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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1915)
THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 21; 1915, Of. 1MMMmJP&& r I ' i - --:: J. How the Blue Blood of the v : i &i&4 -S- I mm 13' 6 Famous Drexels Seems to Run Red and White in These Strangely Opposite Types Lucy Shocks Her Aristocratic Antecedents by Renouncing the World for the Cloister, While Catherine, the Fastest Woman Driver in America, Stuns Them With Her Law-Breaking Antics in a V - .7 i y.yitux: .'A. ft fpfiliiilliillifi V J Vim, m iiawJWW ffl - W-adg rX. .3-.. J High-Powered Motor Lvcy Drexel Dahlgren, who astounded the social world . by taking the veil and retiring to a convent for the remainder of her life. iilwi HO can explain tb trangt paradox in the Uvea of Lucy and Katherlna Dahlgren? De scendants of the famoua Drexels, In whose blue blood runs high pride and social haughtiness, these girls have upset family tradition to a' startling de gree. Lucy has renounced the world for the convent, while Catherine has shocked her aristocratic antecedents by her wild antics In a high-powered motor car. The glaring discrepancy between the cloister and the speeders' court has set all the East asking why. It has been a paradox of the most sen sational form. One girl turns her back upon the world (and a very pleasant world it should have been for her, what with wealth -add high society at her feet), while the other maiden violates the canon of dignity which the old, old Drexel family cherished and gets "pinched" (plain, ordi nary pinched) time after time. Sensations Foreign to Drexels. t, The Dahlgren sisters are granddaughters of Joseph Drexel, head of the house uni versally noted in financial and social cir cles. They are members of a family that has the bluest of Philadelphia blue blood, the most cherished traditions of scrupulous dignity and quietude. Sensation played no part in the annals of the Drexels until Lucy Drexel Dahlgren suddenly Sought divorce from her husband, Eric B. Dahlgren. The complaint came like a clap of thunder to society, accustomed as it was to holding up the Drexels as the paragons of modesty and si exemplifying the blessings of seemly demeanor. All the world knew that the Drexels' proudest boast had been that it had never had a divorce among its members. Society Stood Aghast That was In 1912. Before the edge was off the keenness of this bright piece of gossip another of the Drexel daughters went Into the divorce court Explosive comment and excitement was redoubled. Mrs. J. Duncan Emmet, younger sister o f Mrs. Eric B. Dahlgren, asked and ob tained marital freedom. "What Is the dignified old family com ing to. anyway T asked the exclusive so ciety folk of New York and Philadelphia. Now, three years later? echoes of this pair of divorces have come rattling back upon the "400." Two daughters of Mrs. Eric B. Dahl gren have performed startling acts, the, re sponsibility for which intimate friends of the Drexel family attribute to the shatter ing of tradition in 1912. Miss Lucy Drexel Dahlgren, the eldest of the daughters, is studying in seclusion for the final vows that will make her a Sis-' ter of the Blessed Sacrament, destined to go down into the most miserable hovels of the negroes in southern states and bring; relief to the wretches there. Two years younger than Lucy is Kath erlne, "Katherine the Madcap," they call, her. Even at the moment her elder sister was meditating in solemn solitude Kathe rine was setting all the countryside about i Lenox, Mass., agog with her wild automo-' bile escapades. . Drove Officers of Law Frantic The village constables grew frantic at her defiance of all laws and regulations.! They arrested her for speeding no less than six times, fined her often, warned her again1 and again, and finally had to take her license away. Once they got wind of her proposed race with a motorcycle speed: fiend and dragged her Into court again to receive an official threat To all of these admonitions, fines and restraints of the law Katherine laughed.! At her mother's pleadings she laughed, too. At public indignation she laughed. When the drawing-rooms first resounded to these reports the old-time Intimates of the Drexel family threw up their hands in as these made la the inner circles of so ciety in the East Furthermore, Katherine has developed a peculiar fondness for eccentric and bizarre clothing, affecting flowing Grecian robes and a jeweled fillet about her brow that is in marked contrast to the Quakerlike de murity of her family's traditional attire. Made Brilliant Match. In 1890 Lucy Wharton Drexel married Erie B. Dahlgren. Their wedding was a brilliant one socially. She, daughter of the financial lord, Joseph Drexel, the heiress to not less than $20,000,000; he the son of Admiral Dahlgren, celebrated civil war hero, and Inventor of the widely used Dahl gren gun. Each had been reared in an atmosphere sternly opposed to divorce or to any action that savored of a desire for publicity. The strictest code of morals, veritably puritanic rules, commanded the Drexel fam ily. There bad never been a divorce in It and there never would be, decided Mrs. Drexel. Her two daughters left at home were married later,' one of them to John Duncan Emmet and the other to Dr. Charles Bing 1 ham Penrose. The young, Dahlgren couple were happy, so the world thought Eight children came to them. All ere living. Lucy is 23, Madeline 22, Katherine 21, Ulrica 19, Olga 17, Eric 14, Joseph 12 and Eva 11 years ef age. Dancing Led to Divorce. In Masch, 1912, the divorce papers were brought out in court Eric Dahlgren was ac cused of having been guilty of misconduct with a Mrs. Bradley. He admitted having dined her at Hector's and having taken her to her apartments aiong in the "small hours" of night. He claimed, however, that the wine he had consumed overcame him amazement "Since those two divorceL.ln 'the apartments and that he fell down In trials things haven't been the same. When the Drexel .reputation of freedom from di vorce or scandal was broken Lucy Dahl-j gren went Into a convent and Katherlna became a htrom-scaraoi auto speeder." , Too may now hear Just such statements a stupor, from which he did not recover until 6:30 the next morning. The com plaint charged merely that detectives had seen him dancing with Mrs. Bradley upon the street as they wound their way homeward and that he hid lavished many endearments upon companion during the leisurely Journey, and that she had respond ed in like manner. The court decided is favor of the com plaining wife and gave her both the de cree and the custody of the eight children. A peculiar feature of the case was the departure of Mrs. Dahlgren with her daughter Lucy for Eu rope upon the same day that jthe com plalnt was filed. Throughout the trial the girl, the only ma ture one ot the chil dren, remained with her mother, counsel ing and sustaining her In all the difficulties. When the separa tion was complete Airs. Dahlgren took her family and settled on the estate "Bel Air," near Lenox, Mass. From this home the two daugh ters, Lucy and Kath erine, went forth upon their errands, so strikingly different Did the heartaches and miseries caused by the divorce pro ceedings turn Lucy Drexel Dahlgren against the world Also, did this break-up of a prorad tradi tion make Katherine Drexel Dahlkren sayr "I don't care'? Did she suddenly develop "speed" manias and dashing daredevil man ners because the century-old ntbVts jof the Drexels were removed ? f Lucy la now Sister Maria Xacia.' tJntUf the summer c-t 191S, when sJtej smddanl ) VT - ... sssMnivnBVvnrisvisfiiPWBsjs9TBas j . . : :- ?:kfci'&X:&fy ' . K p. I ) " 7 ,r n I'M' " 1 1 Dm I ? ' jlOJ ' , rr I - 1 r KaUctTna Drexel Dahlgren, who has shocked staid old New England by her ma&ariving of a high-poweiJed racing car. took the vows, she was looked upon as one of the most brilliant of the society girls of New York and Philadelphia. She was brought Into the world of society by her aunt Mrs. Penrose, In 1910 and for two seasons was feted and sought for. Often the "400" has awakened of a morning .to find that one of their number has gainsaid the laws of conventionality as laid aown by their neighbors. In most cases a ready explanation was at hand, as hereditary traits were named as the cause of the fall from grace. In the case of the Dahlgren girls, how-, ever, the time-worn ready answer cannot be given, and so society knits its brow la perplexity. I Copyright 1915.' by J. Keslsyl -