Remember the Beverly Hillbillies? The Clampetts strike oil in the Ozarks and move to Beverly Hills in a rags-to-riches sitcom of the 1960s.

Beverly Hillbillies Moving Van, courtesy Google Images

Beverly Hillbillies Moving Van, courtesy Google Images

 

Of an entirely different era and social class, diaristย Louisa Catherine Adams, wife of the 6th American President, John Quincy Adams, writesย about multiple moves โ€“ both in European nations where John Quincy was diplomat and in the United States serving variously as senator, secretary of state, president, and finally congressman again.

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Woman on the Move

After the birth of her third child, โ€œas soon as she could rise from her bed, she lifted the lids of her empty trunks and opened her packing cases to prepare to leave for Washington. She was ‘a wandererโ€™ again.โ€ (140)

In her boldest move, Louisa traversed the passage from St. Petersburg to Paris while Napoleon rampaged through Europe. She traveled 2000 miles in 40 days, a journey almost unheard of for a woman alone.

Louisa and Son Charlesโ€™ Wild Ride

In 1815, while John Quincy was gone to Paris, Louisa in St. Petersburg had to โ€œsell the furniture, dispose of the house, and buy a carriage that could carry her across the continentโ€ to Paris. She needed supplies: food, drink, clothing, maps, tools and enough medicines for a small apothecary. She had read the map herself, not having heard from her husband, and unflinchingly set her course.

Her largest expense was the carriage, โ€œa berline, a large vehicle with four seats and glass windows, all balanced on an elaborate suspension of springs intended to smooth the rough ride.โ€ Leaving St. Petersburg, the carriage was outfitted with sleigh runners. Wheels were packed when she met melting roads traveling west and south.ย (206)

She sewed gold and silver into her skirts to hide her wealth from robbers and from her male servants. (206)

Touch of Humor:

During the sojourn, though her two male servants were armed, she put on her sonโ€™s military cap and held his toy sword so that what she hoped was a menacing silhouette would show through the carriage window. (221)

True to her declaration when she married Adams, โ€œWhen my husband married me, he made a great mistake if he thought I only intended to play an echo.โ€ (8)

Her Most Moving Adventure

Louisa, often sickly and afflicted with self-doubt, recordedย her grief in โ€œDiaries of a Nobody.โ€ After all, she was often geographically separated from her husband during his ascendance to power, she suffered multiple miscarriages, all of her children except Charles preceded her in death, and she struggled with erysipelas, a skin inflammation.

But her vividly told โ€œNarrative of a Journey from Russia to Franceโ€ enabled her to tunnel โ€œher way out of depression with the sharp spade of her sardonic humor . . . .โ€œ (396)

She wrote about Baptiste, innkeepers, haggard soldiers she has passed on the road, frightened faces of the women she met, cries of Vive Napoleรณn! She remembers the practical difficulties she had overcome: the moment the carriage wheel had come loose, the problem of procuring servants, the dangerous decision to ford a half-frozen river. She wrote about her growing confidence, which rippled out of her descriptions and into her voice. (411)

“Her story was her own. No other woman in America had experienced anything like it. But she made its lessons universal. It was a story about women and what women could achieve . . . . She wrote: โ€˜Under all circumstances, we must never desert ourselves.โ€™โ€ (411)

Move for Equality

At 62, in an era when a woman’sย life span was about 40, she was blossoming. Like the Grimkรฉ sisters of Charleston, with whom she corresponded, she championed womenโ€™s rights and the freeing of slaves.

The Lesson of a Cracked Washbasinย 

Cracked Washbasin, Google Images

Cracked Washbasin, Google Images

John Quincy and Louisa Adams observed their 50th wedding anniversary, a milestone almost unheard of in the mid-1800s. Before she died, Louisa presented her daughter-in-law Abby Adams with a cracked washbasin, symbolic of the naked faces bent toward it sometimes joyful and other times full of inconsolable pain, mirroring life itself. (444)

Want More Louisa?

Writer and editor Louisa Thomas has written a stunning account of a memorable woman entitled Louisa: The Extraordinary Life of Mrs. Adams, 2016.

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Thomas’ย biography sings with color as she describes an incandescent sun on their approach to St. Petersburg, which edged โ€œthe statues with fire and [made] creamy walls blush.โ€ (90)

You can read my full review here.


Your turn: Can you recall any other historical characters with moving stories?

One of your own to tell here? Go right ahead.

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