On March 29,
2016, music historian Joan Bentley Hoffman will present a lecture on the life
and accomplishments of Rose Fay Thomas, the first is a series of three spring
lectures exploring women prominent in the advancement of classical music at the
turn of the 20th century.
(Additional lectures will examine Frances Glessner on April 28 and
Fannie Bloomfield Zeisler on May 24. For
more information, or to reserve tickets, visit www.glessnerhouse.org/events/). In
this article, we will look briefly at the life of Rose Fay Thomas.
Rose Fay
arrived in Chicago in 1878, taking up residence with her brother Charles. She became acquainted with Frances Glessner
through her sister Amy, an accomplished pianist, and one of the first women to
study in Europe. In May of 1890, Rose married
Theodore Thomas, the nationally-recognized music director who had brought his
celebrated orchestra to Chicago annually since 1869. Soon after, Thomas accepted the position to establish
a permanent orchestra in Chicago, the present day Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
now celebrating its 125th anniversary season.
Rose
Thomas became her husband’s able help mate and most ardent supporter. In a letter to Frances Glessner dated May 3,
1892, she noted in part:
“I want to tell Mr. Glessner how much pleasure
his letter gave to Mr. Thomas. He has
worked himself almost to death this winter to bring the orchestra up to the
highest standard, and make the concerts as perfect as possible. . . “
Regarding
the criticisms he was receiving, she went on to acknowledge the Glessners:
‘for the generous sympathy, and support of those
far seeing, and noble minded men and women, like yourself and Mr. Glessner, who
can grasp the situation, and understand that Mr. Thomas is here to establish a
great Art Work, and to make Chicago one of the first musical centers of the
world.”
During the
World’s Columbian Exposition, for which Theodore Thomas was placed in charge of
the extensive musical program, Rose Thomas organized the music clubs of the
country into the National Federation of Music Clubs. She served as the first president and was
later appointed honorary president, a position she held until her death.
In August
1894, the Thomases visited the Glessners at their summer estate, The Rocks, in
the White Mountains of New Hampshire. While
driving through the surrounding countryside:
“Mrs. Thomas was in raptures over one of the
views and locations and came back thoroughly in love with it . . . The Thomases
went to Bethlehem and bought about fourteen acres out of Whitcomb’s farm – for which
they paid $800. They have been wild with
enthusiasm and interest ever since.”
Two years
later, the Thomases completed their home, Felsengarten, on the property, with
Rose Thomas personally supervising much of the work. From this point forward, they spent their summers at their beloved summer estate, as neighbors of the Glessners. Rose Thomas became an
accomplished gardener, frequently sharing plants with Frances Glessner, and in
1904 Rose Thomas published an account of her estate, entitled Our Mountain Garden, a copy of which she
presented to Frances Glessner for Christmas.
Rose
Thomas was passionate about the abolition of cruelty toward animals. In January 1899, she convened a small group
of ladies to organize what evolved into the Anti-Cruelty Society. Two months later, by-laws were adopted, and
Rose Thomas was appointed president, one of the first women to head a Humane
Society in the country.
(Today, the
Rose Fay Thomas Society recognizes those individuals who have made planned
gifts for the ongoing support of the Anti-Cruelty Society).
Theodore
Thomas died of pneumonia on January 4, 1905, just two weeks after the official
opening of Orchestra Hall. His widow
soon gave up their home at 43 Bellevue Place, moving to an apartment at 2000 S.
Indiana Avenue, just a few blocks from the Glessners. Before the move, she came to stay with the
Glessners for much needed rest, Frances Glessner noting:
“Mrs. Thomas came in the afternoon to stay with
us. She brought her little dog. She was perfectly worn out with all the hard
work and anxiety she has gone through. I
gave her the big corner room with a bright fire in it – and have left her alone
as much as possible. She says it is the
first rest she has had since October and has visibly improved since coming.”
She
remained a champion of her husband’s work and in 1911 published Memoirs of Theodore Thomas, dedicating
the volume to her brother Charles Norman Fay, “the best and truest friend of
Theodore Thomas and the chief promoter of his art.”
When she
died in 1929, she was given a military funeral in recognition of her
significant service assisting enlisted men as a director of the Soldiers and
Sailors Club. She was the first woman in
New England and only the fourth in the United States to be accorded a military
funeral up to that time. She was
interred beside her husband at Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Today, the
Anti-Cruelty Society and the National Federation of Music Clubs serve as the
enduring legacy of this fascinating and inspiring individual.
Behind every successful man is a woman, is what they say. And it's a wonderful thing to see that this house will be dedicated to a woman who did just that - support her man!
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