cynthia is finishing up the transcriptions of the meeting minutes held at the Maryland Historical Society, which Marina will be proofreading to correct the numerous names and titles that may were incorrectly transcribed.

All this is to say, work on the project continues. More anon.

Mrs. [Catherine B.] James Casey Coale

Very little is recorded about Mrs. James Casey Coale or her husband outside of the one instance she was mentioned in the Club’s minutes. In the minutes her two novels, The Cottage by the Sea and Lelia the Hindoo Girl, were inducted to the library making her an honorary member on Meeting of April 9th, 1901.

My research began with her husband, Mr. James Casey Coale. I discovered his Ancestry.com page and found out he was an Insurance Agent married to an illusive “Catherine B.” Catherine B.’s Ancestry.com page had even less sources than her husband’s, making it very hard to tell if this is the woman I have been searching for. Since both James and Catherine lived in Baltimore the same time time frame as the club, I assume this was the right couple.

Mrs. Coale was born in Maryland, 1823. Mr. Coale was born in 1826, making him 3-4 years younger than his wife. Mrs. Coale gave birth to one and only child, a daughter by the name of Elizabeth Coale in 1849. Mr. Coale died April 13th, 1891.

On the census Mrs. Coale’s occupation is listed as “Keeping House” rather than “At Home” as most women have listed at the time. On the same census, three Irish immigrants are listed as “servants” in the Coale’s household. This indicates the Coale’s were most likely well-off. Because they were wealthy, it bugs me that this was the extent of information I could find on the Coale family.

The Life and Work of Elizabeth Lester Mullin

Mistress Brent’s Bluff, The Baltimore Sun November 7, 1915

Elizabeth Lester Mullin was born around the year 1874. Her father, Michael A. Mullin was a well-known lawyer in Baltimore, leader within the Catholic church, and graduate of Loyola College. Her mother, Elizabeth C. Mullin (born Josephine Cluskey) was also a prominent member of the Catholic church and founded the Fuel Guild. Miss Mullin had one brother who tragically died in 1906 after falling ill during his service in the Spanish-American war. According to census records it appears that Mullin never married, living with her mother until Mrs. Mullin’s death in 1919.

Elizabeth Lester Mullin was a member of the Woman’s Literary Club of Baltimore from 1899 until 1914, serving as the treasurer from 1904 until 1914. Mullin was also accepted as a member of the Maryland Historical Society in 1916 and served as the secretary of the Edgar Allan Poe Memorial Association.

Miss Mullin was fluent in French and served as a translator for several publications from French to English. Some of these titles included “The Codicil” by Paul Ferrier and “Atalanta” by Edouard Rod. She was also the author of her own works of short fiction. Her story “Mistress Brent’s Bluff” was published in the Baltimore Sun in 1915, and another work of short fiction is mentioned in the Woman’s Literary Club Meeting Minutes of October 2, 1901, but was not called by a title and is currently unrecovered.

Although Miss Mullin seemed to publish little of her own work, her translations made French works accessible to foreign audiences, making her an integral part of their literary production.

Sources:

“Edgar Allan Poe: A Centenary Tribute.” Baltimore: Edgar Allan Poe Memorial Association, 1910.

“Maryland Historical Magazine.” The Maryland Historical Society, vol. XI, Baltimore, 1916.

“Michael A. Mullin Dead.” The Baltimore Sun, 1915 Jun. 10, p. 12.

“Mrs. Elizabeth C. Mullin.” The Baltimore Sun, 1919 Jun. 7, p. 6.

Mullin, Elizabeth Lester. “Mistress Brent’s Bluff.” The Baltimore Sun, 1915 Nov. 7.

Work to remember, Fast to Forget: The Life of Lizette Woodworth Reese

Although today few may know her name, Miss Lizette Woodworth Reese may very well have been one of Baltimore’s most gifted writers. H. L. Mencken, Baltimore writer, critic and scholar, said of Reese upon her death, “I believe, that of all the women who have ever lived in Baltimore, she will be remember the longest, just as Poe will be remembered the longest among men.”

Miss Reese and her twin sister Sophia were born on January 9, 1856 to Louisa Gabler and David Reese, a former confederate soldier, in what is now Waverly, Maryland. Waverly, a still pastoral suburb of Baltimore, served as one of Reese’s favorite subjects of poetry.

After her education in the Baltimore Public schools, Miss Reese began her teaching career at the age of seventeen. She began at St. John’s Episcopal Church’s parish school, but soon moved on to the Number Three School, a German-English school, which largely served immigrant families. Reese than continued her career at City High School, an exclusively African-American school, where she was exposed to the hardships her students faced at the hands of poverty and racism. She finished her teaching career at her alma mater, Western High school.

Reese was widely praised for her passion and dedication to teaching, but found her truest talent and purpose in writing. From poetry to short fiction to memoir, Reese had a gift for eloquence and profound insight. In 1874, her first piece, a poem titled “The Deserted House,” was published in Southern Magazine. She found a fruitful platform in magazines, and continued publishing regularly until the release of her first poetry collection, A Branch of May, in 1887. Reese proceeded to published 15 volumes of her work, two of which were autobiographies and a novel. Reese’s work was not only locally recognized, but nationally. In 1914, a New York Times Poll, asked current well-known writers, “What is the best short poem in the English language?” In response, the writers named 68 poems by 10 different authors, Reese being one, ranking her beside poets like Keats and Wordsworth. Miss Reese’s most famous and critically acclaimed poem, “Tears,” was published by Scribner’s Magazine in November of 1899. In response to its publication H. L. Mencken called it, “one of the imperishable glories of American literature.”

In 1931, Reese was elected the poet laureate of Maryland by the General Federation of Women’s Clubs and received an honorary doctorate from Goucher College. She also served as the honorary president of the Poetry Society of Maryland, the honorary president of the Edgar Allan Poe Society of Baltimore, and a co-founder of the Woman’s Literary Club of Baltimore, where she served as chair of the modern poetry committee from 1890 until her death in 1935.

Reese wrote until the day she died, passing before the completion of her novel, Worley’s. She was deeply dedicated to her craft, both education and poetry, manifesting this passion in her work with the Woman’s Literary Club of Baltimore. Miss Reese’s life embodied everything the club sought to achieve, the engaged study of literature, the production of literary art and the advancement of women writers.

Reese died in the year 1935 at the Church Home and Infirmary, the same location of her beloved idol, Edgar Allan Poe, who passed decades before her. Although her biographical information is easily accessible and most of her texts available digitally online, I am still left to ponder if Miss Reese is remembered these 83 years later. Certainly more than her fellow club members, but not so in comparison to the poets of her time to which she was compared. Her name rarely appears in popular history of the period or anthologies of 18th century poets, and I certainly never heard her name in my literary education.

Lizette Woodworth Reese

A woman, once considered a world famous poet, is now stuck in a niche corner of literary history, and though there may be myriad reasons why, I am more interested in the undoing of the dust collected on this poet’s history.

 

Sources:

“Lizette Woodworth Reese and the Poetry of Spring.” Underbelly, The Maryland Historical Society, 16 Apr. 2015, www.mdhs.org/underbelly/2015/04/16/lizette-woodworth-reese-and-the-poetry-of-spring/.

“Lizette Woodworth Reese.” Poetry Foundation, www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/lizette-woodworth-reese.

“Lizette Woodworth Reese.” The Baltimore Literary Heritage Project, baltimoreauthors.ubalt.edu/writers/lizettereese.htm.

“Miss Reese, Poet, Dies in Hospital.” The Evening Sun, 17 Dec. 1935, p. 44.

“What is the Best Short Poem in the English Language.” Baltimore Sun, 12 July 1914, p. 16.

Uncovering Lucy Randolph Cautley

Passport photo of Lucy Randolph Cautley when she was 54 years old. From Ancestory.com

Mrs. Cautley, who published under the name of L.R. Cautley was born July 19th, 1854 in Richmond, Henrico, Virginia. Her maiden name is Lucy Randolph Daniel.

It is unclear when she married her husband Richard K. Cautley. But it would be sometime after 1880 census which reordered her as single and living in Virginia still, she was 26 at the time. It is likely that after she married her husband that she moved to Baltimore with him.

Cautley shared a ton of short stories and poems within the Club. However, few of her works were ever published. What I could find was an essay on Rudyard Kipling’s works and a poem titled “Betrayal” that appeared in Harper’s Monthly. The poem used personification to convey emotions in a unique and engaging way. My favorite lines from the poem were,

“And all the little world around her smiled,

By memories of their own fair youth beguiled.”

After her husband, Richard K. Cautley died, she relocated to New York on 0ctober 19th, 1923 to be with her oldest son who worked at Cornell University as an engineering instructor. She was 69 when she first arrived. She had two other sons. In 1911 and 1912 her and two sons were listed as students during the summer sessions at Cornell for those years.

Cautley strongly identifies as a Southern woman. This is evident because she was an officer for at least 6 years (known) for the New York division of the United Daughters of Confederacy.

She was highly educated and mentioned in one of her letters to the editor of the New York Times that she studied in Northern Italy at one point in her life.