Sarah Jordan
Men who were unmarried and working for Edison at Menlo
Park might have found themselves living for a time at a boarding house managed
by Sarah Jordan. It was located near by the laboratory and machine shops.
According to accounts, the food was plentiful and good. But there was no
tolerance for unruly behavior. Sarah Jordan had the help of an adopted daughter
and a maid. Between them they
made all the meals, served the meals, cleaned up after the meals, and cleaned
each room to a spotless condition if reports are accurate. This was probably a
difficult task since many of the rooms had two or three times the number of
occupants for which they were designed.
Sarah Jordan was a distant relative to Thomas Edison
by his first wife.
There seems to be no record of her husband, yet she was called Mrs.
Find details about one resident at the boarding house HERE.
Ludwig K. Böhm
More about the boarding house. SOURCE
Sarah Jordan converted this 1870 duplex into a
boarding house in 1878 so that several of Thomas Edison’s unmarried employee's
would have housing near the Menlo Park Laboratory Complex. The house was one of
the first to be lighted by Edison’s newly invented incandescent lamp during
the public lighting demonstration of December 1879. But since the light bulbs,
which were mounted on the wall, were experimental, Sarah Jordan and her boarders
relied on kerosene lamps as well.
Edison’s employees relaxed in the Sitting Room
when they were not busy at the nearby laboratory. A game of cards, reading,
story swapping or even a heated argument filled their leisure times. Menlo Park
visitors looking for a good meal took over the same space, crowding the boarders
into the smaller dining room to the rear of the house.
It took many hands to keep this house running:
kneading bread, boiling the dirty clothes, emptying the slops, sweeping the
floors, clearing the tables and much more, before the chores for the day were
finished.
Boarders seldom crossed the threshold or even had a
look into Sarah Jordan’s side of the house. Sarah Jordan’s sitting room was
a private place, filled with inexpensive, fancy goods and furniture even then
somewhat out-of-date.
Privacy was difficult to find in a house shared
with strangers. Keepsakes competed for space with necessities in Sarah’s
Bedroom, the only room Sarah Jordan, who had lost her husband in 1877, and her
10 year old daughter, Ida, could really call their own.
Kate Williams, the 42-year old servant, had a
private room in the back of the house. The room was furnished in inexpensive
cast-off objects.
Up to sixteen boarders occupied the six upstairs
bedrooms of the house. These room were very spacious in comparison to the rooms
occupied by Sarah and her daughter. Most of the rooms were occupied by at least
2 boarders, which didn’t offer the boarders much privacy.
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