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

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1903-04
1903
darrthelmi
4/99/05
1904
George street publish
-Tryp West (10/6/39)
History AMOI
40 pp of Ms. aug/Sept:04.
1 Schiff in begins B.t. to
-Edith Wharton (9/3) to GBD
in
thanks for Bandscape
Enerson Centurary H. Minsterberg
gardening help. Path finished
on Emerson Hall, Haward
- Tercentenary (300th) of
Dellocts Settlemt, St.Croix
-Eliot completes (12/25/ Essay
-Royce (ettal7(31/04) introduct
Right Development offlout Desert
CBD to Pres of U.F Cala,
-Herry Eno builds Songger
B.I. Wheeler (see Royce file).
-Right - Developt of mouthesent
Elist afferm importance of higher
Standards, apposed liberal tendence
- Champlain Memoral for
300th Anniversary
OFFICERS FOR
1903-1904.
President :
PARK GODWIN.
Vice-Presidents:
L. B. DEASY.
JOHN S. KENNEDY.
RIGHT REV. WM. LAWRENCE.
Treasurer: F. C. LYNAM. Secretary: A. H. LYNAM.
Board of Managers:
Dr. Robert Amory,
Mrs. Robert Amory,
Mrs. Longstreth,
Mrs. A. C. Barney,
Mrs. Lea Mcllvaine Luquer,
HERMAN,
Waldron Bates,
F.C. Lynam,
Edward Coles,
A.H. Lynam,
Mrs. John Markoe,
B. Deasy,
E. B. Mears,
George B. Dorr,
Mrs. E. B. Mears,
Miss Draper,
Miss L. S. Minot,
Mrs. H. E. Drayton.
Dr. S. Weir Mitchell,
W. Butler Duncan,
Dr. E. J. Morrison,
Mrs. Frank Ellis,
Mrs. Clara Norris,
John J. Emery,
David B. Ogden,
Wm. Fennelly,
Mrs. R. B, Potter,
Mrs. DeGrasse Fox,
Mrs. Wm. B. Rice,
Charles Fry,
Wm. M. Roberts,
Mrs. Charles Fry,
Dr. Wm. Rogers,
Parke Godwin,
Edgar Scott,
Herbert Jaques,
J. M. Sears,
Morri: K. Jesup.
Mrs. J. M. Sears,
Mrs. Morris K. Jesup,
Gardiner Sherman,
Mrs. Cadwalader Jones,
Dr. John B. Shober,
Miss Beatrix Jones,
Dr. F. Fremont-Smith,
John S. Kennedy,
Dr. J. Madison Taylor,
Rt. Rev. Wm. Lawrence,
George Vanderbilt.
Dr. Morris Longstreth,
C. ii. Holmes Jr. April 6, 1901
Eugo Mumberbery April 28, 1901.
Learned Hand
June 19, 1901
Josenb Lee
November 15
Thos. W/ Higginson February 13, 1902
C. W. Holmes
February 14, 1902
Wm. R. Thayer
February 14, 1902
Henry S. Fritchitt February 15, 1902
Hugo Nunsterberg April 10, 1902
O. W. Holmes
April 12, 1902
Wm R. Thayer
April 25, 1902
William James
March 20
G. H. Palmer
April 2, 1903
Edward E. Hale
April 8, 1903
Wm. James
April 27, 1903
Wm. James
May 1, 1903
H. I. Higginson
May 6, 1903
Charles W. Eliot
May 7, 1903
Francis G. Peabody May 8, 1903
Charles W. Eliot
May 10, 1903
Hugo Munsterberg
May 12, 1903
Fauline Shaw
May, 1903
Charles W. Eliot
Feb. 9, 1904
Hugo Munsterberg
May 10, 1904 --May 12, 1904 - I not
dated
Charles W. Eliot
May 15, 1905
Hugo Munsterberg, December 16, 1905
HUA. Hanard University
Subscription Records : for Enclose Hall, Harvard U.
1901-1905.
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V58VYXUJSKB5KGHQF2GAD9KSY4AE12SH6J9QM86NYG7CCPXPA96-02988?func=find-acc&acc sequenc1/2/2003
? Berkeley Sr., Cambider:
Fer. 14,1902.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
/ queatly fear that
I shall be wath to attend the meet
ing in behalf of Emerson Hall this
afternoon
That this community and th which
will ace to it that a
fitting Country, mammal is raised Ameri.
Ca's freabest and uplefter
there can be no doubt. No other
Country has produced in one century
a Emerson and a Luiceles.
Very try gums,
I.G.B.Dom En W.R Theres
,
President Charles W. Eliot
Prof. E. S. Dana
President
Second Vice-President
Mr. George B. Dorr
Mr. George L. Stebbins
First Vice-President
Treasurer
Mr. Lea MCI. Luquer
Secretary.
PRIVATE ACTS OF 1903, CHAPTER 369.
An Act to grant certain powers to the Hancock County Trustees of
Public Reservatiions.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in
Legislature assembled, as follows:-
Section 1:- The incorporation of the Hancock County
Trustees of public reservations, a corporation organized at
Bar Harbor, Maine under the revised statutes of Maine, chapter fifty-
five, is hereby ratified and confirmed.
Section 2:- Said corporation shall have power to acquire,
by devise, gift or purchase, and to own, arrange, hold, maintain and
improve for free public use, lands in Hancock County, Maine, which by
reason 01 scenic beauty, historical interest, sanitary advantages, or
for other reasons, may be available for the purpose.
Section 3:- Lands and improvements thereon, held by said
corporation, for free public use, shall be exempt from state, county
or town taxation.
Section 4:- This act shall take effect when approved.
Executive Committee - the officer and mum
deary a means
approved march 28.1903
Maske.
Amount 25, 1303.
Dann VY.
1 MY + 049-77 card the charter new " Cases precured fee the
County T Lateer of Public Fesernationa, as 1 do 2.45 zoc. whetner thans : any-
thing in that document which requires a police of the Executive Connittee. Unlem
thats ia. I hereby think that 5 meating of that Centifiee is exiled for.
The dataging of the jalend reads by the electric high company. and the bad man-
agent of the :com affairs by she jeferent board of selectron is the
present the 1 hard uyar or be elected in rut term : has discour
age the surver residents of fex: Perber and Wer:beast Marber with regard to vel-
state active leeking to the beautification of the instead. If the term muther!
the 41.4 the majerity of the vetere are incapable et Secretac that the ( alamy of
Heart Depart should he trusted es e park. there SMOKE little use 19 the susmer
residents trying to presente the asterni Specifies of a in opotin. : must confest
that I ahara this fooling of and yet : deuts if 11 in reservable.
Have the agree people Sm But Surber never assemptes * prevant or ready the
defacing of the roads and streets of the Marber visis druble lines of poles bater
for views . The of the electric Has company. speaking be several
Iron Merchaest Perbor and Real Harber . far daya use at Fishep Donne's,
sald that the 2gr Marber people had name completed at all of pelee en here sides
of tax with cestrar seaned 1< Like that 1/a alleged character,
that his eccount red no reasos to suppore that anyled would object to desigle
TOTAL of jeles on any of the ligend mere
Yesty truly years,
12- Lee Ret. Lesper.
Cambridge, 26 November, 1902.
Doar Mr. Deasy:
The draft of a petition to the Legislature of Maino, which you
sent me under date of November 22nd, secmit to DB rather inadequate for our pur-
pose. For instance, it omits the statement that the lands, to be hold by the
trustees
open to the public, shall be except from taxation. I enclose a
copy of the act of the Massachusetts Legislature in regard to the Trustees of
Public deservations. That act was easily procured, and has worked well; and the
Trustees now hold several valuable properties open to the public, including
Monument Mountain in Borkshire. I shall be glad to send you later a letter
which you could lay before the Legislativo Committee.
Very truly yours,
Can build
april 2, 1903
Dear Ziri
7 have wanted to reply
to your dayful letter until
J could have from Rogstor
the details of
fund mosting. The problect
makes me my high indud
the can handly now fail
of laying the store on
Emmons birth day, / but
I hope we shall also
obtain itn full $200 : or
originally / amand
N
waydmsars sprony Sp31-1037 wydmisons meH wrong if everyoff 40H
FROM
EDWARD E. HALE
39 HIGHLAND S:
ROXBURY MASS.,
April 8,
1903
near Mr. Dorr:-
I had really meant to relieve
you of the annoyance of writing.
I have gone over two or three lists of
the people who help the world forward, and
I think it might be well to address the
gentlemen and ladies who are included.
Kidder who was one of the public spiri-
ted people told me once that in England, a
tenth part of the rich people subscribed
their fair share to public enterprises;
that a tenth part gave to them occasionally,
and that eight-tenths of the rich people
never did anything about the public service
which they could help.
I am still hoping that your grandfath-
er's Log or Journal will turn up.
Always yours,
Elward E Hale
I
Correspondence of William James, vol.c (2002)
220
March 1903
March 1903
221
U-of Va.Press
Eds. KSkrupstelisis Berkeley.
lutionary method as applied to morality. I have been at work with
my
TLS: MH bms Am 1092.9 (133)
classes more or less on the metaphysical-o logical side as I prefer to
'A slip for 'of'.
call -for some years, but I never felt until this year that I had anything
Alfred Henry Lloyd, "The Organic Theory of Society," American Journal of Sociology 6
in shape to publish. I think you will find the Dynamic Idealism of
(March 1901): 577-601; "The Social Will," 8 (November 1902): 336-59.
Lloyd's freer from obscurity than his other writings-with the exception
John Dewey, review of The World and the Individual in Philosophical Review g (May 1900):
311-24; 11 (July 1902): 392-407.
of a couple of things which he has printed in the Journal of Sociology
Apparently, Karl Pearson (1857-1936), English scientist, but Dewey had very little
on the Social Organism and the Social Will. ²
interest in Pearson's work and the name could well be an error.
Thank you very much for your syllabus which I have read with very
The typist's error for "Peirce" here, and below.
great interest. I hope that you are going to put the thing out in such
objective shape that we can all get the benefit of a completed exposition.
To Alice Howe Gibbens James
Your reference to Monism's doubling up of the world into two editions
emboldens me to refer to my review of Royce in the Philosophical Re-
KENILWORTH INN,
BILTMORE, N.C., Mch 28 1903 P.M.
view, 1900, May, and 1902, July, where I have made some remarks on
Darling Alice,
the same reduplication.
I am told the mail leaves to morrow AM., SO I get this in to night. You
It may be the continued working of the Hegelian bacillus of reconcili-
had better retain all mail after getting this until you hear from me again,
ation of contradictories in me that makes me feel as if the conception of
by wire or otherwise. I shan't stay at this house which costs $5.00 a day
process gives a basis for uniting the truths of pluralism and monism, and
[Prices at A. have gone up!] but move down, and maybe move on. Be-
also of necessity and spontaneity. Pearson leaves his co-evolution of the
sides the hotel is of an ugly type.
perceptual world and the conceptual, a blank unmediated thing, which
I have spent the afternoon until 7 o'clock in trolly rides and walking.
accordingly suffers from the defects of any theory of parallelism and of
The day is overcast and windless, SO that there are no shadows, and the
pre-established harmony.4 Yet I cannot help feeling that an adequate
distance is smothered in haze, but the country is simply lovely, and the
analysis of activity would exhibit the world of fact and the world of ideas
air delicious. The roads are better, and everything developed & more
as two correspondent objective statements of the active process itself-
civilized than when I was here before, and I imagine that it has advan-
correspondent because each has a work to do, in the doing of which it
tages over any other winter resort except California. I wish that you
needs to be helped out by the other. The active process itself tran-
were here to enjoy it with me. After those years of undivided sympathy
scends any possible objective statement (whether in terms of facts or
in travel in Europe, it seems rather bitter to be cut off from your society
of ideas) simply for the reason that these objective statements are ulti-
as much as I am now. The thing that appears to break me up more
mately incidental to its own ongoing-are for the sake of it. It is this
than anything else is too much society. Do I ever act queer when you
trandscendence of any objectified form, whether perceptual or concep-
& I are alone? I venture to say never! The rift within the lute only
tual, that seems to me to give the clue to freedom, spontaneity, etc.,
appears when social responsibilities to others pour in. This is a deli-
and to make it /unnecessary to have recourse to such a hypostatizing of
cious place; and it is rum to see how quickly my poisonous sense of fa-
chance as Pierce5 seems to me to indulge in. I always feel as if he were
tigue has melted away, now that the extreme pressure, intellectual and
engaging (as respects his chance) in just the same sort of conceptual
social, of the past 10 days has yielded to this sweet tranquility & peace.-
construction he is protesting against. I must say, however, that I can
I have been reading a really great book Merejkowsky's "Tolstoi & Dos-
see how far I have moved along when I find how much I get out of Pierce
tojewski." A wonderfully profound study of the two men-a little
this year and how easily I understand him, when a few years ago he was
unfair, doubtless, to T., in order to drive his points of classification
mostly a sealed book to me, aside from occasional inspirations. It is an
home, but really instructive, as it makes me understand T., as I never did
awful pity that he cannot be got to go ahead consecutively.
before.3 You must read it. All other literatures, especially the English,
We are hoping very much that you are going to be in the mountains
seem SO superficial, humanly, compared with this glorious Russian stuff.
during June and July.
It moves (this book of criticism as well as the author's criticized) on a
Yours sincerely, John Dewey
level SO incomparable deeper. How thin it makes Emerson seem! I
2
222
March 1903
March 1903
223
hope that "Mary" waxes stronger & stronger. I am writing to Vander-
[Wind NE., slight rain, temperature 40°. 11 o'clock AM. I had no
bilt for a permission to enter his grounds-I hear that he is back.
barometer.]
Endless love, W.J.
I heard several beautiful songs in the woods that I could n't remember
ALS: MH bms Am 1092.9 (2205)
having heard before, but I unfortunately couldn't see the songsters.
I
WJ is referring to Asheville, N.C.
wish now that I had bro't my Zeiss glass with me!
2 From Tennyson's "Merlin and Vivien," line 391.
3 Dmitry Sergeyevich Merezhkovskii, Tolstoi as Man and Artist; With an Essay on Dostoievski
Lots of negroes here. In the town some of the most primitive ragga-
(1902).
muffins you ever saw out of Africa. In the hotel, very respectable dar-
kies. They have amusing minds. I says to the one who was blacking
my shoes this A.M., says I, "Which direction is North from here?" Says
To Alice Howe Gibbens James, Alexander Robertson James,
he "I don't seem 'zackly to know." Says I: "Where does the sun set?"
and Margaret Mary James
Says he, after looking rather puzzled: ["]I don't seem zackly to know.
I
haven't got them things straightened out yet, I've only bean hyer this
KENILWORTH INN, BILTMORE, N.C. Sunday, 29. 1903 I 8.30 P.
hotel season." I said "you ought to learn those things." He replied:
Darling Alice,
"Thats just what the head waiter's been telling me. He says 'you'd
Here I am still. A mighty east wind started last night &, blowing into
ought to learyn the points of the compass'. But I don't seem to catch
my window, woke me up. It began to spatter rain this forenoon, and
on to them things. I was working two years in the hotel at Pittsburgh,
during the afternoon a regular North Easter has raged, leaving snow on
befo' I could get hold onto dati East and West."
the hills and probably making bad mud on the roads. I slept splen-
I wish I could understand the insides of these niggers. Dey's suthin
didly, took a walk this A.M. ending at the village of Biltmore where I went
good about them. But I'm too old now. Every human being you grow
into Mr. Vanderbilt's little episcopal church, and sawhim pass round the
intimate with now, is SO much stored up for yo' old age. So keep grow-
plate, into which, I beg you to remark, I put only a quarter. He passed
ing intimate. I'm right smart glad you've got intimate with that fine
the plate on the church's opposite side. I came up in the Hotel stage,
fellow Earle Stafford.
& after lunch slept two hours, and finished the book about Tolstoi &
Yo' loving Dad, W.J.
Dostojewski, which tapers off fearfully towards the end, but it has taught
Darling Peg,
me somewhat about Tolstoy.-I think of you with your sweet mother and
Having written to yo' Mar and to Aleck, I come next to yo' turyn.
sweet Peggy, and sweet Aleck, enjoying the calm and solitude. I hope
But I have exhausted my stock of ideas, and haven't much left to say.
I
you'll get a good rest. I shall go to morrow to a cheaper Hotel, the
think that, if you were with me, the change of air would do you good,
Victoria Inn, meeting Warner at the train & taking him there. I am
in spite of the bad weather to day which seems to keep everyone in
feeling extraordinarily well, considering the condition I was in before I
the house. In the dining room I sit at a table with a couple of very
left. The altitude has something to do with There is a band playing
well bred and intelligent N.Y. women with whom I talk. They come
at the other end of the house, and its strains come to me softly. Last
from Aiken where they represent everything as very fashionable and
night it played my old favorite "The heart bowed down by weight of
sportive. Only one hotel, small, but very exquisite. I wonder if Mrs.
woe,' which we had on the deck of the Hudson River steamer, 28 years
Townsend has profited at all by the change in the value of land. I
ago.¹ It almost melted me to tears!
hope so. I hope that your strength is coming back all right. I am
Your loving W.J.
afraid you will be leaving for Montreal these days.2 Mille baisers. It
1903
only remains that I write to your Grandmother-but all these letters are
Dearest Aleck, Child of my entrails,
to her.
I saw a bird!
Your loving Father.
Have you seen one since I left?
ALS: Private
This morning I saw a whole flock of delightful gray buntings, in a
Address: Mrs. Wm. James I 95 Irving Street Cambridge Mass
wood off a beautiful road looking over a valley.
The postmark is illegible.
3
224
March 1903
March 1903
225
Twenty-eight years would place the episode in 1875, before AGJ and WJ had met.
conscience this time!-and bring Mr. Ladd by himself another time. I
More likely, he is referring to an event while on their honeymoon in 1878.
tho't you told me he was in Phil. 3, but I couldn't remember his name
The Gregors were then living in Montreal.
on the list. I have seen him at the lectures, however.
Charles Peirce seems to me to have rather wofully "gone off" in the
To Alice Howe Gibbens James
past 5 years. His lecture was a great disappointment. I doubt whether
he has any very distinct idea of where he is coming out with his pragma-
VICTORIA INN,
ASHEVILLE, N.C. Tuesday night
tism, himself. The discussion degenerated into an interminable dialog
[March 31, 19031 11 o'clock
between him and Schmidt as to the nature of mathematic reasoning,
Darling Wifelein,
each replying to the last sentences of the other and SO drifting along
Just in from dinner at the Vanderbilt's-a really superb palace but so
without a plan. I fear that the audiences will fall off a good deal. Nev-
solid and beautiful that one would like to live there. They are both
ertheless I have done my duty!
very nice simple friendly people. The sun came out at 12' oclock and
Damn your half-successes, your imperfect geniuses. I'm tired of mak-
we had our drive. In the afternoon Joe & I came to this place which
ing allowances for them and propping them up. As Alice says, Peirce
has a lovely view. The air agrees with the social racket is
has never constrained himself in his life. Selfish, conceited, affected, a
queer. The V's have invited us to lunch and for another drive on
monster of desultory intellect, he has become now a seedy, almost sor-
Thursday. They wan't us to buy land, or at least settle here.
did, old man, without even any intellectual residuum from his work that
Your big envelope full came this AM. I'm glad that Peggy enjoyed
can be called a finished construction, only "suggestions," and a begging
McGrew's party, and hope that now she will soon emerge from her
old age. You may thank heaven that you are of a different type, of the
grippe poison. I think that this air would do her great good, but I don't
diametrically opposite type, in fact, and that your ultimate destiny will
know that the mode of life otherwise would. I asked the darkey just
be the opposite pole of his. Only don't let on to any one all that I have
now who drove us home whether the hotel was as full in summer as in
said about Peirce! The sight of him must make his excellent brother
winter. He said, "fuller! De Southern people dey pack clöster dan de
feel rather sad.
Nothern people." I think we shall probably stay here a week longer.
I have been in a cold N. Easter with much rain ever since Saturday
You seem to me, my own darling girl, very pathetic in your aloofness.
night, although the car-ride hither was delicious. The distance from
Good night, and may heaven bless you.
my library and front door has wonderfully soothed my brain, but the jig
Your
Wm.
recommences, for Vanderbilt invites Joe Warner (who turned up yester-
ALS: MH bms Am 1092.9 (2207)
day) and me to drive through Biltmore (in the rain) this morning, and
to dine tonight. The country is really beautiful-noble!-I hope that
To Dickinson Sergeant Miller
your bodily condition keeps improving. You are "carrying" a deal of
work. Don't be SO foolish again about any other lad except G.T.Superscript(3 You
Kenilworth Inn, Biltmore, N.C., 31. 3., 1903.
may apologize if ever you bring him to our house!
Dear Miller,
Affectionately, W.J.
Alice forwards me your letter of apology-Heaven help us!-for
TC: MH bms Am 1092.1
bringing Mr. Ladd to our house. Suggestions of drunkenness or in-
1
William Palmer Ladd was then a student in Miller's Philosophy 20g: Seminary in the
sanity fleet through my mind, but I recall some remarks of mine about
History of Modern Philosophy.
that young Thurman joining the procession propria sponte and I see how
Probably the discussion concerns the walk on 26 March 1903 from Peirce's lecture in
geniuses like you can fly to conclusions.2 Don't you know me better,
Sever Hall to the reception in WJ's house. Samuel Thurman (b. 1882), in later years a
though? Can any acquaintance of yours ever not be welcome? I wish
rabbi, was taking a number of philosophy courses, including Philosophy 20g, but "young
that you had bro't all your seminary! In the case of this Ladd, I knew
Thurman" was more likely Israel Noah Thurman (b. 1884), in later years a lawyer, who
was enrolled in merely an introductory philosophy course.
him already, and he was doubly welcome. So choke off your damnable
3 George Trumbull Ladd.
4
226
April 1903
April 1903
227
To Alice Howe Gibbens James
down straight, we went to the Vanderbilts, and stayed from 1.30 till 6,
2 1/2 hours of it being driving over the lovely place. They are a truly
VICTORIA INN,
I
ASHEVILLE, N.C. April 1. [1903] 9. P.M.
remarkable couple, smooth faced, smiling and genuinely friendly and
Darling Alice,
simple, in spite of their almost absurd possessions, of which I had rather
I have had a good day to day, the weather being too warm for under-
tell you than write you, so let it be on my return. The country, as one
shirts and the country beautifully misty and full of colour. I [am] feel-
lives into it developes its charms. Its atmosphere, being SO misty, gives
ing very lazy in the south wind. I haven't read a line all day except the
it a wonderful amount of sentiment. I shall stay till Tuesday unless
newspaper. All the AM. J.BW & I loafed in the woods not far from
driven out by the sociability sooner. This house is very clean & well
the house. Returned to lunch & nap, and then took a carriage from
kept, and its surroundings are exquisite. I don't read a single line, and
the Square at 75 cents an hour and had a beautiful two hours drive, to a
in the mood in which I now am, should like to go up to Chocorua im-
place called Strawbery hill where there was a house for sale on a high
mediately, on my return.
bank looking down on the curve of the "french broad" river, across
Kiss dear Peggy who will, I hope, now get well straightway. How jolly
which Biltmore lay, whilst the mountains filled the background. The
to hear of Aleck with the birds, especially the woodcock which are so rare.
colours of every thing were inexpressibly rich, and the shading delicate,
Your loving W.J.
and it was then and there that I wished more devoutly that you were by
ALS: MH bms Am 1092.9 (2209)
my side. I know you would have enjoyed the scene. This house is well
Miss Keyes was not identified. WJ knew several people of that name associated with
kept, with beautiful surroundings. We have 2 good adjacent rooms,
Concord; see Correspondence, 5:5099.
very clean & fresh, with a private bath room attached, & fine view from
windows, secluded & quiet for 35 dollars a week for both.
Good night. Inexpressible love to you all. W.J.
To George Herbert Palmer
We shall certainly stay out our week, SO you may write until next Sun-
day, addressing me here. The episcopal pastor Rev. D: Swope(!) has
VICTORIA INN,
ASHEVILLE, N.C. April 3. 1903
called on me, also a Mr Woolsey.
Dear Palmer,
ALS: MH bms Am 1092.9 (2208)
An item in the Tribune, announces a conditional 50,000 for Emerson
Rodney Rush Swope, an Episcopalian priest, ordained in 1876, with philosophical
Hall, which I suppose practically ensures the project, on which I con-
interests.
gratulate you. I never cared for it as much as you seem to have cared. ¹
What I confess I dread is becoming an accomplice in another archi-
tectural crime. Must the building go on Quincy St.? Is n't the Holmes
To Alice Howe Gibbens James
field region, with "power" for the laboratory etc., accessible from out-
side, better? I think this question ought to be thoroughly threshed out,
VICTORIA INN, ASHEVILLE, N.C. April 2. [1903] 8.15 PM.
before any irrevocable step is taken. The only way of saving the Quincy
Darling Alice,
St. site architecturally is by erecting an almost identical mate to Robin-
Returning at 6.45 from the Vanderbilts I find your two letters of
son Hall opposite it, where the two would form a frame for the abso-
Wednesday, with Harry's note to you, and a lot of enclosures, Miss Keyes's
lutely heterogeneous Sever Hall. ² To introduce a third heterogeneity
capping the climax for fantasticality. What would our Henry think of
and discord there, would, I think, be an absolutely unpardonable out-
such an epistle?
rage on the public eye.
Our Harry's letter makes me wish that I were at Chocorua with him,
Surely it isn't too late for both architect and site to be reconsidered.
not that it isn't delicious here, but there is less sociability there.
Longfellow is capable of any atrocity. I don't want to hurry back
now
After a forenoon on a hill above the town-very warm no under-
to fight this, being completely "tuckered eaout," but I do hope that
shirt-led up to by electric tram & beautiful view there, and scramble
you won't, through the mere inertia of the movement already begun,
5
Corr.
228
February 1903
Vol.3
April 1903
229
had agreed to pay Peirce $600 for six lectures (bMS Am 1092.9 [3393]). Peirce
and is doing every kind of work, forestry nursery, dairy, horticulture,
replied on 16 March arguing that he could not cover the subject of logic in six lectures
and proposed pragmatism as a topic (bMS Am 1092 [692]). The lectures were titled
stock raising, road perfecting, and is a model to rich men all through
"Pragmatism as a Principle and Method of Right Thinking" and were delivered on
the country. In spite of his rather soft appearance, he must be a
26 March, 2, 9, 16, 30 April, and 7 May 1903. Peirce gave an additional lecture on
strong character to carry SO much business and responsibility, and I
pragmatism on 14 May and a lecture on "Conceptions of Mathematical Multitude
like his young wife better & better every time I see her. Their house
and Continuity" on 15 May.
(of Richard Hunt's planning)2 is a true wonder of splendor and do-
Sue letter of 22 December 1902.
mesticity combined-a grand success, modeled on certain french cha-
The centenary of Emerson's birth was celebrated at Concord on 25 May 1903.
teaus, Blois especially, but modern in its convenience and comfort.
WJ's address is reprinted in ERM.
8 For the Saturday Club see Correspondence, 2:17n. WJ became a member in 1881.
Too "high studded"-fo my taste perhaps-the dining room roof is
66 feet from the floor. However, enough of this pleasing couple, and
place! A certain Colonel Woolsey has shown us hospitality-his wife
To Henry James
who met you years ago at Mrs. Bronson's at Venice, wishes particu-
larly to be remembered. - - I "retire" after next year from College
VICTORIA INN, I ASHEVILLE, N.C. April 7. '03
and from Cambridge, it will certainly be well to spend one winter
Beloved Henry
here, to see how it goes.-Theodora writes of you that you seem in
You see where I be. I have been here only ten days, having come
excellent trim this winter. Apparently you have been working very
down excessively fatigued, but no reading what ever and an open air
hard, and your last books have started you on a new career of popu-
life have already made me feel quite different. I ought, however, to
larity or at least of praise. The "better Sort" came duly, and I meant
have left home a month ago. I was SO well during the first half of
after reading two of the stories to bring it down here to finish, but I
the winter that a normal desire for travel, especially for the sea-
accidentally left it at home. You certainly excel in stories of that size.
voyage and (strange to say) for a few days in Paris, came over me.
It is hard enamel finish. I suppose that you too will go to the coun-
But at last I got the nervous tire on me, and then I was afraid of
try about May 1st.
getting into that lawful state of nerves which I was in at Edinburgh
I have unluckily pledged myself to give a 20 minutes address
at
last June, SO I threw up my passage, very wisely as I think, for the
Concord on Emerson's Centenary the 25th.5 Although I have
been
racket wd. probably not have agreed. Altho my present "tire" is bad,
reading him lately consecutively with on the whole an enhanced
my whole year has been much more energetic and normal than last
opinion of his powers, my speech doesn't shape itself, & I wish to
year, and my heart sensations and irregularities of action have practi-
Heaven that I were out of it alltogether. My powers don't combine
cally subsided altogether, though all my walking has to be slow. Yes-
well with just that sort of thing-I only undertook it to please Alice.
terday I had a half hour's scramble up a very steep and slippery
"Emerson Hall" the home of our Philosophical department seems to
mountain brook and essuyé-d no bad effects whatever. This is great,
be financially secured, and work will probably begin Duveneck's
compared with two years ago. We shall go to the country by May
statue will probably look well in its vestibule.7
1st I hope and then all will be well. Jo Warner has been here for
5
Bill's year in Geneva seems to have been a splendid success. May
days. It is a noble and beautiful region, with a great deal of colour
his semester at Marburg prove no less so. He writes delightful letters
and atmospheric perspective, and the vegetation just beginning to
home. Young Aleck to whom I am conveying a brindled bull-terrier
soften with the budding leaves. The drawback is the clay roads and
8 months old, bo't from a darkey here, is all right again, and passion-
the mud, but under Geo. Vanderbilts example the town and country
ately engrossed in bird-lore, less as a matter of delight in the birds
have macadamized a great many miles, and driving can be enjoyed.
themselves than of delight in the machinery of "bird-club" note
There are two rivers, one big and rapid which meet close to the town,
book, & all the rest of it. To day Joe, & to morrow I, return home.
and the hill tops offer views in great variety. It is a Northerner's
Your loving, W.J.
resort in Summer, and a southerner's in Winter-a sort of cosmopoli-
My Varieties still sell splendidly. The 12th thousand is not8 print-
tan Place. Vanderbilt owns a strip of land 50 miles long by 15 broad,
ing and binding. It is an immense financial help.
230
April 1903
April 1903
231
ALS: MH bms Am 1092.9 (2904)
speak of! Billy & I exchanged flurries over your intimatedly prob-
George Washington Vanderbilt built the Biltmore estate near Asheville, N.C.
able arrival-& then, when you didn't arrive, wisely rejoiced that you
2
Richard Morris Hunt (1828-1895), American architect.
hadn't partaken of so very qualified a joy. It would have been de-
3 Charles William Woolsey (d. 1907), American military officer and clubman. The
name of his wife, who died before he did, was not discovered. Katherine De Kay
lightful to see you-if one could have been sure of seeing you not
Bronson (d. 1901) was a socialite and hostess. In the late 1850s she and her husband,
finding yourself more the worse than the better. As the months go
Arthur Bronson, owned a villa in Newport and, later, a home in Venice called Casa
on I miss Bill the more-I mean as to the small prospect of my doing
Alvisi.
more than have a very mean little glimpse of him at the summer's
HJ, The Better Sort (1903).
end. He is excellent about writing, better than I, & I seem to get
See letter of 28 February 1903.
the sense that his "personal charm" smooths his path through life, &
The original plan was to break ground for Emerson Hall on 25 May 1903 as part
of the celebration of Emerson's centenary, but there were delays. Emerson Hall was
that he incurs general good will. I took leave of Theodora S. 3 days
formally opened on 27 December 1905 and was first used for a joint meeting of the
since (how poor W - D. will miss her!)¹ & she will give you the latest
American Philosophical Association and the American Psychological Association in
about my appearance & conversation. She will tell you that the de-
December 1905.
sire to go "home" for 6 months (not less,) daily grows in me & that
7 See letter of 22 December 1902, note 5.
I particularly wish it before senile decay sets in. But she will also tell
A slip for 'now'.
you that I don't see my way to anything of the sort within any calcula-
ble number of months-or years. And my dilemma is rather tragic.
From Henry James
It is all economic. It is more & more important I should go, to look
after my material (literary) interests in person, & quicken & improve
LAMB HOUSE, I RYE, I SUSSEX. April 10th 1903
them, after SO endless an absence-of that I am authentically as-
Dearest William.
sured, & see it, above all, for myself. But the process itself is SO damna-
I have all this winter most infamously treated you-at least since
bly expensive-6 mos. of American hotels (for I can't stay with
the New Year-or rather, no-much before it; being in receipt of 3
people-it's utterly impossible,) that I move, as it were, in a vicious
or 4 admirable letters from you that have till this hour languished
circle. I say 6 months because I want & need the material & impres-
unanswered. The one small spark of decency that I have been cap-
sions that only that time would give me. I should wish to write a
able of was writing some month ago a poor stopgap letter to Peggy-
book of "impressions{"] (for much money) & to that end get quite
sending you a message trying to attenuate my silence or promising
away from Boston & New York-really see the country at large.2 On
you some better satisfaction. Yet even now I find it is 11 o clk. at
the other hand I don't see myself prowling alone in western cities &
night & the influences rather adverse! I rise tomorrow a.m.-Easter
hotels, or finding my way about by myself, & it is all darksome &
Saturday-to get over to Brighton & spend there, with some old
tangled. Some light may break-but meanwhile next Wednesday
friends, the 2 or 3 days of this (as ever) most East-windy (especially
(awful fact,) is my 60th birthday.- have had here the last 6 weeks
here) Eastertide. I came down here from London (where I have been
(which doesn't make it any easier,) a tiresome little episode, one of
since the mid-January,) 2 days ago, & I go back from Brighton to
the sorrows of a proprietor. I have had to buy a large piece of the
town again, till the 10th May (about.) It is not till then that the vernal
Garden next my own from J. H. Gasson, the blatant tradesman &
Rye is at all pleasant or that I desire ever to be here. It (This) is the
scourge of Rye, in order to protect myself from his power to build
most raw time of the year. London, on the other hand, has been this
(at west end of mine) & overlook or otherwise annoy me. It had been
winter very agreeable & salutary-the more that I had been there so
for sale, unbeknown to me, & he had pounced on it & purchased-
little for SO long. It has always its old faults-that if you go in for
to threaten me, under the guise of offering it to me-considerately-
any society you have, before you know it, inconveniently, fatiguingly
at an of course excessive rate. The danger poisoned my rest, & wd.
much. But I try to go in for as little as is rigidly inevitable, & I am
have ruined my one view & all my little place, practically-so that
happy to say rigid regularity of work hasn't in the least suffered. I've
there was nothing to do but to buy- save the situation. I have
seen a few old friends, but, thank God, I haven't made any new to
done so, & the (this) property is proportionately improved & de-
17 Lurrey Sk
10 May 03
Dear Mr. Dor:
I shall report to
the Corporation tomorrow that
the Emerson Hall subscription
is sure to he completed and
that it is for them To fix the
site, engage the architech, and
go ahead.
Please tell me what you have
in hand as evidence of that
neee York anonymous 10,000 a
I am glad the committee
[
]
Gev. B Don
193
Fifty thousand dollars "RV-
to the
fund for building Emersen Fall the gift being made conditional
upon the
completion before Commencement of the from
to insure the building of the Hall: i. name of the denor is withholder the
special object of the gift is to encourage the work that is being done under
65k
Professor Posbody's direction in
Sixty-five thousand dol.
50K
lare have been already raised by the Visiting Consistent on Philosophy and te:
thousand more have been promised : if the fund car be completed in time to
lay the corner atone of the memorial hall
centernial day of Emerson S
150K
birth - May 24th. One hundred fifty thousand dollars is the amount which it
noted
is essential to raise in order to insure the building of the hall and as one
hundred twenty-five thousand dollars of this amount are now assured, if the
remainder can be obtained in time to satisfy these gifts conditionally made,
it is create, to be hoped that so rare as opportunity to coohire the needs
of
"
department of the University with honor to a great American thinker
an emphasis upon his past connection with the University and
abiding
influence upon its thought.
No fitter memorial to Emerson could be found than this through which his
name will be associated in the minds of coming generations of students N8 long
as the hall named after him shall endure, with the study of ilosophy and the
development of philosophic thought in the University in which he was himself
student, lecturor and verseer.
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4.
LIST OF DONATIONS TO EMERSON HALL, HARVARD UNIVERSITY
APRIL 14, 1903.
Anonymous. Boston.
$10,000.
Mrs Henry Lee
10,000.
Miss F. P. Mason
10,000.
Mr Arthur T. Lyman
5,000.
Mr Learned Hand. Albany, N. Y.
1,000.
Anonymous. New York.
10,000.
Mrs Wm S. Bullard and family
1,000.
J. Elliot Cabot
2,500.
Joseph Lee
10,000.
R. C. Robbins
1,000.
George B. Dorr
1,000.
Dr Wm Sturgis Bigelow
1,000.
Anonymous. Cambridge.
500.
Mrs D. P. Kimball.
10,000.
Anonymous
50,000.
R. H. Dana
1,000.
Charles Head.
500.
H. H. Goodwin
100.
Mrs Chas. P. Hemenway
200.
Mr Geo. Putnam
250.
Member of the Class of 1867
250.
Mr Chas P. Curtis
500.
James Storer
250.
James J. Putnam
25.
$
Henry Halt
100.
126975
Subscription promined by Indian r one or two achieve but amount,
not yi's stated stated not 15bdarg
643
April 30 1903.
Dear : Dorr -
as the full list of subscribers to tix
imeracy IT Hall Fund been published! When you
sent
President Eliot two weeks ago, he ex
pressed the opinion that the publication of
that list was much to be desired
Very truly yours.
grome
Coorge B. Derr. Esqo
RECEIVED
ACKNOWLEDGED APR 16 1903
april 14-1903
ANSWERED
FILE UNDER
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
my dear Mr Green,
I should like
We have Prut Elist
glance this letter through
On his return, as be may
have form suggration w
make the r it will How
him when au staull_
You they
April 16, 1903.
Dear "r Corr:-
: have your letter of April 14, en-
closing & copy of your letter to Professor
Punsterberg
I shall show the litter to
the President on his return next week.
Very truly yours
Specific
George B. Dorr, Esq.
642
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
March 26th, 1903.
Mr Jerome D. Greena,
President's Office, Harvard University,
Cambridge.
Dear Sir,
The address given me by the President for Mr Holden
Teaching hers do Hall. own to
vas simply Cleveland, which mist, I take it, he Cleveland, Ohio.
But I got an impression from what President Eliot said that
Subren: known r
Mr Holden was really a western man living in one of the mining
states of the Rocky Mountain region. If Claveland, Ohio, is
not right, please telephone me upon receipt of this; otherwise
I will mail to that address.
Yours truly,
George B. Dorr.
Per M.H.
643
Varch 27, 1903
Dear Mr. Dorr &
You were right in Inferring that Mr. holden as address was
Clovaland Ohio.
Hia mining interests take his frequently into the Rocky Moun~
tain region, and his son has lived there, but his head quartere are in Cleveland,
Ohio
I am sorry that I have not yet get that newspaper material ready to submit
to you. I have had a probe of day and evening work which had to be done this
week in anticipation of a meeting of the Corporation next Monday I shall ba
in time, however, for the publication which I have planned for next Tuesday or
Wednesday.
Very truly yours
James
George B, Dorr, Esq.
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
May 1st, 1903.
President Eliot,
Harvard University.
My dear President Eliot,
Mr Greene tells me that you did not see the
ILL
Transcript article of Wednesday before last which contained
the list of the subscriptions then made to Emerson Hall and I
am sending you out with this a copy of the paper with it in
it. Since then I have received subscriptions of $1000. from
J. M. Sears, 8100. from Mrs J. H. Hecht, $100. from Miss L. P.
Loring, and $50. from my classmate Frank Lyman; Lee has received
a subscription of $500. and Mr Ward three subscriptions amount-
ing to $125. Besides this we had a subscription of $25.,
from J. J. Putnem, which we did not publish in our list,
thinking it best at that time not to list so small a subscriy-
tion. This brings the total amount today, including Mr Car-
negie's gift. of $12000., up to $141,500. leaving $8500 still
to bA raised before the 25th of May under penalty, if enforced,
of losing Mrs Kimball's $10,000 and J. M. Sears' $1000.
officiple
We still have a few names left upon our list from whom
subscriptions may he honed but 80 many people, first and last,
upon whom I should have counted to actively interest themselves
in the matter have failed to do so, upon one ground or another,
when approached upon the subject that I feel much less confident
2
than I could wish of our getting even the relatively small
amount that still remains to raise within these next two or
three weeks. Moreover I have moved down to Bar Harbor now
Bas Harbor
myself, where I have a good deal of work going on and shall
have to be the greater part of the time after this, though
I shall keep my house open here all through the spring and
come and go.
I never got any reply from Mr Holden to whom I wrote some
weeks ago, nor from any one of several other western people
whose names I got from various sources as those of men who
would be likely to at least interest themselves in the matter.
Mr Ward and I also wrote, between us, tc a large number of
people, whose addresses we obtained from Edward Emerson and
others, who were known tc take an interest in Emerson, but with
no other result than a number of letters expressing interest
and a few small subscriptions. I thought it worth exploring
but that line seems to be a barren one to follow any farther.
For any suggestions that you can give me as to raising
the balance which we need before the 25th I shall be grateful,
and I remain.
Sincerely yours,
[Harvard Club, 27 W. 44th, N.Y., N.Y.
3.
1000 more
from Mr. S.S. ward
Mr. Dor's uncle
and father of m
want of w th listing
Committee
G.B.Dorr
may 2. 1903
Juxtaposition: 1903
As I explored the overlap of timing two years earlier, might there be some
relationships that can be teased out of events in May 1903?
--see my "Theodore Roosevelt and the Mount Desert Triumvirate." Theodore
Roosevelt Inaugural Historic Site talk in Buffalo, NY., 9/27/2016
A. Theodore Roosevelt's 1903 train tour of the U.S. After leaving Yellowstone he
arrived at the Grand Canyon where he delivered a public statement that has
resonated down the ages. David Gessner's recent book captures the Rooseveltean
spirit of his May 6th statement that nothing ought to be done to the Grand
Canyon." Leave it as it is." The maxim (LEAVE IT AS IT IS) was the title of Gessner's
2020 monograph.
B. Nine days later TR is in Yosemite with John Muir. See Gessner & Brinkley.
Back East, G.B. Dorr is leading his fellow Harvard alums in raising funds for the
construction of Emerson Hall.
A. On May 11 he is joined by the Bowditch brothers in a trip to Virginia to
experience its natural landscape features. Trip documented in park archives (May
11-27).
B. The May 25th 1903 centennial celebration of Ralph Waldo Emerson's birth takes
place in Concord and other sites nationwide. Dorr's absence from these Harvard
related activities provoked no documented comment. Yet it remains in my mind
unresolved.
R.H. Epp
Dorr 1903
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In 1903, Roosevelt visited Muir in Yosemite. Guided
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points of interest in Yosemite National Park. Muir
Get Involved
seized the opportunity "to do some forest good in
talking freely around the campfire," and the President,
referring to John Muir, is quoted as saying "Of course
of all the people in the world, he was the one with
whom it was best worth while thus to see the
Yosemite."
Roosevelt and Muir camped the first night, May 15, at
the Mariposa Grove under the Grizzly Giant, with the
President bedding down in a pile of about 40 wool
blankets, and the second night was spent in the
vicinity of Sentinel Dome during a snow storm that left five inches of new snow on top of the
existing five feet of snow. The third night of camping was at the edge Bridalveil Meadow in
Yosemite Valley, where President Roosevelt was Muir's captive audience to hear a convincing
plea for Yosemite wilderness and for setting aside other areas in the United States for park
purposes. That night, during the campfire discussion, Muir's main focus of conversation was
not only the need for forest preservation but also his concern that the California State Grant
of Yosemite Valley and the Mariposa Grove, surrounded in 1892 by Yosemite National Park,
be receded to the United States for inclusion in the park. Roosevelt agreed that two controls
made for "triple troubles." Eventually, their discussion prompted the Presidential signature
on the Yosemite Recession Bill in June, 1906. This Joint Resolution accepted the recession by
the State of California of the Yosemite Valley Grant and the Mariposa Big Tree Grove, now
the Mariposa Grove of Giant Sequoias, which withdrew them from state protection and put
them under federal protection, making them part of Yosemite National Park.
"There can be nothing in the world more beautiful than the Yosemite, the groves of the giant
sequoias our people should see to it that they are preserved for their children and their
Children's children forever, with their majestic beauty all unmarred," said Theodore
Roosevelt.
During his presidency, Theodore Roosevelt signed into existence five national parks, 18
national monuments, 55 national bird sanctuaries and wildlife refuges, and 150 national
forests (Source for forgoing: "100th Anniversary of President Theodore Roosevelt and
Naturalist John Muir's Visit at Yosemite National Park" - National Park Service Press Release
(May 15, 2003).
A tribute to John Muir by Theodore Roosevelt. In this excerpt, and the next entry,. Roosevelt
complained that Muir seemed to care little for birds or bird songs, and seemed to be "not
interested in the small things of nature unless they were unusually conspicuous." Historian
Donald Worster points out that "What he failed to realize was that Muir was mainly a botanist
and geologist, not an ornithologist, although by no means indifferent to the smallest of
plants or the faintest striations on rock." Indeed, Muir's writings are full of stories about
small things, including bees, flies, and even grasshopper tracks.
"In Yosemite with John Muir" by Theodore Roosevelt (From Roosevelt's Autobiography)
Charlie Leidig's Report of President Roosevelt's Visit to Yosemite in May, 1903 - (PDF)
(original typewritten manuscript by Charles Leidig, one of the civilian rangers to accompany
Theodore Roosevelt during his 1903 visit. His recollections were recorded and filed in the
Yosemite Research Library, which kindly supplied us a copy.
A Year of for Yosemite Anniversaries (PDF) (offsite link) - Yosemite Association special issue
of its journal Yosemite (Vol. 65., No.2, Spring 2003) - containing illustrated articles about
the famous 1903 camping trip by Roosevelt and Muir: "Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir:
100 Years Ago and Today" by Gary Koy, and a reprint of "Charlie Leidig's Report of President
Roosevelt's Visit to Yosemite in May 1903."
A Camping Trip with Roosevelt and Muir by Hank Johnston (PDF) (offsite link) - Yosemite
Association Vol. 56, No. 3 (Summer, 1994).
https://vault.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/people/roosevelt.aspx
2/5/2021
17 Juney Sk
10 stay 03
Dear Mr. Dorr:
I shall report to
the Corporation tomorrow that
The Enserson Rall subscription
is sure to he completed and
that it is for them To fix the
site, engage the architech, and
go ahead.
Please tell me what you have
in a hand and evidence ofthat
rill York enomymous $ 10,000.
are glad the committee
Charles w. Eliot.
[May 1903]
Geo B. Don
by
EMERSON HALL
AT
see
HARVARD UNIVERSITY.
The Visiting Committee of the Alumni in charge of raising funds for a
memorial hall to Emerson at Harvard University desire to lay that project before
all who value Emerson and all Harvard men, that all may have an opportunity to
manifest their interest by contributions, large or small. As a memorial to Emerson,
this building, devoted to philosophic and philanthropic teaching at the University
where Emerson himself was successively student, lecturer and overseer, and
taught in by men like Professors James, Royce, Palmer, Münsterberg, Peabody,
and Santayana, seems singularly) (fitting. The hall itself is greatly needed at the
University. For the further development of the rapidly growing philosophic work,
it is indeed essential. The philosophical department has the greatest number of
graduate students of any department of the University. Its courses are so well
appreciated by undergraduates that the average student now takes an entire year
of philosophy during his college course. A building devoted to one department
gives to that department dignity, unity, and emphasis. Nearly $150,000 has
now been subscribed for this hall, but more is needed to give the memorial
permanence and distinction and to make the hall sufficient for the University's
needs.
Contributions or pledges of subscription may be sent to the Treasurer of
the Committee, Richard H. Dana, Esq. 905 Exchange Building, 53 State Street,
Boston, or to any other member of the committee for forwarding to him.
GEORGE B. DORR, Chairman, 18 Commonwealth Ave., Boston.
RICHARD H. DANA, Treasurer, 905 Exchange Bldg., Boston.
COMMITTEE
RICHARD CABOT, 190 marlboro st. Boston.
JOSEPH LEE, 96 net verum it. Boston
REGINALD W. C. ROBBINS, 44CC
THOMAS WARD. 15wall st. New York
Boston, Mass., May 1903.
[May 1903]
for
Gw B. Don
at
EMERSON HALL
at
HARVARD UNIVERSITY.
The Visiting Committee of the Board of Overseers of Harvard
College in charge of the raising of funds for a hall in memory of
Emerson at Harvard University desire to lay that project before the
reverse
Harvard alumni and all who value Emerson, in order that all may have
an opportunity to take part, by large contributions or small, in the
establishment of this appropriate and permanently useful memorial.
As a memorial to Emerson, this building, devoted to phil-
greater
osophic and philanthropic teaching at the University where he was
Freeson.
successively student, lecturer and Overseer, seems singularly fitting;
and to the staff of teachers - Professors James, Palmer, Peabody,
Royce, Munsterberg, Santayana, and their associates - who will inaug-
urate its service to the University, that happy responsibility will
be
entrusted with the utmost confidence. The hall itself is greatly
needed at the University: for the proper maintenance of the work of
the philosophical department, not to speak of the normal growth of
that work, it is indeed essential.
The philosophical department
has more graduate students than does any other department; and the
resort to its courses by undergraduates is very large. A building
devoted to one department gives to tho teaching in that department
-2-
unity and dignity; and to teachers and students alike it gives the
inspiration which comes from closer association with each other
and a common enjoyment of the intellectual resources centered in
the building.
Nearly $150,000 has now been subscribed for the erection of
Emerson Hall, but more than that sum is needed to make the hall
sufficient for the University's needs and to give the memorial the
distinction appropriate to its abble object.
Contributions or pledges of subscription may be sent to the
Treasurer of the Conmittee, Richard H. Dana, Esq., 905 Exchange
Building, 53 State Street, Boston, or To any other member of the Anniette
Geroge B. Dorr, Chairman, 18 Commonwealth Ave., Boston.
Richard H. Dana, Treasurer, 905 Exchange Bldg., Boston.
Richard C. Cabot, 190 Marlboro St., Boston.
Committee:
Joseph Lee, 96 Mt. Vernon St., Boston.
Reginald C. Robbins, 44 Commonwealth Ave., Boston.
Thomas W. Ward, 15 Wall St., New York.
Boston, Mass., May 1903.
Eliot toward gives
8
200 Emuson Hall
Ra Main 643
date
18 Commonwealth Avenue. Mast mapop
N
Dear President Elist,
letter maki c got you l
ful
Scriptia to Emerdon Hall
just as I was leave,
My brown to Can down
here last night
I will lutu Poland
scriptin you desire
and Mr Wana, which
actic as Measure wour
Committee will and
you a formal profit
on you Cheel 200-)
Rs soon as I cuture
to
Mr the
hut Botto Higgister him down asked
for 4950 Volle feel
W yesterday
2.
3.
do est I alu dut
Committee Y the member of de de-
audulerite
!!
the balaner so that all Conditional
Subscription May be Decured &
the Whole amount to date Called
4 Y deforated
4.
Q. adept.
Which the ?? 7 pay?
II
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
the interest there
15th beaufied its
fund Roy Min
stubing Cause is (s
Ace the yistuda, x
Enervas Family
concerns c Don.
told the of th feeliy
of the
Wheread you, that
the Subscription should
be made
( Ihad also felt il
Maybell but thought
if Use to wair till
ur had, firegost
what large Dear
au Could by, funtonal
appeal before lucki
Kumar the aroued for
5.
6.
Weekly Mu yistude, at au weekly can
crem. meeting Miller Mute d decided wild
a Circular, Signed by Children
the almum efecht of
Committee, 4th whole body
Classes 8/6 any Euroven people teller
7.
III
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
Name raddrem
are can get statiy
the pla. Vobjicty
the Memnial the
Committee's desinct
have it as widely
representative ar hor.
sible WWeecin
as Well as age
Subscription -
Uroth a draft for
this Cincular yisturing
afternon I've
Whiel Data ander
K I Whis both leavi,
the City le
was to put logute
Edit
9.
Circular limit ym teleflem him,
ON Unit abnN it's
Uu May wet get much liming
our of this Stel her we night ld
get a Number of modual thus
Subscription which
10.
IV
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
the wide spread
interest le Emerson r
the duf gooledge
gaid then infor him
I think it Would lu
will als, that from
Simila Circular Should
be distributed, h Man
fit way, Alung the
people Comi Wth
lictures rath
attinding fallen
the Clutenmel Uu
Want how all th
Small Subscriptions
we can get 15 green
the Memorial the
Character it should
have
12.
Me has written him abnNit VI.
think the affectivity is in the he
should not lose
-
Hundry night
I shall Come up again Rother
Strength Giange R. Doss In
fresh
Charlottesville aa
of
18 Commonwealth
Avenue. Many 153/203
RECEIVED
MAY 17 1903
3
q-9 across
ACKNOWLEDGED
64
ANSWERED
trp Blue Ridge
My dear President-Elist.
of circular which our Com.
the I luclase printer from
milter is sending net 15th Aleenin
in ordu Is wide out the Sub-
semplin list to Everson Hall
give it a mm representation
10K copres
of circular
Charactu - Our 10000 cohin
will be mailed writin The neft
few days Richard Cabot has
Charge of prepain, the list. etc.
and I have also asked him
Small subscriptions 15 public strategy
to see is getting specially a few
along unit any active that may
Come, the latter part of neft
week when out Circular (wh.
I have also asked The Rulletin
will be nt So that
people may not hesilate W make
Emall contribution though fear
of being alone N conspicuous in
doing to- - It ought not W
2.
3.
Dr Meury Bow ditel, Charles Row
ditel. rd au starty off from him
Common for an light or hear days
riding
riding ml across etc Blue Ridge
ruf the thenandoah bally
I made anangement before I
Can away for The receift, ac-
Kunoledgement, r reporting of any
Emerson Hall/letter or/subscribtion
which may Come in my absence
The last statement of its find
was in the Transcribe - of May 135
I put it in just before I can any
Sweet Form,
1903
At the time when the May 25th centennial of Ralph Waldo Emerson was being celebrated in Concord and
elsewhere throughout New England and afar, Dorr and the Bowditch brothers leave for their Virginia
trip.
According to Ann Turrisi, ed. Pragmatism as a Principle and Method Right Thinking (SUNY, 1997,
available at UHA), the impoverished C.S. Peirce was seeking income for lectures given at various
institutions. He approached William James who arranged with C.W. Eliot for Peirce to deliver the 1903
Harvard Lectures on Pragmatism at weekly intervals, seven in number, between March 26 and May 15,
1903. James had to raise $600. honorarium from private sources. It appears that none of the Harvard
faculty attended all lectures, some may have attended none, and many missed several. James was
displeased with what he heard having taken pains to distinguish his pragmatism from that of Peirce. He
appears to have missed most lectures even though faculty interacted with the speaker at social
receptions given on several occasions.
We do not know if Dorr had interest in Peirce or his philosophy. He is, however, chair of the Philosophy
Department Visiting Committee and has at this time been responsible for raising funds to support the
erection of Emerson Hall. Curious.
she
9/18/18
BOSTON EVENING TRANSCRIPT. SATURDA
EMERSON CENTENNIAL
ceased to be a prophet, and as preacher he
ov
took the whole world for his parish. Though
or
he left the pulpit he never left the minis-
kr
Addresses Commemorate the
try. He had put on righteousness, and it
00
never ceased to cloothe him with spiritual
hi
Philosopher
power. He may have produced no system,
wi
but in underlying unity of principle he had
se
no equal. Essentially Emerson was a
th
His Birthday 100 Years Ago Next
mystic. From first to last he looked into
re
his own heart and trusted to what was
di
written there. He listened for the inward
ga
Monday
voice, and once said that the trouble with
of
men was that they would not listen. He
tr
The Free Religious Association
belleved that there was nothing in the
m
world so sacred as a man's own self; that
m
Meets
a man should learn to detect that bar of
sel
inward light which now and then flashes
to
Chief
Address
across his consciousness, and to depend
Tomorrow
by
President
upon it. Emerson belonged to that great
sp
Eliot
spiritual anti-slavery society among whose
fri
charter members are Buddha and Christ, he
th
believed that conscience was more to be
a
Centennial observances of the birth of
trusted than conformity. Why should we
tol
Ralph Waldo Emerson May 25. 1893. began
not have a religion of experience rather
ab
in this city today with the meeting of the
than tradition. Emerson asked; and what
for
Free Religious Association in Parker Me-
we did not have he proceeded to give
H.
morial Hall. Emerson was one of the
us. 'Let men stand on their own feet," he
ou
founders of the association in 1867, and
said, 'And God will speak to them.' Ah,
an
the addresses this morning, listened to
in these days of revisions which only half
in
with notable interest and sympathy by an
ov.
revise, and revelations which do not re-
audience which filled the floor and gallery,
veal, we need once again to hear the trum-
were partly historical and partly an esti-
pet call of Emerson's truth!
mate of the Concord philosopher's character
"His early hearers did not understand his
and influence. Edwin D. Mead presided.
rhapsodies over the commonplace; they saw
No
and delivered the opening address, al-
nothing in the daily things of nature. They
though his remarks were preceded by an
wanted miracles two thousand years ago to
organ voluntary, and the singing of Men-
give them revelations. Thank God, all this
delssohn's "How Lovely Are the Messengers
is changed. The lesson he has taught us is
the
of Peace," by the augmented choir of the
that the divine is everywhere. Nature is
ad
Parker Memorial Church under the leader-
the word of God to the heart of man, and
of
ship of F. W. Wodel, the choirmaster.
when a man understands and hears it he
Th
Mrs. G. F. Cheney was organist.
comes to himself and really lives. But that
Ed
EDWIN D. MEAD'S OPENING
is not the only lesson he taught. His trust
Scl
Mr. Mead said in opening that one of the
in democracy showed his faith in all men,
su;
most impressive and most cheering things
because there is something of the divine
up
of the time were the arrangements from
in all men that can betrusted. He exempli-
Pr
the Atlantic to the Pacific to observe the
fied the religious truth on which our fathers
Th
centennial anniversary of the birth of
built. Nobody has showed more clearly
T
Emerson. He thought that never in the
than he the true foundations on which our
'1
world's history had there been SO large an
great republic is built.
will
observance of a purely intellectual anni-
"It is a fascinating task to try to classi-
Em
fy Emerson. Lowell called him the Yan-
H
versary. It came as a special sacrament,
and he loved to think that it represented a
kee Plato and Holmes the Buddha of the
add
longing on the part of the American people
West. More recently somebody compared
Fra
him to Channing, saying: 'Channing
Ed
for a different set of Ideals from those
made a map of the sky, but Emerson mere-
Dol
which had obtained in this country since
by traced the course of a comet." but Em-
Eva
the war spirit swept over it in 1896. "Ether-
son stands for everything which Is highest
erson's vision of the comet of the heaven-
T
and best in our life." Mr. Mead said. THe
ly light within will endure until the end
tion
has spoken in his addresses on
of conselousness As a religious force he
ever
dell'
son stands for everything which is highest
erson's vision of the comet of the heaven-
and best In our life," Mr. Mead said. "He
ly light within will endure until the end
has spoken In his addresses on education
of conselousness. AM a religious force he
the most pregnant and most prophette
Is active Hill to renew religious inspiration
d.
and quicken conselence. He has entered
to
word which has been spoken since John
into the heart of the people."
pa
Milton. In his Harvard address of 1838 he
m
gave us the programme for our religion
PERSONALITY IN HIS THOUGHT
un
for a thousand years, and it is with special
Rev. Charles Francis Carter of Lexington
qu
fitness that we come here to consider his re-
was next introduced to speak of "Person-
81
ligious Influence. He WALS one of the found-
ality of Emerson's Religious Thought."
an
ers of this association, and he was present
He touched upon the four cardinal points
pr
at that original meeting in Horticultural
where his thought touches personality.
ce
Hall May 30, 1867. a meeting which attract-
"The first." he said. "Is the principle of
ha
ed some attention and which had been ad-
self-respect, which Emerson taught from
he
vertised in the newspapers for days before-
first to last. He served a warrant on every
hand.
man to be himself. Each should be unique
80
*The call was issued by Octavius B. Froth-
in the world; stand alone in his place.
th
Ingham, William J. Potter and Rowland
Conventions he held of little account; tra-
fo
Connor, and the first speaker on a long list
ditions, however venerable, he was ever
gu
was Ralph Waldo Emerson. The only three
ready to east off, lest they should become
or
of the list living today are Henry
anchors, keeping men from being them-
In
Blanchard, Francis Abbott and Colonel
selves. He taught always the value of the
be
Thomas Wentworth Higginson. Some of
individual man. His writings bristle with
En
them were there in representative char-
trunts and challenges. But together with
S.
acter, speaking for the liberal Unitarians,
this principle of self-reliance he counselled
Cl
for the progressive Universalists, for the
men to be humble; to think very little of
sp
progressive Friends, but Mr. Emerson. in
themselves; to get into large relations with
ch
the words of Mr. Frothingham, was chosen
the universe. We are nothing; the sight
to speak for those worthy men who have
is everything. This is the abiding truth of
an
no sect, who are strictly Universal in char-
all the mystles from Paul to Emerson-
6a
acter. Others, like sturdy John Brown at
that the things not seen are real. How sa-
T)
Harper's Ferry, were there to speak for
cred is self-respect when so founded. It Is
th
themselves Such a one was Colonel Hig-
only another name for faith; for, as he
ho
ginson. I like to think of his presence
himself said, self-rellance Is reliance on
there, and rejoice that he is to preside at
God. Here we come to bedrock; to the
the meeting this evening.
very essence of religion. With self-reliance
Tu
"But I rejoice more at the long service of
and perseverance, every man can go his
th
Colonel Higginson, who has always spoken
way a representation of the divine.
an
the same word, the helpful human word. In
Rev. Charles G. Ames made the next ad-
tio
his eightieth year let our hearts go out to
dress, on "Emerson's Radical Conserva-
him in greeting. Francis Abbott. will not
tism." He spoke of the fine balance of
be present tonight, for he is confined to his
these two qualities in Emerson; his con-
house in sickness and suffering. Let us re-
servatism not of the kind that blocks the
member that except for Emers n. who-e ad-
wheels of progress; his radicalism never
ten
dresses have gaine world-wide currency, his
reasonless 11e could see the possibility of
ter
words at the meeting when this association
error in all systems of philosophy or belief,
En
was organized, phrased its highest motive:
though he gave them honor and considera-
"To hallow American civilization by a pro-
tion. He called on everybody to hold seu-
diously to the well-considered verdict of his
ter
founder consciousness of the divine.
The president of the association then
elected was Octavius Frothingham; Colonel
Hy
less
Higginson was one of the officers of that
Sel
year; and of the six directors. one was Mrs
:
of
Ednah Dean Cheney, who will be at th
3
festival tonight. In the first speech to the
eyer
onasson
&
Co
'S1
SS clation. Mr. Mead said that time son de-
C ared that the churches of Boston of that
3
day had been outgrown, that the people in
Tremont & Boylston Sts
He
them felt themselves cabined, cribbed. con-
fined and pleaded for the union of men in
good works. for pure beneficence. Two
A
years later he made a much more important
speech 111 which he pleaded for the rolin-
Beginning Monday
Dar
quishment of theological discussions and a
lish
greater attention to good works. That
May 25th
mee
The
7
eared that the churches of Boston of that
3
day had been outgrown. that the people in
Tremont & Boylston Sts
If
them felt themselves cabined, cribbed. con-
fined and pleaded for the union of men in
ly
good works. for pure beneficence. Two
years later he made a much more Important
Beginning Monday
Dr
speech in which he pleaded for the rolin-
He
it-
quishment of theological discussions and a
May 25th
m
greater attention to good works That was
T)
Emerson's great message to the Free Re-
Sensational
an
ligious Association. Mr. Mead pointed out
to
that the Unitarian Churches were far in
rei
ill
advance of where they were in the time
of those early addresses, and urged that
Neckwear Sale
they continue to follow Emerson's teach-
ing.
LONGFELLOW HYMN SUNG
In 3 Special Lots of Summer
Pr
1-
Mr. Mead closed by asking the audience
Wash Materials
to sing Samuel Longfellow's hymn, "O Life
es
That Maketh Old Things New," remark-
ing that this hymn was written for the
Lot No. 1, of 150 dozen Wash
fil
convention of the Free Religious Association
Stocks in plain white and
an
of 1874. when Emerson was vice president
A:
The hymn was sung. then Mr. Mead pre-
with color combinations,
th
sented Rev. Paul Revere Frothingham
regular value 50c.
We
as the second speaker.
20c
sp
EMERSON A RELIGIOUS FORCE
Sale price
wl
:d
Mr. Frothingham took for his topic,
ch
"Emerson as a Religious Force," and Pe-
Lot No. 2, of 100 dozen re-
op
W
marked that Theodore Parker, in whose
fined Wash Stocks all white
int
g
memory the building in which the meeting
2.
was held was erected. "was accustomed to
and in color combinations,
sp
Pr
thank God for three things-for the sun,
for the moon and for Ralph Waldo Emer-
with fagoted bands, double
Pr
son.
and triple tab effect, regu-
vir
of
1d
"One of the amazing things to my
lar value 75c. Sale
Re
il
mind." he went on, "is the progress of
35c
ta:
h
Emerson's religious thought in the suc-
y
ceeding years. The man who left the pul-
price.
ing
re
pit for octselentious reasons has done
more. except perhaps William Ellery
Lot No. 3, of 75 dozen, in
of
L-
soft linen, fagoted and with
be
Channing, for those who still find In the
bo
1.
pulpit an opportunity for service and the
exercise of spiritual influence. Though the
French knots, also with lace
sea
the
d
dean of the Harvard Divinity School, after
medallions, Irish crochet, p'k
ha
Emerson's famous address there. was
heard to say that what was not folly in it
with dimity tie, cheviot and
wt
I.
was atheism. the present dean of the DI-
1.
vinity School is now planning to place a
madras, regular value
S.
tablet In the little chapel where those
$1.00. Sale price
50c
wonderful words were spoken.
:-
"Emerson is only to be properly under-
d
stood from the religious point of view.
IF
Though a philosopher and poet. he never
Tailored Suits
:-
Is
AT
ef
e
:-
ie
Furnishings
Half Price
CO
ca
1b
FOR MEN
Consisting of Voile, Etamine,
ne
0.
e
Broadcloth, Cheviot and Nov-
In variety of exclusive
styles, our stock of sum-
elty Cloths offered at the fol-
de
e.
in
mer novelties is the finest
bane, dos it dos. cabitolet and wagenette Tusty
and interesting colection was upon exhibi-
Ink and rain cants. top and no top road wagons, be
ad-:
tion, consisting of manuscripts, auto-
and frish jaunting car. all the new carriages belot
graph letters. first editions and old and
have been supplemented by consignments from Mr!
of
rare portraits of Emerson: and during the
Boston; the sale will take place In the show 11
con-
evening the college. public and many
Brimmer St.,at the corner of Byron St. and w
the
guests gathered in Goddard Chapel to 11s.
mer Sts. THURSDAY the 28th day of May. Hegli
ever
ten to readings by Professor Thomas Whit-
regardless of any condition of the weather all in
of
temore from both the prose and verse of
be made at the office of the auctioneers, where eat
lief,
Emerson. Among his selections in verse
also be obtained; all vehicles will be on exhibition
ra-
were "The Problem." "Each and All,"
day of sale
stu-
"Voluntaries." "Forbearance." "Charac-
his
ter," "The Fable." "Terminus," "Days,"
**The Snow Storm," and "The Concord
the dignity and emphasis which are rightly
Hymn." For the prose readings the pro-
their due. and then will follow the co-
fessor made selections from "The American
operation of all denominations, when with-
Scholar," "Saf-Rellance," "Books," "Usey
out jealousy all shall unite in the love of
of Great Men," "Work and Days," and
truth and the spirit of Jesus Christ. for the
"Speech on Burns."
worship of God and the service of man."
0
President Pritchett announced as his sub-
Frank Sanborn's Reminiscences
jeet **The Attitude of Educated Young Man
Toward Religion." and said: **There have
t
He Was the Speaker Announced for
been two notes constantly struck this week
Normal School English Club's Emer-
which have appealed in me most strongly.
1
son Meeting
one has been what seemed to me the
At the Boston Normal School, corner
wholesome optimism of the Unitarian faith
Dartmouth and Appleton streets, the Eng-
toward life itself The wholesome both
lish Club of that school held its annual open
that life. as we have it, is a good thing.
meeting this afternoon at three o'clock.
The other note. which has been struck
The work for the year has been upon Lowell
again and again. has been the note of in-
and Emerson: and Mr. Frank Sanborn way
dividual spiritual Freedom
to address the meeting. giving personal
There is a feeling that a constantly di-
reminiscences of Emerson.
minishing number of young men from the
student bodies are being trained into the
SPEECHES AT THE FESTIVAL
religious life or for the ministry I believe
there never was it time when the young
President Pritchett, Professor Moore,
men in Institutions of learning were more
President Southworth and Rev. F. V.
ready to stand in direct relation to truth
Hawley of Milwankee Spoke for
itself than the men in colleges today. Last
Unitarians
year. at the Institute of Technology, T ob-
:
Nearly twenty-five hundred Unitarians
talked statistics from the students as to
I
filled Tremont Temple last evening for the
their religious relations I found that about
annual festival. which marks the close of
41) per cent of them were actual members
1
Anniversary Week. Half of them Were on
of religious bodies."
the floor at the tables. and half of them
Professor Moore who was next called
S
were in the balconies above to hear the
upon. said: The Harvard Dividity School
speaking. At the head table were Dr. Hale,
earlier. If I am right. than any other die
1.
who asked the blessing; Courtenay Guild,
clared that it bound its students and teach-
chairman of the festival commi tee. who
ers to no formula. and 11 is endeavoring to-
of
opened the after-dinner exercises: George
day. on a larger scale than any other
( )
Wigglesworth, president of the evening who
school.. through the representation in good
"
introduced the speakers: and the four
fifth of many determisations, truly to sarve
I'
speakers themselves: President Henry S.
that great Church which 1- larger than any
or
Pritchett of the Institute of Technology,
decomination
Professor George F. Moore of Harvard DI-
"It was sald here Wednesday night that
vinity School, President F. C. Southworth
men had had the great work of missions
of Meadville Theological Seminary, and
and the vast problems of charity and phi-
Rev. F. V. Hawley of Milwaukee, secre-
Linthrone within Main thearts a generation
tary of the Western Conference.
earlier than there did. a certain great thism
Mr. Wigglesworth in opening the even-
mirht never have taken place. One some.
ing's speak. touched on the growing spirit
times thinks that had the men been a gen-
of liberality in all denominations It is to
oration earlier master of some of these
be desired," sald he, "that all religious
thoughts of which I am speaking that
bodies shall maintain a free and fearless
schism might not have taken place. Both
search for truth. The time will come when
sides is the controversy operated from
the nonessentials in religious matters will
premises which are now abandoned by
have little importance attached to m.
both."
URDAY, MAY 23. 1903
he
own faculty, and to hold even more studi-
ugh
ously to those beliefs that come to us, we
nis-
know not how, outside our faculties. The
d it
conservatism of his radicalism is shown by
tual
his pleture of God walking with men as
em,
with his children; the radicalism of his con-
had
servatism is shown by his throwing off all
3
a
the pretences of men's authority. Though
into
reverently affectionate in regard to old tra-
was
ditions, he is not bound by them. He re-
and
garded each personality as a manifestation
with
of one universal life. His interest was con-
He
tred in the divine incarnation that made
the
men's personalities possible. Where did
hat
men get their personalities? They were not
of
self-derived, and that was evidence of God
hes
to him.
end
Mrs. Anna Garland Spencer, the last
eat
speaker, considered Emerson as the
use
friend of those who would live in
he
the spirit. He has given to such
be
a faith in the eternal order: has
we
told them that they need not be concerned
her
about justifying the ways of the Almighty,
hat
for the way and the end are alike secure
ive
He has taught that our concern is with
he
our own contribution to life. and not with
Ah,
another's He has shown us that our
alf
in the world is not anything unless 1: is our
re-
own, for that is the only real thing.
m-
Meetings of Tonight and Tomorrow
his
A Source 01
LW
Notable Emersonian Figures at the
ey
Festival Tonight - President Eliot
Speaks Sunday
IN
to
his
The afternoon session will be devoted to
is
the subject of "Religious Education with
is
addresses by Professor George F. Moure
The Summ
nd
of the Harvard Divinity School. upon **The
he
Theological School of the Future: Rev.
at
Edward Cummings, upon "The Sunday
1st
School of the Future:" George 11. Martin,
We offer at this tin
in,
supervisor of the Boston public schools
used PIANOLAS at
ne
upon "Religion In the Public Schools and
11-
Professor Henry S. Nash of the Episcoped
rs
Theological School at Cambridge,
These instruments are especially
ly
"The Rational Use of the Bible
ur
The evening festival at the Qamey House
being in first-class condition and subjec
will be in the main a continuation of
1-
Emerson commemoration Colored T.
When away from the musical cen
n
H gginson will preside. and there will
and thrown on our own resources for my
ne
addresses by Mrs. Ednah D. Cheney
d
Francis E. Abbot, Frank B. Sanborni
ng
Edward W. Emerson. Rev. Charles
V
What is more we
e-
Dole. Rev. C. W. Wendte, Rev. Daniel
n-
Evans and others.
11
The special event of the whole celebra-
d
tion will be held In Symphony Hall Sunday
PIANO
he
evening. President Eliot
THE CENTENARY
OF THE BIRTH OF
Ralph Waldo Emerson
AS OBSERVED IN CONCORD MAY 25 1903
UNDER THE DIRECTION OF
THE SOCIAL CIRCLE IN CONCORD
Rhodora! if the sages ask thee why
This charm is wasted on the earth and sky,
Tell them, dear, that if eyes were made for seeing,
Then Beauty is its own excuse for being.
Printed at The Riverside Press
FOR THE SOCIAL CIRCLE IN CONCORD
JUNE 1903
R.Waldo
in ;
2
112
THE EMERSON CENTENARY
SPEECH OF HUGO MÜNSTERBERG
113
Miss AGNES C. MAITLAND, Somerville College, Oxford.
bridge, at an expense of $150,000, which sum he has
Professor HENRY GOUDY, D. C. L., Oxford.
already raised, is with us to-night, and we desire to
Professor J. G. McKENDRICK, Glasgow University.
thank him in this manner for the great service he
Professor S. ALEXANDER, Owen's College, Manchester.
Professor GEORGE SAINTSBURY, Edinburgh University.
has done for the memory of Emerson. I have plea-
Professor GEORGE ADAM SMITH, Glasgow.
sure in introducing to you Professor Miinsterberg, of
PATRICK W. CAMPBELL, W. S., Edinburgh.
Harvard University.
Sir LESLIE STEPHEN.
Sir WILLIAM TURNER, Edinburgh University.
SPEECH OF HUGO MÜNSTERBERG
Professor MARCUS DoDs, Edinburgh.
Professor LATTA, University, Glasgow.
MR. CHAIRMAN, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN - The
Professor A. V. DICEY, All Souls, Oxford.
overwhelming kindness of your generous words,
Professor ALEXANDER LAWSON, University, St. An-
Mr. Chairman, adds much to the embarrassment with
drews.
which I stand before you. I am deeply embarrassed
I
Professor C. H. HERFORD, Manchester.
indeed, - how can I, a foreigner, an outsider, rise at
Professor A. S. PRINGLE PATTISON.
this occasion to speak to a circle of women and men,
:
EDMUND GOSSE, LL. D., London.
inspired from childhood by the atmosphere of Emer-
son's New England? I have been brought up near
THE CHAIRMAN - Rudyard Kipling declined his
the Baltic Sea, and in my childhood the waves of
invitation, but we have his Recessional here to-
the ocean seldom brought greetings from these New
night and we hope to have the pleasure of hearing
England shores to the shores of Germany. And yet
Mr. Parker sing it.
my youth was not untouched by Emerson's genius.
I am glad to mention this Emersonian influence
Kipling's "Recessional" was sung by Mr. George
abroad, because in the rich chord of the joyful enthu-
J. Parker, accompanied on the piano by Mrs.
siasm of this day I missed only one overtone: a tone
Charles Edward Brown.
bringing out the grateful appreciation which Emer-
son found in the not-English speaking foreign coun-
THE CHAIRMAN - The gentleman who has per-
tries. As far as I remember, I had only three Amer-
haps honored the memory of Emerson by the grandest
ican books, in German translation, in my little
and most lasting memorial, and who proposed the
schoolday library. At ten I got a boys' edition of
plan for the Emerson Hall of Philosophy at Cam-
Cooper's Leatherstocking; at twelve I enjoyed
Sterr.
3
114
THE EMERSON CENTENARY
SPEECH OF HUGO MÜNSTERBERG
115
Longfellow's poems, but at fourteen I had Emerson's
Essays. And they accompanied me through my stu-
man, the Philosophy Department of Harvard has
dent days I read and reread them, and he became
not to report any new facts to-night. The Emerson
thus the star to which I hitched my little wagon
story is very simple, very short, and completely known
when it was to carry me to the new world from the
to you. We saw a year ago that the time had come
fatherland. This was not without effect on my own
to place an Emerson Hall for Philosophy on the
American experiences. Emerson's work had so often
Harvard Yard, and that it was necessary for that
represented to me the spirit of the new world which
purpose to collect $150,000 before the 25th of May,
I entered that my mental eye became so sensitive as
1903 we began thus to collect, and when we counted
to recognize the Emersonian lines and curves and
the contents of our purse, on the 23d of May, 1903,
forms everywhere in the background of American
we found there $150,250. That is the whole simple
life. Most Europeans, and especially Germans, who
story indeed, and yet some connotations to it may
come over, see everywhere the features of commer-
be in order, and I am most happy to make them
cialism and practical utilitarianism. I was impressed
in this company.
by the idealism of this young, healthful community,
First, do not misunderstand the report of our
treasurer; the sum I mentioned was meant from the
and in the first essay which I published on America,
in a German paper, only a few months after my first
beginning merely as a fund sufficient to secure a
visit, I wrote with most sincere conviction If
building,- not at all sufficient to secure the building
you really want to understand the deepest energies
for which we were hoping from the start. We want
a spacious, noble, monumental hall - the architec-
of this glorious country, do not consult the editorials
of the yellow press of New York, but read the
tural plans are drawn. To build it as the plans sug-
golden books of the wise man of Concord."
gest it we need $100,000 more; and while we
But, Mr. Chairman, I feel that I have no right to
highly appreciate any small gifts toward this addi-
speak here as a German, since you have assured us
tional sum we are firmly determined not to reject
that the foreign scholars have been invited for to-
even the largest contributions.
night, with the understanding that they are not
But all this refers to the externals, to the news-
allowed to come - if a cover has been laid for me,
paper side of our memorial work let me speak in
nevertheless, I take it that I was expected not to
this narrower circle of some more internal points.
forget that I am here as the representative of the
Seen from such an exoteric point of view, it may
Harvard Philosophy Department. But, Mr. Chair-
look as though we Harvard philosophers had said
through all the year "Happy public, you are fortu-
I
116
THE EMERSON CENTENARY
SPEECH OF HUGO MÜNSTERBERG
117
nate in being allowed to build a fine building for our
assure you that it is exactly the opposite feeling with
splendid philosophy instruction, and now that the
which we look into the future, and this conviction
checks are written, the public may kindly remove
that we must fulfil our duty better, much better,
itself and the students may fill their fountain pens
than heretofore, is common to all of us in the whole
to write down in the new building our glorious effu-
large Department of Philosophy. A lucky chance
sion of wisdom." Well, over there in Cambridge,
brought to me this morning, when I left for Concord,
we must impose on the freshmen and sophomores,
a letter from our colleague, Professor Royce, who is
but here let me say at once, we know exactly that
spending his sabbatical year in the country of his
the generous contributions of the community were
childhood, in California. He finds the fit word bet-
not given to us but to Emerson. And if we ever
ter than I could hope to do let me read from his
forgot it, our benefactors reminded us of it. I asked,
letter. I had written to him that the success seems
for instance, the help of Andrew Carnegie, and he
near, and he replies
gave generously, but when I replied that there would
feel very deeply how great are the responsi-
be rejoicing in Harvard that at last he had given to
bilities which the new gift places upon the shoulders
Royce
Harvard University, saw in the far background
of each teacher of the department which is thus
the big Harvard Library building we need so badly,-
endowed. I do not know how much I shall be able
he left me not the slightest doubt that his pledge
to do to live up to these new responsibilities. I only
was for the Emerson Memorial, but not for Harvard
know that the news of the success of the Emerson
as Harvard. Yes, it is thoroughly an Emerson build-
Hall endowment fills me with a desire not only to
ing, a late expression of Harvard's gratitude for her
improve here and there, but quite to make over
greatest son.
afresh, and to change throughout for the better, my
But we know also that the value of this memorial
methods of work as a teacher of philosophy and
gift lies not in its walls and roof, but in the kind of
with a determination to devote myself as never be-
work which will develop within those walls. It will
fore to the task of offering to philosophy and to
be a true Emerson memorial only if the words and
Harvard my best services. That the founding of this
work in that hall become help and guidance, wisdom
new building may mean the beginning of a new life
and inspiration for new and new generations of Har-
for philosophical study in our country, and the dawn-
vard men. There would be no hope of such influence
ing of a new day for the interests of higher thought
if we instructors really entered into it with an air
in our national affairs, is the earnest wish of your
of self-satisfaction and self-complacency. Let me
absent colleague."
Emerson Hall Endorsment
5
118
THE EMERSON CENTENARY
SPEECH OF EDWARD WALDO EMERSON 119
This is the feeling of our common department's
soul. We shall not enter the new Philosophy Hall
SPEECH OF EDWARD WALDO EMERSON
with the feeling that we can sit there on our laurels,
but with the firm promise that we will live up to the
MR. CHAIRMAN, My Honored Friend, - My
duties which the single word above its door demands
Friends and Neighbors: - The Social Circle, as
from us. We all are united by the ideal to make
stated in its book of chronicles, was not merely
our work in Emerson IIall worthy of the name that
founded for the diffusion of useful communica-
honors it.
tions" by the twenty-five members who composed it,
Mr. Chairman, I see from your pretty menu-card
some of which might be shared by their wives and
that Emerson once said, "Harvard University is
some not, - but for the promotion of the social affec-
thin like a wafer compared with the solid land of
tions, that they should not die. I am glad to see
our Social Circle in Concord." That was sixty years
how liberally the Circle has gone to work to promote
ago, and there has not been much change since that
them by such a thoroughly social and affectionate
time, indeed. But now the change will come, believe
and catholic occasion as this.
us. Emerson Hall in Harvard University will be
Now, it makes me smile a little when, after the
built on solid land, too, on the solid land of our best
exercises that I have had the privilege of attending
will and effort, and we will work that it may prove
here and elsewhere, I think of a remark that I have
perhaps even not less solid than the Social Circle,-
SO often heard my father make. My mother was
solid land on which to stand to-night gave me the
constantly remembering that "Ten years ago to-day
greatest possible pleasure.
such a thing occurred," and other members of the
family would remember other anniversaries. When
THE CHAIRMAN: - Dr. Emerson needs no intro-
at table such remarks were made, my father would
duction from me to you. He will occupy the few
often laugh and say, "Oh, it is always a hundred
remaining moments before the time to leave for
years from something." But he was SO good a towns-
the train, and the exercises will then close with
man and he had such an affectionate regard for his
singing the "Battle Hymn" to the tune of "Old
neighbors - and he construed that term very largely
Hundred."
that if we can conceive of him being present and
receiving such a tribute as has been given to him
to-day, it is very clear how it would have affected
him. Some of you are too young - or too young
20
B
men be
EMERSON THE PHILOSOPHER
doubt
are me
and
gether
it to th
all scle
A Plea for a Revival of Idealism
nection
to acce
ist wou
Nature
where
By PROF. HUGO MUNSTERBERG
mys
sesthetic
Can su
osophy?
T the hundredth anniversary of
There are, it seems, three principles of a
Emerson's birthday, Harvard
philosophical character without which
But t
University is to take a
Emerson's life work cannot be concelved.
are not
-noble share in the celebra-
To bring them to the shortest expression
and tha
tion. For years it has been
we might say, Nature speaks to us; Free-
terday.
one of the deepest desires
dom speaks in us: the Oversoul speaks
the per
of the Harvard community to erect in
through us. There is no word in Emerson's
each o
the college yard a building devoted to
twelve volumes which is Inconsistent with
scientifi
philosophy only. Today this building is
this threefold conviction, and everything
ing; an
secured. To be sure, the good will of
else in his system either follows immediately
than th
the community must still do much before
from this belief or is a non-essential sup-
The po
the funds allow the erection of a building
piement. But that threefold faith is a
has ebb
spacious enough to fulfil our hopes; but
courageous creed Indeed. The first, we
istic on
whether the hall shall be small or large,
said, refers to Nature; he knew Nature in
in Har
we know today that It will soon stand
its intimacy, he knew Nature In its glory;
when 1
under the Harvard elms and that over its
"Give me health and a day and I will make
priests,
door will be Inscribed the name: Ralph
the pomp of emperors ridiculous." And this
Ices an
Waldo Emerson. No worthier memorial
Nature, that is the assertion, is not what
the chu
could have been selected. Orations may
natural sciences teach it to be. The Na-
for kno
be helpful, but the Hvl g was flows away:
ture of the physicist, the dead world of
fifty ye
a statue may be lasting. but It does not
atoms controlled by the laws of a dead
Helmho
awaken new thought We shall have the
orations and we shall have a statue, but
causality, is not really the Nature we live
energy
we shall have now, above all. a memorial
In: the reality of Nature cannot be ex-
one nat
pressed by the record of Its phenomena,
golden
which will last longer than a monument
and speak louder than an oration: Em-
but merely by the understanding of its
working
meaning. Natural science leads us away
awkwar
erson Hall will be a fountain of Inspira-
tion forever. The philosophical work of
from Nature as it really is. We must try
science
to understand the thoughts of Nature.
urious I
Harvard have been too long meattered in
SCOTTS of places: there was no unity. phil-
'Nature stretches out her arms to embrace
wooden
nappy had to real home. But Emer-
man; only let his thoughts be of equal
time ar
son Hall will be not only the workshop
greatness, and again Emerson says, "All
val, are
the facts of natural history taken by them-
of the
of the professional students of philosophy,
selves have no value, but are barren like a
that la:
will be not only the background for all
that manford activity in ethles and pay-
single sex: but marry It to human history
which I
chology. in logle and metaphysics in
and it is full of life:" and finally, "The
the last
these succology. it will a
philosopher postpones the apparent order
his perio
new centre for the whole university, em-
of things to the empire of Thought."
came to
bodying in outer form the
And In the midst of Nature, of the living
began,
osophy to connect the scattered special-
Nature, we breathe In freedom; man Is free.
specting
late knowledge of the Harvard
Take that way and Emerson is not. Man
land is t
could not have office. a more glorious
18 free He does not mean the freedom of
since th
kift to Emerson's memorial
the Declaration of Independence, a docu-
more th
But the kpirit of such memorial hour
ment NO anti-1mersonian In Its conception
great to
demands. more than all, sincerity Cin
of man: and he does not mean the liberty
each oth
we sincerely may that the choice was
after which. as he pays, the s'aves are crow-
of deve
wise, when we look nt It from the point
Ing while most men are slaves. No. we are
must go
of view of the philosophical Intereste?
free as responsible agents of our morality.
thus des
It was beautiful to devote the building to
We are free with that freedom which an-
other. w
Emerson. Was It wise. yes, was it mor-
nuis fate; and If there is fate, then freedom
to win. t
ally right to devote Emerson's name to
1s its most necessary part, "Forever wells
Glorio
the philosophy building? Again and again
up the Impulse of choosing and act'ng in
itivism
has such a doubt found expression. Your
the soul." "So far as man thinks he is
century
building. we have heard from some of the
free." "Before the revelations of the soul,
were at
heat. belongs to scientific
nature shrink away.'
decrees
cransmit Last
Edition
SIXTEEN PAGES
5/25/1903
PRICE
THREE
CENTS
RACE IS ABANDONED
Bonneval. nineteen miles from Char-
tres, where the machine driven
EMERSON CELEBRATION
by M. Porter was overturned at
Death and Disaster Follow
railroad crossing, and took fire.
The chauffeur was caught underneath the
Concord
Pays
Homage
on
Automobiles
automobile and burned to-death. while two
soldiers and a child were killed. A chauf-
Anniversary
feur was badly injured by an accident to
Six
Killed
and
Ten
Seriously
his motor car near Angouleme. A woman
crossing the road in the neighborhood of
Throngs at Morning and Afternoon
Injured
Ablis was run over by one of the com-
Observance
peting cars and killed. Mr. Stead and his
chauffeur were thrown out, and were at
Awful Results of Paris-Madrid
first reported to have been killed, but they
The School Children Recite His
are still alive. Mr. Stead was caught un-
Contest
der the machine, while his chauffeur was
Writings
tled to a distance of thirty feet and had
his head and body badly cut.
Further Details of Yesterday's Shocking
It is estimated that one hundred thou-
Address by Professor LeB. R. Briggs of
Tragedies
sand persons crowded into the little town
Harvard
to witness the start of the race. A bomb
was exploded at 3.35 A. M. as a signal to
French and Spanish Authorities Stop the
get ready, and Immediately Charles Jar-
Tributes by Col. Higginson and Senator
rott's car drew into place. Another bomb
Affair
was fired at 3.45 for the start. and then the
Hear
enormous machine shot forward amid the
Government Action Backed by Public
shouts of the thousands of spectators. The
Samuel Hoar, Professors Norton and James
Opinion )
other cars followed in quick succession.
Mme. DeGast, the sole female competitor
Speak
In last year's Paris-Berlin race, was again
Stringent Legislation May Follow in
the only woman to participate in the pres-
Gathering in First Parish Meeting
France
ent contest. Her machine was decked with
House
flowers. and her departure was the signal
for a great ovation. She made a splendid
Paris, May 25-The latest in regard to the
run, passing five of her competitors before
Special to the Transcript
accidents during the Paris-Madrid automo-
reaching Chartres. The crowd around Mr.
bile race is that half a dozen persons were
Vanderbilt's machine prevented him from
Concord, May 25-Emerson's centennial
killed and that ten persons were seriously
reaching the starting line In time, and he
birthday anniversary was celebrated in his
injured, including Marcel Renault, Lorraine
was further delayed by a controversy with
old home town of Concord today with exer-
Barrow and Stead. Louis Renault with-
the judges, finally starting two minutes
clses which began with an interesting gath.
drew all his racers. Henry Farman
late. The last departure was at 6.45 yes-
ering of school children In the forenoon.
smashed his car, but escaped uninjured.
terday morning.
and will end this evening with a banquet.
The trail of death and disaster following
The reports along the route soon showed
The celebration was planned by the Social
the start Sunday morning from Verealiles
that Louis Renault was making a great
Circle, the local society of which the great
has caused a profound sensation. Reports
race, and before Chartres he had overtak-
philosopher was a member for forty-two
from along the route of the first stage, to
en and passed Charles Jarrott. M. Rene
years. and n committe consisting of Samuel
Bordeaux, continue to give details of the
de Knyff, and gained a lead which he never
Hoar, Rev. 1. B. Macdonald, Edward J.
various accidents, and these are causing
lost. Dispatches from Vendome, Tours and
Bartlett, William I. Eaton and Thomas
far greater attention than the race, which
Poletiers told of his passing through ahead,
Hollis had the day in charge. Mr. Katon, a
has practically been abandoned, owing to
and Bordeaux sent the announcement of
member of the Social Circle, Is superinten-
the Interdiction of the Government.
his arrival first, nt 12.14. He had beaten
dent of schools in Concord, and he con-
A despatch from Pottlers this morning
Henri Fournier's record of 8 hours 44 min-
ducted the observance by the schools. This
said Marcel Renault's condition was grave,
utes. Charles Jarrott finished second at
meeting took place at 10.30 A. M. In the
but not desperate. Among the accidents not
12.30, having covered the course In 8 hours
town'hall, where in seats forming two great
reported yesterday was that of George
44 minutes. M. Gabriel arrived third at
banks on the platform and also occupying
Richard, whose machine was overturned.
12.38, his time being 8 hours 7 minutes.
most of the floor space. were pupils of the
Richard had several ribs broken.
The other contestants who made fast time
three private schools of Concord-the Mid-
At Bordeaux the news of the suppression
were J. Saldron, 8 hours 40 minutes: Baron
diesex. the Concord Home School and Miss
White's-and the High. Emerson and West
of the race caused disappointment among
De Crawher, 8 hours 53 minutes: J. B.
the racers. Public opinion, outside the
Warden, 8 hours 50 minutes, and M. Volgt.
Concord public schools. Teachers and
automobilists. strongly approves of the step
8 hours 55 minutes.
friends occupied the remaining floor seats
taken by the Government.
The result of the first stage of the race
and places in the balcony
Rev. G. A. Tewksbury of the Trinitarian
A despatch from Poltiers during the day
appears to be a draw between the merits
of the light and heavy vehicles. Louis
Congregational Church, Rev. 1. B. Mac-
announced that "M. Werner," which was
donald of the Unitarian Church. Rev.
the name C. Gray Dinsmore (the only Amer-
Renault drove a light machine, weighing
650 pounds and of 30 horse-power. while
Henry K. Hannah of the Trinity Episcopal
Ican left In the race) had entered under,
Church, Rev. Walter W. Campbell of the
broke down and withdrew at a small place
Gabriel drove A heavy machine of 70 horse-
Union Church, Concord Junction: Rev. E
outside of that town.
power, weighing 1000 pounds. The time and
The Automobile Club. during the after-
position of the winners of the first stage.
J. Morlarty and Rev. M. J. Scanlon of St.
noon, was Informed that Marcel Renault
deducting the time allowance for slowing
Bernard's Church, and Rev. William J.
down inside the cities, are as follows:
Batt. chaplain or the Cancord Reformatory,
was slightly better, and that there was
some hope of saving his life. M. Renault's
Gabriel 5 hrs. 13 min., Louis Renault
occupied seats on the platform with school
wife was prostrated by receiving a false
hrs. 82 min., Salderon 5 hrs. 46 min., Jar-
committeement of Concord and surrounding
despatch announcing his death. His aged
rott 3 hrs. 51 min., Warden 5 hrs. 56 min.,
towns and members of the Social Circle.
Baron De Crawher 6 hrs. 1 min., Voigt
Miss Ellen Emerson, Mrs. Edith Forben
mother has gone to his bedside.
6 hrs. 2 min., Barras 6 hrs. 12 min., Bou-
and Dr. Edward W. Emerson represented
Advices from Chartres give details of
the accident to Mr. Porter and Nixon, his
gler 6 hrs. 16 min., and Mouter 6 hrs. 17
the Emerson family. The only decorations
companion (both of Belfast, Ireland). The
min. Only 111 arrivals at Bordeaux are
for the hall were the great American flags
automobile struck the guards' nut at a
reported.
which draped the front of the platform.
and sprays and bouquets of wild flowers.
railroad crossing near Chartres, Mr. Por-
ter shot forward and his car was over-
BARROW STILL ALIVE
The programme opened with singing of
turned. Nixon was t brown underneath
Pulgrim Fathers" by all the schools, under
the car. which caught are and exploded.
Physicians Hope to Save Life of One
the leadership of F. W. Archibald. Then
of the Contentants
Mr. Eaton made n brief Introductory ad-
The guard tried to rescue Nixon, but found
his body burned to a cinder. Porter 1e-
Borderer
May 25-A despatch
dress. Mr Faton maid that the people who
knew Emerson as a friend and townsman
noon, WAR Informed that Marcel Renault
down inside the cities, are as follows:
Batt, chaplain of the Concord Reformatory,
was slightly better, and that there was
Gabriel 5 Kre. 18 min., Louis Renault 5
occupied sents on the platform with school
some hope of saving his life. M. Renault's
committeemen of Concord and surrounding
wife was prostrated by receiving a false
82 min., Salderon 5 hrs. 40 min., Jar-
towns and members of the Social Circle.
despatch announcing his death. His aged
rott 5 hrs. 51 min., Warden 5 hrs. 56 min.,
Miam Ellen Emerson, Mrs. Edith Forbea
mother has gone to his bedside.
Baron De Crawher 6 hrs. 1 min., Voigt
and Dr. Edward W. Emerson represented
Advices from Chartres give details of
6 hrs. 2 min., Barras 6 hrs. 12 min., Bou-
the Emerson family. The only decorations
the accident to Mr. Porter and Nixon, his
gier 6 hrs. 16 min., and Mouter 6 hrs. 17
for the hall were the great American flags
companion (both of Belfast, Ireland). The
min. Only 111 arrivals at Bordeaux are
which draped the front of the platform.
automobile struck the guards' hut at a
reported.
and sprays and bouquets of wild flowers.
rallroad crossing near Chartres, Mr. Por-
BARROW STILL ALIVE
The programme opened with singing of
ter shot forward and his car was over-
Pilgrim Fathers" by all the schools, under
turned. Nixon was t brown underneath
Physicians Hope to Save Life of One
the leadership of F. W. Archibald. Then
the car. which caught are and exploded.
of the Contentants
Mr. Eaton made n brief Introductory Ad-
The guard tried to rescue Nixon, but found
dress. Mr Faton said that the people who
S
his body burned to a cinder. Porter 1e-
Bordeaux, France, May 25-A despatch
knew Emerson as a friend and townsman
mained unconscious for two hours, when
received here from Libourne (twenty miles
thought the school pupils should have a
he recovered sufficiently to return to
from Bordeaux), says that at two o'clock
meeting In special commemoration for the
of
Paris. A post-mortem examination of the
Lorraine Barrow. the automobilist who was
Concord philosopher, and remarked that the
remains showed that Nixon was killed be-
severely injured in the Paris-Madrid race,
town hall In which It was held had often
fore he was burned.
is no worse and that the doctors hope to
resounded with Emerson's voice. The pro-
Senator Prevost has announced his in-
save his life.
moters of the gathering hoped, he said. that
tention to Interpellate the Government on
the feeling of respect and regard for Emer-
the necessity for a stringent regulation
PORTER NOT AN AMERICAN
son felt by the elders would descends the
of automobile racing. He intends also to
young people, and they wished to impress
introduce n stringent law fixing n maxi-
One of Injured Contentants a Native
on the younger generation that. the duty
mum speed and forbidding racers to elr-
of Belfant-Is Still Alive, but Com-
of cherishing the memories and ideals of
culate in the streets or on public roads.
panion Was Killed
Emerson as a resident of Concord would
London, May 25-A private telegram from
DEATH IN THEIR TRAIN
fall to them. "What is It that makes a man
Belfast says that Porter, who was at first
great?" he asked, In adding eulogiatic re-
Six Fatalities in Paris-Madrid Auto-
reported to have been burned to death at
marks, and he answered his question by
mobile Content
Bonneval during the Paris-Madrid race and
saying. "It is he who more clearly than all
Paris, May 25-Six persons were killed
who was thought to be an American, is n
others expresses the Ideals and aspirations
and six others probably fatally injured yes-
native of Belfast. He is still alive, although
of the time." Mr. Eaton urged the young
terday in the automobile race from Ver-
badly burned. Hls companion, Nixon, also
people to think of Emerson as a great man,
sailles to Bordeaux, the first stage in the
of Belfast, was killed. He WAS A well-
to acquaint themselves with his writings.
Paris-Madrid speed contest. The two first
known North of Ireland cyclist who had
to follow him to the woods and fields. and
to finish In the race averaged sixty-two
recently taken to motoring.
to remember that he was one who as a man
miles an hour on the road outside the cities.
rose above his work.
and one of these machines. driven by Louis
SPANISH GOVERNMENT ACTS
Mr. Eaton spoke of a town tradition that
Renault. attained at Beourdimere, between
Emerson, when he first came to Concord,
Chartres and Boneval, a maximum speed of
Prohibits Continuance of Race In
more than once could be seen standing in
88% miles an hour. Because of the many
Spain
the town grocery, where a druggist now
fatalities the premier has forbidden the
Madrid. May 25-The Spanish Govern-
has his shop, reciting poetry; and recalled
continuation of the contest on French terri-
ment has prohibited the continuance of the
Emerson's work on the school committee,
tory, and it is reported that the Spanish
Paris-Madrid auto race in Spain. The
saying that he took a great Interest in
Government has issued a similar order. It
automobilists may cross the frontler, but
visiting the schools, and llked particularly
is. therefore, extremely doubtful If the
they are to be considered simple excur-
to hear the boys and girls recite. Mr.
race will be finished. Louis Renault was
stonists. and must travel at reduced speed.
Eaton closed by presenting pupils of the
the first to reach Bordeaux at noon. having
The news of the accidents to the contes-
high school to recite selections from Emer-
covered the 343 miles of the first stage In
tants made a deep impression here The
son's own peems. Those included: "Hama.
the record time of 8h 27m. An hour later
Royal Automobile Club is exhibiting but-
traya." by Hermon Temple Wheeler;
M. Gabriel arrived with a still better rec-
letins on a large transparency, which the
"Fable," by Agnes Louise Garvy; "Jlum-
ord of 8h 7m. These speed records, how-
public is anxious y watching. The comp-11.
bie-Bee." by James Joseph Loughlin: Mo.
ever, were clouded by a series of fatal ac-
tors in the tourist section of the race who
nadnock," by Kenneth Thompson Blood:
cidents. At least four cars were wrecked
"Burns," by Edward Bailey Calger; "The
are arriving here are received with great
and Marcel Renault. the winner of the
Titmouse," by Mildred Browne; "Let Me
sympathy.
Paris-Vienna race last year: Lorraine
Go," by Lucy Tolman Hormer; "Forbear-
The action of the French Government in
Barrows. a well-known automobilist, and
ance," by Warren Kendall Blodgett: "Wead
stopping the speed contest is generally ap-
Renault's chauffeur, were probably fatally
Notes.' by Roland Worthley Butters;
proved. The Imparcial blames the Span-
injured, while Barrows' chauffeur was
"Wood Notes," by Richard Francis Pow.
ish Government for not takin steps to ob-
killed.
erm: "Rhodora," by Margaret Louise Eaton.
tain official bulleting of the accidents, and
The most terrible accident occurred near
The song which followed was the ode
describes the men killed as martyrs In
which was first sung at the completion of
the cause of commercial enterprise
the Battle monument at Concord, April 19,
1836.
BIGELOW.
ACCIDENTS WERE PREDICTED
Then came the principal address of the
Racers Started at Intervals of Only
morning, by Professor Le Baron Russell
One Minute
Briggs, for some years dean of Harvard
College, in introducing whom Mr. Eaton
KENNARD
Predictions of accidents in the Paris-
spoke of hearing Emerson speak in the
Madrid race have been made ever since the
Town Hall at a meeting of teachers thirty-
large number of entries-314-was an-
six years ago and said he well remembered
nounced. On account of these numerous
Emerson's marvelloux elocution and the
&CO.
entries it was necessary to start the racers
carrying power of his voice, and the part
at intervals of only one minute, and conse-
of his address In which the philosopher
quently all but the first starters were com-
spoke of his love for boys. Mr. Eaton said
pelled to start in and ride through a cloud
the committee naturally turned to one who
O fdust. This fact. together with the high
was well known and well loved as having
rate of speed of the enormously powerful
Importers
machines of sixty to one hundred horse.
a knowledge of boys and young men.
Dean Briggs said that now and then we
power or more, caused even French racing
meet a man who affects us like the first
of
authorities to fear trouble.
The total length of the course of the
view of the ocean. Nothing on earth affects
race from Parts to Madrid is 712 miles, dl-
us Mke the soul of a great man, and when
FINE
this soul was good It shone out in his face.
vided into three stages. as follows: First,
Such a great man was Emerson, a lover of
Paris to Bordeaux, 243 miles: second. Bor-
deaux to Vittoria. 208 miles: third. Vittoria
beauty and truth. He was a poet who loved
FRENCH
to Madrid, 201 miles. It was expected that
what he saw and told what he saw as
CONTINUED ON PAGE SEVEN
CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO
CLOCKS
al
5IIWASHINGTON-ST
BOSTON
ACENTS
* Charles P. Bowditch. (1842-1921)
eyes
Page 1-F2
Henry P. Bourditor(1840-1911)
EXPENSES OF TRIP TO VIRGINIA, May 11-27.
Paid by C.P.B.
G.B.D.
H.P.B. & C.P.B.
Washington: dinner and fees,
2.40
1.20
1.20
to station,
1.-
.25
.75
to Arlington,
3.--
1.50
1.50
Drawing-room car to
Charlottesville,
1.50
.50
.50
.50
Tillman, 16th, dinner,
2:--
.66
.67
.67
?
17th,
2.--
.67
.66
.67
Oranges,
.50
Rope,
.22
Fees through 17th,
1.60
2.32
.77
.77
.78
Greenville,
8.50
Fairfield,
2.50
Fees,
.50
11.50
3.84
3.83
3.83
Lexington; hotel,
10.--
horses
and driver,
6.75
oranges
and fees,
.55
17.30
5.76
5.77
5.77
Natural Bridge: hotel, 27.25
shoeing, 1.30
fees, 1.10
29.65
9.89
9.88
9.88
Daggers Springs;
9.
Clifton Forge,
4.50
Fees,
.45
13.95
4.65
4.65
4.65
Healing Springs,
10.
"
" fees,
.50
10.50
3.50
3.50
3.50
Hot Springs, H.& C.
8.
:
4.--
4.
horses and boys &
14.
4.66
4.67
4.67
Bath Alum, H.& C.
2.
1.--
1.
horses, etc.
3.
1.
1.
1.
Millboro Springs,
4.--
2.
2.
horses, etc.
4.--
1.34
1.33
1.33
Sawtelle Archives. A.N.P. B.1.t. 33.
Page 2.02
Wilsons, H. & C.
1.--
horses, etc.
.50
.50
2.25
.75
Presents to boys,
.75
.75
6.--
Fairfield, H.26 C.,
2.--
2.--
2.--
2.75
horses, etc.
1.37
1.38
4.--
1.33
Stanton; hotel,
1.33
1.34
fees,etc.,...7
4.70
2.35
2.35
152.82
Paid by H.P.B.
42.77
54.03
56.02
Charlottesville:
hotel,
(13.50
Afton,
4.50
4.50
27.75
9.50
4.50
Fare to Stanton,
3.17
3.16
1.50
3.17
Stanton drive,
.75
3.25
.75
1.65
180.57
1.62
Pd. " to C.P.B. by G.B.D.cash,
50.44
64.07
66.06
20.
"
" H.P.B.as above,
11
C.P.B.
27.75
as above,
152.82
less fr.G.B.D. . 20.
132.82
Due C. P. B.
1/3 C.H. moors Gree
30.44
+
36.32
=
127.50
66.76
1/3 express has have
7.70
135.20
45.06
45.07
75 50
81.39
Acct for Virginia Trep Pd by club CPB
6/3/1903
Mileage
between
cities
MORI
CHARLOTTESVILLE 252
261
126
138
80
167
59
63
95
168
74
114
180
122
126
125
182
Total mileage through Virginia
MAP SYM
EMPORIA
341
138
180
113
119
235
195
127
156
74
64
178
88
170
106
198
271
298 miles
69 miles
NORFOLK
418
168
105
186
74
145
261
225
194
182
93
280
17
196
46
224
348
325 miles
179 miles
RICHMOND
324
74
186
149
64
55
171
131
118
92
93
186
105
106
51
134
254
Distance scale
ROANOKE
146
114
373
82
178
194
217
109
54
209
280
186
292
236
238
175
76
One inch represents approximate
WASHINGTON DC
374
122
161
250
170
54
75
129
185
37
196
106
236
208
154
77
304
0
5
10
15
WINCHESTER
313
125
242
220
198
82
42
68
157
53
224
134
175
236
77
182
243
PG 138
MORE MILEAGES
WYTHEVILLE
69
182
441
120
271
262
285
177
132
277
348
254
76
360
304
306
243
0
5
10
15
20
25
49
Brenton
Meyersdale
Hyndman
78
ma
655
80
97
928
10
220
523
160
484
168
23
194
Davis 3213
119
219
460
Phelps
52
56
82
PENNSYLVANIA
546
ElHancock
40
194
50
Pikeville
632
MARYLAND
29
807
36
4Z
979
44
Roderfield
16
40
144
La Vale
40
68
72
Welch
14
19
Hurley
Frostburg
Cumberland
219
645
52
495
33
PG.112
CHESAPEAKE
Berkeley
122
(460)
80
103
Gary
39
Big
Dresaptown
51
& OHIO CANAL
Springs
Rock
Roseann
W. VA.
NATIONAL
643
28
23
650
HISTORICAL
119
83
PARK
Stacy
36
War
161
TOTO
197.
Maxie
83
220
BR.
9
522
Breaks
Harman
Grundy
135
Patterson
16
495
Westerneert
cRoberts
Tookland
80
Deel
Piedmont
638
Whitewood
46
46
Vansant
Oakwood
Hersene
Jenkins
63
Prater
Mavisdale
Marvin
38
Keyser
45
Birchleaf
Shortt
Clintwood
Mount Heron
Ridde
Amonate
46
Gap
51
Pound
o
Clinchco
624
Adria
67
2
83
Rowe
Bandy
42
Lynn
(460)
Red
Romney
600
3234
72
Fremont
Davenport
McClure
Spring
Ash
Cestar
Cross
671
Drill
8th
50
Junction
633
Raven
action
Cliffield
Tazewell
Gainesbort
23
Nora
80
624
Dye
Richlands
50
Wakenva
Carrie
16
Gore
321
652
Big A Mtn
D
67
Claypool Hill
Nain
Clear?
3706
42
93
Ravfield
Trammel
600
Cranes
Honaker
Swords
91
Albin
Stephens
Wardell
hense
Wise
63
South
Creek
Asberrys
Nest
Dante
Clinchfield
645
19
Winchest
Banner
601
Tacoma
Tannarsville
Scherr
28 (220
600
37
Hamlin
615
Rosedale
42
Coeburn
ALT
58
Cleveland
82
Broadford
Chatham Hill
Berrys
Lebanon
Allison
Mountain Falls
St. Paut
Castlewped
Gap
29
Saltville
610
/Armel
Boyce
one
72
42
Stephens City
Banners
71
80
Plasterco
2178
Quarry
11
Hayters
Seven
619
Marion
628
302
277
Dungannon
Corner
Hansonville
Mile
Gap
Moorefield
55
Glade
107
haddletown
m
White
Ford
65
13
340
Post
Fort
774
Bolter
Lindel
689
Spring
16
522
Ninevel
kmore
Nickelsville
Emory
45
Cedarville
Collinwood
Holston
3
259
Main
802
72
19
Adwolf
Petersburg
Stasburg
Greendale
11
71
19
MR.ROGERS
762
Trout
Snowflake
Abingdon
600
EE
623
Brook
Riverton
613
Mendota
700
Date
Well Gep
Lodi
AREA
Front
Gate
591
rt
Royal
55
City
Hiltons
Benhams
Hilander
Columbit
binden
(224)
33
Park
Bearies
Furnace
75
Osceola
91
Konnarecki
717
42
Chester
20
58
umi
13
Weber
421
279
10
Damascil
Whitetop
11
the
58
277
Beatonville
Mt Marshal
Bristol
Basyel
Edihi
Brown
m
CHEROKEE
421
11E
94
FOR
N. CAROLINA
town
Crest
NAT'L
Bergton
Flint Hill
19
394
34
16
PG. 74
Mount Cliffon
273
23
194
93
Mt. Jackson
Mountain
N.C.
32 Washington
57w
Forestville
(67)
269
675
City
259
Quicksburg
3
Fulks
Amissy
33
GEORGE
Run
264
Hamburg
Sperryville
WASHINGTON
Timberville
NATIONAL
28
FOREST
Cootes Store-
New Market
Surios
Woodville
Lake
15
20
Broadway
Alma
my
Diana
(220)
613
522
(92)(250)
Tenth
231
Singers Glen
Lacey:
Stanle
15
721
Spring
Legion
Boston
Mount
Edom
257
Etlan
(340)
Norman
28
Blue Grass
642
Rawley Springs
Clinton
42
92
SHENAK
82
C
Harrisonburg
Shenandoak
N
EY
NATIONAL
Culpepe
MONONGAHELA
640
924
Hintone
PARK
Haywpod
609
Knob
Clover
NATL FOR.
Doe Hill
Hill
251
Brightwood
Leon
Hightown
247
Elkton
News
Briery
257
Monterez
Keezle
66
Branch
Dayton
Madison
4378
245
town
33
Toddland
Bridgewater,
243
Regn
654
LA
Mipittown
Locust
"Vanderpoot
and
240
McGaheysville
Pratts
Mount
Dale
McDowell
Mount Solon
Crawford
Aroda
534
84
276
659
15
Mustoe
Head
Moscow
11
231
219
55
646
Weyers
Radiant
84
Waters
607
Port Republic
Cave
Rochelle.
28
250
Sidney
256
678
West
42
Grottoes
Dyke
Montpelier
Orang
150
(220)
235
Marlinton
P
Augusta
Fort Défiance
Station
Churchville
Harristog
Norta
Richwood
39
New
Williamsville
(20)
Somerse
39
Deerfield
Verona
55
23
Buffalo
Gap.
Hope
Chatlette
Barren
810
Bumsville
Elliot
Knob
Barbours
age
614
4463
Crimore
Free Union
ville
Mill
600
Gertionsville
678
629
Staunton
608
254
Point
White
231
Augusta Springs
Fishersville
Dooms
Hall
614
Mountain Grove
876
PG.112
Hinden Valie,
39
Craigsville
Mint Spring
91
Waynesboro 107
Crozet
Boswell
WEST VIRGINIA
Warm Springs
220
Bells
Middlebrook
Ladd
Yancey Mills
12
Nottesville
Bacova
Valley
Millboro
213
340
252
Lynd
Sprs
Moffats
hurst
Aften
Solomons Store
MONONGAHELA
Mitchelltow
Stuarts
92
NATIONAL
Hot Springs
Goshen
Creek
Devils/Knob
Avon
105
136
3051 fs
FOREST
Batesville
143
Greenville
(Millboro
Sherando
1
629
Brownsburg
Raphice
635
Healing
Sprs
Steeles
North
Natural Well
Carloover
42
Gashen Pass
Tavern
Breenfield
Garden
Troy
Fernchiff
Butte
Rockbridge
687
Baths
205
Vesuvius
27
Nellysford
Kents
Covesville
15
Falling Spring
50
Store
Douthat
6
712
60
Palmyra
505
Clearwater
27 29
Fairfield
White Sulphur
Pk
Clifton
Nicely
Montebello
659
169
13
161
10
town
43
11
GEORGE
Esmont
Caledana
Springs
EL 1245 ft
Forget
195
WASHINGTON
151
Faber
Covington
35
60
exington
NATIONAL
56
7
617
Carysbiro
Lewisburi
Callaghar
Longdale
FOREST.
29
Scot
Dixis
Selma
Iron
12
12
269
Furnate
ington
Mt Pleasant
Schuyler
800
63
183
Moor
Gate
4021 ft. A
159
Massies
Ronceverte
Glen
Longdale
Collierstown
Roseland
Oronoco
Lovingston
Columb
Mill'
Alleghany
616
Alderson
Wilton
Lowesville,
Shipman
722
Howardsville
612
Crows
188
Buena
Colleen
690
220
251
Vista
Piney
River
626
Centena
311
43
Arrington
/
NewCanton
18
Jordan
Gala
Sugarloat Mtn.
501
602
180
655
(219)
A 3626 ft
778
151
655
Mines
615
175
Forks of
Glenmore
takeside
615
Eagle Rock
Norwood
Glasgov
Buffalo,
647
670
Village
Clifford
James
Wingina
Oriskany
Saltpetre
Union
The
60
New Glasgow
Paint
Pines
168
617
Bridge
635
Bank
107
Amhers!
626
56
10
Barbours Creek
43
Pediar Mills
Buckingham
606
Spring
Gladstone
Rin Island
Bent Creek
20
Dayton Dueson Horatio's Druv. America's Furil
Road Trep N.Y. Alfud A. Knopt, 2002.
Now, in 1903, in the altered
In 1903, a cable was laid across
131
conditions, we must meet the
the Pacific Ocean, the last link in a
changed and changing problems
web of wires that allowed Roosevelt
with the spirit shown by the men
LINCOLN
to telegraph the first message sent
who, in 1803, and in the subse-
L
around the world. The complete
quent years gained, explored, con-
HICH WAY
circuit took twelve minutes.
quered, and settled this vast
In 1903, the Trans-Siberian rail-
territory, then a desert, now filled
THIS
road was completed; and, with
with thriving and populous States.
ROAD TO
the active encouragement of the
-Theodore Roosevelt, speech
GRANTSVILLE.
United States, Panama declared
at the dedication of the
ELY, NEVADA
GRANTSVILLE
its independence from Colombia in
Louisiana Purchase Exposi-
SAN FRANCISCO.
COMMERCIAL
QLUB
order to pave the way for a canal
tion, St. Louis, Missouri
to be built between the two great
oceans.
In 1903, as the nation began cele-
In 1903, George A. Wyman
brating one hundred years of growth
made the first transcontinental
and expansion since the Louisiana
On the Lincoln Highway
motorcycle trip, bumping along
Purchase and Lewis and Clark's epic
much of the route from San Fran-
voyage across the continent, Americans sensed that their
cisco to New York City by riding on the railroad bed.
world had suddenly got much smaller.
In 1903, two bicycle mechanics from Dayton, Ohio,
In 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt sent a New
named Orville and Wilbur Wright, made the world's first
Year's greeting to England's King Edward VII using Mar-
airplane flight-soaring in their gasoline-powered machine
coni's new wireless radio that could transmit signals across
over the beaches at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina. And far-
the Atlantic.
ther down the coast that same year, Alexander Winton
Make way for a new century.
JACOB H. SCHIFF His hite + Letters
HIS LIFE AND LETTERS
law, and their families-all the connections-assembled
Cyrus Adler.
to the young couple, and Mr. and Mrs. Schiff removed
at his home. At a specific time before the dinner hour
he read the Sabbath evening service, and thereafter the
2 vols.
to 965 Fifth Avenue (in December, 1901).
In 1891 he purchased a summer residence on the Rum-
company, which grew in numbers as the grandchildren
son Road, near Sea Bright, N. J., set in a park of about
became older, dined together. The evening meal closed
fifty acres. In 1898 the house was rebuilt and enlarged.
with his grace, which however was not confined to the
Sabbath.
Doubleday
Later he purchased a large piece of property on the
The strength of his family feeling is expressed in
Doran,6.
other side of Rumson Road, a former golf club, which
carried his estate down to the Shrewsbury River. He
a letter dated November 10, 1890, in which, after ex-
1929
had an extensive farm, which was a great delight to him,
plaining that he gave a large share of his time to the
and he enjoyed showing the stock, the gardens, the
community, he added:
walks, the splendid alley of trees which he planted, to
But there is a duty which I owe to my wife and children,
Vd. 2
his guests. His hospitality was delightful; every indi-
which I think is even above that to the community. I have
vidual's tastes and peculiarities were studied and pro-
made it a rule to spend Friday evening exclusively with my
vided for. Early every morning he was in his gardens,
family, and I can under no circumstances vary from this.
and himself brought to each lady of the household a
The next year he wrote to a friend:
rose or some other flower of the season.
I am giving about as little time to my family as I ought
He zealously. guarded the neighborhood from in-
to, and I frequently have to reproach myself that in trying
trusion, and was an active member of the Rumson Road
to be just to others, I am unjust to those who are nearest
Association, which did a great deal toward making this
to me.
road one of the most beautiful in the country. For many
No day passed without the welfare of every member
years, he used to make the journey up and down between
of the family being inquired into.
New York and his country place, on the Sandy Hook
boat, in which he had a cabin, and there he would meet
With this strong feeling about the family there went
with friends or sometimes make business appointments.
a deep interest in the family habitations. They resided
After 1903, he was accustomed to spend the month
at 35 West Fifty-Seventh Street until 1884, when a new
of August and early September at Bar Harbor, which
house was built at 932 Fifth Avenue. Every detail of
aside from his European trips represented his vacation
construction and furnishing was gone into with absolute
-for when at Rumson he went to the city five days a
thoroughness-the heating apparatus, the chimneys, the
week. He derived especial pleasure from the fact that
carpets, the clocks were all the subject of minute direc-
President Eliot's summer home was not far away, and
tions. When his son married, this house was given over
the two families often exchanged visits. His admiration
322
for the Maine Coast is expressed in the following letter:
323
EEGONOS
Date: 1907
Location: Eden St. # Bar Harbor ( 6 estates north of the Ferry Terminal)
Architect: Guy Lowell (also designed the Bldg. of the Arts in Bar Harbor)
Style: Mediterranean
Owners: Suilt for Mr. Walter G. Ladd. Mr. Ladd sold it to
Mr. George Strawbridge, of Philadelphia. Given by Mr. Strawbridge
to Dr. Richard Gott, Director of L'Ecole Arcadie. Bought by
Richard A. Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hallet, and
Mr. and Mrs. Roger K. Lewis in 1975.
"Bar Harbor Record" October 3. 1906 (page 1)
LARGE REAL ESTATE DEAL
"The Haight Property on Corniche Drive (now Eden St. ) sold
through Cushman's Agency."
One of the largest deals in real estate has recently been
consumated through the agency of Victor N. Cushman, selling the
Haight property on Corniche Drive. The purchaser is supposed to
be Walter Ladd. The land consists of 51/2014 acres on the shore, the
old house and the stable on the road opposite. It will be
improved another season.
Sonogee and Eegonos
Mrs. Mary Ellen Haight built "Sonogee" on the site of the
present "Eegonos." This building was burned soon after and when
Mr. Henry Lane Eno built his house (1903) two estates away he
named it "Sonogee." Later when Kr. Walter G. Ladd built "Eegonos"
he wanted to name it "Sonogee," as that was the name of the
house previously on his land. Since that name had already been
taken by Mr. End he had to sattle for the backwards version of
the name. No one seems to know why this name was so popular or
even what it means, although, at one tine a Hindu couple vielted
"Sonages" and reported that is Eindu "Seasgee" means "custo".
2.
EBGOMOS
Situated on the shore of Frenchman's Bay, this well-maintsinet
Mediterrenean villa remains one of the relatively few turn-of-the-
century summer cottages to escape the Bar Harbor Fire of 1947.
The entrance facade is decorated with lovely plaster ornamen-
tation which blends in beautifully with the sand-colored walls and
red tile roof. The facade is simpley elegant and has remained in
good condition over these 70 years.
The cottage is H-shaped in plan with tiny balconies reached
by French windows on the second floor wings.
The entrance hall runs front to back with a clear vista to
the ocean through a set of French windows which open onto a
patio on the ocean side. Small sitting rooms flank the east end
of the hall; the one on the north leading to the diningroom and
the kitchen wing. and the one on the south leading to the living-
room. On the entrance side of the livingroom is a large billiard
room. Both the billard room and the livingroom open onto an
immense porch, the roof of which is supported by massive Ionic
columns.
A grand staircase rises along the front wall to the second
floor which contains 9 masters' bedrooms (most of which have
fireplaces) and 7 masters' bathrooms.
The third floor contains 9 servants' bedrooms and 4 servants' .
bathrooms. There is no attic to speak of.
NORTHEAST HARBOR DOINGS.
Special to The New York Times.
New York Times (1857-Current file); Jul 26, 1903; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg. 20
Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Peloton, and George B.
Spencer.
W. W. Spence of Baltimore is at the Sea-
ward cottage for the season. He has as
NORTHEAST HARBOR DOINGS.
guests Mrs. John Gill and Miss Agnes Gill.
A't the Glencove Hotel, Seal Harbor, late
arrivals are Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Stevenson,
Special to The New York Times.
Miss W. D. Stevenson. A. E. Stevenson of
NORTHEAST HARBOR, Me., July 25.-
New York, and S. C. Tobey of Providence,
Dr. and Mrs. E. G. Janeway of New York
R. I.
have arrived for the season and are at the
R. F. Gilchrist has arrived for the season
and is staying at Sutton's Island.
Kimball cottage, next to the hotel. Their
Mrs. Charles H. Ludington, Miss Ruggles,
daughter, Miss Frances, and Miss Du Blois
Townsend Ludington, and Wright Luding-
are with them.
ton of Bryn Mawr, Penn.. are stopping at
the Smith cottage, Seal Harbor.
Col. and Mrs. E. B. Robbins and Edward
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Church of Boston,
Blake Robbins, Jr., of Boston have arrived
Mass., are recent arrivals at the Seaside
for the Summer.
Inn. Seal Harbor.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jackson Jeffries
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Frazier of Phila-
and Miss Florence Jeffries will also spend
delphia have come for the season and are
a part of the season here.
occupying Colonial cottage.
Mrs. T. H. Talmage of New York is at
the Roberts cottage for the Summer.
Miss Margaret Gardiner, granddaughter
of Bishop Doane, was operated upon last
week for appendicitis. The operation was
performed by Dr. McCosh of New York,
assisted by Dr. Stuart Hart. Miss Gardiner
is at present doing well.
/ One of the most prominent Summer resi-
dents here is President Daniel C. Gilman
of Carnegie Institute, formerly President of
Johns Hopkins University, who is an an-
nual visitor. The venerable Bishop Doane
is another yearly visitor. Northeast Har-
bor has been noted as the home of college
Presidents, and among the most famous
are ex-President Low of Columbia Uni-
versity, now Mayor of Greater New York,
and President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard
University.
A good-sized Baltimore colony is settled
here, including Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Spence,
who are at Gray cottage; Mrs. John Gill,
and Miss Agnes Gill, who are at Seaward
cottage; Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Schenck and
family, who are at the Schenck cottage;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Randolph, at the
Randolph cottage.
Asticou, Northeast Harbor's suburb, so
to speak, about a mile from the village, is
in a prosperous condition, Among the cot-
tagers here are Mr. and Mrs. Carroll S.
Tyson and family of Philadelphia, Francis
G. Peabody and family, Mr. and Mrs.
James H. Piper of Baltimore, Miss Clara
Williamson. Mrs. and Miss Lagurenne of
Philadelphia, Robert Reutter and family
of New York, Joseph H. Curtis and family
of Boston, and Dr. Caspar Morris and
family.
The resorts around Mount Desert Island
are getting in swing for a successful sea-
son this year. The hotels are filling up
well, the cottages are opening up well, and
in every respect the Summer promises to
be a very good one, Of course, as yet, en-
tertaining has been carried on only in a
desultory fashion, but with the coming
of new cottagers and the advent of August
the season will be as brisk as ever
Some recent arrivals from New York are
Mrs. F. H. Ballard, Miss Ballard, Mrs. F.
H. Ballard. Jr., Mrs. George B. Phelps,
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
NORTHEAST HARBOR GOSSIP.
Special to The New York Times.
New York Times (1857-Current file); Aug 2. 1903; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg.22
NORTHEAST HARBOR GOSSIP.
Special to The New York Times.
NORTHEAST HARBOR, Aug. 1.-Just
now athletic sports are much in evidence at
this resort, and though the severe weather
has been unfavorable links and courts have
been occupied every possible moment. The
Golf Club has sprung into great favor and
the weekly tournaments began last Satur-
day with an eighteen-hole match against
bogie. Two fine clay tennis courts have
been constructed near the Kimball House.
Among the arrivals of the week at the
Clifton House are Mrs. Joseph H. Rieman,
Miss Charlotte Rieman, the Misses Thorn,
Mrs. P. Lea Thorn, Henry C. Thacher of
Baltimore, Mrs. Arthur Brooks. Miss Lane,
Mrs. Joseph B. Warner, and Roger S. War-
ner of Cambridge, Miss Huntington of Sa-
lem, G. S. Benson. Jr., of Philadelphia,
Charles D. McIver and Miss Clapp of New
York, Mrs. Edwin Ashley Walker of New
Haven, Daniel L. Kirby of St. Louis, Miss
R. E. Forsyth of Lawrence, L. I.; Mrs. H.
S. White of Syracuse, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs.
H. P. Blake. Miss Blake. Miss Palfrey,
Mrs. J. C. Hubbard, and Mrs. Richardson
of Boston.
The inhabitants of Northeast Harbor will
not welcome the arrival of the fleet. if their
coming is to be attended with so disastrous
results as followed the visit of the torpedo
destroyer Decatur early in the week. The
waves left after her swift passage through
the harbor caused havoc among the ship-
ping and wharves, and at one slip consid-
erable damage was done.
President and Mrs. Charles W. Eliot of
Cambridge are occupying their attractive
cottage for the Summer. They stayed in
town later this year than is their custom
because of hospitable duties connected with
the National Educational Association.
Arrivals of the week at Rock End include
Miss Slade. Mrs. George S. Fraser, Mrs. E.
Le B. Gardiner. Langdon P. Marvin, Miss
J. C. Delafield, Miss E. Delafield. Miss
Effie V. R. Waddington. and Miss Eleanor
Crosby of New York: Miss A. M. Converse,
Arthur T. Hatch, Charles C. Payson, and
Mr. and Mrs. Horace Basset of Boston, and
R. W. Hawes of New York.
Among the week's arrivals at the Kimball
are Miss M. R. Prime, Dr. and Mrs. E. G.
Janeway, Miss Mildred Dubois, Miss Aman-
da Stock, Miss Frances W. Janeway, S. B.
Lawrence. Mrs. F. W. Ballard. George B.
Phelps, Miss Ballard, Master Phelps. the
Misses Ballard, Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Pelton,
G. F. Spencer. F. H. Ballard. Mr. and Mrs.
W. S. Pyle. Miss Pyle, W. S. Pyle, Jr., Mrs.
E. J. Hancy, Miss Jean Hancy, Mrs. E. J.
Chapman, and Miss Hone of New York:
Winthrop Sargent of Boston. Mrs. G. A.
Pickett of Connecticut, M. C. Shoemaker of
Cincinnati. and J. H. Van Buren of San
Juan. Porto Rico.
The swimming pool for several seasons
past has been one of the principal places of
recreation during the Summer. It is owned
and operated by the Village Improvement
Society. having been built five years ago.
One of the latest improvements is the addi-
tion of a large pump to supply the water
during the low run of tides. A large court
was added to the grounds at the end of last
season. and it is being used for handball
and similar games.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
904
Visual Information Access Record Display
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00
results
Entire record selected
Selected Work
Title:
Emerson Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States
Work Type:
university buildings
Creator:
Lowell, Guy (1870-1927), United States, architect
Production:
Cambridge, MA, United States
Date:
1904
Notes:
General: classrooms
Classification:
Loeb Library, Harvard Design School; KX419
Selected Surrogate
Image:
Title:
view with surrounding buildings
Work Type:
Slide
Topics:
trees
lawns
towers
Classification:
KX419 b
Repository:
Loeb Library, Harvard Design School
119300
Selected Surrogate
Title:
ext., facade
Work Type:
Slide
Topics:
exterior views
facades
columns (architectural elements)
pediments
Classification:
KX419 c3
Repository:
Loeb Library, Harvard Design School
45347
olvsite18781
http://via.harvard.edu:748/WebZ/FETCH?sessionid=01-38874-106338594...0 entitycurrecno= 1/22/2004
Page 1 of
1
2
http://ids.harvard.edu:8080/ids/servlet/imgdelv?id=642795
1/22/2004
OFFICERS FOR 1904-1905.
President: WALDRON BATES.
Vice-Presidents:
L..B. DEASY,
JOHN S. KENNEDY,
RIGHT REV. WM. LAWRENCE.
Secretary: A. H. LYNAM.
Treasurer: F. C. LYNAM.
STANDING COMMITTEES.
Finance Committee:
F. C. Lynam, Chairman.
Morris K. Jesup,
J. S. Kennedy.
Sanitary Committee:
Dr. J. Madison Taylor, Chairman.
Win. Fennelly,
Dr. E. J. Morrison,
Mrs. Cadwalader Jones, Mrs. Clara Norris,
J. S. Kennedy.
2
4
THE BAR HARBOR
VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION.
5
1904-05
STANDING COMMITTEES-Continued.
Fifteenth Annual Report
Roads and Paths Committee:
OF THE
Waldron Bates, Chairman.
Mrs. Robert Amory,
John J. Emery.
Bar Harbor Village Improve-
George B. Dorr,
Charles Fry,
Herbert Jaques,
Miss Beatrix Jones.
ment Association.
Committee on Trees and Planting:
George B. Dorr, Chairman.
The fifteenth annual meeting of the Associa-
Mrs. John Harrison, Mrs. John S. Kennedy,
tion was duly called and held at the Young Men's
Mrs. L. E. Opdycke, Mrs. W. B. Rice.
Christian Association on September I3, 1904.
L. E. Opdycke.
The reports presented at this and previous meet-
Village Committee:
ings are printed in this report in full.
Mrs. E. B. Mears.
MEMBERSHIP.
Glen Mary Park Committee:
All visitors to Bar Harbor, as well as resi-
Dr. Robert Amory.
dents, are cordially invited to join the Associa-
George B.
Darr.
tion. No formality is necessary to become a
Charles Fry,
member. The handing in of a name accom-
panied by one dollar, to the Treasurer of the
A ociation, Mr. F. C. Lynam, at his office,
th: Bar Harbor Banking & Trust Co., con-
N: utes membership. Life membership, $25.
RECEIVED
FEP 1 : 1904
LACKNOWLING D
ANSWERED
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
February 10th, 1904.
President Eliot,
Harvard University,
Cambridge, Mass.
Dear President Eliot,
I think decidedly that it would be expodient to find
out whether the Forbes family will not increase their subscription
to Emerson Hall before any change of plan is made to lessen the cost
of the building. And I will see either Cameron or Edward Forbes
Emerson
Forbers
about it within the next few days and let you know what the result is.
Hall
It is a step which certainly should be taken at this stage though I
am doubtful of success. If the money cannot be obtained from them
I will call a meeting of our board to discuss what other means we
can take to raise the necessary sum.
It seems a pity not to make
the building all that we would like to have it, now that so much has
been secured.
I agree with you in thinking that we ought not to wait long to
build the Hall if it can be avoided, though I do not think that any
of the subscribers would wish to withdraw their gift if it should
finally seem best to do so for a brief term. I feel quite confident,
however, that no long postponement will be necessary and trusting
that it may prove so, I remain
Sincerely yours,
Ginge B. Date
Harvard University,
Cambridge, February 9, 1904.
Dear Mr. Dorr:-
We have received bids for the construction of Emerson Hall from five
different firms. The result is that the hall as planned cannot be built
and made ready for use for less than $190,000. Now, the Corporation have
in sight by the 1st of January, 1905, about $165,000. It will, of course,
be possible to reduce the size of the building by 12% or 15% and then, by
omitting some of the decorative features, to bring the cost of the hall
within the money which the Corporation now have in hand. Do you think it
would be expedient, before resolving on these reductions of the hall itself,
to try to get $25,000 more from the Forbes family or from friends of Emerson?
I sympathized with the feeling of the Forbes family that they did not wish
to contribute so largely to the building as to make it a family memorial;
but the public has now contributed largely, and the number of contributors
is large, and it seems to me that the Forbes family or other friends might
naturally say to themselves: "We prefer to have the hall built as it is de-
signed rather than to have it reduced in any manner, and we will therefore
contribute the moderate sum which is needed to secure that result". At any
rate, if I were in their place, in all respects, I am sure that I should wish
to be informed how the matter stood and given the chance to have the memorial
building constructed just as it was designed as a mate for Robinson Hall.
-2-
If you agree with me, you will perhaps feel disposed to make the necessary
inquiries as Chairman of the Committee.
There is, of course, an alternative - namely, to wait four or five
years until the money accumulates to the necessary amount. I must confess
that this alternative seems 2. disagreeable one to me; because the subscribers
were led to believe that the building could be put up for $150,000, and the
subscription amounts to decidedly more than $150,000 already. A long delay
was certainly not contemplated by the subscribers, and particularly was not
expected by the largest subscriber. You who raised the subscription are
better entitled to hold an opinion on this subject than I am.
Very truly yours,
Chariesh Elin
George B. Dorr, Esq.
Harvard's Finances.
New York Times (1857-Current file) Mar 12, 1904; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg BR171
Harvard's Finances.
3/12/04
I
The Annual Reports of the President
and Treasurer of Harvard College for 1902-
03 " IS an octavo of 450 pages. issued as
New Series No. 116 of the university publi-
cations Appended to the report of President
Charles W. Ellot are those of the various
departments These include all the regular
Facultier. such as that of arts and sciences,
the college proper, the graduate school,
divinity, law, medical, &C., schools; the
various laboratories. the observatory. the
museums, the library, and Radcliffe Col-
lege.
The President reports that the death rate
at Harvard is remarkably low. In 1902-03
there were only thirteen deaths In a college
population of nearly 4,000-about .25 per
1.000. or far less than half of Boston's rate.
It is interesting to note the increase in the
number of students who get the degree of
Rachelor of Arts in three years; the advo-
cates of a shorter course can find ammunt-
tion in the figures here presented. In the
matter of athletics, the President points
out that the games which are most inter-
esting to the public-football, baseball, and
rowing-serve less than one-3ixth of the
students The game which has been con-
ducted at Cambridge with the least intelli-
gence and success is football-except from a
pecuniary point of view," he complains.
The Treasurer's report shows what a
huge corporation such a modern college is.
Harvard 19 worth over $15,800,000. and its
income available during 1903 was $775,000.
But expenses were so heavy that there was
a deficit of over $40.000. Gifts during the
year reached the sum of nearly $2,000,000,
JDR
of which $500,000 came from John D. Rocke-
feller.
beneficiar
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
3/21/04
HONOR ELIOT'S 70TH BIRTHDAY.
Special to The New York Times.
New York Times (1857-Current file): Mar 21, 1904: ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg. 5
HONOR ELIOT'S 70TH BIRTHDAY.
Loving Cup Presented by Harvard Fac-
ulty-Event Observed by Students.
Special 10 The New York Times.
CAMBRIDGE, Mass., March 20.-Dr.
Charles W. Eliot, President of Harvard
University since 1868, celebrated his sev-
entieth anniversary in happy mood to-day.
In the afternoon he was invited to Univers-
ity Hail, where he met the Faculty and was
presented with a loving cup. In accepting
the cup Dr. Eliot said:
"I have received many tributes of affec-
tion, but none so dear as those from the
departments of the faculty. I owe to the
university all that I have accomplished, and
am myself a product of the university and
the influence of the two governing boards.
The cup, which is appropriately inscribed,
is of Greek design, fifth century B. C., and
was modeled after a vase in the Boston
Museum of Fine Arts.
Later President Eliot attended a family
party at the home of his son, the Rev. Sam-
uel A. Eliot, where he spent the evening.
The anniversary was recognized by the stu-
dent body in various ways.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
Explorer of Mongolia; Captain Robert A. Bartlett, Arctic
December 12, 1911 - Col. Theodore Roosevelt speaks at
Explorer (4); Hiram Bingham, Discoverer of Macchu
Meeting 72 held at the Exchange Club, Boston.
Picchu; Barry C. Bishop, Mountaineer (2); Carleton S.
January 17, 1913 - President Charles W. Eiot speaks on The
Coon, Anthropologist (9); Frederick E. Crockett, First Byrd
Social and Political Condition of China.
Antarctic Expedition (2); Charles W. Eliot, President of
Harvard; Anthony Fiala, Arctic Explorer, Edward E.
November 28, 1913 - First meeting held at the newly
Goodale, First Byrd Antarctic Expedition; Laurence M.
opened Harvard Club. Professor Roland B. Dixon, Twelve
Gould, First Byrd Antarctic Expedition; Brigadier-General
Hundred Miles through the Northern Himalayas.
Adolphus W. Greeley, Arctic Explorer, Sven Hedin, Explorer
December 13, 1938 - First showing of color motion pictures
of Central Asia; Heinrich Harrer, Mountaineer; Sir Harry
at a Club meeting. December 13, 1938.
Johnston, African Explorer; Owen Lattimore, Asian Explorer
(5); Donald B. MacMillan, Arctic Explorer; George Leigh
January 16, 1940 - First woman speaker. "She is the only
Mallory, Lost on Everest; John P. Marquand, Novelist (2);
woman to have addressed the Club in the thirty-eight years
Robert Cushman Murphy, Naturalist (2); Otto Nordenskjold,
of its existence, and signally deserves that honor." Mrs.
Polar Explorer; Noel E. Odell, Mountaineer, Commander
Laura Bolton, Africa in Sound and Film. This was also the
Robert E. Peary, Arctic Explorer; S. Dillon Ripley, Orni-
first showing of sound motion pictures at a Club meeting.
thologist and Director of the Smithsonian (3); Kermit
February 25, 1947 - 300th Meeting. Held at the Institute of
Roosevelt (2); Kermit Roosevelt, Jr.; Jonathan Roosevelt;
Geographical Exploration.
Quentin Roosevelt; President Theodore Roosevelt; Tweed
November 16, 1952 - 50th Anniversary Meeting.
Roosevelt; Governor Sumner Sewall of Maine; Eric Shipton,
Mountaineer (2); Joseph Linden Smith, Artist of Egypt (2);
October 10, 1961 - First meeting to have the meeting
Frank S. Smythe, Mountaineer, Vilhjalmur Stefansson,
number on the meeting notice. Number 415.
Arctic Explorer (4); Major-General Sir Percy Sykes, Ex-
March 21, 1972 - 500th Meeting.
plorer of Persia; Bertram Thomas, First to Cross Arabia's
Empty Quarter, Alan J. Villiers, Author and Sailor, Sir
February 20, 1973 - "A loud speaker public address
Hubert Wilkins, Arctic and Antarctic Aviator, Frederick R.
amplifier was used with considerable success." First such
Wulsin, Anthropologist and Explorer (3); and Colonel Sir
use.
Francis Younghusband, Explorer of India and Central Asia.
October 6, 1976 - Only known instance of a speaker not
appearing. Eugenie Clark failed to show because of weather
A Harvard Travellers Club Meeting Timeline
and two members each of the Harvard Travellers Club and
November 15, 1902 - First meeting of the Harvard Travel-
the Women's Travel Club spoke without slides. Precursor to
lers Club at the Harvard Union.
Members Night.
January 16, 1903 - First recorded instance of food being
January 11, 1977 - First African-Americans to speak to
Club, S. Allen Counter, Jr. and David L. Evans, Surinam's
served. Second meeting of the Club. "A light supper will be
served at 9.30."
Ex-Slaves: African Settlements in America.
January 11, 1977 - Nametags first instituted at meetings.
January 29, 1904 - First dinner before a meeting. Harvard
Union. Price $2. Attended by 23.
November 13, 1984 - 600th Meeting. Kermit and Jonathan
Roosevelt, East Africa: A Roosevelt Retrospective.
March 25, 1904 - First meeting held in a private home, the
house of George B. Dorr, 18 Commonwealth Avenue,
January 15, 1991 - 650th Meeting. Robert F. Perkins, Jr. and
Boston.
Chris Knight, Kamchatka: The Unknown Land.
May 18, 1905 - Probably the first Annual meeting as such;
November 10, 1992 - 90th Anniversary Meeting. Tweed
held at residence of Dr. John L. Bremer, 416 Beacon Street,
Roosevelt, Return from the River of Doubt: The 1992 Rio
Boston.
Roosevelt Expedition.
April 27, 1906 - First showing of motion pictures at a Club
February 9, 1993 - Club (later Members) Night first held.
meeting, at the house of Mr. Edwin H. Abbot, 1 Follen
Meeting 667.
Street, Cambridge.
October 10, 1995 - Club starts using its own slide projector.
February 14, 1908 - First Annual Dinner Meeting. Held at
November 15, 2002 - 100th Anniversary Meeting. Jonathan
the Hotel Brunswick, Boston.
Shackleton, Shackleton Returns! The Antarctic, Ireland, the
March 18, 1908 - Exhibition Meeting at Horticultural Hall.
Shackletons and One Hundred Years of the Harvard
First attendance of a Club event by women.
Travellers Club.
May 7, 1909 - Probably first Ladies' Night. Held at Horti-
May 27, 2003 - 750th Meeting. Astronaut Story Musgrave,
cultural Hall. 200 present.
Earth as Art.
Harvard Travellers' Club.
The eleventh meeting of the club will be held, by
invitation, at the house of Mr. George B. Dorr, 18 Com-
monwealth Ave., Boston, Friday evening, March 25, at
8 o'clock.
Professor I. N. Hollis will speak on "A Cruise in
the Pacific."
Members may invite their friends to accompany
them to the meeting; please notify Mr. Dorr on the
attached card.
HENRY B. BIGELOW, Sec.
9/27/2018
Xfinity Connect re George Dorr and Harvard Travellers Club Printout
Steven Holmes
9/26/2018 1:13 PM
2
re: George Dorr and Harvard Travellers Club
To Ronald Epp
Peter Dreher
Ron and Peter -
Hi! I hope you both are well. Following up on our past conversations, last week I
was able to get into the Harvard Archives and look at early papers of the Harvard
Travellers Club, looking for early involvement of George Dorr in the Club and
possible indications of other early members relevant for our interests. Nothing
earth-shattering, but some items of interest:
1
As Ron already indicated, Dorr was definitely involved in the Club from the
very earliest stages. In an undated letter signed by Henry Bigelow, the first
Secretary of the Club (1902-03), Dorr is included in a list of the initial candidates
for fellows of the Club. Curiously, the second report (1904) lists Dorr as a
"member" but not as a "fellow," the latter defined as those members who have
"travelled somewhat off the beaten track" - it's not clear whether that definition
of "fellows" appeared after that initial undated (1902-03) letter, or perhaps Dorr
didn't immediately accept the role, or what. In any case, he was listed as a
fellow in the 1905 annual report, and after.
Additionally, as Ron already knows, Dorr hosted an early regular meeting of
the Club at his home on March 25, 1904 - see attached photo of invitation card.
2. Other early members who may (or may not) be of interest to either of you:
- Charles E. Fay does show up as member in 1904 annual report, becomes a
fellow in 1906, and vice-president in 1908 - so clearly an active and prominent
member. Peter - in your earlier email (8/9) giving a list of Christian Kaufmann's
clients in 1903 Canada, you include a "Charles E Day" - is it possible that that
name was mis-transcribed, and should be Charles E. Fay? If so, he might have
been the connection between Kaufman and Dorr
- The second secretary of the Club was J. C. Phillips (i.e. John C. Phillips III), a
recent Harvard grad whose mother, Anna T. (Tucker) Phillips, was a very early
supporter of groups like Mass Audubon and the Trustees of Reservations (of
which Dorr too was a member); J. C. Phillips went on to be involved in
conservation activities in various circles. Ron, do those names ring any bells?
- On Feb 14, 1908, the Club held a special event for its 40th meeting. I found an
event ticket of William R. Thayer of Cambridge (who became a club member that
year) - see back of ticket in attached photo, where Thayer notes that he went
with a man by the name of Hart, probably Albert Bushnell Hart, also of
Cambridge and already a member. Thayer also clearly mentions Dorr, though I
admit I can't definitely decipher the words! So again, do the names William
9/27/2018
Xfinity Connect re George Dorr and Harvard Travellers Club Printout
-
3
Thayer or Albert Hart mean anything to either of you? I have no reason to thnk
they would, just was struck by clear connection to Dorr.
- Early presentations to the Club relating to the Canadian Rockies:
1907: Papers by Theodore Lyman, W. Rodman Peabody, and R. P. Blake
1911: Paper by George and Samuel Mixter
So again, nothing really new, just confirmation of Dorr's connection to the Club
and a few more names to bat around. (All of which comtributes also to my
own sense of the social and organizational interconnections that constituted the
context for early Boston conservation movements.)
Following up on previous discussion, I hope next week to get into AMC archives
and see if close inspection of those Gleason photos clears up anything as far as
dates he was in Field, B.C. area.
Cheers, Steve
Steven Pavlos Holmes, Ph.D.
Scholar-in-Residence at the Boston Nature Center, Mattapan, MA
Home: 21 Eldridge Road, Jamaica Plain, MA 02130 USA
617-285-2832
Email: stevenpavlosholmes@gmx.com
Alternate: : stevenjholmes@post.harvard.edu
https://facingthechangeanthology.wordpress.com/about-the-editor/
Sent: Wednesday, September 26, 2018 at 11:54 AM
From: Steve Holmes
To: Steven Holmes
Subject:
IMG_1897.JPG (2 MB)
IMG 1898.JPG (2 MB)
9/26/2018
IMG_1898.JPG(2448x3264)
4
heat with Heat-
had George Door in upit
Harvard Travellers
- On Feb 14, 1908, the Club held a special event for its 40th meeting. I found an
event ticket of William R. Thayer of Cambridge (who became a club member that
year) - see back of ticket in attached photo, where Thayer notes that he went
with a man by the name of Hart, probably Albert Bushnell Hart, also of
Cambridge and already a member. Thayer also clearly mentions Dorr, though I
admit I can't definitely decipher the words!
Note: Comments above by Steven Pavlosttolmes (9/26/2018)
Louisiana Purchase Exposition - Wikipedia
Page 1 of 11
WIKIPEDIA
Louisiana Purchase Exposition
The Louisiana Purchase Exposition, informally known as the St. Louis World's Fair, was an international
1904 St. Louis
exposition held in St. Louis, Missouri, United States, from April 30 to December 1, 1904. Local, state, and federal funds
totaling $15 million were used to finance the event. More than 60 countries and 43 of the 45 American states
V
/EXPOSITION INTERNATIONALE
DE
maintained exhibition spaces at the fair, which was attended by nearl y 19.7 million people.
********
1004
Historians generally emphasize the prominence of themes of race and empire, and the fair's long-lasting impact on
intellectuals in the fields of history, art history, architecture and anthropology. From the point of view of the memory
of the average person who attended the fair, it primarily promoted entertainment, consumer goods and popular
culture. [1]
Contents
Background
IMPORTANCE DE LEXPOSITION
95.
us
145
500
Postage stamps
Architects
Board of Commissioners
Poster for the Exposition painted by
Scientific contributions
Alphonse Mucha
Communication contributions
Overview
Medical contributions
Transportation contributions
BIE-class
Universal exposition
Legacy
Category
Historical Expo
Buildings
Name
Louisiana Purchase
Introduction of new foods
Exposition
Influence on popular music
People on dis play
Area
1,270 acres (510
Exhibits
hectares)
1904 Summer Olympics
Visitors
19,694,855
Bullfight riot
Participant(s)
Anglo-Boer War Concession
Countries
62
Notable attenders
Location
See also
Country
United States
Footnotes
City
St. Louis
Further reading
Primary sources
Venue
Forest Park
External links
Coordinates
38°38'18.6"N
90°17'9.2"W
Background
Timeline
Opening
April 30, 1904
In
1904, St. Louis hosted a World's Fair to celebrate the centenni al of the 1803 Louisiana Purchase. The idea for such
a
Closure
December 1, 1904
commemorative event seems to have emerged early in 1898, with Kansas City and St. Louis initially presented as
potential hosts for a fair based on their central location within the territory encompassed by the 1803 land annexation.
Universal expositions
[4]
Previous
Exposition
Universelle (1900)
The exhibition was grand in scale and lengthy in preparation, with an initial $5 million committed by the city of St.
in Paris
Louis through the sale of city bonds was authorized by the Missouri state legislature in April 1899. [5] An additional $5
Next
million was generated through private donations by interested citizens and businesses from around Missouri, a
Liège International
fundraising target reached in January 1901. The final installment of $5 million of the exposition's $15 million
(1905) in Liège
capitalization came in the form of earmarked funds that were part of a congressional appropriations bill passed at the
end of May 1900. [7] The fundraising mission was aided by the active support of President of the United States William
McKinley, which was won by or ganizers in a February 1899 White House visit. [8]
While initially conceived as a centennial celebration to be held in 1903, the actual opening of the St. Louis exposition
was delayed until April 30, 1904, to allow for full-scale participation by more states and foreign countries. The
exposition remained in operation from its opening until December 1, 1904. During the year of the fair, the Louisiana
Purchase Exposition supplanted the annual St. Louis Exposition of agricultural, trade, and scientific exhibitions which
had been held in the city since the 188os.
St. Louis World's Fair Map(2)(3)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louisiana_Purchase_Exposition
4/13/2019
MEMORIAL
OF
Samuel de Champlain
WHO DISCOVERED
THE ISLAND OF MT. DESERT
MAINE
September 5, 1604
PRIVATELY PRINTED
1906
-
Ustz: Absence of GBO as subscriber. N.E.+
Sealtharbor endents dominate.
Includes address by S.A. Eliot, D.D.
2
Introductory Note
THE Three Hundredth Anniversary of the dis-
covery of the Island of Mount Desert was cele-
brated at North East Harbor September 5, 1904.
Subscribers In the Champlain Memorial, 1904
Addresses were made in the Union Church by Presi-
dent Eliot, of Harvard University, and by Hon. Seth
MRS. EDWIN H. ABBOT
MRS. G. G. HAYWARD
Low, late President of Columbia University.
MISSES BLANCHARD
R. M. HOE
Shortly afterwards a number of the summer visitors
MISS BLODGETT
MRS. ELIJAH HUBBARD
at North East Harbor and Seal Harbor contributed
MRS. E. W. CLARK
PRESIDENT AND MRS. SETH Low
MISS FRANCES CLARK
COMMANDER M. A. MILLER, U.S.N
a sum sufficient for placing a moss-covered stone
Miss HARRIET CLARKE
MR. AND MRS. HENRY PARKMAN
tablet, with suitable inscriptions, on a point of land
MRS. JOSIAH P. COOKE
REV. DR. F. G. PEABODY
east of Seal Harbor, which affords a fine view of the
GEORGE B. COOKSEY
MISS PRIME
coast, from the Atlantic to the Western Way, the
REV. DR. J. S. DENNIS
JAMES FORD RHODES
route followed by Champlain.
RT. REV. W. C. DOANE
MR. AND MRS. WINTHROP SARGENT
On the 18th of July, 1906, the contributors to the
EDWARD K. DUNHAM, M. D.
REV. DR. CORNELIUS B. SMITH
fund, and a few of their friends, assembled near the
PRESIDENT C. W. ELIOT
RT. REV. A. MACKAY-SMITH
WILLIAM W. FRAZIER
WILLIAM W. SPENCE
Memorial Stone and listened to a brief recital of the
JAMES T. GARDINER
GEORGE L. STEBBINS
events connected with Champlain's voyage, by Rev.
DANIEL C. GILMAN
MR. AND MRS. J. G. THORP
Samuel A. Eliot, D. D. The tablets were then
MRS. ZABRISKIE GRAY
MR. AND MRS. A. C. WHEELWRIGHT
unveiled by Wright Ludington, the youngest person
MRS. ROGER WOLCOTT
present. President Eliot read the inscriptions, and
added a few remarks upon the characteristics of
Champlain. The verses which are here printed were
then recited by the author of them, Rev. Professor
William Adams Brown, of New York.
D. C. G.
3
Address by Rev. Samuel A. Elint, D.D.
NEW ENGLAND was called New France for
Inscriptions
fifty years before Captain John Smith gave it
its present name. Fifteen years before the Mayflower
i
OBVERSE.
came to anchor in Plymouth Harbor its waters had
IN HONOR OF
been sounded and its outlines drawn by Champlain
SAMUEL DE CHAMPLAIN
and his comrades. The Pilgrims, had they known
BORN IN FRANCE 1567
of it, might have bought, ere they sailed, at a little
DIED AT QUEBEC 1635
shop in the Rue St. Jean de Beauvais in Paris, a
A SOLDIER SAILOR EXPLORER
chart of Plymouth Harbor remarkable for its
AND ADMINISTRATOR
WHO GAVE THIS ISLAND ITS NAME.
accuracy and skill. Twenty-five years before John
Winthrop and his company landed on the Peninsula
REVERSE.
where they planted Boston, these same Frenchmen
THE SAME DAY WE PASSED ALSO NEAR
had mapped the bay, described its features with sur-
AN ISLAND ABOUT FOUR OR FIVE LEAGUES LONG.
prising fidelity, and named its points and inlets.
IT IS VERY HIGH, NOTCHED IN PLACES,
The effort at French colonization in America found
so AS TO APPEAR FROM THE SEA
its impulse in the patriotic pride and chivalric spirit
LIKE A RANGE OF SEVEN OR EIGHT MOUNTAINS
of that many-sided monarch, Henry the Fourth.
CLOSE TOGETHER. THE SUMMITS OF MOST OF THEM
This landfall at Mount Desert, which we celebrate
ARE BARE OF TREES FOR THEY ARE NOTHING
BUT ROCK.
I NAMED IT THE
today, connects itself directly with the revocation of
ISLAND OF THE DESERT MOUNTAINS.
the Edict of Nantes signed by Henry in 1598. That
CHAMPLAIN'S JOURNAL 5 SEPT., 1604.
decree meant nothing less than the speedy return of
commercial prosperity to France and the possibility of
carrying out the King's ambition to make France a
power on the sea and to promote adventure and dis-
4
covery and trade in distant lands. Several attempts
boats from boyhood, and the sea laid a strong hold
at settlement in New France were made but nothing
upon his imagination. In the dedication of one of
permanent was accomplished and in 1604 Henry com-
his books he says 'Among the most useful and
missioned a Huguenot gentleman, Pierre Du Guast,
excellent arts navigation has always seemed to me to
Sieur de Monts to head a colony, granting to him a
take the first place. In the measure that it is danger-
monopoly of trade and vice-regal authority. De
ous and accompanied by a thousand perils, by so much
Monts associated with himself a number of merchants
is it honorable and lifted above all other arts, being in
and adventurers and among them was the pilot-general
no wise suitable for those who lack courage and confi-
of the French navy, Samuel de Champlain.
dence. By this art we acquire knowledge of various
This man, whose word and valor this stone com-
lands, countries, and kingdoms. By it we bring home
memorates, was a true hero. Throughout a long and
all sorts of riches, by it the idolatry of Paganism is
adventurous career he displayed a steadfast courage,
overthrown and Christianity declared in all parts of
a resourceful mind, a kindly heart, an indomitable
the earth. It is this art that has from my childhood
patience. Though a devout Catholic he was extraordi-
lured me to love it, and has caused me to expose
narily tolerant in religion. Though strict in discipline
myself almost all my life to the rude waves of the
he was considerate, just and merciful. Though his
ocean." When he enlisted in De Monts' expedition
opportunities for education must have been scanty,
he was about thirty-seven years old. He had already
yet he wrote and drew remarkably well, and there is a
made an adventurous journey to Panama and the Span-
blitheness of mood about him, a friendliness of spirit,
ish main, and he had just returned from a voyage to
a quaintness of speech that must have made him a
New France and the River St. Lawrence.
rarely good comrade and an inspiring leader.
De Monts sailed with his company in March, 1604,
Champlain was born in 1567, in the little town of
and after coasting along the shores of Nova Scotia and
Brouage, on the Bay of Biscay, some twenty miles
up into the Bay of Fundy, he chose as the site of the
south of La Rochelle. His father was a captain in
colony an island in the river which now bears the
the royal navy, and one of his uncles was a pilot
name which he gave to his settlement, Saint Croix.
in the king's service. Champlain was familiar with
There the colonists passed the summer clearing the
5
ground, building their fort and setting up their houses,
places so that from the sea it gives the appearance of
and early in September, after the ship that brought
a range of seven or eight mountains. The summits
them had gone back to France to bring out reinforce-
are all bare and rocky. The slopes are covered with
ments in the succeeding spring, Champlain took twelve
pines, firs, and birches. I named it Isle des Monts
of the men, together with two Indians, and set out on
Desert."
a voyage of discovery along the coast to the westward.
The next day the voyagers had a conference with
They sailed in a big open boat which Champlain called
some Indians who came out to meet them and who
a " patache." As depicted in Champlain's drawing of
agreed to guide them to the Penobscot. They sailed
the St. Croix settlement this boat had a single lateen
up that river to the point where Bangor now stands
sail, but when the wind was ahead they used oars.
and then passed out by Owl's Head, and continued
Now let me quote Champlain's own narrative:
west as far as the Kennebec. Then, as their provisions
' Setting out from the mouth of the St. Croix and
were running low, they ran back before the wind and
sailing westward along the coast, we made the same
arrived at St. Croix on the third of October, or just
day some twenty-five leagues and passed by many
a month after they set out. When we consider what
islands, reefs, and rocks, which sometimes extend
watchfulness is required in these days of light-houses,
more than four leagues out to sea. The islands
charts, buoys and beacons, to navigate among the
are covered with pines, firs, and other trees of an
numberless islands and sunken ledges of this ragged
inferior sort. Among the islands are many fine
and fog-haunted coast, what shall we say of the seaman-
harbors, but undesirable for permanent settlement.
ship and adventurous courage of the first pioneers.
'The same day (September 5, 1604) we passed
The St. Croix colony did not endure, but the name
near to an island some four or five leagues long, in
of Champlain is writ large on this continent. For
the neighborhood of which we just escaped being lost
fortitude, devout serenity, and prudent zeal it would be
on a rock that was just awash and which made a hole
hard to match this pioneer of New France. Champlain
in the bottom of our boat. From this island to the
became the father of Canada and the bold explorer
mainland on the north the distance is not more than
of the western wilds. He planted the fleur-de-lis on
a hundred paces. The island is high and notched in
the rock of Quebec, and there on Christmas day of
(
ed, striving to the last for the welfare of his
Lines by Rev. William Adams Brown, D.D.
: glad to draw his last breath in the wilder-
, as he wrote, he had "always desired to
To Champlain
ly flourish and the true religion, Catholic,
and Roman." We do well to commemo-
If, from some eyrie in the distant sky,
odest hero and his half-forgotten adventures
Thine eagle eye, still sweeping o'er the main,
Upon this rock-bound coast should chance again,
asts. His heroic monument stands fitly at
Which first thy searching vision did descry;
it this stone will remind many a fortunate
here of the dauntless Frenchman, who first
Then shall this boulder, which to-day we raise,
As messenger a silent greeting bring
en, looked upon this favored island and
From the new friends whose later voyaging
the name it bears.
Has found safe haven in these quiet bays.
Many fair gifts, bold courser of the seas !
Thy laughing France with lavish hand has showered
Upon this daughter of the West,-undowered
When first she knelt and clasped her sister's knees.
One gift France held, and lightly tossed aside,-
A barren isle, sea-swept and tempest-driven ;
Its lonely hills unscaled, its rocks unriven
In that far day when thou didst pass in pride.
Desert the name thou gavest, great Champlain !
Desert she seemed,-thi island of our love ;
Yet in her dales the birches' silver grove
Reared its white columns for her sylvan fane.
By the bare rocks that buttress Sargent's crown
The scarlet lily shamed the evening sky ;
While on the bosom of the lake hard by
Her snow-white sister nestled gently down.
of
From out these mossy glades, fern-canopied,
The orchid raised his purple-fringed head,
And the shy twin-flower softly carpeted
The silent paths thou didst disdain to tread.
Desert the isle, such joys as these doth hold !
Nay, dauntless traveller, return once more !
The scenes so quickly left again explore,
And thou shalt see new graces still unfold.
No longer now the silent spaces yield
Such song alone as woodland minstrels raise ;
Here Man with Nature joins his voice in praise
For wounds bound up and ancient sorrows healed.
Here shalt thou see in goodly fellowship
Ripe age with youth go laughing side by side
Down some long alley of the woods, where hide
Sweet treasures waiting for the eye and lip.
Across the bosom of this sparkling sea,
Through which of old thy piercing prow did glide,
Thou shalt behold white canvas swell in pride,
And on the breeze that blows so merrily
Shalt hear anon, if such thy happy chance,
Quick wit so lightly flash in quip and jest
Thou shalt transfer thine East unto our West,
And think thyself again at home in France.
chron 1904
OF
De MONTS' SEVILEMENT AT
ST. CROIX ISLAND
Publication of the Maine Historical Society, 1905.
On Saturday, June 25, 1904, occurred the celebration of the
three hundredth anniversary of the landing of de Monts at St. Groix
Island
Anchored north of the ioland were the 0.888 Detroit, Captain
Dillingham, the French cruiser Troude, Captain Aubry, the British cruiser
Columbine, Captain Hill
Hon. Charles B. Swan, of Calais, presided. Hio address was in
part as follows:
By invitation of the Maine Historical Society and a committee
of the citizens of the St. Croi Velley, we have gathered here today
to commemorate events which transpired upon this island three hundred
years ago; events which, though futilo for the purpose for which
they were designed and even disastrous to those engaged in them,
had in the aftertime such a dominating influence in settling grave
issues of boundary between England and the United States, as to
render them of signal historic importance.
The story of the ill-starred venture of the brave Sieur do
Monts and his colony, and their stay upon this island, will be
told to us to-day by gentlemen well versed in all its details,
and it will be one of absorbing interest.
of the Maine Historical Society, an organization now vener-
able in years and which took the initiative in organizing this
commemoration, permit me to say that it has so well performed
the work of historic research, to which in its beginning it
dedicated itself, as to entitle it to the gratitude of our
State and all lovers of veritable history. By painstaking,
personal effort it has culled the facts from tradition and
gathered to its storehouse a mass of historic material which
will be of priceless value to the future historian of Maine.
Mr. Teed, Mayor of St. Stephens.
1
Three hundred years ago de Monts and his brave followers
landed on the little island we now are on and planted the seeds
of European civilization, from which sprang all the progress and
advance of that splendid and wonderful civilization that has
spread over this North American continent, which at that time was
one vast and unbroken wilderness. To the French belongs the
honor of planting that civilization on this continent
Rev. Henry 8. Burrage, of Portland, responding for the Maine Historical
Society:
In behalf of the Maine Historical Society it is my privilege
to respond to these most cordial greetings. We who are here as
the representatives of the Society, and indeed its whole member-
ship, take a very deep interest in the proceedings of this day
which carry us back to the beginnings of colonisation within the
limits of the State of Maine.
We are in the opening years of a new century. So were de
Monts and his associates when three hundred years ago they landed
on this little island of St. Croix, and entered upon the begin-
nings of a settlement in this almost unknown world.
Is it now a new era with us! Do we feel its breath and are
we filled with high and noble impulses as we enter upon the task
which the twentieth century has for us! So was it a new era with
de Monts and his followers. They had already been stirred by its
inspirations, and they had seized the opportunity which the open-
ing of the sixteenth century offered to them here.
In religion they were Protestants and Roman Catholics. Not
long had they thus stood side by side. What had happened in France
that brought them together upon this little island inspired with a
common hope of making a new France here in this western world?
The history of the kingdom in the preceding century is written
large, and the story is plain. There had been a long, fierce, at
times uncertain struggle for religious liberty, and the victory -
which in its largest sense was for Protéstant and Roman Catholic
aliko - had at length been won. While the conflict was in pro-
gress it had involved noblemen, scholars, statesmen, and the
king on his throne, as well as peasants, artisans, tradesmen 0
in a word the whole nation. This struggle for religious liberty
most heroically continued for many years and with varying for-
tunes, had at length been brought to a happy issue, and in 1598,
only six years before de Monts landed here, Henry IV, King of
France, recognizing the "frightful troubles, confusion and dis-
orders" to which on his accession to the throne he found his
kingdom a prey, promulgated the famous Ediot of Nantes, which
gave liberty of conscience to all the inhabitants of the land,
granting to his subjects the right to dwell anywhere in the royal
dominions, and to meet for religious purposes without being sub-
jected to inquiry, vexed, molested or constrained to do anything
contrary to the dictates of conscience. What this meant to many
of the king's subjects, long harrassed, tormented, it is difficult
for us now even to imagine
Thus is was that in this French colony, led hither by de Monta
three hundred years ago, Protestants and Roman Catholics were found
sido by side - de Monts himself a Protestant - both minister and
priest being included in the personnel of the expedition.
Halcyon days were these indeed for those who had known only
religious strife and contention; and for twelve years, or until
-5-
the close of the reign of Henry IV, the Edict of Nantes was in
full operation
In 1599, the very year in which the Edict of Nantes was con-
firmed by Parliament, or it may be, as is now thought by some
recent writers, in 1604, the year in which the de Monts and his
little company of Protestants and Catholics landed here, the
great apostle of soul liberty, Roger Willians, was born. Was
religious liberty to suffer for a while disastrous overthrow
in France? It was to have a new birth on this side of the sea,
and to come ere long to a development of which men had only
dreamed in earlier days.
Now to us, religious liberty is BO common a thing that we
fail oftentimes, Protestants and Roman Catholics alike, to esti-
mate aright our indebtedness for a boon of such priceless value.
But de Monts, three hundred years ago, could have said, "With a
great price obtained I this freedom."
Maj.-Gen. Joshua L. Chamberlain:
3
There are things done in the world which by a certain estima-
tion are accounted failure, but which belong to an eternal pro-
cess turning to its appointed ends the discontinuities of baffled
endeavor. The great action of the times we commemorate was not
the result of shrewd calculations of economic advantage; it was
largely the impulse of bold imagination and adventurous spirit
stirred by the foreshadowing of untested possibilities, and
knowing no limit but each one's daring or dream. While the
motive of pecuniary gain was not absent from even noble minds,
yet this was secondary and subordinate. A deeper thought was
moving them, - to turn to human good such opening store of rich
material and marvellous opportunity; to signalize the valor of
their race, the glory of their country and their religion; to
take a foremost step in the march of civilization, - the mastery
of man over nature. It was akin to the chivalby which enjoys per-
sonal hasard for a sake beyond self, What generous ambitions,
what lofty hopes hovered in these early skies, and since have
"faded into the light of common day!"
We como here to recognize the worth of a remarkable man,
Pierre do Guast, Sieur de Monts, - to commemorate in a material
structure more lasting that any of his own the value of his work
and the greatness of his ideas.
Sir Walter Raleigh's vigorous efforts in Virginia in 1584
came to nought. And at the close of the 16th century there was
not a European settlement north of Florida on the Atlantic shore.
But the human ferment was going on, and the time appointed draw-
ing near. The fierce persecution of the Huguenots was tearing
asunder social bonds in France. Earnest minds were moved to
-7-
seek peaceful homes in the wilderness of the New World, where they
might find at least freedom of thought and action, and possibly
scope for their best energies
At the accession of King Henry IV
a notable company had been formed, the chief patron of which was
Aylinar de Chastes, a gentleman of high standing, governor of Dieppe,
to carry forward colonization on these shores "in the name of God
and the King."
At this juncture comes upon the scene one of the most remark-
able characters of our New World history, - Samuel, Sieur de Champ-
lain. Born on the shore of Btacay in a little seaport where de-
parting and returning ships bringing stories of wide and wild ad-
venture quickened into form that vague consciousness of power which
stire in all brave spirits; by nature bold, chivalrous, romantic;
by early experience soldier, sailor, observer and relater; tireless
in labor, patient of suffering, large of vision, and generous of
purpose, genial of spirit and firm of soul, he may well be regarded
as providentially prepared to be called to the solution of great
problems of enterprise. He and de Chastoo seem to have come to-
gether by mutual attraction. To him the king gave special charge
to observe carefully and report all he should see.
This expedition explored the St. Lawrence, tarrying some time
at Tadoussac, at the mouth of the myoterious Saguenay, and finally
ascending to the site of Montreal. of this exploration there were
wonderful things to tell to France; and told by Champlain roused
an interest such as nothing had done before. He came back with high
-8-
hopes, but found that his generous patron had passed away, and
with him the supporting hand, if not the animating spirit, of the
enterprise.
But he found also that the king had given a new charter to
a gentleman of equally high character, an officer of the king's
household, Pierre de Monts, Seigneur of the Commune of Guast in
Santonge, a region of which La Rochelle was the natural center,
and strongly Huguenot in its proclivities, as was the family of
Behlond
de Monts. This charter was given November 8, 1603. It conveyed to
de Monts in elaborate terms trading and seignorial rights to the
New World territory between the fortieth and forty-sixth parallels
of latitude, - those of Philadelphia and Montreal to-day, - this
territory being designated La Cadie, or Acadia. With this came
the appointment of lieutenant general, and by inference vice admiral,
of this vast and vaguely known domain of Acadia.
With reciprocal personal respect and the aympathy of like pur-
pose, these two men joined hands and hearts in an enterprise now
more definitely thought out and practically organized than any
before
Thus was ordained and organized that famous adventure of
Acadia, fraught with human hopes as high and fancies as wide as
its sequel was to be bright with characters of courage and devo-
tion and stormy with vicissitude and tragedy.
-39-
On the 7th on March, 1604, do Monts gathered his company
for the brave adventure of establishing the little beginnings
of a'large new life in a vast new world. It was a highly and
deeply mixed company. With him were gentlemen of all schools
of religion and politics.
For de Monts, although a Huguenot, was wisely liberal.
So passed to dust and ruin this little beginning on the
Island of the Cross. So passed into broken lights the glory
of de Monts', dawning dream. Contemplating this ruin and this
baffled purpose, must we speak of failure? If so, for de Monts
personally the case is not singular. All the first leaders had
sad experiences. Gilbert, Raleigh, Gorges, de Monts, Poutrincourt,
Champlain even, and we might also say Columbus himself, - jealousy,
enmity, imprisonment, disgrace barred their sunset sky. But we
judge the man more by the ideas he quickened into action than by
the immediate material results he lived to see.
One singular dignity this island "settlement" of de Monts
has come to hold. After long lost identity and earnest searching,
these ruins were discovered and admitted to be the proper mark
and eastern origin of the boundary line between England and the
United States of America. Such value had this broken enterprise
in the minds of men and council of nations
On Saturday, June 25, 1904, occurred the celebration
of the three hundredth anniversary of the landing of de Monts
and his fellow colonists at St. Croix Island.
Anohored north of the island were the U. S., S. Detroit,
Captain Dillingham, the French cruiser Troude, Captain Aubry,
the British cruiser Columbine, Captain Hill.
103 IRVING STREET
CAMBRIDGE
Dr. July 31, 1904
Benj Tab Wheeler,
President : :
Dear Dr. Wheeler :- -
The
bearer of this letter,
Mr. george Dars, of
Boston, is a very dear
friend S mine, and
also, as Chairmany
the Overseers' Committee
of Vistors to the Philosphia
Department, and as
a benefactor of our
undertakings, a man
very near to all the
interests of our department
in Harvard.
Mr. Dorr is
making u brief trip
to California. He is W:
pecially intending to
visit the Suerra. But he
will probably pass through
Berkeley, and may be
desireres of seeing the 2,
Mrs. Edith Wharton to George B. Dorr
X
September 3d, 1904.
The Mount, Lenox, Mass.
Dear Mr. Dorr,
I found the book on the terrace just after you left,
and it was sent to Boston in accordance with your direc-
tions.
I have been meaning to write and tell you this and
also to say again how much I appreciated the trouble you
took to help me in my gardening, or rather landscape
gardening, problems. Your visit was SO helpful, and you
left behind you SO many fruitful ideas that I often feel
you are not really gone, and must be somewhere about,
ready to answer the new questions which the solving of
some of the old problems has already raised. Your path
is finished, and the task of planting its borders now
confronts me; and we are just about to attack the laying
out of the path from the flower-garden to the little valley
which is to be my future wild garden.
I am in hopes you may really be able to spare us
a day or two on your return, for though the autumn work
Beinecke
YCAL 42
Box 24 , Folder 753
September 3rd, 1904)
2.
will be nearly over by that time, there will be many
future plans to discuss. My only fear is that my pigmy
planting will quite vanish from your mind among the giant
boles of the redwoods!
The Vanderbilts want us to spend October with them
at Biltmore, but the season is one of far too much in- -
terest here and I told them they must let us come in the
spring instead.
We have been off in the motor digging ferns for our
rocky slopes, and now I have discovered a stony pasture
near Great Barrington full of the "sweet fern" which is
SO rarely found in this region, and am going to fetch a
load of it tomorrow. It is all great fun, but I wish
you were here to suggest and approve.
Sincerely yours,
Edith Wharton.
Edith Wharton and the American garden. Lanox: The Mount Press,
2009.
WILD GARDENS AND
PATHWAYS AT THE MOUNT:
GEORGE B. DORR AND THE
MOUNT DESERT ISLAND INFLUENCE
RONALD H. Epp
T
he Beinecke Library at Yale University contains a handful of Edith Wharton letters to pioneer
conservationist and horticulturist George Bucknam Dorr (1853-1944). This correspondence is
commonly passed over by scholars.2 The ten Wharton letters written between 1902 and 1907 are
unremarkable when isolated from the richly diverse social context of the Gilded Age. They are
remarkable if attention is given to previously unrecognized interactions between the Dorr and Jones
families that began twenty years earlier in Bar Harbor, Maine, where Wharton's brother and sister-in-
law Frederic and Mary Jones summered. Furthermore, the connection of the Dorr family with Lenox,
Massachusetts-site of Wharton's own summer house-tracks back another fifty years to the era of
Catharine Sedgwick and Fanny Kemble. 3
The Wharton correspondence to Dorr ranges in length from a few sentences to several
hundred words. All but two letters were written during an eighteen-month period between September
1904 and February 1906. Some specialists might describe them as technical, narrowly focused
on Wharton's solicitations of Dorr's horticultural expertise. Yet this is not inconsequential, for
The Mount's garden historian, Betsy Anderson, indicated on a recent site inspection that there is
little evidence of Wharton's use of expert landscaping advice outside her family. Unfortunately, no
correspondence from Dorr to Wharton has survived.
There has been no inquiry into the connection between the location and naming of gardens
and paths at The Mount and Dorr's professional and cultural life on Mount Desert Island. What
character traits did he bring to the table in relating to Wharton that encouraged her to invite him
repeatedly to her home? What motivated her to involve this little-known Boston Brahmin in her wild
gardening? Wharton's letters to Dorr refer frequently to a path at The Mount named for him. Why
would she choose to honor him in this way? It is intriguing that Dorr left us no documentation of his
relationship with her, especially since his advice to Wharton is the only recorded case of his engaging in
a horticultural consultancy removed from Mount Desert Island. Many of these questions will never be
resolved since, following his death in 1944, the National Park Service disposed of most of the contents
of the Bar Harbor estate that he had gifted to the government.
However, in 2006 new primary evidence for the Dorr-Jones family relationship came to light.
Both families developed their Bar Harbor properties in the 1880s, and their social interactions are
Pp -88
AI /
Out West
1904
1.
I had a very interesting trip out west, from first
to last, for I had never been in any part of California before,
and even the things that diappointed me interested me as well.
I went straight out to San Francisco, stayed there for three or
blooks
four days, seeing some of the Berkeley College men to whom
IA2/ refers
I had letters, and then d own to Monterey, to see its cypresses.
to September
From there Iw ent on down the coast to Santa Barbara and Los
Angeles. At Los Angeles I ran down for a day and night to
See/A2/for
Santa Batalina Island and then went straight up through the
detail
San Joaquin Valley to Visalia in the Keweah River country
whence I went up by stage to Giant Forest in the National
Sequoia Park where I outfitted for my mountain trip.
LAquara
I took a packer, a Maine man originally, and of my own
name, and some mules and we went out together for a three
weeks' trip across the high Sierras to Owen's Valley on their
eastern side, going out through the Kern River country and
returning by Kearsage Pass and King's River, then back to
Giant Forest where I started from.
Some of the men I met at Berkeley College, who had been
out on geological and botanical expeditions through that
region, laid this route out for me as the most interesting
I could follow and it certainly opened up magnificent scenery a nd
showed me the Sierra forests in a most interesting way. But
Note: First page of several dozen pages recounting Dorr's
1904 trip to California and the Canadian Rockies.
See TRAVEL files.
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1903-04
Page | Type | Title | Date | Source | Other notes |
1 | Notes | Epp's notes on file | Undated | Ronald Epp | 1903: George Street publishes 'History of MDI'. Joseph Schiff begins to vacation in BH. Emerson centenary. H. Munsterberg on Emerson Hall, Harvard. Eliot completes (12/25) essay 'Right Development of Mount Desert'. Henry Eno builds Sonogee. Eliot affirms importance of higher standards, opposed liberal tendencies. 1904: Trip West (10/6/39). [?] of Ms. Aug/Sept '04. Edith Wharton (9/3) to GBD thanks for landscape gardening help. Path finished. Tercentenary (300th) of De Monts Settlement, St. Croix. Royce letter (7/31/04) introducing GBD to Pres. of U. of [?], B.I. Wheeler. (See Royce file.) 'Right Development of Mount Desert' published. Champlain Memorial for 300th anniversary. |
2 | Excerpt | Officers for 1903-1904 | 1904 | Bar Harbor V.I.A. annual report | |
3 | List | Subscription records for Emerson Hall, Harvard University 1901-1905 | 1901-1905 | HUA / Harvard University | Annotated by Ronald Epp: "Emerson Hall letters arranged chronologically, not alphabetically. Letters to GBD." |
4 | Catalog record | Results for Emerson Hall (Cambridge, Mass.) | 1/2/2003 | Hollis Catalog, Harvard University | Printout of the Harvard University web catalog results for "Emerson Hall (Cambridge, Mass.), listing five items in the catalog. |
5 | Letter | Letter from W. R. Thayer to G. B. Dorr | 2/14/1902 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscrition Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905. | Discussing benefit at Emerson Hall. |
6 | Legal document | Private Acts of 1903, Chapter 369 | 3/28/1903 | HCTPR. Chapman Archive. | Document describing a public lands acquisition and management act granting the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservation the ability to acquire, own, and "improve" lands in Hancock County selected on the basis of "scenic beauty," "historic interest," and other reasons for public use. GBD is listed as first vice president. |
7 | Letter | Letter from Charles Eliot to [?] | 8/25/1903 | Low resolution image. | |
8 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Deasy from [Charles Eliot] | 11/26/1902 | Subject: draft of a petition to the Maine state legislature regarding the Trustees of Public Reservation being returned with feedback. | |
9-10 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr from [?] | 4/2/1903 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscrition Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905. | |
11 | Letter | 1903 letter from GBD to Edward Hale | 4/8/1903 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscrition Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905. | 1903 letter to GBD from Edward Hale, providing list of "public-spirited" people, possibly as potential donors for public lands projects in Hancock County. |
12-17 | Letters | Pages from Correspondence of William James, Vol. 10 (2002) | 1903 | Correspondence of William James, Vol. 10 (2002), University of Virginia Press. | Scans of pages in Correspondence of William James, Vol. 10 (2002), University of Virginia Press. Letters written by William James to Alice Howe Gibbens James, Alexander Robertson James, and Margaret Mary James, and one letter from Henry James to William James, with lines underlined by Ronald Epp highlighting mentions of George Vanderbilt, mentioning the status of Emerson Hall at Harvard, and the local environment. |
18 | Letter | 1903 letter to GBD | 5/10/1903 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscrition Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905. | Subject: work being done on Emerson Hall. |
19 | Document | Fundraising for Emerson Hall | Undated | HUA. Records of the Pres. of Harvard U., C.W.E. B.36 | Statement describing fundraising priorities for Emerson Hall at Harvard University. Annotation of "Geo. B. Dorr" in the top right corner. |
20-22 | Letter | 1903 letter to Hugo Munsterberg | 4/14/1903 | HUA. Records of the Pres. of Harvard U., C.W.E. B.36 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
23 | List | A list of donations to Emerson Hall | 4/14/1903 | A list, dated 1903, of donors and amounts to Emerson Hall at Harvard University. A $50,000 donation from "Anonymous" and a $1,000 donation from GBD are underlined by Ronald Epp. Handwritten addition at bottom of page. | |
24 | Letter | Letter to GBD from Jerome Greene | 4/30/1903 | A letter, dated 1903, to GBD, stating that a list of Emerson Hall donors was published and that "President Eliot" was supportive of said action. | |
25 | Letter | Letter from G.B. Dorr to Mr. Greene | 4/14/1903 | ||
26 | Letter | A 1903 letter | 4/16/1903 | ||
27 | Letter | Letter to Jerome D. Greene by George B. Dorr | 3/26/1903 | A 1903 letter from GBD to Jerome B. Greene requesting clarification for the mailing address for a "Mr. Holden" believed to be in Cleveland, OH or a western state. Epp's note: "Tracking down subscribers to Emerson Hall." | |
28 | Letter | A 1903 letter to GBD from Jerome D. Greene | 3/27/1903 | A 1903 letter from Jerome D. Greene, to GBD, confirming that the mailing address is said Mr. Holden is still in Ohio. | |
29-30 | Letter | A 1903 letter from GBD to President Eliot | 5/1/1903 | HUA. Records of the Pres. of Harvard U., C.W.E. B.36 | A 1903 letter from GBD to President Eliot at Harvard, discussing fundraising efforts for Emerson Hall and GBD's recent move to BH. Annotated by Ronald Epp. |
31 | Notes | A 1903 note by GBD | 5/2/1903 | A 1903 handwritten note by GBD: "1000 more from Mr. S.G. Ward Mr. Dorr's uncle, and father of Mr. Ward of the [?] Committee" | |
32 | Notes | Juxtaposition: 1903 | Undated | Ronald Epp | A typed document by Ronald Epp regarding the relationships that may be revealed by the Dorr 1903 letters collection, and some current events in that time for context, including Theodore Roosevelt's Conservation efforts in the west and the Emerson centennial in Concord. |
33 | Web page | Theodore Roosevelt | 2/5/2021 | Sierra Club website | A capture of a web page on the Sierra Club website, with information about Theodore Roosevelt from a John Muir exhibit. |
34 | Letter | Letter from Charles Eliot to GBD, discussing Emerson Hall fundraising | 5/10/1903 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscrition Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905. | |
35 | Letter | Emerson Hall at Harvard University | 5/1903 | HUA. Records of the Pres. of Harvard U., C.W.E. B.36 | A fundraising letter stating the goals for the construction of a building at Harvard University's philosophy department named after Ralph Waldo Emerson, listing fundraising goals and soliciting donations. GBD and Thomas W. Ward are listed as on the committee. |
36-37 | Draft | Emerson Hall at Harvard University (2) | 1903 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscrition Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905. | Draft of the above letter |
38-49 | Letter | 1903 letter to Charles Eliot from GBD | 1903 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscrition Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905. | A 1903 letter to Charles Eliot from GBD. Epp highlights mention of a weekly committee meeting for Emerson Hall fundraising. |
50-52 | Letter | 1903 letter to Charles Eliot from GBD | 1903 | Annotated by Ronald Epp | |
53 | Notes | Ronald Epp notes | 9/18/2018 | 2018 typed document from Ronald Epp, sharing Epp's thoughts about the Emerson Hall centennial fundraising project that GBD participated in. | |
54-58 | Newspaper | Boston Evening Transcript - Emerson Centennial | 5/23/1903 | Boston Evening Transcript | A scan of an article from the Boston Evening Transcript newspaper about the Emerson Hall centennial project and fundraising efforts at Harvard University; article mentions Charles Eliot's involvement. |
59-63 | Program | The Centenary of the Birth of Ralph Waldo Emerson | 1903 | ||
64 | Essay | Emerson the Philosopher by Hugo Munsterberg | Undated | Boston Evening Transcript | |
65-66 | Newspaper | Emerson Celebration: Concord Pays Homage on Anniversary | 5/25/1903 | Boston Evening Transcript | |
67-68 | Expense list | Expenses of Trip to Virginia, May 11-27 | 1903 | Sawtelle Archives. A.N.P. B.1.f.B3 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
69 | Map | Map of western Virginia | Undated | Annotated by Ronald Epp | |
70 | Book excerpt | America's First Road Trip | 2002 | Dayton [?]. Horatio's Drive: America's First Road Trip. NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 2002. | |
71 | Book excerpt | Pages 322-323 of Jacob H. Schiff: His Life and Letters by Cyrus Adler | 1929 | Jacob H. Schiff: His Life and Letters by Cyrus Adler | |
72-73 | Estate description, architectural | Eegonos | 1907 | MHPC | |
74-75 | Newspaper article | Northeast Harbor Doings, Northeast Harbor Gossip | 7/26/1903 | New York Times | |
77-78 | Catalog record | Emerson Hall, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA | 2004 | Harvard | |
79-80 | Book page | Officers for 1904-1905 | 1904 | 15th Annual Report of the Bar Harbor V.I.A. | |
81 | Letter | 1904 letter from GBD to Charles Eliot | 1904 | HUA. Records of the Pres. of Harvard U., C.W.E. B.83 | |
82-83 | Letter | 1904 letter from Charles Eliot to GBD | 1904 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscrition Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905. | |
84 | Newspaper clipping | Harvard's Finances | 1904 | New York Times | |
85 | Newspaper clipping | Honor Eliot's 70th Birthday: Loving Cup Presented by Harvard Faculty--Event Observed by Students | 1904 | New York Times | |
86 | Timeline | A Harvard Travellers Club Meeting Timeline | Undated | ||
87 | Invitation | Harvard Travellers' Club | Undated | ||
88-89 | George Dorr and Harvard Travellers Club | 2018 | Ronald Epp | ||
90 | Event ticket | Annotated Event Ticket for 40th Harvard Travellers Club Meeting | 1904 | ||
91 | Wikipedia page | Louisiana Purchase Exposition | 2019 | Wikipedia | |
92-98 | Book scan | Memorial of Samuel de Champlain | 1906 | Northeast Harbor Library Archive | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
99-108 | Publication | Tercentenary of de Monts' Settlement at St. Croix Island, publication of the Maine Historical Society | 1905 | Dorr Papers B2.F4. | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
109-110 | Letter | 1905 letter to Dr. Wheeler from Josiah Royce | 1905 | HUA. Papers of Josiah Royce. HUG 1755. 12.F1.c2 | |
111-112 | Letter | 1904 letter from Edith Wharton to GBD | 1904 | Beinecke YCAL 42 Box 24 Box 42, Folder 753 [Yale?] | |
113 | Book excerpt | Wild Gardens and Pathways at the Mount: George B. Dorr and the Mount Desert Island Influence by Ronald Epp | 2009 | Published in 'Edith Wharton and the American Garden'. Lenox: the Mount Press, 2009 | |
114 | Journal entry | Out West | 1904 | ANPA.2.F9 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |