Wedding Dresses from the Vassar Community – More than Just Pretty Dresses

As Vassar begins Spring Break, I’m finally able to carve out a moment to catch you all up with our plans for our next exhibition. We’re not sure of our opening date yet (we’re hoping to open during Senior Week as we did in 2010 and 2011, to be open for Commencement, by May 26) but we know we’ll be open for Reunion, which is from June 7-9 this year.

When considering what to exhibit, I realized that this would be the reunion year for several of our recent donors – and it will also be my own 20th reunion! In 2007, we received a donation of 4 wedding dresses from the same Vassar family – 3 generations of dresses from 4 alums. This grouping alone is fascinating, allowing us to compare the stylistic changes over 52 years in the culture of one family. The middle two dresses of the four were worn by Mary Lee Hartzell ’53 and Ellen McPhillips Baumann ’63. As this will be their reunion year, it seems like the perfect time to display their dresses, along with other interesting wedding dresses we’ve collected over the years.

I have to admit I’ve been hesitant to do a wedding dress exhibition. In my work with our collection, I try very hard to get students past the stage of “Oh! Look at the pretty dresses!” and into the stage of examining such objects as evidence of cultural history, evidence of women’s lives. With wedding dresses, it’s particularly hard to get past the “it’s so pretty” stage, and as hard as it is to get the students working on the exhibit past that, it will be even harder to get the exhibition’s fleeting audience past that.

So, can we find a way to use these “pretty dresses” to examine the changes in weddings and marriage over the last 159 years (the earliest dress we plan to show is from 1854)? Can we appreciate the beauty of these dresses, yet not let that blind us to the complications of the cultural ideals they represent?

As we develop this exhibition, we’d love to hear your feedback. We’re just starting to reach out to the donors of the dresses, and some students are hoping to conduct oral history interviews with the women who wore the dresses, or their relatives. The stories that they provide will determine how this exhibition unfolds. We’re also working on identifying the “missing pieces” – objects that are not in our collection, but that we’d like to seek as loans or donations, to diversify the exhibition. We’ve realized one of the easiest ways to do this is to collect photographs from members of the Vassar community, from a variety of weddings, to showcase diverse traditions and innovations.

So . . .

What did you wear to your wedding?

The Vassar College Costume Collection is seeking photographs and narratives from Vassar community members to showcase a variety of clothing worn for weddings. We are interested in images of both traditional and non-traditional weddings, from diverse ethnic and religious traditions, and we’re particularly hoping to include examples from same-sex weddings.

With your permission, we may display some of the photographs and stories as a part of our upcoming exhibition of wedding outfits, for this year’s Reunion. Email your photos to costumeshop@vassar.edu, or mail copies of your photos to the Vassar College Costume Collection, Box 734, 124 Raymond Avenue, Poughkeepsie, NY 12604. Please include a brief narrative about your wedding and what you wore. Please note that we may not be able to display all the photos received, depending on the number of submissions, and we will not be able to return photos that are mailed to us, but all photographs and stories will inform our research and will be greatly appreciated!

In the weeks to come, we’ll be sharing some of our research, along with some of our process for developing the exhibition. We’ll also be reaching out to you for more feedback – whether you’re an alum/current student/married/unmarried/etc., we’d love to know what you think about the traditions/innovations in weddings and marriage that these dresses represent.

8 Replies to “Wedding Dresses from the Vassar Community – More than Just Pretty Dresses”

  1. Under separate cover, I have mailed three pictures from our wedding on June 9, 1958. I graduated in the morning(as President of my class and a summa (or magna) cum laude and married at three in the afternoon in the Vassar Chapel, witnessed by family, friends and many classmates. It was a most exciting and hectic and memorable day!
    My dress was white organdy with re embroidered Alencon lace and seed pearls scattered throughout. My headpiece was Alencon with seed pearls. It was a very classic dress of the period.
    The wedding dress was worn as a party and Hallowe’en costume many times before it finally bit he dust!

  2. I had a very small garden wedding (25 including us) in 1984, and have only a very few pictures. If I can get one duplicated I will send it along. I still do have my dress, a knee length ivory crepe de chine pleated shift with satin shoulder accents. If you are interested in having it, I will hunt it up and send it along for display.

    I agree with Arden wholeheartedly and I remember JoLeigh fondly from college. Claude Salomon ’68

    1. Thanks so much for your support, Claude, and for offering your photos and your dress! We would love to have the photos, if you are able to make copies. You can send them to:

      Vassar College Costume Collection
      124 Raymond Avenue, Box 734
      Poughkeepsie, NY 12604

      Unfortunately we probably won’t be able to include your dress, though. I wish we had more space to exhibit, as I wish we had more space for permanent storage, but we’re crowded in both as it is.

      We look forward to seeing your photos, and hopefully we’ll see you at Reunion!

      -Arden

  3. Thanks for your reply, Shana – this is a conversation we really want to have! Part of the reason we find this subject relevant right now is precisely to acknowledge the issues you raise.

    We’re really hoping that same-sex couples who have married, whether their marriage is legally recognized or not, will respond to our call for submissions, so that we can highlight the situation of others who can’t. But how we can do that depends on the submissions we receive, so we tried to create a call for submissions that was as inclusive and neutral as possible.

  4. You guys do realize that a great many of our fellow alumni and alumnae are still waiting for their legal right to get married at all? Didn’t we just go through this with the Westboro situation? I’m not saying this isn’t interesting, but, some acknowledgement might have been considerate. I am a straight person who has chosen to not get married, that’s fine, that’s on me. But what if I couldn’t event if I wanted to? Vassar seems like the kind of place where we realize these things. Cheers! Not hating, just feel compelled to point it out. Love, Shana Nys

  5. Any chance you have photos of the writing inside the 1854 dress? That was one of my favourite dresses when I worked for the costume shop entirely because of the inscription.

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