Most of her performances were in New Jersey, so imagine my shock when I discovered on her program two personal endorsements from Sandwich, Massachusetts where I’ve lived in for nearly 40 years. “The readings of Miss Moore in our vestry on Thursday evening, July 31st were received with much enthusiasm,” wrote Dr. Edward S. Talbot, D. D. S. …”We predict a successful future for her, and hope to hear her again.” “My Dear Miss Moore: Your recitation was much enjoyed by all,” wrote Elizabeth Clark, Corps Secretary. Dr. Talbot’s former home is a few hundred yards from my house, and Elizabeth Clark’s name is familiar to me as a good friend of Thornton Burgess whose biography I recently completed.
What
brought my grandmother, a young professional elocutionist from New Jersey to a Cape
Cod village in the early 1900s? How did Nana travel? Where did she stay? Did
she have friends or family in Sandwich? These questions go unanswered for now,
but our remarkable town archivist Barbara Gill provided a bit more information
about where my grandmother likely performed.
Elizabeth Clark was undoubtedly the secretary of the Women’s Relief Corps, she
said. It was attached to the Charles Chipman GAR Post and met upstairs at the
commercial building on Jarves St. now owned by the Brown Jug. The purpose of
the Corps was to raise money for Civil War veterans, and they often held fund-raising
programs in the Sandwich Town Hall auditorium.
If it is
known that my grandmother participated in a program for the Women’s Relief Corps
in Sandwich, it is almost certainly known that over 100 years ago she performed
in the Sandwich Town Hall auditorium. (Which is where I’ll be on March 22, introducing
actress Carol McManus who will recite a poem from Nana’s repertoire for the
March for the Arts Town Hall event.)
Who
knows? In the early 1900s Thornton Burgess was in his late 20s and working as a
journalist in Springfield, Massachusetts. Perhaps he took a day off to visit
Sandwich friends the day my grandmother was performing? Perhaps he went with
his friend Elizabeth Clark to hear a visiting elocutionist from Dumont, New
Jersey? As historians know better than most -- anything is possible!
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