Maria Parloa

Maria Parloa
Born (1843-09-25)September 25, 1843
Massachusetts
Died August 21, 1909(1909-08-21) (aged 65)
Bethel, Connecticut
Resting place Forest Hills Cemetery
Occupation Author
Nationality American
Education Maine Central Institute
Subject Cooking and housekeeping
Notable works The Appledore Cookbook, Camp Cookery: How to Live in Camp, First Principles of Household Management and Cookery: A Text-Book for Schools and Families

Maria Parloa (September 25, 1843 – August 21, 1909) was an American author of books on cooking and housekeeping, the founder of two cooking schools, a noted lecturer on food topics, and an important early figure in the "domestic science" (later "home economics") movement. She was arguably America's first "celebrity cook." and culinary pioneer

Early life

Maria Parloa was born in Massachusetts on September 25, 1843.[1] Both her mother and father had been born in New York state.[1] Little is known about her early life; she is said to have been orphaned at a young age.[2] Nor is it known where she learned to cook, although in the Preface to her first book, The Appledore Cook Book, published in 1872, she asserts that she has "had years of experience as a cook in private families and hotels."[3] The latter included the Rockingham House, Portsmouth, NH; Pavilion Hotel, Wolfeboro, NH; McMillan House, North Conway, NH; and the Appledore Hotel on Appledore Island, ME, one of the Isles of Shoals.[4]

In 1871, Parloa entered the Normal School of the Maine Central Institute, Pittsfield, ME, completing her teacher training course two years later.[2]

Career

Following graduation, Maria Parloa accepted a position as a teacher in "a small country school"[5] in Mandarin, FL (a small town now part of the City of Jacksonville) where she remained for five winters. During this time, she gave a talk on cookery to raise money to buy "a small cabinet organ" for the local Sunday school.[5] This led to an invitation to give a lecture on "Cooking and Digestion" in New London, CT, during the summer of 1876. It was so well received, that in May, 1877, she gave a successful series of four talks in one of the lecture rooms at Boston's Tremont Temple. As she later recollected, "The interest seemed to warrant my undertaking the work, and I decided to open a school in the fall, 1877, which I did on Tremont Street. The interest was very great, and all the time I had my school in Boston I had more than I possibly could do ..."[5]

Miss Parloa's School of Cooking opened in October, 1877, at 174 Tremont Street, Boston. (This should not be confused with the Boston Cooking School, founded two years later.)

In 1878, she gave lectures on cookery at nearby Lasell Seminary, Auburndale (Newton), MA; also at Miss A.C. Morgan's Boarding and Day School for Young Ladies, Portsmouth, NH. In the same year, her second book, Camp Cookery: How to Live in Camp, was published in Boston.

During the summer of 1878, Parloa traveled to Europe where she studied English and French culinary practice at first hand.[2] Her observations at the South Kensington and the Board Schools in London were the inspiration for her next book: First Principles of Household Management and Cookery: A Text-Book for Schools and Families, published in 1879.[6] That same year, the Women's Education Association of Boston provided a subvention of $100 for the establishment of The Boston Cooking School. Its first teacher was Joanna Sweeney who taught the classes in basic cookery; Maria Parloa was engaged to give regular lectures on more sophisticated topics.[7]

During this time, she prepared the text for Miss Parloa's New Cook Book: A Guide to Marketing and Cooking, published in 1880.

Although Miss Parloa's own school and her lectures at the Boston Cooking School were both extremely popular, they were not financially rewarding. In 1882, she closed her school, left Boston, and moved to New York City. In November, 1882, she opened Miss Parloa's School of Cooking at 222 East Seventeenth Street.[8] Here, in addition to the regular courses of instruction during the day, Miss Parloa also offered free instruction to "immigrant girls" in the evening.

In 1887, "having made a considerable fortune,"[9] she stopped teaching in New York and moved back to Boston, where she "purchased a comfortable home in Roxbury."[9] During the same year, her next cookbook, Miss Parloa's Kitchen Companion: A Guide for All Who Would Be Good Housekeepers, was published in Boston.

In her later years, Miss Parloa capitalized on her celebrity by endorsing several food products: she may have been the first to do so. One Hundred Ways to Use Leibig Company's Extract of Beef: A Guide for American Housewives appeared in 1893. Though the booklet was "printed in the United States," it was published in London. A second London edition bears the copyright date 1897.[10]

She returned to Europe in 1894 for a three-year study of "the domestic systems of France, England, and Germany." Her plan was to spend a year living with a French family, a second with a German family, and a final year "living in suburban England."[9] "The results of these studies will be made known by Miss Parloa in a series of magazine articles."[9] Maria Parloa moved back to New York City in 1898 where she lived until 1903. The United States Census for 1900 shows that her household included a "servant" of Irish birth named Sarah Hourigan.[1]

In 1899, she attended a meeting in Lake Placid, New York, "to begin the work of professionalizing home economics."[2] She was also present in 1908 when the American Home Economics Association was formed.[11]

In 1903, she moved to Bethel, CT, where she lived until her death, sharing her home with two orphan girls. She organized the Village Improvement Society, and participated in community landscaping.[2] She died on August 21, 1909 following surgery in Bethel, Connecticut. and her remains where interred at the Forest Hills Cemetery. At the time, she was making plans for her third trip to Europe.[2]

Works

References

  1. 1 2 3 United States Census for 1900.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Maria Parloa at Bethel [CT] Public Library.
  3. Parloa, Appledore, (2nd edition) p 3.
  4. Parloa, Appledore, (2nd edition) p 4.
  5. 1 2 3 Parloa in 1906, quoted at Maria Parloa
  6. Parloa, First Principles, p iii.
  7. Maria Parloa
  8. Miss Parloa's Cookery School, November 1, 1882, at New York Times
  9. 1 2 3 4 Bok, Edward W. "A Domestic Woman Abroad," in New England Kitchen Magazine, The., Volume 1, no.1 (April, 1894) p 40f.
  10. Household Books Published in Britain, at University of California at Davis
  11. Now known as the American Association of Family and Consumer Sciences.

Sources

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Maria Parloa
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