Caroline Furness Jayne | |
Birth Date: | July 3, 1873 |
Death Date: | June 23, 1909 |
Resting Place: | Laurel Hill Cemetery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US |
Birth Name: | Caroline Augusta Furness |
Occupation: | Ethnologist |
Spouse: | Horace Jayne |
Children: | Horace H.F. Jayne Kate Furness Jayne |
Relatives: | Frank Furness (uncle) Horace Howard Furness (father) William Henry Furness III (brother) |
Caroline Augusta Jayne (Furness; July 3, 1873 - June 23, 1909) was an American ethnologist who published the first book on string figures in 1906 titled String Figures: A Study of Cat's Cradle in Many Lands.
Caroline Augusta Furness was born on July 3, 1873, the youngest of the four children and only daughter of Shakespearean scholar Horace Howard Furness and author Helen Kate (Rogers) Furness.[1] She grew up in the family's house in Washington Square in Philadelphia, and at Lindenshade, their summer house in Wallingford, Pennsylvania. She graduated from the Agnes Irwin School.[2]
She became interested in string figures through her brother, William Henry Furness III's anthropology work with Alfred Haddon studying native cultures where string game figures were used.[3]
Jayne was the first to create a popular study of string figures built on academic papers from journals such as The Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology. the Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and other foreign language anthropological journals. She also personally recorded string figures from several native groups that were in attendance at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis, Missouri.[4]
Jayne published the first book on string figures in 1906 titled String Figures and How to Make Them.[5] The book provided instructions on how to create 129 string figures that were identified by anthropologists studying traditional societies such as those in Congo-Kasai[6] and the Caroline Islands.
The 1906 book review from the Journal of Education:
On October 10, 1894, she married Horace Jayne, a zoologist and professor at the University of Pennsylvania.[7] Together they had two children, Kate Furness Jayne (b. 1895)[8] and Horace H. F. Jayne (b. 1898).[9]
They built a house in Philadelphia at 19th & Delancey Streets, designed by her uncle, the architect Frank Furness, now known as the Horace Jayne House. They also built a summer house in Wallingford, Pennsylvania, "Sub Rosa" (again designed by her uncle), on the grounds of her father's summer house. Following Jayne's early death at age 36, her husband and children lived year-round at "Sub Rosa".[10]
In her memory, her father commissioned a Tiffany window for the First Unitarian Church of Philadelphia.http://s179260178.onlinehome.us/uploads/images/Development/StainedGlass-by-Lynch.jpg The window features a portrait of her holding a lily.[11]
In 1910, her friend, the poet Florence Earle Coates, wrote a poem in her memory.[12]
Her son, Horace H. F. Jayne, was the first curator of Chinese art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, worked as director of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology and as vice director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[9]