Camp fashion?
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- Harry
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Camp fashion?
This little paragraph was in the August 11, 1892 Evening Standard, page 2:
"A number of Miss Lizzie Borden’s most intimate friends are spending several weeks at Marion, and it is the party that Miss Borden expected to join this week. They are for the most part members of the Central Congregational Church, to which Miss Borden belongs, and they have been living camp fashion in a house owned by Dr. Handy of Fall River."
Anybody have any idea what "camp fashion' means?
"A number of Miss Lizzie Borden’s most intimate friends are spending several weeks at Marion, and it is the party that Miss Borden expected to join this week. They are for the most part members of the Central Congregational Church, to which Miss Borden belongs, and they have been living camp fashion in a house owned by Dr. Handy of Fall River."
Anybody have any idea what "camp fashion' means?
- Susan
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Harry, from what I could find, maybe it refers to the "girls" as sleeping rough, on the floor instead of in beds? Thats the only part of camping I could think of that they might do indoors.
Outdoor camping – essentially a rustic version of middle-class home life – became a popular vacation activity for many Victorian men and women, especially after the publication of W.H.H. Murray’s Adventures in the Wilderness in 1869. This extremely popular book stimulated what contemporaries called "Murray’s Rush" to such areas as the Catskills, the
Adirondack, and the White Mountains. For a party of six or eight people (considered the ideal number), there would be several tents, one designated as a dining and drawing room, the others for sleeping. Some campers brought cots or made beds by filling empty mattress and pillow ticking with boughs or other available materials. Campers were urged to take blue, red, or gray blankets (which did not show dust), and a two-or three yard strip of old carpet to cover the ground in the center of the tent. Camp chairs, steamer chairs, and hammocks provided comfortable seating, and smart campers transported their equipment in boxes and flat trunks that could double as washstands, cupboards, tables, and extra seating.
From this site: http://www.victorianstation.com/leisurehorse.htm
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- Harry
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- lydiapinkham
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Hello, all!
I love the L. L. Bean swimsuit issue photo, Audrey!
I think the camping must refer to sleeping arrangements too. Even if Handy's cabin was a large one, I doubt it would provide beds for a party that large. What I keep imagining is the pall that must have been thrown over the festivities: imagine, one of your party is missing because she's awaiting trial for her parents' murder! Some holiday! I imagine scattered whispers and forced jollity at Marion. And very little fishing done. Do you suppose the girls found sinkers on the lines? Did anyone ever think to ask them?
--Lyddie
I love the L. L. Bean swimsuit issue photo, Audrey!
I think the camping must refer to sleeping arrangements too. Even if Handy's cabin was a large one, I doubt it would provide beds for a party that large. What I keep imagining is the pall that must have been thrown over the festivities: imagine, one of your party is missing because she's awaiting trial for her parents' murder! Some holiday! I imagine scattered whispers and forced jollity at Marion. And very little fishing done. Do you suppose the girls found sinkers on the lines? Did anyone ever think to ask them?
--Lyddie
- Kat
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