Showing posts with label Iowa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iowa. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2020

Backbone State Park - 1920 & Strawberries

On  May 28, 1920 Backbone State Park near Strawberry Point was officially dedicated making it Iowa’s first and oldest state park.  Located in Delaware County, southeast of Strawberry Point and northeast of Lamont, with a Dundee address, the park was named after the narrow (and very steep) limestone ridge carved out by the river.  That ridge is known as the "Devil's Backbone."  The park is over 2000 acres of nature in the valley of the Maquoketa River is open for fishing, hikers (21 miles of trails), campers (over 100 campsites), and aa myriad of outdoor activities.  Lacking swimming pools in. the area, children in the 1950s and 60s were given swimming lessons in the river that flowed through the park.  All types of water activities share the waterways that run through the park. Views of the park and many available activities can be viewed in a Travel Iowa  video on YouTube.  Several entrances can get visitors into the park.  And if you go in one its easy to miss many other attractions so be sure to pick up a map of the park from the rangers.


During the Great Depression the Civilian Conservation Corps provided work and the park was the site of many CCC historic structures.  Many of the park's stone buildings were constructed by the CCC between 1933 and 1941.  Visitors to the area can tour the CCC museum and view the structures and collections.  Information about visiting can be found on the Iowa Department of Natural Resource's (DNR's) park's website.    Kristi Holl (a longtime Iowa resident now living in San Antonio, Texas) wrote a mystery that takes place in Backbone State Park.  The Haunting of Cabin 13 was first published 1987 by Atheneum; but now out of print.  The book might be available in library collections


On the way to the park, up highway 313, Old Mission Road, from Dubuque to Fort Atkinson (get out your maps) travelers will pass through Strawberry Point, the home of the World's Largest Strawberry.  The history of the town is included on the city's website.  

The large strawberry is located outside of the town's city hall and library.  
That strawberry is approximately 15 feet tall and 12 feet across. The fiberglass sculpture weighs 1430 pounds.  It was created by a local ad agency and erected in 1967.  
Founders originally wanted to name their town Franklin, Iowa but that request was denied as there was already a Franklin, Iowa, in Lee County.  So the founders settled on using a name associated with the location of an original geographic marker for the town.  It seems that early in the area's history  there was a road from Wisconsin to Fort Atkinson Iowa called the Mission Road.  The road was a neutral ground that the United States Army used to move the Winnebago tribe, under their protection, protecting the Winnebagos from the hostile Sac and Fox tribes.  The road was marked with one mile stakes.  One of those stakes was near a prominent patch of wild strawberries and this is where the town was located.  Thus the town of Strawberry Point was incorporated officially as Strawberry Point in December of 1887. 

There are no commercial fields of strawberries in Strawberry Point and the wild patch is long gone.  None are known to grow in the Backbone park area either but the Historic Franklin hotel serves a delicious strawberry shortcake (and strawberry pie) commemorating the town's connection. Travel through Strawberry Point, and make your way to historic Backbone State Park.

Photos on this site originated from the Iowa Department of Natural Resources resources, or the city of Strawberry Point.

Sunday, September 08, 2019

Ernest Hemingway and Laura Ingalls Wilder

Literary Authors and their connections

So what is the name Ernest Hemingway and Laura Ingalls Wilder doing on this blog about Iowa and connections to its history?  As far I know Hemingway spent much of his life in Ketchum, Idaho where he is now buried.  For a time he lived and wrote from his home in Cuba.   
Laura Ingalls Wilder spent most of her growing up years (which she wrote of in her very famous Little House series), in Minnesota and DeSmet, South Dakota.  However, she did live for a time in Burr Oak, IA.  I've written about that connection in earlier blog posts both here and elsewhere:
And Hemingway - His parents Dr. Clarence Hemingway was a physician, and his mother Grace Hall Hemingway was an accomplished singer and very musical).  The family lived in Oak Park Illinois and often spent time at  their summer home near Walloon Lake in northern Michigan.  Never in Iowa but his grandmother's family, the Hancocks, had lived in Dyersville, Iowa for several years before his grandmother married Ernest Hall (Hemingway's grandfather)  and Ernest Hall tired of the rural life and moved his family, including his daughter Grace, to Chicago and then to Oak Park, Illinois.  Across the street lived the Hemingways and Grace Hall and Dr. Clarence Hemingway married.  Ernest was the second of the Hemingways's six children. There were four girls: Marcelline, Ursula, Madelaine, Carol, and the youngest child, a brother Leicester.  

Ernest Hemingway never did live in Iowa - even for a short time but his mother Grace Hall Hemingway had Iowa roots.  And there is an firmer Iowa connection, a more lasting collection.
 The connection is through Leicester, Ernest's younger brother, and Ernest's younger brother.  Leicester gives Ernest Hemingway the clearest connection to Iowa.  Leicester and his second wife, Doris Mae Hemingway 'nee Dunning had been married since 1956, and at the time of his death (suicide as his brother, father, and sister Ursula ended their lives)  in 1982, Leicester and Doris were living in Miami Beach, Florida where he had been publishing a fishing newspaper for five years or so.  Leicester's funeral was in Florida, but his cremated remains were returned to Iowa for burial in Alden Cemetery, Alden, Iowa, Hardin County, Iowa.  Doris Mae Hemingway died 15 years later (1997)  in Florida and is buried in Alden, Iowa as well.  Doris was raised in the Alden, Iowa area and many of her family members are buried in the cemetery.  So finally a firm connection from Ernest Hemingway to Iowa.


The Iowa Connection - A Passing Relationship

Both Ernest Hemingway and Laura Ingalls Wilder have a brief and thin connections to Iowa - but a connection never-the-less.  Ernest's brother is buried in Iowa, Wilder's youngest daughter Grace was born in Burr Oak, Iowa.  But Iowa was not either writer's residence (for long at least).


So What Is the Connection to One Another -- Hemingway & Wilder?

This question is answered by a little known fact - there are only two Presidential libraries that hold major collections of a literary figures papers and manuscripts.  One is the John F. Kennedy Presidential library in Boston, Massachusetts.  And the other - by now you've probably guessed it, or at least part of it.  
The Herbert Hoover Presidential Library in West Branch, Iowa holds the literary papers and manuscripts of Laura Ingalls Wilder.
For information about why Wilder's papers are at the Herbert Hoover library view the September 1, 2019 presentation at the museum :
Hoover Presidential Library. (2019 November 20) Long Way Home: The Life of Laura Ingalls Wilder by Sarah Uthoff.  Retrieved from https://youtu.be/ApdkBc29pJQ

The Ernest Hemingway Collection

In a blog entry by Stacey Chandler, Reference Archivist at the John F. Kennedy Library, Chandler explains how the personal papers of Ernest Hemingway came to be part of the presidential library. 
Cahdler, Stacey.  (2018 July 18) JFK & Hemingway: Beyond "Grace Under Pressure. The JFK Library Archive : An Inside Look (Blog).  Retrieved from https://jfk.blogs.archives.gov/2018/07/20/jfk-hemingway/
Information about the Ernest Hemingway Collection is explained on the scope of the collection page: https://www.jfklibrary.org/asset-viewer/archives/MEHC#overview

The Laura Ingalls Wilder Collection

Information about the connection between Herbert Hoover, and Laura Ingalls Wilder's daughter Rose Wilder Lane is discussed on this page on the Hoover site focused on Lane's connection to Hoover, and the link then to Wilder.  The Rose Wilder Lane Collection, retrieved from 
Information about the Laura Ingalls Wilder Collection is explained on the page titled: Rose Wilder Lane and Laura Ingalls Wilder. The page is part of the Herbert hoove Presidential Library and Museum site.  Page retrieved from https://hoover.archives.gov/education/rose-wilder-lane-and-laura-ingalls-wilder.

A brushing glance at Iowa from both Hemingway and Wilder - but their connection to one another as the only literary personalities to be so represented in Presidential libraries is more firmly implanted in the history of our society.

Saturday, June 22, 2019

Iowans and a Woman's Right to Vote

Carrie Lane Chapman Catt
(1859-1947)

Iowans and a Woman's Right to Vote

Amelia Bloomer
(1818-1894)
Carrie Lane Chapman Catt lead the way to women's rights.  The road was paved by a fellow Iowan that came decades earlier.
Amelia Bloomer (1818-1894) was for years a resident of Council Bluffs, IA and very involved in the the suffrage movement - even though she was born 102 years before the 19th amendment was finally ratified, 26 years after her death.  More about her life and involvement can be found on this blog in a post titled: Amelia Bloomer - An Early Suffragette.  But it was Amelia Bloomer and her work with Susan B. Anthony that paved the way for Carrie Lane Chapman Catt's work four decades later.
And it is Catt's work that lead us all straight toward rights for women and resulted in the passage and ratification of the 19th amendment.

"If historians are asked who are the most significant of Iowa State University’s alumni, three names surface: George Washington Carver, Henry A. Wallace, and Carrie Chapman Catt.”  —Marsha Readhead, 1989 (president Ames League of Women Voters -1989-1990)

Carrie Lane Chapman Catt

Carrie Lane Chapman Catt dedicated 25 years of her life to leading the women's movement which culminated in the passage and ratification of the 19th amendment to the United States Constitution.

Women's Suffrage Involvement Timeline

Carrie Lane Chapman Catt was born January 9, 1859 in Ripon, WI.  That was just eleven years after the Seneca Falls Conference on the rights of women (1848), organized by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott.  Amelia Bloomer was at the Seneca Falls Conference but arrived late so she sat in the balcony and did not sign the resolution. Susan B. Anthony become involved in the women's rights movement in 1851.  Three decades later Carrie Chapman Catt became actively involved when she joined the Iowa Woman Suffrage Association.

Growing Up Years

When Catt was just 7-years-old her family moved to rural Charles City, IA where her father continued farming.  During her teen years she became aware that her mother did not have the same rights to vote as her father. She graduated from the Charles City schools and decided to continue her education at the Iowa Agricultural College (now Iowa State University) in Ames, Iowa.  Her father was not supportive and provided no financial help so she washed dishes, worked in the library and taught to earn money to attend.  In 1880 she was the only woman in her graduating class at the college*, where she graduated with a degree in general science.

Beginning a Career

Her career path took her back, first, to Charles City where she was a law clerk, and later to Mason City where she was a teacher and principal - and eventually was appointed superintendent of the Mason City Schools.  She was the first woman to hold that position.  She met and married Leo Chapman, the Mason City Republican's publisher in 1885.  A political ruckus in Mason City regarding an election was instrumental in Leo Chapman deciding to seek employment in San Francisco.  Before Carrie could get there Leo Chapman caught Typhoid fever and died in 1886, leaving Carrie Lane Chapman a widow.  She stayed in San Francisco for a time, working for a newspaper.  But eventually, in 1887, she returned to Iowa. She joined the Iowa Woman Suffrage Association and became very active in efforts to win the vote.  Her advocacy for women's rights was becoming well-known throughout Iowa (and eventually nationally) as thirteen years she worked throughout Iowa as a professional speaker.

Becoming an Advocate for Suffrage and Peace

In 1890 she married George Catt** - a wealthy engineer she had met in San Francisco.  He was also an alumni of the Iowa College of Agriculture.  They moved to Seattle, Washington. He was very supportive of her work and actually committed to supporting her work for four months of each year.  That support allowed her to travel nationally, and she was invited by Susan B. Anthony to speak at the national convention's 1890 conference in Washington, D. C.   She succeeded Susan B. Anthony as the president of the National Woman Suffrage Association in 1900 and became a full-time advocate for suffrage.  During this time she became aware of the international dimensions of suffrage for women, and founded the International Women's Suffrage Alliance (1902).  However, she resigned her posts in 1904 to care for her ill husband.  George Catt died in 1905.
Now twice-widowed, Catt devoted the remainder of her life to continuing to advocate for women's right to vote.  She became founded and was involved with the International Woman Suffrage Movement, and once again assumed the position of president of  the National Woman Suffrage Association and continued to focus on getting the 19th amendment passed.  The amendment passed by Congress (June 4, 1919) and completed the ratification process on August 18, 1920.  Iowa ratified the amendment on July 2, 1919, the 10th state of the needed 36 states to do so.
Six months before the amendment was passed, Carrie Lane Chapman Catt established the League of Woman Voters (Feb. 14, 1920).  The following year she became the first woman to give the commencement address at the Iowa State University (ISU-her alma mater).  She returned in 1930 to address the ISU graduates at their commencement. Catt died on March 9, 1947 in New York. She donated her estate to ISU.
She is a member of the Iowa Women's Hall of Fame (1975) and the National Women's Hall of Fame (1982).  Her alma mater has honored her with The Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics (1992) and with a central campus building - Carrie Chapman Catt Hall (1995).  She was also honored as one of four women selected for the Iowa Woman Achievement Bridge in Des Moines, IA.
====================================================

*The Iowa Agriculture college was renamed Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts in 1898 and became Iowa State University of Science and Technology in 1959.  When Carrie Lane attended the college was the Iowa Agricultural College.
**George W. Catt (born in Davenport, IA in 1860) graduated from Iowa Agricultural College (now the Iowa State University) with a B.S. (1882) in civil engineering. He helped design bridges for the King Bridge Company of Cleveland and the San Francisco Bridge Company. In 1893, Catt formed his own company, the New York Dredging Company. Catt married Carrie Lane Chapman in 1890. His papers and several images of his bridges are part of the Iowa State University's Special Collections in the University Library.

====================================================
References consulted:

Saturday, December 17, 2016

Iowa - On Being in the Middle of the Road

The Tree in the Road

Photo Credit - © 2016, Christina McElmeel.
In the middle of the road in the middle of Iowa stands a 165+ year old Cottonwood tree.
At the intersection of 350th and 710th streets, stands a 100-foot-tall cottonwood tree, known today as the "Tree in the Road."  The tree stands on a road 1 mile north of I-80 part way between the Wiota and Anita exits (Iowa).
 
Legend has it the tree was planted about 165 years ago, a surveyor was marking the line between Audubon and Cass counties and only had a cottonwood sprout on hand.  Since 1890 spikes have commonly been used to mark boundary lines and survey points but this was around 1850, and Iowa had been a state for only a few short years.  (Iowa entered the union on
Dec. 28, 1846). According to George E. Leigh "Today, a typical mark is a brass, bronze, or aluminum disk (or rod), but marks might also be prominent objects like water towers or church spires. Well into the 20th century, the Survey used an eclectic assortment of materials as survey marks, including earthenware cones, jars, bottles, and holes drilled into rock. One surveyor tells the story of recovering several beer bottles used as survey marks buried in the permafrost on Alaska's North Slope. So, while the "kitchen sink" may not have been used to mark surveys, bottles, jugs, pots, and more certainly were used!" (Leigh, 2007, pg. 1, para 4).  In this case the marker was a little sprout from a cottonwood tree.The sprout took root and grew into the massive tree it is today, becoming the intersection of the two roads.

According to Margee Shaffer, administrator for Audubon County Economic Development and Tourism, there is no evidence to prove anything - but the legend has been passed down over the years.


If you want to see the tree for yourself the GPS address to use is 350th Street, Brayton, Iowa.  At the intersection of Nighthawk Ave and 350th Street I-80 exit 70, turn right onto 750 Street Drive.  After approx. a quarter-mile turn left onto 340th Street Drive and drive about three miles.  Then turn left onto Nighthawk Avenue. Drive about a quarter-mile and you will reach the tree.

References:
Leigh, George E.  Bottles, Pots, & Pans? - Marking the Surveys of the U.S. Coast & Geodetic Survey and NOAA.  National Geodetic Survey, n.d.   Note: This is a rather comprehensive history of survey markers and protocols of surveying. The author is a retired member of NOAA Corps.  The article is available as a PDF at http://www.ngs.noaa.gov/web/about_ngs/history/Survey_Mark_History.pdf ).
Leigh, George E. Marking the Surveys — NOAA's Commemorative Marks.  National Geodetic Survey, 2007.  (WEB) http://docs.lib.noaa.gov/noaa_documents/time_capsules/2007/disc_7/celebrating200years.noaa.gov/survey_marks/welcome.html.
At the intersection of Nighthawk Ave. and 350th St. I-80 exit 70. Turn right onto 750th St. Drive about a quarter-mile. Turn left onto 340th St. Drive about three miles. Turn left onto Nighthawk Ave. Drive about a quarter-mile and you'll reach the tree. - See more at: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/8830#sthash.eiMt1yv5.dpuf
At the intersection of Nighthawk Ave. and 350th St. I-80 exit 70. Turn right onto 750th St. Drive about a quarter-mile. Turn left onto 340th St. Drive about three miles. Turn left onto Nighthawk Ave. Drive about a quarter-mile and you'll reach the tree. - See more at: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/8830#sthash.eiMt1yv5.dpuf
At the intersection of Nighthawk Ave. and 350th St. I-80 exit 70. Turn right onto 750th St. Drive about a quarter-mile. Turn left onto 340th St. Drive about three miles. Turn left onto Nighthawk Ave. Drive about a quarter-mile and you'll reach the tree. - See more at: http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/8830#sthash.eiMt1yv5.dpuf

Sunday, September 27, 2015

Memories of a Journey

The Joy Is in the Journey -- The Steeples of NE Iowa on the Way to Balltown & Pope Francis (Inspiration) 2015.

In 2013, a friend and I headed out from Cedar Rapids to head to Balltown to eat lunch at the historic Breitbach's Country Dining.  The original eating establishment, opened in 1852 - just six years after Iowa became the 29th state in the Union. It was a stagecoach stop for cross country travelers and in 1862 the Breitbach family bought the establishment and it has been in the Breitbach family ever since.  The restaurant has been continuously in operation for more than a century.  On Christmas eve in 2007 the restaurant burned completely to the ground.  The community got behind the family and the family rebuilt and reopened the restaurant to great acclaim.  The euphoric atmosphere lasted only 10 months.  On October 24, 2008 the restaurant was again on fire.  This time the decision to rebuild was a little more difficult but rebuild they did.  The history of this restaurant - their menu and all you might want to know about the restaurant can be found on their website at http://www.breitbachscountrydining.com.

Along the journey we decided to check out all the church spires - and here is what we found...

As we traveled through Worthington, Iowa we found this church steeple: St. Paul the Apostle.















Between the town of Worthington, and Dyersville was some beautiful trees that were just beginning to turn crimson and orange and golden yellow.  Beautiful.













 The Basicilca of St. Francis in Dyersville, Iowa has twin steeples.















New Vienna cam next on the route.  From a distance, the steeple on St. Boniface is impressive.  The next two photos are photographs taken from a closer vantage point.  The steeple was so tall that two photos had to be taken.














 This is the little chapel building that sits on the cemetery that is next to the church itself -- the cemetery sits on Church Street.


















Pope Francis during his visit to the United States, September 26, 2015.
The last time a pope visited Iowa was an eventful day in 1979 when Pope John Paul II visited Iowa. Pope Francis will not (and did not) come to Iowa during his visit in 2015.  However, his mere presence in the United States and his inclusiveness brings us all - regardless of religious affiliation or non-affiliation, a reminder that our journey is not over with admiration for the church structure itself.  Our admiration must be for the way people bring beauty into their personal lives -- Christian, Jewish, Muslim, ... whatever one's belief... or non-belief we must care for our fellow human beings.  During Pope Francis's visit to the United States I wish he could have seen how the rural area of Iowa honored (and honors) the religious institution with its buildings from throughout the centuries.  And I wish he could have witnessed the caring people of Iowa.  But we all have much to do.



The buildings are beautiful.  But the work of humanity is not the buildings.  The work for our fellow humans is inside our own actions.
If we can just continue to follow Pope Francis's wish that we actually follow that beauty with gracious and good deeds toward our fellow humans here on Earth perhaps there will someday be peace and honor to all.


A very interesting day to tour Iowa ... and a reminder that each of us could do better for ourselves and for others. 




Sunday, August 11, 2013

Iowa and Anne Frank

Anne Frank is well known to readers and historians. Annelise "Anne" Marie Frank  was born on the twelfth of June in 1929 and before she turned 16 she was a victim of Hitler and his regime that aspired to cleanse the world of Jews.  She is perhaps the most discussed Jewish victims of the Holocaust.  She and her family were German citizens.  But in 1933, when Anne was just 4 the family moved to Amsterdam.  That was the same year that the Nazis gained full control over Germany.  They had left in time -- but by 1940 Nazi Germany invaded the Netherlands and by 1942 the family was forced into hiding.  They hid in some concealed rooms in the building where her father, Otto Frank, worked.  They lived there, inside the walls, for two more years before they were betrayed and sent to concentration camps.  Anne and her sister Margot's transfer to the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp became their last -- both died of typhus in March 1945.  After the war, Anne's father returned to Amsterdam and found that her diary had been saved. The Diary of Anne Frank has been translated from Dutch into dozens of languages.  The diary itself came as a 13th birthday gift (12 June 1942) and she wrote in it until the family's discovery on 1 August 1944.
In 1939, before the invasion of Amsterdam by the Germans, Anne and her sister, Margot, were paired with pen pals in America.  The pen pals were two girls in Iowa.  Anne only wrote two letters -- and only one is still in existence.  Anne corresponded with Juanita Wagner; Margot with Juanita's older sister, Betty.  The war quickly interrupted what might have been a firm friendship.  As it was Anne's life quickly became one marked by the realities of war and Juanita's remained one of innocence in the relatively safety of Iowa.  Juanita and Betty were unaware of their pen pals' fate, and really had not even realized that their pen pals were Jewish, until Betty sent a letter to Margot after the war and received a letter back from Otto explaining the dire fate of his family.  That letter was lost over the years and through many moves. Susan Goldman Rubin has written a book exploring and contrasting the lives of these two would be friends, and budding pen pals.  Life in war-torn Amsterdam and Iowa could not have been more different.  Searching for Anne Frank: Letters from Amsterdam to Iowa (Harry N. Abrams, 2003) follows the two pairs of sisters from prewar to their lives (and in the case of the Franks, their deaths) during and after the war.  The pen pal connection may be slight but the book does give readers a great deal of information about the war years in the Netherlands and Germany, and on the homefront, in Iowa.  The letters were sold in 1988, for $165,000 and were to be donated by the winning bidder, to the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles.  The letters went on display at the center's new Beit Hashoah - Museum of Tolerance - when it was completed in late 1989.
Anne Frank is not only well-known in Holocaust literature but she represents an industry that perpetuates her story and the knowledge of the atrocities that occurred during World War II. 


Sadly Rubin's book, Searching for Anne Frank: Letters from Amsterdam to Iowa,  is no longer in print, but that does not lessen the bit of Iowa that touched the life of Anne Frank.  More about the Iowa sisters can be found in a Quad City Times article (Anne Frank's Iowa Pen Pal Tells Her Story) published in April 2012 when Susan Goldman Rubin visited the German American Heritage Center in Davenport, Iowa and the Bettendorf Public Library to talk about the sisters and to promote her picture book,  The Anne Frank Case: Simon Wiesenthal’s Search for Truth (Illustrated by Bill Farnsworth; Holiday House, 2010).  The Anne Frank Case is only one of the focuses in this book, as Rubin tells much about the life of Simon Wiesenthal who himself is a Holocaust survivor and Nazi hunter.  In 1958 he set out to find the Gestapo officer who had arrested Anne Frank and her family.  An article that appeared in the Palimpsest (Winter, 1995) also provides some insight into the Wagner sisters and their teacher Ms. Birdie Mathews that set up the pen pal exchange.  Juanita Wagner Hiltgen was living in Redlands, California when she died in 2001.  Betty Anne Wagner was living in Burbank, California when she died in August of 2012, at the age of 86.  Her "adopted" niece wrote a tribute to Betty in a blog entry at AdnreaV Photography.  The entry includes several pictures of Betty in later life as well as an earlier one of her on a tractor in Iowa. 
Anne Frank was only brushed for a moment with her connection to Iowa, but like others before her -- Iowa briefly became a part of a life of a historically significant person.

Monday, July 22, 2013

A Moment in Iowa History: Dr. Mary Edwards Walker - and the Iowa Connection

Dr. Mary Walker became the first (and to this date, the only) woman to be awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor.   She was a woman before her time and among her many achievements she was well known for always wearing pants.  Cheryl Harness introduces us to this incredible woman from history and shares her unconventional path to the Medal of Honor.  Harness's book serves to introduce young and old to this remarkable woman -- a woman who has Iowa Connections. 
Harness, Cheryl.  Mary Walker Wears the Pants: The True Story of the Doctor, Reformer, and Civil War Hero. Illustrated by Carlo Molinari. Albert Whitman, 2013.  
 

Mary Edwards Walker (November 26, 1832 – February 21, 1919)

Dr. Mary Edwards Walker was among those who worked for women's right to vote in the years leading up to the granting of women’s suffrage.  She was among the very unconventional women of her time, one of the first American feminists, and she supported abolition, prohibition, as well as, the right of women to vote.  She was one of the first women doctors in the country and she wore pants! She served as a Union soldier (in a modified uniform) during the Civil War, as a doctor.  She became the only woman, to this day, to earn the the Medal of Honor. 
Mary Edwards Walker was born in Oswego, New York.  Her mother taught school and Walker’s father was a country doctor and farmer who encouraged education for his five daughters: Mary, Aurora, Luna, Vesta, and Cynthia, and their one son, Alvah.   The girls’  often helped in the fields and their parents believed that the tight corsets and otherwise restrictive garments women generally wore in those days were unnecessary and hampered women’s ability to move about and do what was needed. As an adult Mary became an avid supporter of the issue of dress reform led by Amelia Bloomer.  Bloomer defended the right of women to wear Turkish pantaloons – or “bloomers” as the bloused trousers came to be called.  Eventually Mary Walker adapted the practice of wearing full men’s evening dress to lecture on Women’s Rights.
At the age of twenty-one (1855) Mary, graduated from Syracuse Medical College.  She was the only female in her medical class and had spent three semesters (13 weeks each) in the study of medicine.  Mary Edwards Walker is the second American woman to earn a medical degree (the first, Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell earned a degree in 1849).  The following year (1856) Walker married a fellow physician, Albert Miller.  Both bride and groom wore a suit and top hat and Mary Walker continued to use her birth name.  The two physicians established a medical practice in Rome, NY but the practice failed as few were ready to accept a female doctor.  

The Iowa Connection

This period of time is when Dr. Mary Edward Waker became part of Iowa’s history.  Dr. Walker separated from her husband after just four years of marriage (due, reportedly, to his unfaithfulness). In 1860, Walker became an active promoter of dress reform but before accepting a formal role in the organization working for reform, she wanted to finalize her divorce from Miller. New York’s laws required a five-year waiting period.  So in the summer of 1860, Walker traveled to Iowa and stayed with a family friend in Delhi, hoping to take advantage of Iowa’s more lenient divorce laws and to avoid New York’s waiting period.  The friend, Judge Albert E. House, was a former resident of Oswego and was willing to host her and to advise her on Iowa law. While in Iowa she briefly attended the relatively newly established Bowen Collegiate Institute (later Lenox College) in Hopkinton, Iowa. She protested that the college advertised that a student could study German at their institute but when she arrived the school had no German instructor.  Dr. Walker did attend the institute, however, until she was suspended when she refused to quit the all-male debate society.  Many of the male members supported her efforts and her protests of unequal rights.  Her protest efforts resulted in many supporters in the Delhi-Hopkinton community but eventually her protests led to her full expulsion from the Institute. While she waited for her divorce, she was privileged to work with a local physician, Dr. Cunningham.  Back in New York state, a long-time attorney friend, B.F. Chapman, learned of her efforts to obtain a divorce under the new laws in the state of Iowa.  Chapman sent her a five-page brief. The brief detailed cases that made clear New York state would not recognize out-of-state divorces.  Walker trusted Chapman and so she returned to Rome, NY the following summer without the divorce. That ended her physical connection to Iowa however, in the following years there would be at least one other connection to Iowa.

Civil War and the Medal of Honor

When the Civil War broke out Mary Walker attempted to join the Union Army.  She was denied an official role so she volunteered in various field hospitals and positions.  Eventually she was appointed to official Army duties.  She always wore two pistols on her side, and dressed in a modified uniform – reportedly designed by a Mrs. Littlejohn of Delhi, Iowa (Leonard 246).  She treated many soldiers and sometimes crossed Confederate lines to treat civilians.  Some suggest that during this time she also served as a Union spy.  Whatever the case, in 1864, she was captured and held prisoner in Richmond until she, along with other Union doctors, was exchanged for 17 Confederate surgeons.
After her release back to the 52nd Ohio Infantry she spent the remainder of the war practicing at a Louisville female prison and an orphan's asylum in Tennessee.  She was awarded a military pension ($8.50, later raised to $20) but it was less than some widow’s pensions.
On November 11, 1865, Dr. Mary Edwards Walker was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor by President Andrew Johnson, in recognition of her contributions during the war.  She was the only woman ever to receive the Medal of Honor, her country's highest military award.  The award was rescinded in 1917 when the “rules” were changed, but Dr. Walker refused to give up the medal and wore it every day, the rest of her life.  Sixty years later, President Jimmy Carter restored the medal to her.
After the war she continued to campaign for the right of women to vote, and entered the political arena by becoming a candidate for Congress (1890) and for a U.S. Senate seat  (1892).  She has been honored with a United States Postage Stamp (1982) and inducted into the Seneca Falls (NY) Women’s Hall of Fame.

Resources:

Graf, Mercedes. A Woman of Honor: Dr. Mary E. Walker and the Civil War. Thomas Publications, 2001.
Harris, Sharon.  Dr. Mary Walker: An American Radical, 1832-1919. Rutgers University Press, 2009.
Leonard, Elizabeth.  Yankee Women: Gender Battles in the Civil War.  W.W. Norton & Company, 1995.
Snyder, Charles McCool. Dr. Mary Walker: the Little Lady in Pants. Arno Press, 1974.
The History of Delaware County, Iowa: Containing a History of the County, Its Cities, Towns, &c., a Biographical Directory of Its Citizens, War Record of Its Volunteers ... History of the Northwest, History of Iowa, Map of Delaware County, Constitution of the United States.  Western historical Company, 1878.
Walker, Dale L. Mary Edwards Walker: Above and Beyond.  Macmillan, 2005.

(This article originally published on the blog at McBookwords:All things literacy — Authors, Books, Connections . . . (Jun 06, 2013)