Maud Howe
Elliott was an American author and the daughter of Julia Ward Howe. A close friend of Frances Glessner, she was
frequently a guest in her homes both in Chicago and in New Hampshire. In this article, we will reflect back upon a
series of lectures given by Elliott in Chicago exactly 125 years ago.
In November
1890, Frances Glessner pasted the following card into her journal:
SIX INFORMAL TALKS
-----------
Mrs. Maud Howe Elliott,
Wednesday Afternoons at
Four O’Clock
Wednesday, Nov. 19 – “The
Growth of Art.”
At Mrs. Charles Schwartz’s,
1919 Prairie Avenue
Wednesday, Nov. 26 – “Foreign
Art in America.”
At Mrs. Charles Schwartz’s,
1919 Prairie Avenue
Wednesday, Dec. 3 – “Our
American Artists.”
At Mrs. O. R. Keith’s, 1808
Prairie Avenue
Wednesday, Dec. 10 – “Late
American Literature.”
At Mrs. O. R. Keith’s, 1808
Prairie Avenue
Wednesday, Dec. 17 – “A
Glance at Belles Letters in England.”
At Mrs. Charles P. Kellogg’s,
1923 Prairie Avenue
Wednesday, Dec. 24 – “The
Ethics of Art.”
At Mrs. Charles P. Kellogg’s,
1923 Prairie Avenue
Course Tickets, $6.00
Mrs. Charles Schwartz Mrs. O. R. Keith
Mrs. Charles P. Kellogg Mrs. Clinton Locke
Mrs. John J. Glessner
Have the pleasure of
sending you a ticket for
MRS. MAUD HOWE ELLIOTT’S
course of Informal talks.
Will you kindly return the
ticket or its equivalent,
at your earliest
convenience, to
Mrs. John J. Glessner
1800 Prairie Avenue
Maud Howe was
born on November 9, 1854 in Boston, Massachusetts. Her father, Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe, was the
founder and director of the Perkins School for the Blind in Boston.
Her mother, Julia Ward Howe, was an
abolitionist, suffragist, and poet, best remembered today as the author of the “Battle
Hymn of the Republic.” She was privately
educated by her mother in the United States in Europe; her mentors included
Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. In 1887, Maud Howe married the English artist
John Elliott.
On November 10,
1890, the Elliotts arrived in Chicago and settled into the guestroom at the
Glessners’ Prairie Avenue home. During
the week that followed Frances Glessner and Maud Howe Elliott attended numerous
concerts, lectures, teas, and dinners.
Within a couple of days of the Elliotts’ departure, Frances Glessner
received a letter stating in part:
“A home sicker pair than John
Elliott and his wife, rarely sat down to a boarding house dinner! And we were homesick not for Boston
but for Prairie Avenue! . . . I shall see you tomorrow. Goodbye, blessed saint of hospitality. Your good offices to us, are written in the
record book of our hearts and will not be forgotten, while our memories are
intact.
Your
attached
M.H.E.”
Prairie Avenue, circa 1890 (photo by George Glessner);
the Schwartz (1919) and Kellogg (1923) homes are at far right.
Elliott returned
to Chicago to give her first talk at the home of Mrs. Charles Schwartz on
Wednesday November 19th.
(Within a few years the house was sold to Marshall Field Jr.; it still
stands today). Frances Glessner noted:
“Last Wednesday I paid some neighborhood
calls after luncheon – and then went to Mrs. Schwartz’s to hear Mrs. Elliott’s
first South Side reading. There were
nearly a hundred ladies there – it was very pleasant. I have given Mrs. Elliott $710.00 for this course.”
Following the
second reading at Mrs. Schwartz’s, Frances Glessner noted that “Mrs. Elliott said that I inspired her paper
by some questions which I asked her at The Rocks.”
The Elliotts had
visited The Rocks during the summer of 1890.
Maud Howe Elliott used the opportunity to write; her husband, to
sketch. John Elliott also provided some
evening entertainment as noted, “Tonight
Mr. Elliott did the polar bear, the monkey, the old lady, and danced.”
Frances Glessner
also noted an interesting incident that took place when their piano was tuned:
“This afternoon our blind piano tuner
came out and tuned the piano – he proved to be John Denny who was educated at
the Perkins Institute for the Blind which was founded by Dr. Howe. This man had played with Mrs. Elliott when
she was a child. They were very glad to
meet – to see her as the blind man expressed it.”
When the
Elliotts left The Rocks on August 4th, Maud Howe Elliott made the
following entry in the guest book:
“These days passed at The Rocks (days as
full of pleasure as the comb of honey) are strong upon our memory as pearls
upon the rosary of Time.”
A few days
later, Elliott wrote from Newport where she gave a detailed account of a party
at the Vanderbilt “cottage.” She noted,
in part:
“My dear Mrs. Glessner,
It has been very hard for me to ‘wait
until after the Vanderbilt party,’ as was agreed between us! I have wanted continually to write you to let
my words follow my thoughts back to the beloved Rocks, and the encircling hills
blue and mysterious, they haunt my memory, they and the song of the hermit
thrush, the genius of the place.
Wednesday night we came down to Newport on
the Fall River boat, bringing Miss Gardner with us. We found my dear mother well. When Thursday came I felt rather indifferent
about the garden party, but my promise was given! Mama and I went together. The Vanderbilt’s home is on the cliffs, with
wonderful lawn leading down to the cliffs which overhang the ocean. We passed in . . . across the house and out
to the lawn where the hostess stood under a group of tall palms. She is a prettyish little lady, and looked
well in her simple frock of white woolen stuff embroidered with gold
thread. She wore no jewels, and a
simple, pretty hat. There were two
bands, one a mandolin band, the other (well out of earshot) a full stringed and
brass band. The refreshments were served
in a large red Marquee. The table
was superb. Two immense silver
punch bowls of beautiful repoussé work. The
centerpiece was very lovely, all manner of water lilies. I never saw some of the variety before. These were great white lilies shaped like
poppies big as a large peony, pink ones of the same color, beautiful tropical
looking things besides water lilies of the ordinary shape in every shade of
blue and pink, the deepest being claret color. The food was fine, I believe, I only remember
a figure of George Washington in ice cream.
There was a menu upon the table and most wonderful looking dishes savory
and sweet, all made by the chefs of the houses Vanderbilt.”
Portraits of Maud and John Elliott by Jose Villegas y Cordero
The Elliotts
lived in Chicago for a time and then in Italy for a number of years before
permanently settling in Newport in 1910.
In 1918, the Elliotts purchased a mansion at 150 Rhode Island Avenue in
Newport which she called “Lilliput.” She
continued her writing here, eventually publishing twenty books. The best known of her works, The Life of Julia Ward Howe, co-authored
by her sisters Laura Richards and Florence Hall, earned them the first Pulitzer
Prize for biography in 1917.
Maud Howe
Elliott was a patron of the arts, and was the founder of the Newport Art
Association organized in 1912 for “the cultivation of artistic endeavor and
interest amongst the citizens of Newport.”
The organization purchased the John N. A. Griswold House on Bellevue
Avenue in 1915 (a National Historic Landmark designed by Richard Morris Hunt
and completed in 1864); it continues to serve as the home of the Newport Art
Museum. Maud Howe Elliott’s portrait
(shown at the top of this article) hangs over the fireplace in the library. She served as secretary of the Association for
thirty years.
John Elliott
died in 1925. Maud Howe Elliott
continued writing, publishing her final book, This Was My Newport, in 1944, when she was ninety years old. She died on March 19, 1948 and was interred
at Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts alongside her husband and
parents. Her papers were given to Brown
University, which had awarded her an honorary doctorate in 1940.
For more
information on the Newport Art Museum, visit newportartmuseum.org.
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