Marjorie Murphy's Dress

Copyright La Crosse County Historical Society

Copyright La Crosse County Historical Society

Amy Vach

Catalog Number: 1975.010.01

A few weeks ago, in Things That Matter, the La Crosse County Historical Society featured the evening dress that Mina Satory wore to one of President Richard Nixon’s inaugural balls.

In the La Crosse County Historical Society’s artifact collection, there is another dress that was worn to a presidential inaugural ball.

A decade earlier, another La Crosse resident attended an inaugural ball, Marjorie Murphy.

In 1975, Murphy donated the dress that she wore to President Eisenhower’s inaugural ball. While she did not specify which year she attended, the strapless style of the dress suggests it was worn at his second inauguration in 1957. The Murphys would have attended one of four inaugural balls held for Eisenhower the evening after the public Oath of Office ceremony at the U.S. Capitol.

Murphy wore this gorgeous Elizabeth Arden cream taffeta and black lace dress. From the front, the dress appears to have a slight flare. When looking at the side or at the back of the dress it has a dramatic train that begins at the thigh. The train of the dress has a resemblance to the tailfin feature that was so popular on late 1950s cars.

Marjorie Murphy was born in La Crosse in 1909 to Maximillian and Louise Platz.

She graduated from Central High School and attended Connecticut College for Women and later the University of Wisconsin, where she graduated with honors.

Married in 1934, she and her husband, Eugene Murphy, had three daughters and a son. Eugene was the chairman of his family’s business, Gateway Transportation Company in La Crosse. Her community activities included the La Crosse Garden Club, La Crosse Book Club and the Marquette University Women’s Advisory Board.

Marjorie and Eugene kept up residences in La Crosse as well as Palm Beach, Florida. She died at home on Feb. 9, 2005.

This article was originally published in the La Crosse Tribune on June 15, 2019.

This object can be viewed in our online collections database by clicking here.

Mary Pettibone's Wedding Dress

Copyright La Crosse County Historical Society

Copyright La Crosse County Historical Society

Amy Vach

Catalog Number: 1975.011.06

When I was shopping for a wedding dress, I remember the consultant saying that the dress I chose would be the most important dress of my life.

At that moment, I ignored her words. However, sometimes a wedding dress is the only object that remains to remember a person. This is the case of Mary Pettibone Barber.

This wedding dress, worn by Mary Pettibone in 1884, is probably the only belonging of hers that still exists.

We don’t know a lot about Mary Pettibone. She was born in La Crosse in 1861 to Albert and Cordelia Pettibone. A year after Mary’s birth, Albert was elected mayor of La Crosse for three successive one-year terms. Her father was a prominent lumberman and in 1900 donated the land for Pettibone Park.

In 1866, after her father’s terms as mayor, the family moved to Missouri. Mary went to school in Massachusetts and stayed with relatives there. In 1884, she married Capt. J.T. Barber, the manager of the Northwestern Lumbering Company in Hannibal, Missouri.

Mary’s elaborate ivory wedding dress was made in St. Louis in a department store dressmaker’s shop. The St. Louis Post described the wedding as “brilliant.” Another newspaper, the Shelbina Democrat, described it as “a very fashionable affair,” a marriage that united two prominent lumbering families.

After the marriage, the rest of the Pettibone family returned to La Crosse and moved into what is today known as the Cargill-Pettibone House at 145 8th St. S.

Unfortunately, Mary suffered from poor health, and she died in 1886 in Missouri, only two years after her marriage to Capt. Barber. Mary’s body was brought home to La Crosse, and she is buried with her family in Oak Grove Cemetery.

In 1975, the Pettibone family donated various women’s accessories used by Mary, her sister Anna, and her mother Cordelia, including fans, hats, shoes, and handkerchiefs. In addition to the accessories, Mary’s wedding ensemble was donated as well.

This article was originally published in the La Crosse Tribune on June 8, 2019.

This object can be viewed in our online collections database by clicking here.

Mina Satory's Evening Gown

Copyright La Crosse County Historical Society

Copyright La Crosse County Historical Society

Emily Patwell

Catalog Number: 1981.063.04

Mina Satory (née Meincke) was born in Lake City, Minnesota, on Aug. 2, 1906 to Henry and Margaret Meincke.

Copyright La Crosse County Historical Society

Copyright La Crosse County Historical Society

She attended the Winona Teachers College and the University of Michigan School of Nursing, later teaching at Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis. While in Minneapolis, she met and married Dr. Perry T. Walters, with whom she had three sons. Mina was widowed in January 1943, but later married Dr. John J. Satory in 1948 after she moved to La Crosse. With John, she had two more children, a son and a daughter.

Through her contributions to society, Mina proved herself to be a woman to be reckoned with.

A civic leader as well as an educator and a nurse, she was heavily involved with the La Crosse community through organizations such as the Women’s Auxiliaries of the State Medical Society and the La Crosse County Medical Society, the La Crosse County Association for Mental Health, and the La Crosse chapter of the American Association of University Women, among many others.

For her work in the community, she was awarded the outstanding contribution award by the State Association for Mental Health in 1958 and the woman of the month award by the La Crosse Tribune and the Greater La Crosse Chamber of Commerce in February 1971.

As a lifelong Republican, Mina was also heavily involved in politics, rubbing elbows with influential political figures such as Bob Dole and President Richard Nixon. She served as the fourth vice president of the Wisconsin Federation of Republican Women and was the co-recipient of the Everett Yerly Memorial Award in 1978 for her “devotion and dedication” to her party.

Along with her passions for civics, politics and community service, Mina had a refined taste in fashion.

She owned many beautiful and luxurious dresses, including this seafoam green, sleeveless, plissé silk evening gown with white flowers around the neckline and hem.

This article was originally published in the La Crosse Tribune on June 1, 2019.

This object can be viewed in our online collections database by clicking here.