The Gary Family
Lillian Gary Taylor, born Lillian Marie Gary, was the daughter of James Albert Gary and Lavinia Washington Corrie Gary. Mr. and Mrs. Gary had ten children, eight of whom survived to adulthood. Their firstborn, a daughter named Alberta Georgetta Gary and affectionately known as Daisy, was born September 20, 1858. Daisy died of scarlet fever at the age of five, on May 20, 1864, the year before Lillian was born. James Sullivan Gary II, the first of two sons for the Garys and named for his grandfather, was born November 17, 1860. “Brother Jimmie” was only nine years old when he died on December 27, 1869, possibly of appendicitis. Lillian’s earliest memories, as recorded in these journals, are scenes from Brother Jimmie’s funeral.
The Garys’ next eight children all lived into adulthood.
Edward Stanley, who went by his middle name, was born July 26,
1862. Lillian Marie, born November 27, 1865, was the eldest of
the seven sisters that followed. Pamelia Holton, called Minnie,
was born February 13, 1867. Minnie was named after her father’s
only sister, Pamelia Ann, who was affectionately called Aunt Minnie.
Emma Lacy followed on July 5, 1868. Adelaide Louise was born April
22, 1871, and then Ida Catherine on November 6, 1873. “Catherine,”
Lillian notes, “was Grandmother Corrie’s name”
(26). On January 12, 1875, Jessie Augusta was born. Madeleine
Lavinia was the youngest of the seven sisters; her birth date
is not given in the journal. Throughout Memories Lillian refers
to her brother as “Brother Stanley,” and fondly prefaces
each sister’s name with the epithet “Sister.”
See pages15-28.
Education
The Garys were careful in the instruction of their daughters,
and raised their children to appreciate education. The girls both
schooled at home and attended various schools for young ladies
in Baltimore. Among these were schools lead by Miss Rossel, the
Misses Gibson, and the Misses Hall. For a time Sister Adelaide
and Sister Ida studied at Miss Randolph’s School for Young
Ladies, which was run by Sarah Randolph, the granddaughter of
Thomas Jefferson.
The girls’ lessons included knitting, sewing, arithmetic,
writing, and poetry. Lillian especially loved poetry, including
Sir Walter Scott’s “The Lady of the Lake,” and
used to recite memorized passages to her sisters while they were
getting ready in the mornings (which was not always their favorite
thing to hear while making their beds). As a gift, her father
gave her a lovely edition of Scott’s poems: “The volumes
are in a box made from wood cut from Abbotsford. Each volume is
bound with wooden sides laquerred [sic] in the plaid of the Clan
where the scene is laid. I love them” (117-118). See pages
115-124.
Early in 1881, nearly all of the girls fell ill. Lillian and Sister
Adelaide were kept upstairs, sick with scarlet fever, while Sister
Jessie, Sister Minnie, Sister Ida, and Sister Madeleine (still
just a baby) were downstairs sick with diphtheria. Sister Emma
was the only daughter who did not get sick. To divert the sisters from
their sicknesses, Lillian read stories to them while sitting at
the top of the stairs (204). Lillian’s love of reading would
later manifest itself in her impressive collection of best-selling American
literature.
The girls also took dance and music lessons from private instructors.
Their dancing instructor, Mr. Lehman, was a great favorite. He
taught the young men and women of Baltimore society to waltz,
polka, and square dance. Among the partners with whom the Gary
girls learned to dance were Mr. and Mrs. John Prentice Poe’s
six sons, who became football legends at Princeton University.
Mr. Poe was a cousin of the author Edgar Allen Poe. The girls
thoroughly enjoyed their dancing lessons, which at times could
be livelier than one might expect. One afternoon, for example,
a young man released a mouse onto the dance floor, and sent everyone
scurrying and girls screaming! She remembers, “We all knew
that Johnson Poe was the culprit; no one told” (99). Of
the poor little mouse, Lillian says, “[H]is own idea was
to run for safety, which I hope in the confusion, was attained”
(98-99). See pages 93-100.