{"id":15944,"date":"2021-05-18T00:15:17","date_gmt":"2021-05-18T00:15:17","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.erotica-readers.com\/?p=15944"},"modified":"2021-05-18T22:03:00","modified_gmt":"2021-05-18T22:03:00","slug":"horse-thief-detectives-and-bonnet-bleachers-making-the-past-come-alive-with-city-directories","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/erotica-readers.com\/blog\/2021\/05\/18\/horse-thief-detectives-and-bonnet-bleachers-making-the-past-come-alive-with-city-directories\/","title":{"rendered":"Horse Thief Detectives and Bonnet Bleachers: Making the Past Come Alive with City Directories"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a><\/p>\n As writers of historical fiction, we strive to make the past come alive for our readers. Historical fiction creates a special contract between author and reader. The author is expected not only to create convincing characters, but to have deep knowledge of the culture and daily life of the times.<\/p>\n It\u2019s not an easy task, but I\u2019ve recently discovered a fun way to immerse myself in the world of the nineteenth century: perusing city directories from a century ago. Historical city directories are available in many library reference rooms, but better still are readily accessible online through historical society webpages, Google Books, Family Search, Ancestry, and other websites.<\/p>\n One might ask, \u201cThe people listed in this directory have long since passed on to their reward. I can\u2019t even drop in for a chat and a cup of tea. What use are names and addresses from 1856?\u201d<\/p>\n Of course names and addresses in themselves provide useful information for a writer. Which sorts of names were popular in that time and place? There are fewer Mabels and Clementines running around today. Where did one go shopping for certain items? Who lived in private residences, usually marked by \u201chouse\u201d or an \u201ch,\u201d and who lived in a boarding house, marked with \u201cbds,\u201d one quick distinction between the higher classes and the lower?<\/p>\n That is just the beginning of the delights within the yellowed pages of a city directory, however. Let\u2019s take a look at The York Gazetteer and Business Directory<\/em><\/a> from 1856. This compendium contains historical sketches, lists of churches, clubs, post offices, schools, and merchants, \u201ctogether with interesting miscellaneous articles and useful receipts\u201d and, naturally, an abundance of advertisements.<\/p>\n The entries for service providers alone provides an enlightening portrait of commerce in a Pennsylvania town in the 1850s. Starting with \u201cAttorneys,\u201d highlights of the list include:<\/p>\n Blacksmiths (The York Gazetteer and Business Directory, 1856<\/em> (York, PA: John Denig, Book Agent, 1856); \u201cU.S., City Directories, 1822-1995,\u201d Ancestry.com<\/em>, p 17-27, image 19-29.)<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n [The York Gazetteer and Business Directory, 1856<\/em>, p. 30, image 32.]<\/p>\n My favorite discovery in this directory is the \u201cHorse Thief Detecting Society of York County.\u201d Am I too far gone in historical research to think that would make a good title for a story? In its day, the society served a useful purpose. What else was to prevent an unethical fellow from riding off with your horse one dark night and quickly selling or trading the animal to an unwitting new owner? Founded in 1850 for members who lived within a 12-mile radius of the Borough of York, the society and others in the surrounding area helped members in the recovery of a horse or paid for a new horse from the insurance fund created by the annual dues. Members were required to brand their horses with the society\u2019s brand. As we see from the clipping at the top of this post, the president of the Paradise Horse Thief Detecting Society, a township close to York, placed a notice for a decent reward in the York Gazette<\/em>. \u201c$25 Reward,\u201d York Gazette<\/em>, 7 May 1872, p. 3; Newspapers.com<\/em>)<\/p>\n By the 1920s, horse thief detection societies were disbanding due to the popularity of automobiles\u2014which required their own more complex form of insurance. The dues that had accrued over the years were divided among the remaining members who owed their windfall to their thrifty ancestors. The 125 members of the Glen Rock society received $15.56 each in 1926, the year my father was born in York City. (\u201cHorse Thief Detecting Society Will Liquidate–$1,945 in treasury,\u201d York Dispatch<\/em>, 6 Dec 1926, page 16; Newspapers.com<\/em>)<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n
\nCoal Dealers
\nDaguerreotypists
\nGentlemen–And as such follow no particular occupation.
\nHatters
\nInn Keepers
\nLaborers
\nLimeburners
\nLivery Stables
\nLaborers
\nSaddlers
\nSausage stuffer [only one listed]
\nSoap and Candle Manufacturers
\nTurners
\nWagonmakers
\nWhip Manufacturers<\/p>\n