election and inaugural day

This the place to have frank, but cordial, discussions of the Lizzie Borden case

Moderator: Adminlizzieborden

Post Reply
User avatar
snokkums
Posts: 2543
Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2005 10:09 am
Gender: Female
Real Name: Robin
Location: fayetteville nc,but from milwaukee
Contact:

election and inaugural day

Post by snokkums »

With all the hoopla that went on yesterday with the inauguration, I wonder what Lizzie would have thought.

And we did elect our first Black president; wonder what her views of that would have been. I mean, she was of her time, which probably didn't see to many black back then didn't fair to well. I wonder if she would have enjoyed watching Obama getting sworn in and the parade that followed.

I bet she would have loved the balls that happened that night!
Suicide is painless It brings on many changes and I will take my leave when I please.
User avatar
SallyG
Posts: 491
Joined: Sat Jan 14, 2006 4:49 pm
Gender: Female
Real Name: Sally Glynn
Location: Gainesville, Florida
Contact:

Post by SallyG »

I enjoyed yesterdays festivities, but wonder how many are aware that there have been several presidents with black ancestry?

As you stated, Lizzie was a product of her time, so her views would have probably reflected the era.
User avatar
snokkums
Posts: 2543
Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2005 10:09 am
Gender: Female
Real Name: Robin
Location: fayetteville nc,but from milwaukee
Contact:

Post by snokkums »

I don't know of any at all Sally. I know that Thomas Jefferson father a child by one of his slave women. That's as close as I come to knowing anything about that.
Suicide is painless It brings on many changes and I will take my leave when I please.
User avatar
SallyG
Posts: 491
Joined: Sat Jan 14, 2006 4:49 pm
Gender: Female
Real Name: Sally Glynn
Location: Gainesville, Florida
Contact:

Post by SallyG »

There are some interesting articles about it online. Anyone whose family has been in America from the 1700's on back is very likely to have mixed ancestry. I have it myself and my family has been here since the 1500's.

History is a very interesting subject to me and I seem to stumble across all kinds of interesting little tidbits in my reading.
User avatar
doug65oh
Posts: 1581
Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2004 11:26 am
Real Name:

Post by doug65oh »

All things considered, I honestly suspect that Lizzie would have been horrified by yesterday's events. Deeply fascinated, but horrified just the same.
I staid the night for shelter at a farm behind the mountains, with a mother and son - two "old-believers." They did all the talking...
- Robert Frost
User avatar
Kashesan
Posts: 323
Joined: Fri Apr 23, 2004 7:59 am
Real Name:
Location: Boston

Post by Kashesan »

His birthday is August 4
"It seemed friendly enough, but it had sharp claws and a great many teeth. Alice thought it best to treat it with respect"
Lewis Carroll
User avatar
Kat
Posts: 14770
Joined: Sun Dec 28, 2003 11:59 pm
Real Name:
Location: Central Florida

Post by Kat »

I didn't know that!
Thanks!
:smile:
User avatar
snokkums
Posts: 2543
Joined: Sat Jan 08, 2005 10:09 am
Gender: Female
Real Name: Robin
Location: fayetteville nc,but from milwaukee
Contact:

Post by snokkums »

doug65oh @ Wed Jan 21, 2009 10:54 pm wrote:All things considered, I honestly suspect that Lizzie would have been horrified by yesterday's events. Deeply fascinated, but horrified just the same.


Why would you say she would be horrified? I think she'd be amazed at the events. Maybe alittle shocked too. :shock:
Suicide is painless It brings on many changes and I will take my leave when I please.
User avatar
1bigsteve
Posts: 2138
Joined: Wed Aug 31, 2005 11:29 pm
Real Name: evetS
Location: California

Post by 1bigsteve »

Lizzie might have been more outgoing in her thinking, after all she did sell 92nd street and move into a rich home with servants, trips, parties, hob-nobing, etc. Who knows for sure but I think the present Presidental activities may not have bothered Lizzie much. She may have welcomed it.

But, like me, she might have been relieved that all the gap flapping is finally over. :smile:

-1bigsteve (o:
"All of your tomorrows begin today. Move it!" -Susan Hayward 1973
User avatar
doug65oh
Posts: 1581
Joined: Thu Apr 22, 2004 11:26 am
Real Name:

Post by doug65oh »

Well, to my way of thinking it comes down to this and this exactly: The question has to be examined in context of the times in which Lizzie Borden walked the earth. When she entered the world in 1860, several millions were seen as constitutionally inferior because of their race – seen as property because of their race.

Fast forward about 65 years to the middle 1920s. The war has been over for 60 years. Slavery is gone. White women get the vote. Massachusetts had been a haven for progressive thought and action for 150 years – and that reputation was not undeserved. But Edward W. Brooke (who became the first Black Congressman elected in Massachusetts some 40 years after Lizzie Borden went to her reward) wasn’t even born yet.

Sure, Lizzie was a moneyed hob-nobber the last half of her life – with them who cared to hob-nob with her – but beyond that the only things we know or can reasonably surmise is that her servants were white.

As Sally said so well: For good or ill, we’re all products of the times in which we live.
I staid the night for shelter at a farm behind the mountains, with a mother and son - two "old-believers." They did all the talking...
- Robert Frost
Post Reply