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Sophia
Woodhouse's Grass Bonnets
By
Melissa Sirick
This
entry is courtesy of Hog
River Journal , where it originally appeared in the
Summer, 2003 issue.
Inventor
and businesswoman, Wethersfield's Sophia Woodhouse (1799-1883) was
one of the first female entrepreneurs of the Greater Hartford area.
Plying her trade during the early 19 th century, Sophia developed
an innovative technique for treating, drying, and braiding spear
grass to make high quality bonnets. She patented her design in 1821
and quickly developed a cottage industry for her hats, which won
awards and acclaim.
Two
major historical factors were in Woodhouse's favor. Embargo acts
in the early 19 th century restricted trade between the United States
and certain foreign ports. Exotic imports such as fashionable Leghorn
hats from Livorno, Italy (the city was known as Leghorn in English)
were no longer available. A second factor was a directive from President
James Monroe in which he encouraged Americans to become a “nation
of manufacturers” and develop new businesses and products.
Nineteen-year-old
Woodhouse responded to the president's call (perhaps indirectly)
and was able to fill the American market's demand for fashionable
bonnets by producing grass bonnets made in the Leghorn style. Using
the common spear grass that grew in the Wethersfield meadows alongside
the Connecticut River, she developed a process in which spear grass
was boiled, bleached, moistened, fumigated and then dried to make
it suitable for plaiting or braiding to make Leghorn-style bonnets.
A clever businesswoman, Woodhouse had her hat-making process patented
in 1821 as “a new and useful improvement in the manufacture of grass
bonnets and hats.” (Though she shared the patent with her husband,
Gurdon Welles, it is Sophia Woodhouse's name that is closely associated
with this extraordinary and innovative local industry of grass bonnet
making.)
It
was not uncommon for women of that era to braid grass and straw
bonnets for their own use as well as selling them to local merchants
or hat dealers. But Sophia's singular success stemmed from the fact
that she manufactured a high-quality product: The fineness of her
braiding made the caliber of her bonnets unparalleled. She won awards
for best “Grass Bonnet” by the Hartford County Society for Promoting
Agriculture and Domestic Manufacturers in 1819 and again in 1820.
The following year, she was awarded a medal and cash prize from
London's prestigious Society of the Arts. The Society was so impressed
with Woodhouse's technique that they requested a sample of the spear
grass used in her unique process.
With
her international success, the demand for Woodhouse's bonnets increased.
She employed several women from Wethersfield to manufacture her
hats. Although she had a workshop at her house, it is very likely
that the women who worked for her did so in their own homes, thus
creating a cottage industry of grass bonnet making in Wethersfield.
A particularly gifted woman in her employ, Maria Francis, produced
300 bonnets in one summer!
Woodhouse's
bonnets were widely admired by socially prominent women, and worn
by two former First Ladies, Dolley Madison and Louisa Adams. The
latter's husband, John Quincy Adams, pronounced it “…an extraordinary
specimen of American manufacture.”
One
of the best examples of Woodhouse's straw bonnets is included in
the exhibit, Legendary People, Ordinary Lives, on permanent
display at the Wethersfield Museum, 200 Main Street, Wethersfield.
For more information call 860-529-7656 or 529-7161 or visit the
museum's Web site at www.wethhist.org.
Melissa
Sirick is the assistant director of the Wethersfield Historical
Society.
This article originally appeared in
the Summer 2003 issue of HOG RIVER JOURNAL. For more information,
visit www.hogriver.org.
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