Jump to Content

Collection Guide
Collection Title:
Collection Number:
Get Items:
Ladies' Silk-Culture Society of California ledger
SFH 558  
View entire collection guide What's This?
Search this collection
Collection Details
 
Table of contents What's This?
  • Descriptive Summary
  • Access
  • Publication Rights
  • Preferred Citation
  • Acquisition Information
  • Biography/Administrative History
  • Scope and Content of Collection
  • Indexing Terms

  • Descriptive Summary

    Title: Ladies' Silk-Culture Society of California ledger
    Dates: 1889-1890
    Collection Number: SFH 558
    Creator/Collector: Ladies' Silk Culture Society of California
    Extent: 1 volume
    Repository: San Francisco Public Library. San Francisco History Center
    San Francisco, California 94102
    Abstract: Income and disbursements for a silk culture promotional organization
    Language of Material: English

    Access

    The collection is available for use during San Francisco History Center hours.

    Publication Rights

    All requests for permission to publish or quote from manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the City Archivist. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the San Francisco Public Library as the owner of the physical items.

    Preferred Citation

    Ladies' Silk-Culture Society of California ledger. San Francisco Public Library. San Francisco History Center

    Acquisition Information

    Purchase

    Biography/Administrative History

    The Society was organized and incorporated in 1885, formed out of the California Silk Culture Association. The Society would promote silk culture and teach farmers' daughters how to cultivate cocoons and establish filatures (where silk is reeled from silkworm cocoons), with the goal of women supporting a family with a small amount of capital and labor. At its first meeting January 8, 1885, Charles Wolcott Brooks was elected president, and Mrs. Louise Rienzi secretary; board members included George C. Perkins, Theodore H. Hittell, Elise C. Hittell, and Ellen C. Sargent, amongst others. In 1886, a building and mulberry orchard of 6,000 trees was purchased at Piedmont, near Oakland, with 100 women being employed there. California would not make appropriations for sericulture after 1888, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture declined funding in 1891. Warren B. Ewer was elected President of the Board of Directors of the Society in April 1889. The Piedmont orchard proved to be a poor location for raising silkworms, and the property was sold to Ewer's son, Thomas B. Ewer.

    Scope and Content of Collection

    First volume entry records note about U.S. appropriations, July 1889, and last entry of August 13, 1890 records payment of $16.80 to Miss Lizzie Rollins for cocoons. Entries skip pages within the volume. Entries include payments to Samuel A. Luce, for his work as superintendent at Piedmont station, as well as wages for the Society's secretary, Mrs. Leonidas E. Pratt; payments to individual women for cocoons supplied; payment for labor and materials, horse shoeing, advertising, taxes.

    Indexing Terms

    Sericulture -- California.
    Sericulture -- California -- History -- 19th century.
    Women -- California -- History -- 19th century.
    Luce, Samuel A., b. 1843
    California Silk Culture Association
    Ladies' Silk Culture Society of California
    Piedmont (Calif.)
    Account books