This essay is the conclusion to a four part series about Hallowe'en during the time of World War I and the Spanish flu pandemic. The series is written by Carol Kohan who is one of Staatsburgh's wonderful volunteers. Carol has presented enchanting Gilded Age Hallowe’en Tea & Talk programs at Staatsburgh since 2016. In addition, Carol enjoyed a 38-year career with the National Park Service, holding interpretation, curatorial, and management positions including Curator of Martin Van Buren National Historic Site in Kinderhook, Midwest Regional Curator in Omaha, Superintendent of Herbert Hoover National Historic Site in Iowa, and Deputy Superintendent of Roosevelt-Vanderbilt National Historic Site in Hyde Park. After her retirement from the National Park Service in 2013, Carol served two terms as Historian for the Town of Hyde Park.
Pages
Saturday, October 31, 2020
Friday, October 30, 2020
Hallowe'en in the Time of War and Pandemic: 1917-1919 - Part III
Saturday, October 24, 2020
Hallowe'en in the Time of War and Pandemic: 1917-1919 - Part II
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Hallowe’en in the Time of War and Pandemic: 1917-1919 - Part I
We hope you will enjoy this four-part blog post which continues the story of this spellbinding holiday.
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Remembering Ruth Livingston Mills a Century After her Death
Today, October 13, 2020, marks the 100th anniversary of the death of Ruth Livingston Mills, the long-time matriarch of Staatsburgh, born in 1855. Ruth’s legacy can be found in her descendants, the preservation of her Staatsburgh mansion, and the surrounding park that bears her name. Upon announcing her death, The New York Times reported, “Since the death of Mrs. William Astor no leader of New York society has more nearly approached the position of social arbiter than Mrs. Mills. Her characteristics as a hostess never altered; she did not believe in easily letting down the bars to newcomers or to new methods and manners of entertaining, one critic of her small invitation list during a certain Newport season asserting that she was determined to reduce the ‘400’ to ‘150.’”
A September 12th article in a Pittsburgh newspaper reported that Mrs. Ogden Mills was due to spend the late autumn at Staatsburgh though she was currently in Paris with her daughter, the Countess of Granard. Mr. Mills was on his way to join her. Alas, Mrs. Mills was never again going to welcome guests to her beloved Staatsburgh.