by Heather Blanton
A
simple question on the surface, I thought a quick Google would give me the
answer. Turns out, a few females claim the honor. So after a little more
serious digging, I came up with Mary Hallock Foote and her first novel, Led-Horse
Claim: A Romance of a Mining Camp published in 1883.
Turns out, Mary
was quite an interesting gal. Born in 1847 in New York to Quaker parents, she
attended school at the very proper Female Collegiate Seminary in Poughkeepsie.
Her gift for the creative arts convinced her father (clearly a forward-thinking
man) to invest more in his daughter’s education. He sent her to Cooper School
of Design for Women, and by her early twenties, Mary was a sought-after
illustrator and designer for some of the most notable publishers in New York
City. She loved her job. She loved the city. But she loved a man more.
In 1876, she
married Arthur De Wint Foote, a young mining engineer whose career would take
her deep into the wild-and-wooly Western frontier. Mary saw it all. From
Deadwood to Leadville, from Idaho to Mexico.
Impressed,
sometimes astonished, at the characters populating these rowdy mining towns,
Mary wrote and illustrated dozens of articles for readers “back East.” She
quickly gained the reputation for being one of the sharpest observers of, and
most civilizing influences on, the bawdy mining, and ditch (irrigation) towns
out west. According to an article in the Oregon Cultural Heritage Commission, “The Victorian gentlewoman traveled the
American West dressed in hoop skirt and petticoats, insisting that her children
be educated by an English nanny and fed by a Chinese cook, so that she could
work on her illustrations and stories, without interruption.”
What this quote doesn’t
tell you is that Mary didn’t have time to raise the children because she had to
help put bread on the table. Her husband’s career as a surveyor and civil
engineer was difficult, at best, due to his unswerving honesty. Apparently,
fudging numbers was expected in the mining industry, but Arthur didn’t play
along. Hence, the continual moves from one town to the next. But Mary wrote
about it all and her short stories and serials gained in popularity. They were
published alongside the likes of Rudyard Kipling. Her articles and observations
of life in the Wild West were met with lavish reviews, especially by those who
could recognize the ring of authenticity—because they lived it.
Mary’s stories leaned
more toward Western romance, though, as opposed to Owen Wister-style shoot-outs
and brawls. She wrote fifteen novels in all. However, her husband eventually landed
a job managing a mine in California and as his salary increased, Mary’s hectic writing
pace decreased. Her last book was published in 1919. She didn’t seem to miss
writing.
Mary and Arthur
were married nearly sixty years. She, ever hardy and determined, lived until
the ripe old age of 90. Unfortunately, while her life was long, her fame was
not. It is nearly impossible to find the complete collection of Mary’s works
now, even on Amazon. What a loss for the Western Romance genre.
What a great article! It's a shame that her stories as well as HER own personal story has not been saved for people today. Thanks for your research in bringing it to light.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Connie. Just goes to show, I guess, we're only immortal in our own minds. She sounds like a really interesting, roll up your sleeves and git 'er done kind of gal.
ReplyDeleteOF COURSE Mary Hallock Foote's story is preserved for all time in Wallace Stegner's PULITZER PRIZE winning novel "The Angle of Repose". He obtained permission to use her letters to write her story without crediting her as the family asked him to not use any family names. It's a gorgeous, moving story of life in the 1800's about an amazing woman. It is her story more than it is Stegner's.
ReplyDeleteBarby-q