From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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1868-70
1868
1869 / Chrono 12/19
1870
-C. Dorr buys "oldForm" of Pres Elist
property
- GBD first ames to B.H.
in 868 (9/9/44 ) se Hadley
- Travel to MDI
Diotaphone - Sunday May 21, 1939.
The summer of 1868 was the first that steamboat
service reached Bar HArbor, and then 1t was only once a week.
The 11ne wau that of Portland to Eastport, whose boats left
Portland in the early ovening twice a week, stopping from
Rookland on which It reached in the early morning, at various
parts along the way where there was freight to get or leave
on the way down or upo There was then no railroad reaching
the eastern befond
and there was oonsi derable
freight a11 along the fine, the boats stopping half an hour or
three quarters of an hour oven at a single port loading and
unloading. Passenger service till that time was incidental
ainly to freight which bore the steep expense of operation
and paid the dividends. Searsport, where the Bangor and
Aroostook railroad now terminates, I refall and Buoksport
where the Penobsoot enters upon Ponbosoot Bay, and Castine
I remember well, and no doubt there were others. Between
Castine and Southwest Harbor, where the steamer from the first
stopped on these trips, there was Deer Isle. T111 1868 to reach
Bar Harbor one got off at Southwest Harbor and took stage, a
two-horse, covered wagon, open at the side with seats across,
and had a ride of 16 miles through Somesville, the horses toiling
patiently over the rough roads and long, steep hills. And so one
did if one came, as mymother At once did I remember in that summer
of 1868, on the steamboat other than the one that put into/phone
Bar Harbor on its b1-weekly trip.
But the summer visitor business to Bar Harbor was growing,
growing rapidly, and for the next year DO that of 1869
and from that time on unt11 the railroad line was built from
Bangor to the Ferry at the head of Frenchmans Bay the Portland
steamer Koox in regularly on both trips and it became one of
the events of the season to go down and watch the summer visitors
como off the boat and be weloomed by their friends And who had
come earlier. Then the soene with the newoomers in their gay
summer clothes, dressed for the occasion, and all their trunks
and other baggage unloading on the pier and loading onto **/
baggage waggons sont down by the various hotels, growing bigger
and bigger every year, made 1t a gay and entertaining scene.
Then, though railroads ran nearer to Mt. Desert
Island than Bangor, it was by that way that my father And/
who had heard of the beauty of the place from old friends and
neighbors at Jamaica Plaind, the Minots and the Wells and others,
started to bring us down, ooming to Bangor
dusty Qido, but so heard such accounts_at the Bangor
or
the
good and absence of accommodations at Bar
ho took us off Instead to the White Mountains and
on to Canada from Waloh trip I remember well rurining in
toamboat the Tamousa Lachino Rapid whose name was given them
Champlain (look up) because he thought on reaching them that
the TRY up led by the mush sought northern route to China. Thenoo
we went on m Bomo way that I do not now reoall to Burlington
and up the lake by steamboat next day and into
Adirondacks reaching first
where all as yet
and VOST wild and primitive. What I remember best of the Adirondaol
the guides
LD a wonderful canoo trip we made up the Raquetto Rivor, carrying
our canoes over from a nearby lake to a forest trail and launching
thom XP/16/16/ for a long battle upstream. The river was dark &
full and narrow between wooded banks! We passed no buildings
non any sign or man, The trees, deoiduous trees I remember,
dark overgreens ovorhung the banks. Whither we went I do not
now reoall nor IVEK had I ony knowledge oven then at the time
allont
where the dark, stream was flowing to. It stands out a
pioture in may mind,
Another momory that comes back to me is that of
paddling out at dusk on some lake and hearing wild laughter of
the loons and the occasional WH hooting of an owl. These, and
Niagara, which we took in as we passed, are my recollections of
the summer when wo aimed at Bar Harbor first but failed to reach it
The summer when we did come, two years later,
was the first people began to buy for summer residence, to
secure themselves in the community against a growing future.
A11 was
then and the cost of land was low, no one
dreaming of the height to which it presently would SOEE. It
was in the later summer that my father bought, then but 6 or 7
sites in all had been taken, barring two or three in the field
opposite the first hotel, the Agamont House, where people previous
had pitched their tents and camped, getting their meals at the
primitive 11ttl. hotel, as did later those who bought these
lots and had but sleeping rooms and a sitting room in them,
developing from the tent idea. Outside the village,
purchasing the western, cultivated portion of the Henry Higgins
tract, extending down to Compass Harbor, was among the first.
Dict-list
Dictaphone.
19-
August 5th.
C 2 -
Travels
That whole summer's journey, coming when it did
at the end of boyhood and reading had made me ripe
for new experience, widened my horizon and gave me
of
realism
the background for much future reading. It sketched
No
in the background for much historic reading, partly
mains
1868*77
chirden
my own, partly with my father for whom the past held
Earr
always a great interest.
His interest rather in
the fact of history; mine rather as I grew older
in its causes and its meaning.
He read XXXX/ aloud
admirably and delighted in reading to us, my brother
and myself, such things as he enjoyed himself for their
poetry or humor.
So it was a great boon to me that
we were together on our trip that summer, sharing in
the interest of what we saw.
What the summer did for me, brief vacation period
though it was, was to start me on lines of reading and
thinking and questioning which reached to the ever-
man's
widening limits of knowledge of himself and of his
past and of the world he lives in.
I was fifteen
*
1568-69
at that time and had been a wide reader all my life,
making others read to me type/before I could read
myself.- fairy stories X, tales of imagination
2.
and t ales of adventure, clean and wholesome stories
all, ,according to my understanding of them.
How
truly, I began to ask myself did they interrupt life?
And my answer after a long lifetime is that they
interrupt man truly if not the world he lives in.
That is, they interrupted as something other than
Reference & give
a mechanism dealing with a world of fact; they
interrupt him as a being compact of imagination,
rich in heroic possibilities not limited by our
its
present knowledge.
On the other hand, they
picture him as living in a world defined by laws
we only dimly understand and controlled by necessities
we cannot alter for they are part of oun existence
and all existent.
To discover these is the true
goal of history, as it is of science.
And all that
is beautiful and good is as much a part of that
existence as what worked to our unhappiness.
There
is a spiritual guide to life we cannot fathom and
we cannot limit.
And as it is infinite like all
existence, no boundaries can be certain.
12/30/38. "The earliest gardens
4pp.or or English garden
Remember
Dickson
Mount Desert Ferry.
Ferry
Running down by train to the Ferry and taking a fast
and comfortable steamboat acros 8 the Bay, they made a slow
trip by waiting for the freight the train had brought and
passengers' baggage to be taken on board, was a beautiful
in summer
experience/and made a splendid approach to Bar Harbor, but
at other seasons it was less pleasant.
Then Sorrento was included in the trip, both coming and
going, and there was delay there also over freight. In zero
weather ice collected in the upper bay and the steamer at times
had to butt its way slowly through it, and the only comfortable
moment for the passenger was when, after a night of travel, as
hot breakfast of coffee and fried eggs was served from the galley
on the lower deck, with johnny cake at times.
Maintaining this steamer service, was expensive to the rail-
road, accidents barred, which was thankful when the opportunity
came to substitute for it service by bus and truck over a good
motor road and a good bridge across the Narrows, over which all
tolls had been given up. Accidents, too, were possible and
costly. The first was when the slip at the Ferry gave way and
let the passengers of a local excursion train, crowded upon it,
down into the sea with much loss of life. The second, though
it might have been serious too, had its amusing side. A popular
Captain on the run--his name was Dickson but familiarly and
affectionately known as Captain Dick --put a new hand on to steer
/Ferry -2
at the wheel. The man was nervous over the responsibility
and annoyed Captain Dick by asking too frequent questions as
to his course. The Captain told him, leaving the Ferry, the
course laid out, to steer straight ahead and he would tell him when
to change.
The man did so, looking at the compass, not where
he was going --of which indeed there should have been no need.
But Captain Dick, occupied with other matters or engaged perhaps
in friendly discourse, forgot to give him his new direction when
the moment came to change, and at last he did look up and the
die
boat was steering straight as a dye for its first objective, which
was the lighthouse. He had just time to slightly swerve her
course toward the shore before she struck, which sheered her off
to safe beaching, though not without injury to the vesselwhich
was of new make, built expressly for the Bar Harbor summer season
trip.
Captain Dick was cashiered for six months but his popularity
saved him, and presently he was restored to the service and
remained upon it 80 long as boat service across the Bay continued.
March 29.
Dictaphone
None of the mountain names on the Island were old when we
came down in 1868. There was no need for them till summer folks
came down and began to climb. For the Indians and the early
settlers alike they were simply a hunting ground, roamed
over by deer and bear. The names given them had no background
in local usage or tradition nor interest in themselves and when
the Government took over the lands, it was suggested to
me that better might be found, relating the Government is
new possessi on with the old French occupation of the coast and
its early history. And the names given were consulted
over and approved at Washington.
The early settlers gave excellent descriptive names
to all that entered into their life, the seacoast and
the offshore harbored waters. Otter Creek; Egg Rock, the
sea gulls' home; the Cranberry Island, settled earliest of
all for their good boating opportunities; Duck Brook, whose
food-bringing waters are the habitat of ducks in winter, where
they come down and meet the sea when inland waters all are
frozen over; or like Somes Slund they bear the name of early
settlers. Hulls cove and Salisbury Cove are other instances.
The whole life of the earl comers was connected with the water
which gave them the opportunity for trade and connection with
the eariler settled regions whence they came. And in none
of these old names has any change been made or thought of.
They tell their own story and are interesting.
The whole Island formed originally a single
township, the township of Mount Desert. The principal
settlements in it were Somesville and Southwest Harbor
but scattered groups were collected as new settlers came
around the various harbors where coastal vessels could
put in, bring goods and load with lumber. One such
was Northeast Harbor, the sito of an early Indian
settlement; others on the eastern side of the Island
were Salisbury Cove, Hulls Cove and Bar Harbor. After
the end of the French occupation in 1759, with the fall
of Louisburg in Cape Breton and Quebec in the following
year, settlers from the Province of Massachusetts Bay
came gradually drifting down, approaching from the
west and when deeds were drawn it was the western side
of the Island facing toward Penobscot Bay that became,
in legal description, the Island's front.
As new settlers came, the towns were organized,
the Town of Eden was laid out, defined by a line drawn
from the head of Otter Creek straight by the compass
aoross the lakes and mountains to include the Island's
western side and the shore beyond it, nearly one half
of the Island.
2.
Town meetings then were held at Salisbury Cove,
as central to the Town and this was the state of things
when we first came in 1868-69, when Bar Harbor, growing
rapidly, the Town offices were established there, not
without opposition, and Town meetings held.
From the remainder of the original township the
fishing communities collected at Southwest Harbor, so
named from the shelter it afforded from southwest winds,
and Tremont were set off. And because of its prosperous
fishing industries and extensive harbor Southwest Harbor
became the chief settlement of the Island, at which,
when steamboat lines were organized, the steamer touched,
bringing freight and carrying away loads of salted fish.
That, too, was the state of things until 1868 when, with
the growing summer visitor business the Portland to
Eastport coasting steamers first included Bar Herbor in
their route.
By land Mount Desert Island was then reached by stage
from Bangor with stops upon the way at the tavern by
Phillips Lake and at Ellsworth, the county seat, which
at that time was a prosperous lumbering industry, the sea
reaching it for coastal schooners, mill power provided
by the falls above, and lumber available from the whole
Union River Basin.
Dictaphone March 29
The name, The Flying Squadron, bears the impress of
the time when the Government received the tract, July 8, 1916.
It tells of the volunteer group of flyers, the Lafayette
Escadrille, who offered the ir lives to France, before the
United S+ ates had entered on the World War; and of those
who enlisted afterward for service in the Flying Squadron of
the nation, all doing dangerous and splendid work in t hat
new and untried field. And in my thought it was reminiscent,
too, of the flight of the Valkyrie Maiden to the top of a
mountain cliff in Wagner's magnificent opera. It was an
addition of highest interest to our growing mountain chaim,
uniting into a single mass its noblest group of mountains
on the island, which were to form the nucleus for the future
national park. Its acquisition shows in the first chapter in
my story.
1. June 14.
In the history of its land-titles, Oldfarm goes
back to the first days of occupation of the Acadian ooast
by settlers from the English colonies, sailing down from
western ports to make new homes for themselves along the
shores of the former French Province of Acadia.
Mount Desert Island, situated on the constantly
embattled coastal border between the French and English
colonies, Aoadia and Massachusetts Bay, was thrice convoyed
in gift, once by the Province of Quebec, so t of Government
of the French Dominion in America, to Antoine de la Mothe
Cadillac, a gentleman of anoient lineage from Gasoony
in So thwestern France, who was then sorving as an
officer in Acadia, the' grant of the Province boing con-
firmed to him soon after, ona return to Paris, by Louis
the Fourteenth; again, after the fall of the French
dominion in America, to Sir Francis Bernard, last Colonial
Governor of English birth of the Province of Massachusetts
Bay, whose title was similarly confirmed to him by
George the Third; and finally, after the Revolutionary War,
by the State of Massachusetts, now acting in its own
right as a sovereign state, to the heirs of these two
previous grantees. To the granddaughterrof Cadillac
2 June 14.
and her husband, M. and Mme. de Gregoire, refugees from
France at the o commencement of the French Revolution, the
General Court of Massachusetts gave the eastern half; to
John Bernard, son of Sir Franois, the western half,
sending down two surveyors -- Salem Towne and John Peters
to make division and to except from the grant such tracts
as they might find already taken up and hold by !squatters
right'. This division was made up the deeply penetrating
fiord of Somes Sound and thenoo northward to the Narrows.
John Bernard mortgaged his portion and went to England,
where bter he appears as receiving the Crown, in acknowledg-
ment of his father's services, the Governorship of one of the
lesser West Indies, where he thereafter lived and died,
the de Gregoires came down to Mount Desert and lived upon
their grant, building themselves a house at Hulls Cove on
Frenchmans Bay and selling off their lands, tract by tract,
as settlers came down and sought them and the good title which
they carriod.
3.
June 14
Among the first traots sold was that containing the
of the present Oldfarm, valuable especially in those day
of lumbering for its good harbor on the shore. Like all
the grants and conveyances of. that time the tract,
containing a roughly estimated one hundred acres, extended
b ack a measured milo from the shore, bounded by two
parallel lines and a third line drawn at right angles to
them.
7.
10 -- By warranty deed dated September 1st, 1868 and
recorded September 4th, 1868 in Vol. 131, page 314, Henry
H. Clark conveyed to Charles H. Dorr and Thornton K. Lothrop
a lot of land described as follows:
"A certain lot or parcel of land situated in the town of
Eden, County and State aforesaid, and bounded and described as
follows, to wit; A lot of land lying in the neighborhood of
Bar Harbor and known as the Zacheus Higgins lot and bounded as
follows: Beginning at a stake and stone at the shore, running
South 150 West following the Conners line three hundred and
forty-seven rods; thence South seventy five degrees East
twenty-five rods; thence North fifteen degrees East to a stake
and thence to the shore; thence following the shore to the
first mentioned bounds, containing forty-six acres more or less.
Said lot is to be twenty-five rods wide and no more, measuring
Southeasterly from Conners line square across the lot; the stake
and stone at which the boundary of the premises begins, is
situated on the Northerly shore of the cove and the above
boundaries include the Southern side and landing of the cove."
11 -- By special warranty deed dated July 19th, 1875
and recorded November 12th, 1875, in Vol. 153, Page 268,
Thornton K. Lothrop conveyed his part of the same to Charles
H. Dorr. [Note: See Old farm files]
- IV -
Detailed History of Dean Higgins lot.
1 -- As stated above the DeGregoires in 1792 conveyed to
Henry Higgins a hundred acre lot marked on the old plans John
Cousins lot.
3.
The Narrows, separating Mount Desert Island from
the mainland, first crossed on horseback only when the
tido was out, were crossed, from the early eighteenth
century on, by a rickety wooden bridge, with a draw
for sailing vessels and a toll taken, and this was not
replaced till after the World War when the state took
it over and a free bridge, a memorial to those who
fell in the World War, was built, at the expense of
Town and County.
The road over this, starting from the State
capital at Augusta and passing along the Island's
northern shore through Salisbury Covo and Hulls Cove
to Bar Harbor where the Federal Government postoffice
and oustoms house for the Island are established, contin-
ues on thence as a state highway still through the Gorge
to Otter Creek, Seal Harbor and Northeast Harbor where
it ends, is the most important road upon the Island,
passing through its primcipal summer resident commun-
ities, well built for motor traffic and much used.
It has two sections of great beauty upon it -- the one
where it crosses the Bluffs from Hulls Cove to Bar Harbor
and the other where it turns, with a bold sweep into the
gorge, at the outflow from the Tarn.
Dict List
Dictaphone.
19-
August 5th.
That whole summer's journey, coming when it did
at the end of boyhood and reading had made me ripe
SERVICE
for new experience, widened my horizon and gave me
the background for much future reading. It sketched
No
in the background for much historic reading, partly
Cherdes
1868
my own, partly with my father for whom the past held
Dorr
always a great interest.
His interest rather in
the fact of history; mine rather as I grew older
in its causes and its meaning.
He read XXXX/ aloud
admirably and delighted in reading to us, my brother
and myself, such things as he enjoyed himself for their
poetry or humor.
So it was a great boon to me that
we were together on our trip that summer, sharing in
the interest of what we saw.
What the summer did for me, brief vacation period
though it was, was to start me on lines of reading and
thinking and questioning which reached to the ever-
man's
widening limits of knowledge of himself and of his
past and of the world he lives in.
I was fifteen
at that time and had been a wide reader all my life,
making others read to me exem/before I could read
myself.- fairy stories x, tales of imagination
2.
and t ales of adventure, clean and wholesome stories
all, according to my understanding of them.
How
truly, I began to ask myself did they interrupt life?
And my answer after a long lifetime is that they
interrupt man truly if not the world he lives in.
8 ONN
That is, they interrupted as something other than
a mechanism dealing with a world of fact; they
interrupt him as a being compact of imagination,
rich in heroic possibilities not limited by our
its
present knowledge.
On the other hand, they
picture him as living in a world defined by laws
we only dimly understand and controlled by necessities
we cannot alter for they are part of own existence
and all existent.
To discover these is the true
goal of history, as it is of science.
And all that
is bea tiful and good is as much a part of that
existence as what worked to our unhappiness.
There
is a spiritual guide to life we cannot fathom and
we cannot limit.
And as it is infinite like all
existence, no boundaries can be certain.
12/30/38. "The earliest gardens
4pp.o or English garden
ARA/CP/R6791
UNITED STATES
CCF,
1933-49/Accident
Box 794
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
NATIONA
PARK SERVICE
PARK
c.2
CEP 11 1944
Acadia National Park
Bar Harbor, Maine
1868
MARSING FLES
September 9, 1944
MEMORANDUM for the Director.
I present the monthly report for Acadia for August 1944.
Weather Conditions
August was a hot dry month. Rainfall amounted to only 0.74
inches. The mean maximum tempe rature was 81.4 degrees, the highest
of record since records have been kept in the park. For five con-
secutive days, 11th to the 15th, the maximum temperature stood at
94, a most unusual record for these parts. Gardens and lawns suffered
great drought damage. Serious forest fires raged on the mainland ad-
jacent to Mt. Desert Island, Hancock County alone suffering the loss
of nearly 10,000 acres of timberland. Fortunately the park escaped
with but two very minor woods fires, the details of which will be found
at the appropriate point in this report.
The weather summary:
Temperature
Mean maximum
81.4
Mean minimum
56.4
Mean
68.9
Maximum
94 on the 11-12-13-14-15
Minimum
46 " is 9-27
Precipitation
Rainfall
0.74 inches
Number of days
Clear 25; Partly Cloudy 3; Cloudy 3.
IRE79/CCF, 1933-49/Roadec, Box 794.
dislates
SPECIAL
12 as
"or ever the silver cord be loosed
"1
On the morning
of August 5, the immortal spirit of George Bucknam Dorr returned unto God,
who gave it. So was closed the earthly pilgrimage of a really great man,
the creator of Acadia National Park, its first, and at his death, its
THAT
only Superintendent. He labored intensely to bring the park into being,
he nurtured it tenderly once it became real, he saw it increase in
stature, and he left it a monument to his work of nearly a lifetime.
He died as he lived, quietly and with great expectations for the
future.
Funeral services were held in St. Saviour's Episcopal Church on
Monday, October 7, and were largely attended by friends and townsfolk.
As a mark of respect business places in town were closed for an hour.
In accordance with directions given during his lifetime, the remains
were cremated and the ashes were scattered in a woodland glade on the
Oldfarm property.
George B. Dorr was born in Jamaica Plain, Mass., December 29, 1853,
the second son of Charles Hazen and Mary Gray (Ward) Dorr. His ancestors
on both sides of the family were prominent in the civic and commercial
life of the Massachusetts Bay region from the beginning of its settlement.
He was seven years old at the outbreak of the War between the States,
and eleven at its close. He was eighteen at the time of the Great Boston
Fire in 1872, and told very interestingly of watching its progress and
destruction of property. He was forty years old at the time of the
Worlds Columbian Exposition, and visited Chicago to see its wonders. At
fifty he was entering actively upon the establishment of Acadia National
Park, although through reading and travel he had been, unconsciously
perhaps, preparing himself for that work. At sixty-five he saw his park
efforts crowned when Congress enacted legislation which established
Lafayette National Park. Following his arrival at the seventy-second
year of his age he was annually named in law as the Superintendent of
the park.
He first came to Bar Harbor with his parents in 1868, when the
village was first becoming known as a summer resort. The family was
accommodated at the only boarding house in the village which was
crowded to the eaves with summer folk. Those not able to get into the
house were quartered in tents in the adjacent field. From 1868 to 1879
the family spent their summers, when not abroad, in Bar Harbor, and in
the latter years, having bought the land previously, began construction
of Oldfarm, into which they moved in 1881.
VARA/CP/RE79/CCF, 1933-49/Aealia Sex 794
V.T.HPY
Oldfarm was a place of great hospitality. Beneath its rooftree
have slept the great and near great of America and Europe: The
"autocrat of the Breakfast Table", Oliver Wendell Holmes; Sir William
and Lady Osler; James, Lord Bryce; writers, preachers, a veritable
cross section of contemporary professional, political and social life
of a day now gone.
He travelled much. on his first trip to Europe he left Boston in
a
side-wheel steamer, which when the harbor was cleared, spread sails
to wind to increase the speed beyond that capable of being made by
steam alone. Egypt, the Nile Valley, Italy, Greece, Palestine, France,
Germany and England became, over the years, familiar ground. In
America he visited east, west and south, covering the ground leisurely
on foot, bicycle and horseback, absorbing to the full the history,
customs and products of the places visited, thereby gaining the back-
ground for his later work in creating the national park on Mount Desert
Island.
He was a cultured gentleman, thoroughly versed in the classics,
in history and in science. His formal education was gained at Harvard,
from which he graduated in 1874. From time to time he did further work
at the University, interesting himself particularly in philosophy. For
Question
bornshear 11
a time he was Chairman of the Visiting Committee on Philosophy, and was
intimately associated with William James in committee work. But his
real education was acquired from reading, travel and contact with the
scientific and social life of his time. Here, apart from his park work,
he found his greatest delight and took his greatest reward. He was
impatient with pretense and shallowness, but full of admiration for
soundness and real worth. His wide range of knowledge was readily
deligit
accessible to any who sincerely sought it but he gave short shift to
those who sought from more politeness or sheer zuriosity.
He was one of the few remaining members of the so-called "gas-
light era" of society, as well as of the old "Boston aristocracy".
Strong willed, arrogant, impatient with the little conventions, he was
nevertheless a gentleman, a scholar, a kindly advisor and wholeheartedly
generous. We who knew him so well miss the cheery twinkle of his eye
and his unfailing courtesy on all occasions. Though he is gone, his
works shall follow him.
Status of Private Lands
On August 1 a conference was held in Bangor, Maine, with Mr. Richard
Bowditch of Boston concerning a further gift of land on Isle au Haut,
Maine, to consolidate and extend the area already in park ownership on
that Island.
3
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK 75TH ANNIVERSARY 37
Significant dates in the history of MDI and Acadia
1529 - Diego Ribero, a Portuguese mariner,
February 26, 1919 - President Woodrow Wilson
1947 - About 8,700 acres of the park's east side
named Somes Sound Rio de las Montanas. This is
signed a bill making Sieur de Monts National
and many summer cottages were wiped out by a
the first known written mention of Mt. Desert
Monument a national park. Called Lafayette
disastrous fire.
Island.
National Park, the park was the first national park
1954 - One million visitors recorded.
September 1604 - Samuel de Champlain, a car-
east of the Mississippi, and it was the only park
1960 - John D. Rockefeller died. His gifts to
tographer-recorder sent on an expedition by the
made up entirely of private gifts. Dorr became the
Acadia included 57 miles of carriage trails, 17 stone
lieutenant general of New France, Sieur de Monts,
first superintendent at a salary of $1 per month.
bridges, two gatehouses and approximately 15,000
described and identified Mt. Desert as an island
Fall 1929 - Congress changed the name to
acres of land.
and named it L'Isle des Monts-deserts.
Acadia National Park, derived from the French
1966 - Two million visitors recorded.
1613 - A colony of French Jesuils attempt first
name for much of northeastern North America.
1971 - The non-profit organization, the Maine
permanent settlement at St. Sauveur located on
1929 - A 2,000-acre area on Schoodic Peninsula
Coast Heritage Trust of Bar Harbor, was founded
Fernald's Point at the mouth of Somes Sound. The
was acquired for the park from a pro-British family
to encourage long-term protection of Maine islands
colonists were welcomed by the local Indians, but
that had hoped the park's name would be changed
and other properties.
the colony was wiped out by the British. This began
to Acadia, as it was.
June 21, 1979 - Jordan Pond House was
a long period of conflict between the French and
1931 - Cadillac Mountain road completed.
destroyed by fire. It was rebuilt with local contri-
British for control of northeastern North America.
1932 - With a donation from John D. Rockefeller
butions within two years.
1759 - The British defeated the French forces at
Jr., Jordan Pond and Northeast Harbor gatehouses
1980 Just under 4 million visitors recorded.
Quebec, and Maine became British territory.
were completed.
1986 - After years of local debate and negotia-
1761 - Abraham Somes of Gloucester, sailing up
August 5, 1944 - George B. Dorr died at the age of
tion, Congress passed legislation establishing lim-
from Gloucester for a cargo of staves, so liked the
91. Dorr is remembered as the father of Acadia
its on how much land Acadia can acquire in sur-
area he moved here and settled Somesville, the old-
National Park.
rounding communities.
est town on Mt. Desert Island.
1837 - First bridge was erected connecting Mt.
Desert Island and the mainland.
1840s and 1850s First summer visitors, mostly
scientists, artists and novelists, came to Mt. Desert
Island.
1868 - Steamboat service started running
between Boston and Mt. Desert Island. Island
House, the first hotel, was built near the steamboat
wharf in Southwest Harbor. Other hotels followed
in Bar Harbor.
1880s
- Land speculation boomed on Mt.
Desert Island as Bar Harbor became a popular
summer spot for wealthy summer "rusticators"
from Eastern cities.
1895 - The Jordan Pond House, a tea house on
Jordan Pond which is now in the park, was built by
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McIntire.
1901 - Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations was organized by a few of the
island's leading summer people to acquire and pre-
serve the island's beautiful landscapes. George
George B. Dorr rushed into Bar Harbor to buy the land around Sieur de Monts Spring minutes before his option
Dorr was named the first executive officer. Other
on the property was set to expire. A group of developers were standing by at the Village Green with cash in
members included Harvard University President
hand, ready to take over the option. This ceremony at the picturesque spring took place sometime around the
Charles Eliot, George Stebbins and Lea Luquer.
turn of the century. Today Sieur de Monts is the site of the Abbe Museum, which houses a collection of Native
Jan. 1, Maine State Legislature granted the
American artifacts from the area, and Wild Gardens of Acadia. ACADIA NATIONAL PARK COLLECTION
trustees a charter making it a tax-exempt corpora-
tion whose purpose was "to acquire, by device, gift
or purchase, and to own, arrange, hold, maintain,
or improve for public use lands in Hancock
This group watches over Acadia
County, Maine, which by reason of scenic beauty,
ost parks and historical sites have
the park administration.
historical interest, sanitary advantage, or other like
M
groups that support their programs.
This year the Friends helped persuade the federal
reasons may become available for such purpose."
Friends of Acadia has been doing this
government to commit to raising half the money
Land on the summit overlooking Jordan Pond and
in Acadia National Park since the
necessary to restore John D. Rockefeller's carriage
a tract near Seal Harbor were the first two parcels
group was founded in 1986.
roads and create an endowment for their perpetual
given to the Trustees.
The group's mission is to help protect and pre-
care. The group also has helped establish an Acadia
1908 - The Beehive and the Bowl marked the
serve the park. That has meant working with the
Youth Conservation Corps to work in the park.
Trustees' first significant acquisitions. Cadillac
Congressional delegation to boost the park's bud-
For more information about the group, write:
Mountain (then called Green Mountain) and Sieur
get. organizing volunteer work crews to restore
Friends of Acadia, P.O. Box 725, Bar Harbor, ME.,
de Monts Spring were added next.
trails and roads, and monitoring actions taken by
04609, or call (207) 288-3340.
January 1913 - Legislative lobbyists questioned
the tax-exempt status of the Trustees. This sparked
George Dorr's quest to establish a national reserve.
The Trustees owned about 5,000 acres on Mt.
Desert Island.
Recycling in the park
March 4, 1913 - George Dorr arrived in
Washington, D.C. to start his fight to save the
cadia National Park
glass, 2,387 pounds of plastic
the park again this summer in
future park.
A
was one of five parks
and 2,006 pounds of aluminum.
almost all the frequently visited
1915 - Automobiles were allowed on all of Mt.
nationwide chosen
Coastal Disposal, a Southwest
locations. Bins also have been
Desert Island after a bitter battle between residents
last year for a pilot
Harbor company, collects the
placed in island towns - in Bar
who wanted to preserve peace and quiet on the
recycling program sponsored by
material from the bins and trans-
Harbor they are on the pier, in
island and those who favored automobiles. Cars
Dow Chemical Co. and
ports it to Augusta where it is
front of the First National Bank;
were allowed in Bar Harbor in 1913.
Huntsman Chemical Co.
separated and sold to manufac-
in Mt. Desert, they are at the
July 8, 1916 - Sieur de Monts National
About 130 big plastic bins
turers.
Somesville fire Station and at the
Monument was signed into law by President
were placed throughout the park
From July to December about
Parkman Mountain Parking
Woodrow Wilson. George Dorr was named first
last summer and in several
11 percent of the total annual
Area in Northeast Harbor.
custodian of the monument.
island communities. By the end
waste from Acadia was recycled,
Material does not need to be
1917-1940 - John D. Rockefeller Jr. financed the
of August, more than 24,478
according to Dow officials, who
separated when it is placed in
design, construction and maintenance of the car-
pounds of recyclables had been
hope to reach 20 percent his year.
the bins, but should not be heav-
riage road system.
collected - 20,085 pounds of
The bins have been placed in
ily contaminated by food.
(December 26)
2.
And, as for my parents it was a fulfilment of
interests and desires whose origin went back to childhood,
so with me, then just grown to manhood, it was the beginning
of interests and studies that were never thenceforth to
cease or lose their hold upon me. I became deeply
in-
terested in the period of the Reformation and the people
who took part in it, in the things they believed and the
ovils they sought to correct, an interest which led mo
on the one hand into the realms of philosophy and on the
other into those of religion and the foundation that it
rested on. I became interested in nature, too, the
development of 11fo and the development of landscape.
In this my interest was first aroused to conscious life
1875
brother
when and I made our first triptogether four
years before, in 1871, to join our parents on the Rhine
and travel at leisure through Switzerland, its high
mountain passes and its lakes. In this Kr. Hugh Davids,
my father's and mother's friend with whom and whose family
we travelled, was a great help, for he was a real artist
whose sketches were an inspiration. He left me with the
desire which stayed with mo for years, to become myself
a landscape painter. Such a desire was .in my mother's
family, coming from what far-off ancestor I do not know
but clearly marked and strong in two of my mother's
brothers and equally in her. It is the one thing in life
that takes one into pleasant places and makes one alive to
Monday, February 12, 1940.
It was my father's purchase of this old farm whi oh
Henry Higgins had sailed Himself down with his family
from Cape Cop to build a century before on the yet wild
shore of Frenchmans Bay with its mountain lands and wood-
lands, its safe little harbor facing north on Frenchmans
Bay, its pleasant site for building on and good land for
cultivation, that oddly enough became as the years went
by the foundation stone from which, as a starting point,
Acadia National Park has risen. And it is to tell of
how this came about step by step that I am writing this
today. All from the beginning flowed on consecutively
through various channels but with the end undreamt of
till the last to the establishment of a unique and striking
monument to a chapter, great in its consequences, in world
the
history: the struggle and its issue between great colonizing
powers of France and England for the control of North America.
fateful
The historian who has made that contest peculiarly his own,
Francis Parkman, came down for years with President Eliot
and his sons, sailing himself down with his boys aid, to
camp on Calf Island in Frenchmans Bay and Parkman took the
opportunity President Ellot offered to s al 1 down with them
and gather material for his work. One of the lesser but
boldest and most outstanding of the mountains in the Island
chain was named by the Government on its Acceptance of the
Impt.: Acadia N.P. origins rooted in Anglo-Frozel
Contest for control of america On Eliot
ps.
4
(Fobruary ES 1940)
Siour de Monta National Monument which preceded Acadia
National Park, in his honor at President Eliot's request.
is Had the French after the death of Henry IV, Henry of
Navarre, their great warrior king, hold on to what his
early enterprise had won, Acadia and the river of Canada
the St. Lawrence -- with the great lakes beyond and the
vast, fortile central region,
by the Mississippi.
from the lakes southward to the Gulf of Mexico, be retained
which
by them,/ they might easily have done had they but devoted
a fraction of the wealth to it which they wasted in fruitlers
wars upon the continent of Europe, the whole course of
history would have been altered and, barring a strip along
its eastern coast east of the Appalachian chain, might have
ruled and developed & land far greater than their own and
made themselves by means of it the greatest of world powers.
Such territory they did own in the time of Gadialao, first
owner of Mount Desert Island, by the gift of Louis XIV,
builder under Fontenac of the city that controlled the
states, Detroit, as the name relates, and later yet, during
his last years, governor of Louisiana, named for the king,
which included then the whole great valley of the Mississippi
So flow, checked and altored by what seemed to us afterward
small causes, obstaoles that might with foresight have been
roadily overoomo, the streams of history. In this struggle,
whose issues were to be 80 great, neither side received but
little help from their home government. It was the greater
3.
energy of the English colonists strung along the Atlantic
coast and derived from their greater independence in religion
and self-government, which prevailed.
A historic of great moment to the future is that of
the causes which produce that greater energy, skown alike
by the English Puritane and the French Huguenots who, XX had
they come in greater numbers to these shores, fleeing from
would
France on the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, do have
made themselves assuredly one of the greatest forces in
America as what has been accomplished racially by those
who did come and develop their initiative in freedom
amply shows. And so too with the Dutch in constrast to
to the Belgians. They were the same stock originally,
the a virile race from the time of Caesar down, who had
trouble in their conquest, never completely achieved.
Freedom, religious and civil, giving scope to enterprise,
made the difference at the time when the Notherlands were
ruled by Spain, narrowest and most bigoted of mediaeval
and later powers. That the Moors in their higher civiligation
with
failed to hold their own in their contest Paragon and Castille
has ever seemed to me one of the tragedies of history.
It also shows that other than racial causes lie at the
root of the groat development men have made here and there
throughout the course of history and that the capacity of
man for development 11e8 far ahead evon at the best of his
achievements.
(February 112, 1940)
with President Eliot, then at the beginning of his
long career at Harvard, came besides Parkman the Presi-
donts two sons, the older of whom, Charles Eliot, full
of public spirit, was making himself what promised to be
a great career in his chosen profession of landscape art
when, still young, he died. And it was in memory of him
who had conceived and brought about The Tunstees of Public
Reservations for the State of Massachusetts that President
Eliot proposed, ten years after his son's death, a similar
organization for Mount Desert Island, widened afterward to
Hancook County. And this in turn in which I had taken active
interest brought us our first gift, the Bowl and Beehivo
at the southern end of what was then known as Newport Mountain
now Champlain, given us by Mrs. Charles D. Homans of Boston
in memory of her son. And it was this gift, as I have
elsewhere told, that made with me a starting point for
gathering the land that presently, seizing the opportunity
created by an attack in the Maino State Legislature, I made
the foundation for Acadia National Park.
That Mrs. Homans! came to Bar Harbor and purchased
the land she built her home upon and with it the land she
gave the Park was due to her brother's ooming earlier with
my father at the time my father purchased Oldfarm, and it
was there that President Eliot came to toll me of Mrs.
Homans' gift. It all ties up togother wonderfully, even
to the success I had in gathering lands for Kppp placing in
(February 12, 1940)
5.
reservation with our Corporation which caused the attack
tipon it in the State Legislature which resuated in my con-
ceiving the plan, opposed at first by President Eliot as
surrendering our control, to the National Government which
alone could in pointor fact hold them as it has done.
7/04 Init's
Old Farm Land acquis Ann
Ola June 1B
In the history of its land-title, Oldfarm goes
back to the first days of occupation of the Acadian
coast by settlers from the English colonies, sailing
down from western ports to make new homes for them-
selves along the shores of the former French Province
of Acadia,
Mount Desert Island, situated on the constantly
embattled coastal border between the French and English
colonies, Acadia and Massachusetts Bay, was thrice con-
veyed in gift, once by the Province of Quebec, seat of
Government of the French Dominion in America, to Antoine
de la Mothe Cadillac, a gentleman of ancient lineage of
Gascony in Southwestern France, an officer then serving
in Acadia, the grant from the Province being confirmed
to him soon after, on a temporary return to Paris, by
Louis the Fourteenth; again, after the fall of the
Fronch dominion in Amorica, to Sir Franois Bernard,
last Colonial Governor of English birth of the Province
of Massachusetts Bay, whose title was similarly con-
firmed by George the Third; and finally, after the
Revolutionary War, by the State of Massachusetts, now
acting in its own sovereign right, to the heirs of
2.
these two former grantees: To the granddaughter of
Cadillac and her husband, M. and Mme. de Gregoire,
refugees from France at the commencement of the French
Revolution, the General Court of Massachusetts gave
the eastern half; to John Bernard, son of Sir Francis,
the western half, sending down two surveyors -- Salem
Towno and John Peters - to make the division and
except from the grant such tracts as they might find
already taken up and held by 'squatters rights'. This
division was made up the deeply penetrating fiord of
Somes Sound and thence northward to the Narrows.
John Bernard mortgaged his portion and went to
England, where later he appears as receiving from the
Crown, in acknowledgment of his father's services, the
Governorship of one of the lessor West Indies, where
he thereafter lived and died; the do Grogoires came
down to Mount Desert and lived upon their grant, build-
ing themselves a house at Hulls Cove and selling off
their lands, tract by tract, as settlers came down and
sought them and the good title which they carried.
3.
Among the first tbacts sold was that of the
present Oldfarm and its continuation southward up
the steep-forested side of Champlain Mountain, eastern-
most member now of the National Park range, to one
Henry Higgins, recorded as purchasing it in 1792.
Henry Higgins was born at Eastham on Cape Cod,
the son of Israel Higgins who had sailed down with
his family from South Truro, on Cape Cod, in 1771
and established himself at Hulls Cove, as it soon
after became known. But before its purchase by Henry
Higgins, John Cousins, son of Elisha Cousins, who had
sailed down yet earlier with his family, from Harpswell
on Casoo Bay, casting about as he grew up to see what
he best could turn his hand to, had sottled himself
in true pioneering fashion, asking no leave of any where
there was as yet no owner but the State, on this same
tract, with its tall pines and spruces, fit for masts
and building, and its good harbor for shipping them off
to
western markets. Into this work he throw himself
with such energy and good result that for generations
after, though he never had or claimed a legal title to
it, the land remained known as the 'Cousins Lot'.
4.
Henry Higgins died early and the tract acquired
by him from the de Gregoires passed by inheritance to
others, whose names and those of their successors it
would be idle to recall; they are all on record.
In the summer of 1868, our first at Bar Harbor
and the first in which land was bought on Mount Desert
Island for summer residence, the eastern portion of the
Henry Higgins lot was purchased by my father, Charles
Hazen Dorr, and his friend, Thornton K. Lothrop, who
had come down with us from Boston to see the new ooastal
landscape of whose beauty and pleasantness we all had
heard so much.
The western portion of the Henry Higgins lot, as
it was then divided, had been purchased a few weeks
previously by Professor Mahan of West Point, father
of Captain A. T. Mahan, a boy then, who became famous
a generation later for his writings on the influence
of sea power upon history and the fate of nations.
Three and a half years later, early in the winter
of 1871-172, Professor Mahan died and his widow, on
my father's writing her, sold him the land she and
her husband had earlier planned to build upon.
1875
Impt. OldFarm builton land
purchase from Professor Mohaa
5.
This land my father bought from Mrs. Mahan contained
in it the doop-soiled, cultivated land of the old farm
and two splendid house sites between which, when we
came to build, we hesitated, but finally chose -- wisely,
I think -- the site the Oldfarm house stands built upon.
Finally, in 1875 , when we were making plans to
build at Oldfarm the following year, my father acquired
from Mr. Lothrop his share in the joint earlier purchase,
uniting once again the original one-hundred-aore Henry
Higgins lot.
The site we chose when we came to build in the
autumn of 1878 was the broad, flat top of an ancient
sea-cliff whose base had been raised by coastal eleva-
tion some forty-odd feet above the present level of the
sea, where the waves in their ceaseless activity are
now at work on forming a new and lower coast-line.
From it one looked out due north across the whole wide
stretch of Upper Frenchmans Bay to the Gouldsboro Hills,
forming a picture which in the long, slowly-deepening
twilight of the northern summer is one of surpassing
beauty.
6.
The cliff we built on marks the western termination
of a line of ancient rocks, hard and contorted and rising
beyond Oldfarm into yet higher cliffs, which, continuing
eastward to Schooner Head, is the oldest geologic
formation on the Island.
To the west the cliff we built on descends
abruptly to the level of a former sea beach, marked
by the surf-piled stones of a sea wall, behind which
lay, as in many another spot along the present coast,
a salt marsh, now become a fertile meadow-land, across
which our Oldfarm house looks out, evening after evening,
to the deep-red sunset glow; while to the south the area
drops gently away to rise again into the deep-soiled,
cultivated lands of the old farm, which extend away,
with no house in sight, framed in the distance by the
mountains of the National Park.
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HARVARD COLLEGE.
From our Own Correspondent.
New York Times (1857-Current file); Oct 20, 1869; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg. 1
HARVARD COLLEGE.
a college government in our day is to broaden,
rienco seality, only one course is prude
1011, lu memory of the 80118 of Harvard who
deepon an invigorate American teaching In all
or justillable, whon such great Interests
died for their country. The futuro of the Uni
branches of learning. It will be generations
are at Atalro-that of cautious and well-
versity will not be unworthy of its past.
before the boat of American Institutions of
considered experiment. The practical problem
As Mr. ELIOT resumed his annt the choir sang
education will get growth enough to boar
le to dovise a safe, promising and instructivo ox-
Inaugaration of Charles W. Eliot as
pruning. The descondents of the Pligrim
periment. Such an experiment the corporation
the chorus from the Antigone of Sophooles, and
Fathers are still very thaukfu for the
have meant to try in opening the newly-estil
Rev. Dr. WALKER, an Ex-President of the Cot.
parched corn of learning. Recent dis.
liened University courses of instruction to com-
lego, pronounced A beneditation.
President.
oussions have added pitifully little to the
petent womon. In these courses the University
world's stock of wision about the staple of edu-
offers to young women who have been to
PRESIDENT ELIOT'S RECEPTION.
cation. Who blows to-day such 16 ringing
good schools, ns many years as they
Immediately after the close of the exercises in
trumpot-en to the study of language as LUTHRK
wish of liboral culture in studies which
the church, Mr. ELIOT hold a reception at the
blow Hardly a significant word line been add-
have 110 direct professional value, to be sure,
A Sketch of the Caremonies--The Procession
ed In two conturies to MILTON'S description of
but which onrich and enlarge both Intellect
President's house on Quinoy-street. Nearly all
the unprofitable way to study languages. Would
and character. The University hopes thus to
the invited guests and n large concourse of Mr.
The Exercises in the Church---Add
any young Amementi learn how to profit by trav-
contribute to the intellectual emailcipation ot
ELIOT'S friends and follow oilizous of Boston
c), that foolish boginning but excellent seiguel to
women, It hopes to prepare 801110 womon hot-
of Judge Chifford and President
education, he CAD find no apter ndvice than BA.
ter than they would otherwise have been pro-
and Cambridgo, crowded the parlors of who mall-
CON'S, The practico of England and America
pared for the profossion of teaching, the one
sion, and warmly greeted its now occupant. The
is literally conturies bobind the precent of the
loarned profession to which women have already
reception was quite brief, most of the Ruests the
Ellot---The President's
best thkikers upon education. A striking Illus-
acquired a elear title. It hopes that the proffer
tratlon way be found in the prevailing nogleot
of this higher Instruction will have some reflex
parting after extending their congratulations to
of the systematic study of the English language.
Influence upon schools for girls-to disconrage
the now President of the venorable and beloved
Reception.
How lamontably true to-day AVO these words of
superiolably, and to promote substantial educa.
University.
OAKHAM.
LOCKE: If any one among 118 have n facility or
tion.
purity more than ordinary in his another tongue,
THE GOVERNMENT OF THE COLLEGE
it is owing to chance, or his genius, or anything
From our Own Correspondent.
rathor than to his education or any care of his
Mr. ELIOT referred to the difficulty of find-
teacher."
ing competent Professors. Fow Americans
BOSTON, Thoudy, Oct. 19,
of ominont ability are attracted to the
HOW TO TEACH, THE REAL QUESTION.
CHARLES WILLIAM ELIOT, the successor of
profession, for tho pay is small and the
The best result of the discussion which has
drudgery sovere. When It coince to hiring learn-
Rev. THOMAS HILL, as President of Harvard Col-
raged 80 long about the relative adventional
ing, and inspiration and personal weight, the
lego, was formally inaugurated At Cambridge to.
value of the main brauchea of learnhik is the
law of supply and demand breaks down alto.
conviction that there 18 room for them all in n
gether. A university cannot be managed like a
day. There has probably been no change in the
sound soheme, provided that right methods of
railroad or a cotton mill. After referring to the
administration of the College, from the day of its
teaching be employed. The actual problem to
change in the method of electing the Board of
foundation down to the present time, which has
he solved, sald Mr. EMOT, is not what to toach,
Overseors, he sald that it would be bard to over-
but how to teach, and to this point he brought
state the importance of the public supervision
excited such general, serious and various com-
full and foreible Illnatration. The nooded rof-
exercised by the Board of Overseers. Experience
mont as the last. The reforms which the now
ornation in methods of Instruction were not
proves that our main hope for the permanence
President will Introduce into the government of
confiried to the university, but applied to pre-
and over-widening 1180fulness of the University
the University AIC Indicated with more or loss
paratory schools of every grade. What they
must reat upon this double-hended organization.
failed to Impart the college must supply and
The corporation Mr. ELIOT designated the
emphasis in the address which follows. They are
under the now administration the facilities
heart of the University,' This Board holds the
such 118 the oldest and most conservativo friends
for onlarging and enriching the propar-
funds, makes appointmants, fixes salaries, and
of the College CAN Ballation and support, for they
atory Instruction will be greatly aug-
has by right the Initiative in all changes of the
mented. The university, said Mr. ELIOT,
organic law of the University. Such an exocu-
are bmt simple responses to the mitations of this
bollovos in the thorough study of language.
tivo board must be small to be efficient. It must
and the requirements of the hour. The now ad.
It contends for all langunges, Oriental, Greek,
always contain mou of sound judgment In
Latin, Romance, German and especially for the
flunnico; and literature and the learned protes-
ministration will enter upon its labors without
mothor tonguet seeling In them all our matitu-
sions should be adequately represented in it.
protension, nnd with duo reverence for the
tion, 0110 history, one means of discipline. ONE
The corporation should also be but slowly ro-
unages which have become honorable and dis.
department of learning. The university recog-
newed; for it is of the utmost COHRO-
nizes the natural and physical sciences 118 India
quence to the University that the govern-
tinguishing characteristics of the venorable
pensable brauches of education but it
ment should have a steady aim, and a
College.
would have science taught In a rational
provailing spirit which 18 Independent of in-
The ceremonies to-day wore little more than
way, objects and Instruments In hand
dividuals and transmissible from generation to
-not from books morely, not through
generation. And what should title spirit he
the formal commonoration of an event long BRO
the memory chiefly, but by the scollik eye and
First, It should be a catholic spirit. A univer-
finished, for President KHOT was elected to his
the Informing flugers. History, mental, moral
sity must be Indigenous; it must be rich but,
office more than six months ngo. But notwich.
and polition philosophy cannot be taught from
above all, It must be free. The winnowing
books alone: but must be vivitled and Illustrated
breezo of freedom must blow through all 11H
standing this fuot, the attendance WHS very large,
by tonchers of notivo, comprehensive, and
chambere. It takes A hurricano to blow
the position of the Collegeamong the Institutions
Indicial mind. To learn by roto n list
wheat away. Secondly, the actuating spirit
of the State, and the high hopes entertained of 18
of dates in not to study history. Mr.
of the corporation should he a ajurit
EMDRSON that history is biography. In n
of fidelity,- to the many and vari-
Increasing usefulness under the now administra-
doop HONSO thus Is true. Certainly, the twot way
our trust repored in them by the hundreds of
tion, more than compensating for the livek of Any
to Impuri the fuels of history to the young 18
persons who out of their penny or their abun-
special affraction which the Immuguration night
through the quick interest they take In the lives
dauce have givon money to the President and
of the men and woman who mi grout Mintorian
Follows of Harvard College in the beautiful hope
have possessed at an enriler day. The wonther
opitomize opouhs. Philosophical 8111).
of doing somo perpetual good upon this earth.
WAR far from favorable, the sky being overeast,
jonts should never he trught- with authority.
The corporation should also be filled with n Apirit
and the air exceedingly cold and MI;; but be-
They are not established HOTONCON they are full
of enterprise. All Institution like Harvard Col-
of disputer mutters and opon questions and but-
lego getting decrepit when Bits down con-
fore 2:30 o'clock P. M., a goodly company, com-
tomaloss speculations.
tentilly on its mortgages. On its Invested
posed of the government of the University, their
EXAMINATIONS AND ELECTIVE STUDIES.
funds the corporation should be always
meeking how safely to make n quarter of
Invited guesta, which included the Governor and
Mr. ELIOT referred with antisfaction to the In-
a por cent. more. A quarter of one per cent.
State and City officers, the Alumni and others,
oreasing weight, range and thoroughness of the
menne 11 HOW Profossorship. It should be al-
had assembled at Goro Hall. The Chief Marahal,
examination for admission to collage. He adve.
waya pushing after luore Profersorships, better
cated R system of examination for setentitio,
Profossors, more land and buildings and better
Mr. LEVERETT BALTONSTALL, nt once organized
theological, medical and dental degrees, remark-
apparatus. It should he enger, sleepless and IIII-
the procession. and n little before 3 o'olock It
ing that by this months the value of such degrees
tiring, novor wasting a moment In counting
marched to the church of the First Congregational
would be greatly cubauced. Rigorous examina-
Introle won, over proinpt to welcome and apply
tion for admission, no and his one good effort
the liberality of the community. and liking no
Hociety. The galleries of the church were filled
throughout the college course: It prevents
11
prospect RO woll 88 that of diffecttler to be over-
with Indies. The members of the soverni faculties
waste of Instruction upon Incompotent
and labors in be done In the cause of learn-
took their accustomed places on the lest of the
porsona. A school with a low HINN-
ing and public virtuo.
dard for admission and a high standard
pulpit, the Board of Overseers, the State officers
of graduation, llke WoHt Polut, IN obligad to
THE DUTIES OF THR PRESIDENT.
and other distinguished guests Issing ranged on
dismiss n largo proportion of its atultonte
The President of the University JR primarily
the right, while in the centre there was R titlie
by the Way. Honro much individual distroks,
an excentivo officer but, being a member of
and 11 great wante of , both public and
boaring the College son) and charter and the Col-
both governing boards and of all the Faoultich,
private. But, on the other hand, it mast not be
ho hns also the Influence In their debater, to
lege keve. The undergraduate CLARMCH occupied
supposed that every et extent who entere Harvard
which his more or loan perfect intunney with the
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission
the powa noarest the platform. and the rost of
College necessarity graduates. BLUND annual
University and greator or less personal weight
examinations are to be passed. More than 16
the church WAR densely crowded with spoutators.
may happon to entillo him. All administrative
fourth of thoso who enter the College fall to take
officer who undertakes to do everything himsolf,
The government of the College extended special
their dogreo. Under the old system, every stu-
will do but little and that little iii. The
Invitations to nearly three hundred prominent
dont who graduated it Harvard passed through
President's first. duty is that of super-
one uniform curriculum, but by this conren
vision. He should know what each ofli-
gonflemon to attend the Inauguration exercison,
the Individual with of different minds
cor's and sorvant's work 18, and how it
and among thoso who responded with their pres-
were noglected. But now the Freshman year Is
18 dono. But the days are past in which the
the only one In which there IH a fixed course pro-
once were:
President could be called on to decido everything
morthed for all. In the other three youra, more
from the purchase of n &oormat to the appoint-
Hon. Charles Francis Adams. Hon. George 8.
than half the time allotted to study IB filled with
ment of 11 Professor. The principle of divided
Hilliard, Bon. Marshall P. Wilder, Hon. (1.
subjects chosen by each student from lists which
and subordinate responsibilities, which rules In
Twichell, Ex-Chief Justice Bigelow, Dr.
compriso HIX Buildon in the Sophomore year, nino
government bureaus, in manufactorics, and all
Parker, formerly Mimator to China; Dr. George
In the Junior your and oleven III the Henior
B. Loring, Robert Trent Paine, Hon. F. W. lim.
great companies, which makes a modern
year, The liberty of chotoo of subject is
coln, Edward Qulney, Rov. Dr. Nonic. Rev. Dr.
army 11 possibility, must be applied in
wide, but you his very rigit limits. There
the University. The President should be
Putnim, Rev. Dr. Clarke, Rev. Alexis Caswell,
certain framework which must be
able to discern the practical essence of
President of Brown University: Rev. Steams,
filled; and about half the material of the filling
President of Amberth College: Professor Hilli-
complicated and long-drawn discussions.
18 proscribed. The choice offered to the eludont
man and Professor Fisher, of Yale College Pro.
He must watch and look before,-watch to 10120
does not llo between liboral studies and profes-
fessur Russoll Lowell and Professor Hon-
opportunities get money, to secure ominont
sional or militarian Hilldon. All the studies
ry W. Longfollow, who walked arm In arm In
teachers and scholars. and to Influence public
which are open to hum are liberal and dissiplin-
the procession Professor Oliver Wondell Holinda,
opnion toward the advancement of learning,-
ary, not narrow or special. Under this hystom
Judga William (IMBY, Balph Waldo Emerson,
and look beforo to anticipate the
the college does not demand, It 18 true, one 111-
Judge R. F. Thomas, and many others of almost
University of the fluctuations of public opinion
variable not of studies of every candidate for
on educational problems: of the progress of the
equal colobrity.
the lirth degroo in arts: but 11H requisitions for
Institutions which food the University; of the
After muele by n band nnd Ringing by the
this degree are novortheless high and inflexible,
changing condition of the professions which the
College choir, assisted by the (Ileo Club of the
being nothing less than four years devoted to
University supplies; of the riso of now profes-
liberal culture. The controversy regarding the
sions: of the gradual alteration of socini and re-
Harvard Musical Association, Rev. ANDREW P.
comparative morite of lectures and recitations
ligious habits In the community, The Uni-
PEARODY, preacher to the College and Plum-
WHA illuded 10. A combination of the two WHH
versity must necommodate Itself prompt-
mor Professor of Christian Morals, offered an III
indiceated, the number of reotations to be di-
ly to significant changes in the chur.
minished IIH the student advances III his course.
troductory prayer. This WHA followed by a con-
notor of the people for whom It exists.
Text-books were Invaluable In apito of their III-
In this mobile nation the notion and reaction be-
gratulatory address in Latin by Mr. JOHN 811.A8
accuracles, and the main Improvement In med-
twoon the University and society at large are
WHITE, n member of the Benior Class, after
loal education In this country during the last
more sonsitive and rapid than in sliffer commu-
which the ceremony of induction into office WHA
twenty years hns been III the addition of -
uttles. The President. therefore, must not need
tematle recitations from text-books to the loos
to 800 house built before he can comprehend
performed, Hon. JOHN HENRY CLIFFORD, Proal-
turox which were formerly the principal meant
the plan of 11. Ho onn profit by a wide Inter-
dont of the Board of Overseore, dolivering an
of theorotical instruction.
courso with all sorts of men, and by
address, of which the following is all abstract:
MANNERS, MORALS and DISCIPILINE.
every real discussion on education, legisia-
In regard to certain common minapprehensions
tion and Boolology. The most important
ADDRESS OF JUDGE CLIPPORD.
function of the President Is that of nd.
about colleges In general and Harvard College
Mr. CLIFFORD began by including to the change
In particular, Mr. Eliot Buld: security of the
vising the corporation concerning appoint-
which had taken place in the government of the
college commonwealth Is largely due to its ox-
month, particularly of young
College HINCO the mauguration of Mr. ELIOT'S
uborant activity. 118 public optuton, though OHSI-
mon who have not and time and opportunity to
Immediate predecossor, explaining how lie, In-
by led natray Is BEIII high in the main. Its schol-
thomsolves to the public, tt Is In dis.
stend of the Ohiof Magistrato of the Com-
arly water and habits, 118 enger friendships and
charging this duty that the President holds the
monwealth, R18 had been the invariable
quick hatreds, 118 keon dobates, 118 frank
futuro of the University In his hands. He CALL-
oustom sluce the foundation of the Col-
lege, performed the coremony of Indue-
discussions of character and of deep, politi-
not do it well unloss he have insight, unless he be
ent and religious questions-nll are safe.
able to recognize, 111 times boneath BODIO crusts,
tion Into office. 110 then influded to the
great importance of the office of President of the
guards against sloth, vulgarity and depravity.
the real géntloman and the natural tonohor.
Its society and not less its solitudos are full of
This 18 the one oppressive responsibility of the
College, and to the marvolous personal Influence
teaching. Shame. conceit and fictitions distinc-
President all other cares are light boside it.
which 11 WHA in the power of the head of the
It is Imperative that the statutes which deflue
tions get no morey. There 18 nothing but ridi-
University to exercise. live aometimos
the President's dutios should be recast, and
thought, no Buid, that If this influence. cont.
onle for bombast and sentimontality. Repres-
bined with somo modo of personal examination,
sion of genuino aentiment and emotion IH,
the customs of the College be somewhat modi-
Indeed, In this College, carried too far.
fied, in order that lesser duties may not
by which the Faculty might test the student's
disposition to minko the boat of his opportunities
Roservo is more respootable than any un-
crowd out the greater. But, however Im-
discorning communicntivenoss. But neither
portant the functions of Wio President, It
According to capacity, could take the placo of
Yankee shamofacedness nor Euglish stalidity
must not bo forgotten that he 18 omphatically a
the present unrealisfactory and often unjust
18 admirable. This point especially touches
constitutional executive. Ishis charactor and
system of arbitrary marks, even when most
critically and conselectiously enforced. our
you, young men, who are still undergraduates.
his judgment which are of Importance, not his
When you feel n true admiration for n teacher, a
opinions. He Is the executive officer of delibora-
college culture would better accomplish 118
highest results. The Procrustes bed on which
glow of enthusinsm for work, a thrill of pleusuro
tivo bodies, in which decisions are reached after
ist BOINO excellent saying, RIVO It expression.
discussion by a majurity vote. Those Aucisions
the poor viotim of mediocrity of talent is now
Do not be inshamed of those emotions. Chorish
bind him. He cannot force his own opinious
laid, to be stretched out to the etaturo of the
the natural sentiment of personal devotion to
upon anybody. A university is the last place in
more highly gifted child of genius by his side,
the world for 16 dietator. Learning is always
the teacher who calls out your better powers. It
would no longer oxist, to work the injustico of
is great delight to serve an intellecting mister.
publican. It line idole, but not mastera
which It has too often been the Instrument. May
We Americane are but too asit to lose this
It be the proud boast of this Institution, under
THE UNIVERSITY AND THE PUBLIC.
your ausjilcious and conscientions administra-
happiness. German and French students get
it. If over in after years you como to
What can the community do for the Universi-
tion, that while the brightest gonius shall hore
smile at the youthful revenue you paid,
ty First, it can love, honor and chorish It. The
flud fit purture for its highest powers, no well-
believe inc, It will be with toars in your oyes."
University is uphold by this public affection and
intentioned effort for improvement, of even the
And in conclusion The best way to put boy.
respect. In the loyalty of her children she
humblest capacity, shall of receiving nt your
Ishuean to shame is to foster scholarship and
fluds strength and courage. The carpora-
handsal practicable encouragementand support.
From these remarks upon the training the Col.
manliness. The mauners of a community can-
tion, the overscore and the several facul-
not be improved by main forco any more than
ties nood to feel that the lenders of pub-
lego is to give, Mr. CLIFFORD procooded at SOHO
its morals. The statutes of the University need
lic opinion. and especially the sons of the Col-
length to the consideration of what 16 to touch.
somo amendment and reduction in the chaptors
lego, are at their back, always ready to give
It snocessary he held, that the great influence
on urines and misdemeapore. But lot 118 render
them n generous and Intelligent support. There.
of Harvard should be on the side of religion and
fore we wolcome the Chief Magistrate of the
to our fathers the justice WO shall
truth. III the progress of what la complacent-
uoed from our RONS. What is too ml-
Commonwer the Senators, Judges and other
ly called the advanced thought of New-England,
nuto or preciso for our uso was doubt-
diguitaries of the State, who by their presence
lie remarked that there doubtless will be waged
conflict of opinion of the highest import to the
loss wise and proper In its day. It waste Incul-
at this ancient coremonial boar witness to the
cause of truth And the welfare of the race.
onto a reveront boaring and due consideration
pride which Massachusetts feels In her eldest
for things sacred that the regulations proscribed
University. Therefore, we rejoice the prose1100
Whonevor It comos Harvard College CALL hold no
n black dress on Sunday, Bluck is not the only
of this throng of the Alumni, testifying their do.
subordinate place among the Institutions of the
decorous wear In those days; but we must not
votion to the Colloko, which, through all changes,
country, in whose armories must be forged the
is still their home. Cherish It. This Unt-
wonpons with which It will be fought. Her
seem, in consing from this particular mode of
friends can have no miagivings ns to the position
good manuers, to think less of the gentle breed-
veralty, though rich among American colleges,
GIIIK of which only the outward signs, and not the
is very poor in comparison with the great uni-
also will occupy in such n nold. Mr. CLIPPORD
substance, have been changed.'
versition of Europe. The wants of the American
then said that his only remaining duty WHIS to
From some general remarks upon the alleged
community have far outgrown the capacity of
place In the charge of the new President thoso
false charges that Harvard was exclusive and
the University to supply them. We must try to
keys, this uncient charter, and this seal of the
suistocratic, he passed to
satisfy the cravings of the select few as well as
College, the symbols and the warrant of the
the noods of the average many. We onnuot af-
authority now conferred upon you as 118 afticial
THE EDUCATION OF WOMEN.
ford to noglect the flue arts. Wo need
head. Tendering to you, therefore, the awaiting
The attitude of the University in the provall-
groves and meadows as well as bar-
confidence, the cordial sympathies, and the
Ing discussions touching the education and lit
racks, and soon there will be no chance
roudy cooperation of the Follows and Overseers,
employments of womon domands brief explann-
to them in this expanding city. But, above
in their name, and on their behalf, I now greet
tion. America is the natural arena for those do-
all, wo need professorships, books and ap-
and welcome you the President of Harvard
bates, for hore the female BOX line better past
paratus, that teaching and soliolarship may
College.'
and
a
better
present
thau
cleawhoro.
Americans,
abound. And what will the University do for
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
At the conclusion of this nddress Mr. CHARIES
08 n rule, hate diabilities of all sorth, whether
the community First, it will mako A rich re-
religious, political or social. Equality between
turn of learning, pootry, and piety. Secondly, it
WILLIAM ELIOT took his Boat in the President's
the BOXOS, without privilege or oppression
will foster the 801180 of public duity,-that great
chair and nssumed his cap while in the choir
on either side, 18 the happy custom
virtue which makes républica possible. The
of American homes. While this great
founding of Harvard College will An heroio act
sang
discussion 18 going on, It is the duty
of public spirit. For more than a contury the
"Domino, fac salvum Presidum nostrum."
of the University to maintain a onutious and ex-
breath of life WAS kept in It by the
A1 Its conclusion the nowly-Inducted President
pootant polley, The corporation will not receive
public spirit of the Province and of its
proceeded to deliver the following address
women as students into the College proper, nor
private benefactors. In the last City years
into any school whose discipline requires resi-
the public apirit of the frieuds of the Col-
(ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT ELIOT.
donce noar the school. The difficultios Involved
lego bas quadrupled its endowments. And how
The endless controversios whother language,
in a common residence of hundreds of young
have the young inon nurtured here in suocessive
philosophy, mathematica or solence supply the
men and woman of iminature character and mar-
generations repaid the founders for their plous
best mental training, whether general education
riageable age are very grave. The necessary po-
caref Have they honored freedom and loved
should be chiefly literary or childtly scientific,
lice regulation are exceedingly burdensome. The
their country For answer we appeal to the
have no practical lesson for us to-day. This
corporation are not influenced to this decision,
records of the national service to the lists of
University recognizes no real antagomem be-
however, by any orudo notions about the innate
the Sonate, the Cabluet, and the diplomatic ser-
tweca literature and solonoe, and consonts to no
capacities of women. The world knows noxt to
vico, and to the rolls of the army and navy.
such narrow altornative smothematics class-
nothing about the natural montal capacities of
Honored men, here present, illustrate before
100, solence or motaphysics. We would havether
the female BOX. Only after generations of civil
the world the public quality of the graduates of
all, and at their best, To observe koonly, to roa-
froodom and social equality will it bo possible to
this College. Theirs is no merconary service.
BOD Boundly, and to Imagine vividly are opora-
obtain the data necessary for an adequate dis-
Other fiolds of labor attract them more and
tione as essential as that of clear and forcible ox-
cussion of woman's natural tondencies, tastos
would roward them better but they are filled
pression; and to develop one of these faculties It
and capabilities. Again, the corporation do not
with the noble ambition to deserve well of the
Is not necessary to repress and dwarf the others.
find It uccessary to entertain a confident opinion
Republic. There have been doubts, in times yet
A university is not closely concerned with the
upon the fitness or unfitness of womon for pro-
recont, whother culture were notselfish; whether
applications of knowledge, until Its general edu-
fessional pursuits. It is not the business of the
mon of retinod tastes and manners could really
cation branches into professional. Poetry and
University to decide this mooted point. In this
love liberty and be ready to endure hardness for
philosophy and selence do indood conspire to
country the University doos not undertake to
her sake whether, in short, goutlemen would in
promote the material welfare of mankind; but
protect the community against incompetent
this coutury provo as loyal to noble ideas as In
science no more than poetry finds its best war-
lawyers, ministers or doctors. The community
other times they had been to Kings. In yonder
rant in its utility. Truth and right are above
must protect itself by refusing to employ such.
old playground, fit spot whereon to 0010meno-
ntility in all realms of thought and action. It
Practical, not thoorotical, considerations deter-
rute the mauliness which there was nurtured,
were bitter mockery to suggest that any subject
mino the polley of the University. Upon
shall soon riso a noble monument which for gou-
whatever should be laught less than it now is in
a matter Concorning which prejudicos are
erations will give convincing answer to such
American colleges. The only conscivable aim at
deen, and opinion informable, and ANIA
shallow double; for over 160 intos will be writ-
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
ges
ADDRESS
AT THE
T
Daying of the Corner Stone
FREE
OF THE
MEMORIAL HALL,
AT
HARVARD COLLEGE
OCTOBER 6, 1870.
BY E. R. HOAR.
TOLMAN & WHITE, PRINTERS, 221 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON.
1870.
C. Pain 7 74
Page No.
of
}
Inquiries numbered and 17 are not to be asked in respect to Infants. Inquiries numbered 11. 12, 15, 16, 17, 19, and 20 are to be answered
merely by as affirmative mark, as 1.
SCHEDULE
of 1.-Inhabitants mass , enumerated in by me on the 2 day of only in the County 1870. of 1 regard
, State
,
226
Post Office:
-auton
Ass't
Marshal,
VALIE OF REAL Estate
OWBED
PARENTAGE
RELATIONS
The - of every preme whose
Profination, Occupation
Whether
Place of Birth caming State
place of abode - the the day of
or Trade of each person,
or Territory of U. a or the
and 4
June, 1870, was is this family
male or female.
Country. if of foreign birth
blind. income
Idiotic.
I
2
8
4
5
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14 15/16/17
18
19
20
1
vicaonall
r scinol
please
No
Necen de
Pr schive
3
Cadan icanna
reeping Youse
2500
8
s
Causes
trues Effeci-
4
5
warratt Redeside-t
it name
//
5
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21 issue
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7
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8
9
Lailes imary
Domasic
Instant
9
10
10
Riggers Venice is
Hendrier
500
mass
10
11
Many
whing Youse
11
1%
Jannell in
12
13
13
lighted Sarah
Inland
13
T1
389
Dorr Charles
4
in
merchant
12000
60000
mass
14
15
13
many G
48
N
w
Leeking House
11
15
16
16
William 101
19
in
w
ar none
11
16
17
George B
6
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17
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kind Elizabeth
63
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Wales
18
19
Dann Ellen
2.
w
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Sartner
19
to
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22
it
W
Domestic
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21
marron Ellse
2
7
w
Dometie
mass
tz
Herinan Sohie
40
in
al
Coachman
Incand
23
13
June Causic
in
Darolin mannel
1500
4000
England
/
23
24
:
January 10
00
needing House
/
24
25
#5
Frank 2
is
in
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mass
25
26
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i
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11
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11
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12
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29
30
30
Leman Heary
21
of
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h.Caroline
30
31
31
Wilson Litter
2
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mass -
31
3%
32
Taunt William
farmer
2500
3 or
!!
32
33
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"
33
34
31
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Hunder
11
34
35
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Franville J.
//
35
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36
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if
Wesley
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36
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1500
37
37
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37
38
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w
inck on form
38
39
William 4/20
in
(
mok in form.
39
40
ii)
255/LE Please T.22
7
Tomestic
40
No. dwellings,
No. of white I
No.
of mailes,
2
6/3/1/82,3
3v
R
colored males,
females,
15/10/1
911
9
white make 19
blind,
No.
Name, G. Dorr
Class and Department, or Occupation,
74
Age, 17 yrs.
ms.
Birthplace,
Nationality of father,
mother,
"
his father,
her father,
"
"
his mother,
her mother,
Occupation of father,
If father is dead, of what did he die ?
If mother is dead, of what did she die?
Which of your parents do you most resemble ?
What hereditary disease, if any, is there in your family ?
Is your general health good?
Have you always had good health ?
Mark (*) such of the following diseases as you may have had :
Asthma,
Bronchitis,
Chronic Diarrhoea,
Dizziness,
Dyspepsia,
Dysentery,
Gout,
Rheumatism,
Neuralgia,
Pleurisy,
Shortness of Breath,
Jaundice,
Palpitation of the Heart,
Headache,
Piles,
Pneumonia,
Varicose Veins,
Liver Complaints,
Habitual Constipation,
Spitting of Blood,
Paralysis.
What injuries have you received?
What surgical operation have you undergone ?
No.
7
4
DATE, at 72
BREADTH, Head,
AGE, 17-9
Neck,
WEIGHT,
69.8
Shoulders,
HEIGHT,
185.2
Waist,
"
Knee,
Hips,
Sitting,
Nipples,
Pubes,
DEPTH, Chest,
Navel,
"
Abdomen,
Sternum,
LENGTH, R, Should. Elb.
GIRTH, Head,
L.
"
"
"
Neck,
R. Elbow Tip,
"
Chest, Repose,
L.
"
"
Full,
86.3
R. Foot,
"
Waist,
L. "
"
Hips,
Horizontal,
"
R.Thigh,
STRETCH of Arms,
"
L. "
CAPACITY of Lungs,
R.Knee,
STRENGTH of Lungs,
L.
"
Back,
R.Calf,
"
Chest,
L. "
"
Legs,
"
R.Instep,
"
U. Arm,
" L. "
"
Forearm,
"
R. Upper Arm, 34.4
"
TOTAL,
"
L.
DEVELOPMENT,
"
R. Elbow,
PILOSITY,
"
L.
COLOR of Hair,
"
R. Forearm,
29.2
"
Eyes,
"
L.
TEMPERAMENT,
"
R. Wrist,
L.
8/16/2015
XFINITY Connect
XFINITY Connect
eppster2@comcast.net
+ Font Size =
RE: Archive Images: George Bucknam Dorr
From : Barbara Meloni
Fri, Aug 14, 2015 05:36 PM
1 attachment
Subject : RE: Archive Images: George Bucknam Dorr
To : Ronald Epp
Hi Ron,
Attached is a scan of the anthropometric measurement card for G. Dorr, Harvard College Class of 1874, from
the records of the department of physical education at Harvard (Archives call number UAV 689.270 Box 3).
There is not a corresponding photograph for Dorr; the photographs don't begin until the Class of 1880. (I did
check to be sure!)
Please see the Permission to Publish from Collections section of our website for updated information on
submitting requests.
I hope this is useful, and that you had a successful trip north. I'm heading to Maine for vacation soon and
definitely looking forward to it!
Regards,
Barbara
Barbara S. Meloni
Archivist for Research Services, Outreach, and Instruction
Harvard University Archives / Pusey Library
Harvard Yard / Cambridge MA 02138
barbara_meloni@harvard.edu/617-495-2461
Follow HUA on Twitter@HarvardArchives
From: Ronald Epp [mailto:eppster2@comcast.net]
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2015 9:14 PM
To: Meloni, Barbara
Subject: Archive Images: George Bucknam Dorr
Dear Barbara,
Below you will find our most recent email. After relocating to a
retirement community in southeastern Pennsylvania, my wife was struck
with squamous cell carcinoma which took her life. It is only in the last
eighteen months that I have returned to the G.B. Dorr (Harvard, 1874)
biography which is under contract and will be published in April 2016 as
part of the National Park Service centennial celebrations.
Today I was approached by an Acadia National Park Ranger who wanted
specifics on Dorr's height. Other than being tall and lanky his entire life,
I had no metrics. Then I consulted online the Harvard Department of Physical Education
https://web.mail.comcast.net/zimbra/h/printmessage?id=313621&tz=America/New_York&xim=
1/3
8/16/2015
XFINITY Connect
anthropometric measurement of students inventory that you processed
Can the restricted card index be consulted to pull the full information on Mr. Dorr?
If there is Dorr's photograph, what is the procedure for securing it? As you did
below, will you forward this request for digital copies to the photo archivist
and I will make the request to publish these images to Ms. Robin McElheny,
unless the persons or procedures have changed in the last five years.
I hope you are well. I'll be traveling to Maine in two weeks and on my return
I may be able to spend time in Boston and Cambridge. If so, I'll contact you
if only to stop by and say hello. I hope you'll be pleased by my rather fulsome
characterization in the manuscript of Charles William Eliot.
Please note new email address.
All the Best,
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
532 Sassafras Dr.
Lebanon, PA 17042
717-272-0801
eppster2@comcast.net
From: "Barbara Meloni"
To: eppster2@myfairpoint.net
Cc: huaphoto@hulmail.harvard.edu
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 4:22:12 PM
Subject: Re: Archive Images: George Bucknam Dorr
Dear Ron,
That's exciting news about your book -- I look forward to reading it!
I'm sending your request for digital copies on to our photo
archivist, who will respond to you directly with a cost estimate and
ordering instructions for the images.
Your request to publish the images should be sent to Ms. Robin
McElheny, Associate University Archivist, at robin mcelheny@harvard.edu.
Regards,
Barbara
Barbara S. Meloni
Public Services Archivist
Harvard University Archives
https://web.mail.comcast.net/zimbra/h/printmessage?id=313621&tz=America/New_York&xim=
2/3
8/16/2015
XFINITY Connect
Pusey Library
Cambridge, MA 02138
617-495-2461
barbara meloni@harvard.edu
At 11:40 AM 2/9/2010, you wrote:
> Dear Barbara,
>
>You may recall that several years ago you provided me with superb
>assistance in researching the Harvard career of Acadia National Park
>founder George Bucknam Dorr (1853-1944). I'm pleased to tell you
>that I've finally completed the manuscript and the book will be
>published by the Library of American Landscape History, an affiliate
>of the University of Massachusetts Press.
>
>Presently I am gathering the images needed and I would like to
>include the two photographs that appear in Harvard College. Class of
>1874. Fiftieth Anniversary Report. 1924. Pg. 86. How might I secure
>copies: digital or print? I'd appreciate any guidance you could
>provide and instructions regarding permissions--and citation
>preferences--for citing in the forthcoming publication the resources
>that you so efficiently secured for me.
>
> All the Best,
>
> Ron Epp
>
>Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
>47 Pondview Drive
>Merrimack, NH 03054
>(603) 424-6149
>eppster2@myfairpoint.net
bsm_UAV689_270_Bx3_1874_Dorr_HarvardArchives.pdf
PDF
518 KB
https://web.mail.comcast.net/zimbra/h/printmessage?id=313621&tz=America/New_York&xim=
3/3
Alfred Runte. National Parks: The American Experience.
Lincoln: U. Nebraska Press, 1979
The Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition in late August and September 1870
aroused the imaginations of people nationwide and became the talk of the popular
press. On October 14, 1870 the NYT carried a lengthy editorial praising
Washburnb's skill in reporting the discoveries. (37-38) Yellowstone like Yosemite
and the Sierras offered the U.S. "another opportunity to acquire a semblance of
antiquity through landscape. "The protection of Yellowstone was a further
outgrowth of America's cultural nationalism. Yellowstone by virtue of its size "was
the first to anticipate the "ideal" national park." (47) Runte emphasizes the
importance of economically "worthless lands" -or useless scenery--as a precondition
for their acceptance as national parks. (Ch. 3)
In 1853 the New York legislature purchased one square mile on the outskirts of
NYC which became known as Central Park as the city evolved around it. Central
Park "set a precedent for preservation in the common interest more than a decade
before realization of the national park idea." (4)
"Monumentalism, not environmentalism, was the driving force impetus behind the
1864 Yosemite Act." (29, see also chapter 2.)
"Americans valued the natural wonders of the West almost exclusively for their
scenic impact." (31)
The Washburn-Langford-Doane Expedition in late August and September 1870
aroused the imaginations of people nationwide and became the talk of the popular
press. On October 14, 1870 the NYT carried a lengthy editorial praising
Washburnb's skill in reporting the discoveries. (37-38) Yellowstone like Yosemite
and the Sierras offered the U.S. "another opportunity to acquire a semblance of
antiquity through landscape. "The protection of Yellowstone was a further
outgrowth of America's cultural nationalism. Yellowstone by virtue of its size "was
the first to anticipate the "ideal" national park." (47) Runte emphasizes the
importance of economically "worthless lands" -or useless scenery--as a precondition
for their acceptance as national parks. (Ch. 3)
Beginning in the late 19th-century there were perennial efforts by congressmen in
the region to abolish large portions of Yosemite Park and return them to the public
domain. Such efforts to delete landscape from the reserve for exploitation was
successful in 1905 and showed that Congress was willing to reverse its prior
"endorsements of scenic preservation where expedient Only where scenic
nationalism did not conflict with materialism could the national park idea further
expand." (64-65) In December 1913 President Wilson signed the bill that gave San
Francisco the rights to the Hetch Hetchy Valley, a part of Yosemite N.P.. "If the
inner sanctum of Yosemite could not be protected in perpetuity, no national park,
then or in the future, could be considered safe from exploitation." (79) The lesson
learned by the preservationists was to "rely as much on economic rationales for
protection as on the standard emotional ones." "The association of scenic protection
with economic growth was the most innovative approach for defending the national
park idea." (89) As New Englander Allen Chamberlain put it, "Switzerland regards
its scenery as a money-producing asset to the extent of some two hundred million
dollars annually." ["Scenery as a National Asset," Outlook 95
May 28, 1910, 169].
"The lasting significance of the Antiquities Act lay in its title and decree that new
reserves be called 'national monuments.' The more impressive monuments would
eventually be considered for national park status. if they were worthless
economically. (73)
1868
Chap. XV of The Say year of the Saturday Cluds
Club gatherings.
Lingfullow's visit to England; followedly C.E. Norton
Lowell's poems no new Club members.
Chap. XVI 1869
Calfodeace of county based on "strength? hermonity
of their great General Jodge Hour is new
Lists members abroad adds J.T.Fields
attorney Gsocral llotley Minista to Enford
much commenting as foreyn twoll & u.s. unplications.
Celebratia of Centennial of a von Hanbalt
much on judge Hoor, though not confirmed for
Nathay@elevation CWE to Presidency Marood
Septem Count.
W Itean Morris Hurt biographical profiles a young Ma
who was resticated to stacebredge a no hardoly
for have sence he was "too fond of Greesement.
So did not retreen to Haward fouid left for Holy where
WMH. studeed art in Rome before worry to Paris
to staf sculpture. net Bartizon School Returned
to us in 1855, merved + speat time in Newport c James
family Established self in Roybury. Study in Boaton
869-cmt
destroyed by great fine of 1872; then turned
There to landscape printing An 1878 commissional
to do a great public work -adou - c nurals
the New Capitol assembly Hall at allang; a
decade late paintings reined by teaching roof
Deed in 1879, drowning indu in loved portant
appledore.
1870
Chapter XVII of The Evily years of the Saturday Club.
Then books : (a) Summer's Addresses; (b) Lowell's
Aming my Books; (c) Emersons Socted Solitude
Club activities; Louell Thorean "antipodal"
OWH writes of new Hawaid Prendest: "King Stork.'
See remains whech OWH does not "care much."
Talk at teath @ Howard charges, write
offer to RWE to teach a course on & -
much detailifica Everson as will.
Cornerston laid fa llemonal Hall Details of Service.
President Greet + Out members
Two new member : Charles France Adams to CWE.
Charles 7. Adons see note in 1864 file, ch.XI, EYSC.
From 1828-1843 recepied with "process the care
of his father's affoirs." Edited favif Papers.
Elected Why candidate to Massleg (1840), House Seast
Eleven
Ants -f lovery activity Why party. Minister to England 1860's
Aver your you if diplomate service abroad
Une and any Democrats to run CFA against Hent in 1872
Death on 11/21/1886.
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