During much of the 19th century, the vast majority of dogs and cats, though present in large numbers in New Jersey cities, received only minimal care by their owners. Unless the dogs were used for hunting or fighting, they, and their feline counterparts, simply weren’t considered valuable enough to warrant treatment.
And yet, some city residents were outspoken in their support of domesticated animals—part of a broader vision of a better, more just society. Outstanding among them was Ottilie Assing, a Hoboken-based, radical German journalist who translated Frederick Douglass’s autobiography into German and was his intimate friend for 28 years. “For any kindness done to animals, I feel personally thankful,” Assing remarked to Douglass in an 1878 letter that included her usual commentary on current events and their shared commitment to women’s emancipation and civil rights for African Americans.
Mary Kostka enjoying a cigarette and the company of her pet bird, circa 1965. Hoboken Historical Museum collection.
Of the 27 surviving letters from Assing to Douglass—she requested her correspondence be burned on her death—most included some reference to animals. The letters reprinted in Radical Passion: Ottilie Assing’s Reports from America and Letters to Frederick Douglass, edited by Christoph Lohmann and published by Peter Lang in 1999, detail her special devotion to a green parrot named Maca and the friends who were “about as great lovers of animals as I am.” Her letters to Douglass often include the salutations “Love to the whole animal company!” or “Love to all our four-legged friends!”
Assing was a strong supporter of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which had been founded in 1866. Her last will and testament established both a trust fund for Frederick Douglass “for the term of his natural life” and provided a large bequest to the ASPCA. The funds, released after her death in 1884, would help secure the organization’s future as the new century approached.
The Kostka family, including their Great Dane, Leo, gathered for dinner in their Hoboken home, circa 1965. Hoboken Historical Museum collection.
Although a stereotype of contemporary American pet owners has developed in which they are portrayed as indulgent, neurotic, and rich—and, of course, some are—for the better part of the 20th century, Hoboken, at least, has been home to animal caretakers of modest means.
During the 1960s, Paul Kostka, a city policeman, lived in a Garden Street row house with his family, which included a very small bird and a very large dog. (A photograph of Paul’s wife, Mary, and her bird, opens this section of City Animals.) When their Great Dane, Leon, died in 1975, Paul created a memorial in the backyard. A Jersey Journal article later noted that “an ever-burning light” glowed about the urn that held Leo’s cremated remains.
Paul Kostka’s memorial to Leo, circa 1976. It has since been destroyed. Photo in Hoboken Historical Museum collection.
The wish to memorialize his dog, did not, of course, originate with Paul Kostka. (Consider the complicated history of Rex, the bull terrier, depicted in the 1922 photo that provoked my exploration of this topic.) Nor did such tributes end in Hoboken with Kostka’s memorial to Leo.
When Hoboken artist Jennifer Place’s collie, Frank, died in April 2001, she, like Paul Kostka, was a homeowner and had sufficient land around her house to bury her beloved dog. But she, too, needed to do more. Place had walked Frank through many Hoboken neighborhoods during their nine years together, and they had both acquired many friends. To them, she sent memorial cards she designed. And then, for Frank, and for herself, she set about creating a memorial art piece.
The idea for a “quivering stick,” she writes, came from Jim Crace’s 1999 novel Being Dead. The book describes a practice from a century ago that may have been an invention of the author:
Jennifer Place’s memorial card for Frank, 2001.
The gathering of friends and neighbors around a deceased person to hold a midnight “quivering”—shaking and stomping and rattling sticks to dispel the misdeeds of the departed, leaving the path to heaven unopposed. Participants would then offer fond recollections of the life lived. The artist selected “noisy things, such as Frank’s dog tags,” and favorite objects, to assemble into a kinetic sculpture. Placed added items that reinforced her memories: some of Frank’s fur, his leash, photos taken over the years. “It was my intention,” she later wrote, “to both help his spirit find a good place to rest and to honor his memory with a tangible, visual record.” The resulting object, when shaken, calls to mind the sounds made whenever Frank shook his head in playful anticipation or greeting. In repose, the sculpture also makes Frank’s absence palpable, with his hanging leash waiting for the dog it delighted; it makes tangible, too, the loss of that other one, the one who held the leash, who walked alongside Frank every day.
Jennifer Place, A Memory of Frank (left, entire sculpture; right, details), 2001-2004, mixed media including wood, metal, glass, photos, 46 inches x 5 inches.