Saturday, October 22, 2011

Tuesday, October 22, 1963 The Frances Hubbard Diaries


October 22, 1963
Tuesday - cool and windy, 53 high, cool east wind, cloudiness.  I finished red dress, did some ironing and mending.  Mother called in pm about Earl.
Comment: Earl's accident news spreading fast. Mom's busy doing seamstress stuff. Socrates Hubbard's sister was a milliner or hat maker and his brother Paul made her the irons and pressing blocks she needed. Here is his entry:

"Feb. 13th 1863.  Eliza Hubbard.  Eliza came next to Paul was neerer my own age and was consequently more of a companion  She was tall well formed and I may say a very fine looking young lady.  I can relate but little of her as a childe only that she was sprightly full of fun and frolick:  When she was about seventeen she went to Durham and remained one summer working with some lady a milener.  When she came home Paul make her presses for ironing and blocks for shapeing and vaper baths for bleaching Laghorn Bonits.  She did a little at this but not much.  She remained with us when we moved to Fulton and after we returned to Durham and taught with Sally Orcut in Durham one summer."  


The"Laghorn bonits" were really Leghorn Bonnets made out of grass or straw and were all the rage in the early 1800's and became a cottage industry.  Here is a web site that talks about their derivation.  They come from Italy..... Probably TMI but still fascinating...to me at least.....

Inventor and businesswoman, Wethersfield's Sophia Woodhouse (1799-1883) was one of the first female entrepreneurs of the Greater Hartford area. Plying her trade during the early 19 th century, Woodhouse developed an innovative technique for treating, drying and braiding spear grass to make high quality bonnets. She patented her design in 1821, and quickly developed a cottage industry for her hats, which won awards and acclaim.
Two major historical factors were in Woodhouse's favor. Embargo acts in the early 19 th century restricted trade between the United States and certain foreign ports. Exotic imports such as fashionable Leghorn hats from Livorno, Italy (the city was known as Leghorn in English) were no longer available. A second factor was a directive from President James Monroe in which he encouraged Americans to become a "nation of manufacturers" and develop new businesses and products.
Nineteen-year-old Sophia Woodhouse responded to the president's call (perhaps indirectly) and was able to fill the American market's demand for fashionable bonnets by producing grass bonnets made in the Leghorn style. Using the common spear grass that grew in the Wethersfield meadows alongside the Connecticut River, she developed a process in which spear grass was boiled, bleached, moistened, fumigated and then dried to make it suitable for plaiting or braiding to make Leghorn-style bonnets. A clever businesswoman, Woodhouse had her hat-making process patented in 1821 as "a new and useful improvement in the manufacture of grass bonnets and hats." (Though she shared the patent with her husband, Gurdon Welles, it is Sophia Woodhouse's name that is closely associated with this extraordinary and innovative local industry of grass bonnet making.)
It was not uncommon for women of that era to braid grass and straw bonnets for their own use as well as selling them to local merchants or hat dealers. But Woodhouse's singular success stemmed from the fact that she manufactured a high-quality product: The fineness of her braiding made the caliber of her bonnets unparalleled. She won awards for best "Grass Bonnet" by the Hartford County Society for Promoting Agriculture and Domestic Manufacturers in 1819 and again in 1820. The following year, she was awarded a medal and cash prize from London's prestigious Society of the Arts. The Society was so impressed with Woodhouse's technique that they requested a sample of the spear grass used in her unique process.
With her international success, the demand for Woodhouse's bonnets increased. She employed several women from Wethersfield to manufacture her hats. Although she had a workshop at her house, it is very likely that the women who worked for her did so in their own homes, thus creating a cottage industry of grass bonnet making in Wethersfield. A particularly gifted woman in her employ, Maria Francis, produced 300 bonnets in one summer!
Woodhouse's bonnets were widely admired by socially prominent women, and worn by two former First Ladies, Dolley Madison and Louisa Adams. The latter's husband, John Quincy Adams, pronounced it "an extraordinary specimen of American manufacture."
One of the best examples of Sophia Woodhouse's straw bonnets is included in the exhibit, Legendary People, Ordinary Lives, on permanent display at the Wethersfield Museum, 200 Main Street, Wethersfield. For more information call 860-529-7656 or 529-7161 or visit the museum's Web site at www.wethhist.org.



http://www.hogriver.org/issues/v01n04/grass_bonnets.htm  

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You're always young in your mind it is said, No matter the face in the mirror, That you see with surprise then say to yourself, "What is that old man doing here?"