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18th Century Umbrellas

May 26, 2011 by Vic

Mansfield Park, Brock. Image @Austenprose

During the 17th century, ladies used parasols for protection from the sun. A century later they were using oiled umbrellas as protection from the rain as well. By the early 19th century, the design of the umbrella had improved and its use had become widespread. After Maria’s marriage, Fanny Price was overtaken by a heavy shower close to the Parsonage and sought shelter under an oak. When the Grants spotted her, they sent out a servant, but Fanny was reluctant to come in:

A civil servant she had withstood but when Dr Grant himself went out with an umbrella there was nothing to be done but to be very much ashamed and to get into the house as fast as possible; and to poor Miss Crawford, who had just been contemplating the dismal rain in a very desponding state of mind, sighing over the ruin of all her plans of exercise for that morning, and of every chance of seeing a single creature beyond themselves for the next twenty four hours, the sound of a little bustle at the front door and the sight of Miss Price dripping with wet in the vestibule was delightful. – Jane Austen, Mansfield Park

Beauty in search of knowledge, 1782. This 18th century woman carries an early version of an umbrella. These models were heavy and cumbersome. Image @Harry Elkins Widener Collection, Harvard College

A century before Mansfield Park was published (1814) men did not use umbrellas, which were regarded as women’s accessories:

A young man who borrowed one from a coffee house in a downpour in 1709 was excoriated as effeminate in a newspaper. It would have been a cumbersome model, ill-suited to being carried around. Similar heavy umbrellas were kept in churches to protect the parson during burial services. – A Brief History of the Umbrella 

Yet the following passage from Notes and queries, Volume 54, William White (Oxford University Press, 1876,  p. 202), suggests that men began to use umbrellas earlier than Jonas Hanway, who braved ridicule from street urchins and hackney coachmen, who regarded the use of the umbrella as a threat to their livelihood:

1745 – Paid for umbrella, box and carriage.
It is not stated for whose use this was intended; most probably for the minister when officiating at funerals. This is a remarkable entry, as the introduction of umbrellas into England is attributed to a much later period. The employment of the umbrella in the streets London is said to have been by Jonas Hanway, who died in 1786; but the following passage from the Trivia of Gay, who died in 1732, shows it was in use at a much earlier period

Good housewives Defended by th’ umbrella’s oily shed,
Safe through the wet on clinking pattens tread.”

Wet under foot, James Gillray. Image @Wikigallery. The woman is wearing "clinking" pattens as well as carrying an umbrella.

In 1893, Georgiana Hill wrote this descriptive history of the umbrella in England:

Umbrellas were a recent fashion in the earlier part of the century. During the first ten years of George the Third’s reign, the only umbrellas in use were large carriage umbrellas, which required an attendant to hold them. In the country they were hardly known at all. The philanthropist, Jonas Hanway, in 1756, boldly unfurled an umbrella in the streets of London, being the first man who ventured upon such an innovation. Surely Hanway deserves to be held in grateful remembrance by the male sex for this spirited effort towards the emancipation of his brethren from the thraldom of custom. He was jeered and ridiculed by the populace, but was not to be laughed into giving up the sheltering oilskin. About twenty years later, a valiant footman named John Macdonald began to use a silk umbrella, which he had brought from Spain. The boys shouted after him: “Frenchman, why don’t you get a coach?” but he grasped his umbrella more firmly and went on his way, and in some three months time he was able to use it without exciting remark. Miss J. Gay Trivia Hutton, writing in 1779 from Derbyshire, says: “Mrs Greaves lent us their umbrella, and servant to carry it.” Miss Hutton’s brother was the person to use an umbrella in Birmingham, a Frenchman being the first.

Jonas Hanway. Image @Wikipedia. This caricature depicts how long early umbrella handles were.

The town beau, when he first carried an umbrella, was caricatured in the prints as the rain-beau holding a tiny parasol over his head. A gentleman once borrowed an umbrella from the mistress of a coffee- house in Cornhill, and after the following satirical advertisement in The Female Tatler: “The young gentleman belonging to the Custom house, that for fear of rain borrowed the umbrella from Will’s Coffee house in Cornhill, of the mistress, is hereby advertised to be dry from head to foot on the like occasion he shall be welcome to the maid’s pattens.”

A meeting of umbrellas, James Gillray, 1782. By now, men used umbrellas as a matter of course.

An illustration of the want of umbrellas afforded in one of the caricatures of the period, showing a respectable citizen’s family from Vauxhall in a downpour of rain – the old gentleman with a handkerchief tied over his head to save his wig, and his wife’s cardinal on his to protect his best coat, while the wife herself and her daughters are tripping along in gowns turned up round their waists, and their heads enveloped in coloured handkerchiefs. In 1797 there was one umbrella in all Cambridge, and that was kept at a shop, and let out like a sedan chair ,by the hour. In London women carried umbrellas before men had taken to them, but the first umbrellas were heavy awkward machines made of oilskin or taffeta. Still, in spite of their cumbrous character, women who had to trudge along the streets on rainy days rejoiced in their shelter. With cloak and umbrella, they were able to face the dripping roofs and waterspouts, which were as much to be avoided as the rain. To the fashionable lady. who only walked in fine weather, the one important consideration was the parasol, but it was otherwise with the thrifty citizeness. Great must have been the relief and saving of clothes when the new invention came into use:

Good housewives all the winter’s rage despise,
Defended by the riding hood’s disguise;
Or underneath the umbrella’s oily shade,
Safe through the wet on clinking pattens tread.
Let Persian dames the umbrella’s ribs display,
To guard their beauties from the sunny ray;
Or sweating slaves support the shady load,
When Eastern monarchs show their state abroad;
Britain in winter only knows its aid,
To guard from chilling showers the walking maid.”
- J Gay Trivia

- A history of English dress from the Saxon period to the present day, Volume 1, By Georgiana Hill , 1893, p. 173-74.

The Umbrella, 1820. This cartoon depicts how little protection these early umbrellas afforded. Cruikshank exaggerates the woman's size to demonstrate the point. Image @Art Tattler

Early umbrellas were heavy and cumbersome to use:

Early umbrellas were made of oiled silk with heavy wooden frames which made them difficult to open or close when wet. Whalebone (baleen) was also used but this still made the article heavy. It wasn’t until 1852 that Samuel Fox invented the steel ribbed umbrella claiming that he was using up stocks bought for making corsets. This made umbrellas much lighter and more portable. - Come rain or shine: historic umbrellas and parasols 

More on the topic:

  • Umbrellas and their history, William Sangster 
  • The history of umbrellas 
  • Art Tattler 
  • Metal Pattens: Awkward Protection for 18th and 19th Century Shoes
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Posted in 18th Century England, 19th Century England, Georgian Life, jane austen, Jane Austen's World, Mansfield Park, Regency Life, Regency Period, Regency World | Tagged 18th century umbrellas, Fanny Price, history of umbrellas, Regency Fashion | 12 Comments

12 Responses

  1. on May 26, 2011 at 22:20 Raquel

    How someone could balance on a patten and hold an umbrella at the same time? it is a mystery to me…


  2. on May 26, 2011 at 22:31 Suzan

    I still can’t use my umbrella, carry my purse, and do much useful with my hands at the same time. And tho’ I live where it seems to rain continuously here, I’ve never adjusted. I seem to just be wearing a hood. But I’m amazed at the history and enjoyed it tremendously.


  3. on May 26, 2011 at 23:17 Karen Field

    This was fascinating! I have always taken umbrellas for granted. Who knew? Thanks for enlightening us.


  4. on May 26, 2011 at 23:21 Jean | Delightful Repast

    Vic, you have amazed me yet again! I’ve been keen on a good umbrella most of my life and yet I’ve never looked into the history of umbrellas. Now I’m asking myself, How can that be?


  5. on May 26, 2011 at 23:22 Jennifer

    As usual, your sense of timing is impeccable. I just had an umbrellas in the rain scene and was wondering how popular they were. Your article has assured me.


  6. on May 26, 2011 at 23:35 TaraFly

    Now I look back on some of Austen’s characters who walked in the rain, and wonder why they never bothered with umbrellas.
    Though Marianne always claimed it would never rain, and I suspect she enjoyed being caught unprepared… LOL


  7. on May 27, 2011 at 02:55 Anna

    What a fascinating topic!

    The only part where I remember Jane Austen mentioning an umbrella is in Persuasion when Anne is taking shelter from the rain at a teashop in Milson Street, Mr Wentworth offers her his umbrella as it’s raining outside. “I have equipped myself properly for Bath already, you see (pointing to a new umbrella); I wish you would make use of it, if you are determined to walk”. Anne declines the offer, as he is going to walk back with Mr Elliott, making Mr Wentworth jealous…


  8. on May 27, 2011 at 05:38 Louise

    Fascinating!

    Can I ask where the print ‘Beauty in Search of Knowledge’ is from? Is it a satire, or an advertisement?


    • on May 27, 2011 at 08:06 Vic

      The Lewis Walpole Library at Yale describes this print:

      BEAUTY in SEARCH of KNOWLEDGE

      London, Printed for R. Sayer & J. Bennett, Map, Chart & Printsellers, No. 53 Fleet Street 30th Decr 1782

      A well dressed young woman carrying an umbrella under her arm, and small volume in her left hand, either exits or is about to enter a shop identified by the sign over the door as a “Circulating Library.” Books rest on the three levels of shop shelf, most closed but a few open in display. The library also exhibits several prints–three landscapes above the middle shelf and a row of a dozen caricatures or figures above the lower shelf.

      Reproduced: Barker-Benfield, p. 166; D’Oench (1999), p. 57

      32.9 x 25 cm.
      Harry Elkins Widener Collection, Harvard College Library(colour, HEW 13.8.3); Lewis Walpole Library (782.12.30.1)


  9. on May 27, 2011 at 07:15 Chris Squire

    ‘umbrella, n. < Italian ombrella . .
    1. a. A light portable screen or shade, usually circular in form and supported on a central stick or staff, used in hot countries as a protection for the head or person against the sun.
    1611 T. Coryate Crudities sig. Lv, Many of them doe carry other fine things‥, which they commonly call in the Italian tongue vmbrellaes.‥ These are made of leather something answerable to the forme of a little cannopy & hooped in the inside with diuers little wooden hoopes that extend the vmbrella in a prety large compasse.
    1668 W. Davenant Man's the Master ii. i, A very desperate man‥coming near so bright a Sun as you are without a Parasol, Umbrellia, or a Bondgrace . .

    2. A portable protection against bad weather, made of silk or similar material fastened on slender ribs, which are attached radially to a stick and can be readily raised so as to form a circular arched canopy.
    1634 T. Herbert Relation Trav. 149 A Shagg or Yopangee which riding serves [in Persia] as an Vmbrella against raine.
    1704 Swift Tale of Tub xi. 197 A large Skin of Parchment‥served him for a Night-cap when he went to Bed, and for an Umbrello in rainy Weather.
    1716 J. Gay Trivia i. 14 Good houswives‥underneath th'Umbrella's oily Shed, Safe thro' the wet on clinking Pattens tread.
    1765 H. Walpole Let. to J. Chute 3 Oct., Servants‥walk about the streets in the rain with umbrellas to avoid putting on their hats.
    1787 Philos. Trans. (Royal Soc.) 77 291 If the weather be rainy, an insulated umbrella may be carried in one hand . . ‘ [OED]


  10. on May 28, 2011 at 18:06 Leigh D'Ansey

    Hey, thanks for this – it’s come at exactly the right time for me :)


  11. on May 31, 2011 at 15:24 Dentelline

    Bonsoir Vic,
    J’adore ton blog et comme je suis abonnée, je reçois tous les jours de super articles sur le monde de Jane Austen.
    J’apprécie la recherche et les photos choisies.
    Dentelline



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