Harriet Low

Harriett Low Hillard (18 May 1809 – 1877) was an American woman of letters and diarist. From 1829 to 1833 she lived in the Portuguese colony of Macau on the South China coast and she and her sickly aunt became the first American women to go to China.[1] During her stay from 1829 to 1833, she wrote a journal in the form of letters to her older sister Molly (Mary Ann, 1808–1851), and became acquainted with many of the influential individuals in the colony. After her return to the United States, she married and moved to London, returning to New York with her husband and five daughters in 1848. Her journal is now part of the Low-Mills collection in the Library of Congress.[2]

Harriet Low Hillard
Harriet Low, 1833 by George Chinnery
Born
18 May 1809

Died
Brooklyn, New York
NationalityAmerican
Known forMacau journal, 1829–1833
Spouse(s)John Hillard
ChildrenKatharine
Mary Louise
Ellen
Harriet
1 other daughter
3 sons (2 were twins and died at a young age)
Parent(s)Seth Low
Mary Porter Low
RelativesAbiel Abbot Low, brother
William Henry Low, uncle
Abbot Augustus Low, nephew
Seth Low, nephew

Biography

She was born Harriet Low, the second of twelve children of Seth and Mary Porter Low, in Salem, Massachusetts.[3] Her father was a well-to-do merchant and owner of a successful shipping business among the ports of Salem, New York, London, and Canton (modern-day Guangzhou).[2] A leading citizen of Brooklyn, Seth Low was one of the founders of the Unitarian church in that city.[4] As one of four daughters in a large family, Harriet engaged in many household tasks, including sewing and mending.[5]

In 1829 her uncle, American trader William Henry Low, and his wife Abigail Knapp Low (1795–1834), prepared to move to China for a five-year stay. While William Henry Low would be managing business interests for Russell & Co. in Canton, which was off-limits to women, his wife would be staying in Macau. They asked Harriet to accompany them and provide companionship for her aunt.[3] The party boarded the Sumatra for a four-month voyage across the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, which included a three-week stopover in Manila.[6] Harriet arrived in Macau on September 29, 1829,[7][8] and took up residence at 2, Pátio da Sé, at the top of Calçada de S. João.[1] She soon became acquainted with many of the well-known residents of Macau, including the painter George Chinnery,[9] who painted her portrait; the Hong Merchant Mowqua; and the surgeon Thomas Richardson Colledge.[7] Through her uncle's connections, she also became familiar with all the employees of the East India Company along with other prosperous British merchants in the city. As the only unmarried young woman in the colony, she was invited to many "fancy balls, dances, teas and dinners".[10]

Low had a strong desire to visit Canton,[7] the only foreign trading enclave permitted in China at the time. However, under the regulations of the Thirteen Factory System, women were strictly forbidden from entering.[11] Low and her aunt dressed up like boys, sailed to Canton, and went straight to the American Factory. When the Chinese discovered the women's true identities, they threatened to stop all trade in Canton forthwith, forcing Low and her aunt to leave.[7]

During her stay in Macau, Low became secretly engaged to William Wightman Wood, a young naturalist from Philadelphia who was a founder and editor of the Canton Register, one of the first English language newspapers in China. When she informed her uncle of the engagement, he objected to her marrying a "penniless adventurer" and forced her to break off the arrangement.[2][12]

In 1833 Low posed for a portrait by George Chinnery. She wore a low-cut dress in the latest fashion from Calcutta, with the sleeves stuffed with down pillows.[7][13]

In 1833 Harriet departed China with the aunt and uncle to return to Salem. Her uncle, who was seriously ill, died on the way back to the United States.[14]

In 1836 she married John Hillard (1813–1859),[15] a son of English parents who was born in Richmond, Virginia.[16] The couple settled in London, where John was a partner in a large bank.[2] They had three sons and five daughters. Only the girls survived; Mary Hillard Loines was active in the women's suffrage movement.[17]

In 1848 Hillard's bank failed and the family returned to the United States, moving in with Harriet's father in Brooklyn, New York.[2] Hillard became "unstable and sick" and was unable to work.[18] After his death in 1859, Harriet was supported by her family until her death in 1877.

Seth Low, a president of Columbia University, and mayor of Brooklyn and of New York, was her nephew, the son of her brother Abiel Abbot Low.

Journal

Sunday, May 24, 1829: Embarked on board the Sumatra bound to Manila, and thence to Macao, where I shall probably take up my residence for the next four years; and for you, my dear sister, shall this journal be kept. I left home at five o'clock (in the morning) with feelings not to be described or imagined but by those who have been placed in a similar situation.

Harriet Low's journal

Harriet described the multicultural experiences of life in the city under Portuguese administration and the social life of its Anglo-American residents in a journal in the form of letters to her older sister, Mary Ann. She described the many opportunities for socializing at dinners, parties, and balls, and entertainment in the form of musical evenings, card games, amateur theatre, and operas. The women passed the rest of their time reading, writing letters, sewing, learning languages (Harriet learned Spanish), going out on walks, horse riding, and gossiping. As a Unitarian, Harriet was uncomfortable with the dominance of the Catholic religion in Macau.[14][19]

Her journal entries from 1829 to 1834 filled nine volumes,[20] a total of 947 pages.[21] In 1900 her daughter Katharine printed an abridged version of the diary under the title My Mother's Journal: A young lady's diary of five years spent in Manila, Macao, and the Cape of Good Hope from 1829-1834. A re-edited version, including letters that Harriet wrote to her family, was printed by her granddaughter, Elma Loines, in The China Trade Post-Bag in 1953. The journal was printed in its entirety in Lights and Shadows of a Macao Life: The journal of Harriett Low, travelling spinster, Part I (2002), edited by Nan P. Hodges.[10] As a first-person account, the journal is regarded as an important historical document for researchers of the China trade.[14]

Legacy

A bronze drinking fountain dedicated in memory of Harriet Low Hillard, commissioned by her granddaughter Elma Loines in 1910, stands in the Brooklyn Botanic Garden.[22]

gollark: WeirdNess™
gollark: They should reclassify thalassa xenos as those.
gollark: I'm attempting to trade my way to sea serpents.
gollark: ′↑′
gollark: Don't think so. I can't shift mine.

References

  1. Puga, Rogério Miguel (June 2008). "Interpreting Macau through the Journals of Harriett Low and Rebecca Chase Kinsman" (PDF). Sino-Western Cultural Research (中西文化研究). Macau Polytechnic Institute. 1: 157–159. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-06.
  2. Edgerly, Lois Styles (1990). Give Her This Day: A daybook of women's words. Tilbury House Publishing. pp. 146–147. ISBN 978-0-937966-35-8.
  3. Lamas, Everything in Style, p. 2.
  4. (American Unitarian Association) The Unitarian Register, 76 (26 July 1900:827).
  5. Loines, Elma (1953). The China Trade Post-Bag of the Seth Low Family of Salem and New York, 1829–1873. Falmouth Publishing House. p. 17.
  6. Lamas, Everything in Style, p. 18.
  7. Peter C. Perdue. "Rise & Fall of the Canton Trade System". Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved January 8, 2012.
  8. Lamas, Everything in Style, p. 20.
  9. Grant, Don (5 January 2012). "The Flamboyant Mr. Chinnery". Kensington & Chelsea Today. Archived from the original on 3 August 2012. Retrieved 8 January 2012.
  10. Taketani, Etsuko (2003). U.S. Women Writers and the Discourses of Colonialism, 1825-1861. University of Tennessee Press. p. 95. ISBN 1-57233-227-1.
  11. "The Canton System". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1995. Retrieved 8 January 2012.
  12. Haddad, John Rogers (2008). The Romance of China: Excursions to China in US Culture: 1776-1876. Columbia University Press. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-231-13094-3.
  13. Hillard, Katharine (ed.) (1900). My Mother's Journal: A Young Lady's Diary of Five Years Spent in Manila, Macao, and the Cape of Good Hope From 1829-1834. G. H. Ellis. p. 71.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  14. Garrett, Valery (6 September 2006). "Book review of Everything in Style: Harriet Low's Macau". Asian Review of Books. Archived from the original on 18 July 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
  15. Chinese Collections in the Library of Congress: Excerpts from the Annual Report(s) of the Librarian of Congress, 1898-1971: Quarterly journal, 1944-1971. Center for Chinese Research Materials, Association of Research Libraries. 1974. p. 974.
  16. Loines, The China Trade Post-Bag, p. 18.
  17. Stanton, Elizabeth Cady; Anthony, Susan B.; Harper, Ida Husted; Joslyn, Matilda (1902). The History of Woman Suffrage: 1883-1900. 4. Fowler & Wells. p. 860.
  18. Lamas, Everything in Style, p. 285.
  19. Lamas, Everything in Style, pp. 113–117.
  20. Taketani, U.S. Women Writers, p. 94.
  21. Lamas, Everything in Style, p. xii.
  22. "Plants & Gardens". Plants & Gardens. Brooklyn Botanic Garden Record. 4–5: 192. 1949.
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