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

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1874-77
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Authors:
Peabody, Andrew P. (Andrew Preston), 1811-1893.
Title:
A sermon preached in the chapel of Harvard College to the
Graduating Class of 1874 / by Andrew P. Peabody.
Published:
Cambridge, [Mass.] : Press of John Wilson and Son, 1874.
Description:
46 p.
Other title:
Baccalaureate sermon, and oration and poem ; class of 1874.
Notes:
Cover title: "Baccalaureate sermon, and oration and poem ; class
of 1874."
Subject:
Sermons, American.
HOLLIS number:
002138040 MARC HOLLIS Classic
Link to this record: htp://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=|library/m/aleph|002138040
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In 9th Class Report
was me of 34 who
-Dour attended its arved Server in boston
A
June 25,1907, held at Uaein Club of Booton
Other meeting at The Pashes House Bootin
- Class Dinner in connect c Convencement
In 1st Clas seport. 1878
190 admitted in 1870.22 loft deeg Justiva year
158 received degrees Jeere 24,1874.
35 bone in Saster
65 Unitave 38 Episcapaclesi
33 in OBK
61 in Hesty Ruddy
89 in Protitute of 1770
9 in Poweller
Eighth report of the class secretary - Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874 - Google Bo
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Harvard Univ. Archives 10/9/02
HUG 300
Coll.
Scl.
Grad.
Div.
Law
Med.
Den.
Yet.
Bus.
Hon.
B 3391
BORN
Dorr. George Bucknam
74-g-ho
DIED
29 Dec. 1853, at Boston, mass
COLLEGE
SCIENTIFIC
GRADUATE
DIVINITY
LAW
MEDICAL august DENTAL VETERINARY 1944 at BUSSEY Bar Marbor 8/44 maine
1888-89
1870-771
1889-90
ple clipping Bir.
4871-722
1890-91
1872-733
1873-7414
AB 1874
SB
AM a
STB
LLB
MD
DMD
MDV
BAS
A.M. 1923
OCCUPATION
S.M.(11on.) Univ. Maine 1924
p 3/29
You - fit
DATE
RESIDENCE
DATE
BUSINESS ADDRESS
Ball '36,
Bar Harbor. Maine
P3/09
Somerset Claim A 42 Beacon St.
1913
18 to wealth Unites,
see 1/34
-Boston 11/ mass
H.F.C.5/40
Old Farm
Bar- Harbor, maine
Son of
Charles Hagen Dorr
and
mary Gray PATENTED Ward. MAY 25, 1897
LIBRARY BUREAU 02880
AT MOUNT DESERT.
Correspondence of The Boston Globe
Boston Daily Globe 1872; Aug 16, 1876: ProQuest Historical Newspapers Boston Globe (1872 1901)
pg.2
AT MOUNT DESERT.
The Journey from Boston-Lovely Sall Along
Through Maine Waters-At Bar Harbor-
Animated Picture set the Wharf-The
Crowd of Summer Vinitors-Points of In-
terent.
(Correspondence of The Boston Globe.
MOUST DESERT ISLAND, BAR HARBOR, Me.,
August 14.-The approach from Boxton to this beau-
tiful Island of hills and wondrous dells is most agree-
ably made by taking passage on one of the admirable
steamers of the Portland Steam Packet Company to
Portland, Mr. William Weeks, agent. This line is
one of the most popular leaving Boston. The bonts
are made inviting by their perfect ( teanliness and the
uniform courtexy of the officers. Reaching Portland
early in the morning, you may spend the day among
the beautiful Islands of 11s excellent harbor or take
the 0.15 A. M. train, seventeen miles. to "Old Orch-
and," and enjoy the beach and surf bathing of this
fanous summer report and return in sensor to take
the Lewiston, one of the best CONST steam-
CIN plying in our water. owned by the
Portland. Bangor and Mnebiar Steamship Com-
pany. of which Mr. Cyrus Startevant la general
agent. Captain Deeting, who command this splen-
did steamer, Is one of the most obliging and reliable
unvigators In New England waters. III experience
of thirty years is ably seconded by other officers who
vie with each other in making the trip to the
"Island" one of the delights of is summer vacation.
The table and 100ms are excellent.
RAILING ALONG TO MOUNT DISCRT.
Leaving at 11 P. M., you will reach Rockland, the
first landing. early III the morning. and If you wish
to go up the river to Bangor. take the Cambridge of
the Boston line for that point. making a tireless
journey all the way by water. Continuing by devious
course, all will agree that nothing could be pleasauler
than the sall by this route, sheltered as it is by the
outlying Islandr from the roll of the -ea. Every mile
of it In picturemque; brond slapes alternate with
woody crag and rocky ledger. The second landing is
made HI the old historic tow: of Castine. where will
be found It large number of Boston business men and
their families spending the summer, and refreshing
their memories with a review of the old stories of
D'Aulney. and La Tour and his wonderful
wife. From Castine the course lies southward,
past Cape Roster. through Egg-moggin Reach,
which pears like river three miles while, until we
reach the next stopping place called Deer Island.
From this point we catch our that glimpse of the
well-wooded alope of the Western Mountain on
Mount Desert Island. The first landing on the island
is made at Southwert Hatber in the town of I're-
mont. Here will be found quite a little Village and
the oldest settlement of the Island. Here are very
comfortable hotels, but the number of viritors is
limited to such as prefer the most quiet and peace-
tul life of n genuine senside location. far away from
the noise and bustle of business or fashionable life.
ON TO BAR HARBOR.
Pursuing our journey the Western hills recede,
and we rec that remarkable Inlet known as Somes
Sound. Here we pass Flying Mountain, the steep
and rugged face of Dog Mountain, and all the
well-known peaks and spare which Champlain saw
on his first visit, when he gave it the name of Mount
Desert Island. Passing the frowning clim of Great
Hend and the pretty puvate cottages of Schooner
Head, we and ourselves at the what of
Bar Harbor, The scene at landing was
an Inspiring one. Throngs of indies in the
most attractive attires met our eyes. It -eemed like
a second Saratogn far away on this barren enust
of Maine. And when we landed and wended our way
to the Rodich and Grand Central Hotels-both large
new houses, and tound not even an attic or cellar
100m to be had, we because convinced that Mount
Depert WDF, Indeed, 11 favorite summer resort. We
were three hours in finding n place in which to lav
our heads. It La the most crowifed resort we have
visited. and yet such uniform courtesy 1. shown by
hotel proprietors and boarding-houre heapers. that
one is almost ready to accept anything for a
room rather than not stay here. It Is claimed that
there are from 3000 to 5000 strangers on the whole
Island. Every hotel, boarding-house and private
dwelling is crowded. and many imitate the poor
lone Indian" and camp out. Such is Bar Harbor as
we find it today. erowded with happy and enthusi-
a°tle lovers of the beautiful in nature. and with
many who add in nature the ornament.-
tion of dress. And some few of the visitors
are in danger of overdoing the matter of dress. Keep
(bis place nee from the excereur of other watering
places and It will continue to be one of the most de-
sirable in America: but let the extremes of fashion
centre here and its fate Is doemed. We have only
space to barely mention
A IFW OF THE DELIGHTIVE POINTS or INTER.
INS
here and the excursions to be ea-ily made and
heartily enjoyed. The Walk" along the -hore to
Ogden's Point, giving near view. of the bays and
islands, Is charming. Here are sheltered nooks,
high and crargy rocks, the most prominent of which
have been named the "Pulpit." All evening stroll
here will (convince the more seepthen that the mur-
mar of the sea by moonlight is conducive to sweet
communion with congenial spirits. The woods on
the north side of the Island are charming resorts for
a hot atternoon, and the view actor the bay 14
lovely nt subset. The Mill In the Meadow by the
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
tippling brook is reached by a walk across the fields,
where will roses abound. Duck Brook,'
two miles away, furnishes 11 ramble of real
autraction to the lover of beauty and nature.
"The Ovens" are caused by the netion of the waves
in the triable rocks. They are hollow -worn out in
various shapes-bolit archway and door ways. .) high
that boats can pass directly under them. Three or
four miles from Bar Harbor. southeast, near Schoouer
and Great Heads, are Spouting Horn and Devil's
Oven. The Oven can only be entered at low tide.
Between "Dry Mountain" and New port the drive
brings you to Otter Clinis, which rise straight out of
the water 112 feet and are very striking object of in-
terest. Near by is Thunder Hole or Thunder Care.
H deep chasm into which each returning wave forces
its water, which rolls and whirls against the rock
with a force that makes the whole eliù shakeand the
nit to tremble like a crash of thunder. We shall ever
remember Echo Lake, two and n halt miles long and
one aud a half miles wide, nestled among the bills III
peaceful solitude: H sheet of water not excelled by
any in Europe or America for its rural and romantic
situation and surroundlugs. But our sketch would
be incomplete without A brief mention of Green Mono-
tain, the highest on the island. A small house, on
the summit. turnishes the tourist all needed nccommo-
dations. A fair wagon road lead, to the top. a ins-
tance of four miles. From this point you have view +
of enchanting beauty. Here are blended the Isles of
Should and the penks of New Hampshire. Newport,
Nabant and the Bluffs of Martha's Vineyard, all in
picturesque view.
The following guests are stopping at the Rodick
House: L. R. Thompson, J. W. Faxon. Mr. and
Mrs. C. J. Prince, Mrs. J. B. Brine, Miss E. L.
Flagg. H. T. Blodgett, N.Warren. Charles E. Gallup,
G. Heury Perkins, Mrs. H. L. Brevoort, Miss M. L.
Morris, B. G. Haskell. Mrs. Morton, A. A. White,
Robert B. Holuuee, Mrs. W.T.G Morton. N. Bowditen
Morton, A. E. Lont. L. Gilbert. Mrs. Thompson,
Captain John F. Lovejoy, Johu Cummings, Jr.,
hart. C. E. Seaver, Mrs. Samnel Leland. Miss M. D.
Pierpont Edwards, A. A. Parker. William L. Lock-
Leland, Miss E. Fitz, Miss Nelson, Miss S. A. M.
Whitmore. D. K. Alten. J. c. Longley. T. T. Wheel-
wright. James A. Daels and other. of Boston.
numbers from Philadelphia and New York.
The Large house is admirably managed by David Rodick &
Rooms nice and tidy. Table aniple, and food
Sour. well cooket. This and the Grand Central are the
central points for this season.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
AT MOUNT DESERT.
correspondence of The Boston GlobeSTREBOR
Boston Daily Globe 1872; Aug 28, 1875; ProQuest Historical Newspapers Boston Globe (1872 1901)
pg. 2
AT MOUNT DESERT.
Going Down-At Rockland-The Sail Out-
Along Life of
the - to
It way no place
along the Provincetown
(Correspondence MOUNT Atlantic safely Mount the People blended than of Shore-The Desert-The be DESERT, the coast, BAR at asserted The of find Mount Season. water The HARBOR, from Approach Bombre Boston spot August, Height that, and Desert. in at
Globe.1
1873.
to Eastport, can one a which are
more happily Land, ocean
and mountain Of the
many routes to this attractive spot, that over
the Eastern and Maine Central to Bath. and
Knox and Lincoln to Rockland, then via the
steamer "Ulysses," is one of the most desir-
able. Rockland is a pleasant spot to pass the
night, and the Thorndike House is one at
which every comfort is afforded. It is the
best hotel to stop at. Leaving Boston at 8 A.
M., one reaches Rockland at about 6 P. M.,
and has from that time until 10 A. M. the
next day to enjoy the hospitality of the hotel,
and visit the points of interest at that place
Along the Shore.
From Rockland to Mount Desert is a most
charming sail. The steamer follows the shore
closely, and we may have a fine view of the
rough, rocky and wild coast of Maine. The
houses are few and far between, and the soil
ems as though it could never be able to
yield a living to those forced to seek it here.
It has often been a mystery how it is that
these people along the coast support them-
selves, how it is that they keep body and life
together. If they have the necessaries, they
cannot have the luxuries of life. There is
no shore, it may safely be 8 ated, where rocky
abound in greater numbers, or where soil 14
leas productive than that portion
passed in a sail to Mount Desert The
houses scattered along the coast, houses
weather-beaten and lonesome, nearly all
have a cool or sheltered place in front, and
upon the calm waters of which there floats a
small, frail craft. The stories that the iu-
mates of these houses could tell would be a
romance such as is rarely written. These
homes have been the scenes of many a trag-
edy. In the early morning, husbands and
fathers have gone out upon the waters in the
small fishing boats, and at evening the faces
of the wife and child have looked out in vain
across the stormy waters for the sight of those
who had gone out 80 strong and hopeful in
the morning. We who pass along so com-
fortably and wonder how the people live, know
not that they live by the boats and the sea,
know not that dangers are braved and lives
lost, as they fish and sail, only that
when winter comes they may have enough
money saved to buy salt pork and corned
beef. For a philosopher the coast scenery is
interesting, for a lover of nature, wonderful-
ly beautiful. Many of the portions of the
sail are strikingly like that through the
Thousand Islards of the St. Lawrence.
The Approach to Mount Desert-The Present
Ser son.
The approach to Southwest Harbor on
Mount Desert Island is picturesque and can
be appreciated only when seen. After about
an hour's Fall from this point the steamer
passes into Frenchman's Bay, and Bar 11-
bor lies before one, a rustic, glittering,
pretty town. The season of '75 nt Mount
Desert and Bar Harbor has been unusually
prosperous. At the present time the town
IS overrun with visitors, and all is life and
activity. Mount Desert in winter and Mount
Desert in summer-what a contrast. lu
summer, at every turn, a party of lively vis-
jers makes the placeall life; in the quiet bay
the 'run archt and the light row-boat dart
about; the hotely teem with life, and in the
flutter if excitement one almost forgets to
think of the scene as it appears in winter.
Then all is quiet, the hotels closed, the Vis-
tors gone. Where now are wahts and
Leats, there are only n few weather-beaten
schooners; the whole aspect has changed,
and Bar Harbor 18 as It was years ago-
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission
lonesome and deserted. It 18 a contrast too
great to be fully appreciated.
A Peep About the Place.
To describe the beauties of the scenery at
Mount Desert would require not. only an
able pen, but an abler brush. There are
mountains and here is the ocean. One is fit
for the other, for both are grand and noble.
Lakes and brooks lend, also, their charms to
the scene, and at no other place can such
beauty be found. Toward evening. when the
last rays of the setting sun paint the crest of
the inward-rushing waves with their mazic
touch. no more beautiful sight can be found
than to look out from the 'cove" upon the
transformed scene. It is like a beautiful
painting; nature puts on her most enticing
dress, and the vessels, sating in and out of
F. enchman's Bay, have their sails painted as
" hite as the wings of the sea gulls hovering
about the masts. There is every variety here.
The coast scenes are not only remarkably
beautiful, but the inland shores as well; and
it is a most beautiful picture to look out upon
the ocean and across to the shores of Maine
from under the whispering pines upon the
mountain side. The season of fog has now
passed, and for the next few weeks the banks
of Mt. Desert will have greater beauties.
STREBOR.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
[Special Correspondence of The Boston Globe.]
Boston Daily Globe 1872; Jul 28, 1874; ProQuest Historical Newspapers Boston Globe (1872 - 1901)
pg. 3
netto Isiana on the coast 01 Maine otters to
promenade the piazza, to be gazed at and to
those desiring to secure an agreeable place of
gaze, but with our plain, pretty cambrics,
Summer resort cannot be overestimated. Till
wander around the various places on all
within the last few years the secret was only
sides, with hats hanging from our hands, or
possessed by few families, who made Mount
any where most convenient. When a little
Desert their regular Summer rendezvons.
weary, we throw ourselves upon the cool
Now from 100 to 200 persons arrive by every
grass under the trees, with the recklessness
steamer from Portland, and the numerous
of girls, as we are. feasting our eyes on the
hotels and cottages scattered around theshore
scenery spread so far before 118, and exclaim-
are filled with strangers who come to enjoy
ing with delight at this and that new point.
the wild and picturesque scenery of this
If it so happen that we linger until the sound
el arming locality. There is no lack of suit-
of the dinner bell, with a little brushing and
able accommodation for regular or transient
rearranging we are considered presentable in
guests. Here, at Bar Harbor, which may be
our first and, perhaps, only suit of the day. It
called the head-quarters of Mount Desert, are
is glorious liberty from the trammels of
some excellent hotels, where the guest will
fashion!
find every attention paid to his wants. Among
I would not have you think, dear GLOBE,
these may be mentioned the Harbor House,
that I deery entirely fashion. I am fond
commanding a fine view of Bar Harbor,
of gayety-of society-1 almost say of fashien
where will be found all the appointments of a
-but give it to no in its proper time and
first-class house. The proprietor, Mr. A. F.
place, when I am prepared to endure the
Higgins, spares no pains in attending to the
dressing, the chatting, the dancing, etc., etc.;
comfort of his guests and patrons, and is one
not in the warm season, when the object in
of those men whose very presence is sufficient
going away from home is supposed to be
to make the sojourners under his hospitable
simple quiet and rest. To be sure, one can
roof feel perfectly at homei n very short time
be independent at the Twin Mountain House,
after their arrival and during their Summer
but every one's delicate nervesare so shocked
visit.
to see a young lady fly about over the grass,
Mount Desert is full of historic associations
with hair braided down her back, hat off, and
and memories of the 'red man," its former
so devoid of style" that it seems a pity to
sole occupant and possessor; its grand and
thus disturb these delientely-organized peo-
sweeping mountain forms, its bowered lakes,
ple! To describe the enjoyments afforded
and nestling vales, charmed the eye of the
here, I shall not attempt; that was not my
artist before they attracted the more prosaic
iden. Only come and see for yourself, and if,
citizen to seek amid its sheltering hills a cool
after a few days sojourn, you do not exclaim
and comfortable Summer retreat. Now it has
"Eureka!" I am afraid we shall vote you
become the most popular of watering-places,
"not sensible."
S.
and its seclusion is yearly invaded by a host of
pale faces in search of that renewed vitality
which they are sure to find in this delightful
MOUNT DESERT.
spot. The long halls and spacious rooms of
the Eden House, appropriately named, at Bar
Attractions of this Delightful Summer Resort
Harbor are thronged by these Summer visi.
-Fishing, Boating and Driving Ad Libitum
tants, and the proprietors, A. H. & O. Ash do
-The Hetels and Their Accommodations-
everything in their power render their stay
How to Reach Them and How to Enjoy
pleasant and profitable.
Their Privileges-Description of the Island,
Eagle Lake is a beautiful sheet of fresh
with Its Numerous Drives and Bays-News
water, a mile and n half in width and two or
Notes and Gossip.
three miles in length. It lies between Green
(Special Correspondence of The Boston Globe.
and Dog mountains, near Bar Harbor, Mount
Desert Island. It is situated some 1500 feet
MOUNT DESERT, Me., July 24, 1874.
above the ocean, and supplies the Bay View
There is a pleasure in the pathless woods,
House nt Bar Harbor, a large and elegant
There is a rapture lu the lonely shore."
hotel, with fresh water, cold and clear. Per-
This little island on the coast of Maine,
haps there is no one thing which, although it
notwithstanding its remote situntion, is rap-
appears insignificant, is so much appreciated
idly becoming famious as n watering-place.
by the Summer tourist as a good drink of
It must be a matter of continued surprise to
fresh, clear, cold water. The visitors at the
the old inhabitants, still changing to their old
Bay View appreciate the efforts of the pro-
habits and traditions, to observe the new
prictors, Homer Young & Co., in their be-
race 01 beings who wave taken possession or
half; and this hotel, which has been newly
this once secluded spot, springing up
furnished and fitted up in every part for the
out of the ground, as if by magic,
convemence of its guests, may be selected
every Summer, along with the cabbages,
with confidence by strangers visiting Mount
cucumbers and other green things. Mt. Des.
Desert.
ert is anything but n desert, now; its name
"Tutto fa il ware Maggiore," said the
is felt to be misapplied; it is, rather, a bright
painter Titian; and certainly the sea, in many
onsis in the trackless expanse of waters that
ways, is calculated to make a people great.
surround it. The charm of its antiquity, of
The continued prosperity of all great nations
its historic and legendary interest, still lin-
situated upon the seaboard is a sufficient tes-
gers about it, however, like some subtle per-
timony to the truth of these words, This
fume, and surrounds the loiterer on its rocky
may be considered as not entirely due to the
shores with an atmosphere of poetry and
commercial privileges and facilities for inter-
romance. Artists, ever prying into the
course among nations afforded by the broad
mysteries of nature and seeking to discover
highway of the ocean; n subtler influence is
hidden secrets, new combinations of form and
that produced by the salt water upon the life
color, fell upon this spot, years ago, and
and health of a nation the powers of the
Church was among the first to portray its
mind and body are undoubtedly invigorated
novel and striking characteristics. It is a re-
by the sea breezes and the constitutional
markable fact that those who have always
powers of a nation thereby strengthened. As
lived by the HAIT water never weary of their
individuals, we recognize the blessings of a
love for the sea; it may be fickle, changeable
"cottage by the sen" during the hot weather,
and trencherous, yet within its blue depths
and the watering-places along the New Eng-
there is an attraction which they cannot re-
land coast are well thronged. Mount Desert,
sist. Nowhere can the sea be seen in all its
by its situation, bonsts particular advantages,
majesty and in all its varying moods to a
and no better hotel can be found mywhere
greater advantage than at Mount Desert. A
along shore than the Rodick House nt Bar
residence at this place during the Sum-
Haibor, where Daniel Rodick, one of the
mer possesses many advantages which
oldest inhabitants, presides and tells his
do not belong to other watering-places,
graphic stories of the many interesting spots
the greatest of these being the total
to be seen this ancient island.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
absence of all stiff-necked gentility,
The lovers of good fishing and gunning can
of all that pomp, spleudor and cere-
find no better place in which to indulge their
inony which is characteristic of too many
sporting propensities than at Mount Desert.
sea-side resorts. The people who pass the
This wild and romantic spot still retains
Summer here leave their big trunks and so-
many of its ancient haunts, untouched by
city manners nt home and enjoy themselves
the prosaic aspects of modern civilization,
in a thoroughly healthy and sensible way.
and nowhere can the full benefits of "camp-
There are a great many Boston families
ing out," of which the Rev. Mr. Mitch-
here, and some who make this place
ell has recently spoken so forcibly
an habitual Summer retreat have erect-
and eloquently, no more thoroughly en-
ed cottages of their own in desirable locali-
joyed. The conveniences and comforts of
ties. There is a number of excellent hotels
civilized life are. however, not wholly
on this island-the principal ones being at
wanting, and the elegant and spacious hotels
Bar Harbor-several of which have been
at Bar Harbor have been built with especial
erected within the last few years to meet the
regard to the requirements of those who come
increasing demand for suitable accommoda-
to this spot from a distance and desire to
tions occasioned by the throng of strangers
make an extended stay. The Hayward
from all parts of the country who crowd to
House is most conveniently located on one of
this spot, every Summer. Thinking that a
the most desirable sites on the island, with a
slight description of the locality and the sur-
fine view of the mountains and the sea; the
roundings of some of these "easeful inns"
house is kept in a superior manner by the
might not only be interesting but useful as a
proprietor, A. L. Hayward, and the tables are
sort of directory to your readers, you will find
well laid; the prices, too, are moderate.
below appended n résumé of some of the most
The Agamont House, T. Roberts proprietor,
prominent.
is another of these fine hotels at Bar Harbor;
Let us suppose the traveller arrived at this
it is the nearest to the sea-shore, and from its
most delightful of all watering-places. The
windows and piazza fine views are afforded
first point he touches after leaving Portland
of the harbor, and the guests can see the
is the Southwest Harbor. The largest and
steamer as she glides up to the landing and
finest hotel in this vicinity isthe Island House,
recognize, mayhap, among those on board
overlooking the whole harbor, kept by H. H.
the faces of friends and acquaintances. Car-
Clark, who furnishes carriages, boats, guides
ringes are always at the disposal of the pa-
and every facility for the enjoyment of his
trons of the house and excursions may very
guests. If the traveller choose to make this
easily be made to Eagle Lake, Hadlock's
his stopping place, he will find some charming
Pond, Carroil's Mountain, Echo Lake, Devil's
drives and raubles in this vicinity; but if he
Den, Spouting Horn, and other attractive
decide to go further, he will find, as he skirts
spots. The drive to Eden from Bar Harbor
the shore, an attractive panorama presenting
may be also mentioned as full of delightful
itself to his gaze; gray cliffs and border-
interest.
ing hills, and here and there, close to the sea
Thus I have endeavored to give you some
line, n fisherman's hut. Soon he reaches
idea of Mount Desert. The description of
Bar Harbor, passing on his way Schooner
the island itself, its wild and romantic char-
Head, Great Hend, and the Porcupine Islands.
acter, will enable you to form some concep-
If he makes his head-quarters at the Hamor
tion of what out-door life may be made amid
House he will find it delightfully situated and
this charming scenery, and the description of
affording fine views of the sea and surround-
the hotels will suit those who do not desire
ing country. The proprietors, F. & H. Rod-
pleasure at the cost of some rough work, and
rick, will show him every attention, and in-
who wish to have a full realization of what
troduce him to the attractions of a region
"taking one's ease in an iun truly signifies.
widely known for its romantic beauty.
Without thus showi up the two sides of life
Islands have always been considered the
here, the picture would not be complete.
most delightful places in which to pass the
SQUIHOB.
hot Summer season. Surrounded by the sea,
the temperature is alw. ays even and cool, and
the long,regular swell of the ocean, stretching
far into the distance, suggests thoughts of
peace and calm that bring a rest to the
troubled spirit. For these reasons, if there
were no others, Mount Desert would possess
a powerful attraction for the Summer visi-
tant; but when, in addition to the favorable
situation, are joined the charins of beautiful
inland scenery, wild and picturesque moun-
tains "and lakes and standing pool," then
are the traveller's feet irresistibly drawn
elther. Many prefer* " camping out" in
this island to living at hotels, thinking
that thus they are brought nearer to Nature,
and can better "hold communion with her
visible forms;" but there are others to whom
such a life of hardship would be entirely dis-
tasteful, and to these the comforts which the
elegant hotels situated at Bar Harbor afford
cannot be overestimated. The Atlantic House
is one of the most excellent of these, and in-
deed the most in some
respects can be found at sea-shore
retreat. 18 and roomy,
fitted up with par-
lors, well-ventilated
sleeping and is surmounted by a
large one of the best pano-
ramic of that
Jancing views obtained The apartments, that It proprietors halls. inviting nowly mountain, reception giving spacious, built, stopping-place celebrated rooms, forest large any and private lake
can be at this watering-
place. are John H. Douglass
and Fdwin G, Desisle, and their names are
guaranties of the good treatment and home-
like privilege to be found at their hospitable
mansion.
The many and great attractions which the
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Mount Desert.
Boston Daily Globe (1872-1960); Aug 13, 1875; ProQuest Historical Newspapers Boston Globe (1872 - 1901)
pg. 5
Mount Desert.
If there is one place more than another on the
coast of Maine that has become an attractive spot
for summer tourists, that place is Mt. Desert. Its
scenery is unequalled in variety, and those who
spend even a few days there carry away with them
some of the grand and inspiring fentures of the
locality. Mt. Desert has been popularized during
the past five years. The trip there from Portland
is a delightful one. There are now over a dozen
good hotels at Bar Harbor, and private families re-
celve guests at reasonable prices. At Southwest
Harbor. also, there are excellent hotel privileges.
The price of board at either place has been reduced,
and the hotels are all supplied with pure water,
brought from Eagle Lake. The flow of pleasure-
Breheis to Mt. Desert. this season, has been steady
and larger than last year. A chear excursion to this
place is now offered by the management of the
Portland and Machias Steamboat Company. Cyrus
Sturievent, Erq., general agent at Portland, has per-
fented arrangements by which. for the sum of $8.
excursionists can go from Boxton to Bar Harbor and
return; And $7 10 Southwere Harbor and return, via
railroad from Boston; or for $1 from Portland to
Bar Harbor and return. This is one of the 1110-1 de-
sitable trips in New England. Excursion tickets
will be good until October 4th. State-rooms und
through tickets can be secured in Boston of J. W.
Richardson, agent. No. 228 Washington street.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Samuel G. Ward to Mary G. W. Dorr
New York. 24 Nov 176
My dear Mary:
It was very kind of you to think of sending us,
on deposit, so faithful a reminder of the view from the villa
as your picture. It does you great credit too, but I hope
you will not let your success lead you off into oil painting
to the neglect of water colors and besides, I heard with
concern of the time you spent over your work out of doors, to
the great risk, I should fear - of your health. I cannot
stand any length of time so employed. One forgets ones self
& meantime the breeze is blowing or the dews rising, or the
sun blazing on you. In a sheltered nook, a verandah, out of
a window, or sitting in a carriage, it is different. My
objections to oil for amateurs are, that any real technical
excellence, or power of expressing ideas, without being
hampered by the medium, is hardly possible except to an artist
whose life has been devoted to it; while in water colour the
material helps you. The tints in themselves are lovely
(which they are often not in oil) and half an hourswork, or
less, will give you numerous & delicate skies & distances
that no amount of labor would give in oil. Then there is
a fascination in the slightness of the means
St.
often a
little sketch in brown ink & Sepia , & gray - or OLL gray paper
with white - gives an effect like magic. I like sketches
always (amateurs I mean) to be done in a book, 6 or 7 inches
by 4 or 5, so as to be carried in the pocket, : always ready
Samuel G. Ward to Mary G. W. Dorr
-2-
New York. 24 Nov 176
SO that it makes a precious journal afterwards. They curl
up to be sure with a wash, but they come flat again. I find
my old sketch books of five times the interest to myself
& others, that any separate sketches are. It is a great
had
resource & I wish I have more of them, & more chance to add
to them - but this country is not favorable.
Anna, who wrote you by Charles whom we enjoyed see-
ing very much, sends much love to you, with which I am ever
Yours affectionately
Sam'l G. W.
Automatic writing.
Apart from the early delveopments of spiritualism in England
and America in the eighteen forties and on, much interest was taken
when I was a boy in what was called 'automatic writing and very
curious things sometimes came from it. After my brother's death
187.6
in New York, of a sudden fever while we were in England, my mother
sought, if he still lived in spirit, if she might not get into
communication with him, if only fragmentary and disjointed,
through such writing, my father putting his hand on hers while
she held the pencil.
In this way during the following summer
and after much was written which she believed night come from
my brother, neither she nor my father knowing while the pencil wrote
what was coming. Baseless or not, it was a help to my mother
in a time 01 great need, for her bond with my brother had been
exceedingly close and intimate. Much of the thought that came
in this way, whatever its source was exceedingly interesting,
not only to IV mother but to othera years afterward to whom she
read it.
This automatic writing lead to hershowing kindness to the
American Secretary of the English Psychical Research Socity, es-
tablished in Boston by the English Society for investigation of
mediums and experimental work.
The English Society stood very
high in its personel and aims. Men like Sir Oliver Lodge, one
Writing -2
of the leading physicists in the world at that time, Sir Arthur
Balfour and his sister, the wife of Professor Henry Sidgwick of
Cambridge University, and other University men all took part in
it, funds were raised and experiments carried on under strict
scientific observation, and annual and semi-annual reports were
published, all of a high grade, and commanding respect. Another
of the world's great physicists, Sir Arthur Crookes, was actively
interested in it and carried on experiments himself, not hesitating
to come forward with his conclusion that there was real matter in
it for careful study and hope of results which, if proven true,
might be of infinite importance to the world. Another leadergin
the formation and work of this society was Frederick Myers, son
of a clergyman in the north of England and a University man
himself and author of high standing. He was brought to it by a
great tragedy in his own life in which some one very dear to him
had died and of whose survival after death, if nothing more, he
hoped to get evidence. Passionately interested and following
up everyclue, he wrote a book 'The Survival of Man', published only
after years of work, in two stout volumes, which is the only really
sound and authoritative work on the subject as a whole which has
ever been published and contains material, well authenticated
which is alike hard to accept and difficult to dis-credit.
The man sent out from England to take up the work in America
Richard Hodgson, was an Autralian by birth, a recent graduate of
Cambridge University in England who first came into relation with
Automatic
Witing -3
the subject through an extraordinary experience of his own
while he was still at the University, in connection with the
sudden un-looked for death of a girl in Australia whom he was
engaged to when he came out to England. His story of it, told
me in convincing detail when he was staying with us once at
Oldfarm I donot now recall but put it in the category of facts
neither to be explained nor easily to be credited.
Coming into contact with him, as did I, through William
James, himself deeply interested in the work and in close touch
concerning it with the English Society, my mother invited Mr.
Hodgson down to stay with us at Oldfarm where he made long
visits afterward and became intimate with us both, my mother and I.
And through him in 18
we came into intimate relation also with
Frederick Myers on his coming out to America to look up some of
the phenomena Richard Hodgson had made report of to the Society,
Myers coming out to stay with us at Oldfarm for a week or more when
we took, with other friends whom we had staying with us, long
walks together and had much intimate talk.
This was in the
lots
1880's
later eighteen eighties. In 1891 my father, mother and I went
abroad for a year to spend the winter on the Nile and the spring
in Palestine and Greece, an exceedingly interesting trip. When
1891
we returned, reaching Boston in the early July 1892, where we
1892 stayed a day or two on our way to Bar Harbor, Richard Hodgson met
us full of certain extraordinary experiences which had developed
that winter and spring in which people we knew, some of them
intimately, came intimately in and which Dr. Hodgeon (to give him
his full academic title) regarded as convincing -definite proof
Automatic
Writing =4
of survival and immediate contact.
Among the people most
intimately concerned were Mrs. Perry, wife of Professor Thomas
Perry- grandson of Commander Perry, ofamous in our Navy annals -
the
and his wife, daughter of one of the leading surgeons of my
father's time Dr. Cabot, and sister of one of the leading surgeons
of my own time in Boston, Dr. Arthur Cabot.
The evidence con-
cerned someone who had been exceedingly intimate in the Perry
household and had died of an accident some months before. There
were three daughtera in the Perry family, the youngest of whom
a child at that time eight years old, to whom this friend intimate
in the house, had shown great kindness and who received her
experiences, with the simplicity of a child, as perfectly natural
happendings, not becoming in any way extited over them or seeking
to draw attention to herself by telling of them, which I heard of
directly only through her mother, though her whole family, her
father included, believed in implicitly.
It was one of those durious cases which lend themselves
to no explanation, can be credited with difficulty, yet seem
impossible to reject. Such phenomena cannot be produced at will
and much evidence must be forthcoming before the age-long experi-
ence of man-kind in contradiction can be overturned. The phenomena
ceased; too much publicity could not be given to the matter on
the family's account and though it roused great interest in England
when reported out by Dr. Hodgson to the Psychical Research Society,
it passed into the general gathering of material which neither could
be explained away nor accepted assevidential. It had, however, a
Automatic
Writing -5
profuona effect upon Dr. Hodgson in relation to his further work,
for he was 80 convinced of the truth of it as establishing evi-
dence of survival that he deased to doubt and took a less critical
attitude toward later developments, some of which I was frankly
convinced myself must have come from the mediums own mind, the
medium through whom Dr. Hodgson was working at that time and con-
tinued to work with till he died a few years afterward, being
one famous in the general investigations of the subject.
The child to whom these extraordinary phenomena came and
who received them so naturally and unhesitatingly became the
wife when she grew up of Joseph Grew distinguished in the United
States Diplomatic Service, at one time Ambassador to Japan, at
another to Turkey and Ambassador now to Italy. Her father,
Thomas Perry, was Professor of English Literature at Harvard, a
writer of note and professor later of Philosophy, on the invita-
tion of the Japanese Government, at the University of Tokyo for
two years. He, like his wife, believed without question in
the genuinensss and veridical character of these phenomena,
which were not the only ones that had taken place in the family.
I remember Mrs. Perry telling me of this same child when, still
younger, telling her, when they were out in their house in the
country which had been the home before them of Mrs. Perry's father,
of a kind old lady coming in to sit by her bedside till she went
asleep, whom as she told it her mother recognized as describing,
unmistagably to her, her own mother, the child's grandmother who
Automatic
Writing =6
had lived there before them. The child showed no excitement
over it but took it up on the basis of an actual happending;
the lady had come and sat by her and she was a kind lady whom
she had liked to have there. Twower three times afterward the
same figure appeared to the child in the same way, then came
no more.
Mrs. William James the wife of Professor William James
of Harvard had also certain remarkable experiences which she told
me of, in one of which her daughter, Margaret or Peggy, had re-
ceived a message, through some medium that Richard Hodgson was
investigating, from her aunt, William James' sister, who had
died not long before and wished, as I recall it, to have given
in remembrance of her certain family property. The details of it
have passed from my mind but of the extraordinary character of
the communication, whatever its source might be, remains vividly
impressed upon my mind. Mrs. James was an extraordinarily good
'sitter', seldom going to visit Dr. Hodgson without getting some-
thing of exceptional interest, while William James himself, more
interested than she to get matter of scientific value, was himself
a poor 'sitter', seldom getting phénomena of the type he sought.
And knowing them both as well as I did, it seemed to me natural
it should be so, Mrs. James had a restful, naturally receptive
character which could but fail, if there were anything genuins
in the penomena, to bring it out, while William James with his
restless, actively questioning mind would have just the opposite
effect of getting resalts dependence upon the
establishment any form of a sympathetic reaction.
1/07
EDWARD SIMMONS
FROM
SEVEN TO SEVENTY
Memories of a Painter
and a Yankee
By Edward Simmons
With an Interruption by
OLIVER HERFORD
FULLY ILLUSTRATED
ot
Publishers
aleat
HARPER & BROTHERS
Clossma.
Riplyy's
NEW YORK AND LONDON
1922
Seven to Seventy
ford graduate and, according to
Chapter III: In Search of a Career
and yet he has substituted the
'gay' and 'blithesome' in that
Out W est
of the Friar in the line which
and lecherous as a sparwe."
H
ARVARD had taught me this-that I did not
know a thing-not even the meaning of human
life. Somehow I think a college education is of
benefit to two classes of people only-those who desire
to acquire a social position and those who want to get
training in a certain subject. I have not the battle
instinct and could never see any use in competition.
If I had not come of good people I might have wanted
to fight to get with good people, and that is about all
college can give. I can remember getting only one
real thrill to go out in the world and do something, and
that was after a sort of valedictory talk by old Doctor
Grey. I had always cared for the out of doors and it
appears I stood well in botany. When the venerable
professor told us that it takes fifty years to make a
nutmeg orchard, and that a million dollars was waiting
anyone who would walk into Boston with him the next
day and prove to certain capitalists that he could tell
the difference between the male and female nutmeg,
my commercial instinct was aroused and a gleam of
ambition came to me for the first time. I resolved to
find out about the male and the female nutmeg.
There was no way to learn anything about beauty in
Harvard-no instruction in it and no honors for it.
Taking their cue from the Pligrim Fathers and, since
then, the Church, they did not believe in the value of
any of the senses of the body, but only in the quality
43
44
From Seven to Seventy
In Search of a Career
45
of the human mind and the power to ratiocinate. Any
honest way to teach, as it hypnotizes the listeners.
expression or feeling for beauty, except that made by
Reading a speech coolly the next morning in the news-
sacred music, was common, vulgar, and to be repressed.
paper is the only fair way to judge it. My father felt
If Harvard could manage to produce one Corot, one
this and changed his preaching into a dry, matter-of-
Beethoven, or one Michael Angelo, her name would
fact style, not caring to influence by his personality.
be known longer in future ages than it will be for all
He immediately lost his audience.
the small imitation Shakespeares she has sent out over
Groping for an occupation, I went to New York and,
the country. Even Mr. Emerson, in my opinion, was
with a half-formulated idea to become an architect,
half ashamed of his lyrical gift; and the elder Story,
called on Russel Sturgis. He was a blond-headed
the sculptor, is more honored in Boston for a law book
young man, about thirty-five, and seemed to me to
he wrote, before thirty, than for any of his statues.
be quite old and efficient. Looking at me very keenly,
One day in Mr. Story's studio, in Europe, was a
he said:
group of American business men who always made
"Do you know anthing about the bearing power of
it more or less one of their loafing places. Of course,
bricks?"
they had all been well bred enough to wander around
"No."
and see what the old man had been working at lately,
"Do you care anything?"
but it was not long before they were settled down over
"No."
their cigars, discussing the business of stocks and
"Have you any rich relatives to back you?"
bonds-what they were all thinking about and all
"No."
they really cared about. Story stood it as long as he
"You don't want to be an architect. You want to
could, walking nervously up and down in silence.
be a painter."
Finally he whirled, saying:
This quite astonished me, for I rather thought I
"Gentlemen, gentlemen, gentlemen, Phidias built
did, although I had never formulated the desire in my
the Parthenon. Who in hell were the stockholders?"
mind. Besides, to be a painter was not an occupation-
After my graduation, it was a question of a career.
but rather on par with a strolling player, a tinker, or a
I had spent four years to find out that I did not know
mountebank. Mr. Sturgis told me that my ideas were
anything, and was to spend three more to find out what
all wrong and that the painters of the day were real
I wanted to do. All my ancestors had lived by talk.
people and, furthermore, making a lot of money. Of
I had inherited the "gift of gab," but there seemed to
course, I could not start in then, but resolved to hold
be no market for it in my generation. It had turned
the thought in the back of my mind. In the meantime,
from the pulpit to the stage and novels, in order to get
my New England coat was feeling SO tight as almost
an audience. Rhetoric and fiery oratory is not an
to burst the seams if I did not get out of it. I wanted
In Retrospect
343
my boyhood-I marvel at those who say that the world
Chapter XVI: In Retrospect
is going backward.
The advance of one human being is comparable to
the advance of the whole race-it is the resultant force
I
ONCE started a sonnet to "My Soul," but, having
of a spiral spring. At the bottom of the coil is Realism;
written one line, I found that I had said all-
at the top, Idealism and, although we are a long time
Cross-hatched with many a shameful scar.
in getting around the circle, the progress is as certain
as the air we breathe.
It is doubtful if I have a soul, but if so, I am sure
All these changes should make me feel old, but they
that if it shows scars of victory, they are the results
don't. Like Barton Hill, who went to call upon an old
of battles that should not have been fought.
friend and mistaking the daughter (who came to greet
We have never been a religious family, as I look back.
him) for her mother, said:
The future? For me it is here. My mother understood.
Think of the agony of a woman who had never had a
"Now I solve the wondrous question,
Now I find what I did lack.
hand laid upon her since she was a child, lying com-
You've stolen some years from your mother
pletely helpless, paralyzed for six years! The last time
And forgot to give them back."
I saw her, I said:
"Mother, you and I know what we believe about a
I do not wish to belong to my own generation.
future life?"
"Whom the gods love, die young" does not mean that
She nodded feebly.
they die when they are young, but that they are young
"You are unhappy here?"
when they die, and I could not ask anything finer
Again the nod, with a pathetic look in her eyes. I
from a generous Creator.
leaned over and whispered in her ear.
I have been happy from the time I was born. It
"Mother, I hope you die to-night."
may be that time covers with an ivy of forgetfulness the
No one knew of our conversation, but I was told
early wounds and renders them less hideous, but I do
afterward that she wrote on her slate that evening,
not think SO in my own case. I am a lover; I am
"Edward has cheered me up greatly."
happy because I love all things. I feel like our Irish
I see that I have always felt this way and have tried
cook who brought in a fish from the river, cooked it,
to live the fullest life possible. When I think of the
and proceeded to consume it all, clutching it at the
progress of mankind during my seventy years-from
tail and eating all the way up, saying,
lamps to electricity, from horses to gasoline, from slow
"It's all very swate; it's all very swate."
mails to wireless, and the aeroplane bringing the other
Since a boy, I have been able to take an interest in
continent as near to us to-day as the next town was in
342
COMMENGEMENT EXERCISES.
The procession was formed at Memorial Hall
about ten o'clock. Arthur L. Devens was the
class marshal. The usual order was observed.
EVENING TRANSCRIPT
Governor Talbot and staff and several distin-
guished guests arrived about ten o'clock. At half-
INE
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 24, 1674.
past ten o'clock the procession, headed by the
Germania Band, marched to Appleton Chapel,
HARVARD COLLEGE.
where the usual commencement exercises took
place. Prayer was offered by Rev. Dr. Peabody,
and the following parts were delivered:
re re-
Two Hundred and Thirty-third Commence.
shing-
D)squiritiona-Exment Francis Fenollosa, "Pan-
ment Exercises.
theirm"; William Royal Tyler, "Ruskin's Art
Throries.'
st,
Dinsertations-Frederick Joseph Stone. "Social-
102
The FONS of old Harvard are gathered together
in in its Connection with the Labor Movement"
Theodore Rewall, "The English Agricultural LA-
today to repew their love and respect for their
borer": Charlen Francis Withington, "Tragelly.
alma mater and witness the exercises incident to
Classical and Romantic."
G
the 283d commencement. The assemblage of tac-
()ration-George Wigglesworth, "The Emperor
ulty, students, friends and visitors began at an
Joreph II."
early hour and the beautiful grounds of the hon-
At the conclusion of these exercises the degrees
ored Institution presented a lively and animated
were conferred as follows:
scene. The dedication exercises had called to-
RACHELORS OF ARTS.
gether so many of the alumni that the usual greet-
William Fitzhale Abbot, Jacob Lloyd Abbot,
D.
Richard Minot Allen, Eugene Nelson Aston, Fran-
ings of commoncement day had been in a meas-
cis ard Baker, Charles Parker Bancroft, Henry Hud-
Eaton Babcock, Walter Baker. William How-
ure anticipated by the experiences of yesterday.
A fairer day never shone; the breezy atmosphere
Barrett, George A. C. Bendelari, Thom
and the absence of all meteorological hinderances
'on Sinims Bettens, Woodbury Blair, George Andreas
IT.
combine to make the occasion as delightful and
George Rusrell Briggs, John Chapin Brinsmade, Buf-
Blaney, Erastus Brainerd. John Winters Brannan,
with
brilliant as the most devoted could wish.
Alexander Porter Browne, Charles Thomas
MEKTING OF THE OVERSEERS.
fum, Henry Morgan Burdett, William Appleton
Hurnham, William Burry, James Jackson Cabot,
int.
Gore Hall will no'more be the scene of the
day; that body have assembled today in Memo-
Thomas tert Henry Cecil Cate. Clarke, Cary, Henry Blake Clark,Charl George Arthur Clapp. Her- CHI- Kel-
Edward Warren Cate,
meetings of the overfeers on commencement
Chisbolm, Arthur
Alden Clark, Louis Crawford
Samuel Belcher Clarke,
any
rial Hall. The meeting was held at nine o'clock,
ford, George Oliver George Coale, Frederic
President (lifford in the chair, and Hon. N.B.
ley Collium, Thomas Corlier, Henry Horatio Crock-
Fregeric Cunningham, Frederic Spaulding
1
ORK
Shurtleff, secretary, at his post.
er, Cutter, l'aul Dana, Richard Henry Dana,
J
The president submitted votes of the corpora-
Arthur Lithgow Devens, Jacob Edward Ditson, Ja.
ad
tion conferring the usual academic degrees, on
Nathan Hankell Dole, George Bucknam Dorr,
those who were recommended by the several fac-
cob Dwight, Louis Dyer, William Hamuel Kiwood, Kllot,
John Wheelock Elliot, Francis Worcester
ulties, and the board concurred. The president
John Woodford Farlow, Jacob Hamilton Farrar,
also presented a vote of the corporation appoint-
ing George F. H. Markoe instructor in materia
Edward Mortumer Ferris, George Russell Fessen-
Francis Child Faulkner, Ernest Francis Fenollosa,
medica for the ensuing year. Hon. Mr. Brim-
den, Bernard Whitman Flagg. Francis Byron
mer preaented a report in favor of estab-
lishing a professorship of zoology, and
,
the board concurred with the corporation in
establishing the same. The president presented a
vote electing John McCrady, A. B., is professor of
zoology, and the same was referred to a committee
rr.
consisting of Messrs. Theodore Lyman, Martin
ID,
Brimmer and William A. Richardson. Votes
were passed conferring the degree of bachelor of
arts out of course on the following-named persons:
Francis Benjamin Arnold '66, Henry Harrison
Haynes '73.
The same degree was conferred upon the fol-
lowing-named persons at the last meeting of the
board, and were first made public today:
Lewis Allen Dodge '65, Albro Elmore Chave '65,
,18
Frederick Stout Stallkneight '43, Thomas Dwight
'66, E. Prentin Tucke '46.
nn
three cents a pound, to take effect the
J. Foxcroft Cole and Albert Thompson sall In
Irt of January next. On books bound ten center
SEVEN PER CENT. BONDS,
the Pereire next Saturday.
volume, unbound, at newspaper rates, w take
K. I.. Booth, a Cambridge lady, who has studied
effect at once,
Ins
with William Hunt and with European masters.
Butler. funding that he had utterly failed In his
to
Due 1894,
effort to kill the civil service reform, tried very
has R very strong head at Doll & Richards's.
hard to get in his usual resolution requiring pref.
Mr
Interest March and September.
Prence to be given to soldiers and sallors in the
Special Notices.
several departments of the Government. Objee
H
tion being made It was ruled out.
HII
COUPON OR REGINTERED,
The Henate Appropriation Committee today
hot
HARVARD COLLEO
L
asked and received consent to sit during the re-
FOR MALK BY
Her
can for the purpose of inquiring into the expe
AKI
dieucy of Instituting reforms in the several
(IDDER, PEABODY & co.,
branches of the civil service, with a view of mak-
Mt.
The Association of the Alumal of Harvard
ing reductions in the expenses of the Govern.
of
ment.
Gar
BREWSTER, SWEET & CO.,
College.
of )
There are rome half-dozen leading committees
that have received permission to sit during recess.
40 State Street.
They do I ot propose to commence operations or
Bt
jel8
The Annual Meeting of this Association will be held
hold meetings till the middle or last of September.
in Harvard Hall, up stairs, at Cambridge, on Corn-
The President is at the Capital, busily engaged
in signing bills. All of the appropriations are
87
Clark, Adams & Clark.
mencement Day, WEDNEADAY, June 24, at one o'clock
passed and signed by the President. There are
piles
P. M. With the assent and cooperation of the Corpor-
large numbers of bills waiting to be enrolled, and
x
The
ation, the usual Commencement Dinner will be Kiven
It will be nearly four 'clock before everything in
M7
RENCH CHINA,
by the Association, All graduates of one year's stand.
leared up.
KAPPA.
53
ing. and all who have received honorary degrees, are
ANTON CHINA,
MUSIC
members, and are entitled is free tickets, which will be
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL.
chil
W
furnished in the froom In Massachusetts 11,Where
BOB
the voting for Overseers takes place. between the
MS
UT GLA88,
hours of 10 and 2, on the day of the Dinner.
(Special Despatch to the Transcript.)
daw
SAMUEL A. GREEN, Secretary
Nan
E GLA88,
13.15.17.20.22.23
d,
HALL
HARVARD UNIVERMITY.
A CHEERFUL FEELING.
IRIAN MARBLE,
C'ommeneement Exercises, June D4, 1874,
Nr YORK, June 23. The general interpreta.
Appleton Chapel.
tion in Wall street of the currency bill, which has
now become a law, in that the measure in mild
ONZE8,
Members of the various University bodies, Invited
expansion, and a cheerful feeling prevails in
glients, candidates for degrees, and students of the
PLACE,
financial circles, with continued buoyancy in the
ATED WARE,
University will assemble at Memorial Hall at 9¥
stock market. Now that Congress has about fin.
o'clock. The procession will be formed at 10 o'clock.
ished its business for the season there is a feeling
The chapel will o pan for ladina o'clock
of relief and hopefulness in all departments of
TLERY, ETC.
21
JAMES W. HARRIM, Merretary
general trade.
CLASS OF 1835.
THE MONT IMPORTANT POINTS
Entrance from Winter St.
in the present change of the financial situation is
6t
Je22
Room No. 17 Holworthy
no more calling upon the Government for aid in
reasons of stringency in the money market, and
will be open for the Class Comnmencement Day.
`URNITURE,
that the late Increase of twenty-eix millions to the
CHAS. HENRY PARKER
greenback currency is made permanent.
je 23
It
Class Sec'y.
THE RAILROAD COMMIPSIONERS OF ILLINOIS
FIRST CLASS ONLY,
CLASS OF 1648.
are discussing a plan to secure the cooperation of
all description, made to order.
the Iowa and Wisconsin commissioners to prose-
Room No. 37 Matthews Hall, will be open for the
cute the railroads under the several State laws
MANTELS
Class on Conamencement Day.
whenever they are violated. A suit has been
GEORGE H. GAY,
brought in Indiana by the stockholders of the Rt.
10 different styles and shapes.
Louis & Southeastern Railroad to force the road
je 23
119
Class Merretary
into bankruptcy, and proceedings will be vigor-
MIRRORS
CLANN or 1444.
ously prosecuted.
Room No. 53 Thayer Hall will be open for the Class
STOCKS OPENED STRONG
Match.
on Commencement Day. Class Meeting at 11 M. The
and buoyant this morning.
tismal collation will be provided.
TWO AMALL FAILURES
LIBRARY CASES.
EDWARD WHEELWRIGHT.
among the bears are announced this morning. M.
Je23
119
Class Mecretary.
A. Platt and M, Caldwell, members of the board,
CLANM OF 1854.
ment in their notice that they were compelled to
CH CHAMBER SETS
suspend on their short contracts in Union Pacfic,
Class Supper at Parker's, at seven o'clock P. M.,
Lake Shore, Pacific Mail and New York Central.
June 23.
Several lots of these stocks were accordingly
BINETS, PEDESTALS, TABLES,
Stoughton Hall No. will be open for members on
bought in under the rule, for the account of cred.
Commencement Day. DAVID H. COOLIDGE,
!tors. The amount of shares short is about five
LETC., ETC.
je 20
3t
Class Secretary.
thousand. The market became weaker upon this
MPLES AT 12 WESTST.
jact becoming known, and prices sold down some-
CLASS OF 1856.
what.
(a
ROOM 15.
Stoughton will be open for the use of the class
GOLD
of
Commencement Day.
opened strong at 112, and afterwards sold down to
ons. C. J. Soyard.
W. W. BURRAGE
111% Sterling exchange opened steady and un-
je
2t9
Class Secretary.
changed at 4881/4 and 491. Money continues easy
Thic
HARVARD COLLEGE. CLASS OF 1860
at 31/4 wA per cent.
O.
FIFTY CASKS
No. 20 Stoughton will be open to the Class on Com
THE RHODE ISLAND SENATOR-
mencement Day.
W. E. PERKINS,
-OF-
je 23 It
Class Secretary.
SHIP.
nglish
CLASS OF 1864.
Hollis 20 will be open for the use of the Class or Com
ANOTHER BALLOT-NO CHOICE.
Oa
mencement Day. Business Meeting 12 M.
The Class will dine at Taft's Hotel, TUESDAY
Cu
EVENING, at o'clock. The propellor C. H. Hersey
Decorated
will leave the end of Long Wharf parcisely at 53 for a
(Special Despatch to the Transcript.)
mail among the Islands, reaching Point Shirley in time
for the dinner. W.L. RICHARDSON, Class Secretary.
2t9
je
TROVIDENCE, June 23. Nineteenth ballot-Burn-
HARVARD COLLEGE, CLASS OF 1863.
side 41, Dixon 26, Barstow 16, Brown 10, Sheffield
DINNER SETS
Room No. 1 Thayer Hall will be open for the use of
6, Jenckes 4, Binney 2. The convention adjourned
the Class on Commencement Day.
for today.
8.
Business Meeting at at
The Class will dine together at the Parker House, on
FORTY-THIRD CONGRESS-First Session.
7
TUESDAY EVENING, June 23d, at 7 o'clock.
NEW STYLE OF DECORATION, and from a
T. FRANK BROWNELL,
of
cy for whose goods in this market we have the
je
2t4
Class Secretary.
WASHINGTON, June 23.
ive control.
HARVARD COLLEGE, CLASS OF 1869.
SENATE.
Tapes
demand for English Decorated Rets having in-
Holworthy 9 will he open for the Class on Commence-
The Senate met at ten o'clock.
Cloth
d to such air extent within the last year, we
ment Day, June 24th.
Mr. Washburn of Massachusetts called up the
een obliged to import the above large stock in
Business Meeting at 1.15.
House bill to fix salarios of clerks at the United
many
to. All orders for sets of any desired number of
Members are again reminded that the full balance of
States armory in Springfield, Mass., which was
passed. Also the Senate bill granting a pension
sold t
To insure the sale of the same we have placed
their subscription to the Class Fund is now due.
to Margaret Hastings. Passed.
goods at LOWER PRICES than they have ever
THOMAS P. BEAL,
Mr. Morrill of Maine, submitted a resolution au-
ffered. Please examine at store or send by mail
je
22
2t
Class Secretary.
thorizing the Committees on Appropriations of
its and Prices.
CLASS OF 1870.
each House of Congress, to sit at the capitol dur-
No. 2 Holworthy will be open for members of
ing the recess, to inquire as to what reforms can
FOR
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Author : Sibley, John Langdon, 1804-1885.
Title : Papers of John Langdon Sibley, 1831-1885.
INTERNET LINK : http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.ARCH:628387 [ Link to transcription of Private journal
]
Locations/Orders : Availability
Location : Networked Resource
i
[Transcription of Private journal] Holdings Availability
Location : Harvard Archives
i
HUG 1791.72 [Private journal (2 v.)] Holdings Availability
Description : 28 linear ft. of mss.
History notes : Sibley (1804-1885) earned his Harvard AB 1825. He served Harvard as Librarian (1825-1877, non-contiguous
service) and editor of Triennial and Quinquennial catalogues of Harvard graduates. He was also the owner and
editor of the "American magazine of useful and entertaining knowledge."
Summary : Includes correspondence, mostly professional, diaries, journals, manuscripts, historical notes, and clippings.
Included is Sibley's private journal, 1846-1865 and 1866-1882; Collectanea Biographica Harvardiana, Volumes 1-
31, containing alumni biographies with additions by Sibley; manuscripts of biographical sketches, 1873-1885, and
other research material about Harvard graduates; lectures about Montgomery and Arnold's expeditions to
Quebec; and accounts of Sibley's American Magazine of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge. Related
publications and reference material also available in repository.
Restrictions : At least one location has information and/or restrictions on access. Click on the holdings link(s) for specific
information.
Other forms : Collectanea Biographica Havardiana are available on microfilm (11 reels, 35mm.) at Harvard University Archives.
Harvard Library journal on negative microfilm.
Private journal available on microfilm at Harvard University Archives.
Notes : See also: Records of the Harvard College Library maintained by John Langdon Sibley including papers (UAIII
50.28.56) and his library journal (UAIII 50.28.56.2); Sibley's own annotated copy of V. 1-3 of Biographical
sketches of Harvard Graduates (HUG 1791.8); Sibley's letter to Rev. Augustus R. Pope of Kingston, Mass.,
regarding biographical information on Harvard graduates, which forms a part of George Goodspeed's scrapbook
of Harvardiana.
Subject : Sibley, John Langdon, 1804-1885.
Note: Toote notes and made
Subject : Harvard University -- Libraries.
Harvard University -- Students.
photocopies of J.L.Sibley's
Harvard -- --
University Libraries Employees. Private Journal 1846-1882
Subject : American magazine of useful and entertaining knowledge.
Subject : Québec (Quebec) -- History.
(HUG 1791.72-10), pp. 676-686
Form/Genre Diaries.
covered the Class of 1874
graduation in R.H.Epp ceremony. 1874 Chronology Filed file.
http://lms01.harvard.edu/F/5YIBH7LY488GDRRRS736B66VXGFCSTSL9VS8K97U2IT
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John Langdon Sibley's Private Journal, 1846-1882 (HUG 1791.72.10)
Page 1 of 912
Harvard University Archives | HOLLIS | OASIS Harvard/Radeliffe Online Historical Reference Shelf
John Langdon Sibley's diary (known as Sibley's private journal),
1846-1882 (HUG 1791.72.10)
John Langdon Sibley, A.B. 1825, Grad. Div. S. 1828, served as
Harvard's Assistant Librarian from 1825-1826 and 1841-1856,
Librarian from 1856-1877, and Librarian, Emeritus from 1877-
1885. A noted biographer, he is best known for his Biographical
Sketches of Graduates of Harvard University. Sibley was born
in
Union, Maine on December 29, 1804, and died in Cambridge,
Massachusetts on December 9, 1885.
Sibley's personal diary spans nearly 37 years, with entries
beginning on January 1, 1846 and ending on August 29, 1882. In it
he recorded the details of daily life, often commenting on local and national current events, as
well as Harvard affairs.
The diary, in its entirety, follows. The links immediately below provide quick access to
decades and specific years. To search by keyword, use the Ctrl + F keys
1840s
I
1850s
I
1860s
1870s
1880s
Transcribed by Brian A. Sullivan.
Location of original diary: Harvard University Archives (HUG 1791.72.10).
1840s
1846 1847 1848 1849
1850s
1850
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1857
1858
1859
1860s
1860 1861 | 1862 1863 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869
1870s
1870
1871
1872
1873
1874
1875
1876
1877
1878
1879
1880s
1880
1881
1882
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Source: John Langdon Sibley's Private Journal, 1846-1882 (HUG 1791.72.10) Harvard
Page 676 of 912
University Archives.
as well as in Great Britain, examined various libraries, etc.
June 13, 1874
Gov. Lefroy of Bermuda with his family visits the Library, inquires immediately about
the gifts of Thomas Hollis, an intimate friend of his ancestor. There are but eight or nine kinds
of birds on the Bermudas, no trees but evergreen, SO that New England with its unusual burden
of foliage is fascinating. The Governor, or General, came by way of St. John's, New Brunswick,
going to Albany thence by New York & to New England an absence of six months. He is much
interested in the history of the Bermudas & wanted to see all we had on it.
Gore Hall reading room & some of the alcoves washed.
June 14, 1874
Richard Metcalf of Winchester preached at Appleton Chapel in the morning, and in the
afternoon, Andrew Preston Peabody the baccalaureate sermon.
June 15, 1874
Washing of Gore Hall finished.
June 19, 1874
Notz: Graduation of G.BDORR and Classmater.
Seniors Class Day. Great preparations, tents near University Press & a large one
between Gore Hall & Appleton Chapel. Very rainy, great disappointment. The Class-Day
Officers were Richard Henry Dana, Orator; Ernest Francisco Fenollosa, Poet; George Riddle,
Odist; Edwin Garrald Merriam, Ivy Orator; George-Oliver-George Coale, Chaplain; Arthur
William Foote, Chorister; Arthur Lithgow Devens, William Gordon McMillan, James Lawrence,
Marshals; James Jackson Minot, Robert Alexander Southworth, William Royall Tyler, Class Day
Committee; Edward Warren Cate, Francis Child Faulkner, Arthur Lewis Goodrich, Class
Committee; George Partridge Sanger, Class Secretary.
At 10 o'clock, Chapel open for ticket-holders, no other persons admitted until the class
has entered.
At 9 o'clock the Class assembles in front of Holworthy, goes to the Chapel for prayer by
the Chaplain, thence to breakfast with Prof. William Everett at his residence, the old Holmes
House, & thence to the Exercises in Appleton Chapel.
From 3 to 5, the rain prevented the music on the green between Thayer & Hollis &
Stoughton.
Between 5 & 6 the Class in procession, marched rapidly through the College yard,
cheered the buildings, planted the ivy & went through the exercises at the tree, where the Class
Song was sung.
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Page 677 of 912
Class Song
Around the flower-wreathed tree we stand
To sing our last, our farewell song.
Again to feel hand clasping hand,
And glad hearts beating full and strong.
And spirits from the shadow land,
Through memory's golden portal throng,
To tell us of the days of yore,
And bid farewell to Seventy-four.
The past is vanished like a dream;
Before us, viewless[?] to our eyes,
A silent-flowing, misty stream,
The dark, uncertain future lies;
But peering through the gloom we seem
To see dim, beckoning forms arise,
Which hold our destinies in store,
And greet the class of Seventy-four.
And now our voices high we raise,
To bid these classic shades adieu.
Forgetting not the vanished days,
But pressing onward to the new;
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Page 678 of 912
All going in divergent ways,
But every one remaining true
To the dear old class of Seventy-four
Farewell, farewell, dear Seventy-four.
At 5 o'clock, Harvard Hall & Holden Chapel were open for those having seats at the
windows.
The entrance to take the seats behind Hollis & Harvard Halls was between Holden Chapel and
Hollis Halls & open at 5.
After the exercises at the tree, and during the remainder of the evening, a ticket required
of every gentleman or of gentlemen accompanied by ladies, entering the portion of the Yard
enclosed by the Rope.
The entrances to the roped-off portion of the Yard, one at the end of Massachusetts,
between Grays and Weld, and Thayer and Holworthy.
From the close of the exercises at the Tree till 9, the President to receive the Class &
their friends at his house, no gentleman admitted without a ticket.
From 8 to 10 illumination of Holworthy, and the playing of the band on the Green.
At 8.30 singing of the Glee Club in front of Holworthy.
It was part of the plan to illuminate the College parallelogram with chinese lanterns but
in consequence of the rain many of the lanterns were put up in Massachusetts where was
dancing in the evening.
"Phillips Exeter Academy
Exeter, NH 19 June 1874
"John Langdon Sibley, A.M.
My dear Sir,
There have been received A History of the town of Union, in the County of Lincoln Maine, by
John Langdon Sibley, A.M.
Biographical Sketches of Graduates of Harvard University, by John Langdon Sibley, A.M.
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John Langdon Sibley's Private Journal, 1846-1882 (HUG 1791.72.10)
Page 679 of 912
Notices of Triennial and Annual Catalogues of Harvard University by John Landon Sibley, A.M., a
gift to the Library of Phillips Exeter Academy for which the Trustees direct me to return their grateful
acknowledgement. The books have just come to hand, though from a mark on the package. I infer they were
despatched some time ago. I wish the question written in the Sketches; "Who will write a History of Phillips
Exeter Academy?" could be answered as satisfactorily as; "Who shall write Biographical Sketches of Graduates
of Harvard University?" has been answered. I wish to devise some form of record book, well adapted to preserve
memoranda of the students who hereafter attend the Academy. The old traditions are many of them fading away,
and we need now the historian who will gather them up and preserve them.
"The Trustees held their annual meeting this week I laid before them the offer made by yourself last
Winter and read your letter to them. They were most gratefully impressed by the generosity of the proposition you
make, and discussed at length the best means to take to make it effectual. It was the belief of the Trustees that just
at the present juncture of business affairs we could not hope to match your liberality so as at present to add twenty
five thousand dollars to the amount you propose I regret that we seem to be forced to this conclusion, both on our
own account as receivers, and on your account who have learned so well the blessedness of giving. I do not renounce
the hope that we may see our way clear, at least to organize a vigorous effort.
I am very truly yours,
Albert C. Perkins"
June 20, 1874
Busts of the following persons carried from Gore Hall to Memorial Hall viz: Kirkland,
Quincy, Everett, Walker, Felton, Sparks, Washington, Sumner, Peirce, Appleton, Farrar, Story,
Bussey, Hayward, John Parker.
A large number of paintings, many of them refurbished & re-varnished, several of them
re-gilded or reframed are moved to Memorial Hall.
June 21, 1874
In the afternoon Dr. A.P. Peabody preaches the Baccalaureate sermon to the graduating
class, in the evening Professor Oliver Stearns the valedictory before the graduating class of the
Divinity School.
June 23, 1874
Exhibition of the Divinity School. In the afternoon Edmund Burke Willson delivered the
Sermon before the Alumni Association of the Divinity School.
The Memorial Hall, erected on the Delta, the old college play ground for base-ball,
football, etc. was dedicated this afternoon. The alumni of the College and invited guests formed
a procession at Massachusetts Hall at half past three o'clock in the following order:
Germania Band
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Henry Lee, Chief Marshal
Aids
Patrick T.Jackson
Charles C. Read
C. William Loring
Henry Bigelow Williams
Charles E. Guild
Robert S. Peabody
Augustus Lowell
Charles C. Stratton
S. Lothrop Thorndike
James Barr Ames
S. Parkman Blake, Jr.
Henry W. Putnam
George B. Chase
Roger Wolcott
A.J.C. Sowdon
George R. Minot, Jr.
Ozias Goodwin
Robert S. Russell
Gilbert R. Payson
A. Lithgow Devens
Robert Amory
James Lawrence, Jr.
President of the Association & Orator of the Day
Chaplain of the Day (Henry Whitney Bellows)
Chairman of the Committee of Fifty & of the Building Committee preceding the Committee of
Fifty
Trustees of the Sanders Fund
Architects of Memorial Hall
President & Fellows of Harvard College
The Honorable and Reverend Overseers
His Honor the Lieutenant Gov. of the Commonwealth & Aids
Ex-Presidents of the University
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Present & Past Officers of Instruction & Government in the University
Officers of the United States Army and Navy
Invited Officers of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion
Invited Officers of the Grand Army of the Republic
Subscribers to the Memorial Fund, not Alumni
Mayor, Aldermen and President of the Common Council of the City of Cambridge, preceded by
the Sheriff of Middlesex.
Other gentlemen specifically invited.
Students of Harvard University, who served in the Army and Navy during the War of the
Rebellion, in the order of their classes.
Alumni of Harvard College in the order of their classes
Students of the University
The procession extended around the entire parallelogram marching from east end of
Massachusetts along east of Matthews Hall, north of Grays Hall, west of Boylston Hall, west of
University & Thayer Halls, south of Holworthy, east of Stoughton, Hollis, & Harvard, the front
of the procession reaching the end just as it was leaving Massachusetts Hall. Thence it marched
west through the College gate, west, & round the northwest of the College yard, crossed to
Kirkland Street & recrossing from the north side of Kirkland Street entered Memorial Hall on
the north side of the vestibule, into the Hall west of the vestibule which was packed full of
humanity.
"Order of Exercises
Hallelujah Chorus,
From the Mount of Olives,
Beethoven
Prayer,
By the Rev. Henry W. Bellows, D.D.
Chorus,
From the Oratorio of St. Paul,
Mendelssohn
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Page 682 of 912
"Happy and blest are they who have endured"
For though the body dies, the soul shall live forever"
Report of the Building Committee,
By their Chairman, Henry B. Rogers, Esq.
Report of the Committee of Fifty,
By their Chairman, Honorable John G. Palfrey
Chorus
From the Creation, "The heavens are telling" Haydn
Address,
By the Hon.Charles Francis Adams
Hymn,
Written for the Occasion, by Oliver Wendell Holmes, to be sung by the Assembly
"Where, girt around by savage foes,
Our nuturing Mother's shelter rose,
Behold, the lofty temple stands,
Reared by her children's grateful hands!
Firm are the pillars that defy
The volleyed thunders of the sky;
Sweet are the summer wreaths that twine
With bud and flower our martyr's shrine
The hues their tattered colors bore
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Page 683 of 912
Fall mingling on the sunlit floor;
Till evening spreads her spangled hall.
And wraps in shade the storied hall.
Firm were their hearts in danger's hour,
Sweet was their manhood's morning flower,
Their hopes with rainbow hues were bright,--
How swiftly winged the sudden night!
O Mother! on thy marble page
Thy children read, from age to age,
The mighty word that forward[?] leads
Through noble thought to nobler deeds.
Truth, heaven-born Truth, their fearless guide,
Thy saints have lived, thy heroes died;
Our love has reared their earthly shrine,
Their glory be forever thine!
Benediction
By Rev. Henry W. Bellows (not by Rev. James Walker)
The Handel and Haydn Society have kindly volunteered for the occasion.
As to Acoustics, Memorial Hall is a failure, it being impossible to hear the speaking
over
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half the room.
After the Exercises, the President had a reception for the men.
The tickets were as follows:
"Dedication Day
Tuesday
June 23, 1874-Admit the bearer to the seats reserved for ladies at Memorial Hall
Henry Lee, Chief Marshal
South Door, 3 P.M.
June 24, 1874
Commencement Day. From earliest knowledge the procession has been formed at the
Library, wherever that was kept but to-day it was formed at Memorial Hall in the vestibule.
Commencement Day. The Overseers held a meeting in Memorial Hall at 9 o'clock. As
soon as they adjourned, a few minutes after 10 o'clock, the Librarian organized the procession in
the vestibule of Memorial Hall, in the ordinary mode, & it marched from the south door into the
College yard along the front of Holworthy, Stoughton & Appleton Chapel where the Exercises
were held & degrees were conferred, the old Presidential Chair as usual being carried there from
the College Library where it is kept.
The oldest graduate present, was Joseph Head, H.U. 1804, who was quite indignant
when asked in the afternoon if he would not ride in the procession. The order of the procession
will be found in the Boston Journal.
After the exercises were finished & degrees conferred, the Association of the Alumni
was held at one o'clock in Massachusetts Hall, tickets for the dinner being distributed & checked
in the lower part of it. To this Association report was made by the Committee of Forty on the
Class Subscription Fund. Col. Henry Lee also made a report on the Harvard Memorial Fund.
Between two and three o'clock, General William F. Bartlett, H.U. 1862, marshal, began
to call the procession, which marched down in front of Matthews, Grays, Boylston, University,
& out between Thayer & Holworthy to Memorial Hall & dined in the lower west room, eight
tables extending the entire length of the room from east to west, headed by two tables on the
platform from north to south. Judge Devens, Vice-President, presided in place of James Russell
Lowell, President, who is in Europe. Henry Whitney Bellows said grace. After dinner, about 20
minutes to 4 o'clock, Judge Devens said: "Brethren of the Alumni. We will commence our after
dinner exercises in the usual way by the psalm, which the Librarian will lead;"--which he did--the
twenty-sixth time. The hall caused reverberations SO that St. Martin's did not sound SO well as it
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has sometimes though it elicited some compliments. The present mode of beating time
conspicuously with the hand and arm in the old fashioned way, to which particular attention was
given, preserved the singing from confusion.
Speeches were made by Judge Devens, Charles William Eliot, Governor Talbot, Henry
W. Bellows, Josiah Quincy, Gen. Bartlett, Prof. Thayer. The result of the election of Overseers
was read, Auld Lang Syne was sung & the assembly dispersed. The hall being a failure in
acoustics, the speeches were not heard except by a few in the vicinity of the speakers.
June 25, 1874
Phi Beta Kappa Exercises. Meeting for business & election of officers held in Boylston
Hall where also the procession was formed. Oration by Charles Carroll Everett, Poem by
Christopher P. Cranch, dinner in Massachusetts Hall. Attendance small.
This appears to be the first time known where a procession & the Commencement has
not been formed at the Library wherever the Library was.
Examination for admission to college begins to-day in Memorial Hall: A new plan
adopted of examining scholars who wish to enter the Freshman Class next year in some of the
studies.
This year I succeed in excluding from the Library all processions and all meetings, the
Corporation and Overseers meetings being held in Memorial Hall, and the Phi Beta at Boylston
Hall.
July 2, 1874
Eliot says no more L.L.D.'s to be given except to Jurists and Statesmen.
July 9, 1874
I have had the letters; received during my administration with such of my predecessor's,
(he never thinking of it) as I could get, bound for the College Library. They make twelve
volumes, and came back from the binder to-day. After the death of Dr. Harris, I instructed his
brother, James Winthrop Harris, to select from the papers left by the Librarian all that did not
belong to the Library and were of a private or personal nature; such as remained, in arranging for
binding my own Library correspondence, I concluded I would also bind.
In regard to the letters received during my administration, there has been perplexity, as
many of them contained information not only relating to the library but also respecting Harvard
Graduates and personal affairs. The letters which related exclusively to the Library are in the
bound manuscript volumes. The others I claim as private property, the Library having nothing to
do with what related to the Annual Catalogues which, beginning in 1850, I edited twenty years,
nor with the Triennial Catalogues, which I have edited since 1840, nor with my private
correspondence, any more than though I had not been Librarian. A thorough examination into
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the history of the Library would require a careful examination of my files as well as of that in the
Library. In addition to the twelve volumes are several important parcels in the Library-drawers,
and numerous letters and communications, in the bound Harvard Papers among the
Corporation Archives, besides some in the Corporation Records themselves. Not seriously, till
recently, entertaining the idea of binding the Library Letters the bulk is small compared with
what it would have been if I had kept them all together instead of placing in the Library-books
most of those which accompanied donations or were criticisms & comments on the books.
July 10, 1874
Day for annual examination of the Library; but in consequence of disappointment in
notifying the members no one appeared.
July 21, 1874
Took hack to North Cambridge & at 7.40 A.M., the railroad cars through Fitchburg,
Keene, stopping nearly two hours at Rutland, Vt., by way of Whitehall, N.Y. to Saratoga Springs
where we got out at the Waverly House a little before 7 o'clock.
July 22, 1874
Began the day by drinking six glasses of Empire Spring Water.
July 23, 1874
Called on Edward Doubleday Harris, A.T. Stewart's architect for his real estate in
Saratoga. Stewart is considered by some persons to be worth a hundred million dollars, having
a
wife and no children. Harris's family, including his mother, widow of the late librarian of
Harvard University, temporarily there, reside at Saratoga Springs.
The college regatta, of which the newspapers contained full accounts, is over, & the
horse races about to begin. Met but few acquaintances, but among whom was Ex-Governor
Fletcher of Vermont, 75 years old, made some acquaintances, among whom were the Hanscomb
family from Brooklyn, NY. Also saw several of the Simes family from New York City with
whom I boarded with more than forty years ago in Portsmouth, N.H.
July 25, 1874
With Mrs. S. called on the Harrises.
The follies and fashions & the sectarianism and religious bigotry at Saratoga do not
essentially decrease & in most respects increase.
July 28, 1874
Quite a sharp controversy with some persons who are trying to dissuade the Hanscombs
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College
IN CIVITATE
Omnibus ad yours hae Literac prevencrint Salutem in Donting sempiternam
NOS PRIESES at SOCII COLLEGH HARVAARDIANT communities
dienounds in reverendes Uneversitates Inspecteratur is Comities
Sucknam Dorr
clummer ad gradum Artihus admissmas vigue
declinical conceptions ensry nu Jura nd hum henricon spretantow
Junique the literal here Universitate ugelli munitis the
wine Saldis frantmite MDCCCLXXIV Americanae XCVH
Strategy ct de expenses Insection
audistat subscript THE
America Pradidas
Trainers.
The the
1875
THE HARVARD BOOK.
A, SERIES OF
HISTORICAL, BIOGRAPHICAL,
AND DESCRIPTIVE
SKETCHES.
BY
VARIOUS AUTHORS.
Illustrated with Views and Portraits.
COLLECTED AND PUBLISHED
BY
F. O. VAILLE AND H. A. CLARK,
CLASS OF 1874.
VOL. I.
CAMBRIDGE:
WELCH, BIGELOW, AND COMPANY,
UNIVERSITY PRESS.
1875.
TO
THE CLASS OF 1874,
FOR WHOSE MEMBERS
THESE SKETCHES WERE AT FIRST INTENDED,
This Work
IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED.
PREFACE.
IN the middle of the academic year 1873-74, when the subject of class
photographs was being discussed by that class which was to graduate at the
following Commencement, this work was begun. It originated by considering
the possibility of securing, in some more durable and attractive manner than
hitherto, those pictures of the familiar scenes and faces of College days which
every student at the end of his four-years' life at Harvard desires to carry away
with him. It was thought this object might be best attained if there were added
to the usual pictures composing a class album descriptive sketches of the College
grounds, buildings, and those institutions which enter so largely into the social
life of the undergraduate.
This plan was attempted, and the book, started essentially for the Class of 1874,
was intended to be chiefly limited in circulation to the members of that class.
It was found, however, that the generous interest manifested by them in the work
at its inception was shared to a great degree by the other undergraduate classes
as well as by many of the Alumni. The result was, that the sketches began to
increase both in length and number, and the scope of the work to be more
comprehensive. These volumes must not, therefore, be regarded as completed
in accordance with the plan proposed at first, but they should rather be con-
sidered as the outgrowth of an originally designed class-book. This fact must
answer the question why some few more or less remote subjects are included in
a work which mainly relates to the University, - they are such as usually find
illustration in the student's portfolio, and are always remembered with interest
as a part of the pleasant associations of Cambridge.
That the work is free from errors, is not professed that some statements may
even be repeated, is not denied ; indeed, it would hardly seem to be possible
viii
PREFACE.
otherwise, for the different articles, written by various authors, give the separate
histories of subjects in many instances closely related to one another. The fre-
quent absence of records often made recourse to memory necessary, in order to
substantiate many facts relative to some of the societies and other institutions
of the College, to those customs which flourished for a short time only, and to
those tales and legends which, handed from one class to another, become tra-
ditional in College circles, and form so large and so pleasant a portion of the
fireside conversation of students. It may be that errors of fact have escaped
detection, but great care has been taken to verify every statement.
There may be many things contained within these pages which may not be
appreciated or even understood by the general public, yet they may, nevertheless,
be most acceptable to and welcomed by that indulgent public for whom they are
principally intended, - the Alumni. It is earnestly hoped that the work may
embrace that which will bring to the older and the younger graduate agreeable
reminiscences of their College days ; that which may afford to those who have
not been enrolled as students, or who may contemplate becoming so, a glimpse
of the inner and more secluded student-life at Cambridge that which may give
to any person seeking the information a correct account of the foundation of the
College, its growth and expansion into a University, - in brief, a truthful repre-
sentation of Harvard's past and present.
To thank those who have shown a generous sympathy, kindly aid, and ready
advice, at all times and in many ways, would be thanking all from whom sym-
pathy was claimed, aid needed, or advice asked: they are so numerous, that it is
wellnigh impossible to mention each; but to every one the reader will be per-
sonally indebted, if he finds that the attempt to make these pages accurate,
entertaining, and instructive has been successful.
CAMBRIDGE, May, 1875.
CONTENTS
OF
VOLUME FIRST.
HISTORICAL SKETCH
By SAMUEL ELIOT.
CHAPTER I.-PREVIOUS HISTORIES OF HARVARD COLLEGE. - THE GENERAL COURT,
1636, VOTE "TO GIVE £400 TOWARDS A SCHOOLE OR COLLEDGE."-THE COLLEGE ORIGI-
NALLY A STATE INSTITUTION. EARLIER PROVISIONS FOR A SIMILAR INSTITUTION IN VIR-
GINIA. VOTE OF THE GENERAL COURT IN 1637.-LOCATING THE COLLEGE AT NEW-
TOWN. - NATHANIEL EATON. - THE GENERAL COURT, 1639, VOTE TO NAME THE COLLEGE
"HARVARD COLLEGE." JOHN HARVARD. - HIS BEQUEST. - THE COLLEGE BUILDINGS
IN 1643. - PRESIDENT DUNSTER. - REGULATIONS. - EARLY CUSTOMS. - NEED OF FUNDS.
CHARLES CHAUNCY. - CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE COLLEGE. - THE INDIAN COLLEGE.
INDIAN STUDENTS. - REFORMS. - LEONARD HOAR, THE FIRST ALUMNUS CALLED TO THE
PRESIDENCY, 1672
23
CHAPTER II. - INCREASE MATHER THE FIRST PRESIDENT OF AMERICAN BIRTH.
HIS ABSENCE FROM CAMBRIDGE. - His IMPLICATION IN THE PERSECUTION OF WITCHES
AT SALEM. ROBERT CALEF. - HIS BOOK BURNED IN THE COLLEGE YARD BY ORDER OF
THE PRESIDENT - TUTORS BRATTLE AND LEVERETT. - LEVERETT ELECTED PRESIDENT,
1707. - AN ACCOUNT OF HIS INAUGURATION. - GROWTH OF THE COLLEGE.-THE COL-
LEGE FACULTY ORGANIZED, 1725. - PROCEEDINGS OF COMMITTEES APPOINTED BY THE
OVERSEERS. COMMENCEMENTS. - CORPORAL PUNISHMENT SUSPENDED BY THE CORPORA-
TION, 1755. BURNING OF HARVARD HALL, 1764. - RESOLVE OF THE GENERAL COURT
TO REBUILD IT. - PRIZES FOR COMPOSITIONS IN HONOR OF GEORGE III. - VOTE OF THE
SENIOR CLASS TO WEAR HOME-MADE SUITS AT COMMENCEMENTS. REBELLION OF THE
STUDENTS.- - THE MARTI-MERCURIAN BAND. - THE GENERAL COURT OCCUPY THE COL-
LEGE CHAPEL. JAMES OTIS. - SPIRITS OF THE STUDENTS AT THE PROSPECT OF WAR.-
PRESIDENT LANGDON'S PRAYER BEFORE THE REVOLUTIONARY TROOPS. - THE STUDENTS
ASSEMBLE AT CONCORD INSTEAD OF CAMBRIDGE
35
CHAPTER III. -EXTRACT FROM THE ADDRESS OF HARRISON GRAY OTIS TO HIS
CLASS. PROFESSORSHIPS FOUNDED--GROWTH OF THE COLLEGE. - STANDARD OF AD-
MISSION RAISED. - ANNUAL EXAMINATIONS CAUSE DISCONTENT AMONG THE STUDENTS.
CLASS DAY.-COLLEGE SOCIETIES. - ADDRESS OF THE STUDENTS IN 1798 TO THE PRESI-
DENT OF THE UNITED STATES. - SOCIAL RELATIONS OF THE STUDENTS.- THE ENGINE
SOCIETY. - THE HARVARD WASHINGTON CORPS.-THE MED. Fac.-The NAVY CLUB.
COLLEGE PERIODICALS.-EXPANSION OF THE COLLEGE DURING PRESIDENT KIRKLAND'S
ADMINISTRATION - THE SECOND CENTENNIAL CELEBRATED, SEPTEMBER 8, 1836. - THE
ELECTIVE SYSTEM ESTABLISHED DURING PRESIDENT QUINCY'S ADMINISTRATION. - THE
OBSERVATORY.-THE SCIENTIFIC SCHOOL.-EXTRACT FROM THE POEM DELIVERED AT THE
COMMEMORATION OF JULY 21, 1865
44
X
CONTENTS.
MASSACHUSETTS HALL
By CHARLES ELIOT NORTON.
THE HALL BUILT BY THE PROVINCE OF MASSACHUSETTS. - VARIOUS GRANTS TO THE
COLLEGE. - FORMER USES OF THE HALL. - PRESENT USES. - DANGER FROM THE FIRE
WHICH CONSUMED HARVARD HALL. - OCCUPANCY BY REVOLUTIONARY TROOPS. - ESTI-
MATE OF DAMAGES. - ASSOCIATIONS CONNECTED WITH THE BUILDING. - REPAIRS IN DR.
KIRKLAND'S TIME. - A PORTION OF THE LOWER FLOOR FORMERLY DEVOTED TO SOCIETY
USES. - ALTERATIONS IN 1870
53
HOLDEN CHAPEL
By ANDREW PRESTON PEABODY.
VISIT OF BENJAMIN COLMAN TO ENGLAND IN 1695. - GIFT OF MADAM HOLDEN AND
HER DAUGHTERS TO THE COLLEGE. - ERECTION OF HOLDEN CHAPEL, 1744. - CONJEC-
TURED OCCUPANTS IN EARLY TIMES. - SCENES AT PRAYERS.- - USES TO WHICH THE
CHAPEL HAS BEEN PUT DURING THE PAST FIFTY YEARS
58
HOLLIS HALL
By JOHN HOLMES.
THOMAS HOLLIS. - HIS BENEFACTIONS TO HARVARD COLLEGE. - LIBERALITY OF THE
HOLLIS FAMILY. - CHARACTER OF THE THIRD THOMAS HOLLIS. - THOMAS BRAND HOL-
LIS, THE SEVENTH AND LAST BENEFACTOR BEARING THE NAME OF HOLLIS. - THE NUM-
BER OF STUDENTS REDUCED BY THE "OLD FRENCH WAR," 1756-63.-THE CORPORATION
URGE THE NEED OF A NEW BUILDING, 1761. - THE GENERAL COURT VOTE £ 2,000 FOR
ANOTHER HALL. - A FURTHER SUM OF £500 VOTED. - SITE SELECTED. THE BUILDING
COMPLETED, DECEMBER, 1763.-JANUARY 13, 1764, THE BUILDING NAMED "HOLLIS HALL."
- RENT FROM THE CELLARS AND ROOMS APPLIED TO DIFFERENT Uses.-DESCRIPTION OF
HOLLIS HALL. - USED FOR BARRACKS. - ACCOUNT OF DAMAGES DONE TO HOLLIS HALL
DURING ITS MILITARY OCCUPATION. - ROOM No. 8. - REBELLION TREE. CLASS-DAY
TREE. - THE MARTI-MERCURIAN BAND. - HARVARD WASHINGTON CORPS.-THE ENGINE
COMPANY. - THE MEDICAL FACULTY. - DISTINGUISHED OCCUPANTS OF ROOMS IN HOLLIS
HALL. - THE COLLEGE WOOD-YARD. - THE COLLEGE SLOOP, THE "HARVARD"
61
HARVARD HALL
By JAMES FREEMAN CLARKE.
THE FIRST HARVARD HALL THE CENTRE OF COLLEGE LIFE. - USES OF THE BUILDING.
- ANECDOTE OF DR. FREEMAN.- - Two SCENES TAKEN FROM DIFFERENT PERIODS OF ITS
HISTORY. - FIRST HARVARD HALL BURNED. - LOSSES. - THE PRESENT HARVARD HALL
BUILT BY THE STATE. - COST. - DISTRIBUTION OF THE ROOMS.-COLLEGE CLOCK. - MR.
McKEAN'S LEAP FROM HARVARD TO HOLLIS HALL-LETTER FROM HONORABLE HORACE
BINNEY.-DAMAGES - TO THE HALL BY REVOLUTIONARY TROOPS. - PRESENT ASPECT
72
STOUGHTON HALL
By SAMUEL LONGFELLOW.
WILLIAM STOUGHTON. - THE FIRST STOUGHTON HALL. - TABLETS ON ITS FRONT. -
STOUGHTON'S WILL - PRINTING-OFFICE. - FIRST STOUGHTON TAKEN DOWN 1780. - THE
GENERAL COURT AUTHORIZE A LOTTERY IN 1794 TO RAISE MONEY FOR A NEW BUILD-
ING. - SECOND STOUGHTON HALL. - ROOMS 3, 17, AND 25. - STOUGHTON FIRST CALLED
NEW HALL. - DISTINGUISHED OCCUPANTS OF ROOMS IN STOUGHTON
79
HOLWORTHY HALL.
By HENRY WARREN TORREY.
BEQUEST OF MATTHEW HOLWORTHY. - A LOTTERY AUTHORIZED. - OPENING OF THE
BUILDING. - EXTRACT FROM PRESIDENT KIRKLAND'S ADDRESS. - DESCRIPTION OF THE
HALL
82
CONTENTS.
xi
UNIVERSITY HALL
By HENRY LEE.
PREFACE. - INITIATORY MEASURES TOWARD ERECTING UNIVERSITY HALL. - A GRANT
FROM THE STATE. - LAYING OF THE CORNER-STONE.-DESCRIPTION OF THE BUILDING.-
CRITICISMS. - THE CHAPEL ENTERTAINMENTS GIVEN TO THE STUDENTS BY PROFES-
SORS. - A CONCERT BY THE STUDENTS. - DAILY LIFE AT UNIVERSITY HALL.-THE
the
ORGAN. - THE HARVARD UNION. - THE EUPHRADIAN SOCIETY - THE MOCK TRIAL.-
EXHIBITION DAY. - CLASS DAY. - COMMENCEMENT.-RECEPTION OF DISTINGUISHED VIS-
ITORS.-FORMER PROFESSORS.-MELANCHOLY CHANGES. - CONCLUSION
84
OFFICES OF THE PRESIDENT, DEAN, AND SECRETARY.
By WILLIAM REED, JR.
FACULTY MEETINGS FORMERLY HELD IN THE OLD PRESIDENT'S HOUSE. - ROOMS IN
UNIVERSITY HALL TAKEN FOR THE PRESIDENT AND REGENT. - CHANGE IN THEM. -
THE SECRETARY'S OFFICE. - PICTURES. - OFFICE FURNITURE
109
GORE HALL AND THE COLLEGE LIBRARY.
By JOHN LANGDON SIBLEY.
BEQUEST OF JOHN HARVARD.- - GIFTS TILL THE END OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.
- SOLOMON STODDARD CHOSEN LIBRARY KEEPER. - REGULATIONS.- STOOLS AND CHAIRS
FOR THE LIBRARY.-BENEFACTIONS OF THOMAS HOLLIS AND FAMILY.-CITATIONS FROM
LETTERS OF THOMAS HOLLIS. - FIRST LIBRARY CATALOGUE.-DONATIONS. - DESCRIP-
TION AND USES MADE OF HARVARD HALL, IN WHICH THE BOOKS WERE KEPT. - OCCU-
PIED BY THE GENERAL COURT - BURNT. - REBUILT BY THE PROVINCE. - AMOUNTS
PAID TO OCCUPANTS OF ROOMS FOR LOSSES BY THE FIRE.-DONORS AND DONATIONS.-
THE BOOKS SENT INTO THE COUNTRY TOWNS WHILE THE BRITISH OCCUPY BOSTON.
BEQUESTS OF SAMUEL SHAPLEIGH, THOMAS BRAND HOLLIS, AND THOMAS PALMER. -
GIFTS OF ISRAEL THORNDIKE, SAMUEL ATKINS ELIOT, AND OTHERS. - GORE HALL
ERECTED WITH CHRISTOPHER GORE'S BEQUEST.-CORNER-STONE LAID; THE INSCRIPTION.
ACCOUNT OF THE BUILDING. - BOOKS MOVED INTO IT. - TWENTY THOUSAND DOLLARS
SUBSCRIBED FOR BOOKS. - GIFT OF WILLIAM GRAY. - GIFTS AND BEQUESTS BY JAMES
BROWN, JOHN FARRAR, GEORGE HAYWARD, CLARKE GAYTON PICKMAN, STEPHEN SALIS-
BURY, CHARLES SUMNER, CHARLES MINOT, HENRY WARE WALES, FREDERICK ATHEARN
LANE, AND OTHERS.-NUMBER OF VOLUMES.-NEED OF A NEW BUILDING FOR A LIBRARY
II2
APPLETON CHAPEL
By EDWARD JAMES YOUNG.
THE NEED OF ITS ERECTION. - THE DONOR. - THE ORIGINAL STRUCTURE AND ITS
EARLY HISTORY. - ITS RENOVATION AND PRESENT CONDITION - THE ASSOCIATIONS CON-
NECTED WITH IT
122
BOYLSTON HALL
By JOSIAH PARSONS COOKE, JR.
GIFT AND BEQUEST OF WARD NICHOLAS BOYLSTON. - TERMS OF THE BEQUEST. - Ex-
TRACT FROM PRESIDENT WALKER'S ANNUAL REPORT, 1855-56. - DESCRIPTION OF THE
HALL. - APPARATUS OF LABORATORIES AND CABINETS
125
PEABODY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY AND
ETHNOLOGY
By JEFFRIES WYMAN.
THE FOUNDATION OF THE MUSEUM BY A GIFT OF THE LATE GEORGE PEABODY. - THE
CONDITIONS OF THE GIFT. - THE PROFESSORSHIP PROVIDED FOR BY THE GIFT STILL UN-
FILLED.-THE GROUPS INTO WHICH THE PORTION OF THE COLLECTION ARRANGED FOR
EXHIBITION HAS BEEN DIVIDED
I27
xii
CONTENTS.
GRAYS HALL
By WILLIAM HENRY PETTEE.
LOCATION. - DESCRIPTION OF THE BUILDING.-THE TABLETS. - REASONS FOR ERECT-
ING THE BUILDING. - THE NAME
I29
THAYER HALL
By WILLIAM HENRY PETTEE.
ERECTED IN 1869-70. - LOCATION. - DESCRIPTION OF THE HALL.- MR. NATHANIEL
THAYER, OF BOSTON, THE DONOR OF THE BUILDING.-INSCRIPTION ON THE TABLET. -
NATHANIEL THAYER, D. D. - MR. JOHN ELIOT THAYER
I3I
MATTHEWS HALL
By WILLIAM HENRY PETTEE.
GIFT OF NATHAN MATTHEWS. - FIRST OCCUPIED, 1872-3 - DESCRIPTION OF THE
BUILDING.-SITI - CONDITIONS OF MR. MATTHEWS'S GIFT.-THE INDIAN COLLEGE
133
WELD HALL.
STEPHEN MINOT WELD.-HIS INTEREST IN HARVARD COLLEGE.-WELD HALL ERECT-
ED TO HIS MEMORY BY HIS BROTHER, WILLIAM F. WELD.-DESCRIPTION OF THE HALL.
- INSCRIPTIONS ON THE TABLETS
I35
THE OLD PRESIDENT'S HOUSE
By CHARLES DEANE.
THE HOUSE BUILT IN 1726. - INTERESTING FACTS CONNECTED WITH ITS EARLY HIS-
TORY.-LIST OF THE PRESIDENTS WHO HAVE RESIDED IN THE HOUSE.-EVIDENCE - SHOW-
ING THAT WASHINGTON MADE HIS HEADQUARTERS THERE FOR A SHORT TIME. - THE
CHANGES MADE IN THE HOUSE SINCE ITS ORIGINAL CONSTRUCTION. - THE USES TO
WHICH THE HOUSE HAS BEEN PUT
I37
THE DANA HOUSE
By JOSEPH LOVERING.
ERECTED IN 1823. - ALTERATIONS. - ESTATE PURCHASED BY THE COLLEGE. - EFFORTS
TO ESTABLISH AN ASTRONOMICAL OBSERVATORY. - DIRECTORS. - MERIDIAN LINE LO-
CATED. - APPARATUS REMOVED TO THE NEW OBSERVATORY. - OCCUPANTS SINCE 1844
143
THE PRESIDENT'S HOUSE
By THOMAS HILL.
GIFT OF HON. PETER C. BROOKS, IN 1846. - ACCUMULATION OF THE FUND.-THE
PRESIDENT'S HOUSE ERECTED IN 1861. - FIRST OCCUPIED BY PRESIDENT FELTON.
PRESIDENT ELIOT GIVES UP THE HOUSE FOR USE AS A HOSPITAL.-LOCATION.-MAG+
NETIC OBSERVATORY.-ARRANGEMENT OF ROOMS. - SURROUNDINGS
145
BIOGRAPHIES.
JOSIAH QUINCY
By EDMUND QUINCY
I47
EDWARD EVERETT
By EDWARD EVERETT HALE
151
JARED SPARKS
By FRANCIS BOWEN
I57
JAMES WALKER
By JOSEPH LOVERING
I59
CORNELIUS CONWAY FELTON
By WILLIAM WATSON GOODWIN
162
THOMAS HILL
164
CHARLES WILLIAM ELIOT
166
CONTENTS.
xiii
JOHN LANGDON SIBLEY
167
ANDREW PRESTON PEABODY
170
BENJAMIN PEIRCE
172
FRANCIS BOWEN
174
JOSEPH LOVERING
176
EVANGELINUS APOSTOLIDES SOPHOCLES
178
HENRY WARREN TORREY
I79
JEFFRIES WYMAN
180
JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL
182
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD
183
GEORGE MARTIN LANE
184
JOSIAH PARSONS COOKE, JR.
185
CHARLES FRANKLIN DUNBAR
187
WILLIAM WATSON GOODWIN
188
FERDINAND BôCHER
I90
EPHRAIM WHITMAN GURNEY
191
JAMES MILLS PEIRCE
I92
HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW
193
THE DIVINITY SCHOOL
By OLIVER STEARNS.
EARLY MODE OF THEOLOGICAL INSTRUCTION IN THE COLLEGE.- - ORIGIN OF THE SCHOOL.
FIRST FOUNDATIONS FOR PROFESSORSHIPS - THE SOCIETY FOR THE PROMOTION OF
THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION IN HARVARD UNIVERSITY.-PAST PROFESSORS.-DIVINITY HALL
ERECTED 1825-6. - CEREMONIES ACCOMPANYING THE LAYING OF THE CORNER-STONE AND
DEDICATION OF THEBUILDING.-DESCRIPTION OF THE BUILDING.-THE ASSOCIATION
OF ALUMNI FORMED.-THE - QUESTION OF THE TRANSFER OF THE TRUST OF THE SCHOOL
FROM THE CORPORATION TO THE SOCIETY FOR PROMOTING THEOLOGICAL EDUCATION. -
THE LIBRARY. - THE PRESENT STAFF OF PROFESSORS. - NEW FOUNDATIONS. - OCCA-
SIONAL LECTURES. - BENEFICIARY FUNDS. - DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF DIVINITY.- AIMS
OF GOVERNORS AND PROFESSORS
I97
BIOGRAPHIES.
FREDERIC HENRY HEDGE
212
OLIVER STEARNS
213
EZRA ABBOT
215
EDWARD JAMES YOUNG
217
CHARLES CARROLL EVERETT
219
HARVARD LAW SCHOOL AND DANE HALL. By EMORY WASHBURN.
LEGACY OF ISAAC ROYALL IN I779. - - ERECTION OF DANE HALL IN 1832. - FOUNDA-
TION OF PROFESSORSHIPS, - JOHN H. ASHMUN'S LIFE AND CHARACTER. - PROFESSORSHIP
CONTENTS
OF
VOLUME SECOND.
THE COLLEGE YARD
By GEORGE EDWARD ELLIS.
THE TERM "COLLEGE YARD." - SIZE AND BOUNDARY OF THE YARD. - THE NUMBER
OF BUILDINGS IN AND OUT OF THE YARD. - GRANT OF THE TOWN OF NEWTOWN, 1638.
THE BREW-HOUSE. - THE BETTS, SWEETMAN, MEETING-HOUSE, GOFFE, EATON, AND THE
WIGGLESWORTH LOTS. - THE "FELLOWS ORCHARD." - "Ox PASTURE." - PARSONAGE
LOT.-LAND BORDERING ON QUINCY STREET PURCHASED, 1835. - PURCHASE OF THE Ap-
PLETON LOT. - ELIOT'S PLAN OF THE COLLEGE YARD. - THE PATHS. - EXTRACT FROM
AN ADDRESS OF EDWARD EVERETT. - THE TREES PLANTED BY PRESIDENT QUINCY. -
THE FENCE.-THE GENERAL COURT VOTE IN 1632 TO FORTIFY NEWTOWN, AND IN 1634
TO ESTABLISH AN ARSENAL THERE. - DESCRIPTION OF THE FORTIFICATIONS. - WATCH
HILL. - DESCRIPTION OF THE FIRST HALL. - THE "FAIRE GRAMMAR SCHOOLE." - THE
"DAME'S SCHOOL." - INDIAN COLLEGE
15
WIGGLESWORTH HOUSE
By LUCIUS ROBINSON PAIGE.
SITE OF THE HOUSE. - ASSIGNMENT OF THE LOT TO REV. THOMAS HOOKER. - RE-
MOVAL OF MR. HOOKER TO HARTFORD, 1636. - REV. THOMAS SHEPARD'S POSSESSION OF
THE HOMESTEAD. - GIFT MADE BY THE TOWN TO HIM. - HIS DEATH. - REV. JONATHAN
MITCHEL. - LEVERETT PURCHASES THE ESTATE. - THE WIGGLESWORTHS. - SALE OF THE
ESTATE TO THE COLLEGE
22
THE OLD PARSONAGE
By ALEXANDER McKENZIE.
JONATHAN MITCHEL. - EXTRACTS FROM THE RECORDS OF THE CHURCH. - EXTRACT
FROM THE TOWN RECORDS UNDER DATE OF JULY 5, 1669. - RESOLUTION PASSED, SEP-
TEMBER 9, 1669, TO SELL THE CHURCH'S FARM. - BUILDING COMMITTEE CHOSEN. - SITE
OF THE HOUSE. - COST OF CONSTRUCTING IT. - MEASURES TO BUILD A NEW PARSONAGE
IN 1718. - WILLIAM STOUGHTON INVITED TO THE PASTORATE.- URIAN OAKES ORDAINED
PASTOR, NOVEMBER 8, 1671.-OCCUPANTS OF THE HOUSE SUCCEEDING HIM. - TAKEN
DOWN IN 1843
26
HARVARD SQUARE
By JOHN HOLMES.
THE TOPOGRAPHY OF THE ENGRAVING.- SCENES AT COMMENCEMENTS. - THE OLD
COLLEGE HOUSE. - MARKET HOUSE. - CAMBRIDGE TAVERN. - THE OLD MEETING-HOUSE.
-ITS INTERIOR AT COMMENCEMENTS.- THE ENGINE-HOUSE.-THE PILE-DRIVER HAM-
MER. -SKETCHES OF COMMENCEMENT TIME. OF ATTENDANTS.-
vi
CONTENTS.
-PLACES OF RESORT FOR VISITORS - MODE AND TIMES OF ARRIVAL. - THE NIGHT PRE-
VIOUS TO COMMENCEMENT DAY. - PILLAGING BY VAGABONDS. - THE "SCHOLARS."
DRESSING FOR THE DAY. - HOLIDAY TROUBLES.-FRESH COMERS.- THE ROADS FOR-
MERLY LEADING TO THE COLLEGE. - THE PROGRAMME OF THE DAY. - ARRIVAL OF THE
GOVERNOR.- PROCESSION.- THE ORDER ADOPTED.-EXERCISES IN THE CHURCH.-
THE FASHIONS. THE VARIOUS PARTS
29
HOLYOKE HOUSE
By WILLIAM HENRY PETTEE.
LOCATION. - CoST.-DESCRIPTION OF THE BUILDING. - FIRE-ESCAPES
48
PART I.
By WALDO HIGGINSON.
MEMORIAL HALL
{
PART II. By WILLIAM ROBERT WARE.
POEM. By CHRISTOPHER PEARSE CRANCH.
PART I.-THE MEETING OF HARVARD GRADUATES IN MAY, 1865. - DISCUSSION OF
THE RESOLUTIONS REPORTED BY THE MEMORIAL COMMITTEE.-NAMES OF THE Com-
MITTEE. - THE ALUMNI VOTE TO ERECT A MEMORIALL HALL AT A MEETING, SEPTEMBER
23, 1865. - A COMMITTEE ON FINANCE AND A BUILDING COMMITTEE APPOINTED.-Ex-
TRACTS FROM A REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE ON FINANCE, JULY 14, r866. THE "DELTA"
SELECTED AS THE SITE OF THE PROPOSED HALL.-THE PURCHASE OF "JARVIS FIELD"
AS A PLAY-GROUND IN LIEU OF THE "DELTA." - THE LAYING OF THE CORNER-STONE
-SUBSCRIPTIONS TO THE HALL. - A COMMITTEE APPOINTED TO PREPARE AND PRINT A
RECORD OF THE SERVICES OF HARVARD STUDENTS AND GRADUATES WHO WERE ENGAGED
IN THE LATE WAR
49
PART II. -DESCRIPTION OF THE BUILDING.-THE INTERIOR.-THE MEMORIAL HALL
PROPER. - THE DINING-HALL. THE THEATRE.- THE EXTERIOR.-THE TOWER.- THE
MAIN ENTRANCES TO THE BUILDING. - DEDICATORY INSCRIPTIONS THE MARBLE TAB-
LETS. - A LIST OF THE NAMES OF GRADUATES OR STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY WHO
FELL IN DEFENCE OF THE UNION.-LATIN INSCRIPTIONS ON THE WALLS OF THE MEMO-
RIAL VESTIBULE. - THE WINDOWS. - THE WEST-END WINDOW - INSCRIPTION OVER IT
60
POEM
73
COMMONS
By BENJAMIN HOMER HALL.
CHAPTER I. - NATHANIEL EATON. - GRANT OF LAND TO HIM BY THE GENERAL
COURT. - HIS ILL-TREATMENT OF THE STUDENTS.-WINTHROP's ACCOUNT OF EATON'S
MISMANAGEMENT. - TRIAL BY COURT.-PROCEEDINGS OF THE Church.-MRS. EATON'S
CONFESSION. - THE SENTENCE. - THE COLLEGE GOVERNMENT DINE AT COMMONS. -
COMMONS SUPPLIED BY THE COLLEGE STEWARD. - LIST OF ARTICLES RECEIVED IN BAR-
TER FOR INSTRUCTION. - EXTRACT FROM LUCIUS R. PAIGE. GIFTS SOLICITED FOR THE
COLLEGE. - RULE REGULATING THE TIME TO BE SPENT AT MEALS. -PRESIDENT DUN-
STER'S ORDERS. - WANTS OF THE COLLEGE IN 1665.- THE COLLEGE STEWARD'S ACCOUNT-
Books.-The TERMS "COMMONS" AND "SIZINGS."- THE FIRST BUTLER. - STUDENTS
CREDITED WITH WORK.-CUSTOM OBSERVED AT MEALS IN 1674.-GIFT OF SAMUEL WARD,
1681 THE PRESENCE OF THE TUTORS "IN THE HALL AT MEAL TIMES" REQUIRED.-
ORDER PASSED IN 1724.-LAWS ADOPTED IN 1734 - DUTIES OF THE STEWARD, BUTLER,
AND COOK.-EXTRACT FROM PRESIDENT QUINCY ON COMMONS.-DISTURBANCES IN 1766
AND 1768.-VARIOUS EXTRACTS RELATING TO COMMONS. - DIFFICULTIES OF PROCURING
DINNER AT THE HATCH. - VOTE OF 1772. - EFFECT OF THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR ON
COMMONS. - VOTE OF 1783
75
Incomplete
STORES
1770
THE INSTITUTE OF 1770.
THE SPEAKING CLUB. - ITS OBJECTS. - EARLY MEMBERS. - THE MERCURIAN CLUB. - PATRIOTIC
ASSOCIATION. THE SOCIAL FRATERNITY. - HERMETICK SOCIETY. - THE INSTI-
TUTE OF 1770. - THE I. O. H. - SELECTION OF MEMBERS. - - THE LIBRARY. ROOMS.
THE times were needing strong words from young Americans when Samuel
Phillips, John Warren, and the rest of the Class of 1771 began their Senior year;
while the College authorities, as these students remarked, in language not wholly
strange to later generations, showed "a cold indifference to the practice of Ora-
tory." What was called the 'Speaking Club" was therefore organized, with
Phillips, later Lieutenant-Governor of the State, as President, and with a Secre-
tary who kept remarkably full and accurate records, happily still preserved, of
these first meetings. It was voted "that there be a stage to perform on, four
feet Diameter, not more than two Feet high, with the front Corners clipt"; and
upon the stage thus made and "clipt" Orations and Essays on the profoundest
themes were "performed" with great regularity. Warren spoke on "The Beauty
of the Heavenly Bodies"; Avery, on "The Odiousness of Envy": and Thomas,
on "The Pernicious Habit of drinking Tea": each of which performances the
ecord describes as " ejus compositionem." It was early voted also "that no
member shall speak in Lath without special leave from the President"; and "that
the Secretary provide candles."
Founded in this very earnest and business-like way, the Society throve and en-
dured, and numbered among its members in these early days such men as Chris-
topher Gore, Rufus King, James Freeman, Henry Ware, and John Quincy Adams.
Other societies, with a kindred purpose, appeared from time to time by its side,
and each in its turn was merged in the older organization. In 1773 it is written
that, Having had intelligence that there is an honourable Club in College, known
by the name of the Mercurian Club, founded in 1771 by Fisher Ames" and
others, and "that these worthy Founders went upon the same noble principle in
founding their Club which is set forth in our Preamble," therefore the two clubs
were united with great formality under the old name of The Speaking Club.
342
THE INSTITUTE OF 1770.
During the years 1778- the records are wanting, but there is a
that the Society was maintained in secret by the Senior classes. Thi
this early history there was much taking of oaths not to disclose the
the Society, "or even that there is such an one subsisting." This secr
to have been the fact that the Society was organized for the practice of
and in 1801 it seems to have occurred to the members that the name
ing Club" might suggest the mysterious purpose of their meetings
actuated," as they write, "by the benevolent purpose to transmit this
secret unimpaired as a blessing to posterity," they changed the dangerou
to that of Patriotic Association." It subsequently assumed the name
Social Fraternity of 1770." In 1825 two more of its rivals, the Herm
ciety" and the "ArpuBoroyounevor," combined with the "Social Fraternity
enlarged Society took the name of 'The Institute of 1770." Still later
the I. O. H., another club of the same nature, followed the lead of it
and surrendered to the Institute, leaving it alone in its field until
since. In 1837 the seal was designed by Rev. Samuel Longfellow, the
Sophomore year.
The Institute was originally a Senior society. In 1781, "the Senior
being obliged to pay a more strict attention to their Collegiate Exercise
Duties of this Club would permit," resigned it to the Junior class. Late
processes of degeneration, Sophomores, and even promising Freshmen, wen
Tradition has at last hallowed the maintenance of the Society by Sopt
choosing at the end of their year ten Freshmen who in turn elect. their dH
As early as 1782 a Valedictory Oration was made a regular annual
and it is still continued, with the addition of a Poem. The library
ciety has always been much used, has grown to be of very consider
and receives additions from the fund of each class at the end of
active membership. It was kept at No. 2 Holworthy Hall, which room
pied free of rent by the Librarian, who was elected at the end of his
year, and held the office during his Junior year. The Society has
meetings, in the rooms of its members, in Nos. 17 and 19 Massachi
and in the lower and upper stories of the same building, until in
the present rooms in Holyoke House, to which the library has been
were obtained and fitted up by the Class of 1875. The Institute
among the older College societies with a marked and creditable distr
is the only one whose members, from a distant beginning, have de
selves to the definite purpose of declamation, composition, and
have not lost sight of or neglected this purpose, either from lac
in it or from love of more social entertainment. The traditions of
needs of the present, and the inspiration of new competitors, all
this original purpose alike clear and profitable.
THE BOTANIC GARDEN.
FOUNDATION OF THE GARDEN. - WILLIAM DANDRIDGE PECK CHOSEN PROFESSOR. - GIFT OF MR.
CRAIGIE. - LACK OF FUNDS. - MR. THOMAS NUTTALL'S RESIDENCE AT THE GARDEN. - DR. ASA
GRAY APPOINTED TO THE FISHER PROFESSORSHIP IN 1842. - PRESENT CONSERVATORY BUILT IN
1857. - HERBARIUM BUILDING ERECTED IN 1864. - INCOME FOR THE SUPPORT OF THE GARDEN.
- COMPLETION OF THE PRESENT ESTABLISHMENT IN 1871.
THE Botanic Garden, along with the Massachusetts Professorship of Natural
History to which it was attached, was founded in the year 1805. It appears
from the records of the Corporation that, on the first day of March of that year,
"a plan for a professorship of Botany and Entomology in the University by a
number of subscribers to a fund for that purpose, was communicated and read "
the proposed statutes and regulations were discussed at subsequent meetings of
the Corporation, and on the 28th of March these statutes were adopted and en-
tered upon the records. William Dandridge Peck was chosen Professor on this
foundation, and on the 14th of May was formally inducted into office, when he
delivered an inaugural oration in English. Afterward," as the record states,
" they sat down to a decent dinner in the Hall."
Dr. Peck must have laid out the Botanic Garden that same year, or soon
after. The next year he went to Europe, to visit the principal gardens, etc., return-
ing, it is to be inferred, in 1808, for in that year a committee of the Corporation
made some regulations for his lectures. The Conservatory built by Dr. Peck
about this time - a "lean-to" structure with stone foundation and brick wall -
served the whole purpose of the establishment until the year 1858, and its foun-
dations and most of the wall form a part of the present structure. There appears
to have been a house for the gardener on the premises. The Professor's house
was finished in 1810. The land for the garden, about seven and a half acres, is
said to have been given by Mr. Craigie. The funds for its formation and sup-
port were raised by subscription, and by a grant from the State of certain wild
lands in Maine, being a portion of the grant made to the Trustees of the Society
for Promoting Agriculture. These Trustees were made the Visitors of the estab-
314
THE BOTANIC GARDEN.
,
lishment, and for many years they took the principal charge of it. What
original funds amounted to cannot now be ascertained. That they were
found to be insufficient appears from an application which the Visitors made
the Corporation in 1810 for a loan of five thousand dollars on interest; from
endeavors (apparently fruitless) to obtain further aid from the State; and from
report made by them in the autumn of 1822, after the death of Professor
Ped
announcing that they could no longer pay the salary of a professor. During
latter half of his incumbency, Professor Peck was unable to lecture or give
struction, owing to a partial paralysis. The chair of the Massachusetts Profes
ship, vacated by his death, was never filled again. The residence was ren
and Mr. Thomas Nuttall, a distinguished English botanist, who had been
several years in the country, was placed in charge of the Garden, and of such
struction in Natural History as was then given. This continued until the win
of 1833-34, when Mr. Nuttall suddenly resigned his curatorship, and made
exploring tour across the continent to Oregon, California, and the Sand
Islands. The Garden remained in the entire charge of William Carter
gardener almost from the beginning. In 1835 - 36 his dwelling-house was
built and enlarged. This worthy man brought with him from Yorkshire a
dency to aspirate his vowels, and he accordingly alarmed the late Mr. Worce
editor of the Dictionary, by informing him that he was going to make the hous
into a hell. The L-shaped house still stands, not in its original position, on Linne
Street, but on Raymond Street, to which it was removed when the former Fine
was widened and made a thoroughfare. Mr. Carter resigned the place he
long and worthily filled in 1847, and died six or seven years afterwards.
After Mr. Nuttall's departure, some botanical instruction was annually
by Dr. Harris, the University Librarian, or by Dr. A. A. Gould of Boston
the year 1842 - 43, when Dr. Asa Gray was appointed Fisher Professor of
ral History, upon an endowment made by a legacy of the late Dr. Fisher
Beverly.
In the year 1848, a study was added to the Professor's house, which conta
his herbarium, and was used more or less for botanical instruction. In 1857
present Conservatory was built, at a cost of nearly four thousand dollars; hal
which was defrayed by a gift from the trustees of the Dowse estate, the rema
der by private donations, supplemented by a grant from the Corporation of
University.
In 1862, the invested funds of the Garden, having become reduced to belo
twelve thousand dollars, were temporarily replenished by a subscription raised
the late Dr. Hayward, a member of the Corporation, yielding fifteen hundred
lars a year for three years.
In 1864, the Herbarium building was erected, at a cost (including some
THE BOTANIC GARDEN.
315
additions to the interior) of fifteen thousand dollars. This was the gift of Na-
thaniel Thayer, since a member of the Corporation. The Herbarium and the
Botanical Library of the Professor, which it was built to receive, were at that time
presented by him to the University, and a fund of over ten thousand dollars,
raised by subscription, was collected for the support of the establishment.
In 1866 - 67, the Professor collected by subscription seventeen thousand dol-
lars, the gentleman who built the Herbarium contributing five thousand dollars
of it, to replenish the funds of the Garden. From that time to the present the
income for the support of the Garden, from all sources, has amounted to about four
thousand dollars, one third of which is the annual gift of an anonymous donor.
Finally, in 1871, the present establishment was completed by the construction
and fitting up of a lecture-room, laboratory, and an extension of the Conservatory,
thus connecting the Herbarium on one side with the Conservatory on the other
into a continuous range, and affording the means of giving the whole botanical
instruction throughout the year at the Botanic Garden in connection with the
materials and collections which illustrate it. This important addition was at an
expense of about sixteen thousand dollars, which was defrayed by another anony-
mous donor.
The Botanic Garden was in charge of Professor Gray from 1842 - 1873, since
which time it has been under the superintendence of C. S. Sargent, A. M.,
Curator of the Arnold Arboretum.
Page 1 of 1
Ronald Epp
From:
"Oxford University Archives"
To:
"Ronald Epp"
Sent:
Thursday, January 02, 2003 7:38 AM
Subject:
re: Alumnus Query
Dear Dr Epp
The Information Officer has forwarded your enquiry to the University Archives.
Postgraduate studies in the modern sense did not really begin in Oxford until
1895, when the degrees of BLitt and BSc were established, although individuals
did of course carry out research before then.
I have looked in Joseph Foster's 'Alumni Oxonienses 1715-1886', a printed
register of all members of the University between those dates, but have found
no reference to George Bucknam Dorr; this indicates that he did not matriculate
here. If he was carrying out research in Oxford without matriculating (ie being
formally admitted to the University), there would be no record of him in the
University Archives. If he was admitted as an external reader in the Bodleian
Library, the Library's own records may contain relevant information; enquiries
about this should be made to Mr Steven Tomlinson at the Library
(srt@bodley.ox.ac.uk).
Yours sincerely
Simon Bailey
Keeper of the Archives
Oxford University Archives,
Bodleian Library,
Oxford OX1 3BG, UK
tel: +44 (0) 1865 277145
fax: +44 (0) 1865 277182
1/2/2003
Page 1 of 2
Ronald Epp
From:
"Steven Tomlinson"
To:
"Ronald Epp"
Cc:
Sent:
Friday, January 03, 2003 9:58 AM
Subject:
Library Records
Dear Dr Epp
The Bodleian's records of admissions of readers for the period 1875-85 are
complete and I have looked through everything for these years. I am afraid
that there is no record that a George Bucknam Dorr was admitted to the
Library during this time. I am sorry not to have been able to give a
positive reply.
Yours sincerely
Steven Tomlinson
Department of Special Collections
and Western Manuscripts
Bodleian Library
Oxford OX1 3BG
On Thu, 2 Jan 2003 07:57:00 -0500 Ronald Epp wrote:
> Dear Mr. Tomlinson:
> Archivist Simon Bailey referred me to you to address the following issue.
>
> In preparing an intellectual biography of Harvard alum (class of 1874) George Bucknam Dorr
(1853-1944), founder of Acadia National Park, there are popularizations which claim that Mr. Dorr
studied at Oxford in the 1875-1885 period.
> Mr. Bailey cannot find evidence that he matriculated at Oxford but infers that he might have been
engaged in research. If so, do the Bodelian Library records contain any indication of Mr. Dorr's
application as an external reader during this decade?
> I appreciate any assistance that you could provide. Thank you!
>
> Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
> Director of the Harry & Gertrude Shapiro Library
> Southern New Hampshire University
> 2500 North River Road
> Manchester, NH 03106-1045
> USA
> 603-668-2211. ext. 2164
> 603-645-9685 (fax)
1/3/2003
9
Monday night, Doo. 19, 1938.
(note to typist; insert year date in this and similar
beginnings hereafter.)
When Edward Dorr demo out the times were changing. The
intense religious spirit of the early Puritan days is rich,
God's presence seemed so near and his ordering SO direct.
This feeling was giving way to a more normal state, although
the prinoiples remained the same. My father had read to me
already as a child John Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress. When
I rebelled, as I remember woll, when the two pilgrims are
oast into the dungoon of Giant Despair, I would then hear
no more, though my father told me they had gotten safely out;
and itwas not until I could read myself that I followed them
further one It was all very real to me and became an allegory
only much later on. There were some excellent steel engravings
in the oopy that I had and in the old ones that oame down to me
from a generation earlier and one picture that I reoall
especially showed Christian and his comptions, two pilgrims with
the..r staffs in hand, first behond, as yet far off and high, the
Heavenly City, with its towers and ramparts all bathed in
glorious light.
2.
And imagine I was nearer to the true spirit of my
Pilgrim forbears in receiving it all as simple fact, true
narrativo of a true experience, than anyone can be today,
looking on it as an allegory. And 80 it was to Bunyan, too,
no doubt, who raised no question as to how it came about or on
what evidence it rested. He needed none and therein lay his
faith.
mt was not to be argued about; it simply was. And
such is the history of all whohave had great faith, whatever
their religion or their creed, who have felt God's presence.
But to return to Edward Dorr and his time. From
genoration to generation the change was rapid. It needed
but the span of a few long lives to bring men's outlook to my
own times in which so great a change has o ome about that I
can only look at it with wonder. Two lives as long as mine
is n ow would span the change, with Equi its opening on the new
universe of which we know rather what is not than we do what
is.
LONDON TIMES as revised from Dictaphone article,
September 19, 1938.
Always when we were abroad and wherever we might
be, the London Times followed us, my father reading
it with constant interest.
It was altogether the
best newspaper in the world at that time, broad in
its outlook, judicial in its tone and all-inclusive,
in the subjects it took up, whether of the sciences,
politics or literature, and reporting and commenting
upon interesting law cases.
Generally my father
allowed me, partly that we might discuss what we
read together and partly because I still was limited
in the use I could make of my eyes, to read it with
him.
To read it is this way was an education in
itself and since he died I have continued reading
daily the best newspapers I could get -- generally,
in America, the New York Times and some Boston or
Maine newspaper 8.8 well.
DICT 1
Thursday evening
DEC 5-1938
It was a pleasant part of England that my
father's people came from, lying warm to the sun,
good ground to cultivate or
graze
cattle
and sheep upon, and warmed in the cold of winter
by the Gulf Stream which bathed its shores and it
was historic beyond any other region in the kingdom,
for it was on its shore that the invaders landed
who ruled successively the kingdom, the Romans,
the Saxons and the Normans.
And against which
the effects of yet two more invasions failed in the
time of the Armaea and the first Napoleon.
The Downs as good grazing land devoid of Lf/enemy-
concealing trees were the site of fortresses built
of earthworks of unknown early date which are among
the earliest and most interesting remains in England
while Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain, nearby, tells
of the old Druid of whose religious faith so little
has come down to us, being entrusted to the memory
of men and perished with them.
One of the strangest things in man is his love
of ####/ rhythm which seems to have no useful purpose
but to be inherent in man's nature, as it is in birds
and probably, undevel ped, in all higher life. And so
it was that the men of old, whether Celts or the
early Greeks, the religious doctrine! they
english
held SO precious and important, allied to magic spells
controlling the natural forces which, in analagy to
themselves, they believed alive with personality and
consciousness.
Dorset and Dorchester, the Saxon settlement and
the Roman Camp, was a region of special interest to
us as the home whence in family tradition our first
Dorr ancestor in America had come, though he actually
###1 sailed out from Devonshire as one of a group
banded together to seek new opportunity across the sea.
Suxxex, the land of the south Saxons, as Middlessex and
Essex, the latter the land of the East Saxons, a land
made famous by Thomas Hardy a generation later, was a
land of intere t to us.
These were lands of chalk
down and gentle streams where much fierce fighting had
been done, no doubt, in early days but quiet and peaceful
now.
How was it that the new doctrines of the Puritan
period took such hold in so conservative a land?
It was
not economic; it seemed to have been purely doctrinal.
ism.
It was a revoke from the pride and luxury of eccleseastical
It was a time when the presence of God among men seemed
very
immanent.
He was every present with
them and, being men of acute reasoning and ### deep
3.
earnestness, they argued, wrote and preached,
confident of their reasoning and curiously
unquestioning of fundemental facts 0 upon which
it was based.
They came to America to be free
but not to win freedom for others than themselves,
who differed from them. So stumbling upon ancient
rocks of controversy, old as the thought of man, they
flipped into many groups of various doctrine when they
had put
OF
A
Sater
Wednesday evening
December 21, 1938.
That summor in England in 1875 marks for me,as, I look
back on it, the entrance on lines of thought and interest
which have stayed with me always, shaping my future life.
That is why I dwell upon it so fully. For they are as
strong upon me today as they were then, the source of
accomplishment and the source of failure.
The search after the home a of my Puritan ancestors
brought up to me the whole problem of what they believed and
Port
why, which led us from th at time on to much reading and much
study. The quest after what wasbeautiful or interesting in the
lands they came from, its life and scenery, its trees and pleasure
gardens, left an impresa on me whose outooms has been
Acadia Nat1 nal Park. This I shall leave behind,
accompanied with the regret that it should be no more, as
I would gladly ha ve made it if I could. But one has to
feel one's way through life, not seeing clearly even in
retrospect.
When I returned to Rome that winter with my father and
mother it was with a mind full of new impressions and questions
that I wished to solve; and I took back with me from
England books that fully occupied my time that winter
Diotaphone 1 December 26, 1938.
7.
Totake n
Our summer in 1875 in England was a very
happy one. We did what we set out to do, searching
out -- my father and I -- the homes. of town and
countryside whence his ancestors and mine had come;
searching out the beautiful manor houses and gardens
for which England was still famous in those days;
visiting the rivers, lakes and regions famous in
English prose and verse; and searching out the ruined
abbeys of the land telling pleasantly of its former
beauty, and visiting its great cathedrals of the Gothic
period. From first to last, our summer had been full
of interesting and beautiful sights and leaving us with
memories we were never to lose of the most varied character
and deepest human interest. It is rare that one can say as
much of any period in / one's life, and it was
only because of we were so much in sympathy and shared
so largely in a common background of reading and, for
desires and
my father and mother, of/interests long postponed that
it was possible. One must travel with others, and with
others thoroughly sympathetic with ourselves to get the
full value and enjoyment out of travel. One must share
in order to appreciate, and the people one can share with
happily are few.
it
4
Tuesday evening.
December 20, 1938
The we spent together in England in 1875,
following what had gone before, oka written of SO fully
because of what they led to in my later lifo which had
bearing upon lines of work and study reaching out beyond
the confines of myself. My father's generation was the first,
I feel as I look back, fairly to get away from the narrowness
and limitations of the Puritan do otrine which, intheir tuen,
had been 80 great and bold a breaking away from the luxury
and pride that had preceded them. Until Iwent abroad the
year before, I had given but little thought to matters of
the kind. I now began to read and study, searching for an
answore to the questions that kept crowding upon me. This
study has not ended yet a nd ne ver will; it 1108 beyond
the bounds of human knowledge. Equally, delighting in
in movement
activity and
I had given little thought to
the deeper implications involved in what I saw. History,
philosophy and religion; motives and the meaning of it all
now opened new perspectives up before me, thinking for myself
as I have always done, unhindered by others' attitudes whether
of faith or skepticism.
onrollrionbooks upon philosophy for which I had & strong
natural bent and books on art, ant in every field save
Which
music, for/1 have no natural gift.
Thursday evening Dec. 14.
Cyl 1
The tracing out of these and others of my
father's descent leading directly back to the very
the
C1875.
heart of-kis Puritan development in but a few well
remembered generations gave us a source of greatest
interest not only that summer but afterwards, in
England and at home.
The whole Puritan movement
sprend itself out before me as I studied its development
and traced back its source in the pictures of the
past it drew for me. In England the whole lay spread out
before me so far as record is left to tell of it.
The Druids and the Celts, the Romans with their unhappily
transplanted gods and goddesses of the Mediterannean
the
its
basin, XXXK growth$ of early Christianity with the fervent
missionary zeal , the growing spelndor of the architecture
which sprang from it in the middle ages
, , the lots of the
spiritual in the wealth and corruption that followed
1
the reaction to Puritanism which came efter it, noble and
temperate in its origin with Wycliffe
and Johann
Huss and the narrow but sincere and hone t doctrine of the
Puritan church, as ready SS the earliest Missionaries
to suffer and parish for their sake, it all combined
in my mind to form a great historic drama, telling
of man's fundenmental ignorance of the world about him of his
spiritual longings and indolity to hold fast to them.
Dictaphone of Friday evening, December 9, 1938.
To read 21 5
(1875)
ture
Dict-5
That summer in England with its leisurely quest
after old family homes and records of the time and people,
its visits to the sites and ruins of the great abbeys
which in their prime had been so striking a feature of the
land from Cumberland to the Severn and the Wye, and the
beautiful gardens and ###1###/zanor houses which courtesy
made open tc us was a period which I look back to now as
one of the pleasantest of my life. Less old than the
European basin and the Mediterrsnean basin in the times
it recalled, it was replete with interest from the beginning
on and the subject of a rich literature that broucht its
period back to us in living figures from King Alfred on
and the impressions that it left, of noble erclitecture,
beautiful gardens and quiet flowing streams have been a
fruitful memory and source of pleasure ever since, influencing
my life. And it added greatly to my pleasure and profit in
the literature I later read telling of the English people
I had come from and the lands where they had lived. The
place names, so largely transported to New England by the
early settlers, were a constant source of interest to me
as we travelled through the land, revealing in the Roman and
Saxon times the forgotten presence of things not elsewhere
told.
(December (9)
21
5,1875
The Roman occupation was told of everywhere throughout
the kingdom by the placing of the Roman campf, as I have else-
where told, and it was interesting to see how well selected
these had been, for nearly all of them apparently became
the persistent site of cities, and are so today. They were
mainly upon rivers, accessible to the low-draft ressels
of their day, propelled by oars but by sails
also if the winds were favorable. There were many things
I would have liked to ask had the shade of a Roman senturian
been present as it was to the children in Kipling's tale.
But the discovery of a watting streetand its branches
extending through every major portion of the kingdom was
a great find, and so was its temple ruins at Bath, telling
how here too as everywhere they went baths and springs were
to the Romans a source of pleasure and a source of health --
one would like to know more about them. Once one begins
to ask questions, there is no end.
The Saxon period, again, registered itself well in
names but in folk names especially, not towns and cities.
Norfolk and Suffolk are such ol ay about their landing
places where they entered at first to raid but soon to
conquer and occupy. so, too, with the settlement, or csets:
Dorset, Somerset and the like, or the settlement of the Saxons
in Essex, Wessex, Sussex and the like -- all ground replete
with history if one did but know it. And so are the laws and
toms which they brought in. They, like the language
y spoke, go back undoubtedly for thousands of years
a time when the Aryan tongue was developing in as
mon center.
Dict first
Saturday December 3.
A Is
Leaving York we passed on into the region
known as the Dukeries for the many estates and
1875
ancient manor houses that lay therein, the home
of wealthy noblemen, and very wealthy some of them
were at that time when wealth was counted in broad
acreage of cultible land and an the villages and towns
that lay upon it, paying rent.
Some of them also
had great coal mines, unsuspected sources of great
revenue until the industrial age began, where KORKEX
anx flocks and herds had grazed, wheat grown as forests
of trees had flourished yielding but moderate
revenues in earlyer times.
It was an
age of great inequality, but SO providence brdained
it it was felt and must be right. It was the England
me Dave
depicted in Jane Austen's novels which my mother delighted
in and made me familiar with that summer as we travelled
on in easy fashion, visiting gardens and galleries and
reading much besides in the delightful Tauschnitz
editions that were so inexpensive to buy, so lightly
corried and of excellent print withal.
And all the
time my father and I had our own ancestors in mind,
searthing out tleir homes and the homes from which
our New England people had come, leaving so much that
was dear to them behind for the sake of a religious
principal which raised them, wrong as that principal
was we feel today, so high above their hard lot and
earthly fortune.
Back of our New England ancestors with their
tremendous earnesty we realized as we travelled through
the English countryside that summer that other great
development of the scirit that WES Christ which reared
such noble temples to God's presence in the world
as the great Cathedrals and the once great monestary
whose ruins we were searching out and which had been
so real also in its earlier day and worshipped in
such beauty.
These were two great phases of
the human spirit, both crude yet both in their time
intensely real.
These were not two people's; they
were both our ancestors and, whatever the material
universe may be, were itx possible to search it out,
both truly exhibiting in its own measure some phase of
the human spirit which is one vi th the Divine.
All
in all, we had a wonderful summer, rich in interest and
rich in the beauty which it showed us.
And it was
richer than I any year I had before in the thought it
gave rise to and the intimate companionship we had together.
It was a long possession which passed before us
as we travelled on, of Romans told of by their camp
name scattered through the land, generally
disguised by the water that they bordered, precious to
Italian Eyes or by a solidly constructed bit of Roman
road or by the sunken pavement of a Roman villa or,
as at Bath, the ruins of a temple to the Scotch
fragmentary reminders of a lifelong past once vivid
as our own; of Saxon invaders and their racial kindred
of the north 11.
16
Embrdrid now
1938
(gan 20'39
Sunday, Dec. 18. Cyl 1
in other)
Fresh beginning
That summer I came to know my England, the England of
my Puritan forefathers ,as thoroughly as one well could, who
was born two centuries and more later, the land they
cultivated and the ports they sailed from. And I was laying
the foundation for a life-long interest in the political
and religious movements of their time. All interested me as
it did my father and I acquired a great interest, too, in the
time of the ruined abbeys and the
side of life they told
of in contrast to what one read in history of wares andodrime.
It is a great thing to explore a region thoroughly as we did
that summer and were to do again less extensively in la ter
years.
That autumn my father returned to America for a few weeks
while my mother and I went down to Devonshire, whose
northern coast., with its high cliffs and moors, which we
added to our , and the south coast at Exeter with it's old
cathedral church and quaint old neighboring towns. Then
we
returned to London to wait for my father and then followed
the traok of the Romans south,down to the Rhone Valley and over
the high, Corniohe road by Driving, with its pale blue sea
seenthrough pale green olive trees of high-terraced gardens and
80 on to Rome to our old ro oms at the Costanzi, where we spent
2.
the winter. My mother wanted another winter's work with Gio-
vanni Costa, in his studio where again sh e had Gaorge Howard
for companion, their companionship ripening into a friendship
which was to remain through life.
We had laid in a store of books on leaving London and
read much that winter, having many friends inRome besides,
which gave it a homelike aspect I have never felt elsewhere
away from home;
1876
1
Charles Hazen Dorr Family Correspondence with
George and Rosalind Howard, 9th Earl of Carlisle
7.
Sep 13, [1876]
Paris
Hotel du Jardin
My dear Mrs Howard
Signed Mary Gray Ward Dorr
"We have just arrived here on our way up from Switzerland and are detained here for two or three
days on business.
We shall go over to London very soon for a few days as George must see his oculist. but I am
more than sorry to say that we cannot come to Naworth in time to see you before you leave on the 20th.
Mr Dorr has just received news of the sudden death of his brother, much older than himself, and
the head of the family. [The deceased is the namesake of their son, George Bucknam Dorr (died
September 3, 1876 at 70 years of age); within four months, Charles Dorr lost his eldest of two children
and a brother] His loss is not only a sorrow to Mr Dorr, but it deserves a good deal of care and
responsibility upon him - and he will be obliged to go at once to America for some weeks
and
this
forced a change in our plans."
Tr.* Mary Dorr relies on the "crumbs of her faith, [knowing] that she will not experience 'clear light'
until she has crossed the 'shining river." She asks Rosalind to pardon her for her self-absorption for there
are "very few" to whom she could speak with such freedom.
"
I am doing the best I can to mend up my broken life but every day I realize more and more fully that
it is a broken life - broken beyond all cure. So far as this life is concerned. Surely such great capacity
of
loving and of suffering as the human soul possesses must mean a great deal somewhere in our own
true home - and it becomes to me more and more clearly that [that] somewhere is our true home, and the
goal of all our being and that we are here only for our preparation and our for that higher and better life
- I cannot but feel too more and more that SO far from being mere waifs and strays floating about hither
and thither at the mercy of a blind chance we are really directly in God's hand and under his immediate
providence.
"
Tr. "We shall probably go to Holland & Belgium after Mr. Dorr sails. Then to Paris to await his return.
We will stay abroad another year."
* Tr. = Transcription provided by R.H. Epp; others by Anna Louise Mason
14.
Sep 29, [ 1876]
Paris
Hotel Brighton
Glenstone
Tuesday evening Dec 13.
Returning from a brief trip to America, my father took
the train from Liverpool to London which ran through, expr sss,
with but a single stop upon the way, at Chester.
My father
left Liverpool in an else empty coach.
At Chester another
gentleman got in and settled down to read his newspaper.
Pres ntly, that done, he entered into conversation with my
father and finding he had just comc over from New York, asked
him some questions bearing on the political situation there.
My father always took great interest in such matters from
a broad standpoint, and they had a long and interesting
talk together on matters american and English which lasted till
they came to London.
My father's fellow traveler it then
tunrned out, was Mr. Gladstone then at the height of his
political career
My father took much interest in this
chance meetng and opportunity for talk. He never had met
Gladstone before nor did he ever see him afterwar s, but he
bore him in high regard for his high humanity and broad, liberal
views, and looked back upon the meeting with great interest.
For his opponent Disraeli, he had slight regard, and I no more.
Now, as then, it is it is hard for mc to realize how a Jew
of his type could have been accepted by the English noblcmen
a conservative party, as their leader, or how Queen Victoria
ocould have looked on him with favor and given him her intimacy
and support.
2.
Wherever he went while we were abroad, then and later,
the London Times followed us in it 8 daily edition,
my father reading it always , even to its reports on law cases
tried in court, and its book reviews, letters from corre pondents
and reports of travelers
It even followed us
to America after our last trip together, when we went up the
Nile, and I have still some unopened copies left of the last
issues that c 2 m o out to us following his death.
Left-alone
After my father died, I read the Boston Horald
then ably editied by my friend, Robert Lincoln O'Brien,
but when he resigned his post on it, I subscribed to the New York
Times, which followed me in turn wherever I was or went.
These three newspapers have been to me a great political education
the best the world could give, following daily its events and
their comments on them, but forming my own opinion from
occasionally their editorials.
Sucn newspapers C.S these reflect
the movement of the world. and are better than books, such-
except histories if one must choose between them , but it is only
a few newspapers that one can read in such fashion and get value
from and they are not for the multitude.
Dict
nor. 23
1938
Lust 18
Wednesday Evening
This quest after the homes of his ancestors
and reading of the time in which they lived in
charge
which my father took keen interest opened up before
me an understanding and intimate vision of the past
which has stayed by me always.
It is of such that
real history is made, not the wars and cruelties and
dynastic changes that are given U.S SO commonly but
the lives and conditions of individual men, their
thoughts and feelings.
And intermingled with this
was the interest of scenery% in a land with a far
background of several occupation.
Roman, and Celtic,
Saxon and Norman, all making their separate contri-
bution toward the time we live in, and in turn are
formed by.
History in the one form is looking at people
collectively as they are grouped in nations or tribes;
they are not real but abstractions of the mind.
In the
other sense, the personal sense they are individual and
real endowed with 77th life and feeling, like to our-
selves.
And it is only by living with people in such
guise that we really know them.
This is the
of history that interested me, bringing back the
people of the past to life.
That is what my
father and myself sought to do with our ancestors
and succeeded in doing to some slight degree.
But
it
the world was very different to them from what/is
to us 6
It was all very real and simple; they had
no conception, near to us as they are in generation
and in point of time, of the universe we know, and
with our knowledge of it, it has become impossible
to see things with their eyes, though we may feel
with them with that sympathy which makes all life
akin as it rises to our level or we to its.
In
trying to do this we learned a lot , both of them
and of ourselves.
It is extraordinary how swift
the change has been in the outlook of thoughtful
men, for whom the new discoveries of science have
created a new world while yet making nothing clear.
The advance is largely negative; we know, as our
Puritan & ancestors did not that much they believed
drew
in and formed a picture of the universe they new for
themselves cannot be, but we do know what is, except
that it is not that.
And in some ways they dream
more greatly than we now can, and so it was that they
created the great structures that they did, temples
of worship to the living God.
But yet perhaps not
which
more greatly than we shall, the world
is to come.
8
D 1ctaphone, Thursday evening, December 22, 1938.
Those years of intimate companionship abroad
with my father and my mother, moving quietly about from
place to place of interest or beauty as the spirit
prompted, reading much and thinking much, were among
the richest of my life and laid the foundation deep
for
future
growth
and study. That is the reason why my memory now turns
back to them with 80 much particularity. My father
was what Chaucer would have calle d 'a verra parfait
gentleman, with constant thought for others, broad
human interests, and no thought for self, though
full of the capacity for great enjoyment in all things
beautiful and good. No lived together constantly as
we travelled on, in the humours of the moment, in our
appreciation and the thoughtsour travel roused.
My mother was of a very different nature, not
Mary
given as I to argument and reason nor patient of them,
but arriving straight at her conclusions by passages
of intuition all alone. This was not due 80 much to
the fact that she was a woman as to inheritance, in
which the artistic strain was strong and the warm
interest in human life. In this she was remarkable;
people came to her always for sympathy and help in
their times of trouble for she was strong to lean upon.
with
2.
But we all three had great reserves, even from each
other, and lived our own lives out, not readily
opening ourselves out to others.
The period I was born into was one of extra-
ordinary development in scientific thought, as that of
the generation which had gone before me was in its
breaking away from old religious views and dogmas.
This last had led my grandfather to Unitarism
my
grandfather on my mother's side, to his father's great
concern. But behind the of that time lay the
attitude of an earlier period **** which accepted all on
face and did not question. The lack of warmth and colour
had led my mother at the time when I was born to join the
Episcopal Church, but this with her was a matter of feeling,
not logical conviction. All that was spiritual, leaving
dogma apart, aroused her deepest interest; for the
spiritual was to her breath of life, and had been always
from girlhood on. My father needed, truly, none to tell
him what was xtp right or wrong in spiritual matters;
he did the right intuitively, needing no instruction.
And I think he made no attempt to solve the insoluble
in regard to God's presence in the world
12.
Dict. 12
Sunday
gyl page/
This search after my father's English ancestors,
all of them whether ministers or not, belonging to the
C1875
Puritan fold, material for which my father had brought out
from home, proved of the greatest interest to both of us ,
taking us into towns and places we should not have otherwsie
have visited and giving us real insi cht into the England
of our origin. My mother is greater interest lay in the
London galleries and their famous pictures and the famous
old country seats with their gardens and their pictures,
left open to the p blic on certain days and hours, upon payment
of a fee to the housekeeper or guide appointed to show people
In
over and- who took interest enough to come./ this too,
the gardens especially, I took myself the greatest interest;
and the memory of them , seen then or in later years,visit
and
to the English countryside, led directly on upon our return to
Mt. Desert
America to the building of our old home at MKXXXEXXX and the
oidform.
establishement (bring to me to fit in if necessary)
of the first true pleasure garden on Mt. Deart Island and,
on
so far/ as I know, XMX the whole Acadian shore from the
Penboscto east, -- and a beautiful garden, too, it was with
its flowers of the olden type and bedding plants only to
fill in the caps in the later summer when the earlier
bl omin- porennia S had donc their serson's work of insect
life attraction through color, form on/ fragrance, and were
ripening their seeds.
Sropt
Credits English gailen visits with
Cyl 2 page 2
grness of anp. born out of
a necessity, a menification f fate?
We were astonished as we visited these old manor houses,
to find how many of them there- were built on the site of
courtiers and
the ru red abbeys suppressed and given to his followers
by Henry the Eight. But for the interest we took that summer
and afterwards in those beautiful old English gardnes and the
remnants of the old English
I visited with my father, the
work I later did at home would never have been done nor
Acadia National Park become into existence. It. has been a
matter of great interest to me all through the later years to
see how , in little things as in creat, one thing leads
on
to another as directly s though willed by fate, free
in themselves as our wills are, to determine what we do.
The monks of old
chose well the sites where they
built their homes, in the most favored regions of the English
countryside, their wealth and prosperity depending upon the
crops their tenants raised. They were a burden on the
land but no more than were the nobles and courtiers who
followed them and who were far worse in wasting what the
labor of the peasantry brought in, and they were in their
time undoubtedly a much-needed refuge from the constant
warfare of the period, the turanny and wastefulness of the
court. In profession as in deed they upheld the spiritual side of
life, its cultural and intellectual 8S ct throug the whole last
period of the middle ages
Between the
and king there was ct
that time but little to choose, but among the monks and nuns,
the abbots and abbesses devoted to
Tuesday evening, May 16, 1939.
The father of Admiral Mahan, famous a generation
Exter for the books ho wrote on the influence of Navios on XYP
world affairs, which were much widely road and discussed on
both dides the Atlantic, Those books are In my Oldfarm library
and have givenintening to the speotacio whon I havo watched from
Lto porob the American and British squadrons, sometimes together,
amottimos Apart oomo steaming into Fronohmans Bay or leaving it.
Professor Mohandaded at West Point three and a
half years later In the winton of 1871-172, and my rather
wrote to his widow, asking 1£ she would be aoll to him at her
own price lands that she and her husband had bought at Mount
Desert, and she sold them.
In 1875, when we were planning to build the
following year at Oldfarm, returning from Europem my father
purchased from Mr. Lothrop hho share he had taken in the land
first bought, completing his ownership of the original Henry
Higgins! traot, whose deed from the DeGregoires is in the Oldfarm
title.
(877
THE LIFE AND THOUGHT OF JOSIAH ROYCE John Clendering
Vanderbilt is P., 1999.
Youth and Education, 1870-1878
decrees," she says, "are not an affair of today or of yesterday, but they endure
the German language. Considering his poverty, it seems unlikely that he could
60
forever, and no man knows whence they spring." Those in the audience who
have afforded a private tutor; furthermore, since the university offered free
61
had read Royce's thesis on Aeschylus might have been reminded of it as they
classes in German, the expense of private lessons would have been unnecessary.
listened to the young man retell the myth of Antigone. Once again he was deal-
Of course it is possible that he had learned German through independent study.
ing with a triangular relationship that poses a conflict between human rebel-
His undergraduate thesis does contain references to German scholarship, but
lion and overbearing power, a conflict that is mediated by an appeal to a higher
except for a title or two, he seems to have used only materials available in
ideal. Eventually Royce would name this triad the community of interpreta-
English translations. It seems odd, but not uncharacteristic, that Royce
tion. The passage from Sophocles, Royce believed, expresses a picty that tran-
embarked for a year's study in the German universities with no more than a very
scends considerations of expedience, finite duty, and decorum. But can such a
imperfect grasp of the language.
defiant piety, Royce asked, be still relevant today? Or have science and
At any rate he left California early in July and was in New York by the
advanced social thought eliminated the possibility of idealism? One must
eleventh. Gilman himself had just sailed for Europe to gather ideas and faculty
agree, he admitted, that much of what we call morality has been socially con-
for Johns Hopkins, but before leaving he had taken care to provide Royce with
ditioned by changing circumstances. But refusing to acquiesce entirely to rel-
letters of introduction to influential men in the East. One of those letters intro-
ativism, he insisted that there remains a portion of morality "which is our
duced him to George Dorr, a wealthy young man, only two years older than
property by virtue of our humanity." Like Antigone, we may not know the
Royce, and a member of Boston's elite social class. With Dorr's help Royce
source of this morality, but we feel it. "This part of our nature is independent
toured the Boston and Harvard libraries. Dorr also arranged a dinner party with
of circumstances, and because it is the result of a higher and wider experience,
leading intellectuals of Boston and Cambridge, including William James and
it is to be obeyed."
George Herbert Palmer. Royce arrived at Dorr's home early, wearing a thread-
bare suit, the only one he owned. Dorr met him in full evening dress, took one
look, and said, "Royce, I think you are right; it's too hot for formal clothes this
Graduate Years
evening. If you will excuse me, I'll run upstairs and change." Aside from his
clothes, Royce must have presented a strange appearance. His passport, lack-
The commencement exercises of 1875 made Royce a bachelor of arts, a
ing a photograph, contained a highly unflattering description: age, 19; stature,
degree restricted to those specializing in classics. The twenty-five men who
5' '61"; forehead, full, broad; eyes, blue; nose, short; mouth, large; chin, round;
received degrees on that day brought the university's total number of graduates
hair, red; complexion, florid; face, inclined to oval. Many years later, after they
to an even sixty. The day's festivities were, however, dampened somewhat by the
all had become close friends, Katharine Royce asked William James if Josiah
earlier departure in April of President Gilman. After a brief, stormy, but pro-
had not seemed lawfully backward. "On the contrary," James said, "we talked
ductive administration, Gilman had resigned to become the founding president
afterwards of the charm and delight of his conversation."
of Johns Hopkins. Before leaving and afterward he worked with a group of local
On July 15 Royce sailed from New York on the steamer Klopstock bound for
businessmen in providing a fund to finance what Josiah called his "European
Hamburg. In Germany, following his plan, he proceeded up the Rhine and the
expedition." Like many other American youths in the nineteenth century, Royce
Neckar to the ancient city of Heidelberg. Remaining there for something less
hoped to continue his studies for at least one year in the German universities.
than three months, Royce must have spent most of his time trying to master the
On June 14 he wrote to Gilman saying that he had been promised five hundred
language. Of his first impressions and social life, little is known, but when he
dollars and could expect about one thousand dollars altogether. "I am in good
returned to Heidelberg in 1908 to attend a meeting of the International
health, hopeful, and a graduate of the University. Your influence in getting me
Congress of Philosophy, his mind was filled with loving memories of the uni-
this assistance is going to be the making of my whole life."
versity's traditions, the city's medieval ruins, and its magnificent natural setting.
Although Royce did not know exactly how to use this precious opportunity,
As a student he seems always to have been very busy. He had hoped to increase
he did have initial plans. They included an overland trip to New York, a voyage
his income by writing articles for the Overland Monthly, which had already pub-
by steamer to Hamburg, and a period of study in Heidelberg. He was commit-
lished two of his essays, "The Aim of Poetry" and "The Life-Harmony," but he
ted, at least temporarily, to Germany. If this plan was conventional, it was also
soon found that his university work left him with very little free time. A single
a bold one, for there is no record to indicate that Royce had had any training in
diversion is recorded. Gilman passed through Heidelberg in September. Royce
Vol.
200
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
[1878
Act. 36]
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
201
away the guaranty, and I feel (provided I am überhaupt
opportunities for a life-work in philosophy in this country
in vigorous condition) a sort of deep enthusiastic bliss, of
were few. Most of my friends and advisers had long been
bitter willingness to do and suffer anything, which trans-
telling me to let the subject alone. Perhaps, so far as I
lates itself physically by a kind of stinging pain inside my
was concerned, their advice was sound; but in any case
I
breast-bone (don't smile at this - it is to me an essential
was, so far, incapable of accepting that advice. Yet if some-
element of the whole thing!), and which, although it is a
body had not been ready to tell me that I had a right to work
ere mood or emotion to which I can give no form in words,
for truth in my own way, I should ere long have been quite
authenticates itself to me as the deepest principle of all
discouraged. I do not know what I then could have done.
active and theoretic determination which I possess.
James found me at once - made out what my essential in-
W. ]
terests were at our first interview, accepted me with all my
imperfections, as one of those many souls who ought to be
The next letter contains the first reference to work on
able to find themselves in their own way, gave a patient and
the "Psychology." It also introduces into this volume
willing ear to just my variety of philosophical experience,
the name and personality of a colleague-to-be with whom
and used his influence from that time on, not to win me as
James's relations were destined to be close and permanent.
a follower, but to give me my chance. It was upon his re-
Josiah Royce was then a young man "from the intellec-
sponsibility that I was later led to get my first opportuni-
tual barrens of California" whose brilliant work was still
ties here at Harvard."
to be done, and whose philosophic genius had not yet been
The opportunities did not ripen until 1882-83, however;
disclosed to the public, although it may fairly be said to
and in the meanwhile Royce returned to the young Uni-
have been announced by every line of his engagingly Soc-
versity of California as an instructor in logic and rhetoric.
rates-like face and figure. He had been born and brought
Letters written to him there will show how cordially James
up among the most primitive surroundings in Grass Valley,
continued to sympathize with the aspirations of his young
California, and won his way to a brief period of study in
friend, and how eagerly he fostered the possibility of an
Germany and to a degree at Johns Hopkins in 1878. While
appointment to the Harvard philosophical department.
yet a student there, he paid a visit to Cambridge, and he
When the opportunity arose, James seized it. Thereafter
has left his own quotable record of the meeting which re-
he and Royce saw each other so constantly in Cambridge
sulted, and of what followed.
that there were not many occasions for either to write letters
"My real acquaintance with [James] began one summer-
to the other. Instead, allusions to Royce appear frequently
1877
day in 1877, when I first visited him in [his father's] house
in the letters to other people.
on Quincy Street, and was permitted to pour out my soul
The philosophical club which is alluded to at the end of
to somebody who really seemed to believe that a young man
the letter was presided over by Dr. W. T. Harris and held
might rightfully devote his life to philosophy if he chose. I
informal meetings in Boston during this winter. It was
was then a student at the Johns Hopkins University. The
Harvard Graduates' Magazine, vol. XVIII, p. 631 (June, 1910).
Vol./
202
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
[1879
TO JOSIAH ROYCE
203
Act. 37]
described in the Essay on Davidson. (See Memories and
substance. My sentence, I perceive, has a rather uncom-
Studies, pages 81, 82.) Dr. C. C. Everett, Prof. G. H.
plimentary sound. I meant only to say that you should
Palmer, and Thomas Davidson were among the members.
not be deterred from treating him in your own way from
fear of inadequacy. All his commentators must un-
To Josiah Royce.
doubtedly be inadequate for some time to come; but they
CAMBRIDGE, Feb. 16 [1879].
will all help each other out. He seems to me the wealth-
My DEAR ROYCE,- Your letter was most welcome. I
iest mine of thought I ever met with.
had often found myself wondering how you were getting
With me, save for my eyes, things are jogging along
on, and your wail as the solitary philosopher between Beh-
smoothly. I am writing (very slowly) what may become
rings' Strait and Tierra del Fuego has a grand, lonesome
a text-book of psychology. A proposal from Gilman to
picturesqueness about it. I am sorry your surroundings
teach in Baltimore three months yearly for the next three
are not more mentally congenial. But recollect your ex-
years had to be declined as incompatible with work here.
treme youth and the fact that you are making a living and
I will send you a corrected copy of Harris's journal with
practising yourself in the pedagogic art, überhaupt. You
my article on Space, which was printed without my seeing
might be forced to do something much farther away from
your chosen line, and even then not make a living. I think
the proof.
I suppose you subscribe to "Mind." The only decent
you are a lucky youth even as matters stand. Unexpected
chances are always turning up. A fortnight ago Presi-
thing I have ever written will, I hope, appear in the July
number of that sheet. The delays of publication are fear-
dent Eliot was asked to recommend some one for a $5000
ful. Most of this was written in 1877. If it ever sees the
professorship of philosophy in the New York City College.
light, I hope you will let me know what you think of it,
One Griffin of Amherst was finally appointed. I imagine
and how it tallies with your own theory of the Concept,
that Gilman [of Johns Hopkins] is keeping his eye on you
which latter I would fain swallow and digest. I wish you
and only waiting for the disgrace of youth to fade from your
belonged to our philosophic club here. It is very helpful
person.
to the uprooting of weeds from one's own mind as well as
I liked your article on Schiller very much, and hope you
the detection of beams in one's neighbor's eyes. Write
will send more to Harris. That most villainous of editors,
often and believe me ,faithfully yours,
as I am told, has himself been to Baltimore lately as an office-
WM. JAMES.
seeker. But the rumor may be false. In some respects
he might be a useful man for the Johns Hopkins University,
The only decent thing I have ever written" appeared in Mind under follows: the
but I would give no more for his judgment than for that of
title "This article is the first chapter of a psychological work on the motives which
"The Sentiment of Rationality." A footnote (p. 346) ran as
a Digger Indian. I hope you will write something about
lead men to philosophize. It deals with the purely theoretic or logical impulse.
Hodgson. He is quite as worthy as Kant of supporting
Other chapters treat of practical and emotional motives, and in the conclusion
an attempt is made to use the motives as tests of the soundness of different philos-
any number of parasites and partial assimilators of his
ophies."
Vol.
/
204
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
[1880
Act. 38]
TO JOSIAH ROYCE
205
To Fosiah Royce.
My ignorant prejudice against all Hegelians, except Hegel
CAMBRIDGE, Feb. 3, 1880.
himself, grows wusser and wusser. Their sacerdotal airs!
BELOVED ROYCE!- So far was I from having forgotten
and their sterility! Contemplating their navels and the
you that I had been revolving in my mind, on the very day
syllable oum! My dear friend Palmer, assistant professor
when your letter came, the rhetorical formulas of objurga-
of philosophy here, is already one of the white-winged
tion with which I was to begin a page of inquiries of you:
band, having been made captive by Caird in two summers
whether you were dead and buried or had become an idiot
of vacation in Scotland.
The ineffectiveness and
or were sick or blind or what, that you sent no word of
impotence of the ending of [Caird's] work on Kant seem to
yourself. I am blind as ever, which may excuse my silence.
me simply scandalous, after its pretentious (and able)
First of all Glückwünsche as to your Verlobung! which,
beginning. What do you think of Carveth [Reid]'s Essay
like the true philosopher that you are, you mention paren-
on Shadworth [Hodgson]? I have read it. Our Phil-
thetically and without names, dates, numbers of dollars,
osophic Club here is given up this year - I think we 're all
etc., etc. I think it shows great sense in her, and no small
rather sick of each other's voices. My teaching is small
amount of it in you, whoe'er she be. I have found in mar-
in numbers, though my men are good. I've tried Re-
riage a calm and repose I never knew before, and only wish
nouvier as a text-book - for the last time! His exposition
I had done the thing ten years earlier. I think the lateness
offers too many difficulties. I enjoyed your Rhapsody on
of our usual marriages is a bad thing, and hope your engage-
Space, and hereby pledge myself to buy two copies of your
ment will not last very long.
work ten years hence, and to devote the rest of my life to
It is refreshing to hear your account of philosophic work.
the propagation of its doctrines. I despise my own article,"
I'm sorry you 've given up your article on Hodgson.
which was dashed off for a momentary purpose and published
He is obscure enough, and makes me sometimes wonder
for another. But I don't see why its main doctrine, from
whether the ignotum does not pass itself off for the magnif-
a psychologic and sublunary point of view, is not sound;
ico in his pages. I enclose his photograph as a loan, trust-
and I think I can, if my psychology ever gets writ, set it
ing you will return it soon. I will never write again for
down in decently clear and orderly form. All deducers of
Harris's journal. He refused an article of mine a year ago
space are, I am sure, mythologists. You are, after all, not
"for lack of room," and has postponed the printing of
SO very much isolated in California. We are all isolated
two admirable original articles by T. Davidson and Elliot
columns left alone of a temple once complete," etc.
Cabot for the last ten months or more, in order to accom-
Books are our companions more than men. But I wish
modate Mrs. Channing's verses and Miss 's drivel
nevertheless, and firmly expect, that somehow or other
about the school of Athens, etc., etc. It is too loathsome.
you will get a call East, and within my humble sphere of
Harris has resigned his school position in St. Louis and
power I will do what I can to further that end. My ac-
will, I am told, come East to live. I know not whether
cursed eye-sight balks me always about study and pro-
he means to lay siege to the Johns Hopkins professorship.
The Spatial Quale," Journal of Speculative Philosophy, 1879, vol. XIII, p. 64.
Automatic writing.
Apart from the early delveopments of spiritualism in England
and America in the eighteen forties and on, much interest was taken
when I was a boy in what was called 'automatic writing', and very
5/15
curious things sometimes came from it. After my brother's death
1876
in New York, of a sudden fever while we were in England, my mother
sought, if he still lived in spirit, if she might not get into
communication with him, if only fragmentary and disjointed,
through such writing, my father putting his hand on hers while
she held the pencil. In this way during the following summer
and after much was written which she believed might come from
my brother, neither she nor my father knowing while the penc il wrote
what was coming. Baseless or not, it was a help to my mother
in a time of great need, for her bond with my brother had been
exceedingly close and intimate. Much of the thought that came
in this way, whatever its source was exceedingly interesting,
not only to my mother but to others years afterward to whom she
read it.
This automatic writing lead to hershowing kindness to the
American Secretary of the English Psychical Research Socity, es-
tablished in Boston by the English Society for investigation of
mediums and experimental work.
The English Society stood very
high in its personel and aims. Men like Sir Oliver Lodge, one
Writing =2
of the leading physicists in the world at that time, Sir Arthur
Balfour and his sister, the wife of Professor Henry Sidgwick of
Cambridge University, and other University men all took part in
it, funds were raised and experiments carried on under strict
scientific observation, and annual and semi-annual reports were
published, all of a high grade, and commanding respect. Another
of the world's great physicists, Sir Arthur Crookes, was actively
interested in it and carried on experiments himself, not hesitating
to come forward with his conclusion that there was real matter in
it for careful study and hope of results which, if proven true,
might be of infinite importance to the world. Another leadergin
the formation and work of this society was Frederick Myers, son
of a clergyman in the north of England and a University man
himself and author of high standing. He was brought to it by a
great tragedy in his own life in which some one very dear to him
had died and of whose survival after death, if nothing more, he
hoped to get evidence. Passionately interested and following
up everyclue, he wrote a book 'The Survival of Man', published only
after years of work, in two stout volumes, which is the only really
sound and authoritative work on the subject as a whole which has
ever been published and contains material, well authenticated
which is alike hard to accept and difficult to dis-credit.
The man sent out from England to take up the work in America
Riohard Hodgson, was an Autralian by birth, a recent graduate of
Cambridge University in England who first came into relation with
Automatic
Witing -3
the subject through an extraordinary experience of his own
while he was still at the University, in connection with the
sudden un-looked for death of a girl in Australia whom he was
engaged to when he came out to England. His story of it, told
me in convincing detail when he was staying with us once at
Oldfarm I do not now recall but put it in the category of facts
neither to be explained nor easily to be credited.
Coming into contact with him, as did I. through William
James, himself deeply interested in the work and in close touch
concerning it with the English Society, my mother invited Mr.
Hodgson down to stay with us at Oldfarm where he made long
visits afterward and became intimate with us both, my mother and I.
And through him in 18 we came into intimate relation also with
Frederick Myers on his coming out to America to look up some of
the phenomena Richard Hodgson had made report of to the Society,
Myers coming out to stay with us at Oldfarm for a week or more when
we took, with other friends whom we had staying with us, long
late
walks together and had much intimate talk.
This was in the
1880's
later eighteen eighties. In 1891 my father, mother and I went
abroad for a year to spend the winter on the Nile and the spring
in Palestine and Greece, an exceedingly interesting trip. When
1891
we returned, reaching Boston in the early July 1892, where we
1892 stayed a day or two on our way to Bar Harbor, Richard Hodgson met
us full of certain extraordinary experiences which had developed
that winter and spring in which people we knew, some of them
intimately, came intimately in and which Dr. Hodgeon (to give him
his full academic title) regarded as convincing -definite proof
Automatic
Writing -4
of survival and immediate contact.
Among the people most
intimately concerned were Mrs. Perry, wife of Professor Thomas
Perry- grandson of Commander Perry, ofamous in our Navy annals -
the
and his wife, daughter of one of the leading surgeons of my
father's time Dr. Cabot, and sister of one of the leading surgeons
of my own time in Boston, Dr. Arthur Cabot.
The evidence con-
cerned someone who had been exceedingly intimate in the Perry
household and had died of an accident some months before. There
were three daughters in the Perry family, the youngest of whom
a child at that time eight years old, to whom this friend intimate
in the house, had shown great kindness and who received her
experiences, with the simplicity of a child, as perfectly natural
happendings, not becoming in any way extited over them or seeking
to draw attention to herself by telling of them, which I heard of
directly only through her mother, though her whole family, her
father included, believed in implicitly.
It was one of those durious cases which lend themselves
to no explanation, can be credited with difficulty, yet seem
impossible to reject. Such phenomena cannot be produced at will
and much evidence must be forthcoming before the age-long experi-
ence of man-kind in contradiction can be overturned. The phenomena
ceased; too much publicity could not be given to the matter on
the family's account and though it roused great interest in England
when reported out by Dr. Hodgson to the Psychical Research Society,
it passed into the general gathering of material which neither could
be explained away nor accepted assevidential. It had, however, a
Automatic
Writing -5
profuond effect upon Dr. Hodgson in relation to his further work,
for he was 80 convinced of the truth of it as establishing evi-
dence of survival that he deased to doubt and took a less critical
attitude toward later developments, some of which I was frankly
convinced myself must have come from the mediums own mind, the
medium through whom Dr. Hodgson was working at that time and con-
tinued to work with till he died a few years afterward, being
one famous in the general investigations of the subject.
The child to whom these extraordinary phenomena came and
who received them so naturally and unhesitatingly became the
wife when she grew up of Joseph Grew distinguished in the United
States Diplomatic Service, at one time Ambassador to Japan, at
another to Turkey and Ambassador now to Italy. Her father,
Thomas Perry, was Professor of English Literature at Harvard, a
writer of note and professor later of Philosophy, on the invita-
tion of the Japanese Government, at the University of Tokyo for
two years. He, like his wife, believed without question in
the genuinensss and veridical character of these phenomena,
which were not the only ones that had taken place in the family.
I remember Mrs. Perry telling me of this same child when, still
younger, telling her, when they were out in their house in the
country which had been the home before them of Mrs. Perry's father,
of a kind old lady coming in to sit by her bedside till she went
asleep, whom as she told it her mother recognized as describing,
unmistakably to her, her own mother, the child's grandmother who
Automatic
Writing -6
had lived there before them. The child showed no excitement
over it but took it on the basis of an actual happending;
the lady had come and sat by her and she was a kind lady whom
she had liked to have there. Twowor three times afterward the
same figure appeared to the child in the same way, then c ame
no more.
Mrs. William James the wife of Professor William James
of Harvard had also certain remarkable experiences which she told
me of, in one of which her daughter, Margaret or Peggy, had re-
ceived a message, through some medium that Richard Hodgson was
investigating, from her aunt, William James'sister, who had
died not long before and wished, as I recall it, to have given
in remembrance of her certain family property. The details of it
have passed from my mind but of the extraordinary character of
the communication, whatever its source might be, remains vividly
impressed upon my mind. Mrs. James was an extraordinarily good
'sitter', seldom going to visit Dr. Hodgson without getting some-
thing of exceptional interest, while William James himself, more
interested than she to get matter of scientific value, was himself
a poor 'sitter', seldom getting phénomena of the type he sought.
And knowing them both as well as I did, it seemed to me natural
it should be so. Mrs. James had a restful, naturally receptive
character which could but fail, if there were anything genuins
in the penomena, to bring it out, while William James with his
restless, actively questioning mind would have just the opposite
effect in getting resalts dependence upon the
establishment any form, of a sympathetic reaction.
Brother.
My brother.
who had been studying law in Mr. Lewis
L. Delafield's office in New York during the winter and early
spring of 1875-76 died of a sudden fever in the spring of
1876. My father, mother and I were in London at the time.
We got a cablegram telling of my brother's illness. It
was Saturday morning and the Cunard steamer from Liver-
pool would have been just sailing when the cable reached
us.
The Cunard steamers always stopped at Queenstown
after crossing the Irish channel to pick up the late
mail from London, the Irish mail it was called, which
left London the afternoon of the day of sailing from
Liverpool and which was carried by swift train and
steamer to Dublin and thence by train to Queenstown
where the steamer waited for it. My father caught the
steamer by this train, as he had just time to do and was
in mid-ocean on his way to New York when my mother and
I in London got a second cablegram telling us that my
yples
brother had died. He died of typhua fever which was
spread
home.,I
more or less endemic at that time in New York, brought
,
by
by immigrants whom steamers brought at that time in
unlimited numbers. How he caught it is a mystery. He
had his own apartment in an apartment house, then lately
a
caung
built, on the corner of 26th street and 5th avenue, an
was
in
Brother -2
excellent location, and he worked on his law studies
in Mr. Delafield's office downtown. There were no
subways then nor elevated railroad, and he walked generally
to Mr. Delafield's office for the sake of the exercise,
and had a horse kept at a stable near the Park on which
he rode in the afternoons, for he was an excellent horse-
man and fond of riding.
Typhus fever is dangerously infectious. I had two
Two
uncles on my mother's dide living in New York at the time
rick
but they both had families and neither of them ven tured
to go near my brother in his illness. Mrs. Delafield,
with whom my brother had come into relation of warm per-
sonal friendship when they had met abroad a couple of years
before, though she had a family of young children, went in
and tended him and to ok charge, an act of true heroism for
which none of us could be too grateful. Thrhat she should
have done so and that her husband should have been willing
she should I have always regarded as an extraordinary tribute
to the relation that had sprung up between them and the
regard in which they held him.
My brother had just completed a report for the
New York Ear Association which Mr. Delafield, who was
one of the leading lawyers of the City at that time, had
asked him to prepare and the New York Bar Association
passed a resolution commending the report, following his
Brother -3
death, for its value and the good work he had done upon it.
My brother had joined the Knickerbocker Club on
going to New York to make his residen ce the autumn before
and gone out a good deal in New York society through the
winter, making many warm friends.
New York was then
very different socially from what it became two decades
later. It was then, like Boston and Philadelphia, an old
society with inherited standards and traditions of self-
respect. The great new fortunes had not then begun in-
vasion of it.
must
My father arrived only in time to purchase a lot
at Mount Auburm Cemetery, where both my brother's and my
grandfathers had purchased lots upon its first establish-
ment and were buried, and bury my brother in it.
John
Krendo
He chose the lot himself,looking out southward to the
river valley from the hillside on which there grew old
hickory trees whose light foliage cast a pleasant shade
over the lot. He chose it for its pleasantness and my
mother loved it and often visited it after her return
from Europe.
Both she and my father and my brother
Darri
nurse
and my nurse, who W as living still and with us
at
that time, caring for our house in Boston, all now lie
buried there.
Brother -4
Before we received the telegram in London telling
of my brother's illness we had all accepted an invitation
from friends we had made in Rome the winter before, George
Howard and his wife. George Howard was the next in line
and heir to the Earl of Carlisle, still living but an
invalid beyond all hope of recovery, and who died soon
afterward.
George Howard was an artist of no slight ability
gow
who had gone to Rome that previous winter to study under
pred
one of the leading Italian artists of that time, Giovanni
Costa, wi th whom my mother also studied during the winter,
learning to paintlandscape in oils, which became a great
resource to her afterward, at home and abroad, during the
rest of her life. on getting the cablegram concerning
my brother, I wrote for my mother to Mrs. Poward excusing
ourselves from coming to their dinner owing to news that
had come to us from home and had taken my father away.
George Howard immediately came around to our hotel to
learn what our news had been and whether there was anything
that he and his wife could do for us. I told him of our
cablegram and he insisted, for his wife as for himself,
on our leaving the hotel and coming out once to their
house in Paris Green looking out most pleasantly upon
Kensington Park and its old trees and away f ram the noise
Brother -5
and traffic of the City. The second cablegram came al-
most immediately afterward and we went thankfully to stay
with the Howards, establishing a friendship that never ceased
or grew colder so long as we any of us lived.
My father presently returned and the Howards in- -
Dorrt
sisted that we come to stay with them in their old Castle,
Hourth
Neworth, nnt far from the Scottish border in cumberland.
Cistle
It was a most interesting old castle, surrounded by a
moat; which had withstood many a raid in the early days
from across the border and is spoken of by Sir Waiter scott
in one of his stories. Many years afterward when George
Howard, now become the Earl of Carlisle, came out to
America on some matter he had interest in, he stayed with
me in Boston and speaking of that stay at Naworth I said
that the wall built solidly of stone through which the
window of my room opened, narrow on the outside widening
within, must have been three or four feet thick. "Eight
or ten", he said. But within, the living rooms opened
wide and pleasantly on a grassy court. Outside, the castle
which on one side rose up from the edge of a deep, narrow
glen, was elsewhere surrounded by an open park where deer
and cattle grazed and old oak trees grew, scattering as
nature planned them.
Brothers
-6
There, made at home in the kindest way, we stayed
long and quietly. The Howards had a large family of
children, ranging from the oldest daughter down. She was
devoted to my mother, who had much to give always to
younger people. Later, this older daughter married Gilbert
lucray
Murray the noted Greek scholar and translator of the
old Greek Dramatists, au thor and lecturer. One of the
sons whom we then saw a little boy was killed in a charge
of the English troops under Lord Kitchener at the Battle
of Omdurman against the fanatinal tribesman of the Mahdi
at Kartum, near)twenty years afterward. The whole family
were extraordinarily individual. Mrs. Howard was one of
the Stanleys of Alderley.
1330
ROSS
No. 11238 HEALTH DEPARTMENT,
BUREAU or VITAL STATISTICS,
No. 301 MOTT STREET
SEE BACK OF
THIS PERMIT.
New York maylle 78, 6
of
William WLearn 28
given Age
to remove the remains
Ocoupation
Place of Birth Boston
Place of Death Stroms Building 442787
Date of Death may 16.
Cause of Death,
To
Boston mass for Interment
Stoon
I y nagle Losto Register of Recor as.
over
Mount Auburn Historical collections. N.Y. Boreau of VitalStatics Death certificate W.W.Dar
5/16/1876.
Dorr Papers e (original)
copy of Original
filed Under NEHGS.
R. Stanton Avery
Special Collections Dept.
New England Historic
Genealogical Society
101 Newbury Street
Boston, MA 02116
New York. Jan'y 2d, 1877.
Hon. Charles W. Eliot,
President of Harvard University.
Dear Sir:
Our late father, Thomas W. Ward, deceased in
1858, for many years Treasurer of Harvard College, by
his will left to the College Library the sum of Five
Thousand dollars together with his portrait by W. Page.
The legacy was duly paid, but the portrait remained
with his widow who survived him many years. We now in
compliance with the provisions of his will beg respect-
fully to inform you that the picture will be forwarded
to you by Messrs Williams & Everett free of all expense,
and we annex at foot the extract of the will of the de-
ceased having reference to the same. We are, dear Sir,
With great respect,
Truly yours,
(Sgd)
Samuel G. Ward
"
George Cabot Ward.
"As I have hitherto devoted much of my time and
money to public objects and institutions and to the
concerns of individuals and shall continue to do so while
COPY
(Jan'y 2d, 1877)
2.
I live, I do not think 1t necessary to give largely
at my decease, but there being a few of those objects
and institutions in which I have always taken an interest
I do hereby give and bequeath to the President and Fellows
of Harvard College (of which corporation I was twelve
years Treasurer,) the sum of Five thousand dollars, the
income thereof to be annually expended in the purchase
of books.
I also give to said President and Fellows
of Harvard College my portrait by Page, and the volume
containing my account of my administration as Treasurer
of that institution."
R. Stanton Avery
Special Collections Dept.
New England Historic
Genealogical Society
101 Newbury Street
Boston, MA 021.6
COPY
Copy of Bond of Thomas Wren Ward (and others) at time
he was Treasurer of the President and Fellows at
Harvard College
Know all men by these presents that we, Thomas
Wren Ward of Boston in the County of Suffolk as principal,
and Samuel C. Gray, Francis C. Gray, William Appleton,
and William Sturgis, Esquires of the same Boston, and
Jonathan Goodhue of the City of New York, Esquire, as
sureties, are holden and stand firmly bound to the
President and Fellows of Harvard College in the sums
respectively, - viz: The said Thomas Eren Ward in the
sum of one hundred thousand dollars, - and the said
Samuel C. Gray, Francis C. Gray, William Appleton,
William Sturgis, and Jonathan Goodhue, in the sum of
twenty thousand dollars each, to be paid to the said
president and fellows or their assigns to which payment
to be well and truly to be made, we bind ourselves, our
heirs, executors and administrators severally and firmly by
these presents, sealed with our seals dated this first
day of April one thousand eight hundred and forty one.
The condition of this obligation is such that whereas
the said Thomas Wren Ward is treasurer to the said
President and Fellows of Harvard College, - now, if he
shall well and faithfully perform all the duties incumbent
on him in the said office of treasurer for and during
the term of three years, if he shall so long hold the
same, then this obligation shall be void, but otherwise
shall remain in full force and virtue.
Lydia G Ward witness to the
signature cf T. W. Ward.
Witness to the signature of
Jonathan Goodhue
Robert C. Goodhue
Franklin H. Story witness to
the signatures of
Sam'1 C. Gray
Wm Appleton
Wm Sturgis
Charles H. Pierce witness
to the signature of
F. C. Gray
R. Stanton Avery
Special Collections Dept.
New England Historic
COPY
Genealogical Society
101 Newbury Street
Boston, MA 02116
MHS. Endicott Family Papers. B35.f.l't.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY,
CAMBRIDGE, MASS.
17 you. 1877
I have the honor
to acknowledge on behalf of
the President & Fellows of
Harvard College the safe
receipt of Page's portrait
your honored father, the
late Treasurer of the College.
It has been hung in the
2
During Hall, above the portrail
of President duriney. The
President & Fellows rejecie that
a valued friend and servant
of the College should be thus
commemorated
In the now which account
pamied this gift there was
mention in the extrach from
Me Mard's will of a volume
which gave an account of his
March 9th.
7
Continuing Diotation to Mrs. Stover.
The Stanleys of Alderly of Lady Carlisle's
generation were an extraordinarily individual
family group, each member of it going his or her
own way.
And it was typically English. Lady
Carlisle, one of twelve children, was no exception.
She was of fair haired, strong-built, Saxon stock
which battled with William the Conqueror at Hastings
and with some slight change of costume would have
fitted well into the picture of that time. Carlisle
was just the opposite, typical of what we associate
with the Normans so how the Norsemen's short residence
in France could have brought so great a change in
their racial type has always been a mystery to me.
He was artistic, critical, kind of heart and full
of
prejudice. The Lord of Carlisle were the second
in rank in the noble powered descent, the Duke of
Norfolk being first.
Ho was, I think, the leading
Catholic peer in England but the Carlisle branch
had no Catholic leanings.
George Howard's father
was still living at the time I write of and was the
oldest member in points of service of the House of
Commons, much looked up to and respected.
He
died soon afterwards, before inheriting the Carlisle
title.
George Howard was, I think, the only son.
His sympathies, like those of the English nobility
generally, had been with the south in our Civil
War; his wife's were with the north and equally
positive.
But this had made no difference in their
relations when, boy and girl friends, they became
engaged while he was at the University still and she
just coming out.
He was warm friend of Mazzini
during his years of exile in England and a warm
friend to the cause of liberty in Italy when its
patriots were working against they tyranny of Austria
in Northern Italy and the temporal power of the Popes.
He was an intimate friend, too, of William Morris,
socialist and poot and of a whole group of the leading
artists of the time, Burne Jones, Frederick Leighton
and the rest, and the men of literature. And their
house was a center of the most interesting kind.
Both Howard and his wife were Liberals in politics, as
had the generation upon either side before them.
with Lady Stanley of Alderly, Mrs. Howard's mother,
the liberal projudice -- for such it was -- was
see
incredibly strong; she could/no good whatever in a
Conservative.
But 11 A11 nature's differenne
makes all nature's wholo"
and England and the world seemed able then and for
a generationsafter t111 life reached the rapids and
all went tumbling.
11/8/2017
Naworth Castle Wikipedia
Coordinates: 54°57'20"N 2°41'20"W
WIKIPEDIA
Naworth Castle
Naworth Castle, also known as, or recorded in historical documents
Naworth Castle
as "Naward", is a castle in Cumbria, England, near the town of
Brampton. It is adjacent to the A69 about 2 miles (3.2 km) east of
Brampton, Cumbria, England
Brampton. It is on the opposite side of the River Irthing to, and just
within sight of, Lanercost Priory. It was the seat of the Barons Dacre
and is now that of their cognatic descendants, the Earls of Carlisle. It
is a grade I listed building. [1]
Contents
1
History
1.1
1844 fire
2
Miscellanea
Aerial photograph of Naworth Castle
3
See also
4
References
Naworth
5
External links
Castle
History
The castle is thought to have late 13th-century origins, in the form of a
square keep and bailey. It was first mentioned in 1323, and in 1335 a
licence to crenellate was granted to Ralph Dacre.
Thomas Dacre (1467-1525), who commanded the reserve of the
English army at the Battle of Flodden and was known as "the Builder
Coordinates 54°57'20"N
Dacre", built the castle's gateway and placed over it his coat of arms
2°41'20"W
with the Dacre family motto below: Fort en Loialte (Norman-French:
Grid
grid reference
"Strong in Loyalty"). [2] There were further additions in 1602, for his
reference
NY559625
successor Lord William Howard. It is likely that the 18th-century
Site history
walled garden lies within the boundaries of the original moat.
Materials
Stone
Howard purchased back the Dacre family estate from King James and
took up residence with his children and grandchildren at Naworth Castle. He restored the castle, improved the
estate and established order in that part of the country. He had a large family of children, of whom Philip, his
heir, was the grandfather of Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Carlisle, and his younger son Francis was the ancestor of
the Howards of Corby.
William Morris, the artist and socialist, stayed at the castle in August 1874. In a letter to Aglaia Coronio he writes
" ...all is very pleasant. Ned & I pass our mornings in a most delightful room in one of the towers that has not been
touched since William Howard of Queen Elizabeth's time lived there: the whole place is certainly the most
evacuated from its own buildings by various government departments. It is currently occupied by Philip Howard,
brother and heir presumptive of the 13th Earl of Carlisle. [4]
1844 fire
On Saturday, 18 May 1844 the castle caught fire, possibly as a result of the ignition of some soot in the flue of the
Porter's Lodge. The structure's lack of internal walls allowed the fire to spread rapidly, and it remained
unchecked until it reached the northern wing. Although some property was saved, by the time two fire engines
had arrived by train from Carlisle, most of the roof had collapsed and the fire had spread to nearly every room on
the three sides of the quadrangle. Water had to be passed in buckets from a rivulet at the foot of a steep hill on the
north side of the castle. "Belted Will's Tower" was saved while the fire continued until around one o'clock on
Sunday morning when it was brought under control. [5] Subsequent restoration was undertaken by the architect
Anthony Salvin.(2)
Miscellanea
The Castle has a well-preserved priest hole.
Francis Galton is said to have invented the concept of correlation at Naworth Castle. [6]
Sir Walter Scott described the castle as
"one of those extensive baronial seats which marked the splendour of our ancient nobles, before
they exchanged the hospitable magnificence of a life spent among a numerous tenantry, for the
uncertain honours of court attendance, and the equivocal rewards of ministerial favour."[5]
See also
Grade I listed buildings in Cumbria
Listed buildings in Brampton, Carlisle
Castles in Great Britain and Ireland
List of castles in England
References
1. Historic England. "Naworth Castle (1087643)" (https://HistoricEngland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/108764,
3). National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 10 July 2015.
2. "Naworth Castle" (http://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0001286/18550716/063/0005).Bell's
Weekly Messenger. 16 July 1855. Retrieved 17 November 2015 - via British Newspaper Archive.
(Subscription required (help)).
3. P. Henderson, ed., The Letters of William Morris to His Family and Friends (London: Longmans, 1950)
4. "Welcome to Naworth Castle" (http://www.naworth.co.uk/). Naworth Castle. Retrieved 2 August 2015.
5. An Historical & Descriptive Account of Naworth Castle, and Lanercost Priory: With a Life of Lord William
Howard, and an Account of the Destruction of Naworth Castle by Fire, May 18th, 1844 (https://books.google.
com/books?id=HI4xAQAAMAAJ). I. Fletcher Whitridge. 1844, p. vii-x1.
6.
Life of Francis Galton by Karl Pearson Vol 2, p. 393 (http://galton.org/cgi-bin/searchlmages/search/pearson/v
ol2/pages/vol2_0458.htm)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naworth_Castle
2/3
Mrs
8
Friday Evening, October 31, 1938.
2
To that picnic at the Lake of Nemi came one of
those rare beings who seemed afterwards to have
disappeared
########## completely from our world, a beautiful
woman, beautiful like some greek goddess of the
olden times.
I met her then for the first
time but came afterwards to know her well that
winter.
She was a Philadelphian, a widow already
although still young, Lina Peters by her maiden
name, who had married Craig Wardsworth of the
New York --
?
-- family but had no children,
nor should have had for she, like the Greed goddesses
again, seemed to stand out alone, the embodiment of
beauty.
She was one of those whom men delight
X
to honor, or did at that time, a time which was
already passing when I grew up.
For there is a
Darri
fashion in men's thoughts and this belonged to what
tomarks
has been called the Romantic Period.
She talked
favord.,
freely to me afterward, when I came to know her of
what this attitude of men toward her had meant in
her life, as to have worshippers must have meant to
the Greeks goddesses of old.
When she had
gone to a ball in her earlier years, she told me,
a train of a dozen men or more who had been waiting
for her, entered the ballroom with her carrying
the flowers, big bouquets, which according to the
custom of that period men had sent her.
She could
not herself have carried even a part of them. Women
do not seem to stand out in these days as some did
then, and the world is the poorer as I think for it.
For it means the loss of an ideal, the loss of something
that does not enter into the world of fact.
Another woman, less beautiful, pl/ whom I remember
at that picnic was one whom I met also then for the
first time, was the daughter, a few years older than
myself, of a general in the Rebel army, of a proud
old southern family who married not long afterward
the French general who had been in command of the
French tooops, who before the Franco-German war of
1870, had maintained as an army of occupation the
Pope in his temporal dominion against the will of Italy.
2.
When that army was withdrawn for service in the war,
the temporal dominion ceased to be.
That, was the
time when we were there and one full of interest on
which to stand in memory and view the changes that have
since come, It was an end of an epoch, the beginning
of another full of astounding change.
Lake Nemi
Page 1 of 1
Back to Home Page or Contents Page or Goddess and Witchcraft or Index
Lake Nemi
Lake Nemi is an ancient lake that is located east of Rome in the Alban Hills where the temple of Diana
once stood, surrounded by her sacred grove. In ancient times the lake was known as "Diana's Mirror"
because the reflection of the moon upon Lake Nemi could be perfectly viewed from the temple.
A stream flowed into Lake Nemi from a sacred grotto nearby the temple. This stream was associated
with the water nymph named Egeria. Both Egeria and Diana are early forms in the Lady of the Lake
mythos. The Lady of the Lake was intimately connected with the guardian of the sacred grove of
Diana. He was referred to as Rex Nemorensis, the King of the Woods, whose role it was to guard
Diana's sanctuary at Nemi.
It might be mentioned that the Irish word neimed that means "sanctuary" is uniquely similar to the
word "Nemi" itself, which comes from the Latin nemus, meaning "sacred grove." A.G.H.
Source: 78, 213-214.
186rth
1
W
C
r
Antones
Mallo
Siskerot
http://www.themystica.com/mystica/articles/I/lake_nemi.htm
6/13/2003
Page 1 of 2
Nemi.
Site with sanctuary of the goddess Diana beside the lake of the same name that
fills a volcanic crater in the Alban hills 25 km south-east of Rome, Italy. Both lake
and town take their name from the nemus (Lat.: 'sacred wood'). The sanctuary
originated before the 6th century BC as the centre for a local cult in the territory
of the Latin town of Aricia; it continued to flourish under Roman rule until the 4th
century AD. The peculiar slave priesthood of Diana Nemorensis was the
inspiration for Sir James Frazer's The Golden Bough (London, 1890-1915), while
the picturesque scenery of the area attracted English landscape artists in the late
18th and 19th centuries, notably J. M. W. Turner, who painted several views of
the lake.
The main remains of the sanctuary now visible to the north-east of the lake are of
a large rectangular terraced precinct (c. 44,000 sq. m), with retaining walls
constructed as a series of arched niches faced in pseudo-reticulate masonry.
Archaeological discoveries made there are recorded from the mid-17th century
onwards, but the first systematic excavations were by Sir John Savile Lumley
(later Lord Savile) in 1885. He identified a large masonry podium in the western
half of the precinct as the Temple of Diana itself, but this does not correspond
with Vitruvius' description of that temple (On Architecture, IV.viii.4), which is
probably the still unexcavated building shown on a plan of 1856 as standing
further up the hillside. Lumley also explored several rooms on the north side of
the precinct and selected areas within it, finding numerous votive and
architectural terracottas, coins and some sculpture. His own share of the finds,
presented to the Castle Museum at Nottingham, England, is now the main
archaeological collection from the sanctuary. Much of what was found in further
digging after 1885 on behalf of the landowner, Prince Orsini, is now untraceable,
but the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen acquired most of the best
sculpture as well as material from earlier antiquarian collections, while the
bronzes and terracottas went elsewhere (e.g. Rome, Villa Giulia).
On the basis of these finds a broad chronology of the site can be defined. Initially
the sanctuary consisted merely of a triple image of Diana in bronze (c. 500 BC),
standing in a clearing in the sacred wood, an image shown on coins issued in 43
BC (e.g. Oxford, Ashmolean). In the late 4th century BC to the early 3rd,
however, the site began to receive buildings decorated with architectural
terracottas, and it became a focus for votive offerings made for health and
fertility. The third phase (c. 100 BC) consisted of the large-scale landscaping of
the sanctuary, with a terraced precinct and new temples. Finally, in the early
Roman Empire, the sanctuary was eclipsed by the summer villas of emperors and
aristocrats attracted by Nemi's scenic beauty. A theatre adjoining the sanctuary,
excavated by Morpurgo in 1928, was rebuilt early in the 1st century AD by
Volusia Cornelia, the proprietor of the luxurious villa near by. The emperor
Caligula (reg AD 37-41) had a sumptuous floating palace on a ship moored in
the lake, one of two vessels uncovered in spectacular excavations between 1928
and 1931, during which the lake was partially drained. The ships were preserved
.../hharticle?section=art.061645&hitnum=2&session_searchid=842959133&session_name=2(7/15/2003
Page 2 of 2
in a specially built museum near the lake (Nemi, Mus. Navi), but they were largely
destroyed during hostilities in 1944.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
G. Ucelli: Le navi di Nemi (Rome, 1940)
F. Poulsen: 'Nemi Studies', Acta Archaeol. [Copenhagen], xii (1941), pp. 1-52
Mysteries of Diana: The Antiquities from Nemi in Nottingham Museums
(Nottingham, 1983)
F. Coarelli: / santuari del Lazio in età repubblicana (Rome, 1987), pp. 165-85
T.F.C. BLAGG
© Oxford University Press 2003
How to cite groveart.com
/hh_article?section=art.061645&hitnum=2&session_search_id=842959133&session_name=27/15/2003
Amy Heard
Letters from the Gilded Age
Transcribed, Translated, and Edited by
Robert M. Gray
C Copyright 2005 by Robert M. Gray
This document was produced using Otfried Cheong's
Hyperlatex package.
nov. 13, 2016
Question at UHS@ Dar mantic life
Form 10/01/38 study on
in Dons Memorial (file-chrone Any 1874-77),
checked to reference as to Heard Papers"
at Khap 2, 1581, Dec. 28,1881 gathering where
1 Mrs 2.Wadworth # / mentioned on have
learched e author. On chap 3, Jone 3, 1882
lunch't Mrs fare "Then again
M Jan 9th at atme now Haracc Pray
was Minimated tobaccome Artor Justra if
th U.S Supreme Count Pre, ( Arthur .
Agen Jan 28 party, Again Feb. 24 every at th
Wadsworths,
Other experience not pursued
in this discount (185-pp)
Sleange
I met in Rome an English laddy, a Mrs. Wynne Fingh
with whom I fell into very pleasant relation.
She
was twice Q widow and her first husband had been the head
of the old LaStrange family in England.
Her son,
Harvey LaStrange had married one of the Wardsworth
family of Geneseo, New York.
Her daughter had
married Lawrence Oliphant, author of Piccadilly,
while ehe had A younger son
of near my own age, Guy LaStrange who won my admiration
by the gallant fight he was making to write the
history of the Caliphate.
Mrs. Wynn Fingh was notable in London for her
delightful little dinners of eight, nover more, to
which the Prince of Wales, King Edward VIIth afterward,
used not infrequently to come. She kindly asked
me 88 I passed through London that spring to one
of those dinners along with James Hussell Lowell,
then our minister to England, and others whom I
now forget but not the pleasantness of the occasion.
Her son, Harvey LaStrange inherited and was living
at the old family manor house and estate of Hustanton,
close beside the Wash, from whose shore we could see
what Hill they there called Boston Stump, the
tall tower of St. Botolph's church in English
Boston.
Hunstanton was a very interesting old Hanor
House of the Elizabethan period with a famous
garden and a wide moat with drawbridge.
It
WRS placed in a wide, grassy park with old oak-
trees scattered about, a true countryscene of the
lesser nobility, such as Jane Austen might have
described.
The same was WRB a good deal of
an antiquary in its way and had a miniment room
where he kept locked up family records and memoranda
going back for many generations.
He showed me
one of these which was quite delightful of an old
lord of the manor, a very simple lord he seemed
to have been, played cards with his neighbors at
the village inn, his wife noting down carefully the
small BUM he made or lcat, she keeping the family
account. He was fond of playing the violin, which
she found annoying and built him hard by a grove
of old oako in the Park
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
Acadia National Park
Bar Harbor, Maine,
May 1, 1939.
Mr. Arno B. Cammerer, Director,
National Park Service,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Cammerer:
I have given Mr. Hadley a brief statement
to enclose you in regard to Oldfarm, along with what he has
written in answer to your request for figures from the
Town Assessors' book and .has just mailed you. I now write
a further word concerning this and on some memories the
question has brought up.
In 1878 we returned from Europe
my
father,
mother
and I after a stay abroad unexpectedly prolonged by my
older brother's death in New York two years before in the
summer of 1876, while studying law in the office of an ol-
der friend, Mr. Louis L. Delafield, one of the leading law-
yers of the country at that time.
We had planned returning home ourselves the fall of
1876 that year and building a permanent summer home at Oldfarm
on a site my father had already purchased a half dozen
years before. My mother was at work over plans for this,
studying some of the old English country houses, when a
cable reached us, telling of my brother's sudden illness,
followed immediately after by another informing us of
his death.
Bar Harbor, when we returned in the fall of 1878, was
just recovering from the effects of a typhoid epidemic two
years before, brought on by the rapid growth of the place
as a resort and lack of realization by its citizens of the
need or corresponding sanitary measures. It had learned
its lesson, however, and steps were in progress to correct
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
2. Director 5/1/39
the evil, but the effect on summer life, when we returned,
and commenced to build, still lingered; no land was being
sold, no houses built.
Ours at Oldfarm as the first house to be built for
summer residence, spaciously and comfortably, on Mount
Desert Island and the reputation of it as the work went
on gave confidence to others, starting what
afterwards and long referred to as the &Bar Harbor boom.
The price of lands along the shore went up a hundred per
cent within six weeks that summer and building continued ac-
tively thereafter for years to come.
The Oldfarm house was built for the first storey up
of granite of a warm reddish hue from the nearby Gorge
and above that was covered with shingles hewn out of Cali-
fornia Redwood, their tone blending well with the granite
and still remaining, after all the years, untouched by
decay.
We had for architect Henry Richards, one of the old
Gardiner family of Gardiner, Maine, who had married the
daughter of my mother's early friend, Julia Ward Howe.
Henny Richards was then a recent graduate from the archi-
tectural school of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
and worked in well with my mother in the plans which she had
made. producing a house that has ever remained for me one
of the most attractive, home-like and best-fitted to its
setting built on our eastern coast.
The scale of wages at that time was low, one dollar
to a dollar and a quarter a ten hour day for ordinary labor;
two and a half to three dollars for skilled. The work was
done by the day and was sound throughout and good. My father
and mother were building for the future and spent liberally
upon the work.
When all was done, my father told me one day that the
house and the work done upon the grounds connected with
it had cost seventy thousand dollars, an amount far greater
than it would seem t oday.
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1874-77
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1874 - 1877