Turin
was an exciting place for foreign diplomats in the years following the
establishment of the united kingdom of Italy in 1861. The Risorgimento, both a political and a
cultural movement, brought Italy’s political, intellectual, and social leaders
to the new capital in the north. (Rome, the putative capital, remained under
the control of the Catholic Church, with French support, until 1870). As the new nation’s leaders debated how to
address the many unresolved questions of Italian nationhood, Turin became a
haven for Italian aristocrats, former revolutionaries, intellectuals, and
visitors from America and Britain. It
was in this stimulating environment that George Perkins Marsh and his second
wife, Caroline Crane Marsh, found themselves after George’s appointment by
President Lincoln as the first U.S. Minister to Italy in 1861.
Caroline
Crane Marsh (1816-1901) was a woman of enormous talents and intellect. Fluent in German and conversant in many other
languages, she was a poet, translator, and eventually her husband’s biographer.
Her diaries in the Marsh Papers
at the Silver Special Collections Library, University of Vermont, provide ample
evidence of her engagement in the social and intellectual life of Italy, as
well as the vital role she played in the diplomatic mission advising her
husband and hosting visitors.
Caroline Crane
Marsh in Italy, 1860s.
Saturday [March]
15 [1862]
Visitors few but
all acquaintances, with many of whom I begin to feel myself quite
familiar. To my great satisfaction
General Menabrea, by repeating the remarks he made to me some weeks since at
the opera, gave me an oportunity [sic]
to say a few words on the other side of the question. The graces in woman and a devotion to her
family duties were all that were required to her perfection. “But,” I said, “what is there left for us if
nature has not gifted us with graces, if we have no family to which to devote
ourselves or if ill health deprives us for long years of all social enjoyments
and of the strength necessary to attend to household matters? With thousands of
women one or more of the suppositions are stern facts. You would deny us all those mental rescources
[sic] with which wide knowledge
furnishes you—you would leave us to count our beads under such circumstances,
but you would leave us nothing else.” I
then told him that I thought nature had made wide differences between men and
women and that it should be the object of education to bring them nearer
together rather than to increase these differences, and finished my speech by a
quotation from St Clement’s advice to his clergy “teach your men to be modest,
your women to be brave.” The General
seemed much amused and quite inclined to pursue the discussion, but we were
interrupted by the coming of a new set of visitors.
Italy
had been home to an unusual number of woman scholars in the Renaissance and
female literacy had once been higher than in most of Europe. By the nineteenth century, however, these
advantages had been lost. Caroline Marsh
encountered in Italy a society in which the social expectations for women of
all castes were more tightly drawn than in America, and where few recognized
the value of female education. In citing
her “suppositions,” moreover, she spoke from experience: for much of her life
she suffered from an undiagnosed illness that gravely affected her eyesight and
often left her unable to walk more than a few steps at a time. Clearly, she used this time to perfect her
mind.
Caroline’s
views on women’s roles, as expressed in her diaries, are explored more fully by
David Lowenthal in his 2008 article in the Journal of Social History (see
below). She continued to keep her insightful
diaries until at least 1880. When George
died in 1882, he left little money to his family, but his life-long passion for
books had produced a 12,000-volume library of great value that would soon find
its way to the University of Vermont. Frederick Billings, a lifelong friend of
Marsh’s and an 1844 alumnus, purchased the books from Caroline for $15,000 and
donated them to UVM, along with funds to build a new library. In the late 1880s
Caroline Marsh donated George’s papers to the University, establishing one of
our most important research collections.
Her diaries and other papers, which have received less scholarly
attention than her husband’s, were given to UVM in 1958-59 by Lowenthal
(1923-2018), the eminent geographer and Marsh biographer. We recently received Dr. Lowenthal’s papers,
containing additional Marsh materials.
Resources:
Lowenthal, David. "The Marriage of Choice and the Marriage of Convenience": A New England Puritan Views Risorgimento Italy. Journal of Social History, Vol. 42, No. 1 (Fall, 2008), pp. 157-174.
Lowenthal,
David. George Perkins Marsh: Prophet of conservation. Seattle: University of Washington Press,
2000.
Crane,
Elizabeth Greene. Caroline Crane Marsh: A
life sketch. n.p., n.p., after 1901.
Marsh,
Caroline Crane. Wolfe of the knoll, and
other poems. New York: C. Scribner, 1860.
Marsh,
Caroline Crane. The Hallig: or, The sheepfold in the waters: a tale of humble life on
the coast of Scheswig: with a biographical sketch of the author. Translated
from the German of Biernatzki by Mrs. George P. Marsh. Boston:
Gould and Lincoln, 1856.
Marsh,
Caroline Crane. Life and letters of
George Perkins Marsh, comp. by Caroline Crane Marsh. New York: C. Scribner’s Sons, 1888.
Two years ago I stayed in Genoa, with the intention of channeling Marsh and giving thought to what it might have been like to have lived in Pegli, west of the city and where he wrote much of Man & Nature. I should have thought more about his wife's role in all their years in Italy as well. On my next turn in Genoa, I will do my best to rectify that.
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