Field, Sara Bard, 1882-1974
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Field, Sara Bard, 1882-1974
Name Components
Surname :
Field
Forename :
Sara Bard
Date :
1882-1974
eng
Latn
Field, Sarah Bard
Name Components
Name :
Field, Sarah Bard
Wood, Sara Field, 1882-1974
Name Components
Name :
Wood, Sara Field, 1882-1974
Wood, Charles Erskine Scott, Mrs., 1882-1974
Name Components
Name :
Wood, Charles Erskine Scott, Mrs., 1882-1974
Ehrgott, Sara 1882-1974
Name Components
Name :
Ehrgott, Sara 1882-1974
Ehrgott, Albert, Mrs., 1882-1974
Name Components
Name :
Ehrgott, Albert, Mrs., 1882-1974
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Biographical History
Poet and suffragist Sara Bard Field lived in Portland in the early part of the twentieth century. Her
poetry, her support of women’s suffrage, and her controversial relationship with Charles Erskine
Scott Wood, a Portland cultural icon, made an indelible imprint on the history of Oregon.
Field was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, on September 1, 1882, to strict Baptist parents. The
family moved to Detroit, where, at the age of eighteen, she married the much older Baptist minister
Albert Erghott. The couple went to Burma as missionaries, an experience that awakened Field’s
sense of social justice. Upon their return to the United States, Erghott, a Baptist of Social Christian
leanings, took a position with a poor parish in Cleveland, Ohio. Field worked in support of
Cleveland’s progressive mayor, Tom Johnson, and her sister Mary, a socialist and supporter of
Johnson’s, introduced her to Clarence Darrow and to the ideas of Henry George. During these
years, she gave birth to two children, Albert (1901) and Katherine (1906).
Erghott was assigned a parish in Portland in 1910, and over the next ten years, Field involved
herself in the suffrage movement. She also met C.E.S. Wood (introduced by Darrow) and they fell
in love. Their love affair shocked many Portlanders, but Field was undeterred by conventional
moralities. In 1913, she moved to Nevada and secured a divorce, becoming a pioneer in the
developing phenomenon of migratory divorce. She also continued to fight for suffrage, and in 1915
she made a 5,000-mile transcontinental automobile journey to carry a petition to President
Woodrow Wilson.
In 1918, Field and Wood left Portland, settling first in San Francisco and then in Los Gatos,
California. Tragedy struck when Field’s son was killed in a car accident. On a hillside above Los
Gatos, Field and Wood built a small villa they called “The Cats,” designed by Walter Steilberg.
There they wrote, entertained, and lived a life of “gilded bohemianism.” They counted among their
friends Robinson Jeffers, Ansel Adams, John Steinbeck, Langston Hughes, and Lincoln Steffens.
Field was close with Jeffer's wife Una.
Field wrote a number of books during the 1920s and 1930s, some of them with major publishing
houses and others privately printed with noted fine press printers—the Grabhorn brothers, in
particular. Her publications include Barabbas: A Dramatic Narrative, which the Book Club of
California judged to be the best book written in 1932 by a Californian, and Darkling Plain, a
collection of lyrics published by Random House in 1936.
Prompted by Wood’s failing health and the death of Wood’s first wife, Field and Wood married in
1938. After Wood died in 1944, Field edited his collected poems, which Vanguard Press published
in 1949. In 1955, she sold “The Cats” and moved to Berkeley, where she died in 1974.
To some, Sara Bard Field is remembered as a provocative woman, but her significance is best
exemplified in her support for women’s rights, social justice, literature, the aesthetic life, and the
man she loved
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/40863211
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n86113936
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n86113936
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q7421558
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Poets, American
Christmas cards
Women poets
Suffragists
Ẁomen authors, American
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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>