And Life Goes On
Musings about History, Religion, and Life
Monday, June 3, 2013
Brownie Wise - Tupperware's First Lady
Brownie Wise, born in 1913, grew up in a broken home in rural Georgia. Her mother, a traveling Union organizer, often left her with cousins for long stretches of time. In 1936, she met and married Robert Wise. Robert took a job with Ford Motor Company and the couple relocated to Detroit. Their son, Jerry, was born in 1938. Although Brownie wrote pieces for a Detroit newspaper column about her idealic life, it was fiction. Robert was a violent alcoholic and they were divorced in 1942.
Earl Tupper was constantly inventing things, but after working in a plastics factory, he decided that he could go into business for himself and invented the Tupperware seal that has made the product so successful. Tupperware was a successful product being sold at home parties and in department stores when Brownie Wise began to sell it in the late 1940s.
After the divorce, Brownie took classes and became a secretary, but she also sold Stanley Home products in home parties to make extra money. Sixteen year old Gary McDonald was also a successful Stanley Home party seller and suggested to Brownie that they start a business selling Tupperware at home parties, which they did. Soon they were so successful that they caught the attention of Earl Tupper. Brownie convinced Tupper that he should sell his products only at home parties. So Earl pulled his product out of the department stores and hired Brownie, eventually making her Vice-president of Sales.
Brownie built up the home party business, establishing headquarters in Kissimee Florida, holding jubilee celebrations, and traveling extensively across the country. She was so successful that in 1954, she became the first woman to be featured on the cover of Business Week magazine.
But Brownie wasn’t a feminist pioneer. Although Tupperware was largely a women’s business, Brownie surrounded herself with male executives. Women could be dealers and managers, but distributorships were offered to husband and wife couples where the husband was expected to quit his job and handle the distribution aspect of the business. Regional positions were the exclusive provenance of men.
In 1957, trouble began to brew between Earl Tupper and Brownie. He began to question some of her expenses, but she consistently refused to go to Rhode Island with her books for Earl to examine. Finally, Earl went to Florida and the end result was Brownie being fired.
Even though she tried to start a new company, Brownie never again had the same success she experienced with Tupperware. She pioneered methods and strategies that are used by many other companies even today. Earl Tupper sold the company and it continued to expand. Tupperware is sold today in over 100 countries.
Tuesday, April 9, 2013
Pola Negri - Film Star
1926 publicity portrait, photographed by Eugenie Richee |
Pola Negri, born Apolonia Chałupiec (1897 - 1987), was a
Polish actress with a long and varied career. She worked in theater,
vaudeville, and film both silent and sound. She also was a singer, recording
artist, author, and a ballerina. She achieved worldwide fame as a tragedienne
and femme fatale first in silent films, but she successfully made the
transition to sound and had a career that spanned the years from 1914 to 1943
with a final movie in 1964.
Negri was the only surviving child of Eleonora Kiełczewska
and Jerzy Chalupiec. After her father was arrested by Russian authorities for
revolutionary activities, she lived in extreme poverty with her mother in Warsaw. Her life began to
change when she was accepted into the Imperial Ballet Academy of Warsaw. She
worked her way up to solo roles before tuberculosis forced her to stop dancing.
That was when she adopted the pseudonym Pola Negri and began her acting career.
Negri made her acting debut in 1912 while she was still a
student at the Warsaw Imperial Academy of Dramatic Arts. She received much
critical acclaim and continued performing with a number of offers to join
theaters. Her film debut was in 1914 in the silent film "Slave to her
Senses."
Success in Poland
led Negri to move to Berlin
where she performed on stage and in film. Two films, "Carmen" and
"Madame DuBarry" were huge successes and released in the United States
under different names in 1918 and 1921. "Madame DuBarry" was an
international success and helped to bring down the United States embargo on German
films. The producer of these films Ernst Lubitsch. The success of his films, as
well as others, threatened Hollywood's
dominance in the international film market. The response was to acquire German
talent, including Lubitsch and Negri.
In 1922, Negri signed a contract with Paramount Pictures
making her the first continental star to be brought to Hollywood, paving the way for stars such as
Greta Garbo, Marlene Dietrich, Ingrid Bergman, Hedy Lamarr, and Sophia
Loren. She became one of the most
popular actresses of the era.
Photo: Negri and second husband Prince Serge Mdivani on their wedding day, 14 May 1927. |
After a brief retirement in 1928 and film work in Britain and Germany,
Negri returned to Hollywood
to make her first talking film (A Woman Commands, 1932.) Her rendition of the
song "Paradise" prompted a
successful vaudeville tour to promote it.
Negri moved to the US permanently in the early 1940s.
She eventually moved to San Antonio,
Texas where she lived quietly
until her death in 1987 at the age of 90. She was the 11th star to place her
hand and foot prints in front of Grauman's Chinese Theater. Among other honors,
she has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and a star in Poland's Walk
of Fame in Łódź.
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Bette Graham, Liquid Paper and a Monkee
This is Women's History Month and I've been busy searching
for women I am unfamiliar with to post on the Facebook page associated with my
women's history blog Saints, Sisters, and Sluts. I took a poll and choose the 4
highest areas of interest to be covered during the 4 weeks in March: Queens and Rulers, Inventors, women in science and math,
and writers. I highlight one woman each day and then do the usual of sharing
other things I find.
I read and write about women's history, but when the month started
I realized that I didn't know of any women inventors! So, Google here I come, I
began the search and this has turned out to be a fun category. Some of these
items it wouldn't surprise you to know were invented by women,for example the
dishwasher (Josephine Garis Cochrane in 1892), the rolling pin (Catherine
Deiner in 1891), and disposable diapers (Marion Donovan in 1950.)
Some inventions we take for granted, but couldn't do
without: windshield wipers (Mary Anderson in 1903), electric hot-water heater
(Ida Forbes in 1917), and the medical syringe (Letitia Geer in 1899.) And some
we rarely think about, but when we need them are a necessity, the life raft
(Maria Beaseley in 1882) and Kevlar (Stephanie Kwolek in 1966.)
There was one invention that I found out about off-line. A
friend told me that she thought the mother of one of the Monkees invented
Liquid Paper®. (We were both little girls in the 1960s, so this was cool, at
least then.) Well sure enough, it was Bette Graham.
Bette Clair McMurray was born in Dallas,
Texas in 1924 and was raised in San Antonio. She
graduated from high school and married her first husband in 1942 before he went
off to WWII. She had a son later that year, but unfortunately the marriage didn’t
last and she was divorced in 1946.
As a single mother, Bette had to support herself and began
working as a secretary at Texas Band and Trust. Soon she worked her way up the
ladder to become an executive secretary, a plum position, especially in the
1950s when there wasn’t anything else open to women in the banking industry. This,
of course, was before the days of word processors. On a typewriter, once that wrong letter was hit it was too
late. This meant that you had to try to erase it or retype the entire page.
Bette also had artistic talent and during holidays she
painted department store windows. She realized that painters never erased
mistakes, they just painted over them. So she mixed a little tempura paint in a
bottle and took her brush to work. It worked and although she tried to keep it hidden, soon other people started borrowing her "paint." She made some improvements over the next few
years with help from her son’s chemistry teacher.
In 1956, Bette began to market her correction fluid as “Mistake
Out.” The name was later changed to Liquid Paper®. In 1979, Bette’s company had
200 employees and was making 25 million bottles of Liquid Paper® a year when she
sold the company for $47.5 million.
When Bette Nesmith Graham died in 1980, her son Michael
Nesmith inherited half of her $50 million estate. And yes that’s Michael
Nesmith of the Monkees!
The Monkees in 1967, from left to right Micky Dolenz, Davy Jones, Michael Nesmith, and Peter Tork |
Saturday, March 2, 2013
Fannie Farmer - Teaching America to Cook
On August 23, 1902, Fannie Farmer opened Miss Farmer’s School of Cookery
in Boston. Fannie Farmer was an advocate for using standardized
measurements in recipes consequently making cooking in the home easier
for many women. Her work at the school, lectures, and cookbooks changed
the way Americans cooked.
Last weekend my sister and I were going through some books that my mom was getting rid of. One of them was a duplicate copy of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook. My sister, Teresa, and I are what we call “dump” cooks. We’re both comfortable dumping in a little of this and a little of that, but our mom and other sister prefer recipes with precise measurements. Nevertheless, Teresa and I both have copies of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook that we have referred to over the years along with many other women.
Fannie Farmer was born March 23, 1857 to a family that believed in education for women, but due to a stroke in her teens she was unable to finish high school or go to college. Unable to walk, she remained at home and began to cook. She became so proficient that her mother’s boarding house became known for the quality of meals that were served. Once she regained the ability to walk, she attended the Boston Cooking School which was founded in 1879 to promote a scientific approach to cooking, and specifically to train women to be cooking teachers. Fannie graduated in 1889, and as one of its top students became the principal of the school in 1891.
In 1896, Fannie published The Boston Cooking School Cookbook. The publisher didn’t expect it to be a big seller, so the initial printing of 3000 copies was at the author’s expense. They definitely misjudged its popularity. It is still in print today. Currently in its 13th addition, the 10th edition published in 1959 was called The All New Fannie Farmer Boston Cooking School Cookbook, and the 11th edition published in 1965 was the first to be called The Fannie Farmer Cookbook.
The Boston Cooking School Cookbook was much more than a recipe book. It also included information about household management, sanitation, nutrition, and preserving fruits and vegetables. Nothing was left out from discussion of boiling point to “how to build a fire” and “boning a bird.” But its most significant contribution to American cooking was in Fannie’s discussion of standard measurements and the idea of level measurements. A teacup of flour became a level cup of flour, and a piece of butter became a specific number of level tablespoons.
In 1904, Fannie published a book that would result in her lecturing to Harvard medical students. Food and Cookery for the Sick and Convalescent gave information on the digestive system, food recommendations for specific diseases, nutrition for children, and emphasized the appearance, taste, and presentation of food for the sick.
Due to another stroke, Fannie was confined to a wheelchair for the last 7 years of her life, but she continued to lecture and write. Her lectures were published by the Boston Evening Transcript and republished in newspapers across the country. Fannie gave her last lecture 10 days before her death on January 15, 1915.
A list of her books from Wikipedia
The Boston Cooking School Cookbook (1896 version)
Food and Cookery for the Sick and Convalescent (1904)
Fannie Farmer around 1900 (Courtesy of the Boston Public Library) |
Last weekend my sister and I were going through some books that my mom was getting rid of. One of them was a duplicate copy of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook. My sister, Teresa, and I are what we call “dump” cooks. We’re both comfortable dumping in a little of this and a little of that, but our mom and other sister prefer recipes with precise measurements. Nevertheless, Teresa and I both have copies of The Fannie Farmer Cookbook that we have referred to over the years along with many other women.
Fannie Farmer was born March 23, 1857 to a family that believed in education for women, but due to a stroke in her teens she was unable to finish high school or go to college. Unable to walk, she remained at home and began to cook. She became so proficient that her mother’s boarding house became known for the quality of meals that were served. Once she regained the ability to walk, she attended the Boston Cooking School which was founded in 1879 to promote a scientific approach to cooking, and specifically to train women to be cooking teachers. Fannie graduated in 1889, and as one of its top students became the principal of the school in 1891.
Fannie with a student |
In 1896, Fannie published The Boston Cooking School Cookbook. The publisher didn’t expect it to be a big seller, so the initial printing of 3000 copies was at the author’s expense. They definitely misjudged its popularity. It is still in print today. Currently in its 13th addition, the 10th edition published in 1959 was called The All New Fannie Farmer Boston Cooking School Cookbook, and the 11th edition published in 1965 was the first to be called The Fannie Farmer Cookbook.
The Boston Cooking School Cookbook was much more than a recipe book. It also included information about household management, sanitation, nutrition, and preserving fruits and vegetables. Nothing was left out from discussion of boiling point to “how to build a fire” and “boning a bird.” But its most significant contribution to American cooking was in Fannie’s discussion of standard measurements and the idea of level measurements. A teacup of flour became a level cup of flour, and a piece of butter became a specific number of level tablespoons.
In 1904, Fannie published a book that would result in her lecturing to Harvard medical students. Food and Cookery for the Sick and Convalescent gave information on the digestive system, food recommendations for specific diseases, nutrition for children, and emphasized the appearance, taste, and presentation of food for the sick.
Due to another stroke, Fannie was confined to a wheelchair for the last 7 years of her life, but she continued to lecture and write. Her lectures were published by the Boston Evening Transcript and republished in newspapers across the country. Fannie gave her last lecture 10 days before her death on January 15, 1915.
A list of her books from Wikipedia
- Farmer, Fannie Merritt. Boston Cooking-School Cook Book. (Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Company, 1896). A complete list of editions may be found at Boston Cooking-School Cook Book.
- Farmer, Fannie Merritt. Chafing Dish Possibilities. (Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Company, 1898).
- Farmer, Fannie Merritt. Food and Cookery for the Sick and Convalescent. (Boston, MA: Little, Brown & Co., 1904).
- Farmer, Fannie Merritt. What to Have for Dinner: Containing Menus with Recipes for their Preparation. (New York, NY: Dodge Publishing Company, 1905). Re-published (by Dodge) in 1914 under the title A Book of Good Dinners for My Friend; or “What to Have for Dinner”.
- Farmer, Fannie Merritt. Catering for Special Occasions, with Menus and Recipes. (Philadelphia, PA: D. McKay, 1911).
- Farmer, Fannie Merritt. New Book of Cookery, A. Eight-hundred and Sixty Recipes Covering the Whole Range of Cookery. (Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Company, 1912).
- Farmer, Fannie Merritt, ed. Priscilla Cook Book for Everyday Housekeepers, The. (Boston, MA: The Priscilla Publishing Company, 1913)
The Boston Cooking School Cookbook (1896 version)
Food and Cookery for the Sick and Convalescent (1904)
Monday, February 18, 2013
The Swope Murders in Missouri 1909
Thomas Swope |
One of the daughters, Frances, married Dr. Bennett Clark Hyde against the wishes of her mother and her Uncle Tom. About a year after they eloped, the couple reconciled with the family. Then one night during dinner Moss Hunton, was proposing a toast when he collapsed. Tom Swope, upset about Hunton’s condition, took to his bed. Both were treated by Dr. Hyde, and both were dead within 3 days.
Soon after the deaths, four of the younger members of the family became ill and Dr. Hyde diagnosed typhoid; he and Frances began drinking only bottled water. They were all under the care of Dr. Hyde, when Chrisman was given a medicinal capsule and within an hour died having terrible convulsions. A few days later, Margaret was given a capsule and had similar convulsions, but survived. Dr. Hyde was well respected around town and the recently elected president of the Jackson County Medical Association. Nevertheless, the nurses began to suspect something and went to Dr. Elmer Twyman.
Dr. Bennett Clark Hyde and his wife Frances. |
In the meantime, Lucie Lee Swope had rushed back from Europe because of the terrible news about her family. On the train from New York to Missouri, she became ill. Can you guess who met her in New York? Yep – Dr. Hyde. But while he was gone, the authorities had exhumed the bodies of Tom Swope and Moss Hunton and found cyanide in both of their bodies, and strychnine in Tom. Dr. Hyde was arrested when he arrived home and charged with the murders.
During the trial it came out that Dr. Hyde had purchased cyanide potassium in capsule form, as well as typhoid fever cultures. The motive attributed to him was a desire to increase his share of the family fortune. (Moss Hunton was the executor of Tom’s estimated $3.5 million estate.)
On May 16, 1910, Dr. Hyde was convicted on two counts of murder for Tom Swope and Moss Hunton, and one of manslaughter for Chrisman. But that isn’t the end of the story. The Missouri Supreme Court reversed the verdict and demanded a new trial, giving no reason for the reversal. There were two more trials, one mistrial, and in the third trial Dr. Hyde was acquitted based on the fact that the evidence was primarily circumstantial. After 7 years of appeals, with Maggie Swope spending money to prosecute her son-in-law, and Frances spending it to defend him, it was over.
The publicity was of course excruciating for the family and had destroyed Hyde’s reputation and career. The family scattered to various parts of the country, Hyde and Frances divorced, and in 1934 Bennett Hyde died. If he did murder them, he took the secret to his grave. No one knew why the Missouri Supreme Court reversed the verdict, and the people of Kansas City were left wondering what really happened in 1909.
The Swope Mansion was demolished in 1960. |
I read this story in Bess W. Truman by Margaret Wallace, but the Kansas City Public Library has a short article “Dr. Hyde and Mr. Swope” with an excellent list of resources at the end of the article if you want to read more.
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Marian Anderson, Eleanor Roosevelt, and the DAR
On Easter Sunday, April 9, 1939, Marian Anderson performed in what
may be her most famous concert in the United States. It began with a
stirring rendition of “My Country ‘Tis of Thee” on the steps of the
Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. The interracial crowd was estimated
at 75,000 and the radio audience in the millions. Her final selection
was the Negro spiritual “Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen” and in
finishing this concert, Marian became a powerful symbol for African
American artists, in part because the concert came about due to the
bigotry of others.
Marian Anderson was born in 1897 to John Berkley Anderson and his wife Annie Delilah Rucker. The Andersons were a devout Christian family with significant musical talent. (Marian and both of her younger sisters would all go on to become singers.) At the age of six, Marian’s Aunt Mary convinced her to sing in the church choir. This gave her the opportunity to sing solos and duets and she soon began singing at other functions around the community.
After graduating high school, Marian wanted to study music at the Philadelphia Music Academy, but was rejected because she was black. Instead she studied privately with the help of people in her community. She won a contest to sing with the New York Philharmonic in 1925 and after a number of other concerts sang at Carnegie Hall. But racial prejudice made it difficult to build a career in the United States, so she moved to Europe.
Marian’s career in Europe was very successful. She toured and made contacts that would help form her future career, including Kosti Vehanen and Sol Hurok who would be her accompanist/vocal coach and manager, respectively, for the rest of her career. She also made a profound impression on the composer Jean Sibelius who became her friend and adapted and composed songs for Marian throughout her career. Although she had thousands of fans in Europe, Hurok convinced Marian to return to the US in the late 1930s where she toured and became famous, although racial prejudice still presented roadblocks.
Because she was so popular, in 1939 when Howard University planned to host a concert with Marian, a large turnout was expected. The only hall large enough to hold the expected crowd was Constitution Hall belonging to the Daughters of the American Revolution. When they were approached, the DAR refused to allow a black artist to perform in the Hall. This caused quite a stir which prompted the resignation of many members, including First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.
The First Lady had considered what to do. She wrote in her newspaper column about the sometimes difficult choice of whether to remain in an organization and work for change from within, or to leave the organization in protest. At times Eleanor felt that making a problem public was not the best strategy, but the rejection of Marian Anderson by the DAR was already public, so she chose to leave the organization and let it be known why.
Not long before this, Eleanor had attended the Southern Conference on Human Welfare in Birmingham, Alabama. The Conference had a large number of black delegates, but the city insisted that they adhere to the cities segregation laws. When Eleanor arrived with her friend Mary McLeod Bethune, the police told her that she couldn’t sit with her friend. Her solution was to have her chair moved to the center aisle where she would sit neither on the “white” side nor the “colored” side. This caused quite a stir as did her resignation from the DAR.
Eleanor’s decision to resign from the DAR received world-wide attention. She had her opponents, but many more who supported her decision. In the wake of the uproar, Walter White, executive secretary of the NAACP, and Marian’s manager Sol Hurok came up with the idea of an open air concert in front of the Lincoln Memorial. With the support of both the President and First Lady, they approached Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes to arrange it. The gathering was a great success.
Marian Anderson went on to have a long distinguished career. She was the first African American to perform at the Metropolitan Opera; she continued to tour in Europe and toured Australia, India, and the Far East; and she entertained troops during WWII. In 1943, she even performed at Constitution Hall at the invitation of the DAR as a benefit for the Red Cross.
It seems fitting that Marian would begin her final concert tour at Constitution Hall in October 1964 and end at Carnegie Hall on April 18, 1965. Although officially retired she continued to appear publicly. She was active in the civil rights movement, giving benefit concerts and inspiring many others. Marian was the recipient of many awards during her life including the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, the United Nations Peace Prize, and the George Peabody Medal.
Marian Anderson was born in 1897 to John Berkley Anderson and his wife Annie Delilah Rucker. The Andersons were a devout Christian family with significant musical talent. (Marian and both of her younger sisters would all go on to become singers.) At the age of six, Marian’s Aunt Mary convinced her to sing in the church choir. This gave her the opportunity to sing solos and duets and she soon began singing at other functions around the community.
After graduating high school, Marian wanted to study music at the Philadelphia Music Academy, but was rejected because she was black. Instead she studied privately with the help of people in her community. She won a contest to sing with the New York Philharmonic in 1925 and after a number of other concerts sang at Carnegie Hall. But racial prejudice made it difficult to build a career in the United States, so she moved to Europe.
Marian’s career in Europe was very successful. She toured and made contacts that would help form her future career, including Kosti Vehanen and Sol Hurok who would be her accompanist/vocal coach and manager, respectively, for the rest of her career. She also made a profound impression on the composer Jean Sibelius who became her friend and adapted and composed songs for Marian throughout her career. Although she had thousands of fans in Europe, Hurok convinced Marian to return to the US in the late 1930s where she toured and became famous, although racial prejudice still presented roadblocks.
Because she was so popular, in 1939 when Howard University planned to host a concert with Marian, a large turnout was expected. The only hall large enough to hold the expected crowd was Constitution Hall belonging to the Daughters of the American Revolution. When they were approached, the DAR refused to allow a black artist to perform in the Hall. This caused quite a stir which prompted the resignation of many members, including First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt.
The First Lady had considered what to do. She wrote in her newspaper column about the sometimes difficult choice of whether to remain in an organization and work for change from within, or to leave the organization in protest. At times Eleanor felt that making a problem public was not the best strategy, but the rejection of Marian Anderson by the DAR was already public, so she chose to leave the organization and let it be known why.
Not long before this, Eleanor had attended the Southern Conference on Human Welfare in Birmingham, Alabama. The Conference had a large number of black delegates, but the city insisted that they adhere to the cities segregation laws. When Eleanor arrived with her friend Mary McLeod Bethune, the police told her that she couldn’t sit with her friend. Her solution was to have her chair moved to the center aisle where she would sit neither on the “white” side nor the “colored” side. This caused quite a stir as did her resignation from the DAR.
Eleanor’s decision to resign from the DAR received world-wide attention. She had her opponents, but many more who supported her decision. In the wake of the uproar, Walter White, executive secretary of the NAACP, and Marian’s manager Sol Hurok came up with the idea of an open air concert in front of the Lincoln Memorial. With the support of both the President and First Lady, they approached Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes to arrange it. The gathering was a great success.
Marian Anderson went on to have a long distinguished career. She was the first African American to perform at the Metropolitan Opera; she continued to tour in Europe and toured Australia, India, and the Far East; and she entertained troops during WWII. In 1943, she even performed at Constitution Hall at the invitation of the DAR as a benefit for the Red Cross.
It seems fitting that Marian would begin her final concert tour at Constitution Hall in October 1964 and end at Carnegie Hall on April 18, 1965. Although officially retired she continued to appear publicly. She was active in the civil rights movement, giving benefit concerts and inspiring many others. Marian was the recipient of many awards during her life including the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, the United Nations Peace Prize, and the George Peabody Medal.
Saturday, September 29, 2012
Anne Hutchinson - Running Afoul of the State Church
The “separation of church and state” has been a continuing issue in our American history. Most often it comes up with regard to our public schools. Over the years, these issues have ended up in the courts, with things being decided in the favor of keeping religion out of the schools, but the issues never really go away. Still prayers are said before football games, at graduations, and even as late as 2004 the school board of Dover, Pennsylvania tried to introduce Creationism into the high school biology classroom in the form of Intelligent Design.
I’m not surprised that the effort continues. The United States is one of the most religious nations on earth with hundreds of different religions and Christian denominations. What does surprise me, however, is that the effort is usually led by evangelical Christians. The reason this surprises me is that evangelical Christians were in large part the driving force behind the First Amendment clause being written into the Constitution.
We don’t have a state religion in the United States, but that wasn’t always the case. During colonial America, many colonies did have official religions that were supported by the state and tax money. In the north, the Congregationalist church (formerly the Puritans) was the official church of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire, in the south, the Anglican Church was the official church of Maryland, Virginia, the Carolinas, and Georgia. There certainly were states without an official religion, most notably Rhode Island which was established on the principle of freedom of religion. But in many of these colonies, evangelicals found themselves at odds with the established churches. One person who is of particular importance to the idea of “separation of church and state” is Jeremiah Moore. Taking up the cause of Moore and many other Baptist preachers who had been arrested for preaching without a license in Virginia, Thomas Jefferson would introduce a bill into the legislature that would eventually be passed and sever the tie between the Anglican Church and the state of Virginia. He would then go on, with others, to insist on the addition of a clause in the Constitution that ensured freedom of religion.
Evangelicalism is characterized by the belief that you can have a personal relationship with Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit. Although Evangelicalism didn’t really begin as a movement until the 1730s, the idea that you could have this communion with God through the Holy Spirit did exist. One woman who believed and taught this idea is Anne Hutchinson.
Anne Hutchinson, born Anne Marbury in 1591, was the daughter of an Anglican minister in England. Her father had strong Puritan leanings and was censured by the church on more than one occasion. He spent time in prison for his preaching and for a time was under house arrest. He was a strong believer in education and in a time that it was unusual for women to be educated, he taught both his boys and his girls. At the age of 21, not long after her father’s death, Anne married William Hutchinson. Together they began to follow the teachings of John Cotton and John Wheelwright. These two ministers preached similar messages emphasizing grace and a “moment of conversion”, and deemphasizing a salvation based on works.
By 1633, Cotton’s message, which didn’t strictly adhere to the Anglican Church doctrines, was attracting attention from the church and he found it necessary to flee to America. After a time, Anne felt the Spirit leading her to follow Cotton to Massachusetts and she and William, with their 11 children, sailed for Boston in 1634. They flourished in Boston. William was successful in trade, and Anne found a place in the community helping others and attending childbirths where women often congregated. At some point, she began to share with these women the message she had learned from Cotton and Wheelwright.
Men would often congregate to discuss recent sermons and theology, but there were no such meetings for women. As more and more women became interested in what Anne had to say, she began to have meetings for them in her home. This eventually led to meetings twice a week attended by as many as 80 people. They would review the sermon, discuss it’s meaning, and often disagree with it. Anne began to espouse her own teachings. Principle among them was the “covenant of grace” as opposed to the “covenant of works.” She emphasized “an intuition of the Spirit” or “a personal revelation” as the true evidence of a person’s salvation rather than their good behavior.
In 1636, it became clear to officials in Boston, that many people were developing opinions that weren’t considered orthodox within the church. The fault for this was laid at the feet of Cotton, Hutchinson, and Wheelwright (who had recently arrived from England.) A number of meetings were held, particularly with Cotton, to try to sort out what his specific teachings were and where they differed from the official church doctrine. (This controversy still exists today between different denominations, with some emphasizing that works have nothing to do with the state of your salvation, and others emphasizing that your faith is not assured unless there is evidence of the fruit of good works.) By late 1636, things came to a head and Hutchinson and her followers were accused of heresy.
Anne was accused of antinomianism and familism. Antinomianism literally means “against the law” and Familism was a sect that emphasized a feeling of divine love. Both of these ideas were considered to be dangerous for fear that they could lead to immoral behavior. Neither accusation is really accurate. While Anne believed that she and others like her, received salvation purely by the grace of God and that this could be experienced and felt by the believer, thereby providing “proof” to the individual, they were not immoral people. By all accounts, Anne was highly respected in the community and very active in helping people, in spite of having a large family of her own.
By 1637 when Anne came to trial, her primary accuser John Winthrop had become governor of Massachusetts. He feared that if the people in the colony did not remain “pure” that God would not protect them. It was a difficult life for the settlers. Just before Anne’s trial, the settlers had engaged in a war with the Pequot Indians. Many Puritans believed that Indian attacks, poor crops, natural disasters, or any misfortune was God’s judgment for sin. Another aspect of this trial was that Anne had risen to a place in the community that Winthrop did not deem “fitting to her sex.” Men had begun to attend Anne’s meetings. In fact, one of her admirers was the previous governor of the colony, Sir Henry Vane. It was not considered proper for a woman to teach men. Cotton, in an attempt to distance himself from Anne, even accused her of promoting licentious behavior by having men and women together in her home for these meetings. The entire situation was filled with politics, fear of judgment, and probably no small amount of misogyny.
On the first day of the trial, Anne met their arguments point for point, probably frustrating them greatly. However, on the second day, Anne gave them her message. She told them that she was assured of her salvation because of a “personal revelation.” The court deemed her a heretic and sentenced her to banishment from Massachusetts. She remained under house arrest throughout the winter in the home of Joseph Weld in Roxbury. It was a severe winter in which she was separated from her family.
In the spring, a church trial was held, in which Anne was excommunicated. During the winter, William and some other men made plans to leave Massachusetts. Twenty-three men would ultimately sign what became known as the Portsmouth Compact. They purchased Aquiddeck Island from the Narragansetts and formed a new settlement. This was near Providence Plantations which had been established by Roger Williams with specific provisions for freedom of religion.
At some point after the death of William in 1641, Anne and some of her family moved to a place in eastern New York. Here she and all but one of her children and other family members were massacred by the Indians. She had had good relationships with the Narragansett Indians in Portsmouth and may not have realized how tense the relationships were in her new home. Her daughter Susanna was away from the house and by some accounts was captured and held for several years before being ransomed by to her remaining family in Boston.
As with many historical figures Anne’s life is viewed through many lenses. She is seen as a heretic, a libertine, and a feminist, or as a woman who simply followed the dictates of her conscience. She definitely stepped out of the generally accepted role of women in Puritan society. Ultimately, she was a victim of both secular and church politics, but she was also a woman who insisted on her religious liberty.
Resources
Life of Anne Hutchinson: With a Sketch of the Antinomian Controversy in Massachusetts by George E. Ellis
God In America – PBS special
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)