Maria Gansevoort Melvill (Mrs. Allan Melvill), c. 1815 Courtesy National Gallery of Art, Washington |
Occupation:
"Lady."
United States Federal Census, 1860 via Ancestry.com |
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7667/images/4237084_003691860 was the first year federal census takers asked about the occupations of women:
At the census of 1860 the inquiry relating to occupations, contained on the schedule for free inhabitants, was made to apply to each person, male or female, over 15 years of age, instead of being confined, as it was in 1850, to males only. --United States Census Office, Twelfth Census of the United StatesOccupation? How else could the daughter of General Peter Gansevoort answer? Lady. Ditto for her daughters.
Mariah Melville, Lady, had just turned 69 years old in April 1860; her age is given as 68 on the federal census dated June 25, 1860. Maria's brother Herman Gansevoort, age 80, is named "Harman" and listed head of household at the Gansevoort mansion in Saratoga County. Also present at the Mansion House in 1860 were Herman Melville's sisters Augusta and Fanny (each a lady); along with Jane Taylor, eighteen years old and employed as domestic servant. "Serving," so not designated "Lady." Augusta (39 in June 1860) and Fanny (age 33) were both older than the Census for 1860 indicates.
Herman Melville's uncle Herman Gansevoort died in 1862. The 1865 State Census for Saratoga County in New York gives the name of Herman's mother as Maria G. Melville, now listed first as head of household.
New York, State Census, 1865 via Ancestry.com |
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7218/images/004238325_00021Herman Melville's brother Thomas Melville is also there in 1865 with sisters Augusta and "Fannie V" (that is, Fanny P? for Priscilla?). Tom's occupation is "Sea Captain."
In 1860, Herman Melville's mother and daughters held the honorable and aristocratic occupation of "Lady." As far as I can tell, no other person in the town of Northumberland, Saratoga County was so designated in the U. S. Federal Census. By contrast, the 1870 Census assigns to Maria the ordinary and generic occupation of "Keeping house." The stated monetary value of that house was anything but commonplace, however: $50,000 in Real Estate; plus $5000 for the Personal Estate.
1870 United States Federal Census via Ancestry.com |
https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/7163/images/4277081_00740Augusta and Frances were still "At home." Domestic servants in the household of "Mellville, Maria G." in 1870 were immigrants John Quinn (from Ireland, age 30) and Keziah Stoepal (England, age 17).
Concerning the cover addressed to "Miss Maria G. Melville" as described on WorthPoint:
https://www.worthpoint.com/worthopedia/bedford-mass-maria-melville-o-allan-1847212231
No family member would have called the mother of Herman Melville "Miss." The envelope postmarked from New Bedford is addressed to Herman's niece Maria G. Melville, daughter of his brother Allan Melville. Later Maria Gansevoort Morewood (1849-1935).
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