
perhaps
Tommy Cordis (b.1884)
Cordis Family Collection
Upon hearing that the Dogs of
Longmeadow were highlighted in a
recent History Note, the cats of
Longmeadow took umbrage, as they
are inclined to do. So in an
effort to be fair and just, this
week the Longmeadow Historical
Society brings you… The Cats of
Old Longmeadow. Unlike their
canine counterparts, cats are
notoriously more private, and
thus there are far fewer images
of them in our archives. After
all, it seems one can never find
a cat that does not wish to be
found. Make no mistake,
though. Cats have been welcome
and helpful members of
Longmeadow households for
generations.

"Mr. Comstock and cat"
December 1913
Emerson Collection/ Longmeadow
Historical Society
The Longmeadow Historical
Society also has several 19th
century children’s books in our
collection, and within their
pages are charming stories and
illustrations of children and
their cats. Cats have always
made wonderful subjects for
children’s books. The word
“C-A-T” is a friendly one to an
early reader, and the antics
they can get into often spell
humorous “T-R-O-U-B-L-E.” One
charming little book titled “Ann
and Ellen and the Little Kitten”
tells a tale of the woe that
falls upon little Ann who
doesn’t heed her mother’s
instructions to admire, but not
pick up, the kitten.
Inevitably, the girl disobeys
her mother’s command. The kitten
scratches the young Ann's face,
and when she cries to her mother
she is reminded that had she
obeyed her mother in the first
place the injury never would
have happened. Exactly the
moral lesson these books were
made to impart.