Edith Mary Thomas (1896-1943)
Edith Mary Thomas (1896-1943)

Edith Mary Thomas Smart

Edith Thomas was a good friend of Alice Silverman Benioff. They corresponded by letter when Edith became a secretary at the Lick Observatory at Mt. Hamilton. On a visit to Edith, Alice met her future husband, Hugo Benioff

Edith Mary Thomas was born in Berlin, Wisconsin Feb 11, 1896. She was the daughter of Davenport Willis Thomas and Margaret A. Heald. She had 5 brothers and 3 sisters. 

She is mentioned a great deal in Alice’s Diary.

We have a number of letters from Edith to Alice before they both were married but it tapers off after that. We also have a lot of letters from Edith to Alice’s father Adolph. 

In 1924, both Alice and Edith went to Europe for a year together. 

Eventually, on 7 April 1928, in Los Angeles, she married Willard Rossiter “Ross” Smart and had one son, George Rossiter Smart (who was born April 10 1931 during the depression and died November 18, 1994). (An interesting observation is that she got married 5 weeks after Alice was married.)

The friendship between Alice and Edith seemed to end after they each got married.  I found one letter from Edith to Alice when they were in their 40’s. Edith was dying of breast cancer. She died 14 Jan 1943 in Los Angeles.

See Google Doc _ Edith Thomas Letter to Adolph Silverman 1928

Edith’s son George Smart never married and died in Ukiah, California. He served in the Navy and worked for the Bureau of Land Management. He was an active lay speaker for the United Methodist Church, treasurer of retired federal employees and a member of the Coast Guard Auxiliary and was involved with the Ukiah Senior Center. He had a Siamese cat named Charlie. He was a diabetic. He was missing for several weeks before he was found dead, near the highway, and identified with dental records.

Looks like George got a MA degree from Ohio State University, Dept of Geography in 1959. His advisor was G.H. Smith. The title of his thesis was “Supplemental Irrigation in the Humid Eastern United States: A Geographical Appraisal” 

 

I invite you to send me any stories, memories, letters (even if untranslated), documents and photos concerning Edith Mary Thomas Smart and I will add them to this website.

Historical data

Edith Thomas returning from France to NY on the Leviathan, Nov 8 1927
Edith Thomas returning from France to NY on the Leviathan, Nov 8 1927
Edith Thomas' Passport Application, 1924 p 2
Edith Thomas' Passport Application, 1924 p 2
Edith Thomas' Passport Application, 1924 p 1
Edith Thomas' Passport Application, 1924 p 1
Edith Thomas' Passport Application, 1924 p 3
Edith Thomas' Passport Application, 1924 p 3

Note that her witness is her friend and fellow traveler, Alice Silverman, and that she is a secretary at the Lick Observatory.

Correspondence

Postcards from Edith to Adolph Silverman

Postcard from Edith Thomas to Adolph Silverman Aug 1 1925
Postcard from Edith Thomas to Adolph Silverman Aug 1 1925
Postcard from Edith Thomas to Adolph Silverman Aug 1 1925
Postcard from Edith Thomas to Adolph Silverman Aug 1 1925

Letter from Edith to Alice Silverman Benioff

May 18, 1942 Letter from Edith Thomas Smart to Alice Silverman Benioff
May 18, 1942 Letter from Edith Thomas Smart to Alice Silverman Benioff

Transcript of letter from Edith to Alice:

Dear Alice,
 
As you see I am in the hospital above. I felt I should write you in case of emergency so that you might not be too shocked in case of misfortune.
 
About six weeks ago I discovered a lump in my left breast – went immediately to the doctor – he diagnosed cancer and I began X-ray treatments every day and tomorrow surgery. I fully expect to come out of the anesthetic minus left breast and under-arm glands – but also perhaps the biopsy will show up a harmless growth and the worst will not happen.
I am so vividly reminded of you in this hospital. Sisters have charge but the nurses are not nuns. There are priests and monks around – I teased Ross3 saying I would ask extreme unction tonight.  Ross is bearing up well and has helped with everything. We have a woman who is staying with George and Ross, and I am hoping she will stay for the some 2 months after the operation.
 
What I started to say about being reminded of you here is the plethora of religious pictures and statues all about the halls and rooms and waiting rooms which give an atmosphere of Old-World cathedrals.

George2 is now a big 11-year old. I suppose your three are almost young people and no longer children.
 
No more for now. I think of you with such happy memories, dear Alice, and wish we might have seen each other through these last 10 years. Love – regards to Hugo
 
Sincerely
 
Edith

—Monday, May 18, 1942, 2301 Bellevue Queen of Angels Hospital

Footnotes
1. Edith Mary Thomas (1896-1943) – Alice and Edith had been very close and went to Europe together…she introduced Alice to Hugo.  She died 14 January 1943.
2. George Smart, her son.

You see Alice dear we are getting back to the effect of our environments and we are dangerously near the crux of the difficulties between you and Edith. There is a side of human life that is not very well pictured by art. It must be lived and as a consequence there is a basis for Edith’s saying so often “How can I tell her, she CAN not understand”.
Hugo Benioff to Alice Silverman in an undated letter probably 1926