Following the Drum:" A Glimpse of Frontier Life.
Vielé, Mrs. [Teresa]. “Following the Drum”: A Glimpse at Frontier Life. New York: Rudd & Carleton, 1858.
8vo.; three pages of ads in the rear; endpapers offset; edges lightly foxed; red cloth, stamped in blind and gilt; spine rubbed; extremities frayed.
First edition of Vielé’s memoir of a year-long stay at Ringgold Barracks in Texas. Chapters include Enlisting, Recruiting, Orders, and Camp Life; chapters devoted to locations such as The Tropics, Havana, and New Orleans; and over a dozen chapters on different locations, maneuvers, and characteristics of Texas. Howes V92; Wagner-Camp-Becker 312a. The Hanna Yale Exhibit notes that as a bride Vielé went with her soldier husband to Texas when the Mexican War was not long over and when the fierce Comanches were plentiful. Dedicated to Winfield Scott, “The Honored Chief of the Army.”
Vielé does not look up in any of the standard references; the most detailed biography we could find, copied below, was derived from this book and from two scrapbooks present at the University of Delaware Library:
Teresa Griffin Vielé‚ lived in New York City in the 1870s. She was married to General Egbert L. Vielé‚ with whom she had five children: Kathlyn, Herman, Teresa, Egbert and Emily. Around the year 1870, Teresa and Egbert Vielé‚ sued each other for divorce on almost identical grounds: adultery, insanity, and cruelty. Mrs. Vielé‚ was accused of having an affair with General W.W. Averill, and Mr. Viel‚ with Miss Julia Dana. The suits also involved a custody battle for their five children. Because of the Vielés' high social standing and the relative rarity of divorce the 19th century, the case was widely publicized in the New York papers.
In June 1871, Teresa Vielé‚ won custody of her two youngest children only to have that court order postponed until October. On October 2, 1871, the divorce trial resumed but soon afterwards the Vielés withdrew their mutual charges and the children were divided among them.
Mrs. Vielé seems to have been very involved socially, as were many 19th century, upper-middle class women. She was a member of the American Ladies Aid Association for Cuban Women and Children which raised money and supplies for victims of the Cuban revolution. As a participant in the Southern Relief Association, Teresa Vielé was a member of the Committee on Public Places of Amusement. She also apparently had political interest in Mr. George Francis Train, a candidate in the 1872 presidential election. George Train was a member of the Train Ligue which campaigned on the promise of an equal distribution of political power for all women, men, and ethnicities and supported women's suffrage.
Perhaps documentation of her divorce drama appealed to Mrs. Vielé's literary instincts. Hers was a creative family. She had authored Following the drum: a glimpse of frontier life (1858), based on her experiences as a military spouse during her husband's tour in the American Southwest and fighting in the Mexican War. The General (1825-1902) published Hand-book for active service; containing practical instructions in campaign duties (1861). Their youngest son, Egbert Jr., accompanied his mother to France after the divorce and later changed his name to Francis Vielé-Griffin (1864-1937), gaining renown as a French symbolist poet. Older son Herman Knickerbocker Vielé (1856-1908) achieved fame as a novelist, playwright, and artist in New York, and was best known for Last of the Knickerbockers a Comedy Romance (1901). Teresa Vielé died in Paris in 1906 and was buried in Père-Lachaise Cemetery. (http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/findaids/viele.htm#bio)
Teresa Griffin Vielé was born in New York City in 1831. Her parents – her father a lawyer and her mother, a writer – had her educated at Pelham Priory, a girls finishing school. She made her debut in New York; and also enjoyed early fame by being immortalized in a poem by Longfellow. After her 1850 marriage to Egbert Vielé, a West Point graduate
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