A Bloomer Girl on Pike’s Peak

To be called a “Bloomer Girl” was not a compliment in polite society. According to Victorian mores, proper clothing for proper women equaled an ankle-length skirt, regardless of its impracticality for many activities. “Bloomer Girls” donned dresses that reached slightly below the knee and were worn over a pair of billowing, loose-fitting pantaloons – a scandal. Even though she did not design the outfit, it was named after Amelia Bloomer (1818-1894), one of the early proponents of women’s suffrage, and an advocate for dress reform. Women who donned these progressive garments protested society’s arbitrary norms and typically supported the early feminist organizations and their goals of equality, and the right to vote.

“Reform Dress” or “Bloomer”. Illustration from A Bloomer Girl on Pike’s Peak.

The title of this post originates from a book I recently discovered. Published by the Denver Library District in 1949, A Bloomer Girl on Pike’s Peak refers to Julia Anna Archibald Holmes (1838-1887). Born in Canada, she moved to Massachusetts at age 10, and to Kansas in the mid-1850s, where her abolitionist family was part of the movement that settled the state to prevent it from becoming pro-slavery. They helped found the town of Lawrence where she met James Holmes, a fellow abolitionist, and, furthermore, a member of John Brown’s Free State Rangers. Julia married him in the fall of 1857, when she was 18. After the discovery of gold in Colorado the following year, the couple joined the Lawrence Party in June 1858, among the earliest hopeful gold seekers. Crossing the Great Plains in covered wagons and on foot, they arrived at the base of Pike’s Peak about one month later and set up camp near the future Garden of the Gods.

Half a century earlier, in 1806, Captain Zebulon Montgomery Pike had led the first U.S. government expedition to the region acquired in the Louisiana Purchase of 1803. While searching for the source of the Arkansas River, he saw and approached a tall mountain in the distance, but was prevented from its ascent by November’s inhospitable conditions. In his journal, he expressed the conviction, that “no man could have ascended to its pinnacle.” On August 5, 1858, however, Julia and her husband summited, and Julia is generally presumed to have been the first white woman to stand on top of the 14,115 foot mountain named after Pike years after his death. Ironically, she did so wearing her Bloomer dress which facilitated her journey, whereas Pike and his men were prevented not only by snow, but also by their inadequate summer uniforms.

Julia kept a journal, and even though it has been lost, letters to her family as well as articles written for women’s magazines have survived and provide insight into her adventures. They form the core of The Bloomer Girl on Pike’s Peak. The following are quotes from the book.

We were now fairly launched on the waving prairie. A person who has beheld neither the ocean nor the great, silent, uninhabited plains, will find it impossible to form an adequate idea of the grandeur of the scene. With the blue sky overhead, the endless variety of flowers under foot, it seemed that the ocean’s solitude had united with all the landscape beauties. (page 15)

I commenced the journey with a firm determination to learn to walk. At first I could not walk over three or four miles without feeling quite weary, but by persevering and walking as far as I could every day, my capacity increased gradually, and in the course of a few weeks I could walk ten miles in the most sultry weather without being exhausted. Believing, as I do, in the right of woman to equal privileges with man, I think that when it is in our power we should, in order to promote our own independence, at least, be willing to share the hardships which commonly fall to the lot of man. (page 20)

I have accomplished the task which I marked out for myself and now I feel amply repaid for all my toil and fatigue. Nearly every one tried to discourage me from attempting it, but I believed that I should succeed; and now, here I am, and I feel that I would not have missed this glorious sight for anything at all. In all probability I am the first woman who has ever stood upon the summit of this mountain and gazed upon this wondrous scene, which my eyes now behold. (page 39)

Modern-day view from the summit of Pike’s Peak

When gold proved elusive, Julia and her husband moved to New Mexico for a number of years. Of their four children, two died. Julia was granted a divorce in 1870, probably as a consequence of domestic abuse and adultery. She made Washington, D.C. her permanent home where she remained active in the suffrage movement and worked for the US Government until her death at the age of 49. I have not been able to establish the cause of death. The portrait above shows Julia at about 32, when she left her husband. Does anyone else think she bears an uncanny resemblance to Julia Roberts?

“America’s Mountain” reminds me regularly of the eventful and accomplished life of “A Bloomer Girl on Pike’s Peak”, the progressive, abolitionist, suffragist, writer, and first known female to scale its steep summit.

Click here for the German Version/klicken Sie bitte hier für die deutsche Version:

https://tanjaschimmel.wordpress.com/2017/10/12/eine-bloomer-frau-auf-pikes-peak/

22 thoughts on “A Bloomer Girl on Pike’s Peak

  1. Sehr interessante Geschichte. Schön die Zitate aus dem Buch. Da bekommt man Lust es zu lesen und diese Frau besser kennenzulernen.
    Ich hoffe Euch geht’s gut. Bei uns alles beim Alten.
    Wir fahren Ende Oktober nach Deutschland, Dirk,feiert seinen 50.!
    Bis ganz bald
    Deine Heike

    Heike Broussard
    06 87 66 87 75

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Fantastic! Especially for me, as a life-long journal writer with similar love for Nature. Think about it! Her words, lyrical, determined, communicate the feelings and insights of a woman who lived over a hundred years ago. I’m sure she never would have known that her words would eventually appear in a book, let alone on posted for us to read on the internet, all these years later.

    I have an inner calling to write about the adventures I’ve had on my horses over the years. Perhaps in a hundred years, there will be no horses. No forests. And my “inner calling” reminds me to be true to my talent and write — so those who might come after me might be able to live, through my account. In freedom. On horses. In the time-frame of my life, like Julia’s, past. Dawn

    Time Traveler

    Adventurer of the Night

    Virtual Rides

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    • Thank you for visiting, for commenting, and for sharing your enthusiasm, Dawn. We never know what kind of mark we leave, and I feel fortunate to have learned about Julia’s remarkable life.
      I hope you are wrong about horses and trees being absent in a hundred years’ time! Please keep writing about your thoughts and experiences. I look forward to following along.
      Best wishes,
      Tanja

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  3. […] One of earliest groups in search of gold that arrived at the foot of Pikes Peak in the summer of 1858 hailed from Kansas and included Julia Archibald Holmes. She is considered the first White woman to have summitted Pikes Peak with her husband and brother on August 5 of that year. A writer, abolitionist, suffragists, and Bloomer Girl, she was the topic of one of my previous posts: https://tanjabrittonwriter.com/2017/10/12/a-bloomer-girl-on-pikes-peak/. […]

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  4. I am, of course, familiar with bloomers (the word that is, not the actual garment…I just haven’t got the legs to carry off the look 🙂) but had no idea of how they got their name. I’m guessing the fashion itself had its origins in Victorian England? But perhaps, as so often, I’m simply overestimating Brits and underestimating Americans!? As far as I’m aware, the term Bloomer Girl never made it here, or if it did it failed to make much of an impact. That’s a pity, as it has a nice, cheeky, slightly rebellious ring to it.

    As for Amelia, what a remarkable lady. Ahead of her time, and deserves to be remembered for much more than giving her name to a style of oversized underwear!

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    • Thank you for taking the time to look at several of my older posts. Mr. P.

      Imagining a platypus wearing bloomers just made my day. 🙂

      All I know is that Amelia Bloomer, the lady who came up with the garments that would bear her name, was American. I don’t know if a similar piece of clothing was in use in Victorian England. I imagine Victoria herself would have been scandalized by the mere notion, but maybe I’m not giving her enough credit.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Yes, we had bloomers here too. And yes, Victoria would have been scandalised by the mere thought of young ladies wearing them, as indeed she was scandalised by so much else. I don’t imagine she’d have been impressed by a platypus in bloomers either. 🙂

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