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<!doctype html>
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<head>
<title>Miss Frick's Debut</title>
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<audio id="firstheartthrobs" src="http://cylinders.library.ucsb.edu/mp3s/0000/0884/cusb-cyl0884d.mp3" type="audio/mp3">Please update your browser; it will not play audio on this site.</audio>
<div class="wrapper-first"> <!-- Adding wrappers to set background-color for divs -->
<div id="first" style="">
<p class="mobile-notice">This presentation is best experienced on a larger monitor. Viewing on a smaller screen could cause display issues.</p>
<img class="full" id="first1" src="img/missFrick1.jpg" />
<img class="full" id="first1a" src="img/missFrick1a.png" />
<img class="full" id="first1b" src="img/missFrick1b.png" />
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-invitation">
<div id="invitation">
<img class="full" id="invitation1" src="img/invitation.jpg" />
<div id="invitation_textBG">
<p>Henry Clay Frick made a fortune in coke, an ingredient essential to making steel. While Pittsburgh's wealthy industrialists enjoyed comfort and leisure, the bulk of Pittsburgh's residents toiled long days in dirty, dangerous mills for paltry wages.</p>
<p>By 1908, Frick wanted his only surviving daughter, Helen, to have an elaborate social debut at the Vanderbilt mansion, the largest private residence ever built in New York City. He was outraged when Helen said she wanted a simple affair with old friends back in Pittsburgh. As the big New York party drew near, Helen and her mother sneaked onto a train to Pittsburgh and made plans for the coming out party that Helen wanted. She won her father over with this handwritten message on an invitation like this one.</p>
</div>
<img id="invitation2" src="img/invitation_next.png" />
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-doorway">
<div id="doorway">
<img class="full" id="clayton" src="img/clayton1900.jpg" />
<img class="full" id="cochere" src="img/cochere.jpg" />
<img class="full" id="cochereenter" src="img/cochereenter.jpg" />
<div id="cochere2">
<p>You are Miss Katherine (Kitty) McCook, Miss Frick's friend from Miss Spence's School in New York.</p>
</div>
<div id="coyne">
<img id="coyneimage" class="floatimage" src="img/Mary-Coyne1000.jpg"/>
<div class="coyneclose"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>Mary Coyne was the housekeeper at Clayton after the Fricks moved to New York City. She may have been the servant who greeted guests during Miss Frick's debut.</p>
<p>Miss Coyne was born around 1860 in Ireland and immigrated to the United States in 1880. She likely began working for the Fricks in the late 1880s; her name appears on payroll records from the early 1890s. She first worked as a maid at Clayton, making $17.75 per month. She remained at Clayton after the Fricks moved to New York and was eventually promoted to housekeeper, a position she held through the 1920s. Records show that in December 1908 she was earning $30 per month. She died in 1933.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-entry">
<div id="entry">
<img class="full" id="chagrin" src="img/chagrin.jpg" />
<img class="full" id="chagrin_next" src="img/chagrin_next.jpg" />
<div class="text" id="aboutChagrin">
<p>When her parents began spending more time in New York than Pittsburgh, around 1901, Helen stayed behind at Clayton, which was filled with reminders of her dead siblings.</p>
<p>This painting, <em>Chagrin d'Enfant</em>, by Emile Friant, is one such example. It hangs in the entry hall to the left of the doorway into the reception room. It reminded Miss Frick of her late sister, Martha, who swallowed a pin when she was 2 and died in 1891 at age 5 of peritonitis and septicemia.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-blueroom">
<div id="blueroom">
<img class="full" id="blueroom1" src="img/blueroom1.png" />
<div class="" id="blueroom_bar">
<img src="img/blueroom_bar.png" />
<img id="blueroom_bar2" src="img/blueroom_bar2.png" />
<div class="text">
<p>Miss Frick had three friends from New York spend the night at Clayton before her coming out party.</p>
<p>This is one of three guest rooms at Clayton. It's called the Blue Room. There are also the Yellow Room and the White Room.</p>
<p><i class="fa fa-caret-right"></i> <span id="askdog" class="ask">You may ask about Miss Frick's dog.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="dog">
<img id="dogimage" class="floatimage" src="img/dog.png"/>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>Miss Frick was never quite comfortable in New York. She taught her spaniel this trick to express her feelings about the city, and performed the trick often for her friends.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-breakfastroom">
<div id="breakfastroom">
<img class="full" id="breakfastroom1" src="img/breakfastroom.png" />
<img src="img/dot-brown.png" id="seepeaches" class="dot" />
<img src="img/dot-brown.png" id="seetable" class="dot" />
<img src="img/get_dressed.png" id="get_dressed" class="get_dressed" />
<div id="breakfastroom_bar">
<div class="text">
<p>You have awakened and joined your friend Helen Clay Frick and her parents in the breakfast room.</p>
<p>Mr. Frick has come down from New York in his private rail car, the Westmoreland. He likes to tease Mrs. Frick about her age.</p>
<p><i class="fa fa-caret-right"></i> <span id="askpresent" class="ask">You may ask Miss Frick about her present.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="breakfast_menu">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/Breakfast-Room-Place-Setting.jpg"/>
<div class="caption">Image courtesy of the Frick Art & Historical Center</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>Sample Victorian breakfast (from "Savory Suppers and Fashionable Feasts"):</p>
<p>Oranges<br/>
Cracked wheat<br/>
Coffee, chocolate<br/>
Fish balls (fried balls of fish, potatoes, butter and milk)<br/>
Brown bread brewis (pan-fried brown bread in milk, cream and butter)
</p>
<p>Helen Clay Frick weighed about 100 pounds and was described in a 1939 New Yorker magazine profile as being small with "great nervous energy and little physical strength."</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="peaches">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/Waters.jpg"/>
<div class="caption">Image courtesy of the Frick Art & Historical Center</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p><em>Still Life with Peaches</em>, 1891, by George Waters (American, 1832-1912). </p>
<p>Henry Clay Frick purchased this painting in 1891.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="present">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/FrickParkKids.jpg"/>
<div class="caption">Bob Donaldson / Post-Gazette</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p><i class="fa fa-caret-right"></i> <span id="askhouse" class="ask">You may ask Mr. Frick about the house in New York.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-sink">
<div id="sink" class="screen">
<img class="full" id="sink1" src="img/sink1.png" />
<img id="seepuff" class="dot" src="img/dot-cinnamon.png" />
<img class="full" id="sink2" src="img/sink2.png" />
<div class="clickhere"></div>
<div id="puff">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/powderpuff.png"/>
<div class="caption">Image courtesy of the Frick Art & Historical Center</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>Gilded age women wore almost no makeup. Face powder was the one cosmetic permitted, with the goal of looking pale. </p>
<p>Miss Frick did not like makeup, and she wanted other women to share her values. When she founded a retreat for girls who worked in the New York mills, her rules required "no smoking, no cosmetics, no bobbed hair, no fibbing, no gossiping."</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-medicine">
<div id="medicine">
<img class="full" id="medicine1" src="img/medicine1.png" />
<div id="greenbar">
<div class='text'>
<p>The Gilded Age medicine cabinet contained few items that would be recognizable today. Deodorant was often homemade scented powder, but Mrs. Frick kept some store-bought "deodorant powder" in her medicine cabinet.</p>
<p>Mrs. Frick also used tooth powder, an alternative to toothpaste, and glycerine, potentially used as a face moisterizer.</p>
</div>
</div>
<img class="full" id="medicine2" src="img/medicine2.png" />
<div class="clickhere"></div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-dresser">
<div id="dresser">
<img class="full" id="dresser1" src="img/dresser1.png" />
<img id="seedresser" class="dot" src="img/dot-plum.png" />
<img class="full" id="dresser2" src="img/dresser2.png" />
<img id="seeundergarments" class="dot" src="img/dot-undergarments.png" />
<img id="seedress" class="dot" src="img/dot-thedress.png" />
<div class="clickhere"></div>
<div id="dresserdetail">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/toiletries.jpg"/>
<div class="caption">Julia Rendleman / Post-Gazette</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>Miss Frick wore her hair in a bun and pompadour for decades, eschewing the bobbed hair that came into fashion in the 1910s and reached its peak in the 1920s.</p>
<p><i class="fa fa-caret-right"></i> <span id="askhair" class="ask">You may comment about short hair.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="corset">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/Corset.jpg"/>
<div class="caption">Image courtesy of the Frick Art & Historical Center</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>For a Gilded Age woman, getting dressed was an elaborate process requiring layers of undergarments. The corset was a standard garment, critical to achieving the small-waisted look popular in the late-19th and early-20th centuries. Corsets were made from cotton or from silk, lace, and other decorative but strong fabrics, with stays made of whalebone or steel stitched between the layers. No woman would leave the house without a tightly laced corset such as this one, which belonged to Mrs. Frick.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="dress">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/helendress.jpg"/>
<div class="caption">Original image courtesy of The Frick Collection/Frick Art Reference Library Archives (this is a detail)</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>Debutantes traditionally wore white, and still do. Unfortunately, Miss Frick's debutante dress was not saved. It had been white satin with white point d'esprit over it and was trimmed with embroidered silver bands. She also wore a pearl necklace with a ruby and teardrop pearl pendant.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-reception">
<div id="reception">
<img class="full" id="receptionBG" src="img/reception-music.jpg" />
<img id="receptionroom" src="img/receptionroom-today.jpg" />
<div id="reception" class="clickhere"></div>
<div id="receptionroom_bar">
<div class="text">
<p>Hundreds of people attended a reception at Clayton in the afternoon of Dec. 16, 1908. The reception room was filled with ferns, palms and debutantes' bouquets. Many of the rare flowers and plants came from the Frick family's conservatory. The blossoms, which included pink rosebuds and lilies of the valley, would have filled the room with fragrance.</p>
<p><i class="fa fa-caret-right"></i> <span id="askreception" class="ask">See what it looked the day of the party.</span></p>
</div>
</div>
<div id="dress2">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/Debut-Gown.jpg"/>
<div class="caption">Image courtesy of the Frick Art & Historical Center</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>Mrs. Frick wore this silk and Irish lace gown at her daughter's debut. She bought the dress at Lichtenstein and Company, which had shops in Paris and New York.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-verdana">
<div id="veranda">
<img class="full" id="veranda1" src="img/veranda-today.png" />
<img id="veranda_next" src="img/veranda_next.png" />
<div id="veranda_textBG">
<p>The Frick family hosted a reception, a dinner and an evening of dancing for their daughter's society debut. The dance card shows featured dances including the Two Step, the Waltz, the Boston, the Barn Dance and the Lanciers. The Pittsburgh Orchestra, then in its 14th season, played for the reception and the dances. Frick family records show the orchestra's services cost $370.</p>
<p>The musicians are likely to have played here, on the veranda, although it would have been crowded.</p>
<p><i class="fa fa-caret-right"></i> <span id="askveranda" class="ask">See the Pittsburg Orchestra.</span></p>
</div>
<div id="orchestra">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/pittsburghorchestra.png"/>
<div class="caption">Image courtesy of the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh Music Archive</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>This image from 1907 shows the Pittsburg Orchestra with famous conductor Emil Paur.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-diningroom">
<div id="diningroom">
<img class="full" id="diningroom1" src="img/diningroom2.png" />
<img src="img/dot-menu.png" id="seemenu" class="dot" />
<div id="diningroom_text">
<p>After the reception, which had been more for Pittsburgh's adult society members, the party moved to the dining room, where Miss Frick, her friends, and an equal number of young men from the proper social stratum had dinner and then a dance.</p>
</div>
<div id="clickfriends" class="clickhere"></div>
<div id="menu">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/HCF-YC-Place-Setting.jpg"/><div style="clear:right;"></div>
<img id="" class="" src="img/Ice-Cream-Forks-6.jpg" style="margin-top: 10px;"/>
<div class="caption">Images courtesy of the Frick Art & Historical Center</div>
</div>
<div class="close"><i class="fa fa-times" ></i></div>
<div class='text'>
<p>This is a dinner place setting from Clayton. The menu from Miss Frick's debut party dinner is not known, but the following is a dinner party menu from the period:</p>
<p>Caviar on toast<br/>
Oysters<br/>
Anchovies on toasts<br/>
Consomme Sovereign</p>
<p>Soup: Green turtle, clear</p>
<p>Side dish: Timbales Imperial fashion (molds with shrimp or lobster in them)</p>
<p>Fish: Fried oyster crabs, cucumbers</p>
<p>Entrees:<br/>
Breast of chicken, Luculus<br/>
Peas with lettuce<br/>
Artichokes</p>
<p>Terrapin Newberg style (in the turtles)<br/>
Fresh mushrooms, sous cloche</p>
<p>Sherbet</p>
<p>Roast:<br/>
Canvas back ducks, cold<br/>
Border of fois gras, Marechale<br/>
Escarole salad</p>
<p>Sweets:<br/>
Pears Richelieu<br/>
Orange jelly, Bavarian cream, vanilla<br/>
Fancy ice creams<br/>
Fruits, cakes, bonbonnieres<br/>
Coffee
</p>
<p style="font-size: 80%; line-height: 150%;">From "Savory Suppers and Fashionable Feasts" by Susan Williams</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-friends">
<div id="friends">
<img class="full" id="friends1" src="img/friends.png" />
<div id="clickdancing" class="clickhere"></div>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper-dancing">
<div id="dancing">
<img class="full" id="dancing1" src="img/dancing.png" />
<img id="dancecard" src="img/dancecard1.png" />
<div id="clickparties" class="clickhere"></div>
<div id="dancing_text">
<p>After dinner, the dining room table was likely pushed to the wall so the dining room could be used for dancing.</p>
<p>(who was at the dance)</p>
<p>(role of men at deb balls)</p>
<p><i class="fa fa-caret-right"></i> <span id="askchilds" class="ask">You may ask about Childs.</span></p>
</div>
<div id="childs">
<div class="floatimage">
<img id="" class="" src="img/Childs FrickHCFFP001096_POST.jpg"/>
<div class="caption">Image courtesy of The Frick Collection/Frick Art Reference Library Archives</div>
</div>
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<p>Henry Frick relentlessly criticized Childs Frick, his only son and Helen's older brother. When Childs was sent away to a day school in Cambridge, Mass., Frick moved Helen's seat at the dinner table to where Childs used to sit. When Mrs. Frick managed to persuade her husband to let Childs come home and attend Shady Side Academy, Childs bullied Helen. He liked to make her cry, then force her to look in the mirror and admit she was ugly. Even Carnegie noticed, remarking in a letter to Frick, "Wish we had Helen up here (in Scotland) away from Childs." By 1908 Childs had graduated from Princeton University. He is mentioned nowhere in the records about Helen's debut and seems not to have attended.</p>
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<p>High society held parties during the winter and summer "seasons." The winter season began in mid-November and ended in February. Debutante coming out parties traditionally took place in December, as Helen's did.
After Helen's debut party, many other parties were given in her honor in Pittsburgh, including bridge parties, dinner dances and cotillions at Pittsburgh's then most exclusive venue, the Pittsburgh Golf Club. One newspaper reported parties for every hour of every day for two weeks that Christmas season. A day might include skating in the morning, a luncheon, tea, a reception, and a dinner, dance or theater in the evening.</p>
<p><i class="fa fa-caret-right"></i> <span id="askpark" class="ask">You may ask about Miss Frick's present from her father.</span></p>
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<div class="caption">Pam Panchak / Post-Gazette</div>
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<p>Henry Clay Frick did give Helen the park -- after he died in 1919. His will provided for a 380-acre park adjoining the Clayton mansion. Frick Park now comprises 561 acres</p>
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<p>After making her debut in society, Miss Frick could host her own parties, be the guest of honor at parties hosted by friends or family and also travel alone. She was free to pursue her own social life.</p>
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