Mrs. Almira Hollander Pitman's social diary, 1909-1910

Collection Type

  • Manuscripts

Date

1909-1910

Location Note

85M-01-314-Z-C-0407; Miscellaneous Manuscripts, Bound, Box 4

GUSN

GUSN-356844

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Description

Bound social diary containing 140 pages, 72 of which are blank. This book was arranged by Mrs. Almira Hollander Pitman, also known as Mrs. Benjamin F. K. Pitman. The diary contains invititations to dinners and other events, scrapbook embellishments, written accounts of Mrs. Pitman's activities, guest lists, addresses of friends and family, dinner menus, and other ephemera. The book contains entries ranging from January 1909 to March 1910 and includes an inscription written in pencil inside the front cover. Cover of the book reads:

"Guests and Dinners -- 1909
M. H. Pitman
121 Carlton St
Brookline"

Details

Descriptive Terms

appointment books
invitations
diaries
social functions
social groups
address books
menus
attendance lists
diaries
appointment books
pencils (drawing and writing equipment)

Inscription

Guests and Dinners -- 1909
M. H. Pitman
121 Carlton St

Additional Identification Number

Tracking number 2153

Physical Descrption

1 social diary with attached pencil

Collection Code

MS029

Collection Name

Miscellaneous manuscript collection

Date of Acquisition

2019

Reference Code

MS029.002.009

Acqusition Type

Gift

Credit Line

Gift of Andrew Spindler-Roesle, 2019

Places

Brookline (Norfolk county, Massachusetts)

Record Details

Originator

Pitman, Almira, Mrs., 1854-1939 (Arranger)

Material Type

diaries
appointment books
pencils (drawing and writing equipment)

Other People

Pitman, Benjamin F. K., 1852-1918

Subjects

Book

Restrictions

Fragile condition. Damaged spine, loose pages. Pages have stains, tears, and in some cases holes in them. Front cover has a stain and some wear.

Description Level

Item

Location Note

85M-01-314-Z-C-0407; Miscellaneous Manuscripts, Bound, Box 4

Language Note

Materials are predominantly in English; some invitations contain French.

Historical/Biographical Note

Historical/Biographical Note

Almira Pitman, nee Hollander, was born in Massachusetts in 1854. Her parents, Jacob Louis and Maria Theresa Hollander, were the founders of the successful women's clothing retailer L. P. Hollander & Co. In 1875, she married wealthy businessman Benjamin F. K. Pitman. Following her marriage she was commonly known as Mrs. Benjamin F. K. Pitman or Mrs. Benjamin F. Pitman, as well as Almira Hollander Pitman and Mira H. Pitman. The couple had two sons named Benjamin and Theodore Pitman.

Throughout her life, Pitman was active in the local suffrage movement. She joined the New England Woman Suffrage Association (NEWSA) in 1884 and was elected as the recording secretary for the Brookline Equal Suffrage Association in 1904. In 1913, she became Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee of the Massachusetts Woman Suffrage Association (MWSA), a position she retained this position until 1919. Pitman also published several works on the topic of women's rights throughout her life, such as the 1912 poem "In Freedom's Land."

Pitman is particularly well-known for her suffrage work in Hawaii. Her husband was the child of High Chiefess Kino'oleoliliha, and they traveled there in 1917 to visit his extended family. She became engaged in the local suffrage movement and held meetings with local suffragists and members of the territorial legislature on the topic. Upon returning to Boston, she, along with other suffragists, used her influence to speak at U.S. Congressional hearings discussing whether Hawaii should be allowed to legislate locally on suffrage. Pitman is largely credited with the passage of this bill.

Following the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment, Pitman remained active in the suffrage movement and was often written about in "The Boston Globe" for hosting events at her Carlton Street home in Brookline, Massachusetts. She was involved in the Women's Republican Club of Massachusetts and organized numerous events for the organization. Pitman passed away in 1939 in Brookline, at the age of 85.

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