Lidian (Lydia) Jackson Emerson enjoying breakfast in bed with
her cats. Sketch by her daughter.
Ellen Tucker Emerson (1839-1909) in 1860
At 17 Ellen returned from school in western Massachusetts to the family home to live the rest of her life. She never seemed interested in marriage but enjoyed her position managing the Sage of Concord's home.
Edward, father Waldo (as he was called) and Ellen in the 1850s
Lydia Jackson Emerson (1802-1892)
Lydia Jackson was Ralph Waldo Emerson's second wife, married in 1835.
His first named Ellen Tucker Emerson had died of tuberculosis
after a short marriage. Lidian (husband Waldo changed her name)
suggested the first wife's name for her eldest daughter.
From her last year at school in Lenox daughter Ellen wrote:
"The next year will probably be an apprentice-ship in house-keeping and that I hope to have begun my career as superintendent of the house.”When the Civil War began Ellen had been housekeeper and father's secretary for several years. In the introduction to Ellen's biography of Lidian Emerson, Delores Bird Carpenter tells us she at first "thought news of every new recruit...a great thing," regretting that the only family member who joined was a second cousin. Lidian was thrilled at news of civil war. She was sure it meant the end of slavery.
Timothy O'Sullivan's photo of a few of the hundreds of freedpeople
who became Union responsibility in 1861
Lidian's contribution was buying expensive English pins to fasten the handmade bandages. Ellen heard from a wounded Concord soldier that his doctor was glad to see his bandage stamped "Concord, Mass" as those had "a pin in them that would work."
"When every old sheet in Concord had been made up and sent, people began to sacrifice their good ones, and Mother, greatly elated, saw to it that the supply of pins never failed."
Library of Congress
Women visiting patients from the 36th New York
at the Portsmouth Grove Hospital, drawing by Private William Thompson Peters, Jr.
Good friends John Murray Forbes and Waldo Emerson shared
grandfather duties to Ralph Emerson Forbes, Ellen's sister Edith's oldest.
Concord Museum Collection
Ellen & a needlework project (?) 1899
In her biography of her mother Ellen mentions a good deal of fabric and bedding but the quilts (there must have been some!) are not recorded among words like blankets and downs, which might mean eiderdown coverlets.
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Adeline Harris Sears, Rhode Island, Silk celebrity quilt
The Concord Museum is showing needlework produced by young women in New England, particularly samplers, a show up through February 25th.
https://concordmuseum.org/
And see a 2014 exhibit there with a marvelous album quilt:
The Emerson home "Bush" in 1905. Ellen continued to live here until her death.
Ellen wrote a rather charming biography of her mother, which seems to reflect the personalities of both women. The manuscript is with the Emerson papers in Harvard's Houghton Library. https://hollisarchives.lib.harvard.edu/repositories/24/archival_objects/336565
Delores Bird Carpenter has edited and published it but unfortunately without the fabric swatches attached to the manuscript.
Ellen Tucker Emerson, Life of Lidian Jackson Emerson, Edited with an Introduction by Delores Bird Carpenter, 1992.A preview:
2 comments:
I wonder what it would have been like in the Emerson household... a husband who changes your name, gives his first wife's name to YOUR daughter, and moves his crush into a blood red bedroom in the house... and a daughter who is expected to act as hostess for his many hungry and eager fellow thinkers. LMA's comment that philosophers are always hungry comes to mind...
Probably typical of many mid-19th-c households where women were given and accepted a second-class position in life. Lidian's solution----act sick and stay in bed with the cats--- was a common reaction.
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