07-06 TABLE of CONTENTS:
Mina Edison More than a House Toy
Ordinary Housewives Not Ordinary
DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and
EVENTS
QUOTES by
Alais, Lillie Devereux Blake.
Mina Edison
The
young Mina Edison.
Born 07-06-1865, Mina Miller Edison has been dismissed
as "only" the wife of Thomas Alva Edison.
Like most wives, MME was so much more.
The couple bought an estate called Glenmont as of
1891 and MME was totally responsible for running it, hiring the staff,
and entertaining illustrious guests who came to pay their respects to the
renowned inventor. The home was often more like a hotel than a family residence.
MME took the role very seriously and went on record
(in a magazine article) as saying her role as "housewife" was
one deserving respect and recognition, for she considered herself to have
the title of "Home Executive."
[Information submitted to WOAH by Kristin Herron,
curator, Glenmont, Edison National Historic Site that in 2000 is closed
for a very, very badly needed renovation. Herron had written WOAH with
the Mina information and had confided her worries that the home was deteriorating
at an alarming rate and might be lost to posterity. The following is the
National park service's biography of Mina]:
Mina (pronounced MI-na) was perhaps
better prepared to be the wife of a famous man. (Edison had married Mary
Stilwell in 1871. She died in 1884.) By the time she met Thomas Edison,
his name was already a household word. She had a more worldly education,
having graduated from Akron High School and having attended Mrs. Johnson's
Ladies' Seminary in Boston. Besides, her father was a millionaire inventor
himself.
Mina Miller was born on July 6, 1865, the seventh
of eleven children. She met Thomas Edison at the home of a mutual friend
of her father and Edison, the inventor Ezra Gilliland. Her future husband
claims he taught her Morse code so that they could converse in secret,
even while the family watched. This is how Edison claims he proposed marriage
and how she responded "yes." The two married on February 24,
1886. The couple moved into Glenmont, the Edisons' new home, after their
honeymoon in Florida. At age twenty, the new Mrs. Edison became a stepmother
to Mary's three children. It was not an easy task. She was less than ten
years older than stepdaughter Marion.
Although Mina tried to nurture her new family, Marion
later described Mina as "too young to be a mother but too old to be
a chum." Her role as Mrs. Thomas Edison was also difficult: Edison
frequently stayed late at the laboratory and forgot anniversaries and birthdays.
Yet he seemed to love his "Billie." A note found in one of Mina's
gardening books reads, "Mina Miller Edison is the sweetest little
woman who ever bestowed love on a miserable homely good for nothing male
(sic)" As Thomas Edison supervised his "muckers" down the
hill (at his laboratory), Mina hired and supervised a staff of maids, a
cook, a nanny and a gardening staff. She even called herself the "home
executive." After 1891 she, not her husband, owned the house. (This
protected the house from being seized to pay Edison's debts if he went
bankrupt.)
Here is a partial list of the organizations she belonged
to: The Chautauqua Association (where she served as president of the Bird
and Tree Club), the National Audubon Society, the local Methodist church,
the John Burroughs Association, the Daughters of the American Revolution
(she served for a year as its national chaplain), the School Garden Association
of America.
Four years after Edison died, Mina married childhood
sweetheart Edward Everett Hughes. The two lived in Glenmont until Hughes
died in 1940, when she once again adopted the name of Mrs. Edison. She
lived at Glenmont until her death on August 24, 1947.
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Ordinary Housewives NOT Ordinary
Sometimes even women overlook
the amazing contribution "housewives" make in a society that
usually limits its values on what males see in their mirrors.
While an "ordinary" bricklayer just lays
bricks, an "ordinary" housewife usually keeps the family finances,
does the shopping, cleans the house, plans and cooks the meals, oversees
the budget, bears the children at great cost to her body, raises the children,
nurses children and husband when they are ill, oversees the conduct of
the children when they are going to school, emotionally and physically
supports her husband's emotional life, and acts as a sounding board (and
sometimes the originator) of a man's ideas - often juggling these duties
in ADDITION to being a full-time employee working outside the home earning
the necessary money to keep the family's finances afloat.
In Mina Edison's case, keeping a home that was
almost a public institution had to be, far and away, above "ordinary."
See http://www.nps.gov/edis/home.htm
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07-06 DATES, ANNIVERSARIES, and EVENTS
B. 07-06-1847, Ellen Martin Henrotin - wealthy U.S. widow who
used her money to make the 1893 Chicago World's Fair the national focal
point for feminist activity.
Most importantly, she
lead a committee that forced the closing of hundreds of brothels in Chicago
and brought about the downfall of the flourishing "white slavery"
trade in which women were kidnaped into prostitution.
B. 07-06-1899, Mignon G. Eberhart - U.S. mystery writer whose
writing career spanned 57 years (1929-1988) and included 59 books. She
commonly used brave - plucky - women in exotic locations. Many of her books
became Hollywood movies.
B. 07-06-1907, Frieda Kahlo (de Rivera) - Mexican artist who
lived under the shadow of her husband Diego Rivera so that most of her
fame has been posthumous. She is gradually being recognized as one of Mexico's
greatest artists, surpassing the fame and regard even for her more political
husband.
A traffic accident when
she was a young woman resulted in a life of constant pain and unable to
bear a child. As a result of her physical condition and the blantant, constant
adulteries of Rivera, her main art production was portrait after portrait
of herself.
B. 07-06-1910, Dorothy Kirsten - U.S. lyric soprano who sang
leading roles at the Metropolitan Opera for a record 30 years, almost unheard
of for a soprano.
She sang the leading
role in 169 performances. DK worked as a telephone operator to finance
her early musical lessons.
B. 07-06-1921, Nancy Reagan - actor, second wife of U.S. President
Ronald Reagan. A woman of burning ambition, NR was pivotal in Reagan's
political career.
Most failed to recognize
her single-minded protection of her husband and solid political acumen.
Her mother Edith Luckett
was deserted by her husband at Nancy's birth. Alla Nazimova, Hollywood
screen star of the 1920s and renowned lesbian, was Nancy's godmother.
B. 07-06-1937, Bessie Emery Head - South African novelist and
short story writer who described the contradictions and shortcomings of
African society - both white and black - that often treats women as "dead
things."
Her mother was considered
white and her father black under the South African apartheid laws. She
was raised in orphanages and by foster parents.
B. 07-06-1954, Louise Erdrich - Amerind-U.S. writer. Her mother
Rita Joanne Gourneau was a Chippewa Indian. Her maternal grandmother was
Tribal Chair on Turtle Mountain Reservation.
LE's writings show the
terrible side of the dying Indian culture but holds out hope for its evolution.
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QUOTES DU JOUR
ALAIS:
"...shall
I stay unwed? That would please me, for making babies doesn't seem too
good, and it's too anguishing to be a wife."
-- Alais, 12th Century, as translated in The Women Troubadours
by Meg Bodin, 1976.
BLAKE, LILLIE DEVEREUX:
"[Adam]
takes the fruit from the hand of his wife without protest... The subsequent
conduct of Adam was to the last degree dastardly. When the awful time of
reckoning comes, and the Jehovah God appears to demand why his command
has been disobeyed, Adam endeavors to shield himself behind the gentle
being he has declared to be so dear. 'The woman thou gaveset to be with
me, she gave me and I did eat,' he whines trying to shield himself at his
wife's expense! Again we are amazed that upon such a story men have built
up a theory of their superiority!"
-- A comment on the Garden of Eden story in Genesis by Lillie Devereux
Blake, part of the Revising Committee of The Woman's Bible (1895).
Long a rarity, Women of Achievement and Herstory is archiving The Woman's
Bible in the WiiN Library.
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