Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Filling in a minor detail

In the absence of any living witnesses to Constance Applebee's introduction of field hockey to the United States in 1901, I find myself compulsively searching for as many contemporary accounts as I can possibly find. Sometimes I'm looking for specific facts, but other times I'm just blindly fishing in the hope that I'll come across something I didn't know before.

A recent search of the online newspaper archive at the Library of Congress website unexpectedly led me to the October 10, 1901 issue of the Bemedji (Minnesota) Pioneer. They ran what seems to be a syndicated article about Applebee and her efforts to introduce the sport, and most of the details were familiar to me. One thing in the opening paragraph caught my eye, though (emphasis mine):

"Hockey for the ladies, long the vogue in England, is now about to be introduced in this country by an energetic young Englishwoman who has come to America and to Boston for the express purpose of inspiring in our girls an interest in this sport. Miss Constance Applebee, the sister of the Rev. J. H. Applebee, the minister at Theodore Parker's church, West Roxbury, thinks that there is no game to compare with this one, for which she is to be sponsor hereabouts."

This was the first I had heard of her having a brother at all, let alone in America. West Roxbury rang a bell, though, and soon I realized why.

The student list printed by Harvard for their 1901 summer school session had Applebee as hailing from "W. Roxbury," which, coupled with the reference above to her brother there, led me to wonder if she was staying with him at the time.

I found Constance Applebee's name on a passenger list for the S. S. Devonian for its voyage from Liverpool to Boston in late June of 1901, so she hadn't been in West Roxbury long if that was indeed where she was staying.


I became more intrigued by the connection when I noticed the address listed for the American Field Hockey Association in its 1901 publication "English Field Hockey for Men and Women," which was written by Applebee, was listed as "23 Landseer St., W. Roxbury, Boston."


Curious if this was her brother's home, a simple Google search for anything including "Applebee" and "Landseer" led me to the 1902 Unitarian Yearbook. In it, the Rev. John Henry Applebee's address was listed as "23 Landseer St., W. Roxbury, Mass."


Which is a long way to go to say that I'm pretty sure I now know where Constance Applebee stayed, or at the lest what she used as a mailing address, when she was in Massachusetts in 1901.

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