They Maketh the Nose Red

"Corsets have always been worn, will be worn, and should be worn"
Did pioneer women wear corsets? I didn't think much about it until I began my second novel and my protagonist, a 19th century Utah woman, needed dresses and skirts and shoes. But what about a corset? Surely not, frontier women plowed fields. They built fences, shoveled snow off their roofs, planted gardens, hauled water, chopped wood, and scrubbed floors. It took a whole day just to do laundry and it was a backbreaking job. Who could perform those duties while wearing a corset? As it turns out, corsets were promoted as essential for work and play as they reportedly kept a woman's back straight and many women wore them. Besides, wearing one was the moral thing to do. It was the Victorian era and women had a standard to keep, whether they lived in the big city or the emerging west.
Wearing a corset wasn’t governed by status, size or gender. High-brow women wore them. Domestic servants did. Men wore them, until the mid-19th century, when they went out of vogue and a man caught wearing one was ridiculed. Children wore them. Pregnant women did. Even women in prison and mental institutions. How do we know? Women wrote about their corsets in letters and diaries. They recorded their purchases and sewed their own. Some packed their corsets away and now they're housed in museums and family collections.
Corsets could reduce the waist to a mere 15 inches. Some feared they would cause consumption, curvature of the spine, rib displacement, cancer, hysteria, hunchback, abortion, melancholy, epilepsy, nervous headaches, feelings of sinking, back aches, side pains, indigestion, poor appetite, short breath, imperfect circulation, tuberculosis, liver disease, cold hands and feet and yes, red noses. And yet, 19th century women still wore them. Women in western society had, in fact, been wearing corsets or some form, for the last 500 years, excluding a few after the French Revolution, with the sole purpose of molding their bodies into the "perfect" shape.
What about ultra-tight lacing, a practice that some physicians believed would cause severe organ displacement? A few researchers claim that lacing until your nose turned red was a myth and that most women bought corsets according to their waist measurement and wore them tightened within reason. Admittedly, a few may have gotten carried away, cinching their corsets as tight as they could, with a desire for a perfect hourglass waist. A woman, in a letter to the "Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine", defended tight lacing, saying the corset was a necessity women had to get used to, the way a "barefooted Highland lassie" had to get used to shoes. The writer goes on to suggest that the secret to wearing the corset safely is to begin using it as early in life as possible. That way, growing bodies would adapt.
Ultra-tight lacing or not, corsets were a health concern. In 1869, Thos. W. Love and Co. introduced the Health Corset, which was, according to the ads, endorsed by N.Y. physicians. The new innovative design was touted to make women not only perfectly shaped, but also happier and beautiful, as well as more amiable, sweeter tempered and affectionate. There you go. The seller probably hoped the supposed benefits would outweigh the fears.
Most likely, not all 19th century women wore corsets all of the time, but the garment seems to have been widely accepted and was simply thought of as underclothing, the way we think of bras these days.
I found a wealth of information about corsets and have provided several links. My favorite sources are magazines, books and advertisements of the day, and also letters and diaries, where women wrote down their thoughts concerning the corset, a commonplace garment that would, in the future, grow out of fashion and become a curiosity or a fashion statement to many 21st century women.
"Godey’s Lady’s Book and Magazine. On Tight Lacing". March 1869. P 288. Hathi Trust Digital Library. Google Digitalized. Public Domain. All 1869 issues are available. Rich in social history of the time. Commentary on proper dress and health. Patterns. House plans. Games and puzzles. Stories and plays and more. Other years are available. Go to the index.
"Women's Fashions." Clothing through American History: The Civil War through the Gilded Age, 1861-1899. Anita Stamper and Jill Condra. Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press, 2011. 79-154. Gale Virtual Reference Library. Web. 9 Sept. 2016. Book includes a section concerning corsets and contains quotes from journals, newspapers, etc. Great resource. I got access through my county library.
"Too Close for Comfort: 500 Years of Corsets." University of Virginia. Historical Collections at the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library. Website.
"Cinching Up in the Victorian Era - Corsets!" Denise Winter, Victorian clothing designer and researcher. Website.
"Crinolines, Crinolettes, Bustles and Corsets from 1860-80." Website. Victoria and Albert Museum of Art and Design. London, England.
Following are books and advertisements published in the mid-1800s that 19th century women most likely had access to:
"Save the Women and Children with the Health Corset." Advertisement. Thos. W. Love & Co. 1869.
"Coraline corsets." Warner Brothers' Company. Bridgeport Connecticut corset makers, not to be confused with the movie makers. 18-page advertisement. 1870s.
The Cholic. Engraving. February 1819. George Cruikshank [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Quote: "Corsets have always been worn, will be worn, and should be worn." 1869 Advertisement. Save the Women and Children. Thos. W. Love & Co
Fashionable: 19th Century Guide. Clothes for men, women and children. Pinterest Board. Kate E Thompson
Accessorize: 19th Century Fashion. Pocket watches, walking sticks, jewelry and more. Fashion extras for 19th century men and women. Pinterest Board. Kate E Thompson.
Kate E Thompson is the author of Bigfoot Hunters Never Lie and a contributing author of New Halem Tales - 13 Stories from 5 NW Authors. She's currently working on her second book, A Family of Forgetters, a historical novel set in 19th century Utah.