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

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1905-06
1905
Dorrfweling
1906
Emerson Hall fund -reasing
-Antiquities Act
Bullday of th art Minis
-Building of th Arts construction
res. Eliofs address at Dedic. Albright
(9/30/41)
Art gallery
- GBD to I story (UPS carton re
Emers on Mamoral Hall-2 sources
responses to her critique of story
(HGM, Dec. '057 March '06)
+ antiquities Act
-CBP an psychical receared-
Elect to CBD (5/15) i Tawen
Old Form senesc W James
Cluh met +WiH gleason photograph
- 6BD dines c William Everett
-CBO hosts George and
Dorothy Howard,
the
of
after Eorl of Carlisle & are
daughter's, October- Naverday
1906
3/28/2021
IEW / By Tina Jordan
OUR FIRST-EVER
COVER PHOTO
1905.
"OUR PORTRAIT OF Edith Wharton, whose seri-
al novel in Scribner's, 'The House of Mirth," is so
eagerly discussed this summer
is the first
portrait printed in The New York Times Book
Review in eight years or more," the editors
wrote in the Aug 12. 1905 issue. It was also the
first time an author photo appeared like this on
the cover: "The departure from custom is
surely justified by the widespread interest in
the subject." The photograph - as exquisitely
composed as a scene in "The House of Mirth" -
features Wharton in a lace tea dress at her desk.
When this issue appeared, "The House of
Mirth" was captivating - and dividing - New
York with its less-than-flattering depiction of
high society. This was at a time when many nov-
els were first published in serial form. Initially,
the Book Review wasn't a fan, writing in April
1905 that "it develops in a rather grim fashion,"
but allowing that "we must be grateful for these
glimpses of the inner social circle, given by one
who has the magic password.' By June 1905, the
Book Review was raving about the novel, and by
August, literary New York could talk of little else.
"The recently printed assertion that 'The House
of Mirth,' like most 'society' novels, promised to
reach no logical or dramatic conclusion, seems to
be sufficiently disproven in the latest install-
ment," the Book Review editors noted. "Indeed
the novel has a well-wrought plot which cannot
fail to develop a striking denouement."
The New York Times.
SATURDAY REVIEW OF BOOKS--P 12.
W York
R.Epp
1906 Activities: Notes.
2/5/ 680 to CWE on Sols Cliff landorsed by
February 15: John Jay Chapman houseguest at 18 Commonwealth Avenue
May 18: William James pens letter to John Jay Chapman informing him that James spent
May 17th at George Dorr's telling him of Chapman's visit.
June 5: Oldfarm Series sittings with the R.H.-control.
June 25: Dorr letter to Charles W. Eliot detailing the Sol's Cliff Harvard property
adjacent to his own and making a recommendation for a third-party to mediate the
August 6: Third-party report from David Ogden is provided to President Eliphot and Mr.
7/29/Hila issue. time GBD to CWELLERS to "before I 90 out West :
Dorr. The next day Dorr sends his six page response to Dr. Eliot.
Sept. 6: Informs President Eliot that responsibilities-financial and architectural-for the
new Building of the Arts has been on his shoulders, as has nursery business and
the development of his lands on MDI. Abandons trip West.
October 6: State of Maine Certificate of Organization for the Bar Harbor Village Library
October 22: William Everett agrees to dine with Mr. Dorr this evening
Visit from York, Englard
Building of the Arts under construction (1906).
Letter from GBD to JORIr. (193Y).
What of further in teractors I Jre-Janes, coppre
psychical research (8/14/18).
(E2)
Edward W. Forbes. Saturday Club a when Completed
(920-1956. 1958
X Social Register , l Boston 1905.
Vol. XIX, # 5 (Nov. (904).
N.Y : Sound Register Aoorc ) 1904
1.44
M.t us. Alfed P. Dors 333
Mr. Bonjou H. worr
The Charlengete
Sm.Tr. 4'18 and Fey
Lodge Dorr.
The Tuder.
Misses Dorr
"
"
M + u Ellentn Ledd Dons Jr
11
1.
Mr. Dear B. Dorr - Im Tv. Ub . Uvn H'74
Phn 523BB
18 Community Ave.
Mr. Henry Gustovus Dorr
U.U.R. Joseph Dorri
No Wards,
Sm= Somerset
TV = Taveen
Ub= Union Boat 8 Club. Sixty Years of the Urean
Howard Maynadier
Uv- University
Boat club. 1913.
a copies. Peahoof Essek this
ILL 7/8/06
Use ILL for early years . No entry for Dorr as past
member, but has
retained membership since 8/12/89
as current member (1913)
GRAY HEREPRIUM
ARCH VES
For study only.
Written authorization must be
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
obtait ed for cil other uses.
April 24th, 1905.
Dear Mr Robinson,
Please excuse an invitation by typewriter, but I
have got to go down to Bar Harbor tonight to look after the
spring planting at my Nurseries.
I am going to have scme colored lantern slides of the
Canadian Rocky wild-flowers, shown at the Tavern Club on Monday
evening, May first, after its annual meeting. And I am
allowed to ask in a few guests of my own to see them. If you
will be one of these and will come at quarter past nine to
the Club house in Boylston Place, it will give me great pleasure
to
welcome you there. The coloring of the flowers has been
unusually well done, from notes taken when the flowers them-
selves were photographed, and the slides, which are not my own,
of course, give one a really good idea, I think, of the flowers
and plants themselves as one sees them growing in the mountains.
Hoping you may come, I am
Dea the Pobristor,
Sincerely yours,
The an the Clearn's
Mechales
you Slides they have Sun diew interest One B. West
when you you think Height also like Wtu item will for
If tort And I think if their they should would he any The in the Department tor
Benjamin L. Robinson, Esq.
him also they him will yru GBW- 2
please effend My W
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
CAMBRIDGE
May 15, 1905.
Dear Mr. Dorr:-
I meant to come to the meeting of
the Tavern Club on the evening of May 1st,
but was prevented by callers at the last
moment. I have seen some of Mr. Gleason's
photographic work and know its merit. I
was sorry to miss the pleasure you offered
me.
Your kind note of April 25th ought
to have been answered at the time, but I
was quite overwhelmed with work that week.
Very truly yours,
Charles A. Elion
George B. Dorr, Esq.
Plastering has begunson are Emerson Hall.
the do not wish to hurry The work .
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
Boston, June 9th, 1905.
Gray Herbarian,
Harvard University, Cambridge.
Dear Sir,
will you kindly write me on the enclosed postal
the name of this flower which I came upon growing freely
upon the banks of the Charles river out at Wellesley yester-
day ?
It is one familiar to me but I cannot recall its
name.
Yours truly,
George B. Dorr.
Per M.N.H.
Dorr at the Mount
From "Cornelia Gilder"
To
Date 02/27/2009 09:22:27 PM
Reply To
Hello Ron, I was at the Bienecke today looking at Edith Wharton's letters to Sally Norton and came across this
reference which dates at least one visit to the Mount. You probably know this but just in case.. How is the book
process? hope all is well with you both. NINI
June 14th !905 "I was glad to hear from Mr. Dorr, who is staying with us, that he thought you
looking much better when he was a Shady Hill the other day." (I can give you the reference if you
need it)
--
Hawthorne's Lenox: The Tanglewood Circle
By Cornelia Brooke Gilder & Julia Conklin Peters
http://www.amazon.com/Hawthornes-Lenox-Cornelia-Brooke-Gilder/dp/159629406X,
Houses of the Berkshires, 1870-1930
By Richard S. Jackson Jr. & Cornelia Brooke Gilder
http://www.acanthuspress.com/pc-20-8-houses-of-the-berkshires-1870-1930.aspx
Beinecke YCAL 42 Series II.folden 899.
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/hwebmail/mail/message.php?index=295
5/24/2010
[8/14/05] 05
Old Farm,
Bar Garbor, Maine.
Dear President Elist,
I am gradually optien
up my land here, & shaighten,
out my foundain from his them,
by / Change list My heighten rhy
land form
Muchael So that this lines may
be determined by etc. hature of th
Grams, du Come of Had etc. What
by Chanes and this year Than been
Studyey our that portion of they
land whiel forder, among other, lite
2.
And Min Ethi. left to HawardCotty
abmall pertic of this runn up a
Sluf rock, hillside to they land alove
is Cut off from the that by the nighty
Wa, road which gives accus Is then
Markoi's rath land beyond- I
would like to talk the matter Our
neft fall unit Some Our representing the
Certivation Yes if I Cannot arrange
uit it for He purchase High of this hies,
a hidugh it's with the
hillSide th ban upa roadway,
I
so Ma, become my
Old Farm,
Bar Darbor, Maine.
My foundary I do urt think the
Carperation would sacrific any the
of Value or to itisite
h din, this, hit it has occumed
to lue that polite you hight be
Coni our Sthu da, r would anim
af take a look at it but Mr.
it would not take long
I'm giving West in a week or to,
to Informat Out h. Organ
Chance, White I live. thould
hit Should you your Come blen, / by good
3.
give the great please. if you &
the Elift yany the when you tright
have but you Would Clus V lewer
list the K let the ask two or then
people also is -
Relice Friend
Genz
August 11gt
88
The was adopted
Resolved That the matter of the
extirmination of brown tail moths be
referred to the committee on Trees and
Planting and that the matter of an
appropriation for that purpose be left 16
the annual meeting of the association
yrs. B. oorr reported informally for the
committee on Trees and Planting and
Mrs. Edward B. mears for the Village
committee.
voted that a committee consisting 7
the president ofth association and the
chairmen of the Viege Green committee
and The Village Committee be affointed
to consider the question of circulating
leafelets in regard to keeping the streets,
Village Green and other public place
free Rotent waste paper, itc.
many Park Committe and miss ninot
Dr. Amory reported for Glen
for the committee on the Preservation
of wild Flowers.
The resignation of Gro. B. Dorr as
Chairman of the village Green
committee was received and accepted
1405
with regret miss Beatrix Jones
was affointed chairman of that committee.
SH
BAR HARBOR ASSOCIATION OF ARTS
Bar Harbor, Maine
nar
August 24, 1937.
Mr and Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, 3rd,
Wabenäki,
Seal Harbor, Maine.
Dear Mr. and Mrs. Rockefeller:
The Building of Arts was planned during the summer of
1905 to make a home for music at Bar Harbor where dis-
tinguished artists who then had their summer residence in
its vicinity, at Seal Harbor and Hulls Cove, at Bluehill
and elsewhere, should find a welcome opportunity for their
art, and where summer residents of the region might gather
for its enjoyment. During the following year the Building
of Arts took shape and in the summer of 1907 was opened by
a series of concerts that at once gave it notable place as
a summer center for the best in music, and a reputation
among artists that made the opportunity it offered for
performance widely sought.
That was thirty years ago this summer. The committee
that planned the concerts then and the audiences that
listened to them have now, with but few exceptions, passed
on, but the opportunity created still remains and holds
fair promise for the future, with wider possibilities for
usefulness along both the old lines and the new ones,
musical and dramatic, that the changing times have brought.
The building, built to endure at large expense, remains
sound and structurally unchanged in all essential features
and needs for its preservation and future usefulness but
relatively slight repair, though important to be made. The
site is splendid with its rising background of old pines and
the green golf link lawns about it; the building placed
upon it forms a unique, conspicuous feature in the land-
scape seen from the mountain road and widely from the trails
over the encircling mountains that look down on the Bar
Harbor plain. Unless steps such as are herein suggested are
taken, it may prove necessary that this beautiful landmark
be sold for taxes or demolished.
To preserve it to future usefulness, and the beauty
of the landscape in which it forms so prominent a feature,
is the aim of the undersigned committee who seek your co-
operation in it by becoming a member of the Building of Arts
Associates organized for the purpose, with an annual pay-
ment of ten dollars to create a fund to meet the annual town
taxes, a moderate insurance and incidental repairs and ex-
penses necessary to the building's upkeep. From those who
2.
BAR HARBOR ASSOCIATION OF ARTS
take special interest in the building's preservation and
the continuation into the future of the Association's aims
and purposes, and who feel free to give more largely, any
sum they may be moved to contribute will be welcome to the
committee in their work.
A card is enclosed for signature and statement of
the amount contributed for the year September 1, 1937 to
September 1, 1938, at the expiration of which term notice
will be sent to those contributing, inviting them to
renew their contribution.
George B. Dorr,
President.
John Hampton Barnes, Chairman
Dave Hennen Morris
Arthur Train
Executive Committee.
avaid instern 2
16. 1905
Tear My in
have Nine honor to invo ic
Tan is line opening of lacerson Fall
for in wilding of which we have in
greatly to thank Tour generous energy
-
there will he a luncheon given by the
University it the farmaed him
-
by treasurer 27. C L
Include and is meeting in the are
HUA Subscription Records
Subsouption for Emergen 1 tall 190105
lecture room is chrison Hall
at 230 1 insident this and for
Sherror will year and the
APD will culer
shirt joint levale.
try trady your
2
Mov. 2011
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
November 29th, 1905.
David B. Ogden, Esq.,
New York City.
Dear David,
This is an account of what I did at Bar Harbor with regard
to
the new building. Lowell went down with me about ten days after
I saw you in New York and we located the building, putting the south-
ern side of it about one hundred feet back from the road line (which
is some eight or ten feet back from the present road-ditch). This
still leaves quite a space upon the northern side of the building
between it and the round turn of the right of way, some sixty feet
as I recall it though perhaps not quite so much. The southern
facing is practically parallel to the line of the road opposite, and
somewhat to the west of the gap between the mountains. East and
west, the site we chose is as much to the east as the ledge that
rises up to the eastward would permit, 80 that the continuation of
the ledge below ground crops out slightly into the cellar. This
seemed best, first because it would fall in with building, sometime
our
hereafter Greek scena at the foot of the ledge with the ledge itself
for amphitheatre; and second, that we might get as much space as
possible at the building's western end, between it and the golf links -
and on account of some large trees. The site determined itself
as
we worked it out very closely, and I do not think could well be
other than the one we chose.
Lowell brought down with him a man named Buttimer who was
2.
building superintendent upon Edgar Scott's house and whom I saw
something of at that time, as they were getting their stone from my
quarry. He is a man very well fitted to do that kind of work well,
and
economically too I think. Lowell sent him down again a week
after he went back, with the completed foundation plans. We then
got bids on these, taking concrete as the material. Buttimer, speak-
ing for Lowell, who was then just sailing for a few weeks in Europe,
and also from his own experience felt sure that concrete foundations
rightly laid would be permanent and wholly satisfactory, and that
with care they might be safely laid at this season and on into winter.
And also that the cost would be much less than that of stone.
We got bids from Preble, Westcot, Shea, Strout & Willy (who
have the contract for building the Water Company's filter) Stanley, and
Norris, their bids ranging from $11,000. down to $5,500., in the
order in which I have named them. Stanley's bid - the one that came
next to Norris's being $6027. Norris is an excellent mason, the
best down there I imagine, and had charge of the stone work on the
Scott house, but he is not a man to be relied on financially
in
any sense, I believe. He is also a splendid foreman, getting good
work out of his men and keeping things moving and also good at think-
ing out the best method of doing his work whatever that may be.
The next step was to make sure that Norris was good for his
bid financially. He said that he could bring backers who would en-
dorse his contract. I told him to take them to Mr Lynam and let him
pass upon them. He produced J. E. Trip and Clifford Doliver, whom
Lynam said he should consider satisfactory. We therefore awarded
the
contract to Norris. Buttimer, however, said that he thought
something might be saved even on Norris's bid if we did the work by
the day, taking Norris as superintendent which he had found out
3.
Mr Lowell's office whom Mr Lowell had had in mind for it to take
charge of the work.
Norris also said he thought he could save
something by doing the work in that way as in making his estimate of
cost he had made allowance for unforseen contingencies.
I
favored
working in this way myself because I did not feel wholly satisfied but
that laying concrete, of which they have had but little experience
down there, at this season when there are liable to be sudden cold
snaps and hard frosts might be risky if not done under experienced
and careful superintendence. And I also thought that the foundation
plan might probably be modified in detail, in the interest both of
convenience and economy, to muit the ledge and situation as the work
went on if some one were there looking after it who was competent to
do it. So I decided, Buttimer also advising it, to do the work by
the day, putting Norris in as foreman (at $5.00 a day) and having
a building superintendent down from Mr Lowell's office.
Buttimer accordingly went back to Boston and sent down a young
architect named Ely, a graduate of the Institute of Technology, who
took second prize one of the Rotch travelling-scholarship competitions
a few years ago and studied for a year in Paris and then went down
to Italy and Greece and spent three weeks at Athens making sketches
there. Since then he has done some large jobs of constructional work-
one of them for the Cash Register Company at Ohio, if I remember
rightly, and another in New York he used concrete on these
on a large scale and apparently has had considerable experience with
it. The buildings out at Ohio he laid the concrete for through
the midst of the severest winter weather, protecting the work as it
went along as we have now planned to do at Bar Harbor. He had also
been very much interested in his trip to Greece and made sketches
there of the old buildings. so that he is very mich interested nor
A.
in our plan. He thinks the site remarkably good for such a build-
ing, giving it a setting more in the Greek spirit than any he has
ever seen in America. Lowell has left the working out of his sketches
in detail to him quite largely
under his own supervision
he says,
so that I was glad to find him really in intelligent sympathy with
what we are trying to do architecturally.
.He also seems
an excellent man for the practical work and anxious, as he expressed
it to me, "to make a record job of it if possible". He has a little
office at the works and will be there steadily now while work is
going on.
We have ordered a tent whose length shall be the breadth
of the building and somewhat more, and which I find can be made to
order at Bangor at what seemed an absurdly low price. The concrete
laying will be carried on under this, with stoves beneath it to keep
the temperature above freezing while work is going on in freezing
weather. This tent will be moved along the length of the building from
west to east as the work progresses and the walls as fast as finished
will be covered with hay or light manure to keep the frost out until
the concrete has set hard, which it does in the course of a few days
freezing then doing it no harm he says.
The building is to have a six-inch akron drain-pipe at the base
of the wall upon the northern side, outside of it, with a stone
drain above it and vertical pipes to take the surface water down.
And an eight-inch pipe will similarly go down past either end of the
wall building to discharge into the roadside ditch. A small cess-
pool is also being build in the south-eastern corner of the lot,
where the terrace-fill will be a deep one, the water from it. syphoning
out, draining off into a blind stone-drain and losing itself in the
ground. This will have a separate pine leading down to it from the
as
building, laid in the same drain the eight-inch pipe from its east-
5.
There will be two cellars, one at each end, as long as the
building is broad and of moderate width. The one at the western end
will be for a toilet room for guests, extra cloak room for any larger
function and storage room for chairs, etc. The one at the eastern
end will be the same breadth as the stage, and on a higher level than
the western one to save blasting out ledge, this level being per-
mitted by the greater head-room which the elevation of the stage will
give. It will provide abundant dressing rooms, lighted by electric-
ity, for theatrical performance, storage room for musicians' instru-
ments, and the like, and also have a toilet room for the performers.
Both these cellars will be free from piers. And the ground beneath
the rest of the building will not be excavated except for the neces-
sary foundations and to leave space for ventillation or for heating.
The type of building which we have chosen calls for foundations
that show a base wider than the building I forget what the arch-
itectural term for it is
and for broad steps descending to the
south and west, as well as for the flooring of the columned porticos
and
on either side
the deep bases on which these steps and porticos
or whatever their term is
must rest to protect them from sinking
or being have by frost.
This is the reason why the cost of the
foundations is so large in proportion to the building.
The approach avenue I threw off further when I came to study
it over than we had planned at first.
This was necessary in order
to leave room for sloping down toward it from the terrace, whose
level will be quite high above it. at the road-side. And also it had
the advantage of keeping it further away from the building.
It
passes straight up from the road, running parallel with the west
front of the building, which will have a court of ample size in front
of it.
I laid the avenue out sixteen feet wide: it will have a
6.
solid stone foundation and a steady grade.
The view from the terrace is going to be magnificent. I
was
very much struck with it myself when we got the ground for it clear.
and it is going to make a splendid fore-court to the building on
the southern side. In fact I feel that it is all going to work out
better than I counted on and I think the whole effect is going to
be a very striking one.
The building and terrace, and the avenue, have been carefully
fenced around so that the trees that lie outside of them will take
no injury from the winter's work.
Mr Ely's plan is to go ahead with the wooden framing of the
building as soon as work upon the foundations is finished, 80 that
all may be ready for the stucco and plaster work when spring opens.
In this way only can we be sure of having the work done in season
for next year. Lowell will be back in three or four weeks now,
and then we shall want to get together and give the plans a very
careful study as soon as he can get them into definite and final
shape. I think he is really greatly interested in the building
himself and has assured me that he looks. upon it as an opportunity
of exceptional interest and will give it his best thought and study.
And I feel confident he will.
[George B Dor]]
a-vard
internity
Income 6.995
tear year W the
have Nine honor to invite
the in the opening of Encereor Fill
for the wilding of which we have in
greatly to thank Tour generous energy
-
here will he a lunchear generity in
Mus al the Harvard him
accepts
in
on December 27.
the
Isched and a weeking 14 arge
lecture room is character Hall
3a 1 two ?
herios will yeak and the
APD Management will enter
into foist revale
bear any traly your
6.
Notable Books.
[December,
1905.]
Emerson Memorial Hall.
249
Moxon would be proud to acknowledge them-
Prof. Palmer arranges the poems in a new order, placing his notes on
that would astonish those makers of fine books.
the page facing the text. For pictorial illustrations he gives portraits,
of the work: the heart and soul of it, whether
views of scenes and buildings connected with Herbert, facsimiles of manu-
8 text or Prof. Palmer's essays and comment,
scripts and reproductions of title-pages. The result is as nearly per-
atisfying.
fect book - in which author, editor, critic, and publisher unite to do their
evement as editor, thoroughness, absolute thor-
best - as we are likely to see. It is the definitive edition of George
ty that strikes one. He has not read up Her-
Herbert: a delight for every lover of fine bookmaking and it may
in a hurry but on the contrary, as he tells us,
serve as a model of the way in which poets can (and therefore should)
's verse before he could read, and he has been
be edited.
rbert for more than fifty years. Consequently,
nowledge and that long familiarity and associa-
opinions. But in addition he has fine
EMERSON MEMORIAL HALL.
knowledge into small compass. One feels, at
r has gone ahead and found the right solution
Harvard's newest building, the Emerson Memorial Hall, the latest
building to be given to the University, will be finished some time in De-
uch more than a mere editor - no matter how
cember, when it will be occupied by the departments of Philosophy and
itor's vocation he is a literary critic of a high
Psychology. The structure, an illustration of which we publish in this
specialists in Elizabethan and Stuart literature
issue, stands adjacent to Sever Hall, facing Robinson Hall, and was de-
niot get many admirable suggestions from the
signed by Guy Lowell, '92.
Herbert's text. These essays consist of a bio-
A difficult problem has been successfully solved in the erection of this
trait of Herbert "the man" as revealed in his
building. Sever and Robinson Halls differ 80 radically in architectural
religious poetry, of a criticism of Herbert's style
design, as well as in color and size, that the task of forming an harmonious
examination of the text and order of the poems.
group seemed well-nigh impossible when the ground was broken for Em-
fom the etymology or pronunciation of a word,
erson Hall. The building, though one story greater in height, has been
highest spiritual or philosophical matter, which
made to balance Robinson Hall in mass and design, and therefore with
the least remarkable of his qualities is his
Sever the three give to the Yard a group of much interest.
sympathy and admiration for Herbert never
The materials of construction are brick and limestone, used in about
arning into pedantry. He shows his hero in
the same proportion as those in Robinson Hall. The most unusual fea-
oboverlook those idiosyncrasies which a critic
ture is the use of large columns of brick, which carry through two stories.
thas blemishes. Read, for instance, his ana-
These occur in a group of six upon the front, and in a group of two upon
His summing up deserves to be quoted
the end elevation, giving a motive for the Yard entrance. They give the
say that Herbert chooses wise means for
desired effect of light and shade without detracting from the quiet effect
the first of our lyric poets who can fairly
of color due to the predominance of brick. The columns are of Ionic
he first who systematically tries to shape
order, and the whole building is Greek in feeling and detail. Over the
predetermined plan, and that, too, a plan
Yard entrance is the one word " Philosophy, and across the frieze over
subject. He is the first who tries to cut off
the colonnade, on the front, What is man that Thou art mindful of
fluxuriant age. That he did not fully suc-
him." At the present moment, although the newness of the limestone
pioneer. He was working in private, on
in the building gives rather sharp contrasts of color, the simplicity and
while knowing very fully and sharing to a
dignity of the design are such that time will quickly tone the structure, 80
contemporaries. But he was in possession
that its real qualities will give to the Yard an added character that it has
normous importance. That he was able to
greatly needed.
wo great achievements."
The uses of the Hall will be such that the uniqueness of the Memorial
250
Emerson Memorial Hall.
[December,
1905.]
The Autumn
Quarte
is striking. Here, generation after generation will be inspired by the life
and works of the great scholar and philosopher, in a way in which no
THE UNIVERSIT
other university can instruct and inspire, through the very atmosphere
of the Memorial. It is to be the home of the Philosophical Department.
THE AUTUMN QUART
As one enters the building, in the hall will be seen the seated statue of
Registration
The following table gives an iter
Emerson, in bronze. by Frank Duveneck. This hall is of impressive and
statistics.
total enrolment in the University o
simple Doric proportions and detail. The hall leads directly to a lecture-
1904, and Oct. 14, 1905:
room, seating 350 persons. On the first floor are also several class-rooms
and rooms for seminars. A generous staircase leads to the second floor,
Oct. 17, 1903.
Oct
which will be largely devoted to the sections of Sociology. Here will be
College.
the sociological library and museum, and also the philosophical library.
Seniors
318
This floor has also a lecture-room seating 150 persons, beside various
Juniors
419
Sophomores
637
class-rooms and studies. Through special gifts the libraries and other
Freshmen
560
rooms on this floor are to be splendidly furnished and equipped.
Special
136
The third floor is devoted entirely to Psychology. Here the greatest
College Total
2070
care has been given to the planning of the most complete arrangement
for psychological research, in the equipment of laboratories and experi-
Lawrence Scientific
School.
ment-rooms, in studies and class-rooms.
Fourth year
89
It is thus seen that under one roof Harvard has now assembled depart-
Third year
102
ments closely bound together, and has provided generous and splendid
Second year
139
First year
113
accommodations for a great work whose results are immeasurable. Prof.
Special
112
Münsterberg in a speech at the Emerson Centenary at Concord, in May,
L.S.S. Total
555
1903, said: "We want a spacious, noble, monumental hall. But we
know also that the value of this memorial gift lies not in its walls and
Graduate School.
roof, but in the kind of work which will develop within those walls. It
Resident
374
Non-Resident
12
will be a true Emerson Memorial only if the words and work in that hall
become help and guidance, wisdom and inspiration for new and new
Graduate School Total
386
generations of Harvard Men."
Total Arts and Sciences
3011
2
A letter from Prof. Royce was read at the same meeting, in which
Royce
he said "That the founding of this new building may mean the begin-
Divinity.
Graduates
14
ning of a new life for philosophical study in our country, and the dawn-
Third year
7
ing of a new day for the interests of higher thought in our national
Second year
4
affairs, is the earnest wish of your absent colleague."
First year
7
Special
17
Jamss
Prof. James, in an address at this centenary celebration, also said :
'Gainst death and all oblivious enmity shall you pace forth, beloved
Total Divinity
49
master. As long as our English language lasts, men's hearts will be
Law.
cheered and their souls strengthened and liberated by the noble and
Graduates
3
musical pages with which you have enriched it." With the words in
Third year
178
Second year
197
mind of three of the professors who will labor together in this Emerson
First year
290
Memorial Hall, the reality and worth of the building is realized for Har-
Special
56
vard and for humanity.
Law Total
724
Harvard
14601
(1905-06)
cl.
Magazine
[March,
1906.]
Varia.
571
Under existing circumstances, and
tion, pursued by large numbers of
Don
philosopher or a psychologist; he was
with the information at its disposal,
students, or to effect the necessary
not a systematic thinker, but he was
the Committee on Reports and Reso-
economies by reducing the number of
more, - a poet, and a prophet many
lutions is not prepared to submit any
special courses. It does, however,
of whose prophecies have already been
form of vote, or recommend any spe-
cificaction of the Board in this connec-
7/7/07
think that, in view of the statements
fulfilled. He was a political, educa-
in the report herewith returned, the
tional, and religious seer. His writ-
tion. None the less, it seems proper
question of policy involved should be
ings abound in noble ideals of govern-
that special attention should be called
clearly understood and carefully con-
ment and worship, as wellas of manners
to the report now returned. It is im-
sidered.
and morals. He was a genuine New
portant and timely as accentuating
All of which is respectfully sub-
Englander, but also an American in
the question of policy involved in the
mitted. By order of the Committee,
the broadest sense. Hence the Uni-
extracts above quoted, to wit whether,
CHARLES F. ADAMS, Chairman.
versity has found his work and char-
as matter of educational policy, it is
October 11, 1905.
acter eminently fit for commemoration
more desirable that the necessary eco-
in this institution which was the child
nomies should be effected, if economies
VARIA
of New England Puritanism, and in
must be effected, in what may be con-
IT President Eliot on Emerson. At
this department of this institution.
sidered the elementary and fundamen-
the dedication of Emerson Hall on Dec.
We believe we have given to this Hall
tal studies of the University, attended,
in the case of the English Department,
1905
27, President Eliot said:
the most appropriate New England
Philosophy is one of the old, tra-
name,"
by no less than 2131 students or in
ditional subjects in a university - one
Albert Matthews, '82, sends the
the large number of special courses,
of the so-called humanities.
of which examples could easily be
following:
cious building, consecrated to this uni-
given, attended by but few students,
Harvard College LOTTERY,
versal subject, is the first on these
or, in some cases, by single students
grounds to be appropriated to one of
5000 DOLLARS the highest Prize,
only. Referring to the experience and
the _humanities. We have long had
Not two Blanks to a Prize.
policy of Yale, under similar circum-
department buildings; but they were
stances, it has been stated that, of a
THE Public are hereby informed,
first provided for the new sciences,
That the Managers of HARVARD
total number of 181 courses, it was
and thus far they have been provided
COLLEGE LOTTERY, are very desir-
there found that 70 were taken by
for the exact and natural sciences only.
ous the Drawing of said LOTTERY
fewer than ten students each 36 by
This department of philosophy is the
should commence as soon as possible;
fewer than five ; 8 by fewer than two
first of the old departments to get the
they would therefore be glad those
and 11 by a single student each only.
advantage of a noble building in which
who have Subscribed for Tickets would
Under these circumstances, the total
it is supreme.
send for them, and those who intend to
number of courses in the Yale pro-
"In 1869-70 and again in 1870-71
be Adventurers, would purchase their
gram was, as a measure of necessary
Ralph Waldo Emerson gave here a
Tickets immediately. (From the Bos-
retrenchment, reduced from 263 to
long course of lectures on the Natu-
ton Gazette, Feb. 17, 1774, p. 3/2.)
249, and of the 249 remaining courses
ral History of the Intellect.' This
IT More than a hundred and twenty-
it was stated that "between 50 and 60
was the last prolonged course of lec-
five years ago, - to be exact, on Com-
would be cut out unless a sufficient
tures (35) that he ever gave. Of this
mencement Day in 1779, - Harvard
number of students elected them to
new building one third is occupied by
College conferred the Doctorate of
make it worth while giving them."
a laboratory, in which psychology, in-
Laws on Joseph de Valnais. Since
The present Committee does not
cluding comparative psychology, is
then in recent times nothing has been
undertake to discuss the question as
studied in a truly natural history
known about him in this neighborhood.
to whether, under conditions exacting
method.
While his name in the Quinquennial
some measure of retrenchment, it is
"This is Emerson Hall. We be-
Catalogue has been duly starred, no
most desirable to impair the efficiency
lieve that the name will prove an en-
date of death has ever been placed
of the fundamental courses of instruc-
during one. Not that Emerson was a
against it. Mr. Sibley supposed that
906
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
February 5th, 1908. [1906]
President Charles Eliot,
Harvard University, Cambridge.
Dear Sir,
[1905]
gistof
ms.Ellis
This fall I went over the land owned by the College at Bar
Harbor quite thoroughly after the leaves had fallen, with reference to
opening out its woods and saving their good trees by Living them oppor-
tunity for growth. And with reference also to protecting the woods from
and
fire making its building site accessible, opening out the view from it
which
trees now hide. I judged that it would take in the neighborhood
of $50 an acre to do what is necessary to accomplish this. There is much
dead wood over the whole piece, both fallen and standing, and over por-
tions of it the present growth is also thick though low and scrubby. One
portion of it would cost more than this proportionately, but need not be
done so fully as the rest; this is the steep front upon the sea which
never has been cleared at all, unlike the rest
which once was cleared
although not thoroughly, by Dr Ellis and his sister
Only a portion of
this frontage however is much in evidence from above, nor would it be
dangerous in case of fire.
The house site itself, unon the summit of
the cliff, should be wholly cleared as well as the space in front of it
to the cliff's edge, widening from the house site out so as to show its
view. And this will involve considerable cutting at that point.
With regard to the question of fire, the Chase woods adjoining the
College lot along its length upon the south have never been cleared at
2
all and are full of dead firs and birches, both on the Lound and standing,
as well as with a dense and tangled growth of living trees
with much
dead wood unon them owing to the poverty of the soil. with the College
their
woods in present condition, fire once started in these adjoining woods
in a dry season would inevitably sweep the College piece quite bare of
the
trees, with a south wind, and the Luquer woods also on beyond. This
would destroy the beauty of the cliff and the privacy of places on it for
years to cone, the soil being a poor one with much ledge SO that new
growth could only be octained with difficulty and slowly.
A
path is also needed from the new road I built last year to the
Dorri
house-site by the cliff, upon the College land; the first part of the
way is swampy, so that no one now can get across it without difficulty,
and the rest is rocky and irregular to the site, so that the way to it
is neither clear nor easy though it could easily be made so. The cost
of such a path would not be great, and it should be made to follow so far
as possible with economy the line a future avenue would naturally take.
Then some sin should be put up in the path's entrance from the road, so
that the site might become known and be talked of among the building
possibilities at Bar Harbor.
"
is
You were thoughtful enough to ask me last summer whether the appro-
Dorr
priation made for the building of the road opposite the College piece
site
had been sufficient to pay for the work done. At that time I had not
At,
P
Chilage.
got my bills all in for the road-building but when I had and came to
Dency
calculate out the cost of it I found that the average cost of that section
of the road had been such that a fair estimate for the College portion
Revinge
was $225, or $25 more than the appropriation made me by the College.
And afterward, in the late fall, when heavy rains had come, I found it
necessary to build a culvert across that section to take care of the
water descending from the hill above, which failed to soak away. This
3
culvert, the work and the material for it, cost in the neighborhood of
$20 more.
I should also be glad to have the College join with Mrs Markoe and
myself in a relatively small expenditure to improve the entrance to the
right-of-way road that lends to, and past, the College lot and to share
with us in the expense of getting the town to make a work of permanent
improvement to the town road leading to it. This work has been approved
by the road comissioner of the town and will be recommended by him and
by the road committee of the board of trade at the annual meeting, and I
think that the town will vote to do it.
But
there
will
be
a
certain
ex-
pense for surveys, etc., necessary to getting the work proposed well
planned and done, and properly presented at town meeting, which the town
cannot be asked to bear. I have already taken what steps are necessary
in the matter until now, and if the work proposed is carried out by the
town it will result in giving a much better approach to all the region
where the land of the College lies, and lead to its increase in value.
with these things in view, and in accordance with your request
that I should make suggestion in the matter, I would suggest that the
College appropriate for all a sum not to exceed $500. This will accom-
plish all that it would be desirable in my judgement to do upon the piece
or for its approach, taken in connection with what the rest of us are
doing and what the town I think will do. This I think it would be
wise however for the College to expend. A year's advance in sale or
a
thousand dollars added to the price obtained would justify the expendi-
ture, and I think that what I suggest would be likely to accomplish more
than this in both regards. The cost of clearing the land would lie
somewhere between $300 and $350 according to my calculation, supported
by that made independently by a man whom I have employed upon such work
before and who looked it over for me. In the neighborhood of $45
has
4
been already expended in the completion of the road opposite the College
land beyond the appropriation made, though this work I should have done
in any case in order to complete the drive and bring it into use. The
rest would be spent upon building the path I have suggested to the build-
ing site; upon the preliminary surveys, etc., for the work the town is
asked to do upon the town road leading to the right of way; and upon
the improvement needed to the entrance of the right-of-way itself.
I remain
Yours truly,
George B. dost
JOHN JAY CHAPMAN
MIDDLE YEARS (1905-1914)
not in America but who are willing to sink America where
Letters
truth is concerned and who have no desire for anything ex-
cept truth - truth often which makes us seem cheap and
horrid and compels us to admit that we do not know -
that we do not know a damned thing about the whole busi-
ness - or only one thing, viz., that Europe is ours also -
To Owen Wister
that is, it is all one concern. To return to the visible. We see
18 COMMONWEALTH AVENUE
a marked inferiority in intellectual fibre, in training - in
BOSTON, Feb. 15, 1906
our American scholars as compared to Europe. Average for
DEAR DAN
average we are not in it anywhere. For a good many years
I've been here for a week staying with George Dorr
past I have asked each specialist I met - 'Now tell me how
revisiting the glimpses of the moon - Porcellian, Somerset,
we stand in your particular subject' - nowhere. Well,
and Tavern, etc. Really I have enjoyed myself. What a world
scholarship is a sort of branch of religion - a form of self-
it is - of friendship and tie. There are twice as many people
sacrifice, a form of worship, an interest in something for its
about here that I know and care for - ten times as many -
own sake
as there are elsewhere all over
Yes, I should be sorry to see Roosevelt President of Har-
To William James
vard because I do not regard it as important to keep Harvard
BARRYTOWN, N.Y. May 29, igo6
to the front - in the ordinary sense - that is in numbers,
My DEAR JAMES
popularity, and general notoriety. This he would probably
I have been desperately hoping, and do still, that somehow
do - but as an influence on young men he is about the
you and Mrs. James will spend a week with us before we all
opposite of what we want. He represents, you might say,
die. And now if you are getting SO old and contemplate that
the reigning vices - glorying in being seen, Hurrah for us,
form of suicide - living abroad - I am going to lay wires,
Americanism of a magazine variety - (alas, you are not free
use influence, and take steps to bring about some sort of
from it) - and the settlement of questions by a sloppy emo-
reunion soon.
tionalism which turns to anger when confronted with world-
Why, of course, of course - I wonder how you have stood
old, world-deep, and world-near moral alternatives. (Which
it
so
long
in
the treadmill how you have kept free from
tendency I must say you are entirely free from.) In one
the shackles of pedagogy, institutional life, Cambridge,
way the question who is president of this or that institution
Boston, Massachusetts, and the era, which is eating up all
is not so important as it seems - for it seems to me that
these and transmuting them into corncobs? I have always
the importantest things are never taught by institutions at
wondered at it and wondered whence you drew the vitality
all - but come straight out of individuals and go straight
to do it. And now that you have borne the burden and heat
into individuals, and these are born and appear in unexpected
of the day and shined your light abroad - and it has been a
places, and while we are quarrelling over who shall lead
real light - and has helped many and steadied much - why,
our sewing circle the real leader has been born and died, and
now you can be turned out to browse and live peaceably
the thing is controlled by him.
at Oxford or Florence or where you will, with the respect,
But if you descend into the visible and the talkable and
gratitude, and affection of everyone who has ever heard your
insist on taking an interest in America as distinct from Europe
name following you to your grave.
- what does America need? It needs men whose minds are
I do not suppose that with your active mind and an unim-
224
225
American Antiquities Act of 1906 (16USC431-433)
Page 1 of 2
Links to the Past
American Antiquities Act of 1906
16 USC 431-433
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of
America in Congress assembled, That any person who shall appropriate, excavate,
injure, or destroy any historic or prehistoric ruin or monument, or any object of
antiquity, situated on lands owned or controlled by the Government of the United
States, without the permission of the Secretary of the Department of the Government
having jurisdiction over the lands on which said antiquities are situated, shall, upon
conviction, be fined in a sum of not more than five hundred dollars or be imprisoned
for a period of not more than ninety days, or shall suffer both fine and imprisonment,
in the discretion of the court.
Sec. 2. That the President of the United States is hereby authorized, in his discretion,
to declare by public proclamation historic landmarks, historic and prehistoric
structures, and other objects of historic or scientific interest that are situated upon the
lands owned or controlled by the Government of the United States to be national
monuments, and may reserve as a part thereof parcels of land, the limits of which in
all cases shall be confined to the smallest area compatible with proper care and
management of the objects to be protected: Provided, That when such objects are
situated upon a tract covered by a bona fied unperfected claim or held in private
ownership, the tract, or so much thereof as may be necessary for the proper care c d
management of the object, may be relinquished to the Government, and the Secret ry
of the Interior is hereby authorized to accept the relinquishment of such tracts in
behalf of the Government of the United States.
Sec. 3. That permits for the examination of ruins, the excavation of archaeological
sites, and the gathering of objects of antiquity upon the lands under their respective
jurisdictions may be granted by the Secretaries of the Interior, Agriculture, and War to
institutions which the may deem properly qualified to conduct such examination,
excavation, or gathering, subject to such rules and regulation as they may prescribe:
Provided, That the examinations, excavations, and gatherings are undertaken for the
benefit of reputable museums, universities, colleges, or other recognized scientific or
educational institutions, with a view to increasing the knowledge of such objects, and
that the gatherings shall be made for permanent preservation in public museums.
Sec. 4. That the Secretaries of the Departments aforesaid shall make and publish from
time to time uniform rules and regulations for the purpose of carrying out the
provisions of this Act.
Approved, June 8, 1906
http://www.cr.nps.gov/local-law/anti1906.htm
2/11/2003
Shoulland
50
STEVE MATHER OF THE NATIONAL PARKS
parks. The forests, established for sixteen years by Presidential
proclamation, served purposes unequivocally utilitarian (most
important: provision of timber and conservation of water
sources), while the parks, always established by Congress,
served the purpose of all-around uplift, possibly non-utilitarian.
After 1890 the people got no more national parks on the main
pretext of forest conservation. All the subsequent ones-Mount
Rainier in 1899, Crater Lake in 1902, Mesa Verde in 1906,
Glacier in 1910, and so on-stood on their merits as handsome
or unique scenery.
With the Act for the Preservation of American Antiquities,
in 1906, came the national monuments. That law was put
through by Congressman John F. Lacey, of Iowa, chairman
of the House Public Lands Committee, who, as clearly ap-
peared from some of the legislation he sponsored, was a bird-
lover and a friend of archxology. Lacey successfully promoted
Mesa Verde for a national park and, unsuccessfully, the petri-
fied forest of Arizona as well as certain prehistoric caves and
ruins in New Mexico, which, he felt, would make a Cliff Cities
National Park. (His Antiquities Act gave the President the
power to set aside by proclamation any lands owned or con-
trolled by the United States that contained "historic land-
marks, historic or prehistoric structures, and other objects of
historic or scientific interest," which for the want of a less
sepulchral term would be classified as national monuments.
Lacey had the satisfaction of seeing the petrified forest desig-
nated one of the first national monuments, but the New Mexico
site did not become the Bandelier National Monument until
1916, three years after the Congressman's death. The difference
between a national monument and a national park is shadowy
-some sites, like the Grand Canyon, have been both-but, in
Park
a rough way, the monuments are less overpowering and much
more miscellaneous, and they emphasize historical or scientific
values rather than scenic. The Antiquities Act has had a lot
of use: the total of the national monuments is now close to
two hundred, ranging in size from fraction-of-an-acre sites, like
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK. THE LOWER FAL
YELLOWSTONE RIVER CANYON FROM ARTIST )
PHOTOGRAPH BY GRANT, NATIONAL P
PUBLIC PARKS AND PLEASURING GROUNDS
51
that of the Father Millet Cross in New York, to the more than
two and a half million acres of the Katmai in Alaska. Up to
1933 jurisdiction over them was divided: the Interior Depart-
ment had those taken from the public domain, Agriculture
those from the national forests, War those from the military
reservations.
Conservation, as indicated, became important news at the
hands of Theodore Roosevelt, who, among other things, called
a Conservation Conference of Governors in 1908, This was an
expansive, Rooseveltian affair, to which the President invited
not only the governors of the states but other public shepherds,
along with university presidents, officers of conservation or-
ganizations, and assorted notables (excluding, however, John
Muir, because of his anti-Pinchot stand on Hetch Hetchy).
The conferring fil ed five hundred printed pages, but most of
it dealt with the works of Pinchot. The country's natural
scenery drew only two mentions, one by J. Horace McEarland
(who called it "un natched" and "one of America's greatest re-
sources" and declared: "The national parks, all too few in num-
ber and extent, cught to be absolutely inviolate.
The
scenic value of all the national domain yet remaining should
be jealously guarde d. We have for a century, Mr. Chair-
man, stood actually, if not ostensibly, for an uglier America; let
us here and now resolve
to stand openly and solidly for a
more beautiful
Americal") and the second by the Gov-
ernor of New York, Charles Evans Hughes (who encouraged
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK, CALIFORNIA. THE YOSEMITE VALLEY
the safeguarding of "the beauties of nature
both from the
FROM THE WAWONA ROAD EAST TUNNEL PORTAL.
ruthless hand of the destroyer and from the grasp of selfish in-
terest").
From then on, McFarland worked to get a single govern-
ment bureau, comparable to the Forest Service, to run the na-
tional parks. He made an effective lobbyist. An agile man,
expert in a half-dozen fields ranging from rose culture to pho-
tography, he kept his conservation instrument, the American
Civic Association, of which he was president, down to fighting
PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDERSON, NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
weight, shaping it to be what he called "a militant organization
Dour
STEVE MATHER OF THE NATIONAL PARKS
PUBLIC PARKS AND PLEASURING GROUNDS
53
52
for the national good, free from red tape and ready to jump."
those wonderful manifestations of nature, so startling and so beauti-
He himself was always ready to jump. He ran a thriving print-
ful that everyone recognizes the obligations of the government to
preserve them for the edification and recreation of the people. The
ing business in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, but it never seemed
Yellowstone Park, the Yosemite, the Grand Canyon of the Colorado,
to hold him back. When conservation needed an advocate any-
the Glacier National Park, and the Mount Rainier National Park
where, it could count on McFarland. He was ubiquitous and,
and others furnish appropriate instances. In only one case have we
to the enemies of a more beautiful America, a bugbear.
made anything like adequate preparation for the use of a park by
He began to show important results in 1910, when the Secre-
the public. That case is the Yellowstone National Park. Every con-
sideration of patriotism and the love of nature and of beauty and
tary of the Interior, Richard A. Ballinger, suggested in his an-
of art requires us to expend money enough to bring all these natural
nual report to the President the creation of:
wonders within easy reach of our people. The first step in that di-
rection is the establishment of a responsible bureau, which shall
a bureau of national parks and resorts, under the supervision
of a competent commissioner, with a suitable force of superintend-
take upon itself the burden of supervising the parks and of making
recommendations as to the best method of improving their accessi-
ents, supervising engineers, and landscape architects, inspectors,
park guards, and other employees.
The volume and impor-
bility and usefulness.
tance of the work of the supervision of the national parks and re-
McFarland was more direct: "Nowhere in official Washington
serves under the Secretary of the Interior has passed beyond the
can an inquirer find an office of the national parks or a single
stage of satisfactory control by operations carried on with the small
desk devoted solely to their management. By passing around
force available in the Secretary's office.
through three Departments, and consulting clerks who have
The following year Dr. McFarland bagged President Taft as a
taken on the extra work of doing what they can for the nation's
speaker at the American Civic Association's annual convention,
playgrounds, it is possible to come at a little information."
and Taft took up the park cause, saying:
Most of the parks had been given to the Interior Department,
Now we have in the United States a great many natural wonders,
but, in keeping with the general looseness that afflicted them,
and in that lazy way we have in our government of first taking up
Agriculture ran a couple, and four of them-Yellowstone, Yo-
one thing and then another, we have set aside a number of national
semite, Sequoia, and General Grant-policed by U. S. cavalry,
parks, of forest reservations covering what ought to be national
had a War Department tie-in. An assistant attorney in the In-
parks, and what are called "national monuments." We have said to
ourselves, "Those cannot get away. We have surrounded them by a
terior Department, W. B. Acker, gave whatever time he could
Taft
law which makes them necessarily government property forever,
spare in a crowded schedule to park affairs; he was the closest
and we will wait in our own good time to make them useful as parks
man to them in Washington. Acker, working part-time, assisted
to the people. Since the Interior Department is the 'lumber room'
part-time by two or three clerks and accountants from the
of the government, into which we put everything that we don't
Chief Clerk's office and supplemented by the superintendents
know how to classify, and don't know what to do with, we will
in the field, constituted the Interior Department's national-
just put them under the Secretary of the Interior." That is the con-
park administration. Happily, Acker held a high opinion of the
dition of the national parks today.
parks, and he gave them loving care. His accomplishments
And on Feburary 2, 1912 President Taft sent a special message
under the pressures of little time, little money, and little help
to Congress:
would be hard now to overestimate.
I earnestly recommend the establishment of a Bureau of National
Congress ignored Taft's request for a bureau of national
Parks. Such legislation is essential to the proper management of
parks, but the demand for. it mounted until, when Lane took
Henry James.
Boston: Little,Broon, Vol.2
P. loff
1926.
218
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
[1905
say this. Your thought in this article is both important and
original, and ought to be worked out in the clearest possible
manner.
Your thesis needs to be worked out with
great care, and as concretely as possible. It is a difficult
XV
one to put successfully, on account of the vague character
1905-1907
of all its terms. One point you should drive home is that
the anti-religious attitudes (Leuba's, Huxley's, Clifford's),
The Last Period (II) - Italy and Greece - Philosophical
so far as there is any "pathos" in them, obey exactly the
Congress in Rome - Stanford University - The
same logic. The real crux is when you come to define ob-
Earthquake - Resignation of Professorship
jectively the ideals to which feeling reacts. "God is a
Spirit" darauf geht es an on the last available defini-
IN the spring of 1905 an escape from influenza, from Cam-
tion of the term Spirit. It may be very abstract.
bridge duties, and from correspondents, became impera-
at
Love to Mrs. Starbuck. Yours always truly,
tive. James had long wanted to see Athens with his own
eyes, and he sailed on April 3 for a short southern holiday.
904
WM. JAMES.
During the journey he wrote letters to almost no one except
To F. F. E. Woodbridge.
his wife. On his way back from Athens he stopped in Rome
[Feb. 22, 1905.]
with the purpose of seeing certain young Italian philoso-
Heelon
DEAR WOODBRIDGE,- Here 's another! But I solemnly
phers. A Philosophical Congress was being held there at
swear to you that this shall be my very last offense for some
the time; and James, though he had originally declined the
months to come. This is the "postscriptual" article' of
invitation to attend it, inevitably became involved in its
garne
which I recently wrote you, and I have now cleaned up the
proceedings and ended by seizing the occasion to discuss his
pure-experience philosophy from all the objections im-
theory of consciousness. It was obvious that the appro-
mediately in sight.
Truly yours,
priate language in which to address a full meeting of the
WM. JAMES.
Congress would be French, and so he shut himself up in
"Is Radical Empiricism Solipsistic?" Journal of Philosophy, Psychology; and
his hotel and composed "La Notion de Conscience." His
Scientific Methods, 1905, vol. II, p. 235.
experience in writing this paper threw an instructive side-
light on his process of composition. Ordinarily - when he
was writing in English - twenty-five sheets of manuscript,
written in a large hand and corrected, were a maximum
achievement for one day. The address in Rome was not
composed in English and then translated, but was written
out in French. When he had finished the last lines of one
day's work, James found to his astonishment that he had
completed and corrected over forty pages of manuscript.
f. 20F5
220
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
[1905
Act. 63]
TO MRS. JAMES
221
The inhibitions which a habit of careful attention to points
silver loving-cup, the graduate students and assistants with
of style ordinarily called into play were largely inoperative
an inkwell. There were a couple of short speeches, and
when he wrote in a language which presented to his mind
words were spoken by which he was very much moved. Un-
a smaller variety of possible expressions, and thus imposed
fortunately there was no record of what was said.
limits upon his self-criticism.
In the following year (1906), James took leave of absence
To Mrs. James.
from Harvard in January and accepted an invitation from
AMALFI, Mar. 30, 1905.
Stanford University to give a course during its spring term.
It is good to get something in full measure, without
He planned the course as a general introduction to Philos-
haggling or stint, and today I have had the picturesque
ophy. Had he not been interrupted by the San Francisco
ladled out in buckets full, heaped up and running over. I
earthquake, he would have rehearsed much of the projected
never realized the beauties of this shore, and forget (in my
"Introductory Textbook of Philosophy," in which he meant
habit of never noticing proper names till I have been there)
to outline his metaphysical system. But the earthquake
whether you have ever told me of the drive from Sorrento
put an end to the Stanford lectures in April, as the reader
to this place. Anyhow, I wish that you could have taken
will learn more fully. In the ensuing autumn and winter
it with me this day. "Thank God for this day!" We
(1907), James made the same material the basis of a half-
came to Sorrento by steamer, and at 10:30 got away in a
year's work with his last Harvard class.
carriage, lunching at the half-way village of Positano;
In November, 1906, the lectures which compose the
and proceeding through Amalfi to Ravello, high up on the
volume called "Pragmatism" were written out and de-
mountain side, whence back here in time for a 7:15 o'clock
livered in November at the Lowell Institute in Boston. In
dinner. Practically six hours driving through a scenery of
January, 1907, they were repeated at Columbia University,
which I had never realized the beauty, or rather the in-
and then James published them in the spring.
,terest, from previous descriptions. The lime-stone moun-
The time had now come for him to stop regular teaching
tains are as strong as anything in Switzerland, though of
altogether. He had been continuing to teach, partly in
course much smaller. The road, a Cornice affair cut for the
deference to the wishes of the College; but it had become
most part on the face of cliffs, and crossing little ravines
evident that he must have complete freedom to use his
(with beaches) on the side of which nestle hamlets, is posi-
strength and time for writing when he could write, for
tively ferocious in its grandeur, and on the side of it the
special lectures, like the series on Pragmatism, when such
azure sea, dreaming and blooming like a bed of violets.
might serve his ends, and for rest and change when recupera-
I did n't look for such Swiss strength, having heard of
tion became necessary. So, in February, 1907, he sent his
naught but beauty. It seems as if this were a race such
resignation to the Harvard Corporation. The last meeting
that, when anyone wished to express an emotion of any
of his class ended in a way for which he was quite unpre-
kind, he went and built a bit of stone-wall and limed it
pared. His undergraduate students presented him with a
onto the rock, so that now, when they have accumulated,
P. 3 of 5
254
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
[1906
Act. 64]
TO JOHN JAY CHAPMAN
255
finger. Great emergencies and crises show us how much
of commerce, so to speak, the healthy philistine, is a mere
greater our vital resources are than we had supposed.
extract from the potentially realizable individual whom he
Pierre Janet discussed lately some cases of pathological
represents, and that we all have reservoirs of life to draw
impulsion or obsession in what he has called the "psychas-
upon, of which we do not dream. The practical problem is
thenic" type of individual, bulimia, exaggerated walking,
"how to get at them." And the answer varies with the
morbid love of feeling pain, and explains the phenomenon
individual. Most of us never can, or never do get at them.
as based on the underlying sentiment d'incomplétude, as he
You have indubitably got at your own deeper levels by the
calls it, or sentiment de l'irréel with which these patients are
Yoga methods. I hope that what you have gained will
habitually afflicted, and which they find is abolished by
never again be lost to you. You must keep there! My
the violent appeal to some exaggerated activity or other,
deeper levels seem very hard to find - I am so rebellious
discovered accidentally perhaps, and then used habitually.
at all formal and prescriptive methods - a dry and bony
I was reminded of his article in reading your descriptions
individual, repelling fusion, and avoiding voluntary exer-
and prescriptions. May the Yoga practices not be, after
tion. No matter, art is long! and qui vivra verra. I shall
all, methods of getting at our deeper functional levels?
try fasting and again try breathing - discovering perhaps
And thus only be substitutes for entirely different crises
some individual rhythm that is more tolerable.
that may occur in other individuals, religious crises, indig-
nation-crises, love-crises, etc.?
To John Fay Chapman.
What you say of diet is in striking accordance with the
CAMBRIDGE, May 18, 1906.
views lately made popular by Horace Fletcher - I dare
DEAR OLD JACK C.,-Having this minute come into the
say you have heard of them. You see I am trying to gen-
possession of a new type-writer, what can I do better than
eralize the Yoga idea, and redeem it from the pretension
express my pride in the same by writing to you?'
that, for example, there is something intrinsically holy in
I spent last night at George Dorr's and he read me sev-
the various grotesque postures of Hatha Yoga. I have
eral letters from you, telling me also of your visit, and of
spoken with various Hindus, particularly with three last
how well you seemed. For years past I have been on the
winter, one a Yogi and apostle of Vedanta; one a "Chris-
point of writing to you to assure [you] of my continued love
tian" of scientific training; one a Bramo-Somaj professor.
and to express my commiseration for your poor wife, who
The former made great claims of increase of "power," but
has had so long to bear the brunt of your temper - you
admitted that those who had it could in no way demon-
see I have been there already and I know how one's irri-
strate it ad oculos, to outsiders. The other two both said
tability is exasperated by conditions of nervous prostration
that Yoga was less and less frequently practised by the more
but now I can write and congratulate you on having
intellectual, and that the old-fashioned Guru was becoming
recovered, temper and all. (As I write, it bethinks me that
quite a rarity.
James had not used a type-writer since the time when his eyes troubled him
I believe with you, fully, that the so-called "normal man"
in the seventies. The machine now had the fascination of a strange toy again.
V.2
P. 4 of 5
256
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
[1906
Act. 64]
TO JOHN JAY CHAPMAN
257
in a previous letter I have made identical jokes about your
I can use my small available store of energy in writing,
temper which, I fear, will give Mrs. Chapman a very low
which is not only a much more economical way of working
opinion of my humoristic resources, and in sooth they are
it, but more satisfactory in point of quality, and more
small; but we are as God makes us and must not try to be
lucrative as well.
anything else, so pray condone the silliness and let it pass.)
Now, J. C., when are you going to get at writing again?
The main thing is that you seem practically to have recov-
The world is hungry for your wares. No one touches cer-
ered, in spite of everything; and I am heartily glad.
tain deep notes of moral truth as you do, and your humor
I too am well enough for all practical purposes, but I
is köstlich and impayable. You ought to join the band of
have to go slow and not try to do too many things in a day.
"pragmatistic" or "humanistic" philosophers. I almost
Simplification of life and consciousness I find to be the great
fear that Barrytown may not yet have begun to be dis-
thing, but a hard thing to compass when one lives in city
turbed by the rumor of their achievements, the which are
conditions. How our dear Sarah Whitman lived in the
of the greatest, and seriously I du think that the world of
sort of railroad station she made of her life - I confess it a
thought is on the eve of a renovation no less important than
mystery to me. If I lived at a place called Barrytown, it
that contributed by Locke. The leaders of the new move-
would probably go better - don't you ever go back to
ment are Dewey, Schiller of Oxford, in a sense Bergson of
New York to live!
Paris, a young Florentine named Papini, and last and least
Alice and I had a jovial time at sweet little Stanford
worthy, W. J. H. G. Wells ought to be counted in, and if
University. It was the simple life in the best sense of the
I mistake not G. K. Chesterton as well. I hope you know
term. I am glad for once to have been part of the working
and love the last-named writer, who seems to me a great
machine of California, and a pretty deep part too, as it
teller of the truth. His systematic preference for contra-
afterwards turned out. The earthquake also was a memor-
dictions and paradoxical forms of statement seems to me
able bit of experience, and altogether we have found it mind-
a mannerism somewhat to be regretted in so wealthy a
enlarging and are very glad we ben there. But the whole
mind; but that is a blemish from which some of our very
intermediate West is awful - a sort of penal doom to have
greatest intellects are not altogether free - the philosopher
to live there; and in general the result with me of having
of Barrytown himself being not wholly exempt. Join us,
lived 65 years in America is to make me feel as if I had at
O Jack, and in the historic and perspective sense your fame
least bought the right to a certain capriciousness, and were
will be secure. All future Histories of Philosophy will
free now to live for the remainder of my days wherever I
print your name.
prefer and can make my wife and children consent -- it is
But although my love for you is not exhausted, my type-
more likely to be in rural than in urban surroundings, and
writing energy is. It communicates stiffness and cramps,
in the maturer than in the rawrer parts of the world. But
both to the body and the mind. Nevertheless I think I
the first thing is to get out of the treadmill of teaching,
have been doing pretty well for a first attempt, don't you?
which I hate and shall resign from next year. After that,
He did mistake, as Mr. Chesterton's subsequent utterances showed.
V.V
Pg. 5 of 5
258
LETTERS OF WILLIAM JAMES
[1906
Act. 64]
TO H. G. WELLS
259
If you return me a good long letter telling me more par-
very attentively, being nothing but an enumeration of all
ticularly about the process of your recovery, I will write
the details visible in the corner of an old field with a hedge
again, even if I have to take a pen to do it, and in any case
and ditch. But rightly taken in, it is probably the highest
I will do it much better than this time.
flight of human genius in the direction of nature-worship
Believe me, dear old J. C., with hearty affection and de-
I don't see why it should not count as an immortal thing.
light at your recovery - all these months I have been on
You missed it, when here, in not getting to Keene Valley,
the brink of writing to find out how you were - and with
where I have just been, and of which the sylvan beauty,
very best regards to your wife, whom some day I wish we
especially by moonlight, is probably unlike aught that
may be permitted to know better. Yours very truly,
Europe has to show. Imperishable freshness!
WM. JAMES.
This is definitely my last year of lecturing, but I wish it
Everyone dead! Hodgson, Shaler, James Peirce this winter
were my first of non-lecturing. Simplification of the field
- to go no further afield! Resserrons les rangs!
of duties I find more and more to be the summum bonum
for me; and I live in apprehension lest the Avenger should
To Henry James.
cut me off before I get my message out. Not that the
CAMBRIDGE, Sept. 10, 1906.
message is particularly needed by the human race, which
DEAREST H.,-I got back from the Adirondacks, where
can live along perfectly well without any one philosopher;
I had spent a fortnight, the night before last, and in three
but objectively I hate to leave the volumes I have already
or four hours Alice, Aleck and I will be spinning towards
published without their logical complement. It is an es-
Chocorua, it being now five A.M. Elly [Temple] Hunter
thetic tragedy to have a bridge begun, and stopped in the
will join us, with Grenville, in a few days; but for the most
middle of an arch.
part, thank Heaven, we shall be alone till the end of the
But I hear Alice stirring upstairs, so I must go up and
month. I found two letters from you awaiting me, and
finish packing. I hope that you and W. J., Jr., will again
two from Bill. They all breathed a spirit of happiness,
form a harmonious combination. I hope also that he will
and brought a waft of the beautiful European summer with
stop painting for a time. He will do all the better, when he
them. It has been a beautiful summer here too; and
gets home, for having had a fallow interval.
now, sad to say, it is counting the last beads of its chaplet
Good-bye! and my blessing upon both of you. Your
of hot days out - the hot days which are really the abso-
ever loving,
lutely friendly ones to man - you wish they would get
W.J.
cooler when you have them, and when they are departed,
you wish you could have their exquisite gentleness again.
To H. G. Wells.
I have just been reading in the volume by Richard Jefferies
CHOCORUA, Sept. II, 1906.
called the "Life of the Fields" a wonderful rhapsody, "The
DEAR MR. WELLS,- I've read your "Two Studies in
Pageant of Summer." It needs to be read twice over and
Disappointment" in "Harper's Weekly," and must thank
country
A New Building for Music at
Bar Harbor
The idea has been rapidly growing among the
residents and cottagers at Bar Harbor that a build-
ing suitable for the music requirements of the
place would add materially to the advantages
which it possesses and fill what has become a real
artistic need. Year after year a greater number
of music-lovers and professional musicians have
found their way here until it now seems evident
that there exists a definite possibility of making
Bar Harbor something more than a mere summer
resort, however attractive-of making it in fact,
a nucleus that would gather to itself each year
whatever might be best in musical and other art.
With this ideal in view a committee has been
formed to purchase a site for such a building and
raise the necessary funds for its erection. The
land chosen, on Cromwell Harbor Road, adjoin-
ing the grounds of the Kebo Valley Club and Golf
Links and within easy reach of the village, has
been selected not only for its accessibility and
unrivalled mountain view but also for that quiet
pose for which the hall is sought commend itself
seclusion and freedom from disturbing influences
to the committee in charge, to hire the hall at a
which are necessary to all artistic accomplish-
reasonable price, and it is also hoped that the hall,
ment. The committee, composed of Mr. Dorr,
when built, will lend itself, through subscriptions
Mr. Eno, Mr. Vanderbilt, Mrs. Abbe, and Mrs.
made for that purpose, to free concerts and musi-
Dimock, have already secured this property, with
cal events, within it and upon the lawn outside,
the intention of proceeding at once to the erection
to which all, townspeople and summer residents
of the building in order that it may be completed
alike, would be welcome and which should help
before another season. It is proposed to form a
materially in the musical development of the
company whose shares of stock shall be available
town, already so successfully initiated, as well as
to everyone who may have an interest in such an
add to the interest and pleasure of Bar Harbor to
undertaking but formed, however, not for the
strangers coming to it as a summer resort.
purpose of investment but for the furtherance of
the musical, artistic and intellectual life of the
The architectural plan is to be entrusted to Guy
Lowell of Boston, whose ability has already won
place and region and of the social life which nat-
for him standing among the foremost architects in
urally springs from them. And it is the confi-
dent anticipation of those who have thus taken the
the country and led to his selection by the Corpo-
initiative that Bar Harbor can be made to stand
ration of Harvard University for its new Hall for
for an ideal of artistic achievement which will
Philosophy and other buildings of importance.
enhance its reputation throughout the whole coun-
It is therefore, the earnest hope of those at
try.
present interested in this endeavor that the enter-
It is the aim of the founders to increase not only
prise will appeal to all those who are interested
the love for music but the desire for whatever is
in the ends it has in view and that it may receive
excellent in art. For this reason the building will
the support essential to its success. It is their
be equipped with a stage for theatrical purposes,
conviction that the opportunity is one of true pub-
illustrated lectures, etc., as well as for concerts
lic advantage and capable of far-reaching develop-
and recitals. Any person will be able, if the pur-
ment.
Gay
give
1906
Papers. JDRJr. Files D3 B143
[
C. 1906
THE BAR HARBOR ASSOCIATION OF ARTS.
SUBSCRIPTIONS TO STOCK.
Mrs C. A. B. Abbe
$1000.
Mr. George S. Bowdoin
500.
Miss M. H. Dehon
200.
Mrs. Dehon
300.
Miss Evelina Palmer
100.
Mr. S. W. Beidgham
300.
Mr. Charles T. How
Henry Lane Eho
the
SUBSORIPTIONS TO
BONDS.
Mrs. John L. Narrison
100.
500.
$5000.
Miss Anna M. Clark
300.
Geo. W. Vande: bilt
3000.
Mr. W. Butler Duncan
200.
0 Mrs. Warner M. Loeds
100.
Mr. John S. Kennedy
500.
Mrs. Everet Maoy
100.
Mr. William Schieffelin
100.
Mrs. Wm. J. Schieffelin,
100.
Mrs. Miles B. Carpenter
500.
Carola L. Laugier Villars
300.
Johnston Livingston
300.
omit
William Lawrence
100.
Miss Anne Thompson
400.
A. Howard Hinkle
1000.
Adele Smith Bass
100.
Emily B. Trevor
300.
Miss Emily Trevor
200.
Susan W. Dimock
1000.
Susan Dimock Hutchinson
1006.
Louise W. Milliken
100.
Alice M. Draper
100.
Lucie How Schelling
100.
Dave H. Morris
100.
Alive V. Morris
100.
Mrs. Helen Seely
300.
Jessie Preston Deaper
200.
Emily J. Pearson
100.
Louis B. McCagg,
$100.
Mrs. Ruth Dana Draper
100.
Henry Lane Eno
3000.
x Francis L. Wellman
100.
Helen H. Draper,
100.
Thomas H. Hubbard
500.
Joseph Pulitzer,
1000.
Mr. C. S. Wadsworth
309.
Anne PierrepontLtiquer 100.
Mr. A. C. Gurnee
500.
Frederic Amory,
100.
Mrs. A. D. V. Ripley
100.
Morris K. Jesup
400.
John B. How
100.
Elizabeth F. Howard
300.
Mrs. Mary W. Cooper
100.
Miss Julia Cooper
100.
Mrs. E. B. N. Worden
100.
D. C. Blair
1000.
Emily B. Condon
100.
Margaret L. V. Shepard
200.
Edith S. Fabbri
100.
70
the it. Fabbri
100.
Dorothea Fremont-Smith
100.
Mrs. B. B. Gurnee
500.
Mrs. A. J. Cassatt
500.
Mary M. Sherman
200.
Gertrude C. Winthrop
100.
Juliet M. Livingston
100.
John J. Emery
500.
Lulu Platt Hunt
300.
D. B. Ogden
500.
George W. Vanderbilt
1000.
George B. Dorr
1000.
Edgar Scott
1000
Mildred Barnes
1000.
$20,400.
MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS BULLETIN
27
August. 1906.
Visiting Committees to the Museum
Trustees. The preparation of the final working
for 1906.
drawings as a basis for specifications and bids for
the construction of the building will be immediately
A
T their annual meeting in January the Trustees
entered upon, and it is hoped shortly to publish
added to the By-Laws of the Museum an
the plans with a description of the proposed
article providing for the annual appointment of
structure.
Visiting Committees entrusted with the duty of
examining and reporting upon the various depart-
ments of the Museum and branches of its activity.
Committee on the Utilization of the
In pursuance of this provision several Committees
Museum by Schools and Colleges.
have since been formed and have held meetings at
the Museum to acquaint themselves with its per-
THE first meeting of a committee formed to
promote the utilization of the Museum by
sonnel and its management. These Committees
schools and colleges took place at the Museum
consist of the following ladies and gentlemen
on May 23 last, under the chairmanship of
Administration.
Library.
President Eliot, the other members of the Commit-
Laurence Minot, Chairman.
C. K. Bolton, Chairman.
tee being President Henry Lefavour, vice-chairman,
T. Jefferson Coolidge, Jr.
Holker Abbott.
Mrs. Richard C. Cabot, Miss Frances R. Morse,
Arthur F. Estabrook.
Mrs. Henry D. Burnham.
Miss Anna D. Slocum, Professor P. H. Hanus,
A. Lawrence Lowell.
Miss Agnes Irwin.
Wallace L. Pierce.
A. W. Longfellow.
Mr. J. Randolph Coolidge, Jr., Temporary Director,
Mr. Walter Sargent, and Professor H. Langford
Chinese and Japanese Art.
Collection of Paintings.
Warren. Mr. M. S. Prichard was chosen as
Edward J. Holmes,
Dr. A. T. Cabot, Chairman.
Chairman.
Dr. Henry C. Angell.
secretary.
Mrs. Harold J. Coolidge.
Eben D. Jordan.
The aim of the Committee is to awaken an in-
Robert Treat Paine, 2d.
E. C. Tarbell.
terest in art among the students of our schools and
Mrs. George Tyson
F. P. Vinton.
colleges through the agency of the collections of
the Museum. A sub-committee of five members,
Classical Department.
Print Department.
consisting of Mr. Walter Sargent, chairman, Mrs.
E. W. Forbes, Chairman.
Francis Bullard, Chairman.
Cabot, Miss Morse, Miss Slocum and Professor
Mrs. W. Scott Fitz.
Gordon Abbott.
W. Amory Gardner
H. G. Curtis.
Hanus, was appointed to carry out the work out-
Bela L. Pratt.
Mrs. J. C. Phillips.
lined. For the coming November the sub-com-
Washington B. Thomas.
mittee has planned a course of introductory lectures
Educational Effort.
Textile Collection.
by prominent authorities, primarily for teachers, but
Stratton D. Brooks, Chairman.
Dr. D. W. Ross, Chairman.
open to all who wish to attend. Mr. John La
Mrs. Allen Curtis.
Miss Frances G. Curtis.
Farge has consented to speak on the consideration
George B. Dorr.
Dr. J. W. Elliot.
of Painting and the consideration of the Minor
Mrs. R. S. Russell.
Mrs. Bayard Thayer.
Walter Sargent.
C. J. H. Woodbury.
Arts, Mr. W. P. P. Longfellow on Architecture,
while Professor Warren and Mr. Sargent will give
Egyptian Department.
Western Art (except Textiles).
more general addresses. Further information in
G. M. Lane, Chairman.
T. Coolidge, Jr., Chairman.
Mrs. Frederick Ayer.
i. Tucker Burr.
regard to these lectures and to other plans of the
Mrs. T. James Bowlker.
Mrs. Lorin F. Deland.
Committee will be given in a subsequent Bulletin.
Augustus Hemenway.
Miss Ellen S. Hooper.
The movement thus auspiciously begun is the
Joseph Lindon Smith.
G. Macomber.
outgrowth of an effort initiated five years ago by
Miss Anna Boynton Thompson of Thayer Aca-
The Plans for the New Building.
demy, in cooperation with other ladies, to interest
teachers of history in New England in making
A
T the regular quarterly meeting of the Trus-
larger use of the stores of material apt for their
tees held on July 19, the Building Commit-
purposes which are contained in the museums of
tee presented a unanimous report approving a
Boston and other New England cities. A peti-
design for the new building of the Museum pre-
tion for instruction in connection with the Museum
pared by the architect, Mr. Guy Lowell, in con-
collections, signed by a large number of teachers of
sultation with Messrs. E. M. Wheelwright, R. C.
history in Massachusetts and neighboring states,
Sturgis, and Professor D. Despradelle, upon the
was presented to the Trustees of the Museum in
basis of sketch plans and elevations furnished him
1901, and met with cordial sympathy. On
by the Building Committee in January last as the
April 30, 1904, a meeting called by the ladies'
result of the cooperation of the architects named,
committee was held at the Westminster, and was
the Staff of the Museum, and the Committee dur-
addressed by President Eliot and other speakers.
ing the three years devoted to preliminary study of
The active aid of Simmons College was secured
the problem. The design was submitted in the
soon after its organization, and under its auspices
form of plans on the scale of working drawings,
courses of lectures to teachers were given in the
with elevations, sections and a perspective sketch,
Museum during the autumn months of 1904, and
and was accepted and adopted as the design for
again in the early months of 1905 and in the
the new building by a unanimous vote of the
present year. The final issue of these efforts has
Notz: In the 1907 annual FA., GBD is listed
as one of ten members y a friend-loising committee
This content downloaded from 137.49.1.13 on Mon, 22 May 2017 14:27:36 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
Query
Reply in Letter Book
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
June 25th, 1906.
Dear President Eliot,
T send you out with this the atlas of Bar Harbor.
My
land and that of the University is on sheet eleven; an index-map
at the beginning gives the general relations. The atlas-map is
very inaccurate in detail however as you will see on comparing it
with the surveyor's map. I also send you out another copy of the
latter to which I have added certain things that will make the
matter clearer to those who have not been over the land itself.
For these also I will state here what you and Dr Walcott know
already, that the land in question is cut off from the main part of
the land owned by the college by a right-of-way road over which
owners upon either side have right of passage either way, the right-
of-way itself having exit at either end to the Schooner Head Road;
that it lies remote from the house-site upon the land, which is above
the cliff and at the other end of the lot; and that it rises up too
steeply from the right of way, which skirts the base of the hill-
side as closely as the ledge allows, to be of use itself for build-
ing purposes. It also gives no access to my land above, whose
approach is from the other side, but the greater breadth and freedom
and better boundary which this land added to my own upon the hill-
top would give the latter if this should later on become a building-
site make it seem desirable, as I look ahead, for me to get.
Wi th regard to the value of the land, it is difficult to
es tablish actual market values in the absence of sales and where
2
m
the land itself varies 80 much in character and situation with
regard to building sites. No land south of Cromwell's Harbor Brook
of the neighborhood of the town, that is has been sold for quite
a number of years now, the Luquer place itself being the last, I
think, with the exception of the land on which McCagg has built on
Strawberry Hill, whose price was moderate I believe though what it
was
I
do
not
now
recall. A portion of Mr Luquer's land,adjoining
the land owned by the College between the right-of-way and shore
and about equal in extent with that, has been in the agents' hands
for sale for half a dozen years. at practically what was paid for it
originally, but I do not think that he has had an offer for it yet.
Mrs Markoe's land, beyond the Chase lot, has also been in the agents'
hands for some years past, but all the movement there is in real
estate at Bar Harbor at the present time seems to be upon the other
side of the town, up the Bay.
What I therefore propose is this, that someone in whose knowl-
edge, fairness and good judgment we both have confidence should be
appointed by us to determine what the value of the piece in question
is to the land between the right of way and shore; and also what
value the possession of the rights which I offer the College in part
exchange - to bring in the town-water supply, sewer pipes, tele-
phone, electric-light, or other wires
would add to the land the
College has to sell.
And then that I should pay the College what-
ever balance might remain after deducting the latter from the former.
For the right-of-way itself carries no other right along with it in
Maine, and Mr Luquer and I are accordingly arranging for an exchange
of land and rights;and I think that a similar arrangement would
3
be of advantage also to the College.
My own selection of a man to arbitrate upon these values would
be David Ogden of New York, who has been familiar with that neigh-
borhood longer than any other summer resident at Bar Harbor now
and is a lawyer of singular fairness and good judgement as well as
wide experience with regard to real estate, which is especially
his
field in legal practice. I should be equally satisfied how-
over with Edward Coles of Philadelphia, who has been a resident at
Bar Harbor, and familiar with that neighborhood, for the last
twenty-five years and in whose judgment as a man of business, as
well as fairness, I should also have complete confidence. Either
of these men, or any one else whom we might appoint, would naturally
consult moreover with the real estate agents at Bar Harbor before
rendering a decision. But I do not think that either of these
agents are men whose sole judgment could be relied upon in such a
matter.
Yours sincerely,
Georg. B. Dorse
June 29, 1906.
Dear Mar. Dorri-
The Corporation acted favorably on your request for the sale
to you of a portion of the Ellis land st Sant°'s Hiff, and left to me the
further arrangements for the sale.
Accepting your suggestion of No. David Ogden 9.8 a satisfactory
person to determine deteils of the transaction, I suggest that you invite
him to act, and say that we should be glad to have him consuls local ox-
perts if he desires to do so. The Corporation agreed with you that def-
inite rights to bring veder-pipes and wires to the balance of the Rilis
land might woll ha part of the consideration.
I have approved the bill of Mr. 19. W. Hill, and it will
shortly he paid by our Eurser. will you kindl let him understand, at
your convenience, that his bill dated March € was not received by Harvard
University until Suno 269
the matter of the DeWolf Street videning was referred by the
Corporation to the Premburnx, Mar. Charles Francis Adams, 2d, 50 Six St.,
Boston, with full power to take such action as you and he might think
expedient, exter that the Commonation did not feel that they could call
The
in / subscription singe the subscriptions wers 1201 made to them.
you and Appletion could devise a and which should include S. statement
that the President and Follows have streed to hold the money the apply it
-2-
as soon as possible to the purpose for which it was given.
I going tomorrow to Mount Desert, so that you can communed
Leate with me at Asticou.
Very timely yours,
C. W. E.
Mr. George B. Dorr.
[David Ogdea
C.W.E.]
8/6/1906
The land of Harvard College at 50210 CRIMY, par Member,
87 chown on the survey of E. 7. MANC, asset Certenher, 1905,
consists
or
a
st
'11)
1894
from
Boy
on
its
side
and 1638 fent long o 1:15 soucherly side, with a viritan of about
300
Perio
itc NAMES aides fronte on Frenchments Res
which it runs venterly, partially up the 8 101 of a etern
Clone low the hill, as cloan 30 the lay OF the Bana
allows, the !Poperly is interveeted be 9 right or way which
forms the common means of communication for this lot and a
number or others lying to the north and south of it with the
3: Road. This right of way starts at a point about
1120 and a half from the Bar Harbor stemboat where and rune
first through the land of Mr. George E. Down, a nistence of
1580 feet; then through the lane of Are. Turgeon, about 300
feet; and then across the college land and continues on, south
and west, through the lanus of various other owners until it
comes out again on the Schoomerhead Road about three quarters
of & Mile from the point where it started.
I am imported that the right of way running through
Mr. Dorn Laro in a were right of passage for the owners or
occupants of the land beyond. and includes no right to
construct or maintain water-pipes, sewers, electric or
telephone wires, either overhead or understound.
The land of Hr. Dorr bounds the college lauds our the
west. He owns the ton of the hill and his 1000 extends
-?-
portion down its essienn class, the repander of which
at the place in question below .... to the college.
Kr. Done wishes to buy feat the college so much of that
land as lies between 1.18 permitt and the centre.
of the right of way at the yout of the hill, containing in
Darr
all about two active, paying payment for it in such portion
as may be Renned a fair exchange by a grant of the right to
constitute and maintain in and along the right of way water-
pipes, sewers and electric light, power, and telephone wires
under reasonable conditions.
I have been asked by opinion as to whether it would
be to the advantage of the college to do thin, and if no
by in was terns.
1.
The first question which I have examined is as to
whether a sale of this plot would result in any inj try to
the remaining land of the college I have heen over the
land with care, have made Myself Amilian with its character,
and have reached the cyindon that the ownership by the
college of the lana in question aces not materially enhance
the value of 14,3 remaining property and could be sold
separately from 1 t without disadvantage.
The college love at its water frontage is a ateen
and rocky bluff. The house site on it would undoubtedly be
found at or near its highest point, which is 160 feet above
-3-
the level of the sea. THEN DONO about en feet back from
the actual shore. from this 10001 the land descents slowly
inland and smally honcess flat and marght. covered by a close
SPORTS or spall trees with a few good SIZON LU large over
among then. This low land continues title the
right of way is reached. on the further or venterly side of
the wight of way the land rises importately and steeply to
the westerly line OF the importive This acclivity, which is
rocky and in part precipitous in character, is too steep to
permit or the 1198 for building purposes, excent that At the
extreme southwestern corner of the property these
is a small, compenstively level but very recky piece on which
11 access to it could be obtained in space cottage might
concievably be built. Acce. however, could only be had
through Mr. Dorr's land, as the hillside caned by the college
in too steep to permit of the construction of a road, except
at it high grade and prohibitive cost. The survey showe that
on the northerly line the two-acre plot in question mises
39 feet in 153 feet, and along its southerly side 89 feet in
a distance of 308. The surface is extrepely broken, always
rocky and frequently precipitous. Horeover, if such a cottage
as I have mentioned were built, it would have no view it could
control, owner to trees upon adjoining land, except nearly
due exct. where on could only see a strip of water on the
-4-
there of the Bay and the pastorn shove 10001 whee
as that point If Int and The of
the cottern 0300 would be 924 feet above 1.00 WRITER Retween
1: active the bay rices the ridge on Hill on the water-front
almandy mentioned, the highest elevation of which 18 160
so that the COLLINS .... would be only about 60 feet above this
ridge The horizontal distance between these points 21 over
1860 feet. from which it, is obvious that trees or large
buildings on the ridge would intercent the nume of vision
from the proposed cottage gite nearly :0 the horison.
The land proposed to be purchased has Ir. Dorr is,
summary
therefore, in itself of no come Licenable intrinsic value,
considered alone. There is also much unsold land on the
neighboring hillsides S.S well as on the 8 one, land which has
direct acces. to multife reada and commande vastly superior
views to the lot in question, and it seens to 110 fairly
contain that with all that land has been taken un there
could be no reasonable expectation of finding a purchaser for
the lot, in question excent as an included portion of the lot
upon the shore.
Augut.
At present, and for P. number or years past, the line
of devolorm nit in BAY Harber has been in other directions and
the Dew agles of real estate which have taken place in this
district have been at very moderate prices, and I do not think
-5-
it can be said at present that as any actual miss
for such land as thin. Even water fronts on that part of the
bay are difficult so dispose of. considering all this, I
then time surver walling to sell would act winely If he
Titled an offer of one thousand dollars for the two acter
in question. If put on the market at that price, it would,
I believe, be a very long time before any purchaser other
than Mr. Dorr could be four
2.
I have next considered whether it would be advisal le
for the College to make the and now at that price, or to
hold the land for the future developrecist f 3 market for it.
In regard to this it must be homes in mind that all the land
now owned by the college is out off from any ROCACC to a
over
highway excent - the might of way I have described, which
18 a right, as T an informed, simply of passage and repre as
and includes no rights to construct or maintain severating
water-pipes or electric wires. These lattor rights are essen-
tial, in my judgment, to the sale of the property. A lot
which does not nosses than 19 simply out 0+ the market,
I1 it were merely it question of whether the college
should accent 2 cank offer of one thousand dollars for the
If dee need
land, I world any that while the price was sufficient it was
not a swi large enough in itself to make it worth the
College " while to sell wiless the money were actually needed
why
by it.
Bill
11
Mr.
Dorn
.100
in
exchange
a
However,
managable grant of the nits over the right of
worr "Sweet has by the
WA
mere
!
and
to
obtain
for
Digits 0702 the right of way where 16
the
the
1.00 the of Mes. luquer ) I 00.171den MALL the
923est of 0019 would be to make the college
property marketable, which at present It i not. And that such
a sale would therefore be very advanta cause +0) the college.
It is quite impossible to fix the increment of value
which would 3 one to the college land unon the shore, its main
101, from the possession of these rights. It is a question
of not bein, it in to sell the property at all wileps they are
obtained.
There
is
or
course
the
FOR
this
the
Might
no obtained by procuring the town to lay out a highway along
the present in This, however, I think, would in
the end prove a very expensive business for the college. the
which would have to be paid to the persons 3'.086 land
is taken would be serious, and would ultimitely to a large
extent have 10 be paid by the college itself.
%oreover, it would certainly be A detriment to the
college land to be intersected by a public road as against
its free use of a right of way.
After considerable care, I have therefore reached the
Creducers
exclusion: first, that the value 01 the land which Mr. Damn
-7-
deaires to buy does not exceed 11,000; seems three it would
be winn for the collere to Bell to Mr. Dorn, receiving as sole
cunsidcration a proper green, extending from the north line of
the college property through lrs. Luquer's and in. Dorr's
land to the choonerhead road, of rights to construct and Mail-
tain sexers, drains, water-pipes, electric wires for light,
power, and telephone purposes, and for such other means
either of communication or or transmis ion or power as May
hereafter be invented and are extended along the highway of
the town.
any. 6. 1906
Old Farm,
Bar Garbor, Matne.
my dear President Elist,
M Ogden did not / unuru
from New York when he intended and, oway
his report- I Now EnClose it; and, with it, a
I have not been able until law you
and Mu Coles's bagic death on Saturday,
been the he stat the our with it which will
efflaw. itself I have taken
M agdin's refielt; before I sent it on you I
also, attach you permission of Showing M Sugue
ment in it which he as own of adjoin, land
withed to alceilam whether there were any State
Similarly placed, height criticin - Heread it thing
unit care / said lu thought th Statement fair and
accurate_ I am how maki, with him a Smila.
Inauguent to that from the braingh Which have
Old Farm,
Bar Garbor, Maine.
been drawn uh by M Diely- I will Send you a
colog of these you would like to Lu that Artain
things ah different in his Cale hours. - the , lin dulake.
Wh Share (iit - the the effects of mutter, any N all
of the will Induponed W lew I may Call on him
to do to - and ) lulu hall a Smile. obligation
toward him - He has also just Shared unit Mrs
the expenses of au lue depraid System of Vurface -
drainage needlay for format washing mt along the
upper portion of The road, which Cost us / don
by Contract_ And he has agreed than kid
Mrs in its lat. Ju Efacia it down needlay also W
the hell it is
keeping it in good refair and like a private ablam,
which lue forh are aupon that it should be_
Unit regard to the lown Wate suffly, the Company
for might a situich main halfway wh the right f
Way Some year ago, upon you, guarantee it's Minum
3
Old Farm,
Bar Darbor, Maine.
annual/playment for the Water uled the life
head if anoth house use built beyond 15
it would the directedly effend 16 tay friday
be supplied from timid When the /iv don. a hydrais
the fight of way av a protection
should hephered at the begin of the Woods along
which IV new a Serim daugh to the Sugar's have
would be to any other built there to hill the Chair
laud pleasure lll Cleaud_
With regard to Connection hid the
lowu leare down the night way, would lu needed
only from such huilding or pasting building as were
will fuilt upon the Sea-ward Hotic of the ridge above
the Cliff, but as the main portune fall that
stopus inland I have Considered it him than
photable that Juct Connection would be needed
is the falust and partfuilt reference to this land,
as Cassbool alla-flow Would ullina by deserved On Sea
if
Old Farm.
Bar Darbor, Maine.
our land in The fulure c paid do loan two yea.
and party will return Is the of My
ago 1000 to get the Won Seave which was this
fluided along the than road up W the Capp laid
deef through for Connection with a pife Hun ,
from The fight of way, what it had not
planned to do
When th Calley land N hill upon, I thing a Hight
Change in th hea where it leaves by
for tafety but and Convenience- Ifil College Itumed
laud - looft info below- - will lu heava,
will to mak. the Change Indian If the land's Sale,
unit reference pressy by it it Can
be down at day thus- I Confide it ( Nential to
good approach
unit legard to what Mr. April say in his hote, in
explanator of list Consult litten of the
Old Farm.
Bar Garbor, Maine.
Min at Ba Harth, fred May N Means, Contine
he was right i this Smith Kunolidge of the
-
men / the efferience they have had_ Blat it
liters has hern to little Jalef land here In So long
befollowed allo this Ochide f in actual billey
was Comu his oun pudgement not Min, that
that un all know as nuce about H. that
have been Inadi as the agent do themselves, whou
fusiness as M. Apdem Lays has ben almout whoth
histi
different fort life, an the opportunity offend by
May only turned to the from a Why
W fop's death - they year ago
the a
had defective I aud do 41 hust_ The fin
Mean's judgement as If matter of thin gart Than
chaneca How
person line left here who has had a wide experience in
How - 1 whose Mr experience has lai. however
land Transactions / abservation f them is Charles
wholl on the other Vid. of rh. lear ruf th. has where
investments
Old Farm,
Bar Garbor. Maine.
are_ Think L however,
Willing ladinu with him in the
his from of View a broad Our and I should would
to hade Im do Id Mr. Dealy's judgedult Henda
also loof upon as Sound good N ; and a hearly
all land handactimi like - alway the Sammun
residents in - have passed Hudn his review hi.
efferience would be as aid as their ham been, or
hearly Lo_ But I rath doubt his wish / set
Miss au frimon in a matte out of len Muss line,
Weshund also have to Consult professionally
if at all__
I do that think of they thing further the Shinle K la
Refun night acus the land, we
The dud, diann by M. Dear Convining
among us unit huach Care r it Would Serm h the Call
equally, anit certain Changes... Stugest Find
[G.B.Dorr]
Bar Harbor, Maine.
September 6th, 1900.
President Eliot,
Northeast Harbor, Maine.
My dear President Eliot,
I was not able to get away from here and go out west as
Trip
of
I intended. The responsibility, financial and architectural, for
Building the Arts.
the new Building of Arts has been on my shoulders and I have not
felt that I could leave it. And I have also had work connected
with my Nurseries and with the development of my land here which
made it necessary I should stay. Mr Luquer and I are now just
concluding our exchange of land and rights. The deed for the
conveyance of rights was one that needed to be thought out carefully
and as Mr Deasy has been out of town a good deal the matter lingered
on.
I am now going up to Boston, in ten or twelve days, to con-
clude the work in which I was engaged last winter. Is there any-
thing that I can do before I go with regard to the arrangement of
matters between myself and Harvard College ? I think that the
deed
drawn up with Mr Luquer, omitting certain engagements which he
undertakes in connection with the extension, etc., of the wires
across my land and which would not apply in the case of the College,
?
will meet your approval as a basis for my exchange with the college.
I submitted it to Mr Ogden in its final form, for friendly criti-
cism, and he passed on it as good. He has now gone down to New
York but will return for a few days on the 16th.
Mrs Markoe and I are now at work on a plan for the completion
of the right of way through to the Schoonerhead Road along a new
route, made possible by a proposed exchange of land between us,
which if carried out according to my plan for it, with certain
park-like restrictions upon its horders, will, I think, turn the
right of way into a much-used pleasure drive and add materially to
the effective value of all the land from Luquer's out that borders
on it - or, what is the same thing, to the possibility of selling
it.
Incidentally, later in the fall I should like to try, through
Mr Adams, whether succes ful pressure cannot be brought to bear
Asks with
by the college as her next neighbor, upon Mrs Chase through Lewis
help
Dabney, who is her man of business, for the clearance of her land
friend
from dead and dying trees. In its present condition it constitutes
a serious menace from fire to all the lands adjoining it as well as
to Mr Luquer's house and even to My own and others. These are the
only woods now uncared - for for a long distance and its condition
makes it a source of serious possible injury and real danger in
a time of drought. to its neighbors.
Some time early in October, when I am back in Boston, I should
like to come out and have a talk with you as to the most effective
HRA
method of urgins the construction of the DeWolfe Street Parkway
3
upon the City of Cambridge. I will also confer with Mr Adams
about it.
Sincerely yours,
Story. B. Dars
P. S. To tell you something about the new building here of
which I spoke, and which I think will interest you in itself and
in its site when it is done, I am going to enclose you under
separate cover a program I chanced to have left over of a concert
given for its benefit by the musicians here, and my own report as
president of the Association which is building it, published by
the local paper. We hope to use it for horticultural exhibitions,
and lectures on that and other subjects, as well as for music and
occasional dramatic performances of the more artistic sort.
THE 'OTHER SIDE'
OF GEORGE B. DORR
By Ronald H. Epp
Acadia co-founder George B. Dorr, is silhouetted by the view of Frenchman Bay from the veranda of his home Old Farm in Bar Harbor.
t is 75 years since the Father of Acadia
developed out of his relationship with
today still celebrate about Acadia National
I
died at Old Farm in Bar Harbor on
Harvard University's William James, a
Park, the "endless vistas," of the island, the
August 5, 1944. From that family
physician, philosopher, and psychologist.
"fragrant worlds of steadfast land and sea,"
home, George B. Dorr also planned the
His revolutionary "Principles of Psychology"
"the mountains
their silent promises
establishment of the Mount Desert Island
(1890) substituted the methods of
of eternal peace," many wishing that "this
Biological Laboratory, the Jackson Lab,
laboratory science for faith-based belief in
desert was my dwelling place."
and Mount Desert Nurseries. In addition
an immortal soul. James attracted Dorr to
During the first three decades of Old
to these scientific pursuits, the emerging
his studies because neither dismissed nor
Farm, Mary and her husband, Charles,
paranormal science developed at Old Farm
accepted paranormal claims.
entertained academics with paranormal
has received little notice. Yet ultimately, it
interests. Harvard philosopher Josiah
too would play a role in the evolution of the
James and Dorr stood apart
Royce dedicated his influential book on
national park.
the religious aspects of philosophy to Mrs.
In the late 1870s, his mother, Mary Gray
in their commitment to be
Dorr. The stature of physiologist Henry
Ward Dorr, enlisted the Boston spiritualist
strictly scientific-cautiously
P. Bowditch prompted author Margaret
community in her efforts to contact her
perched on the fence of
Deland to write in "Golden Yesterdays," "if
eldest son William following his death from
a man like Dr. Bowditch is interested in this
typhus. This was not the first instance of
uncertainty. In his memoirs,
'psychic stuff,' perhaps there is something
her reliance on the occult, for the death of
Dorr expresses the Jamesian
in it?" From abroad, English philologist
her brother John in 1856 initiated a similar
view that such phenomena
Frederick W.H. Myers and Australian
effort. Consequently, George Dorr matured
"are
not
impossible,"
attorney Richard Hodgson entered into
in a spiritualistic family. When Old Farm
their heady dialogues.
was completed in 1880, some guests that
reminding us that "the realms
These were not just maverick scholars,
his mother invited were investigators of
explored
by
science
are
for they formed the core of a new
the spirit realm.
"extraordinarily complex."
professional organization. The Society for
These researchers used existing
Psychical Research had been established in
scientific methods and developed new
The James family were frequent guests
London and immediately formed in 1884
experiments to analyze premonitions,
at the Dorr residence. Their signatures
an American branch which Hodgson led
apparitions, clairvoyance, psychokinesis,
are contained in the "Old Farm House
after its establishment by James. At the
telepathy, automatic writing, and
Book," displayed at the Bar Harbor
same time, G. Stanley Hall received the first
other paranormal practices. Mary Dorr
Historical Society Museum. This historic
American doctorate in psychology under
favored mediums who "fell asleep" only
document contains scores of signatures,
the mentorship of James, quickly rising to
to awake later apparently as another
poems, musical passages, and photographs
the presidency of Clark University-where
person-a disincarnate spirit control who
there is a collection of Dorr-Hall letters on
documenting the positive feelings associated
manipulated the body of the medium.
with the property and the island. More
parapsychology.
Her surviving son's interest; however;
than a dozen poems revel in what people
James' argued that the ideal of every
14
Summer
Friends \cadia Journal
on
the w
that
not a
the n
heech
silon promise of eternal peace
Oliver Wendell Homes, August 123/85
Among the many luminaries who visited the Dorr family home, Old Farm, in Bar Harbor, and made entries in its guest book were, from left, President Chester Arthur,
author of the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" Julia Ward Howe, and Beatrix Jones (Farrand). Behind those photos is an image of a note and autograph by physician and
poet Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.
science-that of a coherent and closed
lost interest in paranormal research. Perhaps
associated with the supernatural beliefs
system of truths-necessitates that
it was because Clark and Harvard became
implicit in psychical research with the
phenomena unverifiable within the system
the first American academic institutions to
satisfactions implicit in efforts begun to
must be untrue. Consequently, belief that
receive endowments for parapsychology
protect the natural world celebrated in
all crows are black is not defensible if one
studies. The New York Times emphasized
poetry by many Old Farm guests and other
witnesses the appearance of a white crow.
that "the acceptance of [Harvard University]
island visitors.
Hodgson, James, and Dorr were the
funding makes it impossible for any other
Julia Ward Howe, her daughter and
principle investigators in America of a
institution in this country to disregard or to
author Laura E. Richards, and others did
"white crow," Mrs. Leonora Piper-an Old
disrespect this work."
not document an awareness of the need
Farm guest in 1907. A Boston housewife
Dorr contrasted the recurring frustration
continued on page 18
with exceptional powers that appeared first
in childhood, she had never been to Bar
Harbor. Nonetheless, Piper "recalled" the
pansies Mary Dorr spread loosely over the
Old Farm table as well her delight in riding
the bicycle path that her son built at Beaver
Pond at the north end of today's Champlain
Mountain. Careful scrutiny led James and
others to conclude that Piper was not
telepathic, and that the source of her claims
could not be explained. The "Old Farm
Series" of experiments were published by
James and to this day are referenced in the
psychological literature.
James and Dorr stood apart in their
commitment to be strictly scientific-
cautiously perched on the fence of
uncertainty. In his memoirs, Dorr expresses
the Jamesian view that such phenomena
"are not impossible," reminding us that
"the realms explored by science are
"extraordinarily complex."
In 1905 Hodgson died; five years later
Dorr biographer Ronald H. Epp displays the guest book of the Dorr family home Old Farm
James, and six years later Josiah Royce. Dorr
which is in the collection of the Bar Harbor Historical Society.
Friends of Acadia Journal
2010
15
Dorr, continued from page 15
iii
PERUVIANLINK
ALPACA COLLECTION
44 COTTAGE ST. BAR HARBOR (207) 288-8988
W
WALLACE EVENTS
LET'S GET THIS PARTY STARTED
36 Commerce Park
Ellsworth ME 04605
(207) 667-6000
Old Farm, the family home of the Dorr family, was located near Compass Harbor in Bar Harbor. It was
WALLACEEVENTS.COM
torn down in 1949. An online app, available on the Friends of Acadia website, allows users to take a virtual
tour of the property.
- BAR HARBOR
to protect Nature from degradation. It was
century away from the otherworldliness
THE CAT CAME BACK
their host, George Dorr, who understood
of spiritualism to the pragmatic yet
the growing threats and allied himself with
MAINE NOVA SCOTIA
still spiritually-inspiring national park-
Harvard President Charles W. Eliot to
building goal: conserve for the public the
establish in 1901 the Hancock County
natural splendors of Mount Desert. *
Trustees of Public Reservations, the
organization that eventually acquired
RONALD EPP is the author of "Creating
the lands that became Sieur de Monts
Acadia National Park, The Biography of
THE CAT
FERRIES.CA
National Monument, the core of
George Bucknam Dorr," published in 2016
today's Acadia National Park.
by Friends of Acadia. It is available locally
In effect, Dorr's priorities shifted
and online at Sherman's Book Store and the
during the first decade of the 20th-
Bar Harbor Bookshop.
BOOK PROFILES
CREATING
ACADIA FOUNDER
ACADIA
Copies of Creating Acadia National
NATIONAL PARK
Park, The Biography of George
RONALD H. EPP
Bucknam Dorr by Ronald Epp can be
The Biography of
picked up at Sherman's Bookstore in
George Bucknam Dorr
Bar Harbor, the Bar Harbor Book Shop
in Hulls Cove, the Eastern National
gift shop at the Acadia National Park
Visitor Center (seasonal), and at the
Friends of Acadia Office on Cottage
Street in Bar Harbor.
For links to order a copy online
please visit friendsofacadia.org/epp.
(Ed.) Gardner lleopphy M.D.
glifton, N.J. Augustus ll Kelley, 1973 Orig. 1960.
and R.O. Ballou,
150
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
151
tion that originally came thus, quickly ceases to be supernormal.
And do you remember the discussion I had with Jack, when he
The control G. P. at the outset of his appearance gave supernormal
got impatient? You were much amused!
information copiously, but within a few years he has degenerated
[His recollection of his discussion with Jack, who used, to-
into a shadow of his former self, dashing in and quickly out again,
gether with M., to be at our house with him a great deal in the
with an almost fixed form of greeting. Whatever he may have been
old days, is characteristic. I do not myself remember the special
at first, he seems to me at last to have "passed on," leaving that
occasion to which he refers, but the incident, including my own
amusement at the heat they used to get into in their talk, falls
amount of impression on the trance-organism's habits.
in most naturally with all my own recollections of that time.-D.]
I will now cull from the records a number of extracts relative
to particular sitters, which show the control's familiarity with their
And I remember your mother's calling me out one Sunday
morning to see the servants go to church on a buckboard.
affairs, calling the first of these extracts
[I cannot now recall my mother taking R. H. out to see the
2. The Oldfarm Series
servants off on any special day, but he was with us many Sun-
Oldfarm is the name of Mr. George B. Dorr's place at Bar Har-
days, and I have no doubt that his memory of this is absolutely
bor, Maine, where R. H. had often been a summer guest. Mrs.
accurate, nor is it anything of which Mrs. Piper might know-it
is not the sort of thing that anyone would have spoken to her of,
Piper at the time of these sittings had never been at Bar Harbor;
or mentioned at the trance. The buckboard is quite correct. It
and although she had had many interviews, as well with Mr. Dorr
was a big buckboard that carried six people and was the only
as with Mr. Dorr's mother before the latter's death, it is unlikely
wagon which we had big enough to take all the people up, but its
that many of the small veridical details in what follows had been
use is not sufficiently universal at Bar Harbor to injure the evi-
communicated to her at those interviews. At Mr. Dorr's sitting of
dential value of his recollection of it. Again, the people used to
go off from the kitchen, which is at an end of the house and can-
June 5th, 1906, he asks the R. H.-control for his reminiscences of
not be seen from the living rooms or piazzas, SO that his state-
Oldfarm: "Do you remember your visits to us there?"
ment that my mother called him out to see them off, while a
Certainly I do. One night we stayed out too long and your
small point, seems to me of value; and the event itself, with the
mother got very nervous, do you remember? Minna was there.
arrangements that had to be made to make it possible, was quite
We stayed out much too long. I felt it was a great breach of
enough of a circumstance in our family life to make recollection
of it natural.-D.]
etiquette but we couldn't help it! I fear as guests we were bad
[laughs].
I can see the open fireplace in the living room.
[R. H.'s sitting out with "Minna" and others "much too long"
[The room is one in which the fireplace, broad and arching, is
and "their being bad as guests" seems excellent. In old days they
the central feature and would be first thought of in thinking of
used often to sit up hopelessly late into the night, when the nights
the room.-D.]
were pleasant, out on the piazza, talking in the dark; and my
(Do you remember where you used to sleep?)
mother's half-real and half-humorous exasperation over it, ex-
Out in the little house just out across the yard, where we used
pressed in her own vivid way, and R. H.'s boyish delight in doing
to go and smoke.
it and at the scoldings they all used to get for it next day, would
naturally be one of the first things he would recall, associated
[His recollection also of the little house is good. The only
as those evenings were with people whom he cared for.-D.°]
mistake in reference to it is in speaking of it as "across the yard,"
it being in fact across the lawn and garden, upon a hillside op-
George B. Dorr.-ED.
posite the house. We always kept some rooms in it for our guests,
152
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
153
overflowing into it when the house was full, and R. H. liked it
whether he could recall the man's name. He also asks him if he
better than the house itself in the greater freedom that it gave
remembers the name of the man who lived in the farmhouse, where
him. We used to close the house itself early in the evening, and
R. H. was very apt then to go up to the cottage with some other
R. H. used generally to sleep when staying at Oldfarm. Both of
man or men and sit up and smoke and talk-often until quite
these names would have been quite familiar to R. H. in life. R. H.
late.-D.]
cannot give them and makes no attempt to do so.
I remember the bathing and the boats and a walk through the
[R. H.] Names are the hardest things to remember; it's extraor-
woods.
dinary but it's true. The scenes of my whole life are laid open
[The bathing was one of the incidents at Oldfarm which R. H.
to me but names go from one's memory like a dream. I remember
would have best remembered. We used to take long walks over
walking through the woods there and sitting down and lighting
the mountains and go down for a plunge when we returned from
my pipe and coming back late to lunch.
them. There were often three or four men or more going in to-
On June 20th, 1906, at a sitting of Miss Bancroft's, at which Mr.
gether when the house was full, and it was something in which
Dorr was present, the R. H.-control suddenly writes:
R. H. delighted especially, SO that his recollection of this would
be apt to be one of his most vivid ones.-D.]
Do you remember anything about Celery-root? about Celle
root?
(Do you remember whether you used to bathe off the beach,
or off the rocks?)
[To G. D.] (Do you remember anything about it?)
[G. B. D. No.]
We used to bathe off the rocks; I'm sure of that. I can see the
Or was it at your place, George. [Difficulty in reading this
whole place.
sentence. When read successfully, G. B. D. says "yes."]
[I asked the question as to whether we went in off the rocks
Your mother used to have it, and I was surprised to see it there
or the beach SO as to see if he really had a clear remembrance of
as I thought it the best of it. As I thought it the best part of it.
it, and I asked it in such a way that my companion at the sitting
The best part of it. No one would ever think of this thing I know.
thought R. H.'s answer "off the rocks" was probably wrong. My
(You mean you think you got this at Mr. Dorr's?)
bath-house was not on the beach, but on a point running far out
Think! I know. I think so, yes. I think George's mother used
into the sea, very bold and rocky, and we used to spring off the
to have it and I never got it anywhere but there.
rocks into deep water, climbing out by a perpendicular ladder
D., who did not at first recall what is meant, then remem-
fastened to the ledge.-D.]
bers and says "Good." He appends the following note:
I can see the little piazza that opened out from your mother's
room and the whole beautiful outlook from it, over the water.
[We used to have a bunch or two of raw celery, when we grew
[That that piazza and its view should be one of R. H.'s strong-
our own, placed on the table as a hors d'oeuvre, and served
est recollections of the place seems to me most natural, while at
whole, with the upper portion of the root left on it in the French
the same time the piazza itself, which is not a conspicuous object
fashion. This part of the root is very good eating, but it is not
in the house from without, and which was only familiar to my
usually served in America; and though I have no clear remem-
mother's more intimate friends, is not a thing which would occur
brance now of special talk about this with R. H., I remember
naturally to anyone not familiar with our life down there.-D.]
quite well his talking at our table late one fall about these autumn
vegetables and think that what is spoken of is this.-D.]
Mr. Dorr then asks R. H. if he remembers a walk he once took
On July 2nd, 1906, Mr. Dorr had a spoken sitting alone, taking
with a young friend from New York, where R. H. outwalked the
the shorthand record himself, and asked again for Oldfarm recol-
other man and was very triumphant about it afterward, and
lections.
154
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
155
(Can you give me any names connected with Bar Harbor, or
(But my mother is on your side.)
of the mountains there which you used to climb, or of the people
Oh yes, I had forgotten. It has troubled me over here, thinking
to whose houses you used to go with me, or any others that you
I might have left her letters among my papers. So I spoke to
can recall?)
Piddington about it.
No, I can't recall any names now.
I will think it over and
(I think you must have destroyed them. We didn't find any.)
try.
I think I must have destroyed them-I hope I did.
(Can you recall four sisters whom we used to walk with, and
[This "Huldah" episode is treated in a separate section of Part
be much with, a number of years ago?)
I of this report, see above, p. J.]
I remember Minna and Gemma. [Names known to the medium
I recall the pansies your mother used to place over the table. I
in former trances, but pertinent as a reply.]
remember that well-delightful to see them! I can see them now.
(I will give you the name of the sisters, and see if that recalls
anything to you. It was the Minturns.)
[My mother used to have pansies spread loosely over the table-
Oh! the Minturns! [repeated eagerly and emphatically].
cloth, when she had people to dine or sup with us at Bar Harbor,
There was Gertrude and Robert, a brother named Robert-and
where we had a large bed of them planted near the house so that
Mary. They lived in New York. I remember them well. [Correct,
we could get them freely for this purpose. The custom is not
save that Mary should have been May.]
common enough to let H.'s statement pass for a happy guess, nor
(There was another sister, who used to walk oftenest with us-
do I think it likely he would have spoken of it to Mrs. Piper,
can you recall her name?)
either awake or in trance. It came out quite suddenly also, and
[R. H. makes one or two ineffectual attempts, giving wrong
with a positiveness which made me feel that it was a true recol-
names.]
lection, something seen at the moment in a mental picture.-D.]
(Now, Hodgson, can't you tell me something about the lady
D., endeavoring to extract Bar Harbor names from R. H.,
you were interested in, whose letters you asked Piddington to
again tries to get that of the man who occupied the farmhouse at
find?)
which R. H. used generally to sleep when at Oldfarm. He was not
This was Huldah Densmore.
(But there is no Huldah in the family, that I know, nor can we
able to give that but gave the name of the gardener, Miller. "It is
learn of any. We have asked her sister, and she has never heard
possible," Mr. Dorr writes, "that Mrs. Piper may have heard of
the name of Huldah.)
Miller's name as that of the manager of my plant-nurseries at Bar
Wait a moment. Let me think. It is most difficult to get earthly
Harbor. I remember I once meant to send her some plants from the
memories. They go from one, but I find that they come back to
nurseries for her garden, and think it probable they went. It is
me as I think of things. She married a -[name of nationality
also possible that the name may have come up at the trance in my
given correctly]. If you will write to her, you will find I am right.
Write to her!
own past sittings."
(Did you want to marry her?)
I remember a beautiful road, a bicycle-road you made, going
Yes, I did. And I remember what a disappointment it was to
through the woods.
me.
[A dozen years ago I made a bicycle-road on my own back-
(Was she out of sympathy with your work?)
land, which ran through the woods beneath a mountain over
She wanted me to give it up-it was a subject she did not
which we often used to walk. It was a pleasant and familiar
care to have to do with. [Correct as to the lady's animus.]
feature in our summer life there, and it would naturally be one of
(Was it at our house you met her?)
the pictures that would come back to R. H. in thinking of the
I met her there, at Bar Harbor. Your mother ought to remem-
place-like the view from my mother's balcony of which he spoke
ber it well. She introduced us to each other. [Correct.-D.]
at the former sitting. But it is not a thing of which either he or I
156
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
157
would have spoken to Mrs. Piper, whether in trance or awake.
[I used to carry a little canvas bag slung over my shoulder
-D.]
and a cup in it, when we went on long tramps. This may be what
G. B. D. then tries again to get the name of the man who oc-
R. H. refers to, though I think that he was rather apt to carry a
folding leather cup of his own in his pocket. The whole recol-
cupied the farmhouse, describing him to R. H. without mentioning
lection is rather vague in my memory, going back a number of
his name.
years. The picture is a good one of just what used to happen
when we were off on our tramps together, though of course what
Oh yes, I remember him well-I remember going off with him
he describes would be always apt to happen on walks through
once fishing-going down the shore in a boat.
I remember
woods and over mountains. The picture of the little brook we
one evening, and it impressed me SO vividly because your mother
used to stop and drink at is good-I can see it
did not like it, and I felt we had done wrong and hurt her-M.
and I were smoking together and we talked too late, and she felt
After some talk about the Tavern Club, Australia, and the state
it was time to retire-
of things in the other world-some of which will be noticed later,
[This would be remarkably good if the incident should prove
R. H. goes on as follows:
not to have come up already in R. H.'s own sittings after M. died.
Do you remember one summer there was a gentleman at your
She used to smoke cigarettes occasionally, and was the only per-
house who had a violin. I had some interesting talks with him
son of the feminine sex whom I now recall as having done SO at
about these things, and I liked to hear him play his violin. A
our house. Unless in possibly referring to this incident to her
little gentleman- remember him very well.
"spirit" at trances, after M. died, Hodgson would have been most
unlikely to speak of it to others-certainly not to Mrs. Piper,
[This describes a man named von G., who was an excellent
either in trance or awake.-D.]
violinist and who also talked interestingly on psychical research
matters, in which he professed to have some faculty. As R. H.
(Do you remember where you went with John Rich when you
himself was also fond of the violin, it seems natural that some
went fishing with him-Oh I forgot! I did not mean to give you
memory of von G. should stand out now. That Mrs. Piper should
his name!)
have any knowledge of this gentleman seems most improbable.
John Rich, John, that is his name! But I am sorry you gave
-D.]
it to me too-it might have come to me. We got a boat and went
over to an island. Coming back we had some difficulty in getting
My earthly memories come only in fragments. I remember
our fish in. We had poor luck in catching them, and then we lost
quite well this little gentleman and how interested I was in talk-
them. Ask him, he will remember it, I think.
ing with him about psychics, and in his instrument as well. I
remember a man Royce visiting you.
[R. H.'s recollection of going off with Rich seems to be good,
as I think it over. That he should go off with Rich only and
[Professor Royce says that he has been at Oldfarm along with
neither alone nor with me or other guests, is exactly what hap-
Hodgson, but adds that that might be a natural association in
pened-and yet not what might have been expected to happen.
Mrs. Piper's mind, since he thinks that the only time he ever saw
His going to an island is descriptive also.-D.]
her was at the Dorrs' in Boston.]
This is, I think, the whole of the matter relative to Oldfarm
Do you remember what you used to put over your back that
had a cup in it? And there was a little brook where we used to
which the R. H.-control has given. The number of items mentioned
stop and drink. And then I used to stop and light my pipe-the
is not great, and some inability to answer questions appears. But
whole scene is as vivid to me! If I could only express it to you!
there are almost no mistakes of fact, and it is hardly possible that
158
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
159
all the veridical points should have been known to Mrs. Piper
First rate.
normally. Some of them indeed were likely a priori; others may have
(I can scarcely speak to you.)
been chance hits; but for the mass, it seems to me that either read-
But you must speak to me.
ing of Mr. Dorr's mind, or spirit return, are the least improbable
(Will you give me some definite message?)
Surely I will. I have called and called to you. Do you re-
explanations.
member what I said to you about coming here if I got a chance?
The fewness of the items may seem strange to some critics. But
(Yes, I do.)
if we assume a spirit to be actually there, trying to reach us, and
I wish you to pay attention to me. [The sitter and Mr. Dorr
if at the same time we imagine that his situation with regard to
were together trying to decipher the script.] Do you remember
the transaction is similar to our own, the surprise vanishes. I have
how I used to talk about this subject, evenings? You know what
been struck over and over again, both when at sittings myself and
you said about my writing-I think I am getting on first rate.
when reading the records, at the paralyzing effect on one's ready
[Everything accurate SO far! Miss B. can herself write auto-
wit and conversational flow, which the strangeness of the condi-
matically, and since R. H.'s departure, has thought that he might
have been influencing her subconsciousness in that and other
tions brings with it. Constraint and numbness take the place of
ways. The words "I have called," etc., she interprets in this sense.
genial expansiveness. We "don't know what to say," and it may also
Rector, however, already knew of her automatic writing.-W. J.]
be so "on the other side." Few persons, I fancy, if suddenly chal-
lenged to prove their identity through the telephone, would quickly
Do you remember what a good time we had at Head? I am
so glad I went.
Do you remember a little talk we had about
produce a large number of facts appropriate to the purpose. They
the lights and satellites? Do you remember how interested you
would be more perplexed, and waste more time than they imagine.
were? Do you remember what I used to say about returning if I
I next pass to what I will call
got over here first?
(Yes, I remember all that.)
3. The Owl's Head Series
[Accurate again. The "Head" must mean Owl's Head, where
Owl's Head was the name of the summer place of Miss Margaret
during two successive summers Hodgson had visited the sitter,
Bancroft, overlooking Rockland Harbor, in Maine, where Mrs.
and been supremely happy. The "lights" refer to the lights of
Piper had never been. R. H. had very greatly enjoyed visits which
Rockland, across the bay, of which he greatly admired the effect,
he had made there on two successive summers. Miss Bancroft had
and at night on the piazza he had often spoken about the planets
and stars, and the question of their habitation.-M. B. Superscript(1)
been a sitter of Mrs. Piper's and was a convert to spiritism, with
some degree of "psychic" susceptibility herself. At her first sitting
Well, here I am, now fire away, now fire.
after Hodgson's death, February 19th, 1906, Mr. Dorr also being
(Can you tell me the names of some who were with you there
last summer?)
present, the following dialogue took place: 10
Remember Miss Wilkinson?
I am Hodgson! Speak! Well, well, well, I am delighted to see
(No.)
you. How are you?
You ask me about whom? Not understand. How are the chil-
(I am all right. How are you?)
dren? [The house had been full of schoolchildren, of whom R.H.
was fond.-M B.]
10 Here, as in all the rest of the records reprinted, I omit repetitions and
remarks not connected with the recollections. Nothing is omitted, however,
which in my eyes might affect the interpretation of what is printed.-W J.
11 Margaret Bancroft.-Ed.
160
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
161
(They are well.)
B. can remember nothing definite about a hat, but is inclined to
Good! Do you remember the day I walked across to the Moun-
interpret the allusion as referring to this incident. The "poem"
tain?
she conceives to be the verses "It seems as if the wondrous land,"
(No, I don't remember.)
etc., written at Miss Pope's sitting of February 5th. See Part I of
Ask Putnam if he and I-My watch stopped.
this report, p. 123.-W. J.]
[For this reference to a watch-stopping, compare pages 123
On the following day Miss B. had a second sitting, and R. H.
and 205 of this report. I suspect some confused memory of a real
asked "How is Nellie?" [Nellie is a member of Miss B.'s household,
incident to be at the bottom of it.-W. J.]
presumably unknown to Mrs. Piper, about whom R. H. always
used during his lifetime to inquire.]
(Can you not recall something you did at the Head?)
On the night of Hodgson's death, Miss B., whom I described
That is just what I am trying to do. Don't you remember how
above as having "psychic" aptitudes, had received a strong im-
I had to laugh at you, laugh on that boat, about that boat?
pression of his presence. She now asks:
[This last word being wrongly deciphered as "hat," Miss B.
asks:]
(Yesterday you said you had "called and called" me. When did
(Whose hat blew off?)
you ever call me?)
My hat, do you not remember the day it blew off? Yes, you
Just after I passed out I returned to you and saw you resting
are not following me very clearly.
and came and called to you telling you I was leaving.
(I am trying to recall about that hat.)
(Did I not answer?)
Do you remember fishing?
Yes, after a while.
(Yes, I remember fishing.)
(What did I do?)
Capital! Remember about my hat? went into the water.
You arose and seemed nervous. I felt I was disturbing you. I
(Yes, I think I do.)
then left.
I should say you did. Oh my! but I am not so stupid as some
(Do you not recall another time when I was sure you were
I know. I have not forgotten anything. Get my Poem?
there and I did something?
What did I do at one o'clock,
(Yes, and I want to thank you for it.)
Christmas morning?)
Don't bother about that. I want you to know I am really here
I saw you, I heard you speak to me once, yes. I heard you speak
and recognize you, and the first-rate time I had at Owl's-
to someone, and it looked like a lady. You took something in your
Thank you very much. How is Bayley? Certainly first-rate time
hand, and I saw you and heard you talking.
I had at Owl's. Thank you very much. Owl's. Remember the
(Yes, that is true.)
jokes I told you? Jsp. Thank you. Remember what I said about
I heard you say something about someone being ill, lying in
dressing them [or "him?"]? Remember? Oh I do well.
the room. [Nellie was ill in my room.-M. B.]
(How am I getting along?)
(Yes, that is true. I also said something else.)
Capital! You are doing well, all you need is experience. I
You said it was myself.
would like to take a swim! I would like to take a swim. Plunge.
(Yes, I said that. Anything else?)
[Much incoherence hereabouts. The names Bayley and Jessup
I remember seeing the light, and heard you talking to a lady.
(Jsp) are correct. Hodgson used to bathe with them off the rocks,
[Correct.-M. B.]
and Miss B. recalls jokes between them about dressing there. H.
(The lady did something after I talked to her.)
and they went deep-sea fishing almost daily. One day Dr. B. and
You refer to the message, she sat down and wrote a message
R. H. went fishing in a gasoline launch, and on their return had
for me. [I do not understand what is meant by this, unless it be
much riotous laughter about some happenings in the boat. Miss
a confused reference to Miss Pope's reception of a message to me
162
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
163
in the sitting of February 5th.-M. B.] [See Part I., p. 123.-
here any time, only I wanted to finish my work. And ask him if
W. J.12]
he remembers what I told him about my getting married.
(I don't know anything about it. That's a good test.) [Proves
There was nothing more of interest from Hodgson at this sitting.
to have been correct.-W. J.]
Dr. Bayley, to whom reference was made in connection with Owl's
Also ask him if he remembers what I said about the children
Head, at Miss Bancroft's first sitting, had two sittings in April, in
of my old friend Pilly.
which the hearty and jocose mannerisms of R. H. were vividly re-
[W. R. N. remembers R. H. telling him of a certain "Pilly,"
produced; but there was a good deal of confusion, owing to Dr.
but forgets about the children.]
Bayley's lack of familiarity with the handwriting; and the eviden-
No one living could know this but Billy.
tial material, so far as the Hodgson-control (whom we are alone
I ask if you recall the fishing process.
concerned with) went, was comparatively small. One passage was:
(Why, Dick, it will be very sad fishing without you.)
[R. H.] Get that book I sent you?
[R. H. and I had done much deep-sea fishing together, but my
(I received the book, right after your death.)
suspicion that this was meant may have deflected him from some
explanation of the "fishing" process of controls at sittings.-B.]
[Hodgson had addressed some books and some cards to be
sent to friends as Christmas presents. They were mailed after his
I wonder if you remember Miss Nellie.
death on December 20th. It should be added that Miss Bancroft
(Perfectly.)
had at her sitting of February informed Rector that such a book
Give her my kindest regards.
Got your feet wet!
had come to her, and Rector associated her and Doctor Bayley
(Tell me more about that, Dick.)
as friends.]
Do you remember how I put my pipe in the water? Do you
Have you seen Billy? [My friend Professor W. R. Newbold.
remember my putting my coat on the seat, and my pipe got into
the water? Remember ducking?
-B.¹³
(Ducking?)
(No, have you any word from him?)
I said plunge.
Ask him if he remembers the day we went to the seashore and
(Plunge?)
we sat on the beach, and I told him how I hoped to come over
Yes! Let's take a plunge.
12 À propos to Miss Bancroft's "psychic" susceptibility, at a sitting on
(Yes indeed!)
October 17th, 1906, which Mrs. M. had with Mrs. Piper, the following words
ALL.
were exchanged:
(Who was along with us, Dick?)
"(Any other messages, Dick?)
Jess-
I got it in my head. [Dr. Jessup is correct.-B.]
"[R. H.] Not for him [the person last spoken of], but tell Margaret it was
I who produced that light she saw the other night."
Do you remember the Head? Oh I think it was the best sum-
The sitter immediately wrote to Miss Margaret Bancroft, with whom she
mer I ever had. Best, best, best.
Do you remember laugh
had recently become acquainted, to ask (not telling her of the message)
about Mitchell? Laugh? [This might refer to a very distinct in-
whether she had had any special experiences of late. Miss B. answered: "I
cident involving a friend named MacDaniel.-B.] Idiosyncrasies
had a very curious experience on the morning of the 14th. At four o'clock I
[What immediately followed was illegible.]
was awakened from a sound sleep, and could feel distinctly the presence of
three people in the room. I sat up and was SO attentive that I hardly breathed.
On the next day, April 4th, Dr. B. says to Hodgson:
About nine feet from the floor there appeared at intervals curious lights, much
like search-lights, but softer, and there seemed to be a distinct outline of a
(Give me your password if you can today.)
figure.
This lasted probably from fifteen to twenty minutes
when
I went into a sound J.
Password? I had no less than forty. One was shoeing. Yes, yes,
18 Dr. Bayley.-ED.
do you remember?
164
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
165
(Of course I don't remember about your passwords; but you
Do you remember reading in the evening?
wrote Mrs. Bayley a charade of your own making, and if you can
(Well enough.)
give the answer to that it will be a splendid test.)
Remember the joke I told you about Blats [Blavatsky]
Shoo fly, shoo fly? [It runs in my head that these words were
and her tricks? [Correct, but matter of common knowledge.]
answers to charades propounded last summer, but I can get no
(Now, Dick, do you remember some of the words of the song
confirmation and may be mistaken.-B.]
which we all sang SO much, and which you brought there last
(I have the letter with the charade here.) [Puts it into the
summer?)
medium's hand.]
Song? awful! song?
Doctor, this is peacemaker, peacemaker. I gave this word in my
(It begins "Come, I will sing you.")
letter. Shoo fly.
Oh yes!-gone out of my head like a shot!
(Yes, Dick.)
[Miss Bancroft writes: "I have a dim recollection about 'peace-
Listen, let me tell you something. Do you remember a little
maker.' I feel very sure about 'shoo fly.'"]
song I sang to the children which went like this: Little Popsey
(I will look it up.) [There were two charades in the letter
Wopsey
Chickey Biddy Chum
all.
I am tired.
handed to the medium, but the words given answer neither of
(Dick, that was splendid, I remember it well.) [Known also
them.-B.]
to Mrs. Piper.-W. J.]
Do you remember anything about that awful cigar and my
Do you remember my palming trick?
joke about it? [Mrs. Bayley remembers a cigar SO huge that
(Yes.) [Known also to Mrs. Piper.-W. J.]
neither R. H. nor I would smoke it. He finally broke it up and
And how you all seemed to enjoy them?
I am getting
smoked it in his pipe. This may have been the joke referred to.
clearer since I have met you here. It helps in recalling many
-B.]
things I had almost forgotten. Listen, do you remember my
Doc, [This is not R. H.'s usual way of addressing me.-B.]
recitation of a Hindoo?
that is peacemaker! And to Mrs. B. I felt I said shoo fly. If you
(No, I don't remember that.)
knew the difficulties I am having, you would smile out loud.
Which reads like this: "I think till I'm weary of thinking-"
Can you play ball?
(Yes, I know that well.) [Known also to Mrs. Piper.-W. J.]
(Well, H., neither of us were very active ball-players in the
Do you remember my letter to Will, in which I told him of the
country.)
delight of the place [possibly a misreading for "depth of the
Listen, do you remember our late hours?
piece"].
(Indeed I do.) [R. H. and I used to sit out on the porch
(Who is Will?)
smoking to untimely hours.-B.)
Will James. Or perhaps I didn't read it to you after all.
Got your sleep made up yet?
(No, I didn't hear that letter.) [I recall no letter either about
(Not quite.)
the "place," or about the "piece," but my memory is so bad that
Next followed some rather unintelligible as well as illegible
that proves nothing. I have heard the "piece"; and think I heard
references to skinning fish and bailing a boat. Then:
it from Hodgson.-W. J.]
Ask Margaret Bancroft if she remembers telling me about
Do you remember how we tried to make many words out of
you and Mrs. Bayley giving her a watch. I am glad I found her
one?
after I came over. I think she is perfectly sincere and a light.
(Yes.)
[Miss Bancroft writes: "I felt badly about accepting the watch,
And the fun we had?
and consulted Mr. Hodgson about it. He said a number of things
(Yes.) [R. H. had enjoyed doing this with some of the ladies
about my sensitiveness, and after that I felt all right about the
at Owl's Head.-B.]
watch. I don't think I told anybody of this interview with Dr.
166
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
167
Hodgson. As regards my 'sincerity,' the last talk I had with him
Yes, Ellen's boy and his passing over.
was on that very subject.
He said he would certainly con-
Do you remember-Enid? What I told you about her? And
vince Dr. Bayley of my sincerity." The reader knows already that
her poems? A scholarship and her poems?
Miss Bancroft is a "light."]
(I remember all that.) [He had told me a great deal about
this niece Enid.-M. B. Mrs. Piper denies knowledge of her
On June 20th, 1906, Miss Bancroft had her third sitting. Some
existence.-W. J.]
days previous to this Mrs. M., an old friend of Hodgson, had taken
Listen. I am in the witness boxl I am trying to help you to
to her sitting a cross which remained among his effects, and asked the
recognize me,
R. H.-control for directions concerning its disposition. He had or-
Do you remember anything about celery root?
[See above,
dered it to be sent to Miss Bancroft; and when he appeared to Miss
p. 153.]
Margaret do you remember the walk through the woods?
Bancroft at the sitting a few days later almost his first word was:
(Yes, I remember it.)
Do you remember "Let us sing of-sing you
Get my cross?
(Yes, thank you very much.
)
Let us sing of a"
(Yes, I understand.)
A Mascot I send to you.
No you do not. No song.
(Yes, I know you sent it to me.)
(Yes I do. Try and give it to me.)
I shall be with you when you are in the cottage.
I am but you do not understand. You do not understand at all.
(Do you know that I have bought the place?)
Of course I do. I understand pretty well what you are about.
Let us sing the old song.
(You mean the song "Come let us sing"?)
[Miss B. had been enabled to buy the land at Owl's Head since
Yes.
her sittings in the previous February.]
(Tell me what it is.)
There is more help coming to you to enlarge the house.
I am telling you. "Come let us sing the-what would you sing
You remember you thought it necessary to have more room.
-sing-sing
(Yes, I remember very well.)
[He taught us a song last summer, "Come I will sing," and the
Did you see me in your dream with my trousers rolled up at
response was "What will you sing me"; "I will sing you one oh,"
the bottom?
etc. My idea is that he wanted to have me give him the next
(I am not sure that I did.)
line and probably he would have been able to give me the text
I spoke to you and you replied.
and perhaps the whole song or part of it, but I did not under-
(I have seen you several times in dreams.)
stand what he wanted to do.-M. B.]
Remember my knock?
(When did you knock?)
Miss Bancroft had two more sittings, on December 2nd and 3rd,
You were sleeping.
1907. On December 2nd Hodgson seemed to be cognizant of cer-
(I remember twice when I thought someone knocked my arm.)
tain changes in the Owl's Head place, that there was a new wall-
But I woke you, I certainly did. [Correct.]
paper of yellow color, a new bath-house, a new pier and platform,
(Can't you do me a favor by knocking now?
)
etc., none of which facts Mrs. Piper was in a way to have known.
Not while I keep on speaking. You wish me to knock your arm
now, eh? I cannot do SO and keep on speaking.
He also showed veridical knowledge of a very private affair be-
Do you remember the evening I told you about my sister
tween two other people, that had come under Miss Bancroft's ob-
Ellen's boy?
servation. There was, however, some confusion in this sitting, and
(I do not recall it.)
R. H. was not "strong." The results were better on December 3rd,
168
WILLIAM JAMES ON PSYCHICAL RESEARCH
WILLIAM JAMES AND MRS. PIPER
169
but the evidential parts do not lend themselves well to quotation,
would seem necessary to invoke either lucky chance or telepathy,
with one exception, as follows:
unless one be willing to admit spirit return. I should say that I have
(Don't you remember something that happened that you
condensed the record considerably, leaving out some matter ir-
helped us in?)
relevant to Owl's Head memories, some repetitions, and all the talk
I remember that one evening-
that grew out of slowness in deciphering the script.
(What happened that evening?)
Dr. Bayley himself wrote me after his sittings: "They are pretty
We got a little fire and I helped. Yes.
good, and have about convinced me (as evidence added to previous
(Yes, that is true.)
Put
it
out
the
fire
I remember it well.
experience) that my much loved friend is still about. I had had either
(What did you tell us to get before the fire occurred?)
four or six sittings, some of them in conjunction with Miss Bancroft,
Before the fire?
before R. H.'s death. I do not think that Mrs. Piper normally knew
(You told us to get something for the house.)
me by name, or knew that I was from Philadelphia or that I knew
I said you ought to get a - in case of fire pail, yes.
Newbold. I realize that the average reader of these records loses
[Here the hand drew three parallel horizontal lines, which
much in the way of little tricks of expression and personality,
might have meant shelves, and beneath them the outline of a
subtleties impossible to give an account of in language. As I look
vessel with a cover.]
over the sittings and realize my own blunders in them, I cannot
(What are they for?)
always decide who was the more stupid, the communicator, or my-
Water pails water pails - yes, fire buckets - fire Yes, I
self."
did.
[He told us in Maine, when we were experimenting with Mrs.
4. Professor Newbold's Sittings
A
by automatic writing, to get fire buckets and put them
The message given to Dr. Bayley for "Billy" (i.e., Professor Wil-
up on the shelves, which we did long before the fire occurred. He
liam R. Newbold) makes it natural to cite next the experience of
warned us of this fire many times, but no one seemed to pay much
this other intimate friend of R. H. Professor Newbold had two
attention to it but myself.-M. B.]
written sittings, on June 27th and July 3rd, 1906, respectively, Mr.
(What did you tell us to put on them?)
Go on you will find that I am not asleep.
Dorr being present both times. On June 27th, after a few words
(I never thought you were asleep.)
with Rector, Hodgson appears, and the dialogue continues as
follows:
So much for the Owl's Head record, which, as the reader sees,
follows a not incoherent thread of associated facts.
Well, well, of all things! Are you really here! I am Hodgson.
Few of the items were false, but on the other hand it must be
(Hallo, Dick!)
remembered that a mind familiar with Hodgson's tastes and habits
Hello, Billy, God bless you.
might have deduced some of them (swimming and fishing, for
(And you, too, though you do not need to have me say it.)
I wonder if you remember the last talk we had together-
example) a priori by combining the two abstract ideas "Hodgson"
(I do remember it, Dick.)
and "seaside." Leakages impossible now to follow might also ac-
I can recall very well all I said to you that glorious day when
count for the medium's knowledge of such items as the names
we were watching the waves. [Our last talk was on a splendid
Nellie, Jessup, etc., for her connecting Dr. Bayley with "Billy," etc.
afternoon of July, 1905, at Nantasket Beach.-N. 4
For the "fire buckets," "watch," "sincerity," and other items, it
14 Professor Newbold.-Ed.
Notes
415
were apparently at one time mounted
graphical, and literary interest relat-
in an album, as may be seen from the
ing to these letters will be presented
fragments of sheets adhering to mar-
with their edition in the forthcoming
6
gins.
volume of Slavic studies, as announced
2
As in the case of the Dostoevsky
above.
manuscript, all details of textual, bio-
DMITRY CIZEVSKY
The Robbins Library of Philosophy
N
1905 Benjamin Rand, A.B. 79,
with liberal funds for acquisition, and
I
Ph.D. '85, Instructor in Philosophy
with himself as librarian, he must have
1897-1902, Librarian of the Rob-
thought his ideal well on the way to
bins Library of Philosophy 1906-33,
its entelechy. Overnight the humble
saw the publication of the two heavy
classroom library for Philosophy, just
volumes of his Bibliography of Philos-
transferred from Dane Hall, assumed
ophy, Psychology, and Cognate Sub-
significant stature.
jects. But, as he wrote in his class re-
The beginnings had parallcled those
port of that same year, he regarded
of other Department libraries at Har-
his task as only half completed:
vard. We learn from the Thirteenth
My ideal would be to found 'A Philo-
Report 1890 of Justin Winsor as Li-
sophical Library for the American Con-
brarian of Harvard University that
tinent' which shall be the counterpart of
toward the close of the academic year
this "Bibliography of Philosophy.' And
1889/90 'the formation of a class-
for such a library what more fitting in-
room library in Philosophy was be-
stitution could be named than our own
gun, and a good number of volumes
beloved Alma Mater? And what more
have been bought.' The Report for
appropriate place in it could be chosen
the next year indicates 186 volumes on
than the new 'Emerson Hall'? For the
the shelves, all 'permanent.' In this
attainment of this end I have addressed
same year, 1891, William James
a printed letter to the Chairman of the
Harvard Philosophical Department [then
moved his Psychological Laboratory
Hugo Münsterberg] in which I have
from Lawrence Hall to Dane Hall, in-
estimated that $50,000 would be the cost
stalling a library of some hundreds of
of the forty thousand volumes necessary
books. The classroom library of
as a minimum for a Continental Philo-
Philosophy may well have been in
sophical Library. The ideal has been
Dane from its establishment, but it is
well received. Its realization waits upon
not definitely located until the Report
'the sinews of war."
for 1898, when the entry is 'Philos-
When, a year later, Rand saw a li-
ophy (Psychol. Lab.). Dane Hall,'
brary established in Emerson Hall,
and the total for the combined library
given as 431 volumes. The entry re-
1 Report of the Secretary of the Class of
mains the same, though with gradually
1879 of Harvard College, 1900-1905 (Bos-
ton, 1905), p. 99.
increasing totals, until 1905, when 750
V. ? (1956)
Harvard University - Houghton Library / Harvard University. Harvard Library bulletin. Cambridge. Mass., Harvard University Library.
416
Harvard Library Bulletin
volumes were moved to Emerson
to
gists (1912), but he admittedly pre-
form the nucleus of the new library.
ferred the 'romantic work' of schol-
The Social Questions Library in Har-
arly research. His summer trips to
vard Hall likewise went to Emerson,
England and the Continent produced
with 1,810 volumes, becoming the
The Life, Unpublished Letters, and
Social Ethics Library in the process.
Philosophic Regimen of Anthony,
The two libraries, Philosophy and
Earl of Shaftesbury (1900), editions of
Social Ethics, shared the same second
the correspondence of Bishop Ber-
floor in Emerson, but remained ad-
keley with Sir John Percival (1914)
ministratively distinct.
and of John Locke with Edward
It was Reginald Chauncey Robbins,
Clarke (1927), and an edition of
'92, a member of the Visiting Com-
Locke's Essay concerning the Under-
mittee for the Department of Philos-
standing (1931).
ophy, who gave actuality to Ben-
But from the point of view of his
jamin Rand's Platonic Idea. Enthusi-
University, Rand's greatest achieve-
astically responding to the proposal to
ment must always be the building of
expand resources for philosophy at
Harvard's collections in philosophy.
Harvard and at the same time create
His acquisitions still form the bulk of
a library worthy of the new home of
the 5,500 books in Robbins today, and
the Department, he donated funds
his vigilance in selection is largely rc-
that brought immediate accretions of
sponsible for the very comprehensive
more than 2,500 volumes. This gen-
main collection in philosophy in
erous support he continued for years
Widener, now numbering approxi-
as chairman of the Visiting Commit-
mately the 40,000 volumes that he
tee. Even today from his home in
had set as a minimum goal in 1905.
California he maintains an active in-
By 1924 he was able to write that his
terest in the library that so fittingly
ideal had 'received a very large meas-
bears his name. On its shelves are his
ure of fulfillment,' while recognizing
several volumes of poetry and his
that the Robbins Library in itself had
works on aesthetics.
not become the 'Philosophical Li-
It was also fitting that Benjamin
brary for the American Continent' of
Rand should have been chosen the
his original dream. The Robbins Li-
first librarian of the Robbins Library,
brary was, he said, 'limited to works
a post he held for almost thirty years.
solely of classical value.' But Robbins
In the large, Edwardian, oak-pancled
and Widener together did indeed
room that overlooks the Sever Quad-
largely provide that counterpart to his
rangle, Rand found full opportunity
Bibliography of Philosophy that he
to exercise his bibliographic lore and
had regarded as the other half of his
his zest for scholarship. The routine
task.2
in Robbins by no means confined him
The earlier years of Rand's li-
He is perhaps best known for his use-
brarianship saw the close of the Great
ful compilations of selections, includ
Age of philosophy at Harvard. James,
ing Modern Classical Philosophers
(1908), The Classical Moralists
2 Harvard College Class of 1879. Fiftieth
Anniversary. Ninth Report 1929 (Boston,
(1909), and The Classical Psycholo-
1929), PP. 430-431.
Harvard University - Houghton Library / Harvard University. Harvard Library bulletin. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Library.
Notes
417
Royce, Santayana, Palmer, and
the newly formed Department of So-
Münsterberg were all frequenters of
cial Relations (succeeding that of
the Robbins Library. Gifts, both
Social Ethics) radically affected the
within and without the Department,
Robbins Library. With Mr Robbins'
helped to swell the Library's holdings.
permission something over 3,200 of
Other gifts both of books and manu-
the more than 8,000 volumes then in
scripts, increasing the University's re-
Robbins were removed, and divided
sources in philosophy generally, went
between the Departments of Psychol-
to Widener, whence the rarer books
ogy and Social Relations. Miss
and manuscripts were transferred to
Gustafson supervised the transaction,
Houghton on the establishment of
and, when the purged Robbins Li-
that repository in 1942. In addition to
brary of Philosophy was finally in
other resources, special support for
professional order, other hands suc-
the Robbins Library came from the
ceeded hers. Mark Gibbons was li-
Nelson Robinson, Jr, Endowment
brarian 1950-51, and James H. Brod-
Fund.
crick 1951-55- In September 1955 the
Rand retired from Robbins in 1933,
latter was succeeded by Warren I.
check
and died the following year. A life-
Cikins.
Hallis
size oil portrait of him hangs in the
The Robbins Library is today a
Library, and a bequest known as the
working library for the Department
Benjamin Rand Philosophical Fund
of Philosophy, the domain primarily
(1935) perpetuates his interest in mat-
of its faculty and graduate students,
ters philosophical at Harvard.
though serving members and students
In the year of Rand's retirement,
of other faculties as well. Its collec-
Psychology was established as a sep-
tion of works of 'classical value' in-
arate Department, but the psycho-
evitably is largely duplicated by the
logical books remained in Robbins.
main philosophy collection in Wide-
Rand was succeeded as librarian by
ner, a state of affairs that in no way
Dr Louis Harap, later editor of Jew-
lessens its value as a convenient center
ish Life, who served until 1939-
for study and reference. By contin-
Thereafter, a series of graduate stu-
uing to adapt itself to the changing
dents, appointed by the Departments
concepts and needs of the field it rep-
of Philosophy and Psychology, acted
resents, the Robbins Library of Philos-
as librarians for short periods of time.
ophy should render important service
In 1943 Esther L. Gustafson, now a
to the Department and to the Uni-
member of the Catalogue Department
versity for an indefinite future.4
in Widener, came to Robbins, to
JAMES H. BRODERICK
bring order out of its increasing chaos.
Extensive weeding and recataloguing
3 See Edwin R. Boring, 'The Library of
the Psychological Laboratories,' HARVARD
were carried out.
LIBRARY BULLETIN, I (1947), 394-395.
Unlike the earlier fission, the divi-
I wish to record my thanks to the
sion of psychology in 1947 between
Editor of the BULLETIN, Mr G. W. Cottrell,
for his helpful guidance in the preparation
the Department of Psychology and
of this note.
Harvard University Houghton Library / Harvard University. Harvard Library bulletin. Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Library.
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1905-06
Page | Type | Title | Date | Source | Other notes |
1 | File folder | File Contents. 1905: Emerson Hall Fundraising; Building of the Art Mission& Plan; Pres. Eliot's address at Dedic.Albright Art Gallery; Emerson Memorial Hall-2 sources (HGM, Dec.'05+ March '06); Eliot to GBD (5/15)at Tavern Club mtg + W.H. Gleason photography. 1906: Antiquities Act; Building of the Arts construction (9/31/41); GBD to I.Story (NPS editor) re: responses to her critique of Story + Antiquities Act; GBD on psychical research-Old Farm series with William James; GBD dines with William Everett; GBD hotst George and Dorothy Howard, the 9th Earl of Carlisle + one of his daughters, October-November, 1906 | 09/05 | Ronald Epp | |
2 | Magazine article | First Ever Cover Photo of Edith Wharton in NY Times Book Review (Aug.12,1905) | 3/28/2021 | Tina Jordan, NY Times Book Review. March 28, 2021 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
3-4 | Notes | 1906 Activities | No date | Compiled by Ronald Epp | |
5 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Robinson from George B. Dorr re: invitation to view Gleason's colored slides of wildflowers | April 24, 1905 | Gray Herbarium Archives | |
6 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr from Charles W. Eliot re: meeting at Tavern Club and Gleason's photography | May 15, 1905 | HUA. Harvard University. Subscription Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905 | |
7 | Letter | Letter to the Gray Herbarium from George B. Dorr | June 9, 1905 | HUGHA | |
8 | Personal email to Ronald Epp from Cornelia Gilder re: visit to the Mount June 14th 1905 | Feb. 27, 2009 | Personal correspondence of Ronald Epp | Annotated by Ronald Epp | |
9-12 | Letter | Letter to President Eliot from George B. Dorr at Oldfarm re: land boundary and plan to travel West | August 15, 1905 | HUA.Records of the President of Harvard U., C.W.E, Box 83 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
13 | Report | BHVIA Committee on Trees and Planting and resignation of George B. Dorr as Chairman of Village Green Committee, replaced by Beatrix Jones | 1905 | Jesup. BHVIA | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
14-15 | Letter | Letter to Mr and Mrs. Rockefeller from George B. Dorr re: Building of the Arts | August 24, 1937 | No source | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
16-17 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr re: opening of Emerson Hall | December 16, 1905 | HUA.Harvard University. Subscription Records. Subscription for Emerson Hall. 1901-1905 | |
18-23 | Letter | Letter to David B. Ogden from George B. Dorr re: Building of the Arts plans | November 29th, 1905 | Deborah Dyer, Curator. B.H. Historical Society Archives | |
24-25 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr re: opening of Emerson Hall | December 6, 1905 | No source | |
26-27 | Textbook excerpt | Emerson Memorial Hall | December, 1905 | Harvard Graduates Magazine. 14(1905) | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
28 | Textbook excerpt | Dedication of Emerson Hall and President Eliot on Emerson | December 27, 1905 | Harvard Graduates Magazine. March 1906 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
29 | Date Page | 1906 | Ronald Epp | ||
30-33 | Letter | Letter to President Charles Eliot from George B. Dorr re: Harvard property in Bar Harbor | February 5th, 1906 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U. C.W.E..Box 83 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
34 | Textbook excerpt | Letter to Owen Wister from William James re: week with George Dorr | February 15, 1906 | M.A.DeWolfe. John Jay Chapman and His Letters.Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1937 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
35 | Website | American Antiquities Act of 1906 | 2/11/2003 | www.cr.nps.gov | |
36-38 | Textbook excerpt | Antiquities Act | No date | Shankland, Robert. Steve Mather of the National Parks | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
39-43 | Textbook excerpt | Letter from William James, 1906 | 1906 | Henry James. Boston: Little, Brown, Vol. 2, 1926 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
44-45 | Article | "A New Building for Music at Bar Harbor," written by George B. Dorr | 1906 | ANPA B3.F9.33,34 | |
46-47 | Record | Listing of the Bar Harbor Association of Arts. Subscriptions to Stock. | c.1906 | Chapman Papers.JDR Jr. Files. B3 B143 | |
48 | Bulletin | Museum of Fine Arts committee members | August, 1906 | Museum of Fine Arts Bulletin, V.4,#21. August, 1906 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
49-51 | Letter | Letter to President Eliot from George B. Dorr re: Harvard property in Bar Harbor | June 25th, 1906 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U. C.W.E..Box 83 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
52-53 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr from C.W.E. re: Saul's Cliff property | June 29, 1906 | No source. | |
54-60 | Letter | Letter from David Ogden to C.W.E. re: sale of land of Harvard College at Sol's Cliff, Bar Harbor | August 6, 1906 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U. C.W.E..Box 83 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
61-66 | Letter | Letter to President Eliot from George B. Dorr re: Harvard property in Bar Harbor | August 7, 1906 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U. C.W.E..Box 83 | |
67-69 | Letter | Letter to President Eliot from George B. Dorr re: responsibilities of Building of the Arts and Nurseries, cancelling trip West | September 6th, 1906 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U. C.W.E..Box 83 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
70-72 | Journal Article | The "Other Side" of George B. Dorr, by Ronald Epp. | Summer 2019 | Friends of Acadia Journal. Summer 2019 | |
73-82 | Textbook excerpt | The Oldfarm Series and Psychical Research | 1973 | Gardner Murphy and R.O.Ballou, William James on Psychical Research. Clifton, N.J.: Augustus Kelley, 1973. Orig. 1960 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
83-85 | Bulletin article | The Robbins Library of Philosophy | 1956 | Harvard Library Bulletin. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Library, 1956 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |