Madame Louise "Lou" Graham: Difference between revisions
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Madame Louise "Lou" Graham (1861-1903[1]) was a head seamstress at a business she opened located in Pioneer Square in [[Seattle, Washington]] which is now only remembered as Lou Graham's Parlor. She would hire others who lived at the venue as seamstresses offering tailor services, a cover for sex workers at the time. Lou herself had a romantic relationship and partnership with another woman, Amber Delmas[2], and she hired, possibly, transgender women who would be requested by clients as "the lady in the black dress". Lou Graham never became a citizen of the United States, a German immigrant, and had no known children while here[3,4]. Her possessions were challenged by | Madame Louise "Lou" Graham (1861-1903[1]) was a head seamstress at a business she opened located in Pioneer Square in [[Seattle, Washington]] which is now only remembered as Lou Graham's Parlor. She would hire others who lived at the venue as seamstresses offering tailor services, a cover for sex workers at the time. Lou herself had a romantic relationship and partnership with another woman, Amber Delmas[2], and she hired, possibly, transgender women who would be requested by clients as "the lady in the black dress". Lou Graham never became a citizen of the United States, a German immigrant, and had no known children while here[3,4]. Her possessions were challenged by relatives in Germany but, without citizenship, all her property in Washington could acquired by the state through escheatment. The matter was debated for years[4,5,6,7]. | ||
== Madame Lou Graham's Parlor and Seattle's "Seamstresses" (1888) == | == Madame Lou Graham's Parlor and Seattle's "Seamstresses" (1888) == | ||
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# University of Washington, [https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/ptleader/id/1261 "Port Townsend Daily Leader No. 219 (July 21, 1904)"] | # University of Washington, [https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/ptleader/id/1261 "Port Townsend Daily Leader No. 219 (July 21, 1904)"] | ||
# Library of Congress, "The Seattle Republican, August 26, 1904, Image 5" | # Library of Congress, "The Seattle Republican, August 26, 1904, Image 5" | ||
# Library of Congress, "The Seattle Republican., January 27, 1905, Image 2" | |||
# University of Washington, [https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/ptleader/id/1568 "Port Townsend Daily Leader (August 21, 1904)"] | # University of Washington, [https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/ptleader/id/1568 "Port Townsend Daily Leader (August 21, 1904)"] | ||
# University of Washington, [https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/ptleader/id/1706 "Port Townsend Daily Leader (September 9, 1904)"] | # University of Washington, [https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/ptleader/id/1706 "Port Townsend Daily Leader (September 9, 1904)"] | ||
# Photo courtesy of Paul Dorpat and HistoryLink.org [https://www.historylink.org/File/2762 "Madame Lou Graham arrives in Seattle in February 1888."] | # Photo courtesy of Paul Dorpat and HistoryLink.org [https://www.historylink.org/File/2762 "Madame Lou Graham arrives in Seattle in February 1888."] |
Revision as of 04:05, 14 September 2021
Madame Louise "Lou" Graham (1861-1903[1]) was a head seamstress at a business she opened located in Pioneer Square in Seattle, Washington which is now only remembered as Lou Graham's Parlor. She would hire others who lived at the venue as seamstresses offering tailor services, a cover for sex workers at the time. Lou herself had a romantic relationship and partnership with another woman, Amber Delmas[2], and she hired, possibly, transgender women who would be requested by clients as "the lady in the black dress". Lou Graham never became a citizen of the United States, a German immigrant, and had no known children while here[3,4]. Her possessions were challenged by relatives in Germany but, without citizenship, all her property in Washington could acquired by the state through escheatment. The matter was debated for years[4,5,6,7].
Madame Lou Graham's Parlor and Seattle's "Seamstresses" (1888)
Sources
- Secretary of State, "King County Auditor, Death Records, 1891-1907"
- Libbie Hawker, "Madam" (2018) Historical Note And Acknowledgements
- Library of Congress, "The Evening statesman, July 22, 1904, Image 3"
- University of Washington, "Port Townsend Daily Leader No. 219 (July 21, 1904)"
- Library of Congress, "The Seattle Republican, August 26, 1904, Image 5"
- Library of Congress, "The Seattle Republican., January 27, 1905, Image 2"
- University of Washington, "Port Townsend Daily Leader (August 21, 1904)"
- University of Washington, "Port Townsend Daily Leader (September 9, 1904)"
- Photo courtesy of Paul Dorpat and HistoryLink.org "Madame Lou Graham arrives in Seattle in February 1888."