Sara Agnes Sara Agnes Rice Pryor
Published: 2018-12-25
Total Pages: 231
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Sara Agnes Rice Pryor (1830 - 1912) was a writer who published two memoirs in the early twentieth century of the mesmerizing times in which she lived. The first few chapters contain Mrs. Pryor's recall of the years she spent in Washington society before the "Civil War." Her husband, Roger Atkinson Pryor (1828-1919) was an able lawyer who was appointed by President Franklin Pierce as a special United States Minister to Greece in 1854. In 1859, after Virginia Congressman William O. Goode died in office, Roger Pryor won his vacant seat in the United States Congress. Of these years, Mrs. Pryor describes the prominent politicians (and their wives) that she met in addition to many well-known foreign dignitaries. She remembers the Southern power presence of those halcyon days: "When the Marine band would play on the veranda of the White House," and the lavish White House parties with "ices in every form from a pair of turtle doves to a pillared temple." Students of fashion history and especially re-enactors will benefit from her careful descriptions of the attire of era, "Our white gloves were short and were finished at the wrist with a fall of lace three or four inches wide, and a band of ribbon and rosette," etc. Of the war privations she writes, "Pins became scarce. People walked about with downcast eyes; they were looking for pins! Thorns were gathered and dried to use as pins. Dentists' gold soon disappeared. The generation succeeding the war period had not good teeth. Anesthetics -- morphine, chloroform, opium--were contraband of war. This was our great grief. Our soldier boys, who had done nothing to bring the war upon the country, must suffer every pang that followed the disasters of battle." Mrs. Pryor's detailed memoirs of the war have been important sources for historians doing research on southern society during and after the Civil War. Incidentally, the author, Sara Agnes Rice Pryor, was one of the founders of the National Daughters of the Revolution.