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Abby Day Slocomb

Abby Day Slocomb (October 5, 1836 – December 6, 1917) was an American inventor, philanthropist and historic preservationist. Born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana, she descended from a Connecticut Revolutionary soldier and was a Quaker. After marrying Cuthbert H. Slocomb in 1860, she served as a nurse during the American Civil War. Her husband was a Confederate officer and the cannon used by his unit was named "Lady Slocomb" in her honor. He died in 1873, leaving his share of the lucrative hardware firm, Slocomb, Baldwin & Company, to his wife and sister, Ida A. Richardson. In addition to her earnings from the business, Slocomb filed several patents. She donated windows to the historic Christ Church Cathedral in New Orleans and helped the Ladies Aid Society raise money to save the church.

Abby Day Slocomb
Slocomb, c. 1890
Born
Abigail Hannah Day

(1836-10-05)October 5, 1836
New Orleans, Louisiana
DiedDecember 6, 1917(1917-12-06) (aged 81)
Zürich, Switzerland
NationalityUSA
Occupation(s)Inventor, preservationist, philanthropist
Spouse
Cuthbert H. Slocomb
(m. 1860; died 1873)
ChildrenCora Slocomb di Brazza

Slocomb moved to Groton, Connecticut, in 1888. She founded that city's chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) in 1892, and three years later founded the chapter in New Orleans. She was the inaugural regent of the Groton chapter and first state director for the Children of the American Revolution (CAR). She also located the lot on which the Memorial Continental Hall, headquarters of the DAR, was built. Realizing that Connecticut did not have an official flag, she pressed the legislature to adopt one and submitted designs for consideration. After a protracted disagreement over which emblem should be chosen, her design was accepted as the Connecticut State flag in 1897.

Interested in historical preservation, she wrote letters to President Theodore Roosevelt and Secretary of War Elihu Root convincing them to turn over Fort Griswold to the care of the state of Connecticut in 1902. A society was formed to preserve the site and the DAR developed a museum at the fort, making its headquarters in the former caretaker's cottage.

When her daughter became ill in 1906, Slocomb moved to Italy where she remained for the rest of her life. The designs she submitted for the Connecticut state flag are located in the Fort Griswold Museum. The cannon which was named after her is on display in front of the Confederate Memorial Hall in New Orleans. The DAR built its headquarters and national meeting place on the lot she found on 17th Street, between Streets C and D in Washington, D.C. The building was completed in 1910 and served as the organization's convention center until 1929. It was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1972.[citation needed]

Early life edit

Abigail Hannah Day was born on October 5, 1836 in New Orleans, Louisiana, to Sarah Eliza (née Armitage) and James Ingersoll Day.[1][2] The family were Quakers and descendants of Elisha Hinman, a soldier in the American Revolutionary War.[3] Hinman was commissioned as commander of the ship Alfred and later the ship Cabot and successfully captured several British ships during the conflict, before being taken prisoner.

Her father, James Day, originally from New London, Connecticut, turned down a military career in favor of business. At seventeen, he moved to New Orleans and worked at the hardware wholesale firm of Palmer & Whiting. When the original partners retired, Day and Robert Slark took over the concern.[4] He later served as president of the Sun Mutual Insurance Company. Her mother was the sister-in-law of his business partner. The couple had six children after Abby – Helen Amelia, Sallie E., Jane W., James Armitage, Marie Louise, and Robert Slark Day. The family lived in New Orleans until Day retired and then moved to Stonington, Connecticut.[5]

 
Cuthbert H. Slocomb by Washburn, 1865

On October 18, 1860, in Stonington, Abby married Cuthbert H. Slocomb,[6] the senior partner in the New Orleans hardware firm of Slocomb, Baldwin & Company. The store had been founded by his father, Samuel B. Slocomb, who died in 1833, leaving an estate of over a million dollars to his wife,[7][8] Cora Ann (née Cox), and three children, Ida, Augusta, and Cuthbert.[9][10] Cuthbert also was the fire chief of the local volunteer fire department and in 1861 enlisted in the elite, 2nd Company of the Washington Artillery of the Confederate States Army for service during the American Civil War.[11] The couple's only child, Cora Ann was born on January 7, 1862.[1][12] In the spring of that year, Cuthbert was assigned to the command of the 5th battalion's Company B, and was injured in the Battle of Shiloh.[11]

At the battle, the cannon "Lady Slocomb", named in honor of Cuthbert's wife, fired its first shot.[13][14] He was later wounded a second time at the Battle of Jonesborough, but after recovering from his wounds returned to command until the surrender of his regiment on May 8, 1865.[11] After his service, he returned to his hardware business.[8]

Career edit

Louisiana (1861–1888) edit

During the war, Slocomb worked as a nurse and after Cuthbert died in 1873, she and her sister-in-law Ida A. Richardson maintained the family interest in the hardware firm.[15][16] She worked professionally under the name Abby Day Slocomb[17][16] and filed several patents.[17][18] The first was for a deodorant made with baking soda and corn starch. She and Jenny Whiting Day were granted patent 279,195 in 1883 and they jointly filed a trademark for a toilet powder in 1885.[17][19][20] In 1896, Slocomb was the sole filer for a patent on a table bell she had designed.[18]

When Cuthbert died in 1873, Slocomb donated two memorial windows in his honor to the Christ Church Cathedral, where he had served as a vestryman.[21][Notes 1] The church was closed in the summer of 1882 because the rector had died in May. The building was in need of repair and the congregation was in severe financial straits. A committee was formed to investigate the costs of repair versus finding a new location. Unable to make a decision on what to do,[23]

Slocomb, her sister-in-law Ida, and her mother-in-law Cora, organized the members of the Ladies Aid Society to raise money to pay off the debts. By the spring of 1883, they had raised $10,000 toward the $14,500 debts the church owed.[24] Despite their efforts, as the remaining debt could not be paid, the building was sold in 1884, and the church had to rent a meeting space until a new building could be constructed in 1886.[25]

Connecticut (1888–1906) edit

 
Memorial Continental Hall, Washington, D.C.

A year after her daughter married and moved to Italy in 1887,[12][26] Slocomb took up residence in Groton, Connecticut.[15] The national chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) was founded in 1890.[27] Two years later, the Anna Warner Bailey chapter was founded in Groton by Slocomb, who was selected by the Connecticut State DAR regent to serve as regent of the Groton chapter.[28][29][30]

In 1895, she was contacted by Augusta Geer, a national vice president of the organization, about founding a Louisiana chapter. Slocomb agreed and set about recruiting members and educating them about the DAR. Establishing a charter and funding its organizational activities, she founded the first Louisiana chapter, the "Spirit of '76" in New Orleans on March 2, 1895.[31][32] That year, the national association, Children of the American Revolution (CAR), was founded with the purpose of educating children about history and the responsibilities of citizenship.[33] Slocomb became the state director for the CAR in 1897.[34] In 1902, she was instrumental in locating a permanent site for the national headquarters of the DAR.[35] Originally the organization was looking at a lot between H and I Streets on Connecticut Avenue,[36] but Slocomb scoured the city for a better location. Her choice was accepted by the committee appointed to select the site.[35] The lot for the Daughters of the American Revolution Hall was located on 17th Street, between Streets C and D, and cost $50,000.[35][37] It was dedicated in 1905.[38]

 
Slocomb's designs for the State Flag of Connecticut

In 1894, Slocomb wrote to the Connecticut General Assembly proposing that a state flag be adopted, when the Groton DAR discovered that there was no official flag.[29] The legislature confirmed the DAR's findings,[39] and a resolution was passed the following year to create a memorial flag. A design competition was opened[29][40] and Slocomb drafted two designs based upon the Seal of Connecticut from 1639. Other designs were proposed by the Grand Army of the Republic, the Sons of the American Revolution, and the Society of Colonial Wars.[29] Many of the veterans' organizations were in favor of adopting their military flags, or assumed that their unit's flag was an official state flag.[41][42] The Hartford Courant was in favor of John James Goodwin's draft and published only his designs. After a two-year campaign by the DAR, the design submitted by Slocomb featuring a Rococo shield and three grapevines to represent the colonies of Connecticut, New Haven, and Saybrook was chosen as the Connecticut State flag.[29] It was adopted and flown above the capitol for the first time at a dedication ceremony at which Slocomb and dignitaries were present on August 12, 1897.[43]

Slocomb lived across the street from Fort Griswold and, as the DAR was concerned about protecting historical sites and artifacts, she began pressuring the government about the fort.[28][29] Writing letters to federal officials, she corresponded with President Theodore Roosevelt and Elihu Root, United States Secretary of War, urging them to allow the State of Connecticut to care for the site. Her efforts were successful in 1902, when the federal government turned over the fort to the state.[35] The following year, the governor appointed a commission to take charge of its preservation.[44] She led the Groton DAR chapter to restore the caretaker's house and establish a museum. The chapter moved into the Monument House at Fort Griswold, making it its headquarters.[45]

Italy (1906–1917) edit

 
Cora Slocomb di Brazza, craftswomen making lace, and her lace school at the Castello di Brazza in Moruzzo, Italy

After eighteen years of living in Groton, Slocomb moved to Italy to be near her daughter in 1906.[28] Cora had started a lace cooperative in Moruzzo, to assist the poverty-stricken women in Friuli.[46] She taught local women how to make lace, founded six lace-making schools, and helped them market their wares.[47][48] In 1906, after organizing earthquake relief in Calabria, Cora had a physical and mental collapse, when she was returning home.[49][50] She was diagnosed with a form of osteoporosis, known as Paget's disease of bone, which impacted her skull and caused severe and debilitating headaches.[51] Although her family visited her, for the rest of her life, Cora was confined to mental hospitals, as she was often confused and unable to comprehend or recognize people and events she encountered.[52][53] Slocomb lived in Italy during the winter and spent her summers in Switzerland.[54]

Death and legacy edit

 
Lady Slocomb Cannon in front of Confederate Memorial Hall Museum

Slocomb died on December 6, 1917, in Zürich. At the time of her death, she was remembered for her charitable work and efforts in historic preservation.[55] Legend maintained that the "Lady Slocomb" fired the "last shot in the last battle of the last American war", at the engagement of Spanish Fort. After the battle, it was buried to prevent its capture.[13][14] In 1891, the cannon was retrieved by the Blue and Gray Union and taken to Mobile, Alabama, and five years later it was put up for sale.[14][56] It was purchased and placed at the entry to the Confederate Memorial Hall in New Orleans in 1899.[56][57][58] The DAR headquarters building was completed in 1910 and served as the meeting place for the organization until 1929.[59] It was listed as a National Historic Landmark in 1972.[60] Slocomb's designs for the Connecticut state flag are on display at the Fort Griswold Museum.[29] In 2014, a time capsule Slocomb had created in Italy in 1914, hoping that Italian newspaper clippings would add historic perspective to the events of World War I was opened by the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter of the Connecticut DAR at their annual fundraising event.[15]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The source says Cuthbert's wife was named Cora,[21] but that was the name of his mother and his daughter.[22]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Osborne 1893, p. 23.
  2. ^ Johnston 1897, p. 73.
  3. ^ Pucci 2020, p. 10.
  4. ^ Beers 1905, p. 706.
  5. ^ Beers 1905, p. 707.
  6. ^ New York Evening Post 1860, p. 3.
  7. ^ Sylvia 2017, p. 45.
  8. ^ a b Cooper 1922, p. 95.
  9. ^ Christovich 1998, p. 42.
  10. ^ Ripley 1999, pp. 118, 167.
  11. ^ a b c Sylvia 2017, p. 46.
  12. ^ a b Eagle 1895, p. 697.
  13. ^ a b The Daily Intelligencer 1896, p. 4.
  14. ^ a b c The Saturday Evening Post 1896, p. 11.
  15. ^ a b c This Is Mystic 2014.
  16. ^ a b Land 1882, p. 72.
  17. ^ a b c Grosswirth 1976, p. 74.
  18. ^ a b Jewelers' Circular and Horological Review 1897, p. 34.
  19. ^ Slocomb & Day 1883.
  20. ^ Official Gazette 1885, p. 1308.
  21. ^ a b Carter & Carter 1955, p. 179.
  22. ^ Cocks 1914, pp. 118–119.
  23. ^ Carter & Carter 1955, pp. 181–182.
  24. ^ Carter & Carter 1955, pp. 183–185.
  25. ^ Carter & Carter 1955, pp. 185–187.
  26. ^ The Times-Picayune 1887, p. 8.
  27. ^ The Farmerville Gazette 2020.
  28. ^ a b c Kimball, Streeter & Comrie 2007, p. 35.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g Mancini 2011.
  30. ^ Hartford Courant 1894, p. 8.
  31. ^ The Times-Picayune 1895, p. 24.
  32. ^ Minor 1897, p. 487.
  33. ^ Record-Journal 1895, p. 6.
  34. ^ Record-Journal 1897, p. 6.
  35. ^ a b c d The Meriden Daily Journal 1902, p. 6.
  36. ^ The News-Journal 1902, p. 4.
  37. ^ The Evening Star 1906, p. 27.
  38. ^ The Iola Daily Record 1905, p. 1.
  39. ^ Hartford Courant 1897a, p. 10.
  40. ^ Hartford Courant 1895, p. 5.
  41. ^ The Meriden Daily Republican 1895, p. 3.
  42. ^ The Meriden Daily Journal 1895, p. 1.
  43. ^ Hartford Courant 1897b, p. 5.
  44. ^ The Morning Journal-Courier 1903, p. 8.
  45. ^ Kimball 2008, pp. 43, 99.
  46. ^ Pucci 2022, p. 95.
  47. ^ Porpora 2019.
  48. ^ Pucci 2022, pp. 94–97.
  49. ^ The New York Times 1907, p. 23.
  50. ^ Pucci 2020, p. 260.
  51. ^ Pucci 2022, p. 116.
  52. ^ Pucci 2020, pp. 260–261.
  53. ^ Pucci 2022, p. 127.
  54. ^ Sylvia 2017, p. 50.
  55. ^ New York Herald 1917, p. 7.
  56. ^ a b Brannon 1948, p. 10.
  57. ^ The Picayune's Guide 1903, p. 114.
  58. ^ Rightor 1900, p. 439.
  59. ^ Gamble & Redburn 1972, p. 2.
  60. ^ National Park Service 1972.

Bibliography edit

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abby, slocomb, abby, redirects, here, girl, character, list, girl, characters, abby, october, 1836, december, 1917, american, inventor, philanthropist, historic, preservationist, born, raised, orleans, louisiana, descended, from, connecticut, revolutionary, so. Abby Day redirects here For New Girl character see List of New Girl characters Abby Day Abby Day Slocomb October 5 1836 December 6 1917 was an American inventor philanthropist and historic preservationist Born and raised in New Orleans Louisiana she descended from a Connecticut Revolutionary soldier and was a Quaker After marrying Cuthbert H Slocomb in 1860 she served as a nurse during the American Civil War Her husband was a Confederate officer and the cannon used by his unit was named Lady Slocomb in her honor He died in 1873 leaving his share of the lucrative hardware firm Slocomb Baldwin amp Company to his wife and sister Ida A Richardson In addition to her earnings from the business Slocomb filed several patents She donated windows to the historic Christ Church Cathedral in New Orleans and helped the Ladies Aid Society raise money to save the church Abby Day SlocombSlocomb c 1890BornAbigail Hannah Day 1836 10 05 October 5 1836New Orleans LouisianaDiedDecember 6 1917 1917 12 06 aged 81 Zurich SwitzerlandNationalityUSAOccupation s Inventor preservationist philanthropistSpouseCuthbert H Slocomb m 1860 died 1873 wbr ChildrenCora Slocomb di BrazzaSlocomb moved to Groton Connecticut in 1888 She founded that city s chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution DAR in 1892 and three years later founded the chapter in New Orleans She was the inaugural regent of the Groton chapter and first state director for the Children of the American Revolution CAR She also located the lot on which the Memorial Continental Hall headquarters of the DAR was built Realizing that Connecticut did not have an official flag she pressed the legislature to adopt one and submitted designs for consideration After a protracted disagreement over which emblem should be chosen her design was accepted as the Connecticut State flag in 1897 Interested in historical preservation she wrote letters to President Theodore Roosevelt and Secretary of War Elihu Root convincing them to turn over Fort Griswold to the care of the state of Connecticut in 1902 A society was formed to preserve the site and the DAR developed a museum at the fort making its headquarters in the former caretaker s cottage When her daughter became ill in 1906 Slocomb moved to Italy where she remained for the rest of her life The designs she submitted for the Connecticut state flag are located in the Fort Griswold Museum The cannon which was named after her is on display in front of the Confederate Memorial Hall in New Orleans The DAR built its headquarters and national meeting place on the lot she found on 17th Street between Streets C and D in Washington D C The building was completed in 1910 and served as the organization s convention center until 1929 It was designated as a National Historic Landmark in 1972 citation needed Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Louisiana 1861 1888 2 2 Connecticut 1888 1906 2 3 Italy 1906 1917 3 Death and legacy 4 Notes 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 BibliographyEarly life editAbigail Hannah Day was born on October 5 1836 in New Orleans Louisiana to Sarah Eliza nee Armitage and James Ingersoll Day 1 2 The family were Quakers and descendants of Elisha Hinman a soldier in the American Revolutionary War 3 Hinman was commissioned as commander of the ship Alfred and later the ship Cabot and successfully captured several British ships during the conflict before being taken prisoner Her father James Day originally from New London Connecticut turned down a military career in favor of business At seventeen he moved to New Orleans and worked at the hardware wholesale firm of Palmer amp Whiting When the original partners retired Day and Robert Slark took over the concern 4 He later served as president of the Sun Mutual Insurance Company Her mother was the sister in law of his business partner The couple had six children after Abby Helen Amelia Sallie E Jane W James Armitage Marie Louise and Robert Slark Day The family lived in New Orleans until Day retired and then moved to Stonington Connecticut 5 nbsp Cuthbert H Slocomb by Washburn 1865On October 18 1860 in Stonington Abby married Cuthbert H Slocomb 6 the senior partner in the New Orleans hardware firm of Slocomb Baldwin amp Company The store had been founded by his father Samuel B Slocomb who died in 1833 leaving an estate of over a million dollars to his wife 7 8 Cora Ann nee Cox and three children Ida Augusta and Cuthbert 9 10 Cuthbert also was the fire chief of the local volunteer fire department and in 1861 enlisted in the elite 2nd Company of the Washington Artillery of the Confederate States Army for service during the American Civil War 11 The couple s only child Cora Ann was born on January 7 1862 1 12 In the spring of that year Cuthbert was assigned to the command of the 5th battalion s Company B and was injured in the Battle of Shiloh 11 At the battle the cannon Lady Slocomb named in honor of Cuthbert s wife fired its first shot 13 14 He was later wounded a second time at the Battle of Jonesborough but after recovering from his wounds returned to command until the surrender of his regiment on May 8 1865 11 After his service he returned to his hardware business 8 Career editLouisiana 1861 1888 edit During the war Slocomb worked as a nurse and after Cuthbert died in 1873 she and her sister in law Ida A Richardson maintained the family interest in the hardware firm 15 16 She worked professionally under the name Abby Day Slocomb 17 16 and filed several patents 17 18 The first was for a deodorant made with baking soda and corn starch She and Jenny Whiting Day were granted patent 279 195 in 1883 and they jointly filed a trademark for a toilet powder in 1885 17 19 20 In 1896 Slocomb was the sole filer for a patent on a table bell she had designed 18 When Cuthbert died in 1873 Slocomb donated two memorial windows in his honor to the Christ Church Cathedral where he had served as a vestryman 21 Notes 1 The church was closed in the summer of 1882 because the rector had died in May The building was in need of repair and the congregation was in severe financial straits A committee was formed to investigate the costs of repair versus finding a new location Unable to make a decision on what to do 23 Slocomb her sister in law Ida and her mother in law Cora organized the members of the Ladies Aid Society to raise money to pay off the debts By the spring of 1883 they had raised 10 000 toward the 14 500 debts the church owed 24 Despite their efforts as the remaining debt could not be paid the building was sold in 1884 and the church had to rent a meeting space until a new building could be constructed in 1886 25 Connecticut 1888 1906 edit nbsp Memorial Continental Hall Washington D C A year after her daughter married and moved to Italy in 1887 12 26 Slocomb took up residence in Groton Connecticut 15 The national chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution DAR was founded in 1890 27 Two years later the Anna Warner Bailey chapter was founded in Groton by Slocomb who was selected by the Connecticut State DAR regent to serve as regent of the Groton chapter 28 29 30 In 1895 she was contacted by Augusta Geer a national vice president of the organization about founding a Louisiana chapter Slocomb agreed and set about recruiting members and educating them about the DAR Establishing a charter and funding its organizational activities she founded the first Louisiana chapter the Spirit of 76 in New Orleans on March 2 1895 31 32 That year the national association Children of the American Revolution CAR was founded with the purpose of educating children about history and the responsibilities of citizenship 33 Slocomb became the state director for the CAR in 1897 34 In 1902 she was instrumental in locating a permanent site for the national headquarters of the DAR 35 Originally the organization was looking at a lot between H and I Streets on Connecticut Avenue 36 but Slocomb scoured the city for a better location Her choice was accepted by the committee appointed to select the site 35 The lot for the Daughters of the American Revolution Hall was located on 17th Street between Streets C and D and cost 50 000 35 37 It was dedicated in 1905 38 nbsp Slocomb s designs for the State Flag of ConnecticutIn 1894 Slocomb wrote to the Connecticut General Assembly proposing that a state flag be adopted when the Groton DAR discovered that there was no official flag 29 The legislature confirmed the DAR s findings 39 and a resolution was passed the following year to create a memorial flag A design competition was opened 29 40 and Slocomb drafted two designs based upon the Seal of Connecticut from 1639 Other designs were proposed by the Grand Army of the Republic the Sons of the American Revolution and the Society of Colonial Wars 29 Many of the veterans organizations were in favor of adopting their military flags or assumed that their unit s flag was an official state flag 41 42 The Hartford Courant was in favor of John James Goodwin s draft and published only his designs After a two year campaign by the DAR the design submitted by Slocomb featuring a Rococo shield and three grapevines to represent the colonies of Connecticut New Haven and Saybrook was chosen as the Connecticut State flag 29 It was adopted and flown above the capitol for the first time at a dedication ceremony at which Slocomb and dignitaries were present on August 12 1897 43 Slocomb lived across the street from Fort Griswold and as the DAR was concerned about protecting historical sites and artifacts she began pressuring the government about the fort 28 29 Writing letters to federal officials she corresponded with President Theodore Roosevelt and Elihu Root United States Secretary of War urging them to allow the State of Connecticut to care for the site Her efforts were successful in 1902 when the federal government turned over the fort to the state 35 The following year the governor appointed a commission to take charge of its preservation 44 She led the Groton DAR chapter to restore the caretaker s house and establish a museum The chapter moved into the Monument House at Fort Griswold making it its headquarters 45 Italy 1906 1917 edit nbsp Cora Slocomb di Brazza craftswomen making lace and her lace school at the Castello di Brazza in Moruzzo ItalyAfter eighteen years of living in Groton Slocomb moved to Italy to be near her daughter in 1906 28 Cora had started a lace cooperative in Moruzzo to assist the poverty stricken women in Friuli 46 She taught local women how to make lace founded six lace making schools and helped them market their wares 47 48 In 1906 after organizing earthquake relief in Calabria Cora had a physical and mental collapse when she was returning home 49 50 She was diagnosed with a form of osteoporosis known as Paget s disease of bone which impacted her skull and caused severe and debilitating headaches 51 Although her family visited her for the rest of her life Cora was confined to mental hospitals as she was often confused and unable to comprehend or recognize people and events she encountered 52 53 Slocomb lived in Italy during the winter and spent her summers in Switzerland 54 Death and legacy edit nbsp Lady Slocomb Cannon in front of Confederate Memorial Hall MuseumSlocomb died on December 6 1917 in Zurich At the time of her death she was remembered for her charitable work and efforts in historic preservation 55 Legend maintained that the Lady Slocomb fired the last shot in the last battle of the last American war at the engagement of Spanish Fort After the battle it was buried to prevent its capture 13 14 In 1891 the cannon was retrieved by the Blue and Gray Union and taken to Mobile Alabama and five years later it was put up for sale 14 56 It was purchased and placed at the entry to the Confederate Memorial Hall in New Orleans in 1899 56 57 58 The DAR headquarters building was completed in 1910 and served as the meeting place for the organization until 1929 59 It was listed as a National Historic Landmark in 1972 60 Slocomb s designs for the Connecticut state flag are on display at the Fort Griswold Museum 29 In 2014 a time capsule Slocomb had created in Italy in 1914 hoping that Italian newspaper clippings would add historic perspective to the events of World War I was opened by the Anna Warner Bailey Chapter of the Connecticut DAR at their annual fundraising event 15 Notes edit The source says Cuthbert s wife was named Cora 21 but that was the name of his mother and his daughter 22 References editCitations edit a b Osborne 1893 p 23 Johnston 1897 p 73 Pucci 2020 p 10 Beers 1905 p 706 Beers 1905 p 707 New York Evening Post 1860 p 3 Sylvia 2017 p 45 a b Cooper 1922 p 95 Christovich 1998 p 42 Ripley 1999 pp 118 167 a b c Sylvia 2017 p 46 a b Eagle 1895 p 697 a b The Daily Intelligencer 1896 p 4 a b c The Saturday Evening Post 1896 p 11 a b c This Is Mystic 2014 a b Land 1882 p 72 a b c Grosswirth 1976 p 74 a b Jewelers Circular and Horological Review 1897 p 34 Slocomb amp Day 1883 Official Gazette 1885 p 1308 a b Carter amp Carter 1955 p 179 Cocks 1914 pp 118 119 Carter amp Carter 1955 pp 181 182 Carter amp Carter 1955 pp 183 185 Carter amp Carter 1955 pp 185 187 The Times Picayune 1887 p 8 The Farmerville Gazette 2020 a b c Kimball Streeter amp Comrie 2007 p 35 a b c d e f g Mancini 2011 Hartford Courant 1894 p 8 The Times Picayune 1895 p 24 Minor 1897 p 487 Record Journal 1895 p 6 Record Journal 1897 p 6 a b c d The Meriden Daily Journal 1902 p 6 The News Journal 1902 p 4 The Evening Star 1906 p 27 The Iola Daily Record 1905 p 1 Hartford Courant 1897a p 10 Hartford Courant 1895 p 5 The Meriden Daily Republican 1895 p 3 The Meriden Daily Journal 1895 p 1 Hartford Courant 1897b p 5 The Morning Journal Courier 1903 p 8 Kimball 2008 pp 43 99 Pucci 2022 p 95 Porpora 2019 Pucci 2022 pp 94 97 The New York Times 1907 p 23 Pucci 2020 p 260 Pucci 2022 p 116 Pucci 2020 pp 260 261 Pucci 2022 p 127 Sylvia 2017 p 50 New York Herald 1917 p 7 a b Brannon 1948 p 10 The Picayune s Guide 1903 p 114 Rightor 1900 p 439 Gamble amp Redburn 1972 p 2 National Park Service 1972 Bibliography edit Brannon Peter A September 12 1948 Through the Years The Lady Slocomb of Alabama The Montgomery Advertiser Montgomery Alabama p 10 columns 1 2 column 3 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com Carter Hodding Carter Betty Werlein 1955 So Great a Good A History of the Episcopal Church in Louisiana and of Christ Church Cathedral 1805 1955 Sewanee Tennessee The University Press OCLC 1328899 Christovich Mary Louise 1998 New Orleans Architecture The American Sector Paperback ed New Orleans Louisiana Pelican Publishing ISBN 978 1 4556 0933 8 Cocks George William 1914 History and Genealogy of the Cock Cocks Cox Family Descended from James and Sarah Cock of Killingworth Upon Matinecock in the Township of Oyster Bay Long Island New York 2nd ed New York New York Privately printed OCLC 608715478 Cooper Clay C ed June 1922 A Baldwin amp Co One Hundred Years in Business Mill Supplies 12 6 Chicago Illinois The Crawford Publishing Company 95 Retrieved January 29 2023 Eagle Mary Kavanaugh Oldham ed 1895 The Congress of Women Held in the Woman s Building World s Columbian Exposition Chicago U S A 1893 Official ed Chicago Illinois International Publishing Company OCLC 1215981 Gamble Robert Redburn Chris August 1972 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Memorial Continental Hall Site of Washington Conference of 1921 1922 Report Washington D C National Park Service Grosswirth Marvin March 1976 The Wonders of NaHCO3 Baking Soda Science Digest 79 3 Des Moines Iowa Hearst Corporation 70 75 ISSN 0036 8296 Johnston Elizabeth Bryant 1897 Mrs Abby H Day Slocomb 2205 Lineage Book Vol 3 2001 3000 1893 Washington D C The National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution p 73 OCLC 1565972 Kimball Carol W 2008 Remembering Groton Tales from East of the Thames Charleston South Carolina History Press ISBN 978 1 59629 513 1 Kimball Carol W Streeter James L Comrie Marilyn J 2007 Groton Revisited Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 0 7385 5490 7 Land John E 1882 Pen Illustrations of New Orleans 1881 82 Trade Commerce and Manufactures New Orleans Louisiana Jno E Land OCLC 6478090 Mancini Juli April 1 2011 The Connecticut State Flag Go Girls Patch New York New York Archived from the original on February 1 2023 Retrieved March 9 2023 Minor Katharine L April 1897 Louisiana American Monthly Vol 10 no 4 Washington D C National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution pp 487 489 Retrieved March 9 2023 Osborne Arthur Dimon 1893 A Few Facts Relating to the Origin and History of John Dolbeare of Boston And Some of His Descendants New Haven Connecticut n s OCLC 8090421 Porpora Genevieve 2019 Cora Slocomb Enciclopedia delle donne in Italian Milan Italy Societa per l enciclopedia delle donne Archived from the original on January 29 2023 Retrieved January 30 2023 Pucci Idanna 2022 Cora Slocomb Savorgnan di Brazza An Artisan of Peace and Social Justice In Laurenzi Elena Mosca Manuela eds A Female Activist Elite in Italy 1890 1920 Its International Network and Legacy Cham Switzerland Palgrave Macmillan pp 93 129 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 87159 8 ISBN 978 3 030 87159 8 Pucci Idanna 2020 The Lady of Sing Sing An American Countess An Italian Immigrant and Their Epic Battle for Justice in New York s Gilded Age New York New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 1 982139 31 5 Rightor Henry 1900 Standard History of New Orleans Louisiana Chicago Illinois Lewis Publishing Company OCLC 5633932 Ripley Eliza 1999 Social Life in Old New Orleans New Orleans Louisiana Pelican Publishing ISBN 978 1 4556 1201 7 Sylvia Stephen W 2017 Uniforms of Capt Cuthbert H Slocomb PDF North South Trader s Civil War Vol 40 no 3 Orange Virginia Publisher s Press Inc pp 38 52 ISSN 0094 7318 Archived PDF from the original on March 9 2023 Retrieved March 9 2023 A State Flag Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut May 30 1895 p 5 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com An Historic Cannon The Saturday Evening Post Vol 76 no 24 Philadelphia Pennsylvania Curtis Publishing Company December 12 1896 p 11 ISSN 0048 9239 Retrieved March 10 2023 C A R Convention Record Journal Meriden Connecticut January 21 1897 p 6 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com City and Vicinity State Flag Dedicated Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut August 13 1897 p 5 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com Countess di Brazzo Better The New York Times New York New York December 29 1907 p 23 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspaperarchive com D Arbonne Chapter DAR meets in Farmerville The Farmerville Gazette Farmerville Louisiana February 13 2020 Archived from the original on August 6 2020 Retrieved March 9 2023 Daughters of the Revolution The News Journal Lancaster Pennsylvania February 18 1902 p 4 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Do Not Favor Scheme The Meriden Daily Journal Meriden Connecticut June 4 1895 p 1 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com James Ingersoll Day Genealogical and Biographical Record of New London County Connecticut Containing Biographical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens and Genealogical Records of Many of the Early Settled Families Chicago Illinois J H Beers amp Company 1905 pp 705 707 OCLC 3525737 Last Shot of the War The Daily Intelligencer Vol 30 no 165 Belleville Ontario November 13 1896 p 4 column 2 Retrieved March 9 2023 Married Slocomb Day PDF New York Evening Post Vol 59 no 250 New York New York October 20 1860 p 3 column 4 Retrieved March 8 2023 Met at Groton The Morning Journal Courier New Haven Connecticut July 29 1903 p 8 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com Mrs Abby Day Slocomb New York Herald New York New York December 12 1917 p 7 Retrieved March 9 2023 via Newspapers com National Register Digital Assets Memorial Continental Hall NPGallery Digital Asset Management System Washington D C National Park Service November 28 1972 Archived from the original on October 8 2019 Retrieved March 11 2023 Patriotic Woman s Work The Meriden Daily Journal Meriden Connecticut July 2 1902 p 6 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Revolution Memorial The Iola Daily Record Iola Kansas April 19 1905 p 1 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Slocomb di Brazza The Times Picayune New Orleans Louisiana November 8 1887 p 8 column 3 column 4 Retrieved March 9 2023 via Newspapers com Stonington Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut April 28 1894 p 8 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com Talk on 100 Year Old Time Capsule Message This Is Mystic Mystic Connecticut Greater Mystic Chamber of Commerce October 25 2014 Archived from the original on March 8 2023 Retrieved March 9 2023 The Confederate Memorial Hall The Picayune s Guide to New Orleans PDF 5 ed New Orleans Louisiana The Times Picayune 1903 p 113 114 OCLC 903821712 The Flag Is Sacred Record Journal Meriden Connecticut July 20 1895 p 6 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com The Latest Patents Jewelers Circular and Horological Review 34 1 New York New York Jewelers Circular Publishing Co 34 February 24 1897 OCLC 656553511 The Spirit of 76 The Times Picayune New Orleans Louisiana March 24 1895 p 24 Retrieved March 9 2023 via Newspapers com The State Flag The Meriden Daily Republican Meriden Connecticut June 28 1895 p 3 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com The State Flag Hartford Courant Hartford Connecticut January 7 1897 p 10 Retrieved March 10 2023 via Newspapers com Trademarks Official Gazette 31 11 Washington D C United States Patent and Trademark Office 1308 June 16 1885 OCLC 1768634 Retrieved March 10 2023 US patent 279195 Solcomb Abby Day amp Day Jennie W Deodorizing Perspiration Powder published June 12 1883 Washington Choral Society The Evening Star Washington D C April 29 1906 p 27 Retrieved March 11 2023 via Newspapers com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abby Day Slocomb amp oldid 1217147275, 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