< Main Menu
California
Mozart Hall
Tuesday, April 4, 1882
The Decorative Arts
Newspaper report
Stockton Herald, April 5, 1882, 3
The subheading to the article notes that, in looks, Oscar resembled Laura de Force Gordon.
Laura de Force Gordon ( 1838—1907) was an American lawyer, editor, and a prominent campaigner for women’s rights in the American West. She was the first woman to run a daily newspaper in the United States (the Stockton Daily Leader, 1873). She was a key proponent of the Women’s Lawyers Bill allowing women to practice law in California, and the related language in the California Constitution allowing women to practice any profession in California.
Given her activism towards equality, Wilde might have appreciated being associated with Gordon; what he might have thought about the comparison in appearance can be evaluated below:
Mozart Hall
Southeast corner of Main and Sutter Streets, Stockton, CA
Built: 1870
Charles Dallas, (1814-1883) was born in Scotland, and came to California and Stockton overland in 1849 with his wife and six children. He had a livery stable on Weber Avenue, south side, around the corner from San Joaquin. He sold the stable to George Fox. The year after he came to Stockton, he built a plain one-and-a-half story house on the southeast corner of Main and Sutter. He sold the little red house in 1861 when he moved to Merced County and became a prosperous farmer.
In 1870 the old house was torn down and a two story brick building was built on the site. The second story was known as the Mozart Hall, the social center of the city for twenty years.
The assembly hall was used for balls, parties, musicales, and all popular social functions. All the high-toned balls and parties were held in the hall.
Source:
Stockton Area Pioneers - 1850-1900, Glenn A. Kennedy, Privately Printed, 1992
Yosemite Hotel
Main Street between San Joaquin and Sutter (now 337 E. Main St., Stockton, CA)
Built: 1869
Rooms: 200
Wilde’s room: 21
Later: remodeled as the Hotel Philson
Destroyed (fire): July 29, 1923 (as Philson Hotel)
Credit:
Thanks to Rob Marland for help in identifying Wilde’s hotel in Stockton.