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

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1909-10
ParTimeline 9/05
1909
1910
Eliot resigns Harvard Residency
- Jesupplennal tbbang Contraction
(1869-1909)
IMPT
Athletic Field acquisition
- -HCTPR land expansion under
Eagle Lake Watershed +
G, Stebbins
securing finstate Trustee
-DOR Jr. purchase Eyree
- Dres Tait insits BH (7/20)
power of Eminent domain
Eliot to 600 re HCTPR land
CBD become V.P. of Soud for
Psychical Research (U.R.)
1 Elist acquirition publishis (9/16) "Five Fort Shelf"
- a Eaglehake DP, B2F6
- Prychual Research etlrs. Piper
Chebacco XIV (2013) : 86-106.
From Horses to Horsepower:
Mount Desert Island's Ten-Year War for the Automobile
Bill Horner, M.D.
This year's Chebacco marks the centennial of one of Mount Desert
Island's most famous controversies: the admission of the automobile to
the island's picturesque roads. As background, it should be remembered
that during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, an American
urban elite created an extensive "pleasure periphery," with seasonal resorts
that dramatically reshaped local economies and landscapes. Mount Desert
Island and, in particular, Bar Harbor, exemplified this type of resort with
the arrival of such familiar American surnames as Vanderbilt, Kennedy,
Dorrance, Stotesbury, Ford, Kent, Rockefeller, and Eliot. Affluent summer
cottagers developed an exclusive, picturesque retreat, with a local service
economy almost completely dependent on tourism. The resulting civic
discourse gave rise to many instances of differing opinions as local residents
confronted an unprecedented wave of change brought about by a class of
people who were often paternalistic and expected deference in return. Most
of the townspeople were used to a fairly independent life. Deference did
not come naturally, and tension was never far from the surface.¹
The years 1903 to 1913 constituted a decade of disobedience, division,
and debate on Mount Desert Island. The local and national press of that
time vividly displays the divergent thinking and attitudes that informed
the emerging relationship between these very different societal sets as they
engaged in the so-called Automobile War.
On April 27, 1909 the Bangor Daily Commercial published an
editorial entitled "Motor Mania," which commented on the first Eastern
Maine Automobile and Motor Show held one week earlier at the Bangor
Auditorium: "The gasoline motor car is no longer an experiment. It has
demonstrated its usefulness not only as a racing machine for millionaires
and cranks to play with, but as a useful vehicle of travel, or for the delivery
of packages and mail, for the carrying of passengers for pay, for the
transportation of physicians and for so many purposes that in a very wide
sense it is now indispensible to civilization.".
Rec
The Leading County Paper and the Society Journal of Mt. Desert Island
BAR HARBOR, MAINE, WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 24, 1909.
AS SEARLS, Cashier
EDWARD E
F.CARTER Asst. Cashi
BANK
NO AUTOMOBILES
CCOUNTS
CTORS
Mount Desert Towns Can Shut Them
R E
worth, R. H. Kittre'ge C.
erts, A. S. Rodick, J.A.
C.H. Wood.
Out
OFFICES
D
MAN,
When the reports from committees
tion, and on second and every subse-
HOUSE L
came into the house last Thursday
quent conviction shall be punished by
morning the commtitee on judiciary
a fine of fifty dollars and costs of
surance
without dissenting voice, reported
prosecution or by imprisonment for
"ought to pass" on the bill to refer
not exceeding sixty days or by both
to the voters of Mount Desert island
fine and imprisonment.
On Led
New York
the question as to whether or not the
Section 3. The words motor vehi-
On Gler
use of automobiles shall be restricted
cle, as herein used, shall not be con-
on the island. The report of the
structed to include steam road rollers
committee. was accepted and in the
used by authority of the Town offi-
usual manner of procedure was tabled
cers.
for printing.
Section 4. In such of the said
Apply 1
The whole matter now is un to the
Towns as shall accept this act at any
pring
citizens o fthe towns on this island.
legal meeting called by a warrant
Both sides will be busy trying to in-
containing an article for that purpose
fluence voters, and while the vote may
this act shall. subject to the provis-
later
For the
be a matter of doubt elsewhere on the
ions of the State Constitution thereto
island (so some think) there is no
applicable, take effect ten days after
doubt of the result in Bar Harbor. By
it shall be so accepted.
a overwhelming majority the town is
L
certain to vote for the exclusion of
Bishop Lawrence Among Those in
A.
for
RITY
the motor cars. The matter will
Boston That Worked for
is
a
come up just as soon as the legisla
Bar Harbor Bill
ARK.
lature passes the reenabling act, in all
15
14
17
"Up the Island"-that is to say,
Among the Boston people who as-
16
15
18
S.A.
anywhere away from the shore, the
sisted in securing a favorable report
17
13
20
from the legislative committee on ju-
people of Mt. Desert are mighty an-
18
15
S
xious concerning the exclusion of
diclary on the bill excluding automo-
19
10
a
biles from Bar Harbor, which went to
autos. They feci very strongly that
20
44
34
Co
senate Monday last, are Mrs: J. Mont-
their summer business depends upon
21
25
22
gemery Sears, who pays a Bar Har-
keeping the machines out, and as
Include rain, hail.
bor tax of $1041; Sarah Lawrence,
Fre ESS maximum
their bread and butt 1" depends upon
$335, Mary E. Leeds, $375. Rt. Rev.
the exclusion of motor cars they will
William Lawrence $335, Mrs. C. L.
who
vote against them. and are working
Carr $608, Charles Fry, $810. Charles
to secure other voters of their way
T. How. $1775. George B. Dorr. $2337.
ter at
of tlinking.
Dr. Robert Amory, $833. the Misses
The Euabling Act
Morrill, $1017. and the heirs of Al-
pheus Hardy $992.
Section 1. No automobile or motof
Bishop Lawrence wrote:-"In con-
vehicle shall be set up, used. driven
nection with the ordinance this point
or operated in or on any highway,
should be kept in mind, that a horse
mpany
townway, or public street within any
accustomed to automobiles will pass
of the towns of Eden, Mount Desert.
30 or 50 In an afternoon and not look
Tremont and oSuthwest Harbor, on
at one. but If that Name horse pass an
the Island of Mount Desert, In the
automobile only once or twice in a
County of Hancock. State of Maine.
week he will shy I have no horses
Section 2. Whoever sets up. UNOS,
and use an automobile entirely er
drives or operates any automobile or
cept at Bar Harbor. for 1 am 90 clear
vehicle controry to the provisions of
that the conditions at Bar Harbor
Section 1 hereof shell on the first
are unfavorable to automobiles that
conviction be punished by a fine of
I
am ready. at some added expense to
twenty dollars and costs of promeen
hire horses for the summer
it cannot be said that the classifica-
township that 13 assessed
MINEL
tion is not a reasonable one." So
non-residents. The year-round
peo-
will do
ple, therefore. would seem to-be,
even
volved
much for the law.
more generally than the summer
peo-
fendant
Letter From Dr. S. Weir Michell
ple are, in favor of keeping
years in
"Let me diverge one second from the
biles oue.
ganized
subject and read a letter from Dr.
"I may add that one of the most
don't pat
Mitchell that I have heretofore refer-
eminent automobile officials in
the
names of
red to.
country has just reaffirmed his
con-
fused to u
'Mys on and I have sent here in
viction. first expressed more
than
not treated
the past few years patients who are
three years ago, that the island
of
serves. T1
suffering from nervous maladies and
Mt. Desert is 'entirely unsuited
for
court forba
motor traffic. Its roads are
the name
in every case it is a question of es-
cape from noise, confusion and reck-
winding, annd dangerous for
fast
Range Com
lessness the automobile brings. At
going. Comfortable touring
upon
contended
present there are three who would
them would be impossible.
Few
had excee
autos would visit the island, but those
such an O
not have been sent here had the auto-
few would destroy its pleasant
an attack
mobile been free to come and go. It
for nearly all who now enjoy it.
the view
is a necessity in towns, has come to
who delib
stay, but these places which secure
tion; thus
themselves against this modern con-
venient nuisance are sure to get resi-
COMMUNICATION
prosecutio
The sente
dents permanent and others who find
To the Editor of The Bar Harbor Rec-
for this o
pleasure in escaping the automobiles.
ord:-
sentences
I wish that some of the people who
Dear Sir:
pers, nine
favor it could have the experience of
some of our residents who live at
Will you allow me space in tour
six month
paper to express my opinion on a
The boy
times in other places and are deadly
foes of the automobiles. This should
question that is of great moment to
don't patr
the people of the towns of Eden Mt.
attempted
be a paradise of rest and peace where
Desert and Southwest Harbor.
against th
we should he free from the smells,
IS
the tooting of horns, and carelessness
I am not writinng at the instance
by it, and
of automobiles in the hands of so
anybody, neither am I actuated by
such a ca
many.
selfish motives. I have no interests
the princi
"This gentleman is but one of hun-
at stake in Northeast Harbor not on
sons may
dreds of others who have sent similar
the island that can be materially ef-
from agr
letters daily to Bar Harbor. Our is-
fected by the introduction or the ex-
over it is
land is not adapted to them. It would
clusion of the automobile. Per on-
tion-shall
be no pleasure for any one to go
ally, for some reasons I would
like
there is
there and see the island in an auto-
to see the automobile, but for
the
party at
mobile. as the typical automobiler
best interest of the island, for
the
Buck Ste
sees nothing; he never lingers in one
welfare of the majority of the
citi-
sought re
place, is always hieing on to the next
zens I believe that the automobile
against t
should be excluded.
either a C
place, and when he gets there boasts
are the t
of his speed, or laments the accidents
While no argument pro or com is
on the CC
that he had on the road, which makes
conclusive or is so much one sided
be passed
speed impossible. The quiet, leisurly
that the anti-automobilist or the afti-
sented bei
enjoyment of a place like Bar Harbor
mobilist can indulge iin dogmatic
Whethe
and its vicinity is utterly foreign to
sertions, will not a consideration of
these two
the automobile man whose object is
the following argument prove a suf-
is a quest
not to see anything thoroughly, but
ficient cause for barring out the au-
tent tolea
to pass over as much ground as pos-
tomobile.
layman n
e
sible. In many conversations with
The introduction of the auto, while
him for
thesepeople on this most important
it may rejuvenate the hotel life, will
ion. Cou
subject in the past few years, if you
reduce the pressure of the cottage
laborers,
had heard the expressions of satis-
life. Let this pressure be reduced
10,000,000
faction at not being tortured with
and you create immovable conditions.
terested
these automobiles as I have you would
Reduce the water pressure of the
These hav
agree with me.
mill and you get a slow moving a1a-
of distrus
"Dr. Mitchell, whose letter I have
chine. Has it been the hotel life that
tone of hi
just read, and who is one of the great
has made Bar Harbor famous
I
tensify th
est nerve specialists in the country
think not. Rather has it been
the
terly who
of and
today, and whose treatment for ner-
owner of the cottage and palatial
the most
vous afflictions are recognized the
manor who has spent hundreds
of
this the
world over by the medical profession
thousands and perhaps millions
of
that he he
as the Weir Mitchell treatments, and
dollars who is the real builder of Bar
class cons
who spends his summers roaming
Harbor and should receive the hig
at a time
over our hills and dales. viewing the
est consideration. As I understand
demanded
scenery as an inspiration for some
situation these men. for the most
done to
great story, told me that he had seen
part, object to' the automobile,
Herald.
every place worth seeing in the world
that they are not auto-faddist or
re
and that he had traveled the entire
not owners of automobiles. but
world over hunting for beautiful
men who destre a diversion of
P.
scenery. that he had seen the great
and wish to spend the summer
Here is
cliffs and waterfalls of Norway. h.
rest period-away from the
burn
ture as
had visited Switzerland and Been the
nolsy life of the city with its hank
on Kidney
shoreless ocenas, whose forming bil-
honk! away from its dust clouds
lows seemed first white. then opales-
and noxions gasoline odors
cent. in the light of dawn, then one by
The Incoming of the auto mesos
the
one the mountain tops appeared like
the out going of the man who
ishing
He states
Islands rising from the sea. and at
given money, labor and talent tolde
back.
pal.
work, to which of late years he has devoted himself, in June, 1878,
pril 12, 1881 ; m. September 28,
oardman, A.B. Harvard, 1903.
by translating and editing Rambaud's "History of Russia," pub-
lished in three volumes in 1880. Was engaged in newspaper work
is b. August 2, 1908.
for the Boston and San Francisco papers one year; assistant in
Washington Mills at Lawrence,
& Co., dry goods commission
private classical school in Philadelphia, 1881; and during his resi-
dence for some years in that city, did some writing and translating,
r, 1881, and with their succes-
and was literary, music, and art editor of the "Press," and later
aber, 1885, after several months
e Boston Stock Exchange, and
managing editor of the "Epoch." Literary adviser to the publishing
house of Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., in Boston, 1877-99. Con-
brokerage business, now under
nected editorially with the "Encyclopredia Americana" (16 vols.
& Co., in Boston, with offices at
on representative of the banking
1903-04), published under the auspices of the Scientific American."
Paris and New York. Has been
In charge of the advertising department of D. Appleton & Co., in
New York, 1900. Has since resided in Boston, and continued his
of Massachusetts since its forma-
treasurer of the Somerset Club.
literary activities, editorially and by writing and lecturing. Delivered
at Club of Hamilton, Mass.' Is
the Phi Beta Kappa poem at Tufts College, 1904, and wrote the
[anchester, Mass.
poem at the dedication of the monument in Provincetown, Mass.,
1907. Read a poem also at the dedication of a monument in New-
SON.
bury, Mass., in honor of the founders of that town, of whom his
er 11, 1852. Son of Oliver and
ancestor, Richard Dole, was one. President of the Bibliophile
Society and of the Omar Khayyâm Club of America since their
nrietta Curtis Mixer.
inception. One of the founders of the Twentieth Century Club of
ber 20, 1878.
Boston, and member of Boston Authors' Club. On visiting commit-
V. Y., August 7, 1881.
tee of Boston Public Library, and trustee of Fellowes Athensum.
Report, 1899.
Among his recent publications are : "The Pilgrims and Other
Poems," 1907; A Teacher of Dante," 1907; and "Peace and
OLE.
Progress," 1904. His translations include "Anna Karénina" and
1, 1852. Son of Nathan and Caro-
other works of Count TolstoI, and novels by Valdes, Verga, Von
Scheffel, Daudet and Von Koch, and numerous works for music.
h, Mass., to Helen James Bennett.
His editorial work comprises about two hundred volumes, of which
b. June 13, 1884; A.B. Harvard,
the best known is the so-called multi-variorum edition of the
Rubaiyât of Omar Khayyâm, in two volumes. Resides at "Hedge-
March 14, 1886; A. B. Harvard,
cote," Jamaica Plain (Boston), Mass., and has a summer home,
The Moorings," at Ogunquit, Me.
January 26, 1891.
March 30, 1893.
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR.
spension Bridge, N. Y., one year,
BORN in Jamaica Plain (now Boston), Mass., December 29, 1853.
School, one year, and at Derby
Son of Charles H. and Mary Gray (Ward) Dörr.
b years. Commenced his literary
In Europe five years, spent in study and travel. Continued his
]
[ 33 ]
studies as a graduate student at Harvard and elsewhere several years.
Travelled again in Europe and visited Greece, Egypt, and the Holy
Land. Has given much attention to the study of plant-life and to
landscape-gardening work, and has established at his summer home
in Bar Harbor, Mount Desert, Me., nurseries for the growth and
sale of northern trees and plants. Member of Somerset and Univer-
sity Clubs of Boston. Resides at 18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
JAMES DWIGHT.
BORN in Paris,:France, July 14, 1852. Son of Thomas (Harvard,
1827) and Mary Collins (Warren) Dwight.
MARRIED January 12, 1887, in Boston, Mass., to Elizabeth Iasigi.
CHILDREN: Dorothy, b. July 15, 1888.
Alfred Warren, b. July 28, 1889; d. May 4, 1893.
Ruth, b. January 18, 1891.
Philip Joseph, b. March 16, 1892.
Elizabeth, b. February 24, 1894.
Richard Warren, b. April 30, 1903.
Harvard Medical School, receiving degree of M.D. June 25, 1879.
House physician at Boston Lying-in Hospital one year. Practised
medicine for a while in Boston, and in summer in Nahant, Mass.
Relinquished the active practice of medicine some years ago.
Prominent in lawn tennis matters as a player, and publisher of two
books. Elected president of United States Lawn Tennis Associa-
tion, 1901. Member of Scmerset Club of Boston. Resides at 225
Beacon Street, Boston, and has & summer home at Barnstable,
Mass.
*LOUIS DYER.
LOUIS DYER was born in Chicago, III., September 30, 1851. His father,
Charles Volney Dyer, born in Clarendor, Vermont, in 1808, was grad-
usted with the degree of M.D. at Castleton Medical College in Vermont
in 1829, and practised as & physician in Newark, New York, and Chicago.
LOUIS DYER
He was descended from William and Mary Dyer, who came from Somer-
setshire to Boston in 1635, and who, being adherents of Mrs. Hutchinson,
Born September 30 1851.
were driven from Massachusetts Bay to Rhode Island, where they became
Quakers. Dr. Dyer was prominent in the anti-slavery movement, and very
active in the work of the "Underground Railroad." After giving up the
practice of his profession, he was appointed in 1862, by President Lincoln,
judge for the United States in the Anglo-American Mixed Court at Sierra
Leone, which had been established by treaty for the suppression of the
[ 34 ]
MGLG CLIAGA D FLOW DAGL mue browning ID
were
driven from I DR) DO IMORO I
Quakers. Dr. Dyer was prominent in the anti-slavery movement, and very
active in the work of the "Underground Railroad." After giving up the
practice of his profession, he was appointed in 1862, by President Lincoln,
judge for the United States in the Anglo-American Mixed Court at Sierra
Leone, which had been established by treaty for the suppression of the
George B. Dorr to Charles W. Eliot
17 Quincy Street
Cambridge
26 April 1909
Dear Mr. Dorr,
I saw Mr. Alexander Cochrane (55 Kilby Street)
today and found that he know all about that Kebo land
and the present owners. If you will call on Mr. C.
he will tell you how best to approach the owners. The
estate is undivided, and there are, I think, four heirs
of whom Mrs. Cochrane is one. Mr. C. seemed very well
disposed.
Wishing you prompt success, I am
Sincerely yours,
Charles W. Eliot.
Elizabeth Hoyt & Gladys Rice, Landscape Gardeners | Landscape of a Washington Place Page 13 of 18
The Trees
of
Commonwealth Avenue
Boston
By
laikar
GRD.
Charles Sprague Sargent
this
guna
Printed for the Author
1909
The Saltonstall residence in Boston was at 181 Commonwealth Avenue.
Biodiversity Heritage Library image from digitized Library of Congress copy
There is a letter in the
Royal Botanic Gardens,
Kew written by C.S.
Sargent to Sir David
Prain on 12 April 1910
that is described in the
Archives as he has given
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his card to two you
agree to their use.
Close and accept
friends of his Miss Hoyt
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and Miss Rice. They are
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9/24/2018
HARVARD GRADUATES ACCLAIM DR. ELIOT
New York Times file): Jan 28, 1909; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg.4
HARVARDGRADUATES
ACCLAIM DR. ELIOT
1/28/09
As He Tells Them That Ameri-
cans Measure Success by Ser-
vice, Not by Dollars.
REVOLUTION IN TEACHING
College Men Learn Nowadays by
Doing the Actual Work of Their
Choice, He Declares.
The applause with which close to a
thousand graduates of Harvard, old and
young. greeted Dr. Ellot, the retiring
President of the university, on his en-
trance last night to the great dining room
in the Harvard Club, where a reception
was held in his honor. was regarded as a
refutation of the criticism often made
that Dr. Eliot's was a cold nature that
had kept Harvard men strangers to him.
His speech, which was listened to with
the closest attention, the silence being
interrupted only by occasional bursts of
applause, also refuted this criticism. He
spoke of himself more than has been his
wont, of his gratification in having been for
so many years intrusted with a position
to render a service in a high degree, and,
arguing from, the congratulations which,
as he said, had poured in on him in the
past few months, he said it was not ma-
terial success that the American people
worshipped. but serviceableness.
It is just and accurate to say that we
are develop.ng in this country a new re-
ligion-the reigion of serviceableness," he
declared.
Dr. Eliot said that teaching methods had
been revolutionized in the past forty
years-that now men learned by doing.
Forty years ago," he sald, the uni-
versity trained men for the three tradi-
tional professions, ministry, law, and med-
reine. we now train them for every
learned and scientific profession. Edu-
cation is now got by doing the things
themselves. We have at Harvard three
instances of 'his great change In teaching
methods.
At Squam Lake. in New Hampshire,
the Harvard Engineering Camp, men
spend-two months in the Summer, living
the lives of working engineers. We have
a preserve at Petersham. N. H., where
men studying to be foresters, instead of
learning from books, take in hand the
actual work. In Vermont, so that our
mining students may perfect themselves,
we have control of part of a copper mine,
and there the men work as actual miners
for eight weeks in the year.
In our law school men now learn how
to draw briefs. The lecture system is al-
most abandoned. Every student is now
taught to do the things his profession re-
quires.
We are on the trink of a vast ocean
of undiscovered truth. We have just had
a striking example of this in wireless
telegraphy.
Dr. Eliot then began to talk of himself,
which, even to Harvard men, he has rare-
ly done before.
In the last three months," he said,
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
there has come to me a steady stream
of praise, thanks. and gratitude. My ca-
reer appears to strike a considerable num-
ber of people as a successful one. People
congratulate me on what they call my
success. But my career has certainly not
been successful in what IS considered
to
be the American Idea or success. It has
not successful m a pecuniary way.
SUCCESS terms or service
to the community NOW. does not this re-
fute the common opinion that the Ameri-
can estimate of success is a pecuniary
one?
Dr., Eliot told how when traveling by
boat recently mom BOSTON to Mount Des-
the vessel's officers came to thin and
said: officers want to ask you a
question. We know you're a smart man.
We want to know why, being a small
man. you are not rich-?
The real American estimate of success
in the WORLD IS sPrriceableness and not
wealth. continued Dr. Ellot. and it is
a great satisfaction to me. that I have
been privileged 10 give an instance to
that effect. The reward the American
people give to such success is remarkable
in its impressiveness. The man who
stands in my place cannot help under-
going infinite processes of enlargement of
his sympathies and mind from the con-
tact he has with people of high education
and standing.
When he had finished his speech Dr.
Eliot was again applauded vigorously.
In the first part of his speech. after
being introduced by Austen G. Fox. Pres-
ident of the club. Dr. Ellot spoke of
Living Harvard Force." and eulogized
the late Edward King. the reliance of
the American people in time of stress.
and the architect. Charles McKlm, of
whom he said: have just visited Mr.
Morgan's library-the most perfect build-
in't for 118 purpose in the world. and that
came from the brain of Charles Mc-
Kim."
TOO FEW COLLEGE WOMEN.WED
So Says Dr. Eliot, But He Hopes It
Isn't Higher Education's Fault.
Charles W. Eliot. the retiring President
of Harvard University, addressed/ the
Brearley League at its annual luncheon
held in the Hotel Gotham vesterday The
organization is composed of alumnae of
the Brearley School. 17 West Forty-
fourth Street, and numbers among its
members many women prominent in New
York society About 200 attended the
luncheon. Miss Ethel Ward. 123 West
Seventy-fourth Street. President of the
magne. prosided. with Dr. Eliot at her
right and Pro Henry Fairfield Osborn,
President of the American Museum of
Natural History and of the New York
Zoological Society. at her left.
Dr. Ellot responded in the loast. The
Advantages of Higher Enucation for Wo-
men. He said in part:
have bec.n very much interested to
hear Mr. Croswell. your Headmaster, say
that you ladies were/his teachers and not
his pupils. At Harvard I have had sev-
eral groups whom , held In verv
much
the same regard. One of the chief joys
of elderly teachers and parents is to see
the young child's mind expand. It is a
great joy to a father or mother to see in
the mind of their child some quality that
they themselves do not possess. A teach-
er's greatest satisfaction is to learn to
respect the attainment of his pupil's
mind. I have/sec hundreds and thou-
sands of cases where the growth of fac-
ulties has come under the teacher's no-
tice, which were not possible of acquisi-
tion. and which he had not known to
exist This is a constant joy to. the
teacher.
Twenty-five years ago there were
many problems in women's education.
One was: /Will prolonged education for
girls injure_health? Another was: Are
girls capable and competent to undertake
higher education? And. lastly, and most
important: Does a higher education im-
pair a woman's chance of getting mar-
ried?
All these questions have now been
satisfactorily settled. We have come to
see that health is improved, if anything.
by higher education. Further, It has been
sown in thousands of cases that young
women are as capable as young men to
undertake men's studies.
And are the prospects of marriage
interfered with by college? Certainly not
by going to college. Twenty-five years
ago the sort of women who went to col-
lege were not the most attractive phy-
sically. however they may have been
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
162
The report of the Viewe Green Committee
was read and accepted.
7/13/09
Discussion was had in regard to
expectoration in public places
that the matter be referred the Board of
It was suggested by Mr. John
Health after ascertaining the law on the
subject
The President explained the reasons for
amending the By Lows by substituting in
Article 3 Thursday in place of Tuesday
as the day for the meetings of it association
on motion of Mr. Kennedy volid that the By-
Laws be changed as aforesaid
The President, reported that arrangements
had been made for improving the Shore
Path near the mount Desert Reading Room
property
The President explained that is had been
proposed to transfer Tawn Pond Park
to it. Hancock Country Rustees of Public
Receivations in order to avoid all risk
of toxation.
Mr. John S. Kennedy also spoke to the same
effect
No action was taken but is was tacility
agreed towars untie the arrival of wr.
S. Trui mitchell used to confer with him
on the matter.
163
r
th President and Dr.S. Weir hitchell be appointed
On memo of hr. Kennedy is was voted that
the associations appreciation of the loli Sun.
a committee leforefore resolutions expressing
Waldron Bates legacy, and of his devoted services
loth community
his Hobson called is attention to the fact that
here in the interests of Forestry, and on
Mr. Gifford Prichot was to d dress a meeting
motion of Rs. Rev. William Gaurence, it was
voted that the President together with Mrs.
Hobson and mr. George B. Doer aef in
the matter.
(Signed) L. A. tustin,
Voted to adjourn
Sec. pro tem.
Society at Bar Harbor Engaged in its Usual Round of Pleasure. Small Dinner Pa
Special to The New York Times.
New York Times (1857-Current Aug 1, 1909; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2001)
pg. X2
Society at Bar Harbor Engaged in its
Usual Round of Pleasure. Small
Dinner Parties Popular at Lenox.
Special to The New York Times.
by Mrs. Henry F. Dimock at her cottage
AR HARBOR, Me., July 31.-The
Tuesday evening after the Gifford Pinchot
B
week just drawing to a close has
lecture at the Casino in honor of Mr.
been a busy one for Bar Harbor.
Pinchot and the other speakers. There
The largest function of the week was
was a large attendance of society leaders
the annual Kennedy reception at Ken-
at the lecture and at the reception, which
arden Lodge, at which the Summer
was a very pleasant affair.
colony leaders were all present, and
Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Wilkes will
enjoyed a delightful afternoon on the
spend the Summer at the Rockaway. Be-l
spacious and extensive grounds, by
fore her marriage Mrs. Wilkes was Miss
far the finest at Bar Harbor. Then the
Sylvla Green, daughter of Mrs. Hetty
first tennis tournament of the Summer,
Green,
in mixed doubles, was held at the Kebo
Valley Club, beginning Monday. with a
Gifford Pinchot of Washington, head
remarkably good list of entries. The Gif-
the United States Department of For-
ford Pinchot lecture at the Casino Tues-
estry, has been the guest of Mrs. Morris
day attracted many. The Malvern mid-
K. Jesup at Stonecliffe during his stay
week hops and the Swimming Club hop
here.
Saturday night proved delightful affairs.
Mrs. Sidney W. Keith of Philadelphia
Then there were a number of local events
entertained at dinner at the Swimming
and private dinners and luncheons by the
Club Saturday evening before the hop.
score.
The floral decorations were sweet peas,
The entry blanks and premium lists for
and the favors American Beauty roses.
the Horse Show were sent out Tuesday,
Those present included Dr. and Mrs. S
and there is already a general response
Weir Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Scott,
as to entries. The boxes are going fast,
Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Barklie, Mr. and
all the front rows being already taken.
Mrs. Robert C. Drayton, Mrs. Drayton.
The box holders# thus far include Gen.
Mrs. Adams, Miss Julia Berwind, Miss
Edward Morrell Clement B. Newbold, J.
Anne Thompson. Mrs. Frank T. Howard,
L. Ketterlinus, J. Pierpont Edwards,
Miss Ellen Hopkins, Miss Linzee, Messrs.
John I. Kane, Mrs. Warner M. Leeds,
Reginald De Koven, Timothee Adamow-
John T. Pratt. John C. Livingston, Mid-
dleton S. Burrill, Philip Livingston. Mrs.
ski, Charles Fry, Boardman, Johns, and
Ridgway.
Edgar Scott, Miss Christine W. Biddle,
Frank B. Keech, Mrs. G. A. Draper, Mrs.
Mrs. George A. Draper also entertained
Alexander Mackay-Smith, Louis B. Mc-
at dinner prior to the dancing, the dec-
Cagg, Mr. R. L. Patterson, W. S. Gurnee,
orations being American Beauty roses.
F. H. Goodyear. Francis Burton Harrison,
Her dinner was in honor of Miss Ger-
Mrs. Emmett, Dave Hennen Morris, Mrs.
trude Bradford, flancée of Mrs. Draper's
nephew, Preston Davie. The guests in-
cluded Miss Widener, Miss McCormick,
Miss Hinckley, Miss Cartwright. Miss
Bickford, Messrs. Harry Widener, A.
Hudson, Henry D. Burnham, G. Draper,
Davie, Gordon. and Pierce.
Mrs. Henry F. Dimock held a largely at-
tended reception Tuesday night at her
cottage after the Gifford Pinchot lecture!
in honor of Mr. Pinchot and the other
speakers.
Mrs. Nicholas Anderson of Washington
entertained at the Miller cottage Tuesday,
her guests including Mrs. D. T. Worden,
Mrs. Drayton, Mrs. Steward, Mrs. Platt-
Hunt, Mrs. Rush Shippen Huidekoper,
Mrs. Hammond, and Mrs. R. Hall Mc-
Cormick.
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver J. Wells entertained
Monday morning at Clovercroft at an
enjoyable musicale, at which Perie Averill
of New York, a guest at the cottage, was
soloist.
Mr. and Mrs. Wells also entertained
Wednesday night with a small dinner and
bridge party, the guests including Mr,
and Mrs. J. I. Ketterlinus, Mr. and Mrs.
Stevens, and Mrs. Haskell.
Augustus Franzen entertained a few
friends at dinner at the Newport on Tues-
dav.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Newbold of Hyde
Park. N. Y., are late additions to the
cottage colony, and have the Carr cot-
tage on Wayman Lane,
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Bridgman of New
York have returned from a trip abroad
and are at their cottage, Rockhurst, on
Mount Desert Street for the Summer
Mrs. Mary R. H. Ghyn and Miss Doro-
thy Glvn of New York are spending a
fortnight at the Fox cottage, which Mrs.
GWy purchased this Spring.
William Rhinelander Stewart, Jr., who
has been spending the early Summer with
his father. William Rhinelander Stewart,
at Greenlawn, has sailed for Europe to
join his mother. Mrs. J. Henry Smith,
and sister, Miss Anita Stewart, in London.
Mr. and Mrs. James B. Clews, who have
Sherman, Mrs. Charles T. Pellew,
been spending the early Summer at El-
Jacob H. Schiff, Merle Middleton, Mrs.
beron. N. J.. will spend the month of
Thomas Hamlin Hubbard, H. C. Fahne-
August at Bar Harbor. Mr. and Mrs.
stock, Mrs. Gifford A. Cochrane, Miss
Clews have been entertaining Mrs. J.
Mellon, Miss Gardiner, George S. Bow-
Francis Sullivan of Philadelphia, who will
doin. A. J. Barklle. C. Morton Smith, Mrs.
spend August at Bar Harbor with her
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
c.1909
2
In point of faour legal difficulties OF 8 burely technical
character rendered ft impossible to complete the details OF these
purchases before that meeting, or to estimate the exact cost OF the
works etc. involved the such completion, and the payment covering
them undertaken by Mr Kennedy, had not then been made Whole COST
however was stated to wound numbers, amounting fon the murchase of
the land ftself the the case of the Newport and Ploket Mountain ReBet
vations to $5,500. while the Teraz and Bundry expenses needs
earily involved in the transaction which was alac stated the
Meeting Kennedy had offered and apreed to beaze amounted to
an estimated and now actual $2500 more.
It W8B further announced at this meetine that these lifts
of Mary Kennedy had enabled the Association to secure other carva of
large amount dependent unon his, which comaleted the extension of
Reservation when outlined.
Thearine has now come for makine payment for the lands thus
contracted for in accordance with Mr Kennedy's engagement with the
Association In contracting for them. which R did as Executive
officer of the Association, I acted in full consultation with MY
Kennedy as their donor. who authorized me to make these contracts
and incur such expenses upon his account moreover Mrs Kennedy who
was conversant with Mr Kennedy's wishes in the matter as well as
with the main items of expense involved, has told me that he in his
last illness asked her to bear witness to his engagements in this
matter as to an obligation which he had assumed and had not yet
discharged
Under these circumstances I respectfully request you to
recognize this obligation as Mr Kennedy's executors, byadischanges
3
the indebtedness thus incurred. under his instruction, upon his de
count and paying the above desoribed sums, together aggregating
eight thousand dollars (88,000
Payment may be made to me as
Executive Officez OF the Hancook County menetees of Public Reserve
tions I having been authorized as Buok by Missing Kennedy to entor toto
the contracts and engagement B herein described. The deeds for the
lands are waiting now tombe delivered
Lenu trully yours.
the
1909
1909
Undeted
Attendic
The surveys and studies the Transit Company
made during the summer of 1907 having shown con-
clusively the impossibility of extending railroad
connection to Mount Desert Island and operating
it successfully by electricity as our plan --
undertaken solely to avoid the building of a
trolley line over the Island roads had con-
templated, the lands secured in anticipation for
its terminus at Ellsworth, Southwest Harbor and
elsewhere were sold as opportunity offered, with
the exception of that at Bar Harbor, from which I
had from the beginning other, alternative views.
In the autumn of 1909 Mr. Kennedy, who had
subscribed by far the greater sum toward the Tran-
sit Company enterprise, died.
He had approved,
without commitment of the future, my plan for tem-
porary use of our Bar Harbor lands for athletic
purposes as had my fellow directors on the Board
and authorized, with them, the putting the land in
condition for it at our company's expense.
2.
I now took up, the electric railway project at
at end, making the use of the land for athletic pur- -
poses permanent with Mr. Kennedy's nephews, the Tods,
trustees of his estate, whom I found thoroughly in
sympathy with me in the matter and who offered their
cooperation. A word in explanation of what follows
is needed here:
Mrs. Kennedy, left alone after Mr. Kennedy's
death, invited her sister and her sister's husband,
the Rev'd Dr. Schauffler, Secretary of the Presby-
terian Missionary Society in America, to make their
home with her, with the result that she, already in-
terested, presently became completely absorbed in
the missionary undertakings of the Society, devoting
to it her whole income, great as it still was, and
even pledging it for years to come for the construction
of buildings in China, Rome and elsewhere and their
provision with endowments.
With this in mind, Mr. Kennedy's nephews told me
it would be wise to mark the value of the Athletic
Field down in asking her to purchase it from the com-
pany and give it to the Town, that she might not feel
too great a sum was being taken for it from her missions.
3.
So, in friendly conspiracy, we set the price of the
Athletic Field at less than half what it, with its
drainage and other improvements, had cost, and the
following summer, that of 1910, I took up with Mrs.
Kennedy making the gift of it to the Town. She agreed
at once but presently wrote me to withdraw the gift
on account of objections made by Dr. Schauffler.
I let the matter rest for a while, biding my
time, then took it up afresh, going first to Dr.
Schauffler and diplomatically seeking his cooperation.
A meeting with Mrs. Kennedy followed, at which he, too,
was present. I outlined, at their request, the good
work the Athletic Field, I felt, would do for the ever
renewed younger generation at Bar Harbor, and the real
need that existed for it as a playground. When I had
done, Dr. Schauffler said: "The Athletic Field is
yours!" and Mrs. Kennedy nodded her approval.
It was arranged that for a period of twenty years,
Date
which I set as covering probably the duration of Mrs.
Kennedy's life, the property should be held by a cor-
poration which I undertook to form, insuring its right
administration in accordance with Mrs. Kennedy's desire,
4.
then be turned over to the Town under conditions that
would safeguard and perpetuate such use for all future
time. These twenty years came to an end but a year
or two after Mrs. Kennedy died, and on November 14th,
1934 the holding corporation turned the Athletic Field
over formally to the Town.
[C.B.Dar]]
Cofy
At the annual meeting of the Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations held at Bar Harbor in September, 1909, a statement was made
by Mr George B. Dorr as the executive officer of the Corporation regard-
ing work accomplished during the preceding year and other work in process
of accomplishment.
The meeting was presided over by the president of
the Corperation, ex-president Charles W. Eliot. Present among other
Trustees at the meeting were Mr John S. Kennedy, the Rt Rev. William
Lawrence, Bishop of Massachusetts, Mr L. E. Opdycke, president of the
Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association, State Senator L. B. Deasy of
Bar Harbor, and Mr Lea McI. Luquer, the secretary of the Corperation.
The statement made by Mr Dorr of work accomplished included the
purchase of the summit of Green Mountain and the acquisition of the stock
of the Green Mountain Road Corporation, and was accompanied by the fur-
ther statement that the cost of these, together with that of the search
into titles and other legal work involved and the employment of neces-
sary agents in the matter, had been the gift of Mr Kennedy to the Associ-
ation.
The statement of work in process of completion described a contract
entered into with the Rodick Reality Company and others for the purchase
of the northern portion of Newport Mountain and the whole of Picket
Mountain; a similar contract entered into for the purchase of a tract
called the Dry Mountain Tract, connecting the Newport Mountain Reserva-
tion with the Green Mountain Reservation first referred to; and studies
made by lawyers and work done by others in regard to the ownership of
other mountains and tracts of land important to the purposes of the Associ-
ation. This statement was accompanied by the further statement that the
Newport Mountain and Picket Mountain tracts themselves and the legal ex-
penses, employment of agents, etc., involved in the acquisition of these
2.
and of the adjoining Dry Mountain tract and which had made it possible to interest others in its
purchase. like the Green Mountain Tract acquired the previous year the gift of Mr. Kennedy,
who had authorized the action on the part of Mr. Dorr.
Following the statement by Mr. Dorr, President Eliot moved a vote of thanks to Mr. Kennedy for
his generosity and public spirited action. Seconded by Bishop Lawrence.
Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Oct. 13.1909
Hou L B. Denry
My dear Sir:-
I have the honor to inform you that President
Charles W. Eliot has appointed the following Committee to
consider and report at the next meeting, on "the whole matter
reparding the protection of all water supply on the Island of
Mt. Desert."
President Charles W. Eliot, Chairman.
Mr. John S. Kennedy
Hon. L. B. Deasy
Mr. James T. Gardiner
Dr. Richard H. Harte
Dr. C. C. Morrison
Dr. George A. Phillips.
This Committeechas the power to add to its number.
Kindly
signify your acceptance to the Secretary at 321 West 80 Street,
New York.
Very truly yours,
Lea h== Lugue
Secretary.
Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Oct. 13.1909
Hon. L. B. Desiry,
My dear Sir:-
I have the honor to inform you that President
Charles W. Eliot has appointed the following Committee to
present to the next annual meeting a proposed amendment to
the Charter, whereby "net income of the Corporation may be
used for the purposes of the Corporation without infringing
upon its charter privileges."
Hon. L. B. Deasy, Chairman.
Mr. George B. Dorr.
Mr. George L. Stebbins.
Kindly signify your acceptance to the Secretary at 321 West 80
Street, New York.
Very truly yours,
Lea
Secretary.
Diotaphone - transcribed Ootober 15, 1941.
I, happily, was not a member of the Bar Harbor Water Company's
directors board, but stood apart as one interested from every angle
in the better development of the Town. I could do what others could
not without being open to the charge of acting for some special
interest in seeking charge of the aoquisition of further lands for
the protection of the Bar Harbor Water Company. The water sheds of
the lake was large and its lands were held by local owners whose
prices would go up beyond all limit as soon as purchasing by the
Water Company for protection of the lake began. But the matter was
one of broad public concern, State concern, and I thought that by
dwelling on that aspect of it I might be able to get a law passed
by the State Legislature, which happily met in its bionnial session
the first of the ooming year, and I set to work upon it with a will.
We happily had at Seal Harbor, as a summer resident, Professor
William T. Sedgwick, author of the most authoritative work extant
on public water supplies, and I at once enlisted his aid. Dr. Abbe,
than whom no one in New York stood higher, I already had behind me
and one by one I was able to present, when the January first meeting
of the Legislature opened and
hearing came upon my bill,
a most impressive array of testimony of high authority in favor of
granting our water supplies on the Island condemnation rights for the
protection of their waters purity. I also got a number of leading
summer residents on the Island to attend the meeting and speak in
favor of the Bill. They represented a great new industry of the State,
2.
summer residential life along its ocean-front, and they too carried
weight. I sought the right for all the water supply companies upon
the Island; I obtained it,in spite of local opposition, for Eagle Lake,
Bar Harbor's water supply, and Jordan Pond, that of Seal Harbor, the
two most important of them all. Local ownership around the others,
less important from the summer residential point of view, was too
strong to do more, but it was enough
It put the idea of the
necessity of purity for our water supplies across and no further
trouble has ensued.
Having got this right, I naturally was asked by the Water
Company to take charge of seouring, so far as their reserve funds,
which were considerable, would allow, their water sheds which I
agreed to do upon the sole condition that the lands secured should
pass into the Public Reservations hands, to be held by our Trustees
association, and not go to the Water Company, thus insuring, as I
thought forevert the purity of their supply. In this the Water
Company secured a great advantage in its freedom from taxation
which ownership under our Trustess of Public Reservations association
gave, and it readily agreed. The same course was followed by the
Seal Harbor Water Company so far as need was, and the two lakes
lying baok to back as it were with the Bubbles mountain ridge
[G.B.Darr]
Pureedings of the Society for Psychical Research
Baedain College
I
Dorr is VP of
C.3
Soc for Priydant fes.
1909. -
VJ / 21 Puc Filc
Soc For Single Res.
1939.
1909 Vol. 23 Pice the
Soc
2
Wm Jan Report M His Piper's
Hodg sm-Control.
Pp 38-47 OlF Faru
41
jot
3 1939 Final Listin for Worr.Still lists 18 Series Commonwealth Ave
address.
Dorr listed as UP
I
NOVICI 18901 1902 402 (not earlier ) 1910, 1911
1913, 1115
Payinn America march R
Voi 6 (Proc:)
1918, 1920 1923, 1939
it
Dorr Listed as Member, Mrs C.Dorr 1891-
1896
1897
,1 900, 1903, -
Check again vol. 25 (Proc) Index to Dorr/Door
(1411)
5
last puh list of offer util 1946.
6
No obit for Dorr.
EOOSIER01
Cound Pub in G45, vol 47 No.
9/5/2018
Xfinity Connect Inbox
Sam clemens & william james
RONALD
9/4/2018 10:15 PM
To rwh051009@gmail.com, eppster2@comcast.net
Following your. lead, I watched the final PBS installment on Mark Twain. Refreshed my
memory from its original broadcast.
Spent the day with William James. Was reminded that James asked Dorr to be one of his
pallbearers at Harvard's Appleton Chapel. But what I had not uncovered earlier was that
on the occasion of James's 68th birthday--eight months before his death--his family invited
1/11/10
to his Irving Street home 22 of what his biographer calls his "eminent colleagues and close
friends" to mark his retirement. A moment of celebration for those seated around the
dining room table: Charles William Eliot, A. Lawrence Lowell (Eliot's sucessor), Henry
Higginson, George Dorr and the senior members of the philosophy department. And
overlooking the gathering was the just completed Bay Emmet portrait of James to be
presented to the university, its subject looking "kindly, wise, and benign." That Dorr was
included in this gathering elevates his standing, don't you think?
I have found anew more evidence of James and his first psychology grad student and
PhD recipient, G. Stanley Hall. Need to look at my Clark U. Archival files tomorrow. Spent
most of the afternoon reading James's 1898 letters to his wife for the two month trip to
Stanford and Berkeley. What sensitivity!
How did you spend the day recovering from my visit? I sent in nine new ILL requests.
Sleep well.
Ron
PLACE FOR PINCHOT.
Former Forester Made Head of Na-
tional Conservation Association.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 23.-The election
of Gifford Pinchot, former Government
Forester. to succeed Dr. Charles W. Eliot
as President of the National Conservation
Association was announced to-night. Dr.
Eliot, at whose suggestion Mr. Pinchot
was elected, retains the honorary Presi-
dency. Mr. Pinchot takes active charge
of the association to-morrow, the head-
quarters of which will be in Washington.
Two weeks ago Dr. Eliot wrote to the
Executive Committee of the association
expressing his opinion that Mr. Pinchot,
as the recognized head of the conserva-
tion movement, should take the active
leadership of the association. At Dr.
Eliot's direction. a meeting of the Ex-
ecutive Committee of the association was
held, and Mr. Pinchot's election followed,
The National Conservation Association
was formed last July at a meeting with
Dr. Eliot in Cambridge, Mass., with the
purpose of helping. through a large indi-
vidual membership, to put into practical
effect the conservation principles de-
clared by the conference of Governors'at
the White House in May, 1908.
It has secured a membership extending
generally over the country. It is an-
nounced that an active campaign to ex-
tend that membership in every State and
Territory will be carried on vigorously
The New York Times
Published: January 24, 1910
Copyright © The New York Times
5 NASSAU STREET,
NEW YORK,
1st March, 1910.
George B. Dorr Esq.
18 Commonwealth Ave.,
Boston, Mass.
Dear Sir,
Your letter of the 24th ultimo addressed to the
Executors of my late Uncle's Estate has been referred to me,
and as some time will elapse before it can be acted upon, I
have decided to acknowledge it.
At a Meeting of the Executors application was
made to them to authorize the payment to you of $5,000 for
the acquisition of Newport Mountain. The statement was made
to the Executors that the Mountain had not been acquired,
and that Mr. Kennedy had made no payment to account. On the
presentation of the case as made to the Executors their duly
appointed Counsel advised them that such payment would be
illegal.
The statement made by Mr. Kennedy during his last
illness, and to which you refer, was conveyed to the Executors
as a request by Mr. Kennedy to Mrs. Kennedy to "See that New-
port Mountain is paid for" and appealed to some of them as
susceptible of more than one construction.
Your presentation of the case gives to it an
entirely different aspe ct and I sincerely regret that a de-
cision was arrived at without the present detail, without
G.B.D -2-
reference to "Picket Mountain" and the legal and other ex-
penses connected with these purchases and the "Dry Mountain"
Reservation purchase, and under a misapprehension as to the
total cost, all of which indicates to me that Mrs. Kennedy's
knowledge of the subject is not so extensive as you think.
I will ask Counsel to the Executors to recon-
sider the whole question and if he reverses himself and ad-
vises them that the appropriation of $8,000 for this purpose
can be legally made by the Executors, I will cheerfully vote
to make it. If the decision is against you, and although
I have not been asked to do so, I will see if some of Mr.
Kennedy's relatives or legatees are not disposed to carry
through what I believe he would have done had he lived.
You have forgotten that I met you once more at
General Hubbard's reception to Commander Peary on 28th Sep-
tember last. Mr. Kennedy discussed with me during my visit
the whole question of the Mountain tops, what he intended to
do and what he expected others to do.
Yours faithfully,
ELIOT ON ROCKEFELLER PLAN.
Special to The New York Times.
New York Times (1857-Current file); Mar 5, 1910; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg. 9
ELIOT ON ROCKEFELLER PLAN.
Harvard's Ex-Head Doubtful of Wis-
dom of Vast Charity Corporation.
Special 10 The New Yerk Times.
CAMBRIDGE Mass. March 4.-Presi-
dent Emeritus Charles W. Eliot of Har-
3/5/10
vard was not very enthusiastic when
asked to express his opinion of the re-
cently announcedRockefeller Foundation.
Whether this new plan of incorporat-
ing all charities and educational gifts now
supported by the Rockefeller millions will
prove a beneficial advance over the pres-
ent methods I cannot say," said Dr.
Eliot. "A great deal depends on the per-
son or persons who administer this vast
fund. Those who have the actual han-
dling of the money which is to be dis-
pensed should have a wide and impartial
experience in such work.
It is just as possible to throw money
away in this manner as in any other, and
many undeserving charities may impose
on Mr. Rockefeller's agents. I am not in
favor of applying the principles of incor-
poration to such an undertaking, for in
my mind that is to commercialize the
matter 100 much.
There IS also another matter to be
considered. It is possible for such a cor-
poration to discriminate unconsciously
against many deserving charities. Such a
vast scheme of charities as proposed by
Mr. Rockefeller may also have the effect
of paralyzing gifts from other persons
who may consider all charitable and edu-
cational wants to be filled by the Rocke-
feller Foundation.
With these restrictions and comments
I believe that the Rockefeller Foundation
will be a great benefit to all humanity.
The proposal of such a plan on Mr.
Rockefeller's part certainly shows a wide
and humane mind, but whether the work
will be managed with the same public
spirit and impartiality which has charac-
terized Mr. Rockefeller in such matters
remains to be seen."
Do you expect Harvard to benefit
greatly by this plan? Dr. Eliot was
asked.
I should want to see the articles of
incorporation and know the men who will
handle this fund before I can answer
that," replied Dr. Eliot.
ST. THOMAS'S NEW CHANCEL
Church to Have a Carved Panel In-
stead of a Window.
St. Thomas's Episcopal Church, Fifth
Avenue and Fifty-third Street. has adopt-
ed a new chancel plan for its $1,000,000
structure. Instead of a large chancel
window the arcintects have now substi-
tuted. and it has been accepted. a carved
panneling. which will extend all the way
to the lofty ceiling and contain many
carved figures. In the upper part will be
stained glass. The only other change is
a reduction of 7 feet in the length of the
church made necessary by the widening
of
Fifth Avenue.
In the year book to be issued to-morrow
a
communican list. of 3,300 is shown of
which 2,300 belong to the parish church.
This is larger than ever before.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
Leading County Paper and the Society Journal of Mt. Desert Island
THE BAR HARBOR RECORD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 20, 1910.
Cashier
BAR HARBOR WILL WELCOME
EDWAI
PRESIDENT WILLIAM TAFT
The President and his party left
for dinner. The party will be the
OFF
Beverly on his Maine cruise Monday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ellis at that
afternoon and arrived at Eastport yes-
famous Tea House and about twenty-
nce
terday afternoon, where he was en-
five guests have been invited to ac-
tertained by the people of that East-
company them.
HOU
rk
ern Maine Seaport city, during the
Others who will entertain the party,
afternoon and evening. He left there
while they are at Bar Harbor are
this morning and is expected to ar-
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dimock and Mr.
rive at this resort at Three o'clock
and Mrs. Nicholas Anderson, where
today. He will in all probability land
they will be dined. Moses will fur-
On
at the Mt. Desert reading room slip.
nish the flower decoration for all of
On
He will then receive an official wel-
these receptions and dinners and as
come from the selectmen of the town,
usual he will make everything look
after which he is expected to take a
its best.
drive out to the Kebo links.
The streets are being made ready
He has had numerous invitations,
for the occasion and when the party
which he cannot accept during his
arrives one will not be able to recog-
Apply
short stay here, but it has been offi-
nize the beautiful town. A decorative
cially stated that he will be the guest
company from Boston is in town and
of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ellis at the
is busily engaged brightening things
Kebo Valley Club between the hours
up.
of are and six on Thursday. About
After the President's stay of three
FA
200 hundred Invitations have been
days at this resort a special car will
sons out for this occasion and some
take him to Bangor. where he will
of most prominent members of
give an address and then return to
11.0 colony will to there in
Hilaworth. where he will spend the
night with Senator Eugene Hale.
Telep
President
Koto luncheon the Prost
It is not definitelt known as vet
Taff Miss Mahal
whore the party will Be received by
ISA
Winthrope
the selectment but It 10 expected that
and
ther
ther will be memmer at the Mount
Desert Reading Room 85 soon 8.9 the
paiir lands
MADIANA FITA MORTN
FUSSY
Th
Charles W. Eliot to George B. Dorr
Asticou, Maine
September 16, 1910.
Dear Mr. Dorr,
Under the power given me by the new by-law adopted
yesterday, I am ready to appoint any special committees
that you will name. Is it not best to appoint them im-
mediately? You spoke yesterday of two special committees,
one on bridle paths, and the other on new roads.
I hope you will soon be relieved from the necessity
of taking quick, decisive action on purchases. That is
a somewhat wearing business, which is an offset to the
enjoyment which, on the whole, you ought to get from
your admirable work for the Reservations. When the tran-
sactions have been completed, SO that you have made sure
of all the necessary or very desirable places, I hope the
time will come when all the acquired reservations can be
indicated in green on the path-map of Mt. Desert, as was
done in 1909 for the acquisitions on Green Mountain, the
Beehive, and Barr Hill.
[You gave me great pleasure yesterday. To see the
progress already make of the reservations, ad the
promote lost the immediate future was a great
Safis faction.
Chale W. shoot]
1910-
JDR Fr. purchase Seal Harber home.
First step that
A Degan land acquisition to
preseur at lead partyfedad
from expiritation
donalia
of nearly 10,000 are
ANP.
R.H.E 8/2004
5/18/12
Josiah Royce
a
630
A Word of Greeting to William James.
[June, 1910]
A WORD OF GREETING TO WILLIAM JAMES
SOCAH
My word of greeting to our host ought to be delivered ex tempore. If
I cannot meet the requirement of the occasion in this respect, one suffi-
cient reason for my failure is the difficulty of separating out, in my mind,
and in my speech, the things that it is possible to say from amidst the great
mass of the things which flock to my mind at such a time. My relations
to our host have lasted so long,-have been so manifold, that I can select
3/26/1980.
only with difficulty. What he has meant to me has been of such intimate
/
importance in my own personal life that it is especially hard to judge what
part of my own account of him will appeal to others with any of the deeper
meaning that this account inevitably has for me.
Yet there is one matter to which I may at once refer, a matter that has
been indeed momentous for my own private fortunes, but that is also known
and interesting to all of us alike. Nothing is more characteristic of Pro-
fessor James's work as a teacher and as a thinker than is his chivalroas
fondness for fair play in the warfare and in the cooperation of ideas and
of ideals. We all of us profess to love truth. But one of James's especial
offices in the service of truth has been the love and protection and en-
couragement of the truth-seekers. He has done much more than this for
the cause of truth; but this at least he has always done. He has lately
warned us much against thinking of truth as a mere abstraction. And in-
deed it has always been his especial gift to see truth incarnate, em-
bodied in the truth-seekers, and to show his own love of truth by listening
with appreciation, and by helping the cause of fair play, whenever he
found somebody earnestly toiling or suffering or hoping in the pursuit of
any genuine ideal of truth. How many eager seekers, neglected by the
world, -men who fought on the side of unpopular causes, have come to
him for sympathy, and have found it, - not in the form of any easy so
ceptance of their own opinions, - but in the form of a sympathy that has
1 A dinner was held at the house of Prof. James on Jan. 18, to celebrate the com-
pletion of his portrait, and the presentation of it to the University. The portrait was
subscribed, on the occasion O James' retirement, by the members of the Divi-
mon and the Visiting Committee on Philosophy as s symbol of the affection and esteem
of his colleagues. The following were present at the dinner:
Specially invited guests: Pres. Lowell, Pres. Eliot, Mr. H. L. Higginson. Members
of the Visiting Committee : Mesars. R. C. Robbins, G. B. Dorr C. Cabot, R. H.
Dana. W. R. Warren, J. Lee, and the Rev. G. A. Gordon. Members of the Division of
Philosophy Professors James, Palmer, Münsterberg, Royce, Pasbody, Santayana,
Holt, Yerkes, Woods, Perry, and Dr. Fuller. Informal remarks were made by
Prof. Palmer, who represented the subscribers, by Pres. Eliot and Prof. Royce, who
spoke as Prof. James's associates throughout his career, by Pres. Lowell, who repre-
sented the University and received the portrait in its behalf, and by Prof. James. The
portrait was painted by Miss Ellen Emmett, of New York, and is to hang in the Faculty
Room, University Hall.
Harvard graduates Magazine 18(1910)
Google
CALIFORNIA
1910.]
A Word of Greeting to William James.
681
sustained them in the freedom of their faith and in the sincerity of their
life, because he told them that if the spirit of earnest endeavor was in them,
and if some real light had come to their souls, it was better to offer what
they had, and to fight for their own best, than to accept tamely the re-
straints of this or of that transient form of present-day orthodoxy. Other
men talk of liberty of thought; but few men have done more to secure
liberty of thought for men who were in need of fair play and of a reasonable
hearing than James has done.
Now I suppose that it is altogether, or almost altogether because of
James's chivalry of soul that I myself first obtained that opportunity in
life which results in my being here with you at all. In speaking of my
personal relation to him, I therefore have to dwell upon a matter that in
1877-
this respect does indeed tend to characteriza My real acquaintance
with our host began one summer day in 1877 when I first visited him in
the house on Quincy St., and was permitted to pour out my son to some-
body who really seemed to believe that a young man might rightfully do-
vote his life to philosophy if he chose. was then student at the Johns
Hopkins University. The opportunities for a lifework in philosophy in
this country were few. Most of my friends and advisers had long been
telling me to let the subject alone. Perhaps, so far as I was concerned, their
advice was sound; but in any case I was so far incapable of accepting that
advice. Yet if somebody had not been ready to tell me that I had a right
to work for truth in my own way, I should ere long have been quite dis-
couraged. I do not know what I then could have James found me
at once - -made out what my essential interests were at our first inter-
view, accepted me, with all my imperfections, as one of those many souls
who ought to be able to find themselves in their own way, gave a patient
and willing ear to just my variety of philosophical experience, and used
his influence from that time on, not to win me as a follower, but to give
me my chance. It was upon his responsibility that I was later led to get
my first opportunities here at Harvard Whatever I am is in that sense
due to him.
There are a great many people living who could give almost this very
account of their own carcers. My own case is but one of a multitude. No
other philosopher in our country compares with James, I think, in his
effectiveness as a man who has helped active and restless minds not only
to win their own spiritual freedom, but to express their ideals in their
own way
Sometimes critical people have expressed this by saying that James has
always been too fond of cranks, and that the cranks have loved him.
Well, I am one of James's cranks. He was good to me. and I love him.
The result of my own early contact with James was to make me for years
Gougle
632
A Word of Greeting to William James.
[June,
very much his disciple. I am still in large part under his spell. If I con-
tend with him sometimes, I suppose that it is he also who through his own
free spirit has in great measure taught me this liberty. I know that for
years I used to tremble at the thought that James might perhaps some
day find reason to put me in my place by some one of those wonderful,
lightning-like epigrams wherewith he was and is always able to char-
acterize those opponents whose worldly position is such as to make them
no longer in danger of not getting a fair hearing, and whose self-assur-
ance has relieved him of the duty to secure for them a sympathetic atten-
tion. What, I used to say, would be my feeling if James were to wither
me with such a word as he can use about Thomas Hill Green, or perhaps
about some other so-called Hegelian - The time has passed, the light-
ning in question has often descended, - never indeed on me as his friend,
but often on my opinions, and has long since blasted, I hope, some at least
of what is most combustible about my poor teachings. Yet I am 80 glad of
the friendly words that still sustain me, that these occasional segnendo
Blitze, when incidentally they are sown over the earth where my opinions
chance to be growing, only make me love better the cause that James loves,
and that he has 80 nobly served, the cause of fertilizing the human soil
where our truth has to grow, - this cause, and the friend who through all
these years has borne with me so kindly, and has in so many ways been
my creator and my support
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1909-10
Page | Type | Title | Date | Source | Other notes |
1 | File folder | File contents. 1909:Eliot resigns Harvard Presidency (1869-1909); Athletic Field acquisition; Eagle Lake Watershed + securing first state Trustee power of eminent domain; GBD becomes VP of Social for Psychical Research (U.K.); Eagle Lake, DP,B2F6; Psychical Research with Mrs. Piper. 1910:Jesup Memorial Libary Construction; HCTPR land expansion under G.Stebbins; JDR jr. purchase Eyrie; Pres Taft visits B.H. (7/20);Eliot to GBD re HCTPR land acquistion (9/16); Eliot publishes "Five Foot Shelf" | 09/05 | Compiled by Ronald Epp | |
2 | Journal excerpt | "From Horses to Horsepower: Mount Desert Island's Ten-Year War for the Automobiles" | 2013 | Bill Horner. Chebacco XIV (2013): 86-106 | |
3-4 | Newspaper article | "No Automobiles: Mount Desert Towns Can Shut Them Out" | February 24, 1909 | Bar Harbor Record | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
5-6 | Class Reports | George Bucknam Dorr biographical record | 1909 | HUA. Class of 1874.9th Report.1909 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
7 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr from Charles W. Eliot re: Kebo land acquisition | April 26, 1909 | JML 1, f.5.Dorr Papers | |
8 | Title Page | The Trees of Commonwealth Avenue, Boston by Charles Sprague Sargent | 1909 | washingtonembassygardens.wordpress.com | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
9-10 | Newspaper article | Harvard Graduates Acclaim Dr. Eliot | Jan. 28, 1909 | New York Times. Proquest | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
11-12 | Report | Discussion and report of the Village Green Committee | July 7, 13, 2009 | BHVIA | |
13 | Newspaper article | "Society at Bar harbor Engaged in its Usual Round of Pleasure" inc. reference to Pinchot lecture | Aug 1, 1909 | New York Times. Proquest | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
14-15 | Letter | Partial letter from George B. Dorr re: Kennedy lands | c1909 | Chapman Archives.JDR Jr.Papers.B143 R15 | |
16-19 | Manuscript excerpt | Transit Company and Athletic Field | 1909 | ANPA B3.F5.2 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
20-21 | Report | Purchase of Green Mountain, acquisition of Newport and Picket Mountains | No date | Chapman Archives.JDR Jr.Papers.Box 143.R21 | |
22 | Letter | Letter to Hon.L.B.Deasy from Mr. Luquer re:HCTPR Committee members | Oct. 13, 1909 | Chapman Archives.JDR.Jr. Papers. Box 143.R1 | |
23 | Letter | Letter to Hon.L.B.Deasy from Mr. Luquer re:HCTPR Committee members | Oct. 13, 1909 | Chapman Archives.JDR,Jr. Papers.Box 143 R1. | |
24-25 | Manuscript excerpt | Bar Harbor Water Company, circa 1909-10 | October 15, 1941 | Dorr Papers. B2.F6 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
26 | Notes | Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research | Bowdoin College | Compiled by Ronald Epp | |
27 | Date page | 1910 | Ronald Epp | ||
28 | Sam Clemens & William James; Dorr present at gathering before death of William James | 9/4/18 | Personal email of Ronald Epp | ||
29 | Newspaper article | Pinchot made head of National Conservation Association | January 24, 1910 | New York Times | |
30-31 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr re:acquisition of Newport Mountain | 1st March, 1910 | Chapman Archives. JDR Jr. Papers.B143.R21 | |
32 | Newspaper article | Eliot on Rockefeller Foundation plan | Mar 5, 1910 | New York Times. Proquest | |
33 | Newspaper article | Bar Harbor welcomes President William Taft | July 20, 1910 | Bar Harbor Record | |
34 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr from Charles W. Eliot re: HCTPR and Dorr acknowlegement | September 16, 1910 | JML. Dorr Papers | |
35 | Notes | JDR, Jr and land acquisitions | 8/2004 | Compiled by Ronald Epp | |
36-39 | Magazine excerpt | A Word of Greeting to William James from Josiah Royce | June, 1910 | Harvard Graduates Magazine 18 (1910) | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
40-41 | Textbook excerpt | Tribute to William James written in 1910 | 1998 | Linda Simon. Genuine Reality: A Life of William James. N.Y.:Harcourt Brace + Co., 1998 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
42 | Title Page | Studies in Spiritism by Amy E. Tanner, PhD. | 1910 | Dartmouth College. | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
43-47 | Report | A Brief Record of the Origin and Activities of the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations | 1936 | Woodlawn Museum. Samuel A. Eliot | |
48 | Newspaper article | Activity of the HCTPR | October 20, 1910 | Bar Harbor Record | |
49-51 | Magazine article | "The Five-foot Shelf Reconsidered" | November-December 2001 | www.harvardmagazine.com | Annotated by Ronald Epp |