South of the Border: Women Travelers to Latin America
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Courageous and intrepid women made their way to Latin America in the nineteenth and twentieth century. Some traveled with their husband while several brave souls went alone. Either way, they encountered a culture and peoples that were foreign to them. This encounter inspired them to write about their experiences and impressions in lett
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South of the Border - Palmetto Publishing
Introduction
DURING THE NINETEENTH CENTURY, WOMEN travelers began to make their way to South America. Years before, European and North American men had preceded them as explorers, scientists, merchants, businessmen, missionaries, naval officers, and diplomats. But with improvements in transportation and communication and the more settled politics of the countries after achieving independence, adventurous women made their way to this lesser-known part of the world that was exotic, tropical, unvisited, and unknown to most of the population.
Several women in this book lived in South American countries for a long period of time, while others traveled and stayed for a shorter period of time. Why did they go? There are as many reasons to travel as there are people who travel. Married women followed their husbands to duty stations in Peru and Chile, as Sarah Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren did in the 1860s when her husband, Admiral John Dahlgren, was commanding officer of the USS Powhatan on the west coast of South America. She made the hazardous trek through Panama by railroad and mule with young children to get to the ship that took them to Peru. Another navy wife, Marguerite Dickins, sailed onboard her husband’s ship, the USS Tallapoosa, on the east coast of South America for two and a half years, from 1887 to 1889, where she visited Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay. Wilma Miles, an admiral’s wife, visited every country in South America in the 1950s and lived at Fort Amador, a navy base in Panama City, when her husband was commanding officer of the Fifteenth Naval District there from 1954 to 1956.
Diplomats were assigned to the newly independent South American republics once the United States granted recognition. Mary Robinson Hunter of Newport, Rhode Island, lived in Rio de Janeiro for fourteen years, from 1835 to 1848, when her husband was chargé d’affaires and later promoted to minister plenipotentiary. When he was recalled in 1844, Mary stayed on in Rio, as her two daughters and her grandchildren lived there. She briefly lived in Montevideo, Uruguay, during the political conflict between the liberals and conservatives, and in Buenos Aires, Argentina, during the rule of the dictator Juan Manuel de Rosas. United States diplomacy brought Loretta L.Wood Merwin to Valparaiso, Chile, in 1853, when her father was appointed American consul. He served in the post for several years, then her husband assumed the position of consul before the two families returned to the United States in 1856.
Economic reasons, the hope of a prosperous livelihood, led Sarah Sabin Wilson and her husband, Joseph Oliver Wilson, to immigrate to Camarioca, Matanzas, Cuba, in 1818. Joseph Wilson, captain of the brig Yankee during the War of 1812, had purchased a sugar and coffee plantation there. The couple hoped to turn a profit in five years and then return to their home in Bristol, Rhode Island. As time went on, they prospered and bought another plantation, thereby establishing themselves permanently in Cuba. Sarah learned Spanish, brought up her children there, and remained in Cuba for the rest of her life.
The lure of the natural environment and the scientific possibilities it held for the naturalist and ichthyologist Louis Agassiz inspired him to organize a yearlong expedition to Brazil in 1865. His wife, Elizabeth Cabot Cary Agassiz, a teacher and founder of a girls’ school in Boston, went along as the scribe of the group. She copied his lectures and notes wherever they went, whether it was in Rio de Janeiro or the Amazon jungle. Fearless and intrepid, she was a major contributor to the expedition and coauthored the book describing their trip, which was published in 1868.
While Alice Rollins was not a scientist, she was a nature lover. In the 1880s, she traveled to Brazil with her husband, whose company had interests there, and she extolled the beauties of the natural world.
Single women made their way south of the border for professional and personal reasons. Nellie Bly, whose fame came from completing a round-the-world trip in record time in 1890, was a newspaper reporter for the Pittsburgh Dispatch. In 1885, tiring of her routine assignments, she and her mother traveled by railroad to Mexico, where she made observations and sent her reports back to the newspaper to be published. Nellie stayed in Mexico almost six months but was critical of lack of freedom of the press and had to leave or face jail, as the dictator Porfirio Díaz brooked no criticism. In 1855, Mary Lester, an Englishwoman and a teacher, sailed from Australia to Central America in hopes of landing a teaching position and the promise of a plantation in San Pedro Sula, Honduras. Mary traveled two hundred miles by mule across the mountains of Honduras, fording streams and dealing with unscrupulous mule drivers, only to have her hopes dashed as the school was not built, the colonists had fled, and the offer of employment was fraudulent. Virginia Heim George went alone to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in 1940 as an employee of the YWCA. She rented an apartment, traveled throughout the country, and served in Brazil for three years.
Women went to South America as adventurers, just as some of the men had done. Ida Pfeiffer, an Austrian, was a world traveler who arrived in Brazil in 1845 and then sailed through the Strait of Magellan to Chile. In 1851, she traveled to the Far East and then sailed up the west coast of South America and the United States; this time she visited California, Mexico, Panama, Peru, and Ecuador. She traveled alone, made her own arrangements, endured hardships, foul weather, and a near-death experience in her efforts to satisfy her curiosity about the non-European world. Lady Florence Dixie, an aristocrat born in Scotland, was a reporter, suffragette, and writer of some repute. She and a party of four men spent several months in the wilds of Patagonia in 1878, solely because it was remote, inaccessible, and untraveled by Europeans or by women. A crack shot, she reveled in horseback riding and shooting ostriches and guanacos.
Julia Ward Howe, best known as the composer of the lyrics to The Battle Hymn of the Republic
that was an inspiration to the troops of the Union Army during the Civil War, sailed with her husband and Reverend and Mrs. Theodore Parker to Cuba in 1859 for a vacation to escape the cold New England winter. While her purpose there was to rest and relax, she visited plantations, civic institutions, and commented on the differences between the Creoles and the Spanish, as well as the status of women, Cuban slave laws, and the condition of slaves.
Josephine Hoeppner Woods and her husband, a mining engineer, moved to Bolivia and Peru in the 1930s. Josephine lived in remote high-altitude mining camps where she oftentimes was the only Caucasian woman there. She eagerly explored her surroundings and the Indian markets, climbed mountains, traversed glaciers, and taught briefly in La Paz and Cochabamba.
The women who traveled and lived in South America were not professional authors, but several documented their experiences and encounters that they turned into books, as the public was eager to read travel literature of distant places that the average person could only dream about. Elizabeth Agassiz and her husband, Louis, collaborated on A Journey in Brazil, published in 1868, which documented their experiences and voyage up the Amazon River. Sarah Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren used her letters home as a basis for South Sea Sketches: A Narrative, which described her travels through Panama and down the Pacific coast by ship to Peru and Chile. Marguerite Dickins wrote articles for a newspaper that eventually became a book entitled Along Shore with a Man-of-War, which included her impressions of Argentina, Uruguay, and Paraguay when she sailed aboard her husband’s ship, the USS Tallapoosa. Nellie Bly, a professional journalist, wrote Six Months in Mexico, which she dedicated to the editor of the Pittsburgh Post, who gave her the opportunity to travel. She went to Mexico as a foreign correspondent and sent her stories home to be published. Loretta L.Wood Merwin entitled her contribution Three Years in Chili, which documented her life in Valparaiso, Chile, a city that was prone to earthquakes. Ida Pfeiffer, a world traveler, spent time in Mexico, Panama, Peru, and Ecuador in the 1850s, which was captured in A Second Lady’s Journey Round the World. Mary Lester’s travels across the mountains of Honduras appeared in print as A Lady’s Ride Across Spanish Honduras. In 1878, Lady Florence Dixie’s hunting and shooting adventures in Patagonia were published as Across Patagonia. The flora and fauna of Brazil in the late nineteenth century captured the imagination of Alice Rollins, who wrote From Palm to Glacier, with an Interlude: Brazil, Bermuda, and Alaska. In the twentieth century, Wilma Jerman Miles wrote her autobiography, Billy, Navy Wife, which contained large segments on her travels and life in South America. Josephine Hoeppner Woods’s years in mining camps in the Andes in the 1930s resulted in the publication of High Spots in the Andes: Peruvian Letters of a Mining Engineer’s Wife. The book was based on her letters to friends.
Other women documented their residence in South America by either keeping a diary or writing letters home. Mary Robinson Hunter lived in Brazil for fourteen years, with periods of time in Argentina and Uruguay during the 1830s and 1840s. She was a faithful diarist who wrote in her diary every day. Her six Brazilian diaries are located in the Newport (RI) Historical Society. Sarah Sabin Wilson’s life in Cuba comes to light in her letters to her former guardian and friend, John D’Wolf, in Bristol, Rhode Island, over a twenty-year period, from 1818 to 1838. Her letters are located in the John D’Wolf Papers in the Bristol (RI) Historical and Preservation Society. Virginia Heim George, a YWCA director in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, from 1940 to 1943, wrote letters to family and friends that described her travels and life there. These letters reside in the Sophia Smith Collection at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts.
The women who lived and traveled in South America wrote about a wide variety of topics. Nature and the natural world of the Amazon were important to Elizabeth Agassiz, as that was the purpose of the Thayer Expedition. Alice Rollins was impressed by the flora and fauna of the Brazilian countryside that she extolled so rapturously. Nature wasn’t always kind to the traveler. The natural world of mountains and rivers were impediments to travel in Honduras and Ecuador, as noted by single travelers Mary Lester and Ida Pfeiffer. Lady Florence Dixie lived one with nature and the animals during her travels camping out in Patagonia.
Slavery and the emancipation of slaves were subjects that interested four women. Sarah Sabin Wilson in Cuba and Mary Robinson Hunter in Brazil owned slaves yet feared slave insurrections as they occurred in nearby areas. Elizabeth Agassiz wrote that the emancipation of slaves was not the contentious topic in Brazil as it was in the United States. People of all classes supported emancipation and felt it would happen gradually. Julia Ward Howe commented on the treatment of slaves on sugar plantations in Cuba and lauded the fact that there were opportunities for slaves to purchase their freedom. The Cuban slave laws were more liberal than those in the United States, she wrote. Despite this, racial equality and miscegenation were not topics that merited support by either Agassiz or Howe.
Women travelers were interested in the status of women in the countries they visited. Julia Ward Howe wrote that women in Cuba suffered an almost Middle Eastern confinement, as they could not go out alone on the street without a male escort. Sarah Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren described the dress of Limean women on the street that contrasted to their untidiness at home. However, women could go out without a male escort in Lima, albeit with a servant. Elizabeth Agassiz decried the fact that upper-class Portuguese women were sequestered at home and uneducated, while Afro-Brazilian women and the Indian women of the Amazon had more freedom to go about unchaperoned in the public square. Loretta L.Wood Merwin thought that the women of Chile were intellectually superior to the men but lacked education and were limited to home and church. Nellie Bly commented on the ritual of courtship in Mexico that ended in marriage where the upper-class women were confined to home, family, and church, while the wives (soldadas) of Mexican soldiers followed the troops and cooked for them. In Ecuador, Ida Pfeiffer found that women participated in business and in politics as much as men.
Women whose husbands were renowned met highly placed government officials and ranking members of the diplomatic corps and the military. Mary Robinson Hunter met Emperor Dom Pedro II of Brazil and socialized with his sisters, the princesses Januária and Francesca. Elizabeth Agassiz also met Emperor Dom Pedro II and Empress Teresa Cristina while in Rio de Janeiro. Sarah Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren and Admiral Dahlgren were guests of President and Mrs. Mariano Ignacio Prado Ochoa at the president’s palace in Lima. Marguerite Dickins met Dictator Francisco Solano López’s son in Buenos Aires and mingled with the diplomatic corps at balls in Montevideo, Uruguay. Navy wife Wilma Miles entertained ambassadors and admirals in Panama, as well as a descendant of Christopher Columbus, Don Cristóbal Colón, the Duke of Veragua and Admiral of the Ocean Sea. Women who traveled alone, like Ida Pfeiffer and Mary Lester, had more opportunity to mix with the indigenous population, as they had to hire mule drivers and servants upon whom they depended. Oftentimes, they stayed in lodgings run by the local people.
Religion and, in particular, the Catholic Church, its religious services and holidays, and the Catholic priesthood, met with criticism from Mary Robinson Hunter, Ida Pfeiffer, and Loretta L.Wood Merwin. The priests were immoral, lived with concubines, and had illegitimate children. In Chile, they even sold indulgences. The pomp and ceremony of Catholic rituals and holidays, as well as the raucous pre-Lenten celebrations and carnivals, were foreign to these Protestant observers.
Sarah Sabin Wilson, Loretta L. Wood Merwin, and Mary Robinson Hunter had to keep house in a foreign land and deal with servants. Sarah had difficulty obtaining articles of clothing and the food that she was accustomed to—hence her letters to John D’Wolf, her former guardian and lifelong friend in Bristol, Rhode Island, asking for seeds and food. Mary Robinson Hunter complained about the food in Brazil and pined for Newport pork and ketchup. She never was adventurous enough to try the Brazilian staples of vatapá or feijoada. She was troubled when slaves were whipped and helped those in need, but she was frustrated dealing with her own servants. Loretta L Wood Merwin was not impressed by the grocery stores in Valparaiso. She also had difficulty adjusting to servants who did not conform to North American standards and, at times, bolted.
The urban landscape was of interest to women travelers. Most of them arrived in a major city or port and visited other cities, where they described the layout of the town, government buildings, churches, and urban dwellings. Mary Robinson Hunter took walks in Rio de Janeiro, visited the emperor’s palace, the public gardens, and the churches. Loretta L Wood Merwin praised Santiago, the Chilean capital, as did Sarah Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren, while Ida Pfeiffer found only the churches of Quito, Ecuador, worth seeing. Marguerite Dickins described her visits to Montevideo, Uruguay, and Asunción, Paraguay. Elizabeth Agassiz visited the major civic institutions of Rio de Janeiro, including schools, hospitals, and asylums that she found well run. Alice Rollins was impressed by the cities of Pará, Maranham, Pernambuco, and Bahia. And Wilma Miles found Cayenne, the capital of French Guiana, primitive and undeveloped.
The travelers commented on customs of the Hispanic countries that were so unlike North American or European ones. The concept of mañana was the order of the day wherever they went. Time was of no importance, and patience was required before anything got done. The fact that women smoked was commonplace in Peru and Chile yet surprising to women travelers and deserved mention. A passion for gambling was reported by Nellie Bly in Mexico and also in Chile by Loretta L Wood Merwin. Bly remarked that Mexican soldiers smoked a weed called marijuana and passed the cigarette along one to another. The Paraguayans drank numerous glasses of maté, a bitter tea, every day, wrote Marguerite Dickins. One very admirable quality of South Americans was their courtesy and charm that Loretta L.Wood Merwin felt should be copied by North Americans. And Josephine Hoeppner Woods was not allowed to go into a mine in Bolivia, as the Indian miners thought it was bad luck if a woman entered. She had to bow to their ancient superstitions.
The governments of South American countries came under the critical eye of women travelers. Both Loretta L Wood Merwin and Sarah Madeleine Vinton Dahlgren stated that Chile and Peru were republics in name only. Elizabeth Agassiz acknowledged that, although there was a liberal constitution under Emperor Dom Pedro II in Brazil, little was done for the people. Julia Ward Howe said that Spanish rule in Cuba equated with bad and corrupt government, and that no improvements in roads or education were made to benefit the people. Ida Pfeiffer leveled the same criticism about the government in Ecuador. Marguerite Dickins, in Uruguay, averred that the country was not an ideal republic. These women lived in a liberal democracy and could not help but note the great differences between the governments of South American countries and the United States.
How these women reacted to their travels and observations in South America was influenced by their gender, race, class, nationality, religion, values, and morals. The prejudices and the politics of the times in which they lived colored their observations; hence, the opinions that these women expressed tell us as much about them and the times in which they lived as they do about what they observed.
The selections in this book are arranged chronologically, beginning with the second decade of the nineteenth century and ending in the mid-twentieth century. Each selection gives the traveler’s insight into the topics that interested and impressed her the most. The countries that are covered range from Cuba in the Caribbean to Chile, Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Mexico, and Panama on the west coast of South America and Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and French Guiana on the east coast, as well Nicaragua and Honduras in Central America.
Sarah Sabin Wilson
Mistress of a Cuban Plantation
SARAH SABIN WILSON (1799–1847) WAS a native of Bristol, Rhode Island, a seafaring town on the shores of Mount Hope Bay, whose privateers played a part in capturing British vessels in the War of 1812. Sarah was an orphan, as her father, John Sabin, captain of a slave ship belonging to wealthy and politically minded James D’Wolf, died in 1808, and her mother, Lucretia Wardwell Sabin, died in 1811. During her youth, John D’Wolf, the brother of James D’Wolf, was appointed her guardian. He took his responsibilities seriously and was a friend and trusted advisor to her for over thirty years. On June 1, 1814, Sarah, at the tender age of fifteen, married twenty-six-year-old Joseph Oliver Wilson (1788–1838), the former captain of the brig Yankee that brought in the largest amount of booty during the War of 1812, in Bristol’s Congregational Church. Wilson, who was from Windsor, Connecticut, was well known and considered a catch, although there is no information on how or when the couple met. Wilson used his profits from his seafaring career to buy a plantation in Camarioca, Matanzas, Cuba, together with his partner, Captain John Smith, and in 1818 the couple and their three-year-old son John moved to Cuba. The Wilsons intended to make a profit from raising sugar and coffee and return to the United States within five years, but they spent the rest of their lives in Cuba.
The Cuba that Sarah Sabin Wilson encountered in 1818 was still a Spanish possession. From 1492, when Columbus landed on Cuban shores, to 1792, the island was a backwater, with no Indians to exploit or gold to discover. In the colonial period, Cuba was the jumping-off point for the invasion of Mexico by Hernando Cortés in 1519 and later served as a stopover for the galleons with their cargo of gold and silver on their way to Spain. By 1762, when the British occupied Havana, trade with the English opened up the country to new products. But the 1790s were transformative for the island, as the Haitian planters immigrated to Cuba after the slave revolt in Haiti destroyed their plantations and crops. They reestablished themselves, and the production of sugar went into full swing, as the growing population of the United States demanded the product. And the need for workers to cut the cane resulted in Cuba becoming an importer of slaves. Over time, about six hundred thousand slaves were brought to the island. Cuba suddenly became Spain’s most prosperous colony and attracted settlers like the Wilsons and other North Americans who hoped to make a fortune cultivating sugar and coffee before returning home.
During her twenty-eight years in Cuba, Sarah wrote faithfully to her former guardian John D’Wolf in Bristol, and it is from these letters that the contours of Sarah’s life in Cuba emerge. She confessed to him that life on a plantation was isolating, and she confided that she missed the company of other women, as her nearest female neighbor was twelve miles away. In a depressed mood, she saw no prospect of getting clear of a plantation life altogether.
But she wrote to D’Wolf that she wanted him to dispel rumors that she wanted to return home. She averred that she had too much to do to be homesick, and she set about her household duties with energy and determination.
Sarah raised six children over a fifteen-year period—five boys and one girl, Susan, whom she named after D’Wolf’s wife—and she devoted herself to seeing that they were well educated and trained. She wanted the children to learn Spanish, and she herself was determined to learn the language as fast as she could—and she did. Sarah resolved to read books only in Spanish and became proficient in the language. In an attempt to assimilate, Joseph began to call himself José and was addressed as Don José. As time went on, the Wilsons became, for all intents and purposes, Cuban, although they never forgot their roots, and sent their children to school in the United States.
Besides raising her children, Sarah took on new responsibilities on the plantation. She took care of poultry and hogs; planted a kitchen garden; superintended the house slaves had a hospital built on the grounds, where she nursed the sick; and tutored her own children. She reported to D’Wolf on the status of the coffee and sugar crops that were being raised and marketed, so she was acquainted with the crops produced and the prices that they brought. She took an active interest in the produce that the plantation yielded, as that was their livelihood. Her letters to D’Wolf contained requests for items that they were not able to get in Cuba, including shoes, cloth, bonnets, ribbons, tea, seeds, potatoes, books, and vinegar. In turn, the Wilsons sent D’Wolf molasses, sugar, coffee, and fruit. Sarah also begged the D’Wolfs to visit, as the climate would be agreeable in the winter months.
The Wilsons had to face a number of life-threatening events in Cuba. A cholera epidemic was rampant by 1833. A number of their slaves died of the disease, including their cook. Sarah also came down with cholera but fortunately, recovered. Pirates were another threat that plantation owners had to face. The pirates of the Caribbean preyed on ships carrying cargo of sugar, molasses, and coffee leaving Matanzas harbor. To stem the losses, the United States government sent United States Navy ships to protect commerce. In 1823, Sarah’s fourth of July party had to be postponed because her neighbors refused to leave their homes, as pirates were in the vicinity. Sarah was carrying on a hometown tradition, as Bristol, Rhode Island, held the first Independence Day parade in the country. Finally, slave uprisings threatened the lives and property of the white plantation owners. A slave insurrection occurred in Cuba in 1825, some six leagues from the Wilson plantation. The Wilsons were not harmed, but their neighbors were. Eighteen people were killed, their homes destroyed, and goods stolen. Eventually, the insurrection was put down, but the ringleader was never caught. Joseph Oliver Wilson was a member of the militia