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Health & Fitness

Was she the first Woman to Conduct the Boston Symphony Orchestra?

I’ve done surname studies on most of the WILKINSON families of northern New England.  This helps me to keep straight who is a cousin, and who isn’t.  I’ve gotten to know some of the other WILKINSON lineages very well.  Some of those “other Wilkinsons” have actually married some of my ancestors, their siblings and cousins. 

When I first read about Emilie G. Wilkinson of Nashua, New Hampshire, I was hoping she was one of the “New Hampshire Wilkinsons”, descended from the immigrant Thomas Wilkinson (about 1690 – before 1739) of Portsmouth.  It turned out that her maiden name was Grant, and that I was actually more closely related to her first husband, Edward Morris Temple (1848 – 1912) than I was to her second husband, George Ware Wilkinson (about 1827 – 1913).  George W. Wilkinson was descended from the immigrant ancestor, the widow Prudence Wilkinson (about 1595 – about 1655) of Malden, Massachusetts.

Emilie, also known as Emily, was born in Nashua, New Hampshire.  She was a self-taught musician who studied to be a church organist in Boston. She studied organ abroad and returned to Boston to play at several churches.  According to one book, see below, she even filled in for the famous Arthur Nikisch, director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, one night in 1892 when he became ill at the last moment and could not conduct.  I don’t know how many women have conducted the BSO, but she must have been one of the first!

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 New Hampshire Women: A Collection of Portraits and Biographical Sketches of Daughters and Residents of the Granite State, Who are Worthy Representatives of their Sex in the Various Walks and Conditions of Life, The New Hampshire Publishing Co., Concord, NH, 1895, page 129.   Via Google Books

So who was her husband, George Ware Wilkinson? He was born, raised and died in Boston,.   Except for a brief time in Minnesota and his service in the Union Army during the Civil War, he spent his whole life in Boston as a surveyor.  He was a member of the “Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company”, and I found him listed in several Boston City Directories as an officer in that fraternal organization.

Emily G. Wilkinson died in Boston at age 61 at the Massachusetts Homepathic Hospital (now the Talbot Building at the Boston Medical Center).  Her occupation was listed as “organist & music teacher”.  She was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in Nashua.  Her husband, George W. Wilkinson, died in 1913 at the Home for Aged Men in Boston.   Their records, 1861 – 1916, are kept at the Joseph P. Healey library of the University of Massachusetts in Boston.   For some reason, he is buried, not with his wife in Nashua, but at Forest Hills Cemetery in Boston.  I couldn’t find any children for Emily by either husband in census records, vital records or in compiled genealogies. Nor could I find any children for George W. Wilkinson by his first wife.

The “other” Wilkinson lineage:

Generation 1: Unknown Wilkinson, married about 1615 in Bedford, England to Prudence Unknown.  She was born about 1595 in England and died between 9 January 1654 and 26 July 1655 in Massachusetts. She was a resident of Charlestown and Malden, Massachusetts.

Generation 2: John Wilkinson, died 12 December 1675, married Joanne Skelton

Generation 3: John Wilkinson, born about 1647; married on 10 October 1675 in Salem, Massachusetts to Elizabeth Read, daughter of Thomas Read.

Generation 4: John Wilkinson, born 25 January 1678 in Providence, Rhode Island, died 24 January 1725 in Attleborough, Massachusetts; married about 1700 to Raches Fales, daughter of James Fales and Anne Brock.

Generation 5: Joseph Wilkinson born 21 March 1705 in Attleborough;  married on 17 October 1733 in Dedham, Massachusetts to Hannah Warren.

Generation 6: David Wilkinson, born 15 October 1740 in Stoughton, Massachusetts; married on 5 May 1763 in Wrentham, Massachusetts to Abigail Ware.

Generation 7: Elijah Wilkinson, born 1772 in Massachusetts, died after 1850, married about 1798 in Townshend, Vermont to Mindwell Rawson, daughter of Stephen Rawson and Silence Ward. 

Generation 8: Ware Wilkinson, born May 1801 in Townshend, Vermont, died 1 September 1867 in Dedham, Massachusetts; married first on 2 December 1830 in Boston to Eliza Dennis, daughter of Charles Dennis and Sarah Endicott Ford of Beverly, Massachusetts; married second on 19 February 1852 in Newburyport, Massachusetts to Hannah E. Pressell.

Generation 9: George Ware Wilkinson, son of Ware Wilkinson and Eliza Dennis, born about 1837 in Boston, died 29 December 1913 in Boston; married first to on 23 June 1870 in Charlestown to Emma Janetta Colbath, daughter of Charles Granderston Colbath and Elizabeth Moulton; married second on 26 November 1894 in Boston to Emilie J. Grant, daughter of Erastus C. Grant and Lucie C. Stone of Rhode Island.

 

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