Gilded Age Girls: Exploring the Travel Diaries of Sarah and Eleanor Hewitt
Curious what might life have really been like for two wealthy, unattached New York City sisters at the turn of the 20
th
century? Fictional sisters Ada and Agnes from HBO’s new series,
The Gilded Age
, could have been inspired in part by real sisters, Sarah (1859-1930) and Eleanor (1864-1924) Hewitt. Also known as “Sallie” and “Nellie”, without them the
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum
, and its
library
, would not exist. A new exhibition celebrating this remarkable duo,
Sarah and Eleanor Hewitt: Designing a Modern Museum
, includes select pages from their never-before-seen travel diaries. Even better than seeing those few pages in person, now you can travel right alongside these two intrepid women from the comfort of your own home through six recently digitized volumes of their
diaries
. Plus, you can help transcribe their contents to make them even more accessible to researchers around the world!
Diaries of Sarah and Eleanor Hewitt, on display in
Sarah and Eleanor Hewitt: Designing a Modern Museum
.
Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum is the only Smithsonian unit founded by women. Granddaughters of industrialist and philanthropist, Peter Cooper (1791-1883), Sarah and Eleanor were pioneering women of significant means who shared their grandfather’s spirit of contributing to the greater good of American society through education. In 1895, the Hewitt sisters created the first museum of decorative arts and design in the United States—the Cooper Union Museum for the Arts of Decoration. They also started a night school that worked closely with the museum’s collection, establishing an active space for design education that helped shape the American aesthetic.
Left:
Photograph of Sarah Cooper Hewitt
. Collection of Edward Parmee. Right:
Portrait of Eleanor Garnier Hewitt
. Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, Bequest of Erksine Hewitt, 1938-57-737.
Sarah and Eleanor’s museum became what is now Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. Since becoming a part of the Smithsonian in 1968, Cooper Hewitt has told the story of its founders, yet a key component remained locked away in twenty-three diaries held in the library. Due to their extremely fragile condition, access to the diaries was restricted and their contents were unknown. To help reveal what Sarah and Eleanor documented, in 2020, Cooper Hewitt Museum and Smithsonian Libraries and Archives received a joint Smithsonian American Women’s History Initiative award to support the conservation and digitization of Sarah and Eleanor’s travel diaries to make them truly accessible for the first time.
Open page from
Travel diaries of Eleanor Garnier Hewitt and Sarah Cooper Hewitt U.S. v. 1.
These small notebooks contain over four thousand pages of hand-written and typed notes mostly by Eleanor, recording their travels across Europe, the United States, and Mexico from 1913 to 1924. The Hewitt sisters kept d…
Descubre más desde Hoy En Perspectiva
Suscríbete y recibe las últimas entradas en tu correo electrónico.