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Maggie Hall
Maggie Hall (26 December 1853 – 17 January 1888) was a prostitute and brothel madam in the early history of Murray, Idaho, originally from Dublin, Ireland. In local lore she is known as a "Prostitute with a heart of gold" and the "Patron Saint of Murray".
Maggie Hall was born in Darwen, Lancashire, England, to an Irish father and mother, both of whom were well educated. They ensured their daughter also gained an education, and young Maggie could recite Shakespeare, Dante and John Milton.
The Hall family were tailors, and Thomas Hall moved his family to Manchester in hopes of growing his business. Unfortunately, his investments failed and he fell into debt. Maggie and her sisters - Mary, Bridget and Louisa - would have to find work or marry. Maggie, instead, sailed for America to seek her fortune.
She arrived in New York City in 1870, according to the census taken in New York Harbor. Once there, she started working as a barmaid. Soon, however, she met a wealthy young man named Berdan, and they agreed to wed. Maggie wanted a Catholic wedding, but Berdan wanted to get married immediately, and woke a city official who promptly married them. Berdan thought Maggie too common a name for the wife of a man of wealth and position, so she changed her name to Mollie, which was a popular woman's name in the 1870s. The marriage was kept a secret from Berdan's father, out of fear that he would disapprove and withdraw the generous monthly allowance he gave his son. The father did eventually find out, and cut Berdan off.
Without any income, and now in debt, Berdan tried to talk his wife into prostitution. She eventually, and reluctantly, agreed. Feeling guilt for her actions, she went to receive the Confession, but instead of receiving forgiveness, she was excommunicated from the Catholic Church. This event may have caused her distress, as she appeared to be dedicated to her Catholic faith, as evidenced by her gifts to churches.
,With her husband making more demands on her, and her love for him fading, Hall left her husband around 1877, determined to work solely for her own benefit. She travelled to Chicago, Virginia City, Nevada, San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, increasing the amount she charged for services [clarification needed] as she went. At one stage she was reputed to be the mistress of a millionaire Charles Burchard. Burchard - who owned the building Mollie lived in - came to her aid after a fire in her apartment, and provided her with a new wardrobe. They reportedly began a May/ December romance. During this time she built up an expensive wardrobe as Mr. Burchard was generous. He bought Mollie a trotting race horse named Maggie and a racehorse for himself named BG Burchard. Burchard was working on building the pedestal for the statue of Liberty in New York Harbor and Mollie was privy to the models and sculptures as they were developed.
In 1884, after hearing about the gold strikes in the Coeur d'Alene Mountains, she headed to Idaho. While en route, travelling by train, she met Calamity Jane, although their paths diverged at Thompson Falls, Montana.
A potentially apocryphal tale relates that Hall obtained[clarification needed] a horse and joined a pack train heading to Murray, Idaho. The pack train encountered a blizzard while travelling through Thompson Pass. She noticed a woman and child struggling in the snow, and decided to care for them, helping them and finding shelter for the night while the train carried on its journey. Mollie made it to Murray, with woman and child in tow, a day after the rest of the pack train had arrived; word of her actions spread and her heroic actions were much admired by the townsfolk.
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Maggie Hall
Maggie Hall (26 December 1853 – 17 January 1888) was a prostitute and brothel madam in the early history of Murray, Idaho, originally from Dublin, Ireland. In local lore she is known as a "Prostitute with a heart of gold" and the "Patron Saint of Murray".
Maggie Hall was born in Darwen, Lancashire, England, to an Irish father and mother, both of whom were well educated. They ensured their daughter also gained an education, and young Maggie could recite Shakespeare, Dante and John Milton.
The Hall family were tailors, and Thomas Hall moved his family to Manchester in hopes of growing his business. Unfortunately, his investments failed and he fell into debt. Maggie and her sisters - Mary, Bridget and Louisa - would have to find work or marry. Maggie, instead, sailed for America to seek her fortune.
She arrived in New York City in 1870, according to the census taken in New York Harbor. Once there, she started working as a barmaid. Soon, however, she met a wealthy young man named Berdan, and they agreed to wed. Maggie wanted a Catholic wedding, but Berdan wanted to get married immediately, and woke a city official who promptly married them. Berdan thought Maggie too common a name for the wife of a man of wealth and position, so she changed her name to Mollie, which was a popular woman's name in the 1870s. The marriage was kept a secret from Berdan's father, out of fear that he would disapprove and withdraw the generous monthly allowance he gave his son. The father did eventually find out, and cut Berdan off.
Without any income, and now in debt, Berdan tried to talk his wife into prostitution. She eventually, and reluctantly, agreed. Feeling guilt for her actions, she went to receive the Confession, but instead of receiving forgiveness, she was excommunicated from the Catholic Church. This event may have caused her distress, as she appeared to be dedicated to her Catholic faith, as evidenced by her gifts to churches.
,With her husband making more demands on her, and her love for him fading, Hall left her husband around 1877, determined to work solely for her own benefit. She travelled to Chicago, Virginia City, Nevada, San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, increasing the amount she charged for services [clarification needed] as she went. At one stage she was reputed to be the mistress of a millionaire Charles Burchard. Burchard - who owned the building Mollie lived in - came to her aid after a fire in her apartment, and provided her with a new wardrobe. They reportedly began a May/ December romance. During this time she built up an expensive wardrobe as Mr. Burchard was generous. He bought Mollie a trotting race horse named Maggie and a racehorse for himself named BG Burchard. Burchard was working on building the pedestal for the statue of Liberty in New York Harbor and Mollie was privy to the models and sculptures as they were developed.
In 1884, after hearing about the gold strikes in the Coeur d'Alene Mountains, she headed to Idaho. While en route, travelling by train, she met Calamity Jane, although their paths diverged at Thompson Falls, Montana.
A potentially apocryphal tale relates that Hall obtained[clarification needed] a horse and joined a pack train heading to Murray, Idaho. The pack train encountered a blizzard while travelling through Thompson Pass. She noticed a woman and child struggling in the snow, and decided to care for them, helping them and finding shelter for the night while the train carried on its journey. Mollie made it to Murray, with woman and child in tow, a day after the rest of the pack train had arrived; word of her actions spread and her heroic actions were much admired by the townsfolk.
