Seattle, Washington: Difference between revisions
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=== Madame Lou Graham and Seattle's Seamstresses === | === Madame Lou Graham and Seattle's Seamstresses === | ||
Madame Lou Graham (1861-1904) was a head seamstress at a downtown business she opened. She would hire other seamstresses who lived at the venue, a cover for sex workers at the time. Lou herself had a romantic relationship and partnership with another woman, Amber Delmas, and she hired, possibly, transgender women who would be requested as "the lady in the black dress". | Madame Lou Graham (1861-1904) was a head seamstress at a downtown business she opened. She would hire other seamstresses who lived at the venue, a cover for sex workers at the time. Lou herself had a romantic relationship and partnership with another woman, Amber Delmas[1], and she hired, possibly, transgender women who would be requested as "the lady in the black dress". | ||
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== Sources == | == Sources == | ||
# Libbie Hawker, "Madam" (2018) Historical Note And Acknowledgements |
Revision as of 19:42, 13 September 2021
Home for the archives of Seattle in the State of Washington, USA.
Seattle History
Madame Lou Graham and Seattle's Seamstresses
Madame Lou Graham (1861-1904) was a head seamstress at a downtown business she opened. She would hire other seamstresses who lived at the venue, a cover for sex workers at the time. Lou herself had a romantic relationship and partnership with another woman, Amber Delmas[1], and she hired, possibly, transgender women who would be requested as "the lady in the black dress".
Photo courtesy of Paul Dorpat and HistoryLink.org "Madame Lou Graham arrives in Seattle in February 1888."
Related Entries
Sources
- Libbie Hawker, "Madam" (2018) Historical Note And Acknowledgements