Saturday, October 22, 2022

Cornelia Amory Goddard Loring's Civil War

Collection Rochester Historical Association, New York
Pre-quilted & bound block from a Sanitary Commission quilt
associated with Cornelia Loring's family,
pictured in Pamela Weeks's & Don Beld's Civil War Quilts (revised.)
"My grandmother, Mrs. Charles G. Loring worked in the [Sanitary] Commission rooms in Boston by day, in the evening she would bring materials and drive about in her buggy to distribute them among the neighbors, collecting the finished garments to be carried back to Boston by an early train."---Katharine P. Loring recollections of her [step] grandmother Cornelia Amory Goddard Loring's work during the Civil War.

Katharine Peabody Loring (1849-1943)

Katharine's father's mother Anna Pierce Brace Loring had died in 1836 so Cornelia was the grandmother she knew. Less than a year old when grandfather Charles Greeley Loring married his third wife, Katharine was an adolescent during the Civil War and may have been recalling her grandparents summering at the sea shore in Pride's Crossing where train service was available for the 30 mile commute to Boston.


Cornelia Loring (1810-1875) seems to have been a one-woman supply chain for textiles funneled to & from the shore to the "Industrial Committee" of the New England Women's Auxiliary Association.
"The Industrial Committee, chaired by Mrs. Frank W. Andrews, oversaw the making of clothing and bedding for soldiers and hospitals. It provided patterns and fabric for distribution to sewing circles and soldiers aid societies throughout New England, and to women in need whose work was paid for by benefactors."
Sewing machine, 1865


In 1863 the women of greater Massachusetts donated 5,400 quilts
to the cause. 

Collection Rochester Historical Association, New York
56" x 84", Dated 1864-1865
This narrow quilt appears to have been stitched
to warm a hospitalized soldier towards the end of the war.
The nine-patch probably survived because it was never shipped.

Pamela Weeks in the recent revision of her book Civil War Quilts concludes Cornelia's stepdaughter Susan Loring Jackson may have organized its making. Inscriptions include Susan's name and two of her children's with locations in Beverly Farms, adjacent to Pride's Crossing .

C.G. Loring owns beachfront property in this 1872 map

Cornelia's first husband merchant George Augustus Goddard (1802-1845) was killed three years into their marriage when he was thrown from his chaise and fractured his skull near their home in Milton in May, 1845, leaving her with a small boy George August Goddard II (1844-1920.) 


Forty when she married Charles Loring five years later, Cornelia gave birth to one boy Kirkland Lathrop Loring who did not live to be two years old.

Wendell Phillips speaking for Thomas Sims, 1851
Gleason's Pictorial Drawing Room Companion

A year after their marriage her attorney husband took the case of Thomas Sims, a fugitive from Georgia slavery who landed in Boston after the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law dictating that Northerners must return African-Americans to bondage.


Lorings were so numerous in Massachusetts that Charles's double first cousin Edward Greely Loring was the judge who ruled against Sims and sent him back to Georgia. 


Picture from Pamela Weeks's Civil War Quilts
Detail of the Loring quilt with a war-time print of soldier and cannon.

When the Civil War began Cornelia was living on Mount Vernon Street in Boston, stepmother to Charles's four children in their forties and grandmother to eight. Son George was a student at Harvard.

Library of Congress
Mount Vernon Street in the 1850s with a view of Bunker Hill

Cornelia's stepson Charles Greeley Loring II had a distinguished army career.

Major-General Charles Greeley Loring (1828-1902)
Ninth Army Corps

Grandson Lt. Patrick Tracy Jackson III
5th Massachusetts Cavalry Regiment

Undoubtedly she had a number of family members and friends serving in the Union Army to worry about. The many Lorings are so interconnected an outsider cannot hope to figure them out. Also difficult to figure out: the Boston branch of the Sanitary Commission. Unlike organizations in New York City and St. Louis, the Boston aid society was not a public relations presence in the press of the day (or modern memory.) 

Ednah Dow Cheney in a biography of Abby May recalled the Auxiliary's origins in December, 1861 after national Sanitary Commission officer Frederick Law Olmstead issued a call for local soldiers' aid organizations under the Commission's canopy:


Samuel Howe, at first the lone actor in gathering and dispensing supplies, had experience raising money, clothing and bedding for anti-slavery causes such as Kansas settlers fighting for a free-state constitution so he looked a good choice to administer a similar project. But as Cheney noted he was "inclined to think it was not worth while...to organize work of the women...," attitude quite consistent with Howe's misogynistic reputation. (See Elaine Showalter's, The Civil Wars of Julia Ward Howe for a portrait of his unhappy marriage trying to repress his wife's independent activities.)
The civil war's "cruel fangs fastened upon the very heart of Boston, and took from us our best and bravest.... The work of the women in providing comforts for the soldiers was unremitting. In organizing and conducting the great bazaars, which were held in furtherance of this object, many of these women found a new scope for their activities, and developed abilities hitherto unsuspected by themselves."
Julia Ward Howe, Reminiscences, 1899
The Sanitary Commission and its local branches were run by men with women deputized to conduct most of the raising of supplies (after all, women could not make contracts, etc.)

Abby Williams May (1829-1888), first cousin to 
Abby May Alcott (Marmee in Little Women), was Secretary of the Boston group.

Note the Lorings

Efficient branches of the Sanitary Commission seemed to benefit from smooth relations between the men "in charge" and the female committees. But the Boston association had problems with dissension, perhaps indicated by its name as an Auxiliary. Like other regional groups Bostonians put on a fund-raising fair during the latter years of the war despite "the Executive" (one or more of the men?) discouraging the idea.


In the face of opposition the New England Sanitary Commission Fair was held Christmas season of 1863 at Boston Music Hall, raising $140,000 for war work. Cincinnati's Fair the same week raised about $235,000 (and got more press in the Boston papers.) 

Elevating the items for sale in Boston above the "usual variety of fancy and useful articles" were displays of fine arts remembered by twelve-year-old Sarah Gooll Putnam (1851-1912) who was related to the Lorings through aunt Mary Ann Putnam Loring (Charles Greely Loring's middle wife.) Sally recorded her impressions of the event, an account found online.

Cornelia Loring ran the Boston table, offering fine
art and useful articles.

Boston Music Hall, 1850s, Massachusetts Historical Society

Abby May's cousin Louisa May Alcott dramatized "Six Scenes from Dickens" but complained, “Things did not go well for want of a good manager and more time. Our night was not at all satisfactory to us, owing to the falling through of several scenes for want of actors [but] People liked what there was of it.”
Two patriotic silk quilts at Table #7 from the women in Cambridge.

As might be expected Cornelia and her husband were in favor of Abraham Lincoln's re-election in 1864. Diarist Regina Shober Gray recalled the torch-light parade held on election eve, which she watched from Cornelia and Charles's windows on Mount Vernon Street. "It was a beautiful sight....Mrs. Loring’s party...was not so crowded as I supposed, but was a very pleasant gathering; no doubt many declined her invitation, on acct. of the torch–light."


After Cornelia's second husband died in 1867 she moved to Florence, Italy where she was buried in 1875.

Boston Globe Obituary

Picture from Pamela Weeks's Civil War Quilts
Many of the surviving Sanitary Commission quilts were made
in New England using their rather unusual "pot-holder"
method of binding each block before joining them.


Further Reading:
Jane Loring Gray (1821-1909)

See more about Cambridge women's work for soldiers' aid at this post about the Banks Brigade that met at the home of another of Cornelia's stepdaughters Jane Loring Gray.

Pamela Weeks & Don Beld, Civil War Quilts: Revised, Updated, and Expanded. 2020
Preview: https://www.amazon.com/Civil-War-Quilts-Revised-Expanded-dp-076435888X/dp/076435888X/ref=dp_ob_title_bk?asin=076435888X&revisionId=&format=4&depth=1

Judith Ann Geisberg, Civil War Sisterhood: The U.S. Sanitary Commission and Women's Politics

Elaine Showalter, The Civil Wars of Julia Ward Howe

Massachusetts Historical Society: New England Women's Auxiliary Association Records
https://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0506
Plus many Loring Jackson family records.

New England Farmer, November 21, 1863


1 comment:

Little Penpen said...

These posts are always so interesting. And I love seeing the fabrics.