At
a glance:
- Born:
June 9, 1855
- Died:
February 8, 1932
- Maiden
Name: Meacham
- Race/nationality/ethnic
background: Caucasian
- Married:
Samuel Hooker (Whitmarsh) Strobridge
- Children:
three sons, died in infancy
- Primary
city and county of residence and work: Lassen Meadows
(Humboldt County)
- Major
fields of work: ranching, mining, bookbinding, writer,
cultural affairs
- Other
role identities: wife, mother
Biography:
Idah
Meacham was an only child, born on June 9, 1855, to parents
who were ranching at Moraga Valley, California. While still
a young, impressionable girl, she moved with her family
which homesteaded a ranch in northern Nevada at Lassen Meadows
about halfway between Winnemucca and Lovelock. There her
father built the Humboldt House, a popular hotel and cafe,
which served as a rest stop for many travelers passing through
Nevada from all over the country and the world. In Idahs
everyday life she watched wagon trains headed west, the
new railroad bringing more homesteaders, Mexican vaqueros,
Chinese placer miners and Native Americans from the Paiute
and Bannock tribes. From this eclectic childhood, Idah went
on to pursue her formal education at the Mills Seminary
in Oakland, California, starting in 1878 and graduating
in 1883.
While
there, she met and married Samuel Hooker (Whitmarsh) Strobridge
of Auburn, California, who was the adopted son of James
H. Strobridge. The young married couple moved back to Nevada
and ranched on land near her parents which was a gift from
Idahs father. She gave birth to three sons, Earl,
Gerald and Kenneth, before her life spun out of control,
presenting her with tragedies that would have broken most
womens spirits.
Her
first-born son died the day after his birth. Then came the
devastating winter of 1888-1889 when the blizzards killed
most of the familys herd of cattle and pneumonia took
the lives of her husband and one other son. She was left
with just one child who died a year later. Suddenly, Idah
was stripped of everyone in her family except her parents.
Later, in "The Lessons of the Desert," she left
behind a haunting description of the desert that must have
come partly from this experience:
"Just
a little flour, a piece of bacon, a handful of coffee,
ones blankets, enough clothing for comfortthat
is all. When one stops to think of it, it is astonishing
to find how little one really needs, to live. It is
only after you have been on a rough trip of weeks, when
it was needful that you should debate well and long
over not every pound, but literally every ounce of extra
weight that you were to carrycasting aside all
things but those that were vital to your absolute needsthat
you came to realize how much useless stuff one goes
through life a-burdened with."
Idah
did not give up on life after her tragic losses; instead
she found solace in her work and in the vast, silent Nevada
desert. In July 1895, a Mining and Scientific Press reporter found Idah hard at work on the "Lost Mine"
claim:
"...persistent
searches were made for the mine, but each time were abandoned
until this spring when a cultured woman of the new age appeared
in the person of Mrs. Ida M. Strobridge, in company with
a young man lately employed on her fathers ranch near
Humboldt. She is a most remarkably bright woman, and will
climb a precipitous cliff where the average man would not
dare to venture. In addition to mining she looks after the
business of her fathers cattle ranch, and is quite
a sportswoman and would probably carry off first prize in
a shooting tournament, as she brings down her game every
time. She wears a handsome brown denim costume, which she
dons in climbing the very steep and rugged cliffs of the
Humboldt Mountains. She has located five claims on the lode,
laid out a new camp and named it after her father, "Meacham,"
and reorganized the district anew as the "Humboldt";
she has four men to work and is superintending operations
herself. She has also located the water and springs flowing
over her claims, which are nine miles east of the Central
Pacific Railroad, at the Humboldt House. She is the New
Woman...Mrs. Strobridge is now engaged running a tunnel
under the shaft where the vein is showing up finely, and
if the present appearance is maintained the New Woman will
in due time be reckoned a millionairess, and all by her
indomitable will and perseverance. She is now sacking ores
for shipment."
The luck
predicted did not occur, and possibly to make ends meet, Idah
began two other projects at her ranch house. One was the "Artemisia
Bindery," a book binding business established in the
attic of her ranch home. The other was to begin writing at
the age of forty, first under the pseudonym of "George
W. Craiger." She published three volumes of books, most
based on her experiences and love of the desert. Editors of
Sagebrush Trilogy, a compilation of those works, call
her "Nevadas first woman of letters."
By
May of 1901, she was finished with the ranching and mining
phase of her life. She sold her property and moved to Los
Angeles with her parents. Here she embarked on a totally
different lifestyle among the cultural leaders of Southern
California. Among her friends were authors like Mary Austin,
and Charles Fletcher Lummis, publisher of the literary magazine
Land of Sunshine, later renamed Out West.
Actually,
she stopped writing at age fifty-four and spent the last
twenty-two years of her life working on civic clubs and
genealogical societies in the Los Angeles area. She was
a member of the Friday Morning Club, the Southern California
Press Club, and the League of American Pen Women, as well
as the National Genealogical Society and its state organizations
in California, Connecticut and New Jersey.
Although
she lived her final years among the coastal cultural crowd
of Southern California, she apparently never lost her love
of the desert solitude. She created a special retreat in
San Pedro called "The Wickieup" which she described
to a Los Angeles Examiner reporter in 1904:
"It
is not alone the open which attracts me and the untrammeled
natures of the people. It is the life utterly without
pretense. I am not a city woman, neither do I like that
country life which savors of the city. I despise the
suburb. An existence wholly away from those conventional
things hampered by man is what I long for. It is the
life on the desert wholly apart from everything of pretense.
I cannot give it up entirely and so I have furnished
in fitting manner the 'Wickieup,' my substitute for
the desert... "
Idah
died on February 8, 1932, leaving only two cousins, one
of whom she made a home with in Los Angeles. She is buried
in Oaklands Mountain View cemetery next to her parents,
husband and sons.
(Biographical
sketch by Victoria Ford)
Published
works:
- Strobridge,
Idah Meacham. In Miners' Mirage-Land. Los Angeles:
Baumgardt Publishing Company, 1904.
- Strobridge,
Idah Meacham. The Loom of the Desert. Los Angeles:
Artemisia Bindery, 1907
- Strobridge,
Idah Meacham. The Land of the Purple Shadows. Los
Angeles: Artemisia Bindery, 1909
- Strobridge,
Idah Meacham. Sagebrush Trilogy, Idah Meacham Strobridge
and Her Works. Reno and Las Vegas: University of Nevada
Press, 1990.
Sources
of Information:
- Zanjani,
Sally. A Mine of Her Own, Women Prospectors in the American
West, 1850-1950. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska
Press, 1997.
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