Charlotte Taylor Blow
Charless (1810–1905) founded the "Home of the Friendless"
in St.
Louis
in 1853 for elderly, indigent women who could no
longer work and care for themselves. Renamed “The Charless
Home" in 1977, the institution celebrated its 150th anniversary in
2003 and continues to provide housing and services to retired men
(since 1996) as well as women.
Mrs. Charless wrote a biography of her husband, Joseph Charless,
Jr. (1804-1859) to extol his exemplary moral and Christian
character. Her husband, a prominent merchant and banker, was
assassinated in St. Louis by a deranged bookkeeper, Joseph
Thornton, who believed that Mr. Charless had ruined his character
by testifying against him at trial. Mr. Thornton, accused of
stealing nearly $20,000 from the Boatmen’s Saving Association, was
acquitted of theft, but found guilty of murder. Mrs. Charless's
biography, written as a series of letters to her grandchildren, was
privately printed and published in St. Louis in 1869.
Born in
Southampton,
Virginia
, Mrs. Charless traveled with her family first to
northern Alabama and then, in 1830, to St. Louis where her father,
Peter Blow (1777 -1832), briefly operated a hotel.
At the
time of his death, he or his family sold their slave Dred Scott (ca.1799-1858) to Colonel John Emerson, who took Scott to the “free”
state of
Illinois
and territory of
Wisconsin. When Scott returned to St. Louis in 1842, he
sued for his freedom. Scott found moral and monetary support from
Charlotte Charless, her husband and her brothers Henry and Taylor
Blow. After Scott's final appeal to the United States
Supreme Court failed in 1857, Colonel
Emerson's widow, by then married to a leading abolitionist,
transferred ownership of Scott to Taylor Blow. Mr. Blow gave Mr.
Scott his freedom in 1857.
Sources
- Gary Sluyter, St. Louis’ Hidden Treasure, A History of The
Charless Home, 1853-2003 (St. Louis, 2003).
- Charlotte Charless, A Biographical Sketch of the Life and
Character of Joseph Charless, in a Series of Letters to His
Grandchildren (St. Louis, 1869). Text is available at Project Gutenberg.