A Victorian woman's material world: the life and legacy of Mary Cowgill Corbit Warner

Date
1989
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of Delaware
Abstract
This thesis examines the meanings of objects preserved for posterity by one Delaware woman: Mary Cowgill Corbit Warner (1848-1923). I have focussed my study on those objects which she collected and selected for display in her grandfather's house, the David Wilson Mansion, now called the Wilson-Warner House. This analysis of material evidence explores what Mary's material world signified for her. ☐ Mary's collections are her autobiography; her acquisitions of souvenirs, antiques, and family heirlooms reveal a cogent personal and historical mission. By rehabilitating the David Wilson house, Mary vindicated her grandfather who had lost the property in an 1828 bankruptcy. Mrs. Warner reinterpreted the homestead as a museum that displayed both the artifactual legacy of her colonial forbearers and her own belongings and collections. Thus, the museum served to perpetuate a concept of family unity as well as Mary's personal history. (Abstract from ProQuest citation page.)
Description
Keywords
Citation