Thursday, January 22, 2015

19TH CENTURY MOURNING—PART TWO: GRIEF KNOWS NO CLASS BOUNDS By Jaymi Trimble M.A. Southern Antebellum History

After a study of upper and middle class mourning practices, it left me wondering…what of the lower class?  Their grief is no less fierce.  Grief knows no class bounds.  Yet, unlike upper and middle class women, the poor were not afforded the luxury of a time of mourning—a period set aside for one’s heart to mend.



To a life already burdened with financial woes, visited grief.  There was no time to stop and mourn.  Life must go on.  There were mouths to feed. 



Could love flourish as a couple, could parents love young children when there was a black cloud of fatalism looming on the horizon?  There was sickness, disease, accidents, plagues…and there was Civil War.  Over 600,000 men died.  Every family, from upper class to slave, was touched by grief.



When a loved one was lost, all grieved, yet, only some could afford to indulge mourning.  For upper class women, mourning was a job.  Lower class women already had a job and languishing in their grief was not an option.  How could  women so devastated by their loss as to require a regimented three year’s mourning period, be so out of touch with the sorrow of women less fortunate?  Money buys privilege, not brains.  To be more precise, mourning is the outward expression of grief.  Mourning for the lower class was considered unnecessary.

It’s not that the poor didn’t grieve.  Of course they did.  They had responsibilities to uphold, where outward signs of grief were not acceptable. In stolen moments and in private, they grieved.  Grief is the commonality between the classes.  How it is expressed is what money could buy.  The amount of money spent on grief was inferred as an indication of depth of grief.  If a lot of money was spent on mourning attire, hired coach, funeral, headstone; then, it was inferred the departed must have been very well loved.  The man destined for the pauper’s grave was not to have the epilogue of not being loved.  Rather, he had the misfortune to be poor in wealth, not necessarily in love, family and friends.
 


When someone of meager financial means passed, it must have been difficult to separate grief from worry over the added financial burden of a funeral and burial…not to mention the loss of a wage earner to contend with.  Loss is certainly entwined in material concerns, but not bound by them.  More important than financial concerns, there is a broken heart, loss of companionship, loss of dreams and plans for the future.
 


The poor had practical considerations in planning a funeral, which the rich were not encumbered by.  Funerals among the working classes were planned around work and most often held on Sundays, so family and friends wouldn’t have their pay docked to attend.



Extravagance was not equal to respectability.  Even if the departed was bound for a pauper’s grave, the family would do their best to fashion mourning attire—sometimes that meant using black tape to make a tie (which was common).  Being practical folk, they relied on their ingenuity and simply dyed their existing wardrobe black—bundling up their clothes and carting them to the backyard to be dyed in the wash pot.  The reason they dyed their clothing outside was because the black dye smelled horrible.  To create black dye iron was used with madder and logwood.  Sometimes an entire neighborhood would smell foul from the dye pots if the person that passed came from a large extended family, or if several neighbors were dyeing clothing to attend the funeral. 



One equaling factor among classes was religion.  The church was often turned to for solace.  Having lots of money or having little money didn’t change the fact that spiritual rights were the same, rich or poor…it was the private meaning placed on them that was important. 

For upper and middle class, mourning dress was a way to share the prevalence and stage of one’s grief with others.  It was also a way to display economic and social status.  The boom years of the mourning industry were from 1815 to 1915.  Fashion magazines flaunted mourning wear and the rich supported this thriving industry.  Accordingly, it was expensive to look properly anguished. 



In 1863, Nannie Haskings, a Tennessee teenager, called mourning practices to task in a journal entry that questioned why she should care at all about what she wore instead of focusing on her emotional pain: “What do I care whether it becomes me or not? I don't wear black because it becomes me. ... I wear mourning because it corresponds with my feelings."



The lower classes may not have been able to afford expensive mourning attire, an extravagant funeral, ornate headstone (or mausoleum), let alone commission a death mask or hire  a photographer for the very popular post mortem photography of the day…but what they commonly did was save a lock of hair.  This was popular among the upper classes too, however, they would likely have had the hair made into jewelry or art.



The lower class would paste the hair into a simple remembrance book.  An article in Godey’s Lady’s Book May 1855, expressed sentiment that crossed class lines: “Hair is at once the most delicate and lasting of our materials, and survives us, like love.  It is so light, so gentle, so escaping from the idea of death, that with a lock of hair belonging to a child or friend, we may almost look up to heaven and compare notes with the angelic nature—may almost say, “I have a piece of thee here, not unworthy of thy being now.”



Our body is a vessel for our spirit, and once the spirit no longer has need of it, the time has come for our body to be put to rest.  For those of little means, there would be no hearse pulled by a horse decked out in plumes.  Possibly a friend with a buckboard...otherwise, mourners carried the coffin from the home all the way to the graveyard.  There was support among friends--a spirit of kindness, not extravagance.  Having enough money to grieve properly by societal standards, was not a reflection of the love for the departed.



We all end up not needing our body anymore.  Some of us end up in the cemetery—a Greek word meaning “sleeping place.”  Death and graveyards remind us of our mortality, of our short time on earth, our ultimate death.  Rich or poor.  Pauper’s grave or mausoleum.  We all end up…dead.




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