09 July 2014

Concord College for Adult Education: From Dream to Reality

http://bit.ly/AlcottSCS
A. Bronson Alcott on the steps of the School of Philosophy





The Concord School of Philosophy began as a dream. After Amos Bronson Alcott began his mercurial career as a schoolteacher in the 1820s, during which he tried out his radical educational ideas in the classroom in a series of schools that he ran in Germantown, Pennsylvania, and in Boston, Massachusetts, he abandoned the idea of running his own schools in favor of holding “conversations” for groups of adults, often traveling as far as the Midwest to find his audiences. Alcott’s dream of one day opening an adult educational center, a “college” that would be open to the public, was an idea he entertained as early as 1842 . On his trip to England to meet the founders of the Alcott School, named in honor of Alcott’s educational ideas, he collected hundreds of volumes of books on literature and philosophy, bringing them back to Massachusetts for the library of his future ideal classroom.


The dream became a reality in 1879, when the very first session of the Concord School of Philosophy “Conversational Series” was held in the Study of Orchard House. There were so many attendees that they spilled out the doors; and afterwards a benevolent participant from New York, Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson, donated $1,000 to build a structure that would house the large numbers of future participants.

http://bit.ly/AlcottSCS
1899 Rendering of the School of Philosophy Building

During the following years the School was run each summer with great success. Many women and men, coming from as far away as the Midwestern states, would attend, boarding in town during the weeks of the sessions. Speakers who graced the stage included such luminaries as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Elizabeth Peabody, Julia Ward Howe, William Torrey Harris, and Franklin Sanborn.
Franklin Sanborn, eminent Concord educator, thus described the conversations that followed each series lecture: “What is sought in the discussions at Concord is not an absolute unity of opinion, but a general agreement in the manner of viewing philosophic truth and applying it to the problems of life.”

The Hillside Chapel, as Alcott named it, built in 1880, still stands today on the Orchard House grounds. Bronson Alcott’s legacy lives on in the Summer Conversational Series and Teacher Institute, held annually each July at Louisa May Alcott’s Orchard House.

http://bit.ly/AlcottSCS
The School of Philosophy as it stands today.
This year’s Summer Conversational Series and Teacher Institute, “Navigating the Vortex: Creative Genius in the Time of the Alcotts,” runs Sunday, July 13 through Thursday, July 17, and is open to the public. Massachusetts teachers may receive Professional Development Points for attending. Speakers include Pulitzer Prize winners Megan Marshall and John Matteson, screenwriter Olivia Milch, and others.




Pre-registration and prepayment are suggested. For a full schedule and additional information CLICK HERE, or call 978-369-4118 x106.

Lis Adams, Director of Education

04 July 2014

Reflections on My Portrayal of Louisa May Alcott

 I am privileged to live in Concord, Massachusetts just a mile from Louisa May Alcott’s Orchard House, where I have worked since 1977 in varying capacities, and now as executive director.  Through these years, I developed an original one-woman show, in which I portray Louisa May Alcott in as much depth as I can to show her complexity.  When in character, I enter the room where the audience awaits as if I’ve had a minor carriage accident and must wait for repairs.  As soon as I step in, however, I quickly leave, as one would do if one inadvertently walked into an assembled group.  The evening’s host must say something to the effect, “Wait, Miss Alcott, these people wish to meet you.”  My embarrassed answer: “But I am interrupting you!”  When assured that this is not the case, I confess that the young man who took my carriage to the livery mentioned that someone in the building had read Little Women and would probably enjoy meeting me, but I didn’t expect so many people!  I then interact with the audience for about an hour, staying in character and staying in Louisa’s time-period.  In some performances questions begin immediately and the entire time is a dialogue.  In other cases, the first part of the performance is more like a stage show and the audience warms up for questions later on.  The interaction with the audience is my favorite part of the experience.  For me this process is like having a large mental closet full of stories and quotations.  I pull out the ones appropriate for that audience.  I try to behave exactly as someone would if stranded in a very unfamiliar place but pleasantly surprised by interesting people.  My highest complement is when people tell me they feel that they’ve really met Louisa May Alcott.  One editor asked me to write of my experience portraying Louisa because, as he put it: “Figuratively standing in her shoes brings a special insight” into her life.  That request has inspired this blog post, as well. *

Louisa May Alcott has ignited passion in scholars and captured the attention of modern day readers because of her multifaceted personality.  I like to think of her, the strong-minded feminist, proud spinster, independent thinker, and rebel poised to enter the Civil War as a Union Army nurse.  In her November 1862 journal she wrote,

Thirty years old.  Decided to go to Washington as a nurse . . .. I love nursing and must let out my pent up energy in some new way . . . I want new experiences, and am sure to get ‘em if I go.

Who was the young woman who wrote those words in 1862?  At age thirty, she did not think herself to be young.  On the surface, one might say she did not think much of herself at all.  Continually self-effacing, Louisa did not consider herself attractive, socially adept or a great writer.  Rather, she considered herself a workhorse who had the harder road, at least compared to her youngest sister.  In one journal entry, she wrote, “She (sister May) is one of the fortunate ones, and gets what she wants easily.  I have to grub for my help, or go without it.  Good for me . . . cheer up, Louisa, and grind away.”

Louisa routinely identified with the outsider and wistfully acknowledged what she could not have.  The reader of Alcott’s journals may conclude that Louisa was jealous of her sister, but should also note numerous passages such as, “On the 17th go to B[oston] and see our youngest [May] start on her first little flight alone into the world, full of hope and courage.  May all go well with her!”   Keeping the whole person in mind as I portray Louisa, I take the view that her sibling envy is only on the surface.  Underneath, I see her deep love for her sisters and her strong spirit taking over.   Looking beneath that surface in order to understand her, one does see a strong-minded feminist, an independent thinker, a dutiful daughter, a humorist, an actress, a preacher, a repressed soul, sometimes frustrated not to be in a more traditional, cared-for role, a proud, independent spinster, a jealous outsider, a rebel, an optimist, and a pessimist.  Louisa was all of these, and reflected them in her writing.  She was, after all, a product of her age.  Women were strongly admonished everywhere in the Victorian culture to prepare themselves to fulfill their sacred duty to be wife and mother. 

Even as one sometimes sees traditional female roles reflected in her writing, one must remember her thriller tales, uncovered by foremost Alcott scholars Leona Rostenberg and Madeleine Stern.  In tale after tale, with titles such as Behind a Mask, or the Story of a Woman’s Power, Louisa celebrated strong, independent, bold women.   I loved discussing these stories with Rostenberg and Stern, who become very close friends.  At our first meeting, I was extremely nervous, knowing that these Alcott experts were about to see me perform as Louisa May Alcott after a dinner at Trinity College honoring their lifetimes of scholarly achievement.  After the performance, Miss Stern said to me, “You are Louisa May Alcott.  Louisa would have loved this!”  As our friendship grew, I learned more about their thoughts on Alcott and also discovered that it was the depth of my characterization, and my willingness to include divergent aspects of Louisa’s personality that drew Miss Stern’s compliment (which I shamelessly treasure to this day).

In the bosom of a family that practiced what they preached, Louisa learned to value people more than things and greatly admired her mother whom she called, “The best woman in the world.”  Well-born Abigail May was a true philanthropist who gave out of her own need, when she could not give out of abundance.  She truly was the Marmee of Little Women, with more dimension in real life.  Indeed, the cheerful actions and words of Mrs. Alcott and her daughter were often exhibited in the midst of suffering and death.   Both Louisa and her mother also had an acerbic wit and could also express dismay and distress in their journals.  Even so, the Alcotts repeatedly made an intentional choice to search for joy in hard times.  Louisa loved finding or making fun.  Humor gave her a healthy perspective on her life and life around her, even in the midst of suffering.

Louisa dearly loved her philosopher father, Amos Bronson Alcott.  Although he did not provide well for his family materially, he nurtured his daughters’ inner beings.  Instead of mourning his lack of sons, he celebrated his girls as equally viable movers and shakers – remarkable for that time.  In an era when it was considered unlady-like for a woman to have a desk of her own, Mr. Alcott built his budding authoress her own desk.  Louisa enjoyed this personal encouragement, love and support even as she was sometimes frustrated by her father’s extremely idealistic impracticality.   She once wrote, “Why try to know the unknowable when there are still poor to be fed?”  Louisa also wrote, “I wish the stupid would wake up and pay him what he is worth,” after learning that as a lecturer, he was not always paid what was promised, even though his conversations had been characterized as going “to heaven in a swing.”

When preparing the role of Louisa May Alcott, I try to be honest and take her as a whole being.  I endeavor to take conflicting feelings and let them coexist in one person.  Indeed, we are all made up of contradictory parts, which we frequently do not see very clearly in ourselves.   Yet as a whole, these diverse pieces come together to create a vital, interesting person.  A problem with intelligent, complex historic people, such as Louisa May Alcott, is that when dissected in a purely academic light, one loses that sense of the whole.  For Alcott, as for others, like a pointillist painting, close inspection of the tiny pieces means loss of the whole where one sees the true character.

            A strong part of the popular culture, Louisa’s book, Little Women, is a useful reference point for understanding Alcott – to a degree.  Readers are not called upon to dissect and scrutinize tiny pieces of a character’s conflicting nature.  They understand conflict to be a normal part of an interestingly complex real person.  One of Jo’s most endearing qualities is that she is not perfect, yet she goes on loving, living, and doing her best to make a real difference in the world.
           
            In this way, I believe Little Women is an aid in understanding the young woman who stood at the brink of war and wished to plunge in!  Louisa was ready to make a real difference in the world, even as she was self-effacing.  To some degree, that modesty was a façade, fulfilling society’s expectation of a woman, yet the side of her that went forth and acted boldly anyway always won out over any doubts.  Such action is a sign of healthy esteem, even if you also look wistfully to what might have been, as Louisa sometimes did.  The imaginative and creative soul can envision oneself on the path not taken, feel a sense of loss, but refuse to dwell on regrets.

                        Louisa May Alcott was both a product of her times and a challenge to them.  Her autobiographical character, Jo March, has been hailed as a role model for women for over a century now and inspires people from all walks of life and all parts of the globe.  Women in particular draw inspiration from Jo March.  Yet, it is unfortunate that the very title, Little Women, creates a certain reluctance to reading the book in some males.  I am convinced that Louisa’s experiences in life and in the Civil War allowed her to cut through gender roles and convey the inspiration and attraction of her family experience to male and female alike.

            She begins her classic, Little Women, during the dark days of the Civil War.  To make her book more socially acceptable, the pragmatic author gave many of her own Civil War experiences to Mr. March.  The similarities are unmistakable:  A telegram brings the family the dreaded news that Mr. March is in a Union Army Hospital.  Mother leaves immediately for Washington, “praying that she is not too late.”  In reality, Louisa was the subject of just such a telegram and her father traveled to the Union Hotel Hospital, hoping that he may see his second born alive.

            In Little Women and in the Alcott home the warmth and support of family – no matter how flawed -- provides strength when far away and in trying circumstances.  With remarkable straightforward simplicity, Louisa shares what she experienced that the strength of a good family is a constant presence.

            In my role as performer, as well as in my job as executive director of her home, Orchard House, I meet literally hundreds of her readers every month.  I have been truly astounded by her impact on lives.  I am often asked to explain phenomena such as the hundreds of thousands of Japanese visitors who flock to Orchard House, brimming with enthusiasm.  I have come to believe that because Jo March displays strength and independence, while maintaining absolute respect for all members of her family and championing the value of family and people over material possessions and social standing, she is a universal role model.  Humans the world over long to find ways to maintain their inner spirit, while sustaining connections to those who really matter in life.

            Of all the statements that I have heard, however, a recent one really gave me pause.  A woman, who saw my Louisa May Alcott performance, told me that her fifteen-year-old grandson’s favorite book was Little Women.  She told me that he would not admit to his friends that he had even read it, much less how much he loved it.  I asked her if he had given her a reason for his fondness of the book.  She told me that he said it was because the March family was weird in a cool way.  I have turned this idea over in my mind a great deal since then.  “Weird in a cool way.”

            That pretty much sums it up, I guess.  In the midst of people who are afraid to be themselves, whether the year is 1861 or 2061, it can seem weird to be oneself with all of one’s conflicts and inconsistencies showing.  It can definitely seem weird to stand up for one’s unpopular beliefs and to act in ways that do not “fit in” with everyone else.  And in today’s vernacular, where “cool” means admirable; it is cool to see the bravery and integrity it takes to do these things.   Do I hero-worship Louisa May Alcott?  No.  Do I admire her?  Yes.  Her writings come from the heart and intellect of a person of tremendous integrity and spirit.  They accurately record events of the time, yet hold a timeless quality.   Louisa May Alcott imparts the unique perspective of a person whose family nurtured her with independence and integrity – a person. flawed, but definitely “cool”

* Parts of this blog originally appeared in my introduction to Louisa May Alcott’s Civil War from Edinborough Press, c 2007           --Jan Turnquist

11 June 2014

Anna Alcott Pratt's 1860 Wedding Dress on Display

Once a year, during the months of May and June, visitors on tour at Louisa May Alcott’s Orchard House have an opportunity to see Anna Alcott Pratt’s original 1860 gray silk wedding gown.




Anna Alcott was 29 years old on May 23, 1860, when she married John Bridge Pratt, a young Concord man who had once played her leading man in an amateur theatrical production called “The Loan of a Lover.”  It was typical (and practical) for a bride of that period to choose a gown of a neutral color (brown, navy, gray) that she could wear again.  “Hoping to be married in the evening,” she wrote in her journal three months after the event, “I had proposed a very simple white dress meaning to look like a bride, but on deciding it should be in the morning & knowing myself to be neither young nor pretty I laid it aside as unsuitable & wore my riding dress of silvery grey, & Louy [sister Louisa] placed in my hair & upon my bosom, sprays of lilies of the valley.”

The wedding party was small, comprised of “Mr. & Mrs. Emerson, Mr. Thoreau, (Franklin) Sanborn, & the two families,” and took place in the front parlor of Orchard House, with the bride and groom standing “together beneath an arch of lilies, hand in hand.”  Mrs. Alcott’s brother (the bride’s uncle), Unitarian minister Samuel May, presided over the couple, bringing tears to the eyes of the onlookers with his heartfelt words, according to Anna:

I was in a dream, the lovely day, the bright May sunshine stealing in upon the sweet flowers & wreaths, & loving faces, the influence of the kind hearts around me, Uncles gentle voice, and the touch of the hand that held mind so firmly yet so fondly, all seemed so beautiful, that altho’ my heart beat fast and the tears came to my eyes, I did not feel like Annie.”  After the ceremony, “we danced on the lawn under the Elm…we ate the wedding dinner, and then the carriage came and I began to wake up, & think ‘I am going away.’  Tearful faces kissed me goodbye, loving hands held mine as if they could not let them go and amid such plentiful affection as even the most beautiful bride in the world could (experience), I drove away from my dear home… a happier wedding day a woman could not ask.

Recording Anna’s wedding day in her journal, Louisa May Alcott wrote that she and her sister May were dressed “in thin grey stuff and roses,--sackcloth, I called it, and ashes of roses, for I mourn the loss of my Nan, and am not comforted.”  She added:  “Then, with tears and kisses, our dear girl, in her little white bonnet, went happily away with her good John; and we ended our first wedding.  Mr. Emerson kissed her; and I thought that honor would make even matrimony endurable, for he is the god of my idolatry, and has been for years.”

One month after the wedding, Louisa called on Anna and John in their home in Chelsea.  She wrote:  “Saw Nan in her nest, where she and her mate live like a pair of turtle doves.  Very sweet and pretty, but I’d rather be a free spinster and paddle my own canoe.”

Louisa May Alcott herself never married, claiming that “liberty is a better husband than love.”  She and Anna remained close friends throughout their lives.

It is presumed that Anna did wear her dress again for special occasions, since silk would not have been suitable (or practical) for everyday use.  The full costume would have included “undersleeves” that went to the elbow beneath the fashionable bell sleeves on the dress.

Orchard House also owns a replica costume that has been worn in living history wedding reenactments, performed as public events every few years.  Brides portraying Anna Alcott, as well as the grooms portraying John Pratt, most often have been descendants of Anna herself.  One memorable reenactment featured a family descendant from Germany: the great-great-granddaughter of May Alcott, Anna’s youngest sister.

Alcott descendants participate in wedding reenactment (with replica wedding gown).
To visit Orchard House and experience the dress for yourself, guided tours are available daily at 399 Lexington Road, Concord, MA, Mondays through Saturdays, 10 – 4:30 p.m., and Sundays 1 – 4:30 p.m.  Groups of 10 or more may make advance reservations by calling 978-369-4118 x106.

03 June 2011

Our Centennial Countdown Begins!



In 1910, any visitor seeking to find the thrill or comfort in visiting the Concord home of one of the world’s most beloved authors would have instead discovered signs posted that read “Private Property” and “No Trespassing."

Fortunately, this is hardly the welcome one receives today at Louisa May Alcott’s Orchard House, in large part due to the brave foresight of several Concord residents who, in 1911, sought to both preserve the home where Louisa May Alcott and her family lived and perpetuate the legacy of the Alcotts in literature, education, the arts, and social justice. 

On January 23, 1911, the Concord Woman’s Club was able to raise enough funds to purchase Orchard House “with all the land in front of it and 20 to 30 feet in the side and back” from Mrs. Harriet Lothrop (aka author “Margaret Sidney”), owner of the adjacent Wayside as well.  Private donations garnered from around the world -- including a dime from a girl in Hungary! -- totaled $8,000 and were to be used “for papering, furnishing, also to begin a maintenance fund,” as noted in a Concord Patriot article.

As early as 1909, however, research was being done into establishing a “Corporation” to help save and preserve Orchard House.  On April 15, 1911, Articles of Incorporation were signed by the following founding members of the all-volunteer Louisa May Alcott Memorial Association:   Murray and Mabel Ballou, Anna H. Burrill, Charles and Elizabeth Darling, George and Laura Furber, Carrie M. Hoyle, Woodward and Bessie Hudson, Russell and Edith Robb, Abby F. Rolfe, Henry and Margaret Blanchard Smith Jr.  Several of these surnames resound to this day as a result of continued family involvement with Orchard House and other Concord organizations.

In 1913, John Sewall Pratt Alcott, the only surviving nephew of Louisa May Alcott, was asked by Good Housekeeping Magazine to write about his family and the home they so loved:

I suppose it was because it was right in their midst the people of Concord forgot the existence of Orchard House.  We tried many times to buy it, but it was not until the club of women of the town brought their united efforts to bear that the price was put within reasonable limits.  Two years ago they bought it, and when they had collected enough money they set right at work, making the necessary repairs and putting on the needed patches.  The house was in such a bad condition that one of the carpenters called into consultation advised Mrs. Henry Rolfe, the president of the Louisa Alcott Memorial Association, “to tear it all down and build a new one.”  The house has been restored, practically, through little self denials.

Board members gathered monthly in the Parlor of Orchard House or in Mrs. Rolfe’s home to review plans for and progress of renovations pursuant to the formal opening of Orchard House as an historic site.  With persistent fundraising and careful budgeting, the Board kept one eye on providing visitors entry into the idyllic and heartwarming home so vividly portrayed in Little Women, but were also intent upon providing a historically accurate context for the public to appreciate the talents and contributions of all the Alcott family members.

The first official Orchard House Guest Book signature was posted on July 13, 1911, with admission to the house being 25 cents.  Visitors came and went for nearly a year before a formal celebration of work completed on Orchard House was held on May 27, 1912.  An article in The Christian Science Monitor estimated 250 people visited Orchard House that one day.  Guests included descendants of the Alcotts and other notable Concord families, as well as people from across the globe who had been inspired by the ideals and works of the Alcotts.  Mrs. Rolfe provided historical background on the house, John Alcott reminisced about his Aunt Louisa and Grandfather Alcott, and Frank Sanborn also spoke.

The current stewards of Louisa May Alcott’s Orchard House -- a fifteen-member all-volunteer Board elected from nearly one hundred Corporators along with five full-time administrators and upwards of fifty part-time interpreters, educators, and volunteers -- still maintain the home in accordance with the highest standards of historic preservation and interpretive technique, enabling Orchard House to garner prestigious grants for on-going restoration and awards for quality tours, programs, and events.

Since the opening of Orchard House did not happen with haste, it is perhaps fitting that as the historic house today seeks to meaningfully commemorate its Centennial, the celebration is not confined to merely one date, or even bound by one year.  In April 2011, we honored the founders of L.M.A.M.A., whose dedicated efforts brought to life a place that had held sway in the hearts and minds of generations of Little Women readers, by re-enacting the signing of the Articles of Incorporation with several descendants of the original Board, current Board members, and an Alcott descendant:


This year's Summer Conversational Series & Teacher Institute (July 10th - 15th) has as its theme, "Creating a Vision:  The Power of Place - A Centennial Celebration of Louisa May Alcott's Orchard House."  Authors such as Concord’s own Jane Langton will join scholars from around the world to discuss the power of place in their own writings and other contexts, as well as the significance of Orchard House as an abiding source of inspiration.
 
As time passes toward May 27, 2012, we will offer many other opportunities for fans and supporters to celebrate with us.  Please keep checking back on this blog, as well as on our website -- www.louisamayalcott.org -- for details, and don't forget to say "Happy Anniversary" when you visit us!