Ohio History Journal

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BOOK REVIEWS

BOOK REVIEWS

 

Auntie Kate: Her Journey Through Ninety Years. By Katharine

Garford Thomas. (Columbus, Ohio History Press, Ohio State Archaeolog-

ical and Historical Society, 1949. 252p., illustrations. $3.50.)

Volumes of biography based upon reminiscences can be fruitful re-

sources for the historian who is attempting to reconstruct the details of

social history. In this book the memories of Katharine Moody Smith,

who during her long lifetime from 1838 to 1932 lived reasonably close

to the main current of American history, are recorded by her niece.

It is to the author's credit that in her role of historian she demon-

strated a concern for accuracy and eschewed embellishment where her

aunt's memories lacked coherence. Unfortunately she did not handle her

unusual collection of family records and her reports of interviews with

skill, and the result lacks clarity and style. Sentences like the following:

"While eager to be off, once plans were laid, yet there was sadness in their

hearts at leaving a home so dear to them all," disrupt the course of

thought and irritate the reader.

Auntie Kate would seem to have had an unusually full life that took

her from a childhood in Puritan Massachusetts to the rigors of pioneer

life in Washington Territory and back to a dignified retirement in a sedate

Ohio town. There are interesting glimpses of student life at Mt. Holyoke

in the decade before the Civil War and a few fragments of public opinion

in New England relative to that conflict. Auntie Kate's one national re-

cognition came by way of passing reference in the New York newspapers

to the unknown person who marred Elyria, Ohio's, reception for President

Johnson by waving a black flag from a window at his passing train. The

black flag was actually a piece of black silk fastened to a parasol on a

moment's inspiration, but it elicited a remarkable amount of speculation

about Elyria's sinister intentions toward the chief executive. Descriptions

of the graciousness of life in nineteenth-century Elyria are provocative of

nostalgia, while the endurance of frontier hardships by families who had

known a more comfortable existence is another aspect of the last century

which has been less reluctantly forgotten.

In the last chapters of the book the subject of this biography becomes

a more realistic figure, and the author succeeds in imparting to the reader

some of the veneration she felt for her aunt. Her correspondence with

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