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{{short description|American madam}}
{{Short description|American brothel keeper (1860–1940)}}


{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
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| spouse = James Kenney{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
| spouse = James Kenney{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
| partner = William "Billy" Mabon<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />
| partner = William "Billy" Mabon<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />
| children = Daisy May Kenney (b. 1876}<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /><br>Stillborn baby (1882){{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
| children = Daisy May Kenney (b. 1876)<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /><br>Stillborn baby (1882){{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
| mother = Sarah Ann Cox{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}}
| mother = Sarah Ann Cox{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}}
| nationality =
| nationality =
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| notable_works =
| notable_works =
}}
}}
'''Belle Brezing''' (June 16, 1860 – August 11, 1940) was a nationally known [[madam]] in Lexington, [[Kentucky]] at the end of the 19th century and into the beginning of the 20th.{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}} Her brothel was known as the "most orderly of disorderly houses".{{sfn|Tattershall|2014}}
'''Belle Brezing''' (June 16, 1860 – August 11, 1940) was a nationally known [[Procuring (prostitution)|madam]] in Lexington, [[Kentucky]] at the end of the 19th century and into the beginning of the 20th.{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}} Her brothel was known as the "most orderly of disorderly houses".{{sfn|Tattershall|2014}}


==Early life==
==Early life==
Belle Brezing was born '''Mary Belle Cox''', the illegitimate daughter of Sarah Ann Cox. Sarah Cox was a dressmaker who also worked part time as a prostitute. Sarah Cox subsequently married George Brezing, a saloon operative, grocer and alcoholic, in 1861,<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" /> whose name Belle adopted.{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}}
Belle Brezing was born '''Mary Belle Cox''', the illegitimate daughter of Sarah Ann Cox. Sarah Cox was a dressmaker who also worked part-time as a prostitute. Sarah Cox subsequently married George Brezing, a saloon operative, grocer and alcoholic, in 1861,<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" /> whose name Belle adopted.{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}}


At the age of 12, the age of consent at the time, Brezing was seduced by Dionesio Mucci, a local merchant who was three times her age.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} Soon after, Brezing wrote a poem:<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />
At the age of 12, the age of consent at the time, Brezing was seduced by Dionesio Mucci, a local merchant who was three times her age.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} In 1874, when Brezing was age, Mucci gave her a scrapbook, in which she started keeping magazine clippings, Valentine cards, and photographs—as well as a poem she composed, titled ''Kisses'':{{sfn|Wall|2014}}{{page needed|date=July 2022}}<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /><ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" />
<poem>
<blockquote>
Sitting to night in my chamber, a school girl figure
Sitting to night in my chamber,
a school girl figure and lonely,
and lonely, I kiss the end of my finger, that and that only.
I kiss the end of my finger.
that and that only.
Reveries rises from the smokey mouth

Memories linger surround me.
Reveries rises from the smokey mouth. Memories linger surround
me. Boys that are married or single. Gather around me. School boys
Boys that are married or single.
Gather around me. School boys in pantalets romping,
in pantalets roumping, Boys that now are growing to be young lands,
Boys that now are growing to be young lads,
Boys that kiked to be Kissed; and like to give kisses.
Boys that like to be kissed, and like to give kisses.
Kisses—well I remember them;

Kisses. I remember them: Those in the corner were fleetest:
Those in the corner were fleetest;
Sweet were those won the Sly in the Dark were the sweetest.
Sweet were those on the sly in the Dark were the sweetest
Girls are tender and gentle. To woo was allmost to win them.
Girls are tender and gentle,
To woo was almost to win them.
They lips are good as ripe peaches, and cream for finger.
They lips are good as ripe peaches, and cream for finger.
Girls are sometimes flirts, and coquettish; Now catch and Kiss if
Girls are sometimes flirts, and coquettish;
Now catch and kiss if you can sin;
you can sin: could I catch both - ah, wasent I a happy Girl.
Could I catch both—ah, wasn't I a happy Girl,
Boys is pretty and blooming sweetly, yea

Boys is pretty and blooming sweetly, yea sweetness over their rest!
Sweetness over their rest
Them I loved dearly and truely. Last and the best.<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" /></blockquote>
Them I loved dearly and truly, Last and the best.
</poem>


The relationship with Mucci lasted two years, although Brezing had other lovers during this time, including cigar makers<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com">{{cite web |last1=Soodalter |first1=Ron |title=Belle of the Brothel |url=http://www.kentuckymonthly.com/culture/people/belle-brezing/ |website=kentuckymonthly.com |accessdate=5 January 2019 |language=en-us |date=26 November 2014}}</ref> James Kenney and Johnny Cook.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
The relationship with Mucci lasted two years, but Brezing had other lovers during this time, including cigar makers<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com">{{cite web |last1=Soodalter |first1=Ron |title=Belle of the Brothel |url=http://www.kentuckymonthly.com/culture/people/belle-brezing/ |website=kentuckymonthly.com |access-date=5 January 2019 |language=en-us |date=26 November 2014}}</ref> James Kenney and Johnny Cook.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}


Soon after her 15th birthday in 1875, Brezing was pregnant, possibly by Johnny Cook,{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} but she had at least three lovers at this time.{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}} On September 14, 1875,<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" /> when Brezing was 3 months pregnant, she married James Kenney, but never lived with him. After the wedding ceremony she returned to her mother's house. Nine days later, Brezing wrote to Cook asking for a gun. Cook was found outside Brezing's house with a bullet in his skull. Mucci was alledgedly the last person to see Cook alive. Kenney immediately left Lexington and didn't return for ten years. The death was recorded as a suicide, but popular opinion was that Cook was murdered.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
Soon after her 15th birthday in 1875, Brezing became pregnant—possibly by Johnny Cook,{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} but she had at least three lovers at this time.{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}} On September 14, 1875,<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" /> when Brezing was three months pregnant, she married James Kenney, but never lived with him. After the wedding ceremony, she returned to her mother's house. Nine days later, Brezing wrote to Cook asking for a gun. Cook was found outside Brezing's house with a bullet in his skull. Mucci was allegedly the last person to see Cook alive. Kenney immediately left Lexington and didn't return for 10 years. The death was recorded as a suicide, but popular opinion was that Cook was murdered.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}


On March 14 1876, Brezing gave birth to a daughter, Daisy May Kenney.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> In May of that year Brezing's mother died of cancer. Whilst at the funeral, her mothers landlord padlocked the house leaving Brezing and her baby homeless.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />{{sfn|Tattershall|2014}} Brezing left her baby with a neighbour, with a promise to always provide for her, and turned to prostitution.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />
On March 14, 1876, Brezing gave birth to a daughter, Daisy May Kenney.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> In May of that year, Brezing's mother died of cancer. While at the funeral, her mother's landlord padlocked the house, leaving Brezing and her baby homeless.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />{{sfn|Tattershall|2014}} Brezing left her baby with a neighbor, with a promise to always provide for her, and she turned to prostitution.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />


Belle's first job in a [[brothel]] began December 24, 1879, in a house maintained by Jenny Hill, which has the distinction of being the [[Mary Todd Lincoln House|former residence]] of First Lady [[Mary Todd Lincoln]].<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu">{{cite web |url=http://www.bluegrass.kctcs.edu/LCC/HIS/scraps/belle.html |title=Belle Brezing |access-date=June 20, 2008 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090612000000/http://www.bluegrass.kctcs.edu/LCC/HIS/scraps/belle.html |archive-date=June 12, 2009 }}</ref> Brezing quickly became the brothel's top earner and had bankers and politicians amongst her clients.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
Belle's first job in a brothel began December 24, 1879 in a house maintained by Jenny Hill, which has the distinction of being the [[Mary Todd Lincoln House|former residence]] of First Lady [[Mary Todd Lincoln]].<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu">{{cite web |url=http://www.bluegrass.kctcs.edu/LCC/HIS/scraps/belle.html |title=Belle Brezing |access-date=June 20, 2008 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090612074040/http://www.bluegrass.kctcs.edu/LCC/HIS/scraps/belle.html |archive-date=June 12, 2009 }}</ref> Brezing quickly became the brothel's top earner and had bankers and politicians among her clients.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}


==Belle's "bawdy houses"==
==Belle's "bawdy houses"==
[[File:Pardon of Belle Brezing by Luke Blackburn (1882).jpg|thumb|right|300px|Gov Blackburn's Pardon of Belle's "bawdy house"]]
[[File:Pardon of Belle Brezing by Luke Blackburn (1882).jpg|thumb|right|300px|Gov. Blackburn's pardon of Belle's "bawdy house"]]
In July 1881, Brezing rented a house at 156 North Upper Street<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> and opened her own brothel. Around this time she arranged for her daughter, Daisy May, to be sent to an institution in [[Newport, Kentucky]]. Daisy May was mentally retarded and spent the rest of her life in institutions in Newport and [[Detroit]].{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} Brezing again became pregnant but the baby was stillborn in July 1882.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
In July 1881, Brezing rented a house at 156 North Upper Street<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> and opened her own brothel. Around this time, she arranged for her daughter Daisy May to be sent to an institution in Newport, Kentucky. Daisy May was mentally disabled and spent the rest of her life in institutions in Newport and Detroit.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} Brezing again became pregnant, but the baby was stillborn in July 1882.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}


Brezing was determined to make her brothel the finest in Lexington, with the best surroundings and entertainment. She made frequent trips to [[Cincinnati]] and [[New York City]] to buy linens, furnishings and clothes for the brothel.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} She had many influential citizens amongst her clients, including bankers, businessmen and politicians. When arrested for keeping a "bawdy house" in December 1882, she received a pardon from Kentucky Governor [[Luke P. Blackburn]].{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
Brezing was determined to make her brothel the finest in Lexington, with the best surroundings and entertainment. She made frequent trips to Cincinnati and New York City to buy linens, furnishings, and clothes for the brothel.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} She had many influential citizens among her clients, including bankers, businessmen and politicians. When arrested for keeping a "bawdy house" in December 1882, she received a pardon from Kentucky Governor [[Luke P. Blackburn]].{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}


Two years after starting her brothel she had saved enough money to buy a house, 194 North Upper Street. The brothel transferred to the new premises in July 1883.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> In the same year she became attached to bookkeeper William "Billy" Mabon. The couple stayed together until his death.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />
Two years after starting her brothel, she saved enough money to buy a house, 194 North Upper Street. The brothel transferred to the new premises in July 1883.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> In the same year, she became attached to bookkeeper William "Billy" Mabon. The couple stayed together until his death.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />


On January 13, 1889, the ''[[Lexington Herald-Leader|Lexington Daily Press]]'' published a "Petition of Citizens" on the front page which called for the closing of "houses of ill fame conducted by Belle Breezing at 194 North Upper Street; Lettie Powell, 196 N Upper Street; and Molly Parker, 154 N Upper Street."{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
On January 13, 1889, the ''[[Lexington Herald-Leader|Lexington Daily Press]]'' published a "Petition of Citizens" on the front page, which called for the closing of "houses of ill fame conducted by Belle Breezing at 194 North Upper Street; Lettie Powell, 196 N Upper Street; and Molly Parker, 154 N Upper Street."{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}


With the help of Philadelphia millionaire William M Singerly, Brezing brought new premises at 153 Megowan Street (now 153 N. Eastern Ave) in the city's [[red-light district]]. The brothel quickly established its self as one of the most stylish in the city. The house was badly damaged in a fire in 1895, but rebuilding started immediately.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} During the building works an additional floor was added.<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" />
With the help of Philadelphia millionaire William M Singerly, Brezing brought new premises at 153 Megowan Street (now 153 N. Eastern Ave) in the city's [[red-light district]]. The brothel quickly became established as one of the more stylish in the city. The house was badly damaged in a fire in 1895, but rebuilding started immediately.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}} During the building works, an additional floor was added.<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" />


Brezing was known for her charity.{{sfn|Tattershall|2014}} When the local hospital had a fire, she brought up all the bed linen locally and sent it to the hospital. A local prostitute, Debbie Harvey, was murdered in 1911. Brezing ensured she had a proper burial in Lexington Cemetery.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}
Brezing was known for her charity.{{sfn|Tattershall|2014}} When the local hospital had a fire, she brought all the bed linen locally and sent it to the hospital. A local prostitute, Debbie Harvey, was murdered in 1911. Brezing ensured she had a proper burial in Lexington Cemetery.{{sfn|Young-Brown|2011}}


The [[Temperance Movement]] was gaining strength and in 1915 pressured the city commissioners into issuing an ordnance requiring brothels to close. Brezing and some other madams ignored the ordnance. When the US entered [[World War I]] in 1917, soldiers were stationed nearby and the US Army ordered to city to close the brothels.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> On February 16, 1917 Billy Mabon died and by November of that year Brezing had shut the brothel.<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" />
The [[Temperance Movement]] was gaining strength, and in 1915, it pressured the city commissioners into issuing an ordnance requiring brothels to close. Brezing and some other madams ignored the ordinance. When the US entered World War I in 1917, soldiers were stationed nearby, and the U.S. Army ordered to city to close the brothels.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> On February 16, 1917, Billy Mabon died, and by November of that year, Brezing closed the brothel.<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" />


==Retirement and death==
==Retirement and death==
Brezing continued to live in the premises until her death in 1940. Addicted to [[morphine]], Brezing was attended to by her doctor Dr. C.A. Nevitt. She was diagnosed with [[uterine cancer]] in 1938 and passed away on August 11, 1940.<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" /> She was buried in Calvary Cemetery in Lexington. Her tombstone reads "Blessed Be the Pure in Heart".{{sfn|United States Congress|1992|p=13222}} ''[[Time (magazine)|Time]]'' magazine published her obituary,{{sfn|Boyd|2011}} calling her a "famed Kentucky bawd." The Lexington Herald published a front-page eulogy.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> Her estate was auctioned off over several days.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> The house was converted into apartments and in 1973 a fire consumed the upper floor. The remaining architectural details were auctioned off. Bricks salvaged from the home were sold to the public with the inscription: "Brick from the Belle Brezing Home - The most orderly of Dis-orderly Homes".<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />
Brezing continued to live in the premises until her death in 1940. Addicted to morphine, Brezing was attended to by her doctor Dr. C.A. Nevitt. She was diagnosed with uterine cancer in 1938, and she died on August 11, 1940.<ref name="bluegrass.kctcs.edu" /> She was buried in Calvary Cemetery in Lexington. Her tombstone reads "Blessed Be the Pure in Heart".{{sfn|United States Congress|1992|p=13222}} ''Time'' magazine published her obituary,{{sfn|Boyd|2011}} calling her a "famed Kentucky bawd." The ''Lexington Herald'' published a front-page eulogy.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> Her estate was auctioned over several days.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" /> The house was converted into apartments, and in 1973 a fire consumed the upper floor. The remaining architectural details were auctioned. Bricks salvaged from the home were sold to the public with the inscription: "Brick from the Belle Brezing Home - The most orderly of Dis-orderly Homes".<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />


==''Gone with the Wind''==
==''Gone with the Wind''==
Brezing is believed to have been the model for Belle Watling in ''[[Gone with the Wind (novel)|Gone with the Wind]].'' The author, [[Margaret Mitchell]], allegedly heard about Brezing from her husband who had previously lived in Lexington.{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}} Mitchell denied basing Watling on Brezing.{{sfn|Wall|2014}} The [[Gone with the Wind (film)|film adaption]] was released 6 months before Brezing's death.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />
Brezing is believed to have been the model for Belle Watling in ''[[Gone with the Wind (novel)|Gone with the Wind]].'' [[Margaret Mitchell]] allegedly heard about Brezing from her husband who previously lived in Lexington.{{sfn|Holland|Moran|Sceurman|2008|p=96}} Mitchell denied basing Watling on Brezing.{{sfn|Wall|2014}} The [[Gone with the Wind (film)|film adaptation]] was released six months before Brezing's death.<ref name="kentuckymonthly.com" />


==Legacy==
==Legacy==
Still standing, one of her other former houses, is on the campus of [[Transylvania University]], and houses a women's locker room.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lfucg.com/history.asp |title=Lexington History Page |website=www.lfucg.com |access-date=June 20, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080612000620/http://www.lfucg.com/history.asp |archive-date=June 12, 2008 }}</ref>
Still standing, one of her other former houses is on the campus of [[Transylvania University]] and houses a women's locker room.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lfucg.com/history.asp |title=Lexington History Page |website=www.lfucg.com |access-date=June 20, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080612000620/http://www.lfucg.com/history.asp |archive-date=June 12, 2008 }}</ref>


Brezing is commemorated annually in Lexington by a bed race in April.<ref>{{cite web |title=Belle Brezing bed race |url=https://lexingtonartleague.wordpress.com/tag/belle-brezing-bed-race/ |website=Art Beat Lexington |accessdate=5 January 2019 |language=en |date=9 April 2010}}</ref> Several of the city's streets are closed to make a course for the race.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bertram |first1=Charles |title=Belle Brezing Bed Race |url=http://www.heraldleaderphoto.com/2008/04/10/belle-brezing-bed-race/ |website=Heraldleaderphoto.com |accessdate=5 January 2019 |language=en |date=10 April 2008}}</ref>
Brezing is commemorated annually in Lexington by a bed race in April.<ref>{{cite web |title=Belle Brezing bed race |url=https://lexingtonartleague.wordpress.com/tag/belle-brezing-bed-race/ |website=Art Beat Lexington |access-date=5 January 2019 |language=en |date=9 April 2010}}</ref> Several of the city's streets are closed to make a course for the race.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bertram |first1=Charles |title=Belle Brezing Bed Race |url=http://www.heraldleaderphoto.com/2008/04/10/belle-brezing-bed-race/ |website=Heraldleaderphoto.com |access-date=5 January 2019 |language=en |date=10 April 2008}}</ref>


Margaret C. Price wrote a play about Brezing, simply called ''Belle Brezing''. It was performed at the Lost Theatre in [[Los Angeles]] during the summer of 2008.{{sfn|Price|2008}} In 2011, Lexington's Actors Guild Theatre presented the play. The actress who played Brezing, Laurie Genet Preston, had previously played that role in a 2004 presentation of the play at the University of Kentucky.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Copley |first1=Rich |title=Playing Belle Brezing brings actress back to Actors Guild |url=https://www.kentucky.com/entertainment/performing-arts/article44098509.html |website=kentucky |accessdate=5 January 2019 |language=en |date=29 May 2011}}</ref>
Margaret C. Price wrote a play about Brezing, titled''Belle Brezing''. It was performed at the Lost Theatre in Los Angeles during the summer of 2008.{{sfn|Price|2008}} In 2011, Lexington's Actors Guild Theatre presented the play. Laurie Genet Preston, the actress who played Brezing, previously played this role in a 2004 presentation of the play at the University of Kentucky.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Copley |first1=Rich |title=Playing Belle Brezing brings actress back to Actors Guild |url=https://www.kentucky.com/entertainment/performing-arts/article44098509.html |website=kentucky |access-date=5 January 2019 |language=en |date=29 May 2011}}</ref>


Director and producer Doug High made a documentary about Brezing's life: ''Belle Brezing & the Gilded Age of the Bluegrass''. The documentary was narrated by Elizabeth Shatner (wife of [[William Shatner]]) and Brezing was again played by Laurie Genet Preston. The film premiered at the [[Kentucky Theater (Lexington)|Kentucky Theatre Lexington]] on February 16 2017.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Truman |first1=Cheryl |title=A madam to inspire them all: Lexington's Belle Brezing gets a new documentary |url=https://www.kentucky.com/living/article126800899.html |website=kentucky |accessdate=5 January 2019 |language=en |date=16 January 2017}}</ref>
Director and producer Doug High made a documentary about Brezing's life: ''Belle Brezing & the Gilded Age of the Bluegrass''. The documentary was narrated by Elizabeth Shatner (wife of [[William Shatner]]), and Brezing again was played by Laurie Genet Preston. The film premiered at the [[Kentucky Theater (Lexington)|Kentucky Theatre Lexington]] on February 16, 2017.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Truman |first1=Cheryl |title=A madam to inspire them all: Lexington's Belle Brezing gets a new documentary |url=https://www.kentucky.com/living/article126800899.html |website=kentucky |access-date=5 January 2019 |language=en |date=16 January 2017}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
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==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
* {{cite book |last1=Boyd |first1=Douglas A. |title=Crawfish Bottom: Recovering a Lost Kentucky Community |date=2011 |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |isbn=9780813140124 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=U_DLv6JLlv0C&pg=PT64&dq=belle+brezing#v=onepage&q=belle%20brezing&f=false |ref=harv |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Boyd |first1=Douglas A. |title=Crawfish Bottom: Recovering a Lost Kentucky Community |date=2011 |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |isbn=9780813140124 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=U_DLv6JLlv0C&q=belle+brezing&pg=PT64 |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Holland |first1=Jeffrey Scott |last2=Moran |first2=Mark |last3=Sceurman |first3=Mark |title=Weird Kentucky: Your Travel Guide to Kentucky's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets |date=2008 |publisher=Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. |isbn=9781402754388 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=DoCJUB42lokC&pg=PA96&dq=belle+brezing#v=onepage&q=belle%20brezing&f=false |ref=harv |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Holland |first1=Jeffrey Scott |last2=Moran |first2=Mark |last3=Sceurman |first3=Mark |title=Weird Kentucky: Your Travel Guide to Kentucky's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets |date=2008 |publisher=Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. |isbn=9781402754388 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DoCJUB42lokC&q=belle+brezing&pg=PA96 |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Price |first1=Margaret C. |title=Smiley Pete, Magnificent Moocher |date=2008 |publisher= |isbn=9781438908274 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=XVwrnrFomQIC&pg=PT37&dq=belle+brezing#v=onepage&q=belle%20brezing&f=false |ref=harv |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Price |first1=Margaret C. |title=Belle Breezing|date=2008 |isbn=9781438908274 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XVwrnrFomQIC&q=belle+brezing&pg=PT37 |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Tattershall |first1=Doug |title=Belle Brezing: American Magdalene |date=2014 |publisher=Wind Publications |isbn=9781936138685 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=TmiUoAEACAAJ&dq=belle+brezing |ref=harv |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Tattershall |first1=Doug |title=Belle Brezing: American Magdalene |date=2014 |publisher=Wind Publications |isbn=9781936138685 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TmiUoAEACAAJ&q=belle+brezing |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Thompson |first1=Buddy |title=Madam Belle Brezing |date=1983 |publisher=Buggy Whip Press |isbn=978-0961282400 |edition=2nd}}
* {{cite book |last1=Thompson |first1=Buddy |title=Madam Belle Brezing |date=1983 |publisher=Buggy Whip Press |isbn=978-0961282400 |edition=2nd}}
* {{cite book |author1=United States Congress |title=Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the ... Congress |date=1992 |publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office |url=https://books.google.com/?id=R04zKvlDvakC&q=belle+brezing&dq=belle+brezing |ref=harv |language=en}}
* {{cite book |author1=United States Congress |title=Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the ... Congress |date=1992 |publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R04zKvlDvakC&q=belle+brezing |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Wall |first1=Maryjean |title=Madam Belle: Sex, Money, and Influence in a Southern Brothel |date=2014 |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |isbn=9780813147079 |url=https://books.google.com/?id=R4ZaBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT139&lpg=PT139&dq=Belle+Brezing+bed+race#v=onepage&q=Belle%20Watling&f=false |ref=harv |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Wall |first1=Maryjean |title=Madam Belle: Sex, Money, and Influence in a Southern Brothel |date=2014 |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |isbn=9780813147079 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R4ZaBAAAQBAJ&q=Belle+Watling&pg=PT139 |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Young-Brown |first1=Fiona |title=Wicked Lexington, Kentucky |date=2011 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |isbn=9781625841087 |ref=harv |url=https://books.google.com/?id=GKx_CQAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=belle+brezing#v=onepage&q=belle%20brezing&f=false |language=en}}
* {{cite book |last1=Young-Brown |first1=Fiona |title=Wicked Lexington, Kentucky |date=2011 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |isbn=9781625841087 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GKx_CQAAQBAJ&q=belle+brezing |language=en}}


==External links==
==External links==

Latest revision as of 14:24, 18 March 2024

Belle Brezing
Portrait of Belle Brezing c1895
Portrait of Belle Brezing c1895
Born
Mary Belle Cox[1]

(1860-06-16)June 16, 1860[2]
DiedAugust 11, 1940(1940-08-11) (aged 80)[3]
Lexington, Kentucky, US
Resting placeCalvary Cemetery, Lexington
Occupation(s)Prostitute
Brothel madam
Years active1879–1917[3]
SpouseJames Kenney[2]
PartnerWilliam "Billy" Mabon[4]
ChildrenDaisy May Kenney (b. 1876)[4]
Stillborn baby (1882)[2]
MotherSarah Ann Cox[1]

Belle Brezing (June 16, 1860 – August 11, 1940) was a nationally known madam in Lexington, Kentucky at the end of the 19th century and into the beginning of the 20th.[1] Her brothel was known as the "most orderly of disorderly houses".[5]

Early life

[edit]

Belle Brezing was born Mary Belle Cox, the illegitimate daughter of Sarah Ann Cox. Sarah Cox was a dressmaker who also worked part-time as a prostitute. Sarah Cox subsequently married George Brezing, a saloon operative, grocer and alcoholic, in 1861,[3] whose name Belle adopted.[1]

At the age of 12, the age of consent at the time, Brezing was seduced by Dionesio Mucci, a local merchant who was three times her age.[2] In 1874, when Brezing was age, Mucci gave her a scrapbook, in which she started keeping magazine clippings, Valentine cards, and photographs—as well as a poem she composed, titled Kisses:[6][page needed][4][3]

Sitting to night in my chamber,
a school girl figure and lonely,
I kiss the end of my finger.
that and that only.
Reveries rises from the smokey mouth
Memories linger surround me.
Boys that are married or single.
Gather around me. School boys in pantalets romping,
Boys that now are growing to be young lads,
Boys that like to be kissed, and like to give kisses.
Kisses—well I remember them;
Those in the corner were fleetest;
Sweet were those on the sly in the Dark were the sweetest
Girls are tender and gentle,
To woo was almost to win them.
They lips are good as ripe peaches, and cream for finger.
Girls are sometimes flirts, and coquettish;
Now catch and kiss if you can sin;
Could I catch both—ah, wasn't I a happy Girl,
Boys is pretty and blooming sweetly, yea
Sweetness over their rest
Them I loved dearly and truly, Last and the best.

The relationship with Mucci lasted two years, but Brezing had other lovers during this time, including cigar makers[4] James Kenney and Johnny Cook.[2]

Soon after her 15th birthday in 1875, Brezing became pregnant—possibly by Johnny Cook,[2] but she had at least three lovers at this time.[1] On September 14, 1875,[3] when Brezing was three months pregnant, she married James Kenney, but never lived with him. After the wedding ceremony, she returned to her mother's house. Nine days later, Brezing wrote to Cook asking for a gun. Cook was found outside Brezing's house with a bullet in his skull. Mucci was allegedly the last person to see Cook alive. Kenney immediately left Lexington and didn't return for 10 years. The death was recorded as a suicide, but popular opinion was that Cook was murdered.[2]

On March 14, 1876, Brezing gave birth to a daughter, Daisy May Kenney.[4] In May of that year, Brezing's mother died of cancer. While at the funeral, her mother's landlord padlocked the house, leaving Brezing and her baby homeless.[4][5] Brezing left her baby with a neighbor, with a promise to always provide for her, and she turned to prostitution.[4]

Belle's first job in a brothel began December 24, 1879 in a house maintained by Jenny Hill, which has the distinction of being the former residence of First Lady Mary Todd Lincoln.[3] Brezing quickly became the brothel's top earner and had bankers and politicians among her clients.[2]

Belle's "bawdy houses"

[edit]
Gov. Blackburn's pardon of Belle's "bawdy house"

In July 1881, Brezing rented a house at 156 North Upper Street[4] and opened her own brothel. Around this time, she arranged for her daughter Daisy May to be sent to an institution in Newport, Kentucky. Daisy May was mentally disabled and spent the rest of her life in institutions in Newport and Detroit.[2] Brezing again became pregnant, but the baby was stillborn in July 1882.[2]

Brezing was determined to make her brothel the finest in Lexington, with the best surroundings and entertainment. She made frequent trips to Cincinnati and New York City to buy linens, furnishings, and clothes for the brothel.[2] She had many influential citizens among her clients, including bankers, businessmen and politicians. When arrested for keeping a "bawdy house" in December 1882, she received a pardon from Kentucky Governor Luke P. Blackburn.[2]

Two years after starting her brothel, she saved enough money to buy a house, 194 North Upper Street. The brothel transferred to the new premises in July 1883.[4] In the same year, she became attached to bookkeeper William "Billy" Mabon. The couple stayed together until his death.[4]

On January 13, 1889, the Lexington Daily Press published a "Petition of Citizens" on the front page, which called for the closing of "houses of ill fame conducted by Belle Breezing at 194 North Upper Street; Lettie Powell, 196 N Upper Street; and Molly Parker, 154 N Upper Street."[2]

With the help of Philadelphia millionaire William M Singerly, Brezing brought new premises at 153 Megowan Street (now 153 N. Eastern Ave) in the city's red-light district. The brothel quickly became established as one of the more stylish in the city. The house was badly damaged in a fire in 1895, but rebuilding started immediately.[2] During the building works, an additional floor was added.[3]

Brezing was known for her charity.[5] When the local hospital had a fire, she brought all the bed linen locally and sent it to the hospital. A local prostitute, Debbie Harvey, was murdered in 1911. Brezing ensured she had a proper burial in Lexington Cemetery.[2]

The Temperance Movement was gaining strength, and in 1915, it pressured the city commissioners into issuing an ordnance requiring brothels to close. Brezing and some other madams ignored the ordinance. When the US entered World War I in 1917, soldiers were stationed nearby, and the U.S. Army ordered to city to close the brothels.[4] On February 16, 1917, Billy Mabon died, and by November of that year, Brezing closed the brothel.[3]

Retirement and death

[edit]

Brezing continued to live in the premises until her death in 1940. Addicted to morphine, Brezing was attended to by her doctor Dr. C.A. Nevitt. She was diagnosed with uterine cancer in 1938, and she died on August 11, 1940.[3] She was buried in Calvary Cemetery in Lexington. Her tombstone reads "Blessed Be the Pure in Heart".[7] Time magazine published her obituary,[8] calling her a "famed Kentucky bawd." The Lexington Herald published a front-page eulogy.[4] Her estate was auctioned over several days.[4] The house was converted into apartments, and in 1973 a fire consumed the upper floor. The remaining architectural details were auctioned. Bricks salvaged from the home were sold to the public with the inscription: "Brick from the Belle Brezing Home - The most orderly of Dis-orderly Homes".[4]

Gone with the Wind

[edit]

Brezing is believed to have been the model for Belle Watling in Gone with the Wind. Margaret Mitchell allegedly heard about Brezing from her husband who previously lived in Lexington.[1] Mitchell denied basing Watling on Brezing.[6] The film adaptation was released six months before Brezing's death.[4]

Legacy

[edit]

Still standing, one of her other former houses is on the campus of Transylvania University and houses a women's locker room.[9]

Brezing is commemorated annually in Lexington by a bed race in April.[10] Several of the city's streets are closed to make a course for the race.[11]

Margaret C. Price wrote a play about Brezing, titledBelle Brezing. It was performed at the Lost Theatre in Los Angeles during the summer of 2008.[12] In 2011, Lexington's Actors Guild Theatre presented the play. Laurie Genet Preston, the actress who played Brezing, previously played this role in a 2004 presentation of the play at the University of Kentucky.[13]

Director and producer Doug High made a documentary about Brezing's life: Belle Brezing & the Gilded Age of the Bluegrass. The documentary was narrated by Elizabeth Shatner (wife of William Shatner), and Brezing again was played by Laurie Genet Preston. The film premiered at the Kentucky Theatre Lexington on February 16, 2017.[14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Holland, Moran & Sceurman 2008, p. 96.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Young-Brown 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Belle Brezing". Archived from the original on June 12, 2009. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Soodalter, Ron (26 November 2014). "Belle of the Brothel". kentuckymonthly.com. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  5. ^ a b c Tattershall 2014.
  6. ^ a b Wall 2014.
  7. ^ United States Congress 1992, p. 13222.
  8. ^ Boyd 2011.
  9. ^ "Lexington History Page". www.lfucg.com. Archived from the original on June 12, 2008. Retrieved June 20, 2008.
  10. ^ "Belle Brezing bed race". Art Beat Lexington. 9 April 2010. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  11. ^ Bertram, Charles (10 April 2008). "Belle Brezing Bed Race". Heraldleaderphoto.com. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  12. ^ Price 2008.
  13. ^ Copley, Rich (29 May 2011). "Playing Belle Brezing brings actress back to Actors Guild". kentucky. Retrieved 5 January 2019.
  14. ^ Truman, Cheryl (16 January 2017). "A madam to inspire them all: Lexington's Belle Brezing gets a new documentary". kentucky. Retrieved 5 January 2019.

Bibliography

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