James William Hathaway
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James William Hathaway | |
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Born | Martha's Vineyard | August 16, 1882
Occupation | Female husbands |
James William Hathaway (née Ethel Kimball; born August 16, 1882) was one of dozens of "female husbands" documented before the term transgender came into modern parlance.[1]
Early life
Hathaway was born on August 16, 1882 on Martha's Vineyard and assigned female at birth. He eventually moved to Boston with his family[1]. In May 1904, Hathaway was arrested in Cambridge for allegedly forging a $5 check to hire a horse and carriage. He was bailed out of jail by a member of the Wilson family (into which he would later marry) and acquitted of all charges.[2]
In 1908, while still living as a woman, Hathaway married Frank A. Wilson. In 1911 he was again arrested for "evading a motor fare amounting to $48" and sentenced to two months in the Brighton House of Corrections.[1]
Post-gender transition & multiple marriages
By 1921, Hathaway had transitioned and was living as a man. That November, he was remarried to Louise Margaret Aechtler at the Union Congregational Church in Somerville.[1]
Three weeks after the wedding, Hathaway was again arrested and charged with attempted auto theft. While in police custody, Hathaway's "true sex" was revealed. Subsequently, the initial charges were dropped and he was rearrested "on the charge of falsifying a marriage record in Somerville." The case went before the district court. There, Aechtler testified that she was unaware of her husband's "true sex," while Hathaway himself testified that the marriage was a "prank." Shortly thereafter the marriage ended and Hathaway voluntarily entered the House of the Good Shepherd, a convent and women's reformatory in Roxbury.[1]
Hathaway was arrested again in May 1922 and October 1923, the with former arrest prompting psychiatric evaluation. By 1924 he had begun a relationship with eighteen-year-old Pearl A. Davis, who described Hathaway as a women "masquerading in male attire to close a real estate deal." That February, Hathaway and Davis were arrested in Concord for checking into a hotel with false names. In March, the pair married in Hartford, Connecticut and were arrested shortly thereafter for perjury. They were sentenced to thirty days in jail.[1]
In August 1926, Hathaway was arrested at a motel in Manchester, New Hampshire for "posing" as the husband of twenty-three-year-old Maude Allen.[3]
Relevant scholarship
Hathaway's story is documented in the book True Sex: The Lives of Trans Men at the Turn of the Twentieth Century by history scholar Emily Skidmore. Skidmore notes that Hathaway was "one of dozens of recorded cases of trans men who placed their identities under state scrutiny in order to become legal husbands." However, Skidmore argues that Hathaway is distinct from other "female husbands" because his "driving force" seemed not to come from a "normative logic" of "settling down" or becoming a "contributing member of their community." Skidmore hypothesizes that Hathaway's actions stemmed from a feeling that "his gender variance prevented him from reputable employment, or perhaps economic necessity required that his behavior stray from legal boundaries.[1]"
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Skidmore, Emily (2017). True Sex: The Lives of Trans Men at the Turn of the Twentieth Century. NYU Press. doi:10.2307/j.ctt1pwt5nm. ISBN 978-1-4798-7063-9. JSTOR j.ctt1pwt5nm.
- ↑ "Charged with forgery". The Boston Globe. June 12, 1904. p. 28.
- ↑ "Boston girls posted as man and wife". The Boston Globe. 11 August 1926. p. 2. Retrieved 8 March 2025.
External links
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