On May 11 1875 a girl was born into poverty in rural Michigan. She went on to make her mark on journalism, the cinema and finally in the air. The spectacular, and very American, story of pioneer flyer Harriet Quimby
I’m writing this on Harriet Quimby’s 150th birthday. She was probably born at the family farm in Arcadia, Michigan; we don’t know for certain as the local records were destroyed in a fire not long afterwards. We don’t even know how many siblings she had; there were at least three, and possibly as many as nine, who were stillborn or died in infancy. She never spoke of them. We do know there was one older sister – Kittie, born in 1870 – who did survive to adulthood. But biographers agree about two things.The Quimbys were poor. And William Quimby, her father, failed at everything except marriage.
Born in
upstate New York, William Quimby was from a humble background but married middle-class
Ursula in 1859 when they were both 25. During the Civil War he served in the
188th Infantry Regiment, but his service was undistinguished – he had a
disability that prevented front-line service so served as a cook, but was
invalided out with dysentery. After the war, he was one of the ex-soldiers
who obtained title to land on the frontier on the understanding that he would
clear and farm it within five years. In the Quimbys’ case this was 160 acres at
Arcadia on Lake Erie.
The Quimbys left little record of their lives in Michigan. In later years Harriet would hide her Michigan origins and give her birth date as nine years later, and the place as California. Only in the 1990s did careful research by a local historian, Bonnie Hughes, locate the family farm at Arcadia and establish that they were there when Harriet was born. But we do know, from the diaries and memories of others, what their lives would have been like. According to Quimby’s biographer Don Dahler (Fearless: Harriet Quimby A Life without Limit, 2022), they would have been constantly hungry. Quimby attended a one-room schoolroom. Her mother Ursula was a strong influence. Dahler describes her as “a diminutive force of nature, from an educated and enterprising family …who simply refused to accept the cruel randomness of life.” She supplemented the family income by selling a patent medicine concocted by her father, Quimby’s Liver Invigerator (sic). God knows what was in it. But Ursula would want her daughter to achieve everything she had not.
Harriet was
born in an America that was only just taking shape. In 1875 the United States
wasn’t quite a century old and the Civil War, and slavery, had finished just 10
years earlier. The battles with Native Americans were not yet quite won. Rural
Michigan was, in a sense, on the frontier. Everything was difficult, but as
Quimby was to prove, nothing was impossible. The story of Harriet Quimby was to
be a very American one indeed.
*
Sometime in
the 1880s (some sources say 1884, others after 1887), the family gave up on the
farm and headed west in search of a better life. They settled in Arroyo Grande,
between San Francisco and Los Angeles.
William Quimby worked at odd jobs with limited success and Ursula eventually sent him off up the Pacific seaboard to sell Liver Invigerator. Meanwhile some point soon after their arrival in California older sister Nettie, still a teenager, eloped. Neither Harriet nor her parents ever spoke of her again. Dahler says an 1898 pension application completed by William Quimby gives her married name (Rasmussen) and states that she lived in Oakland. But no-one knows what became of her. Meanwhile the family continued to struggle; the 1890s were a depressed time and many Americans were out of work. Sometime around 1900 they wound up in San Francisco. Leslie Kerr, in her biography Harriet Quimby: Flying Fair Lady (2016), says they were living in what was basically a hovel. Dahler says it was a one-room apartment in Montgomery Street, near Chinatown and the red-light district. But Harriet did finish high school. After that she worked as a clerk.
She had
grown up to be a young woman of quite startling beauty, tall and slim with dark
hair and, according to one source, striking green eyes (others say grey or
blue). And she was starting to meet people. At night, she started moonlighting in the
theatre, wanting to be an actress. She got mixed up in the Bohemian Club, still
a famous San Francisco institution; it had been founded in 1872 and early
members had included Jack London, Mark Twain and Ambrose Bierce. We don’t know
who she knew there, but it seems likely she was at least acquainted with London
and Bierce. We do know she knew the German-born photographer Arnold Genthe, who
would become famous for his shots of San Francisco in the aftermath of the 1906
earthquake. Both Dahler and Kerr say that Genthe shot a nude photo of her that
hung behind the bar at the club until the latter was destroyed in the San
Francisco Earthquake in 1906.
Kerr goes farther, reproducing an early-colour autochrome of a beautiful young nude that she says is the portrait. It may be, but maybe not. The Library of Congress, which has it now, does attribute it to Genthe but doesn’t identify it as her. Genthe started experimenting with the autochrome process in 1905, by which time Harriet had already left San Francisco. The Library of Congress dates it to after 1911. In that year Genthe himself moved to in New York but Quimby was by then quite well known, and it seems unlikely she would have posed nude then. But Quimby did pose for him, for publicity shots for a 1900 production of Romeo and Juliet she mounted with her friend Linda Arvidson. The latter later wrote in her own book, When the Movies were Young, that he did them for free because of her beauty. Whoever the woman in the mysterious autochrome is, she is lovely. And it does look like her.
The play
was a bold move and got some kind reviews, but did not lead anywhere. Dahler
says that Quimby herself decided that she wasn’t a very good actress and should
try journalism instead. According to Kerr, Ursula had wanted her to do that
anyway. Meanwhile the Invigerator had paid for some nice clothes, so Ursula had
chopped some years off Harriet’s age and invented a past for her of private
tutors in Europe for her. For her husband, she concocted a past in the US
consular service.
I wonder if
Harriet really needed that sort of help. To get into journalism, she did what
she was always to do in her short life; she kicked down the front door. She
walked into the office of Will Irwin, editor of the San Francisco Call (he
almost certainly knew her from the Bohemian Club). He gave her a try and in
October 1901 her first piece appeared, a description of the artists’ colony in
Monterey. It was rather good. It seems she really did have a flair for ‘slice
of life’ stories; moreover she went out and got her copy in person. This description
of a trip on a fishing boat had meant a 2am start; it was published only a week
or two after her first meeting with Irwin:
Have you
ever heard orders given from hurried men in Italian-French-American? If not you
have missed a treat for those sons of the seas all have musical voices, strange
to say. …As it neared the noon hour everybody found a comfortable seat and
waited for “breakfast”; did not wait very patiently either for the salty air
gives one a royal appetite. Great round loaves of bread were brought out and
…Upon them, about an inch thick, were placed good-sized rounds of beefsteak.
Harriet
Quimby realised she was a good journalist. She never looked back, and in
January 1903 she decided to try her luck in New York.
*
Quimby’s
biographers describe, in some detail, what her arrival in New York would have
been like, but both are using their imagination – in reality, they can’t know.
Kerr has her arriving at Penn Station in the snow, and making her way to a
hotel, where she is looked at with a certain suspicion. Dahler has her arriving
in Manhattan by ferry and disembarking at the 23rd St ferry terminal. Kerr’s
version sounds more likely, but from something Quimby later wrote it seems
Dahler is right. It’s all part of the challenge they have writing about Quimby;
she left plenty of good journalism, but no personal correspondence. Neither did
she live to write an autobiography. One suspects that had she done so, it would
have been rather good – but would have left out a lot; as we’ve seen, she and
her mother were not frank about their past.
What we do
know is that she once again kicked the front door down, but with charm. She
called on John Foster, editor of Leslie’s Illustrated Weekly. Founded by
Frank Leslie in 1855, it was no longer run by the family but had retained the
name, and was an important weekly news magazine with a circulation of probably
60-70,000. Foster was not, at first, very friendly but agreed to give her a
try; her first piece, about Chinatown, impressed him and from then on she
worked for the paper.
In 1906 she
decided she wanted to be a theatre critic as well, so went to the theatre,
wrote a review and got the job. She would be quite influential in this role. She
could be quite a rough critic; she was also a witty one and some of her
barbs must have hurt. Kerr quotes one review as follows: “The production of The
Foolish Virgin fell as flat as an overdone omelette souffle. The same may
be said of the acting of Mrs. Campbell, who, in my opinion, has been highly
overrated.” Ouch.
Blink and you'll miss her: Quimby in Lines of White on a Sullen Sea (1909) |
But there
seems also to have been some campaigning journalism. Quimby was not the first
American woman investigative reporter; Ida Tarbell had recently published
damaging revelations about Standard Oil, and 20 years earlier Nellie Bly had famously
gone undercover to expose conditions at the insane asylum on Roosevelt Island.
But Quimby did write of social matters – including an investigation into
prostitution, an article that caused quite a bit of trouble at the time. What
she did not do was campaign directly for women’s equality. She did say that she
was in favour of women’s suffrage (although she contradicted herself on this
later). But in the main this was something she avoided. Whether this was
because she was not committed, or because it was a bad career move to get
involved, is not clear.
By now
quite successful, Quimby was able to bring her parents from San Francisco. She
was also able to give friends a helping hand. In April 1906 the San Francisco
earthquake devastated the city and Quimby’s friend Linda Arvidson and her fiancé,
also an actor, found themselves homeless. They decided also to try their luck
in New York. Not all went well at first; Arvidson would later remember an
occasion when Quimby came to see how they were doing. She was very well-dressed
and on her way to a social occasion by the sea, and the contrast upset
Arvidson’s fiancé, by then her husband. He in the meantime had been forced to
get bit parts working for the Biograph Company, a movie maker – at that time
actors did not regard this embryonic industry as respectable. But it caught his
imagination. The Biograph Company gave him a chance to move behind the camera.
His name was D.W. Griffith.
Between
1908 and 1911 he directed an enormous number of short films for Biograph, and
seven of them were scripted for him by Harriet Quimby. They were silent, with
almost no dialogue, and her scripts are perhaps better described as film
treatments. In Harriet Quimby – Flying Fair Lady, Leslie Kerr reproduces
the handbills for all seven; these would have been distributed, presumably, to
cinema managers and include an order number for each production. They give a
detailed description of the plot. Given that Quimby was very beautiful, you
wonder at once whether she was ever tempted to move in front of the camera. Her
biographers suggest she did appear in a 1911 D.W. Griffith film that she had
scripted for him, Fisher Folks. But she doesn’t appear in the cast
lists, even as one of the 11 known extras.
Oddly,
neither Dahler nor Kerr mention another Griffith film for Biograph in which she
is known to appear very briefly, though she didn’t write it. It is Lines
of White on a Sullen Sea (1909), which like Fisher Folks is a
romance set in an imaginary fishing community. Blink and you will miss her, but
she is there. She was in good company, as at least two other extras in the film
would go on to bigger parts: Mary Pickford and Mack Sennett. The film can be
streamed on the website of the Library of Congress. It has been said that
Quimby was romantically involved with Griffith, and he and Arvidson did
separate in 1912 (though they did not divorce until 1937). But the only real
evidence, apart from rumours at the time, is a scarab ring that Griffith wore
that Quimby gave him.
The ring had been bought in Egypt. In 1907 Quimby went there and to Palestine via London, Ireland and various places in Europe that she toured by car. She had already been to Cuba in 1906. Other destinations included St Thomas, Panama and Trinidad. She wrote pieces for Leslie’s – but did not just write. Genthe may or may not have taken a nude portrait of Quimby but he did teach her photography. It is hard to find her pictures now, but some were published in a series of compilations by Leslie’s journalist John Schleicher called Around the World with a Camera; the first came out in 1910 and includes quite a number of photos by Quimby – again, Leslie Kerr has managed to find them and includes some in her book. These show Quimby was an at least competent photographer, and maybe a very good one.
Some of Quimby's photographs from the Caribbean in 1906 or 1907,reproduced in Around the World with a Camera in 1910 |
Journalist,
critic, screenwriter, photographer; even, perhaps, actress – there seems no end
to what this dazzling woman could do. But in the end, she would fly too close
to the sun.
*
Motoring
was in its infancy in the 1900s but Harriet Quimby had Mr Toad tendencies early
on. Kerr suggests that she was the first woman in the States to get a driving
licence and to buy her own car. I doubt if either is true; the first is sometimes
attributed to Anne Rainsford French in 1900. In any case, many states did not
require a licence to drive until long after Quimby’s death, and in the early
years many issued them solely for identification; they did not require a test. Dahler
suggests she had had a car of her own, a yellow convertible, as early as her
San Francisco days. That seems surprising, given that the family was struggling
and in 1903 cars were still very rare. Kerr says Quimby acquired her first car,
and her licence, in New York in October 1908.
We do know
that in 1906 she went for a ride out on Long Island with the racing driver
Herbert Lytle, who was practicing for the Vanderbilt Cup driving a Pope-Toledo (he
didn’t qualify that year). They reached speeds of 70MPH and Quimby lost her
hat. But she clearly enjoyed herself, as her report in Leslie’s confirms:
You feel the swift currents of
air produced by the mad flight of the machine... A curve and a sharp angle …and
the car careens virtually on one wheel, and the whole machine seems lifted up
in the air and comes down to earth again with a jump. …You think, if indeed you
think at all, that if it goes much faster you will topple right over, but soon
you begin to slow down, seventy, sixty, fifty. Why you seem to actually crawl
along at fifty an hour, and although every nerve in your body is quivering and
you have just enough strength to hang on to the strap, you manage to shout an
answer to Lytle, who asks with exquisite sarcasm, at the top of his voice,
"Was that fast enough?" and you enjoy the satisfaction of seeing him
nearly fall over with surprise as you fire back "Twasn't very fast; can't
you make one hundred and twenty?"
October 1908: With Herbert Lytle, the Pope-Toledo, and still (for the moment) with hat |
But then
Quimby became interested in aviation.
The first
significant airshow in America took place at Dominguez Field near Los Angeles
in January 1910, and Dahler thinks she was there, maybe with a feature article
in mind. The second such meeting was the Harvard-Boston meet in September, and
at least one source thinks this gave Quimby the flying bug, but we don’t know
if she went. However, the third major American airshow of the year was on a
racetrack at Belmont Park, Long Island, in the last week of October. And this
time we do know Quimby was there.
The
contestants in the competitions at Belmont included some of the best pilots of
the day, including America’s Glen Curtiss, France’s Roland Garros and Britain’s
Claude Grahame-White. They also included a colourful American called John
Moisant. His family, French-Canadian in origin, had settled in Illinois, where
he was born in 1868. In the 1890s Moisant and his brothers moved to El Salvador
to open a plantation. Moisant tried to overthrow the government in El Salvador
twice, with some loss of life. He had eventually been told to back off by the
US government, which was finding him a nuisance. Back in the States he read
about the new science of aviation and wondered if planes might come in handy
for coup attempts, so went to France to learn to fly. After a slightly farcical
attempt to build and fly his own plane, he sensibly got Louis Blériot’s
aviation school to teach him. He became so enamoured of flying that he lost
interest in coups; this was a more interesting hobby. On his return to the
States he started to build monoplanes of his own based on Blériot’s designs. At
Belmont he won an important trophy against strong competition from
Grahame-White.
Quimby was
among the spectators. Exactly what took her there is not clear. Some accounts,
including Kerr’s, say that she went there with her friend Matilde Moisant,
John’s younger sister. Quimby and Matilde Moisant did become friends later but
Dahler’s account suggests that Quimby may not have known her at that stage; she
went alone and, fascinated by what she saw, decided she must learn to fly and
that Moisant was going to teach her. If Dahler is right, she then found out
where the Moisant family were dining that night and did what she did best –
kick down the front door, but with charm; she marched up to their table and
told John Moisant that he must teach her to fly.
Matilde Moisant in 1911 or 1912 |
Not all early aviators approved of women flying. The Wright Brothers would not teach women and they were not alone. But John Moisant and his elder brother Alfred were planning to open a flying school and, perhaps surprisingly, Moisant agreed there and then that she would teach her. At this point Matilde Moisant seems to have decided he would teach her to fly as well. Moisant insisted that they wait until the spring when the weather in the northern US was suitable. In the meantime John Moisant would be travelling the warmer States for the winter, giving lucrative flying displays.
He did not
return; on New Year’s Eve he was flying for a crowd near New Orleans when he
was caught by a gust of wind and thrown from his aircraft. He survived the
impact and was taken to hospital, but was pronounced dead on arrival.
*
Harriet
Quimby was not put off. More surprising, neither was Moisant’s sister Matilde. After
some thought, Alfred Moisant proceeded with the flying school, and that spring
the two women began to fly, Quimby driving out to Long Island in the very early
hours to begin lessons at 4.30am. They were taught by André Houpert, a
Frenchman who had himself qualified in France just the year before (at the time
France was the world’s leader in aviation, and the best pilots often were
French). Dahler and Kerr both say she snuck off in the early morning so that
no-one would find out that Leslie’s most glamorous reporter was learning
to fly. But I suspect she (and Leslie’s, which had paid for the lessons)
always meant it to leak and of course it did, with Quimby being spotted by a reporter from the New York Times.
In due
course Houpert decided she and Moisant should be tested for their pilot’s
licences. The Aero Club of America was not keen on testing women but were
eventually persuaded, and on August 1st she passed. Unfortunately another
candidate then damaged the plane, delaying Matilde’s test for 14 days; but she
too then passed with flying colours. Quimby was the first American woman to
obtain her licence, and only the seventh in the world; the first had been
Raymonde de Laroche in France the previous year.
This should
be put in context. The US didn’t actually require pilot’s licences until 1928; the Aero Club of America issued Quimby and Moisant’s licences on behalf of the
Fédération Aéronautique Internationale. In the meantime, at least a few women flew
anyway. Blanche Stuart Scott, then the best-known, and perhaps the first, American woman flyer, never bothered to get a licence. This had not stopped her
thrilling spectators by diving steeply from 4,000ft and pulling out 200ft from the
ground. (Despite this, she lived until 1970.) Even so,
Quimby was the first American woman to gain an internationally recognised
pilot’s qualification.
Quimby poses with one of the Moisant monoplanes in 1911, probably at an aviation meet on Staten Island in September but possibly in Mexico later that year |
The next
step was to make money out of it. The girl from the hardscrabble farm never did
feel secure, and she wished to provide for her parents. She went exhibition
flying. Blanche Stuart Scott already did this, working first for Glenn Curtiss
and then for Glenn Martin. Quimby teamed up with the Moisants. Soon afterwards
the family were invited to hold flying exhibitions in Mexico, to introduce
Mexicans to aviation and to celebrate the inauguration of President Francisco
Madero. In November 1911 Moisant’s flying circus arrived in Mexico City. It
included André Houpert, Roland Garros, Matilde Moisant and Quimby. Houpert
became the first man to fly over Mexico City; Quimby, the first woman.
Meanwhile Matilde Moisant decided to love-bomb the new President by dropping
flowers for him on the Chapultepec Palace. The two women also delighted a crowd
by flying over the city side-by-side.
And then
Quimby bailed out of the whole enterprise. She did not say why. In fact she had
her eyes on a bigger prize: First woman across the English Channel, and was
afraid someone else would beat her. She slipped away from Mexico, where things
were about to go wrong – Madero faced an armed insurrection led by Emiliano
Zapata and the rest of the aviators, caught up in the chaos that followed, were
lucky to get away in one piece.
How Matilde
Moisant felt about this is not clear; it is said her enthusiasm for flying
faded somewhat after her friend’s defection. Besides, she had lost her brother
– and had had various near misses of her own. “The earth is bound to get us
after a while,” she said later. “So I shall give up flying before I follow my
brother.” She decided to bow out with a final exhibition in Wichita Falls,
Texas on April 13 1912. The following day the crowds rushed the field, forcing
her to crash-land. The aircraft exploded and caught fire but Houpert and
another man dragged her from the flames without serious injury.
Moisant was
just five feet tall, slim, energetic, and if pictures are to be believed, madly
attractive with a direct gaze and a cheeky smile. She may also have been an
even better flyer than Quimby (Houpert considered her a natural pilot). She did
not return to flying and died in 1964.
Also left
behind was André Houpert. He, like Griffith, is said to have been Quimby’s
lover. Apparently the Houpert family did later believe this, but the only real
evidence is a locket Quimby gave her with her picture. It was dated August
1911, which is the month Quimby passed her FAI licence examination; it could be
a love token but could also simply be in thanks for Houpert’s training. If
there was a romance, Houpert never spoke of it. He died in New York in 1963.
*
In any
case, Quimby had moved on. On Sunday, April 14 1912 – the day on which Matilde
was dragged from her burning plane – she was in England. To be precise, she was on the ground near Dover with one
A.L. Stevens.
The latter
was a pioneer balloonist and had also developed the manual parachute. His
ballooning escapades had included landing on the spire of Notre Dame Cathedral
in Montreal and landing in the Atlantic. He was born in Cleveland but no-one
seems quite sure when – in 1912 he was probably 41. His name at birth was
probably not Stevens (his parents were Czech). He had become Quimby’s business
manager. He is also said to have been her lover, though again there is no proof
– and he was in fact married, though his wife divorced him in 1921. Whatever he
was to Quimby, he had helped her in her negotiations with Louis Blériot, who
had agreed to lend her a plane on the understanding that she would order one of
her own. He also helped her secure a sponsorship deal with the Daily Mirror.
Quimby in her Blériot about the time of her Channel flight |
And the
weather on that Sunday was ideal. But Quimby refused to go. She always refused
to fly on a Sunday. This may have been for her parents, but perhaps she herself
was superstitious. She carried charms for luck (though other flyers, including
Matilde, also did this). She also had an odd fear that her body might be used
for medical research after her death, and had left instructions for it to be
protected from grave-robbers.
For
whatever reason, the day passed and with it the weather; Monday was awful.
Tuesday April 16, however, was just good enough. At 5.30am, she went.
Henry
Holden, in Her Mentor was an Albatross (1993), quotes her as saying: “I
started climbing steadily in a long circle, and soon reached an altitude of
1,500ft. As I looked down, Dover Castle was in a veil of mist. I could barely
see the tugboat filled with reporters sent out by the Mirror… The fog
quickly surrounded me like a cold, wet, gray blanket.” The mist made it hard to
see: “I had to push my goggles up to my forehead. I could not see through them.
I was traveling at a mile a minute and the mist felt like tiny needles on my
skin.” She could see very little - but she had with her a compass. She had
never had one before but an English flyer, Gustav Hamel, had given it to her
and insisted that she use it. It would have been easy to become disoriented and
be lost at sea; it had happened to others. Hamel himself would be lost flying
the same route two years later.
Somewhere around mid-Channel, her nerves torn by the fog, she suffered a near engine failure, but was able to restart the three-cylinder Gnome radial engine and in due course saw the vague outline of the French coast. “It was all tilled land below me, and rather than tear up the farmers’ fields, I decided to drop down on the hard and sandy beach. I did so at once, making an easy landing.” She had landed not at Calais as intended but 30 miles (about 50km) away at Hardelot, oddly enough where Blériot had his own base. She received a warm welcome from the fishing community, who quickly manhandled her plane up the beach to protect it from the rising tide. She sent a telegram to Calais, where the Mirror reporters and photographers were waiting; they arrived quickly, with a bottle of champagne.
The
champagne soon went flat. The Daily Mirror had promised her $5,000 for
her story after the Channel flight but went back on its word when another woman
made the crossing two days earlier, albeit only as a passenger (flown in fact
by Hamel). Moreover the Sunday when Quimby should have flown was, it turned
out, the day the Titanic hit the iceberg; the two days’ delay meant the
news had broken and she was not on the front pages. The Mirror’s own
report the day after her crossing was relegated to two columns on page eight.
Quimby
returned to the States and took delivery of the plane she had ordered from Blériot
– a Type XI-2 “Artillerie”, a two-seater designed for possible military use.
Stevens managed to get her a few deals for exhibition flights, paying $1,000 or
more – a huge sum in 1912. They also clinched a sponsorship deal for a popular
soft drink, Vin Fiz, a grape soda that happened to match Quimby’s famous purple
flying suit. One journalist, says Dahl, described it as “a cross between river
water and horse slop”. Still, business was good. The press, charmed by her pale
skin and delicate beauty, dubbed her “the Dresden China aviatrix”.
But she may
not have enjoyed it. Exhibition flying was a ruthless business and despite the
high fees, the cost of mechanics and transport for the aircraft ate into
profits. Henry Holden quotes Houpert as saying that Quimby had become less
enthusiastic about flying. She still needed the money; she had to take care of
her parents. But she seems to have told friends that she intended to give it up
when she could, and pursue a dream of writing a novel. She may also have
realised, as Matilde Moisant had, that the earth was bound to get her after a
while. In fact she may have been in a thoughtful mood when she arrived for the
Boston Air Meet at Squantum, Massachusetts.
On July 1
she made a number of flights at the meet and at 6pm, after competitive flying
had finished for the day, she took the meet organiser, William Willard, for a
flight across the harbour and around the Boston Light. As she descended towards
the landing strip on her way back, the Blériot’s nose pitched downward and
Willard was thrown out. Quimby appeared to be fighting to bring the nose up but
was herself thrown out after Willard. They fell into the mud flats at the edge
of the harbour. Both died at once. There is a poignant photo of Quimby’s body
in its stylish flying suit, slung across the shoulders of the man who is
carrying her to the shore.
*
Harriet
Quimby lived a very public life. But she left no correspondence, and never
talked of private matters. We don’t know who Quimby’s lovers were (at least,
not for certain). We're not even sure how many siblings she had.
That was not an accident. In 1907 she had interviewed Rose Stahl, an actress of
some years’ standing who had just broken through in a big way in a play called The
Chorus Lady. Stahl gave Quimby a piece of advice – to keep her private life
just that: “The less the public knows of your private life the better it likes
you.” It was advice she clearly did not forget. All we really know is that she
was intelligent, confident and charming. She was also probably rather decent; she
seems to have had no known enemies and some good friends.
Quimby (left) with Matilde Moisant |
And she was
very beautiful. Her pictures confirm this. Matilde Moisant would later recall
her as “tall and willowy…the prettiest girl I’d ever seen. She had the most
beautiful blue eyes, oh what eyes she had.” Perhaps that is what makes her
story so resonant today; her charm and her beauty, combined with her awful
sudden death.
But there was something else too. Quimby was born on the American frontier, in a country that was less than 100 years old, to a father who was a veteran of the Civil War. She was also born into poverty on a hardscrabble farm. She could have lived and died that way, but decided she wouldn’t. All her life, she lived her own life and no-one else’s. If she wanted something, she kicked the front door down. To be sure, she did it with charm. But she did it. Nothing was impossible. Harriet Quimby’s story is about as American as it is possible to be.
Mike Robbins's book On the Rim of the Sea is available as a paperback or ebook. More details here. Follow Mike on Bluesky or X or browse his books here.