The Satellites of Mercury, 1888-1892By Kathryn Anne Bratcher |
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The Satellites of Mercury held their festival each fall for five years beginning in 1888 as the final event of the month-long Industrial Jubilee Celebration or Fall Commercial Celebration. The Satellites were Louisville businessmen whose identities were kept secret except for Peyton Clarke, who was Chief Satellite and general manager of the organization. During the festivals Satellite members wore masks to protect their identities. They also kept secret the pageant themes and parade routes to build anticipation.
The theme of the first pageant was The Feast of Mercury. The Filson’s special collections department has a wonderful triangular invitation that unfolds into a cone-shaped hat with wings attached, representing Mercury’s helmet. The Filson library has advertising brochures detailing all 20 floats in full color from both the 1888 and 1889 festival parades. In addition to the parade brochure, The Filson library also has a hand-painted Carnival Reception programme and a tri-fold card that was perhaps part of a special invitation for the 1889 festival. The 1889 festival detailed the life of Sinbad the Sailor, taken from the tales of The Arabian Nights. References in Louisville’s newspaper The Critic and in Madison Dugan’s River News described the arrival of the steamboat
Ben Hur was the theme of the October 1890 Satellites of Mercury celebration. The parade was the “grandest of its kind,” and the Queen of the Ball was soon-to-be well-known artist Enid Yandell. Thousands of locals and out-of-state visitors spent thousands of dollars with hotels and local merchants. All of this was good news to a city that had been struck by a catastrophic tornado just six months earlier.
Although the Satellites are gone, their ideas live on. Louisville’s Derby Festival has many of the same elements the Satellites used over 100 years ago: a steamboat excursion, fireworks, gala receptions, and a parade.
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The Filson Historical Society Hours |
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