We're torn over whether the Iowa City
community should congratulate or should tar-and-feather local
historian Timothy C. Parrott for so effectively demystifying the
lingering legends surrounding the life of Theresa Feldwert and
the statue she commissioned as a memorial to her third husband
and her second son. Gone are the stories of the statue being hit
by lightning, or falling off the boat on the way from Europe, or
commemorating the death of Feldwert's infant son. Left is an
account of how a bronze statue, made in a Chicago foundry,
quickly turned black because of oxidation.
Indeed, in his recently published "The Enigma
of Theresa Dolezal Feldwert and the Black Angel," Parrott coldly
asserts that, "The infamous Black Angel is nothing more than an
imposing albeit forbidding monument, memorializing the lives of
Mrs. Feldwert, her third husband, and teenage son."
Although the short book will force Iowa
City ghost storytellers to adjust the tales they share over
midnight campfires, Parrott manages to tell a story even more
interesting than the many spooky theories about how the statue
lost some of its fingers. By digging in the archives of Iowa
City's 19th-century Czech-language newspaper and of the public
records throughout Czechoslovia, Parrott fleshes out the life of
one of Iowa City's amazing female citizens: Theresa Karasek
Dolezal Picha Feldwert (1836-1924).
The story of Theresa Feldwert -- engraved
as "Feldevert" on the memorial stone -- is a story of a mother's
heartbreak, of an immigrant's American dream, of love affairs,
of a scandalous divorce, of multiple legal battles, of living
with physical disability and of a woman's ambition to be
remembered long after her death. She
• was born in the Czech village of
Strmilov,
• married a doctor in 1866,
• lost her firstborn infant son,
• graduated from the University of
Vienna's Clinic for Obstetrics,
• gave birth to a second son,
• traveled to America after her husband's
death,
• proved successful enough as midwife in
Iowa City to purchase several homes of increasing value,
• lost her second son on the verge of his
adulthood,
• married and divorced her second husband,
• married Nicholas Feldwert,
• had her leg amputated because of a snake
bite and
• used some of her share of Feldwert's
estate to commission artist Josef Mario Korbel to construct the
memorial now standing in Oakland Cemetery.
Parrott shows how, despite the various
roles played during her life, Theresa Feldwert's most enduring
role was that of survivor. Her life proves worthy of the time
and effort Parrott spent pulling her records from the historical
archive and translating the poetry that she wrote on paper and
had etched in stone.
Despite the glee in which Parrott
denounces supernatural legends surrounding the statue, "The
Enigma" demonstrates Parrott's commitment to our community and
to the accuracy of the stories it tells about itself. Parrott's
grandfather, Charles F. "Polly" Parrott, cared for the Black
Angel when he served as superintendent of Oakland Cemetery from
1947 to 1964. Now Parrott is keeping up the family tradition by
caring for this well-known Iowa City landmark in his own way.