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Robert G. Barrows - Albion Fellows Bacon: Indianas Municipal Housekeeper

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Albion Fellows Bacon Indianas Municipal Housekeeper Robert G. Barrows Examines the career of a leading Progressive Era reformer. Born in Evansville, Indiana, in 1865, Albion Fellows was reared in the nearby hamlet of McCutchanville and graduated from Evansville High School. She worked for several years as a secretary and court reporter, toured Europe with her sister, married local merchant Hilary Bacon in 1888, and settled into a seemingly comfortable routine of middle-class domesticity. In 1892, however, she was afflicted with an illness that lasted for several years, an illness that may have resulted from a real or perceived absence of outlets for her intelligence and creativity. Bacon eventually found such outlets in a myriad of voluntary associations and social welfare campaigns. She was best known for her work on behalf of tenement reform and was instrumental in the passage of legislation to improve housing conditions in Indiana. She was also involved in child welfare, city planning and zoning, and a variety of public health efforts. Bacon became Indianas foremost municipal houskeeper, a Progressive Era term for women who applied their domestic skills to social problems plaguing their communities. She also found time to write about her social reform efforts and her religious faith in articles and pamphlets. She published one volume of childrens stories, and authored several pageants. One subject she did not write about was womens suffrage. While she did not oppose votes for women, suffrage was never her priority. But the reality of her participation in public affairs did advance the cause of womens political equality and provided a role model for future generations. Robert G. Barrows, Associate Professor of History at Indiana University at Indianapolis, was previously an editor at the Indiana Historical Bureau. He has published several journal articles and book chapters dealing with Indiana history and American urba

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Albion Fellows Bacon MIDWESTERN HISTORY AND CULTURE General Editors James - photo 1
Albion Fellows Bacon
MIDWESTERN HISTORY AND CULTURE
General Editors
James H. Madison and Andrew R. L. Cayton
Albion Fellows Bacon Indianas Municipal Housekeeper ROBERT G BARROWS - photo 2
Albion Fellows Bacon Indianas Municipal Housekeeper ROBERT G BARROWS - photo 3
Albion Fellows Bacon
Indianas Municipal Housekeeper
ROBERT G. BARROWS
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS Bloomington and Indianapolis THIS BOOK WAS - photo 4
INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS
Bloomington and Indianapolis
THIS BOOK WAS PUBLISHED WITH THE GENEROUS SPONSORSHIP OF
Barbara Evans Zimmer
This book is a publication of
Indiana University Press
601 North Morton Street
Bloomington, IN 474043797 USA
http://www.indiana.edu/~iupress
Telephone orders 8008426796
Fax orders 8128557931
Orders by e-mail iuporder@indiana.edu
2000 by Robert G. Barrows
All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed
Library Materials, ANSI Z39.481984.
Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Barrows, Robert G. (Robert Graham), date
Albion Fellows Bacon : Indianas municipal housekeeper / Robert G. Barrows.
p. cm. (Midwestern history and culture)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0253337747 (cl)
1. Bacon, Albion Fellows, 1865 2. Women social reformersIndianaBiography.
3. Authors, American20th centuryBiography. 4. IndianaSocial life and
customs. 5. IndianaBiography. I. Title. II. Series.
CT275.B144 B37 2000
303.484092dc21
[B]
00025134
1 2 3 4 5 05 04 03 02 01 00
To my mother
and to the memory of my father
Picture 5
With thanks for nature and nurture
CONTENTS
ILLUSTRATIONS
Albion Fellows Bacon in her bedroom office
Many individuals and institutions contributed to the preparation of this book. Albion Fellows Bacons descendants were of crucial importance. My largest debt is to the late Joy Bacon Witwer (Albion Bacons youngest daughter), who opened her home to me, granted me two oral history interviews, and made available for reproduction and research use both manuscript materials prepared by her mother and family photographs. (She had previously donated other materials regarding her mother and her aunt, Annie Fellows Johnston, to the Willard Library in Evansville.) She could not have been more gracious and encouraging, and I deeply regret that I was unable to bring this project to fruition before her death. Joys son, Scott Witwer, gave me a family copy of Beauty for Ashes, which I had never been able to locate outside a research library. Albion Bacon Dunagan (Albion Bacons granddaughter) discovered in her fathers possessions and made available for my use a manuscript reminiscence written by Bacon toward the end of her life. The late Hilary E. Bacon, Jr. (Albion Bacons son) responded to a query very early in my research and offered an explanation for why some looked-for items (letters to Albion Bacon from Jacob Riis, for example) are apparently no longer extant. I very much appreciate the familys assistance and support.
During the course of my research I visited or corresponded with many libraries and archives. Some of them are large repositories, while others are quite modest institutions. Many of them (especially the publicly funded agencies) struggle with inadequate resources. The staffs of all were unfailingly helpful and knowledgeable, and their dedication to collecting, preserving, and making available the raw materials of history, often under trying conditions, merits our admiration. My thanks to the librarians and archivists at: Chautauqua Institution Library (Chautauqua, N.Y.), especially Alfreda L. Irwin; DePauw University Archives (Greencastle, Ind.), especially Wesley Wilson; Evansville-Vanderburgh County Public Library; Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace Archives (Stanford, Calif), especially Marilyn Kann; Indiana Historical Society Library (Indianapolis), especially Leigh Darbee; Indiana State Archives (Indianapolis); Indiana State Library (Indianapolis), especially John Scotty Selch and the late Marybelle Burch; Indiana University Archives (Bloomington); Indiana University Library (Bloomington); IUPUI University Library (Indianapolis); Indiana University School of Medicine Library (Indianapolis); Library of Congress, Manuscript Division (Washington); Lilly Library (Bloomington, Ind.); National Archives (Washington), especially Aloha P. South; Newberry Library (Chicago); Petoskey Public Library (Michigan); University of Southern Indiana, Special Collections Department (Evansville), especially Gina Walker; Willard Library (Evansville), especially Joan Elliott Parker, Lyn Martin, and Carol Bartlett.
Several past and present residents of the Evansville area are due recognition. Donald E. Baker, former head of the Willard Library (and later director of the public library in nearby Newburgh), provided encouragement, advice, and a few corrections. Joe Ballard at the Evansville-Vanderburgh County Area Plan Commission facilitated use of the early minutes of the Evansville City Plan Commission, and fought the bureaucracy on my behalf for a copy of Margaret Bacons death certificate. Bill Bartelt provided access to the archival records and photographs of Trinity United Methodist Church. Darrel Bigham shared his extensive knowledge of Evansville, both in person and via his publications, and suggested helpful contacts. The late Joan C. Marchand, who was the historic preservation guru in Evansvilles Department of Metropolitan Development, sent me information regarding the Bacons house and Hilary Bacons store. Kenneth P. McCutchan resolved an inconsistency regarding Albion Bacons employment as a young woman. The late Margaret McLeish, who grew up on the same block where the Bacons lived and knew the Bacon children, shared her memories with me in an oral history interview. Sylvia Neff Weinzapfel made available the early records of the Evansville YWCA.
I am grateful to David Klaassen at the Social Welfare History Archives, University of Minnesota, for undertaking an ultimately fruitless search for Bacon materials in the collections there. Sarah McFall, assistant editor at the Atlantic Monthly Press, had better luck; she managed to track down correspondence dealing with Bacons article Consolation as well as her book of the same name. The Indiana Federation of Clubs (specifically, then-Historian Vivien Freese) kindly granted permission to use the IFC records on deposit in the Indiana State Library.
James H. Madison and Thomas J. Schlereth, who were the general editors for the Indiana University Press series Midwestern History and Culture at the time this manuscript was submitted for consideration, both offered useful suggestions for improvement. I want to thank Jim Madison, in particular, for his support over the years of my scholarship and my career. Nancy Gabin read a draft of the final chapter and provided helpful advice; its my own fault that I took only part of it.
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