Web
and Book design,
Copyright, Kellscraft Studio 1999-2008 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
Click
Here to return to
Customs and Fashions in Old New England Content Page Return to the Previous Chapter |
(HOME)
|
XIII RAIMENT AND VESTURE WE know definitely the dress of
the settlers of
Massachusetts Bay, for the inventory of the "Apparell for 100 men"
furnished by the Massachusetts Bay Company in 1628 is still in
existence. From
it we learn that enough clothing was provided to supply to each
emigrant four
"peare of shewes," four "peare of stockings," a "peare
Norwich garters," four shirts, two "sutes dublet and hose of leather
lynd with oil'd skyn leather, ye hose & dublett with hooker
& eyes,"
a "sute of Norden dussens or hampshire kersies lynd, the hose with
skins,
dublets with lynen of gilford or gedlyman kerseys," four bands, two
handkerchiefs, a "wastcoate of greene cotton bound about with red
tape," a leather girdle, a Monmouth cap, a black hatt lyned in the
browes
with lether," five Red knit Capps mill'd about 5d a piece," two pair
of gloves, a mandillion "lyned with cotton," one pair of breeches and
waistcoat, and a "lether sute of Dublett & breeches of oyled
lether," and one pair of leather breeches and "drawers to serve to
weare with both their other sutes." This surely was a liberal
outfit, save perhaps in the
matter of shirts and handkerchiefs, and doubtless intended
to last many years. Though
simple it was far
from being a sombre one. Scarlet caps and green waistcoats bound with
red made
cheerful bits of color alongside the leather breeches and buff doublets
on
Salem shore. The apparel of the Piscataquay
planters, furnished in
1635, varied somewhat from that just enumerated. Their waistcoats were
scarlet,
and they had cassocks of cloth and canvas, instead of doublets. Though
scarce
more than a lustrum had passed since the settlement on the shores of
the Bay,
long hose like the Florentine hose had become entirely old-fashioned
and
breeches were the wear. Coats — "lynd coats, papous coats,
and moose
coats" — had also been invented, or at any rate dubbed with that name
and
assumed. Cassocks, doublets, and jerkins varied little in shape, and
the names
seem to have been interchangeable. Mandillions, said by some
authorities to be
cloaks, were in fact much like the doublets, and were worn apparently
as an
over-garment or greatcoat. The name appears not in inventories after
the
earliest years. Though simplicity of dress was
one of the
cornerstones of the Puritan Church, the individual members did not
yield their
personal vanity without many struggles. As soon as the colonies rallied
from
the first years of poverty and, above all, of comparative isolation,
and a
sequent tide of prosperity and wealth came rolling in, the settlers
began to
pick up in dress, to bedeck themselves, to send eagerly to the mother
country
for new petticoats and doublets that, when proudly donned, did not seem
simple
and grave enough for the critical eyes of the omnipotent New England
magistrates and ministers. Hence restraining and simplifying sumptuary
laws
were passed. In 1634, in view of some new fashions which were deemed by
these
autocrats to be immodest and extravagant, this order was sent forth by
the
General Court: "That no person either man or
woman shall
hereafter make or buy any apparel, either woolen or silk or linen with
any lace
on it, silver, gold, or thread, under the penalty of forfeiture of said
clothes. Also that no person either man or woman shall make or buy any
slashed
clothes other than one slash in each sleeve and another in the back;
also all
cut-works, embroideries, or needlework cap, bands, and rails are
forbidden
hereafter to be made and worn under the aforesaid penalty; also all
gold or
silver girdles, hatbands, belts, ruffs, beaverhats are prohibited to be
bought
and worn hereafter." Liberty was thriftily given the
planters, however, to
"wear out such apparel as they are now provided of except the
immoderate
great sleeves, slashed apparel, immoderate great rails and long wings,"
which latter were apparently beyond Puritanical endurance. In 1639 "immoderate great
breeches, knots of
ryban, broad shoulder bands and rayles, silk ruses, double ruffles and
capes" were added to the list of tabooed garments. In 1651 the General Court again
expressed its
"utter detestation and dislike that men or women of mean condition,
education and callings should take uppon them the garbe of gentlemen by
the
wearinge of gold or silver lace or buttons or poynts at their knees, to
walks
in great boots, or women of the same rank to wear silks or tiffany
hoodes or
scarfes." Many persons were "presented"
under this
law; Puritan men were just as fond of finery as were Puritan women.
Walking in
great boots proved alluring to an illegal degree, just as did wearing
silk and
tiffany hoods. But Puritan women fought hard and fought well for their
fine
garments. In Northampton thirty-eight women were brought up at one time
before
the court in 1676 for their "wicked apparell." One young miss, Hannah
Lyman, of Northampton, was prosecuted for "wearing silk in a Maunting
manner, in an offensive way and garb, not only before but when she
stood
presented, not only in Ordinary but Extraordinary times."
We can easily picture
sixteen-year-old Hannah, in
silk bedight, inwardly rejoicing at the unusual opportunity to fully
and
publicly display her rich attire, and we can easily read in her
offensive
flaunting in court a presage of the waning of magisterial power which
proved a
truthful omen, for in six years similar prosecutions in Northampton,
for
assumption of gay and expensive garments, were quashed. The ministers
of the
day note sadly the overwhelming love of fashion that was crescent
throughout
New England; a love of dress which neither the ban of religion,
philosophy, nor
law could expel; what Rev. Solomon Stoddard called, in 1675,
"intolerable
pride in clothes and hair." They were never weary of preaching about
dress, of comparing the poor Puritan women to the haughty daughters of
Judah
and Jerusalem; saying threateningly to their parishioners, as did
Isaiah to the
daughters of Zion: "The Lord will tape away the
bravery of their
tinkling ornaments about their feet, and their Gauls and their round
tires like
the moon. "The chains and the bracelets
and the mufflers. "The bonnets and the ornaments
of the legs and
the head-bands and the tablets and the earrings. "The rings and nose jewels. "The changeable suits of
apparel, and the
mantles and the wimples and the crisping pins. "The glasses and the fine linen
and the hoods
and the veils." Every evil predicted by the
prophet was laid at the
door of these Boston and Plymouth dames; fire and war and poor harvests
and
caterpillars, and even baldness — but still they arrayed themselves in
fine
raiment, "drew iniquity with a cord of vanity and sin with a
cart-rope," and "walked with outstretched necks and wanton eyes
mincing as they go." As an exposition of the
possibilities, or rather the
actual extensiveness, of a Puritanical feminine wardrobe at this date,
let me
name the Articles of clothing bequeathed by the will of Jane Humphrey,
who died
in Dorchester, Mass., in 1668. I give them as they appear on the list,
but with
the names of her heirs omitted. "Ye Jump. Best Red Kersey
Petticoats, Sad Grey
Kersey Wascote. My blemmish Searge Petticoate & my best hatt.
My white
Fustian Wascote. A black Silk neck cloath. A handkerchiefe. A blew
Apron. A
plain black Quoife without any lace. A white Holland Appron with a
small lace
at the bottom. Red Searge petticoat and a blackish Searge petticoat.
Greene
Searge Wascote & my hood & muffe. My Green Linsey
Woolsey petticoate.
My Whittle that is fringed & my Jump & my blew Short
Coate. A
handkerchief. A blew Apron. My best Quife with a Lace. A black Stuffe
Neck
Cloath. A White Holland apron with two breadths in it. Six yards of
Redd Cloth.
A greene Vnder Coate. Staning Kersey Coate. My murry Wascote. My Cloake
&
my blew Was-cote. My best White Apron, my best Shifts. One of my best
Neck
Cloaths, & one of my plain Quieus. One Callico Vnder Neck
Cloath. My fine
thine Neck Cloath. My next best Neck Cloath. A square Cloath with a
little lace
on it. My greene Apron." It is pleasing to note in this
list that not only the
garments and stuffs, but the very colors named, have an antique sound;
and we
read in other inventories of such tints as philomot (feuillemort),
gridolin
(gris-de-lin or flax blossom), puce color, grain color (which was
scarlet),
foulding color, Kendal green, Lincoln green, watchet blue, barry,
milly, tuly,
stammel red, Bristol red, sad color — and a score of other and more
fanciful
names whose signification and identification were lost with the death
of the
century. In later days Congress brown, Federal blue, and Independence
green
show our new nation. This wardrobe of Jane Humphrey's
was certainly a very
pretty and a very liberal outfit for a woman of no other fortune. But
to have
all one's possessions in the shape of raiment did not in her day bear
quite the
same aspect as it would at the present day. Many persons, men and
women, preferred
to keep their property in the form of what they quaintly called
"duds." The fashion did not, in New England, wear out more apparel
than the man, for clothing, no matter what its cut, was worn as long as
it
lasted, doing service frequently through three generations. For
instance, we
find Mrs. Epes, of Ipswich, when she was over fifty years old,
receiving this
bequest by will: "If she desire to have the suit of damask which was
the
Lady Cheynies her grandmother, let her have it upon appraisement."
Hence
we cannot wonder at clothing forming so large a proportion of the
articles
bequeathed by will and named in inventories; for all the colonists ".
. . studied after nyce array,
And made greet cost in clothing." Nor can we help feeling that any
woman should have
been permitted to have plenty of gowns in those days without being
thought
extravagant, since a mantua-maker's charge for making a gown was but
eight
shillings. Though the shops were full of
rich stuffs, there was
no ready-made clothing for women for sale either in outside garments or
in
under-linen. Occasionally, by the latter part of the eighteenth
century, we
read the advertisement of a "vandoo" of "full-made gowns,
petticoats and sacs of a genteel lady of highest fashion" — a notice
which
reads uncommonly like the "forced sales" of the present day of
mock-outfits of various kinds. About the middle of the century
there began to appear
"ready-made clothes for men." Jolley Allen advertised such, and under
that name, in 1768, "Coats, Silk Jackets, Shapes and Cloth Ditto;
Stocking
Breeches of all sizes & most colours. Velvet Cotton Thickset
Duroy
Everlasting & Plush Breeches. Sailors Great Coats, outside
& inside
Jackets, Check Shirts, Frocks, long and wide Trowzers, Scotch bonnets
&
Blue mill'd Shirts." But women's clothes were made to order in the town
by
mantua makers, and in the country by travelling tailoresses and
sempstresses,
or by the deft-fingered wearers. New England dames had no
mode-books nor
fashion-plates to tell to them the varying modes. Some sent to the
fatherland
for "fire-new fashions in sleeves and slops," for garments and
head-gear made in the prevailing court style; and the lucky possessors
lent
these new-fashioned caps and gowns and cloaks as models to their poorer
or less
fortunate neighbors. A very taking way of introducing new styles and
shapes to
the new land was through the importation by milliners and mantua-makers
of
dressed dolls, or "babys" as they were called, that displayed in
careful miniature the fashions and follies of the English court. In the
New
England Weekly Journal of July 2, 1733, appears this notice: "To be seen at Mrs. Hannah
Teatts Mantua Maker
at the Head of Summer Street Boston a Baby drest after the Newest
Fashion of
Mantues and Night Gowns & everything belonging to a dress.
Latilly arrived
on Capt. White from London, any Ladies that desire to see it may either
come or
send, she will be ready to wait on 'em, if they come to the House it is
Five
Shilling & if she waite on 'em it is Seven Shilling." We can fancy the group of modish
Boston belles and
dames each paying Hannah Teatts her five shillings, and like overgrown
children
eagerly dressing and undressing the London doll and carefully examining
and
noting her various diminutive garments. These fashion models in
miniature effigy obtained
until after Revolutionary times. Sally McKean wrote to the sister of
Dolly
Madison, in June, 1796: "I went yesterday to see a doll which has come
from England dressed to show the fashion" — and she then proceeds to
describe the modes thus introduced. We can gain some notion of the
general shape of the
dress of our forbears at various periods from the portraits of the
times. Those
of Madam Shrimpton and of Rebecca Rawson are among the earliest. They
were
painted during the last quarter of the seventeenth century. The dress
is not
very graceful, but far from plain, showing no trace of Puritanical
simplicity;
in fact, it is precisely that seen in portraits of English well-to-do
folk of
the same date. Both have strings of beads around the neck and no other
jewels;
both wear loosely tied and rather shapeless flat hoods concealing the
hair,
Madam Shrimpton's having an embroidered edge about two inches wide.
Similar
hoods are shown in Romain de Rooge's prints of the landing of King
William, on
the women in the coronation procession. They were like the Nithesdale
hoods of
Hogarth's prints, but smaller. Both New English dames have also broad
collars,
stiff and ugly, with uncurved horizontal lower edge, apparently trimmed
with
embroidery or cut-work. Both show the wooden contour of figure, which
was
either the fault of the artist's brush or of the iron busk of the
wearer's
stays. The bodies are stiffly pointed, and the most noticeable feature
of the
gown is the sleeve, consisting of a double puff drawn in just above the
elbow
and confined by knots of ribbon; in one case with very narrow ribbon
loops.
Randle Holme says that a sleeve thus tied in at the elbow was called a
virago
sleeve. Madam Shrimpton's sleeve has also a falling frill of embroidery
and
lace and a ruffle around the armsize. The question of sleeves sorely
vexed the
colonial magistrates. Men and women were forbidden to have but one
slash or
opening in each sleeve. Then the inordinate width of sleeves became
equally
trying, and all were ordered to restrain themselves to sleeves half an
ell
wide. Worse modes were to come; "short sleeves whereby the nakedness of
the arm may be discovered" had to be prohibited; and if any such
ill-fashioned gowns came over from London, the owners were enjoined to
wear
thick linen to cover the arms to the wrist. Existing portraits show how
futile
were these precautions, how inoperative these laws; arms were bared
with
impunity, with complacency, and the presentment of Governor Wentworth
shows
three slashes in his sleeve. Not only were the arms of New
England women bared to
an immodest degree, but their necks also, calling forth many a "just
and
seasonable reprehension of naked breasts." Though gowns thus cut in the
pink of the English mode proved too scanty to suit Puritan ministers,
the fair
wearers wore them as long as they were in vogue. It is curious to note in the
oldest gowns I have
seen, that the method of cutting and shaping the waist or body is
precisely the
same as at the present day. The outlines of the shoulder and
back-seams, of the
bust forms, are the same, though not so gracefully curved; and the
number of
pieces is usually the same. Very good examples to study are the
gorgeous
brocaded gowns of Peter Faneuil's sister, perfectly preserved and now
exhibited
in the Boston Art Museum. Nor have we to-day any richer or
more beautiful
stuffs for gowns than had our far-away grandmothers. The silks, satins,
velvets, and brocades which wealthy colonists imported for the
adornment of
their wives and daughters, and for themselves, cannot be excelled by
the work
of modern looms; and the laces were equally beautiful. Whitefield
complained
justly and more than once of the "foolish virgins of New England
covered
all over with the Pride of Life;" especially of their gaudy dress in
church, which the Abbe Robin also remarked, saying it was the only
theatre New
England women had for the display of their finery. Other clergymen, as
Manasseh
Cutler, noted with satisfaction that "the congregation was dressed in a
very tasty manner." In old New England families many
scraps of these rich
stuffs of colonial days are preserved; some still possess ancient
gowns, or
coats, or waistcoats of velvet and brocade. In old work-bags,
bed-quilts, and
cushions rich pieces may be found. When we see their quality, color,
and design
we fully believe Hawthorn's statement that the "gaudiest dress
permissible
by modern taste fades into a Quakerlike sobriety when compared with the
rich
glowing splendor of our ancestors." The royal governor and his
attendants formed in each
capital town a small but very dignified circle, glittering with a
carefully
studied reflection of the fashionable life of the English Court, and
closely
aping English richness of dress. The large landed proprietors, such as
the
opulent Narragansett planters, and the rich merchants of Newport,
Salem, and
Boston, spent large sums annually in rich attire. In every newspaper
printed a
century or a century and a quarter ago, we find proof of this luxury
and
magnificence in dress; in the lists of the property of deceased
persons, in the
long advertisements of milliners and mercers, in the many notices of
"vandoos." And the impression must be given to every reader of
letters and diaries of the times, of the vast vanity not only of our
grandmothers, but of our grandfathers. They did indeed "walk in brave
aguise." The pains these good, serious gentlemen took with their
garments,
the long minute lists they sent to European tailors, their loudly
expressed
discontent over petty disappointments as to the fashion and color of
their
attire, their evident satisfaction at becoming and rich clothing, all
point to
their wonderful love of ostentation and their vanity — a vanity which
fairly
shines with smirking radiance out of some of the masculine faces in the
"bedizened and brocaded" portraits of dignified Bostonians in Harvard
Memorial Hall, and from many of the portraits of Copley, Smibert, and
Blackburn. Here is a portion of a letter
written by Governor
Belcher to a London tailor in 1733: "I have desired my brother, Mr.
Partridge to get
me some cloaths made, and that you should make them, and have sent him
the
yellow grogram suit you made me at London; but those you make now must
be two
or three inches longer and as much bigger. Let 'em be workt strong, as
well as
neat and curious. I believe Mr. Harris in Spittlefields (of whom I had
the
last) will let you have the grogram as good and cheap as anybody. The
other
suit to be of a very good silk, such as may be the Queens birthday
fashion, but
I don't like padisway. It must be a substantial silk, because you'll
see I have
ordered it to be trimm'd rich, and I think a very good white shagrine
will be
the best lining. I say let it be a handsome compleat suit, and two pair
of
breeches to each suit." Picture to yourself the garb in
which the patriot
John Hancock appeared one noonday in 1782: "He wore a red velvet cap within
which was one
of fine linen, the last turned up two or three inches over the lower
edge of
the velvet. He also wore a blue damask gown lined with velvet, a white
stock, a
white satin embroidered waistcoat, black satin small-clothes, white
silk
stockings and red morocco slippers." What gay peacock was this
strutting all point-device
in scarlet slippers and satin and damask, spreading his gaudy feathers
at high
noon in sober Boston streets! — was this our boasted Republican
simplicity? And
what "fop-tackle" did the dignified Judge of the Supreme Court wear
in Boston at that date? He walked home from the bench in the winter
time clad
in a magnificent white corduroy surtout lined with fur, with his
judicial hands
thrust in a great fur muff. Fancy a Boston publisher going
about his business
tricked up in this dandified dress — a true New England jessamy. "He wore a pea-green coat, white
vest, nankeen
small-clothes, white silk stockings and pumps fastened with silver
buckles
which covered at least half the foot from instep to toe. His
small-clothes were
tied at the knees with riband of the same color in double bows the ends
reaching
down to the ancles. His hair in front was well loaded with pomatum,
frizzled or
creped, and powdered; the ear locks had undergone the same process.
Behind his
natural hair was augmented by the addition of a large queue, called
vulgarly
the false tail, which, enrolled in some yards of black riband, hung
halfway
down his back." We must believe that the richest
brocades, the finest
lawn, the choicest laces, the heaviest gold and silver buckles, did not
adorn
the persons of New England dames and belles only; the gaudiest
inflorescence of
color and stuffs shone resplendent on the manly figures of their
husbands and
brothers. And yet these men were no "lisping hawthorn buds," their
souls were not in their clothes, or we had not the signers of the
Declaration of
Independence and the heroes of the Revolution. The domination of French ideas
in America after the
Revolution found one form of expression in French fashions of dress;
and where
New England women had formerly followed English models and English
reproductions
of French fashions, they now copied the French fashions direct, to the
improvement, I fancy, of their modes. Too many accounts and
representations
exist of these comparatively recent styles to make it of value to enter
into
any detail of them here. But another influence on the dress of the
times should
be recorded. The sudden and vast development of the Oriental trade by New England ship-owners is plainly marked by many changes in the stuffs imported and in the dress of both men and women. Nankeens became at once one of the chief articles of sale in drygoods shops. Though Fairholt says they were not exported to America till 1825, I find them advertised in the Boston Evening Post of 1761. Shawls appeared in shopkeepers' lists. The first notice that I have seen is in the Salem Gazette of 1784 — "a rich sortment of shawls." This was at the very time when Elias Haskett Derby — the father of the East India trade — was building and launching his stout ships for Canton. We have a vast variety of stuffs nowadays, but the list seems narrow and small when compared with the record of Indian stuffs that came in such numbers a hundred years ago to Boston and Salem markets. The names of these Oriental materials are nearly all obsolete, and where the material is still manufactured it bears a different appellation. A list of them will preserve their names and show their number. Some may prove not to have been Indian, but were so called in the days of their importation.
|