Caroline Cowles Richards Clarke (1842-1913)
at the time of her diary.
Next Wednesday we begin the 2017 Block of the Month:
Yankee Diary. Here's some information about the diarist.
The United States before the Civil War
Carrie lived in upstate New York, under the red arrow by the Canadian border. The light blue states are the Free States, the dark blue the Slave States, and the gray areas were the "West".
Kansas was a frequent topic in the Ontario [County]
Repository newspaper in the late 1850s.
Where I come from in Kansas we think the Civil War began in 1854, the
year Congress established the Kansas/Nebraska Territories and gambled their
future as slave states or free states on the votes of the first citizens.
By
1854 the U.S. had become two cultures, a North focusing on industry and a South
on agriculture based on slave labor. Extending either culture into the Western
territories brought a crisis to a head. Within seven years the two cultures
were at war.
Carrie and Anna soon after their mother died.
Caroline Cowles Richards grew from a girl to a woman in those seven years.
Carrie's Maternal Grandparents
In 1854 she was twelve, living with her younger sister Anna and her mother's parents Abigail Field (1784 -1872) and Thomas Beals (1783-1864).
Carrie's Parents
Elizabeth Beals Richards (1814-1846) & James Richards (1813-1875)
The girls' mother had died when Carrie was almost five and Anna was an infant. Both parents suffered from chronic diseases. Elizabeth had tuberculosis and James was an alcoholic with bi-polar disorder. A peripatetic Presbyterian minister, he left
them to be raised by their grandparents who were in their early seventies.
Carrie and Anna were fortunate in their mother's parents who
raised them with the steady hand of old time Congregationalists confident in the
ways of their religion. Brothers
James and John were not so lucky and spent their childhoods in a home with a
bedridden mother and their adolescence following their father as he alienated
congregation after congregation with his drinking and manic episodes.
Older brother John Morgan Richards (1841-1918) wrote an autobiography
in which he recalled his father's death from a fall in Scotland in 1875.
Daughter Pearl Richards Craigie (1867 – 1906) was a well-known
English novelist who wrote under
the name John Oliver Hobbes
Family disgrace was not mentioned in Carrie's diary, at
least in the version published a century ago. But her extended family was remarkable and
written records about them abound. (See the books & documents below.)
Newspaper accounts and a pamphlet warned
congregations against hiring Carrie's father.
Her father Reverend James Richards II was publicly
censured. The problem was not only his alcoholism but also his refusal to
accept responsibility. His manic periods were as outrageous as his
alcoholic binges.
James II was the son of a well-known minister and chose to follow
in his father's footsteps after he met Elizabeth Beals who had vowed to marry a
minister and only a minister. An old school friend of Elizabeth's told Carrie:
"She hoped we would be as good as our mother was. That is what nearly every
one says."
A bust of Elizabeth Beals Richards who died at 32.
After being compared to her mother once too often Carrie wrote,
"I think children in old times were not as bad as they are now."
How much did Carrie know about her father's problems? He
visited. When Carrie was about 10 he took the girls "to the store and told us we
could have anything we wanted---stick candy, lemon drops, bulls' eyes, rubber
balls, jumping ropes with handles, hoops and jewelry.
They corresponded often. When she was 13 he sent a
box of fruit from his post in New Orleans. She wrote "a little 'poetry'
" back. He sent her money and Gulliver's Travels with a gold image of
Gulliver on the cover. "Grandmother did not like the picture so she pasted
a piece of pink calico over it so we could only see the giant from his waist
up."
Welcome to Canandaigua
Photo from the New York Public Library collection.
The diary begins in 1852 when she was 10 and settled in Canandaigua, a prosperous city only a few decades older than she. Her grandparents were well-to-do community founders. Aunts, cousins and other relatives lived there comfortably to give Carrie and Anna an extended family.
Aunt Ann's house still stands
Carrie's diary. published to give us a nostalgic view of
small town American life, reveals glimpses of contemporary issues before and during the Civil War. With careful reading we can see slavery's resonance in a
Yankee state, family tragedies and the importance of New York as a center for women's rights and abolition.
Like her niece Pearl Craigie, Carrie had a talent for writing and a sly wit. Her diary is full of fun as well as sorrows. Following her will be an enjoyable mid-19th-century journey.
Links to publications about Carrie & her friends and family:
Diary of Caroline Cowles Richards, 1852-1872
The diary is still in print and has been published many times under different names. You can buy it as a printed, bound book and in chldren's editions. The first publication was 1908, I believe.
I like this 1908 digital version with photographs:
A 1913 edition at Google Books:
Village Life in America, 1852-1872: Including the Period of the American Civil War. as Told in the Diary of a School Girl.
Download it in various forms here:
And this is just plain text for a quick search.
About Carrie's Immediate Family:
Her Father
The Documents in the Case of James Richards.
Her Brother John's Memoir:
With John Bull and Jonathan. Reminiscences of Sixty Years of an American's Life in England and in the United States by John Morgan Richards.
Her paternal grandfather's family:
Pearl Richards Craigie in 1902
Niece Pearl Richards Craigie's biography by her father, Carrie's brother:
T
he life of John Oliver Hobbes: told in her correspondence with numerous friends
To say nothing of the Fields Family, her grandmother's distinguished brothers....
About Carrie's Friends & Their Quilts:
Jacqueline Atkins,
Shared Threads (New York: Viking Studio Books, 1994)
Shelly Zegart Old Maid/New Woman.
The Ontario County Historical Society has some of the quilts and many photos related to Carrie, plus her piano.
http://www.ochs.org/objects/