Nothing Daunted

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Authors: Dorothy Wickenden

BOOK: Nothing Daunted
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C
ONTENTS

P
ROLOGUE

P
ART
O
NE:
B
EGINNINGS

1. O
VERLAND
J
OURNEY

2. T
HE
G
IRLS FROM
A
UBURN

3. “A
FUNNY, SCRAGGLY PLACE

4. “R
EFINED, INTELLIGENT GENTLEWOMEN

P
ART
T
WO:
O
LD
W
ORLD AND
N
EW

5. U
NFENCED

6. T
HE
G
RAND
T
OUR

7. F
ERRY

S
S
CHEME

8. D
EPARTURE

9. H
ELL
H
ILL

P
ART
T
HREE:
W
ORKING
G
IRLS

10. T
URNIPS AND
T
EARS

11. T
HE
M
AD
L
ADIES OF
S
TRAWBERRY
P
ARK

12. D
EBUT

P
ART
F
OUR:
R
ECKONINGS

13. T
HE
C
REAM OF
R
OUTT
C
OUNTY

14. “U
NARMED AND DEFENSELESS

15. “T
HE DARK DAYS ARE VERY FEW

16. T
HREE
-W
IRE
W
INTER

17. C
OMMENCEMENT

E
PILOGUE

A
CKNOWLEDGMENTS

N
OTES

B
IBLIOGRAPHY

I
NDEX

M
ORE
P
HOTOS FROM
D
OROTHY
W
OODRUFF

S
A
LBUMS

Rosamond and Dorothy, “Stranded for a day on the Moffat Road”

For Hermione and Caroline

P
ROLOGUE

Miss Underwood (left), Miss Woodruff, and Elkhead students, 1916

O
ne weekend afternoon in the fall of 2008, at the back of a drawer in my old wooden desk at home, I came across a folder I had forgotten. “Dorothy Woodruff Letters, Elkhead 1916–17.” My mother had given me the file when my children were young, and I had put it away, intending to look through it, but life had intervened. I glanced at the first letter. Dated Friday, July 28, 1916, it was written on the stationery of the Hayden Inn. At the top of the sheet was a photograph of a homely three-story concrete-block house with a few spindly saplings out front. The inn advertised itself as “The Only First-Class Hotel in Hayden.” Dorothy wrote: “My dearest family: Can you believe that I am actually far out here in Colorado? ”

She and her close friend, Rosamond Underwood, had grown up together in Auburn, New York. They had just arrived after a five-day journey and were preparing to head into a remote mountain range in the Rockies, to teach school in a settlement called Elkhead. Dorothy’s
letter described their stop overnight in Denver, their train ride across the Continental Divide, and their introductions to the locals of Hayden, whom she described as “all agog” over them “and
so
funny.” One man could barely be restrained “from showing us a bottle of gall stones just removed from his wife!” She closed by saying, “They are all so friendly and kind—and we are
thrilled
by everything. We start now—four hours drive. Goodbye in haste. . . .”

Dorothy Woodruff was my grandmother. As I began reading the letters, I recognized her voice immediately, even though they were written by a young woman—twenty-nine years old, unmarried, belatedly setting out on her own. An avid correspondent, she captured the personalities of the people she met; the harsh landscape; her trials with a classroom of unruly young boys; and her devotion to Rosamond, known to my brothers and me as “Aunt Ros.” I also was struck by their unusually warm friendship with two men: the young lawyer and rancher who hired them, Farrington Carpenter; and Bob Perry, who was the supervisor of his father’s coal mine. They were eighteen hundred miles away from their families, and from decorous notions about relations between the sexes.

The letters revealed the contradictions of Dorothy’s upbringing. She was a daughter of the Victorian aristocracy. Her forebears, like Rosamond’s, were entrepreneurs and lawyers and bankers who had become wealthy during the Industrial Revolution. In 1906, the young women were sent to Smith, one of the earliest women’s colleges, and afterward, they were indulged for a year with a grand tour of Europe, during which they saw their first “aeroplane,” learned how to blow the foam off a mug of beer, expressed disdain for the paintings of Matisse, and watched Nijinsky dance. Then, like other girls of their background, they were expected to return home to marry, and marry well.

Yet they had grown up surrounded by the descendants of some of the most prominent reformers in American history, including the suffragists who organized the first women’s rights convention in Seneca Falls, fifteen miles west of Auburn; and the man who overturned barbaric penal practices at the Auburn state prison, Sing
Sing, and penitentiaries across the country. Auburn was a stop on the Underground Railroad, and some of the families they knew had hidden runaway slaves in their basements. Dorothy’s grandfather lived next door to William Seward, President Lincoln’s secretary of state. One day when she was visiting my family in Weston, Connecticut, she recorded an oral history, speaking with unerring precision about her childhood and about her time in Colorado. Retrieving the transcript of the tape, I was reminded of the breathtaking brevity of America’s past.

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