Posts Tagged ‘Helen Jean Burn’

Excerpt: from Betsy Bonaparte, by Helen Jean Burn

Posted by csollod on Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

Helen Jean Burn writes in Betsy Bonaparte (Maryland Historical Society, 2010) about the new city of Baltimore, where William Patterson, father of the “belle of Baltimore,” settled in the late eighteenth century:

Geography had determined the placement of this town far up the Chesapeake Bay, deep into a fertile countryside where crops could be grown and then shipped out. On the west side of the upper bay, the Patapsco River splits into three branches. The northwest branch ends in a small basin. At its 1729 founding, Baltimore Town bordered this basin. On the south side of the basin, later called the inner harbor, was Smith’s Hill, so named because it had been described by the original white explorer of Maryland, John Smith. Along the west edge of the basin ran a trail that became the coastal road between north and south.

….

Continuing north, the trail bent around the Baltimore basin, then rose northeast over low hills, to cross the stream that marked the town’s eastern boundary…. This boundary stream, named Jones Falls, was deep enough to accommodate ships, although they could not turn around until a turning basin had been made.

….

In the early years, the streets were named after the Maryland colony’s proprietor, Charles Calvert, Lord Baltimore. Charles and Calvert Streets ran north and south; Baltimore Street stretched from the Great Road on the west to Jones Falls on the east. There a market was built, called Marsh Market because of the swampy ground along the stream, and town folk commonly omitted the name of Baltimore Street and instead referred to it as Market Street. Beyond Jones Falls, the land continued eastward along the Patapsco River to a nearby settlement called Fell’s Point. There the water was much deeper than that of the Baltimore basin, and in time Fell’s Point became a site for shipbuilding and a mooring place for ocean-going ships. Yet it was to Baltimore Town’s encircled basin that men with the most money came. Their investments would enable Baltimore to expand, absorb Fell’s Point, and for a time surpass both Philadelphia and Boston.

Who will play Betsy Bonaparte?

Posted by csollod on Monday, December 12th, 2011

The Maryland Historical Society has published two books about one of Baltimore’s most famous citizens, Betsy Bonaparte, a wealthy young lady born Elizabeth Patterson of the Patterson merchant family who would later give its name to Patterson Park: Betsy Bonaparte, by Helen Jean Burn (2010), and Betsy Bonaparte, The Belle of Baltimore, by Claude Bourguignon-Frasseto (1988, 2003, originally published in French). Her story is ripe for new movie development. Two have been made: Glorious Betsy, which came out in 1928, starring Dolores Costello Barrymore; and Hearts Divided, 1936.

At age 18, in 1803, against both families’ wishes, Betsy Patterson married Jerome Bonaparte, who was in the United States evading capture by the British. Napoleon was dead set against this match for his youngest brother, and the Emperor tended to win his battles. Despite Betsy’s pregnancy, he forced the marriage to be annulled, and our heroine spent the next 25 years living off and on in the great capitals of Europe, advocating for her son’s rights as a royal and enjoying herself. She was spunky, determined, and passionate, and she wore revealing clothes at the very height and edge of fashion. Though she was an heiress and ended her life a wealthy woman in Baltimore, she had significant financial worries throughout, as her father indicated his continued disapproval of her actions by bequeathing her far less than her brothers received in his will.

Burn’s book is particularly entertaining and accessible. Her presentation of Betsy Bonaparte’s life as a “fitful fever,” with ups and downs and the emotional trials the young woman must have endured as her husband rejected her and their son in favor of his family are far more interesting than presentation of a life of balls, suitors, and witty bon mots repeated for generations. The “belle of Baltimore” was a complicated and interesting woman, along with being beautiful, and that’s a far more compelling route for a book–or new movie–to take.