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Veiled Prophet Parade and Ball

The Veiled Prophet Parade and Ball was a civic celebration held each year in St. Louis, Missouri, over which a mythical figure called the Veiled Prophet presided. The first events were in 1878. The last parade under that name was in 2019, but the observances continue yearly as Fair St. Louis on the Mississippi riverfront and America's Birthday Parade every July.[needs update?]

Overview[edit]

Although the identity of a given year's Grand Oracle, or Veiled Prophet, was officially a secret, early holders of the office were reported[1] to include Col. Alonzo W. Slayback, Capt. Frank Gaiennie, John A. Scudder, Henry C. Haarstick, George Bain, Robert P. Tansey, George H. Morgan, Col. J. C. Normile, Wallace Delafield, John B. Maude, Dr. D. P. Rowland, Charles E. Slayback, Leigh I. Knapp, David B. Gould, Henry Paschell, H. I. Kent, Dr. E. Pretorious, Win. H. Thompson, and Wm. A. Hargadine.[citation needed]

The office of maids of honor — other women making their debuts at the ball — was later established to accompany the Queen of Love and Beauty. The list of invitees was determined by a process never made public. The supply of tickets was limited to members of the VP organization, which had a secret constitution, and the assignment of these non-transferable tickets required the organization's approval. The Veiled Prophet danced the "Royal Quadrille" with the Queen and then awarded her some keepsake of the occasion. Over the years, the Queens and their courts received pearl necklaces or silver tiaras, which became family heirlooms (as did the elaborate invitations themselves).[citation needed]

Queens include the daughters of the most influential members of the organization. In 1999, actor Ellie Kemper was crowned Queen of Love and Beauty. Kemper's father, David Kemper, was then the CEO and Chairman of Commerce Bank.

The ball, parade and fair became a St. Louis tradition, though not without controversy. "The traditional VP celebration has represented for St. Louisans a perceived link between different components of the community in a holiday celebration, while also reinforcing the notion of a benevolent cultural elite," the St. Louis city government website says.[2] Historian Spencer believes that the event generally revealed rather than soothed class conflicts. In 1882, public objections were raised by Irish Americans to a float which featured that ethnic group, and it was withdrawn from the parade.< ref name=":1">Spencer, pp. 45–46</ref> Onlookers used pea-shooters, rocks and other missiles against the floats. Confectioners' shops stocked the pea-shooters in anticipation of the parade, one observer recalled.< ref>Spencer, p. 75</ref>

The VP parade had been created in part to displace the parades regularly held by the trade unions. Spencer believes it cast workingmen in a passive rather than active role, not merely in the celebration, but in the mythology asserted for the history and economic life of the city.[3] Occasionally the unions would stage events intended to mock the pretensions of the VP Ball.[4] The leading socialist and working-class newspaper, St. Louis Labor, "wrote negatively" about the VP event and its organizers between the early 1900s and 1930.[5]

But the parade continued to attract large crowds and exerted a certain fascination. In 1949, for the first time, the ball was broadcast on KSD-TV (now KSDK), and the station estimated that more than 80% of area viewers tuned in. According to historian Spencer, "Most St. Louisans probably enjoyed the 'fairy tale' nature of it. By watching the ball, they were vicariously living the experiences of the elites dancing across their television screens." According to Harry Levins, "The parade was aimed at boosting the spirit of the city's common folk. The ball was aimed at reassuring the city's elite of their exclusive status." The early pageants had been partially meant to move working-class viewers to awe at the accomplishments of great men, all of whom were said to be ancestors of the Prophet.[3]

Due to the demands of world wars, the ball was suspended in 1917–1918 and from 1942 through 1945.

History[edit]

Origin[edit]

The organization was founded by prominent St. Louisans who had been invited to a meeting in a letter signed by John B. Maude, John A. Scudder, George Bain, John G. Priest, and D.P. Rowland.Charles E. SlaybackCite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

On March 20, 1878, Charles Slayback, a grain broker (who had spent several years in New Orleans after the Civil War and become acquainted with its Mardi Gras traditions), called a meeting of local business leaders at the Lindell Hotel.[citation needed]

His brother, Alonzo, a colonel in the Missouri State Guard, which fought for the Confederacy, created a mythology for a secret society, whose public demonstrations would coincide with the annual fair. The Slaybacks borrowed the name "the Veiled Prophet of Khorassan" from Irish poet Thomas Moore's Lalla Rookh; they also incorporated features from Comus of New Orleans. In Moore's poem, the Veiled Prophet was a horribly disfigured man who considered himself a prophet. In the Veiled Prophet Organization's version, the Prophet was a world traveler who chose to bless St. Louis and was later marketed as a type of Santa Claus figure.[6] I ORDERED THIS BOOK.

First celebration, 1878[edit]

The first parade and ball were held on October 8, 1878. John G. Priest,[7] a member of the city's Board of Police Commissioners, was chosen to reign over both of them.[8][9]: chapter 17 

On October 6, 1878, an opinion column in the Missouri Republican newspaper featured an image described as the Veiled Prophet, dressed in a white hood and robe while armed with a pistol and rifle. That image was actually repeated from an earlier issue of the newspaper (August 23, 1875), a photograph of a man posing as a Ku Klux Klan member.[9]: page 51 Cite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page).

Theme: "Festival of Ceres, an illustrated pageant of the visit of Demeter to the Veiled Prophets."[10]

Belle of the Ball: Suzanne (Susie) Slayback.[11]

1879-1889[edit]

1879[edit]

Though daytime temperatures were in the 90s, heavy rain caused the postponement of the festivities from Tuesday night to Wednesday, October 8. The Washington Avenue Street Railway ran late cars to return people home afterward.[12]

". . . people of every sort — all together in one great confused mass of humanity. The belle's silk dress brushed against the rags of her fallen sister, and the broadclothed arm of the millionaire leaned on the shoulder of the humblest representative of 'profane labor.' . . . The people climbed up on the roofs and out on the window sills and ledges. Wherever a human being could cling there was one clinging." [13]

Parade theme: Progress of the Mechanical Arts.[13]

1880[edit]

A letter writer in the Globe-Democrat agreed with the idea that the "agents of the Prophets" should "mingle with the guests . . . and take the names of all those who appear in shabby or unsuitable dress — both ladies and gentlemen — for the purpose of making out a list of those who disregard the wishes of the Prophet in the matter of dress, so that another year some parties need not hope to receive invitations again."[14]

Some two hundred men, both "white" and "colored," and "on the whole a veritable congress of nations, were in waiting . . . to carry beacons, torches, and lead horses. . . . In the long dressing room over 100 costumes were displayed upon a table." Fifty attendants helped to dress the participants.

At the ball afterward, unaccompanied men were denied entrance, and some women who had not chosen to appear in "full dress" were relegated to the balcony.[15]

1881, October 4[edit]

A Globe-Democrat reporter found that "expert costumers" transformed "commercial or legal gentlemen to the most absurd beets, cabbages or potatoes or gorgeous specimens of the floral world. The display of shapely limbs by the young men selected for female characters was quite creditable."[16]

Parade theme: A Day-Dream in the Woodland.[16]

1882[edit]

It was reported that the (Irishmen) who drove the parade's teams and wagons would "withdraw their services" if the float was included in it, so the entry was removed.[17]

Slayback said: Why, the float is perfectly unobjectionable. It is not a caricature, but merely a piece of pleasantry and is not calculated to hurt the feelings of anyone but a fool.[18]

He said that the message of the "first procession" in 1878 went "over the heads of the spectators" and since then "we found that a float which aimed rather to convey a pleasant bit of fun pleased the people much better[,] and we have carried out this idea ever since. . . . Let them raise a finger against any part of the pageant, if they dare. I feel sure that there will be on hand a sufficiently large number of people . . . to prevent any attack. Yes, sir, just let them try it."[18]

Then followed a description of the proposed float as it was drawn for the Veiled Prophets' official publication, including a shilleighllah-bearing man and woman in "peasant costume" dancing to a fiddle. A "drinking booth with the Irish harp" is nearby. "A pig sty, with a couple of grunters anxiously peering over the side, stands to the left, a bushel basket of potatoes evidently tempting them."[18]

The offending scene was eliminated, and other props were used on a refurbished float.[19]

1883[edit]

Program title page, 1883

1884[edit]

1885[edit]

1886[edit]

1887[edit]

1888[edit]

1889[edit]

1890s[edit]

1890[edit]

1891[edit]

1892[edit]

1893[edit]

1894[edit]

1895[edit]

1896[edit]

1897[edit]

1898[edit]

1899[edit]

1900s[edit]

1907[edit]

Fourteen state governors were in attendance at the ball,[20] where Mrs. Moses Fraley wore sixty-eight thousand dollars' worth of garment and jewelry — a point lace gown, a necklace, a tiara, a bar pin, a chain, a lorgnette, bracelets, a "bow knot", back hair ornaments, and a "dog collar." Earlier, jewelry and other loot was taken from homes while less wealthy residents were out watching the parade.[21]

1908[edit]

So great was the crowd that downtown streets were almost impassable. A reviewing stand collapsed, throwing several hundreds to the street. The parade was viewed by Judge William H. Taft, Republican candidate for the Presidency.[22]

1909[edit]

A score of visiting mayors were denied admittance to the ball because they were not dressed in formal attire. [23]

1910s[edit]

1910[edit]

The "Royal Set" was composed of the Veiled Prophet, two High Priests and the Grand Marshal, the Queen and her three attendant Maids of Honor. "At each corner of the square will stand an Asiatic attendant . . . . There the dance will be given. The stately measures and the beautiful costumes and dthe gowns will be visible to all."[24]

Ball invitation, 1913, with photographic marker at the bottom

1920s[edit]

In 1928, Mary Ambrose Smith, who was selected as Queen, was found to have secretly married Dr. Thomas Birdsall days earlier, violating the rule that the Queen of Love and Beauty must be a "maiden."[25] In a 1979 interview with the St. Louis Times,[26] Smith recalled how the Veiled Prophet:

gave her travelling money and told her to "begone, don't register at any large hotels, and don't use your real name."... Smith was "made to feel she disgraced her family. None of her friends stuck by her (she was told she could not visit their houses), she was never invited to another VP ball, her picture was removed from the collection of queens' portraits at the Missouri Historical Society, and her name was deleted from the Social Register.

1930s[edit]

1940s[edit]

1950s[edit]

1960s[edit]

1966[edit]

Walter W. Witte, rector of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, set forth the first widely circulated opposition to the ball in a letter printed in the Post-Dispatch on September 30, 1966. He wrote:[27]

. . . I recall my fascination some 10 years ago when I was told that St. Louis had a Veiled Prophet Parade. I was new to the city then and I presumed that this gala event must be some climactic community celebration, perhaps historical in nature. Then to discover that this was the yearly feast of the rich, culminating in a "coming out" ball at the municipal auditorium . . . was indeed a disappointment. Since then disappointment has given place to disgust. The spectacle of the wealthy daring to parade through the neighborhoods or near neighborhoods of the poor is outrageous.

And the ritual. Is it merely "cute," or are we witnessing the honest to God cult of the affluent with its prophets, queens, attending angels, heavenly courts taken seriously and paid for dearly by the educated business and professional men of the community? . . . .

Could it be turned into a genuine community event? I have an idea. If the powers would contact me, I have several outstandingly beautiful candidates in my parish for the Queen of Love and Beauty. Mind you, these candidates are not Mary Institute graduates nor are they currently attending Wellesley, Smith, or Vassar, nor are they likely to be. But they would, indeed, add beauty. Then again they would probably be disqualified. They suffer from one serious limitation. They are black.

1967[edit]

1968[edit]

1969[edit]

1969: Veiled Prophet Ball becomes a scene of racial protest |url=https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/history/oct-3-1969-veiled-prophet-ball-becomes-a-scene-of-racial-protest/article_0d45d7e8-1f78-5f31-9b3f-72eff42a3f3f.html |access-date=29 August 2021 |work=STLtoday.com |language=en}}</ref>[28] By 1969, the ball was the object of civil rights protests, resulting in numerous arrests. Percy Green and the civil rights group Action Committee to Improve Opportunities for Negroes (ACTION) conducted numerous protests against VP activities. Green has stated numerous times that his goals were to stop the use of the public Kiel Auditorium for the organization's private party, to get the organization's leaders, all heads of St. Louis corporations, to hire more minority workers, specifically black males, and to abolish the organization that flaunted its wealth in front of the city's poorest residents. It was said that editorial staffs suppressed much of the reporting of the protests by ACTION against VP activities. Pat Buchanan, then an editorial writer for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat newspaper, particularly portrayed the group as radical dissidents.[29] ACTION used dramatic displays to get attention, often laying in front of VP Parade floats, or marching outside of the VP Ball with the Black Veiled Prophet and the Queen of Love and Human Justice. [30] Green had a flair for the dramatic, and had once climbed the St. Louis Arch with suction cups during its construction to protest the lack of minority workers.[30]

1970s[edit]

1970[edit]

1971[edit]

1972[edit]

On December 22, 1972, in Kiel Auditorium, the three Caucasian female members of ACTION crashed the ball using tickets given to them by Veiled Prophet insiders. Gena Scott, Phyllis Knight, and Jane Sauer (née Gottlieb) dressed in evening gowns and entered the ball, sitting in a high balcony reserved for unimportant friends.[29] Knight's actions that evening are unknown,[29] but Sauer crossed the auditorium and threw leaflets from an upper balcony while screaming "Down with the Veiled Prophet!"[29] Amid Sauer's diversion, Scott slid down a three-inch thick electrical cable towards the stage. The cable snapped and dropped Scott an estimated 50 feet onto the steps of the stage. Scott says she broke three ribs and blacked out for a moment, then convinced guards that she had fallen from the balcony. After being escorted to the back of the stage, Scott diverted a security person's attention and ran up behind the Veiled Prophet's guards, the Bengal Lancers. She was able to get even closer, and Scott reached forward and yanked the mask off the Veiled Prophet, then threw it to the ground.[30] There was complete silence as the unmasked prophet was seen to be Monsanto Company Executive Vice President Tom K. Smith, whose name was published in only the St. Louis Journalism Review.

After a moment, Smith picked up the veil and placed it back on his head, and the ball went on as normal. Scott was later arrested after being taken to the hospital to have her ribs taped, but charges were ultimately dropped, as the Veiled Prophet Organization would have had to publicly admit that Tom K. Smith had been the Veiled Prophet.[30]

1973[edit]

In early 1973, Scott was awakened when her car was bombed outside of her apartment.[30] Her apartment was vandalized numerous times.[29] The unveiling of the Prophet was the most dramatic disruption in ACTION's long campaign (1965–1976) to encourage the many CEOs in the VP Organization to hire more minority workers at their businesses.

1974[edit]

1975[edit]

Other efforts include in 1975, ACTION member Patrick Dougherty unfurling a banner on stage reading "ACTION Protests Racist VP,"

1976[edit]

and in 1976, two ACTION members sprayed what Green called "commercial tear gas"[31] at VP audience members along the stage. While VP spokesmen said they took no notice of ACTION, its leader, Percy Green, had been laid off in 1964 and never was able to get another job for a St. Louis corporation.[29]

1977[edit]

1978[edit]

1979[edit]

in 1979 did the Veiled Prophet Organization admit its first black members, three physicians.

1980s[edit]

The 1980s and 1990s saw the Veiled Prophet Organization become more secretive as the group took steps to lessen its public profile. The Veiled Prophet Ball was reworked in order to be a more private event and the parade changed to be more focused towards general entertainment, though the Veiled Prophet and his entourage still rode in the Parade.[32]

1980[edit]

1981[edit]

1982[edit]

1983[edit]

1984[edit]

1985[edit]

1986[edit]

1987[edit]

In 1987, fair officials and St. Louis Metro Police Department were confronted with accusations of racism when they closed the Eads Bridge to pedestrian access, which reduced the ability of attendees from East St. Louis to reach the fair. East St. Louisans, mostly African American, were blamed for the crime that had been occurring at the fair. Judge John F. Nangle ordered the bridge to reopen, saying that there was no proof that the crime was caused by East St. Louisans.

1988[edit]

1989[edit]

1990s[edit]

1990[edit]

1991[edit]

1992[edit]

The largest change came in 1992 as the VP Fair was renamed to Fair St. Louis, removing all reference to the Veiled Prophet in the Fair's name.

1993[edit]

1994[edit]

1995[edit]

1996[edit]

1997[edit]

1998[edit]

1999[edit]

2000s[edit]

2000[edit]

2001[edit]

2002[edit]

2003[edit]

In 2003, the organization created a Community Service Initiative, through which members participate in a wide variety of projects in and around the city of St. Louis.[33]

2004[edit]

2005[edit]

2006[edit]

2007[edit]

2008[edit]

2009[edit]

2010s[edit]

2010[edit]

2011[edit]

2012[edit]

2013[edit]

2014[edit]

2015[edit]

2016[edit]

2017[edit]

2018[edit]

The ball still occurs on the Friday before Christmas each year, is attended by thousands, and has been protested recently by Black Lives Matter members, as well as the St. Louis based group Missourians Organized for Reform and Empowerment.[34] In 2018, two "jewel-encrusted" gold and silver Veiled Prophet tiaras, worn by a Special Maid in 1894 and the Queen of Love and Beauty in 1896, were stolen from the Missouri History Museum. They have never been returned.[35]

2019[edit]

2020s[edit]

2020[edit]

2021[edit]

Location[edit]

Plan of Coliseum as arranged in 1913

In the first part of the 20th century, the ball was held at the St. Louis Coliseum. Later it was held at the Kiel Auditorium until ACTION's lawsuit against the organization for shutting down a public auditorium for weeks at a time, arguing that the common taxpayers did not have access to the event.[30] In the 1950s, the Chase Park Plaza Hotel constructed the opulent Khorassan Ballroom specifically to host the annual debutante ball, and the event was formally moved to the Chase Park Plaza Hotel in December of 1975.[36]

Beginning in 1974 the Veiled Prophet Fair was held on the riverfront.

Since the turn of the 21st century, the Ball has been held at the Downtown St. Louis Hyatt at the Arch.

Veiled Prophet Belles and Queens[edit]

Maid's crown, 1894

The custom of singling out a young woman for special attention began with the first Veiled Prophet Ball in 1878, when Suzanne (Susie) Slayback was chosen by the first Veiled Prophet, John G. Priest, to be the "belle" of the ball at the age of 16. According to a 1958 article in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, in those earlier times it was "the custom of the Prophet to select a girl for his partner in the first dance at the ball."[37][38][39]

The first crowned "queen" was Hester Bates Laughlin in 1894.[37]




See also[edit]

People[edit]

Similar festivities[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference :1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ History and Culture, St. Louis City Government
  3. ^ a b "Order of the Veiled Prophet", St. Louis Post Dispatch, January 13, 2004
  4. ^ District 8 and movement unionism, Northern Illinois University
  5. ^ Spencer, pp. 77–78
  6. ^ Vincent H. Sanders, Theodore Drury, Jr. (1956). The Story of the Veiled Prophet. illustrated by Charles A. Morganthaler.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference Spencer was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  8. ^ "Priest in a Pickle," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, June 17, 1878, image 1
  9. ^ a b George Garrigues, The Failed Joke of the Veiled Prophet, pps. 50-51, ISBN 0999014226
  10. ^ "Pageant Prophecies: Some Idea of What the Gorgeous Procession Is Going to Be," St. Louis Evening Post, October 7, 1878, image 2
  11. ^ "Belle of First Ball Tells How She Felt," St. Louis Globe-Democrat,October 7, 1958, image 39
  12. ^ "Splinters," St. Louis Globe-Democrat, October 10, 1879, page 6
  13. ^ a b "Golden Glory," St. Louis Daily Globe-Democrat, October 9, 1879, pages 6 and 7
  14. ^ "Full Dress at the Prophets' Ball," St. Louis Globe-Democrat, October 4, 1880, page 2
  15. ^ "The Ball," St. Louis Globe-Democrat, October 6, 1880, page 3, column 7
  16. ^ a b "The Prophet's Dream," St. Louis Globe-Democrat, October 5, 1881, page 9
  17. ^ "Veiled Prophet Echoes: The Fate of the Irish Float," St. Louis Daily Globe-Democrat, October 5, 1882, page 7, column 1
  18. ^ a b c "The Irish Float," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, October 3, 1882, page 4
  19. ^ No headline, St. Louis Globe-Democrat, October 4, 1882, page 10, column 2
  20. ^ "Margaret Cabell Crowned Queen to Surprise of All," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, October 2, 1907, image 7
  21. ^ "Best-Dressed Woman's Garb Cost $68,000" and "Family Away, Burglars Get $1000 Jewels," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, October 2, 1907, image 1
  22. ^ "Veiled Prophet Parade," St. Joseph (Missouri) News-Press, October 7, 1908, image 7
  23. ^ "Veiled Prophet Parade Arouses Carnival Spirit," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, October 6, 1909, image 4
  24. ^ "Prophet Prepares to Break Records," The St. Louis Star, September 18, 1910, image 7
  25. ^ "Veiled Prophet Queen Turns in Her Resignation". Decatur Evening Herald. 23 October 1928. p. 1 – via newspapers.com.
  26. ^ "The Veiled Prophet Found Out She Was Married and Told Her to Flee". The St. Louis Times. Newspapers.com. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  27. ^ "The Parade From a Pulpit," page 16
  28. ^ Beauchamp, Scott (2 September 2014). "The Mystery of St. Louis's Veiled Prophet". The Atlantic. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  29. ^ a b c d e f Spencer (2000), pp. 134–36
  30. ^ a b c d e f Lucy Ferriss, Unveiling the Prophet
  31. ^ Cite error: The named reference :2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  32. ^ Mooney-Melvin, Patricia. "The St. Louis Veiled Prophet Celebration: Power on Parade, 1877–1995." The Annals of Iowa 60 (2001), 295–97.
  33. ^ "Veiled Prophet Organization".
  34. ^ "The Uneasy Past of the Veiled Prophet Organization: Part II". February 12, 2018.
  35. ^ "Questions remain about jewel-encrusted tiaras stolen from Missouri History Museum". April 18, 2018.
  36. ^ Cite error: The named reference :3 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  37. ^ a b Walter E. Orthwein, "Idea for VP Festival Came Out of Meeting in Old Lindell Hotel," St. Louis Globe-Democrat, October 7, 1958, image 34
  38. ^ "List of Queens Chosen by the Veiled Prophet Since 1894," St. Louis Globe-Democrat, October 6, 1915
  39. ^ "Belle of First Ball Tells How She Felt," St. Louis Globe-Democrat,October 7, 1958, image 39

External links[edit]

Additional reading[edit]

Lucy Ferriss, one of the debutantes seated on stage that night whose aunt, Ann Chittenden Ferriss, was the 1931 Queen of Love and Beauty, wrote about the events and interviewed Sauer and Scott for her memoir Unveiling the Prophet: The Misadventures of a Reluctant Debutante.

Category:Culture of St. Louis Category:Debutante balls Category:Balls in the United States Category:Recurring events established in 1878 Category:1878 establishments in Missouri