Poughkeepsie February 22d 1866 Cyrus Swan Esqr Sec - V.F« Colledge &c. Dear Sir Your three half sheets letter handed me the other day has been perused and I find nothing therein that does not com- mand my assent and fully meets all my interogations and suggestions in my notes of the 15 and 16™1 addressed to the Chairman of the Executive Commit- tee and yourself, but there was another subject which I intended to have touched and which I had some weeks since taken action upon without impli- cating the College directly or indirectly being rather personall interogatories, It was somewhat in this wise as my memmory serves at this moment: •Mons. Blout Dear Sir Having seen notices in several articles in the public journals of your success in intriducing to the citizens of New York your system of teaching the Culinary Art I am leade to confer with you on that subject thro1 this medium and at this time as our Exective Com* of V.F. College contemplates erecting the coming Spring an Edifice on the College grounds adapted to impart a knowledge of that art practicaly to such of the young Ladies pupils who desire to obtain such Instruction—---- with this view I am anxious as the Founder of the Institution to avail our- selves of the most improved Modern inventions of the Kitchen utensials &c 291 February 22, 1866 - 2 altho! the College have already the most complete (in the modern sense of the term) the latest improvements and which I should like you to inspect when you could make it most convienant to visit Po'keepsie this Spring, and to confer with you in relation to the location for the Kitchen Buildings &c. Of course your expenses would be paid by us, and the Buildings were erected and ready for opperation we should want to make some arrangement with you to give the necessary Instruction to the College pupils on some terms that would be mutialaly satisfactory &c&cM— M.V. This is the substance I wrote to Mon Prof Blout as near as I can remember----- Now with regard to imparting such Instructions I sincerly believe that it will not only meet the sanction of the public, parents and pupils, but prove in future of pecuniary immoloment to the College & place a stake in advance in the catagory of making Domestic Science part of Womans higher Education and this once attained becomes one of her choicest & accomplished priviledges—— Not that she should choose it as a profession, but to adorn her household, and be able to instruct those whom may be in her employ who may know less of domestic art, and as "Knowledge is power1' which ever posses it most 'Mistress or Maid" there it will rule.—— Custom has every thing to do with human life. I well remember the time when familys or otherwise all made & Baked their own Bread and failures by heavyness.was ascribed to 9-Q 9 {•at %J (%»' - ■ 45- February 22, 1866 - 3 some kind of witchcraft, and the shrinking of the boilt Pork in the pot was attributed to the phases of the Moon when the pig was killed, but I will not enumerate Cases of ignorance & superstition,— I merely allude to them to see how times and things has changed,— so with regard to physical exercises__the time was when "Skating by Females was regarded mascu- line an extremely vulgar and clownish and by the more Sober, and bigoted class even wicked, placing the exercise on the same footing as Dancing and be only one of Satans fasicitating devices to take and delude the unwarry, but I never knew a Man or Woman that was caught in this Nett that was any the worst for it----- Not so with Theatricals, I have known many the young and some of the elder of my acquaintances ruined----- if not in purse in Morals— and I have looked in vain to find a single case where Man or Woman have been made better Citizens, Christians, Husbands or Wifes by attending them— I object not so much to what is seen or heard on the Stage as the sorroundings before and evincing a licentious inferenceAbehind it &c&c The Stage is not now what it was in the days of flShakespheren or even 40 to 50 years ago, nor are the usual attendants of the homogenious Masses, Men and Women of the higher standard of Morality the same by no means------- then the play-house was some what a "School of Moral reform" but now debauchery & prostitution &c----- I see just now at this day a New Theatre opened by the great cateriort) public taste "Barnum" a Theatre for the 293 ,45-' February 22, 1866 - 4 performance & Exhibition of Scriptural Selections—,—- Begining with the historical record of "Moses and the Isrealites'1 journey through the Holy have Land, next I suppose we shallAChrist & his Crusifixtion &c, now the Moral character of all these performances & thier influence must be to degrade and weaken the influences of Sacred writ upon the rising generations, but you will say that if the Stage as now conducted does tends to currup & degrade, in its legitimate conductment and proper uses it would not, but if so we must leave its reform to its friends and when it clearly and fully illuminates its virtues it will be time for its opponents to fall into its ranks &c------- I have now written nthree half Sheets" which is equivalent to yours in quanity but in substance of solid value I have nothing to say--------- I have some things more to say when at lea sure about physical health exercises, domestic Economy &c but must defer the rest to another oppor- tunity—_ Yours Respectfully &c&c M. Vassar 294 '4S-r