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Boston-Boston Athenaeum
Boston
Boston Athenaeum
The
Athenaeum Centerary The Softener ad History
of the Boston athenaeum Boston B.A., 1907.
PROPRIETORS
135
John Torrey Morse, Jr., and
Elizabeth Loring Tappan and
Eben Rollins Morse, Ex-
Mary Swift Tappan
1901
ecutors
1894
174 DAVID WELD CHILD
1822
Elihu Goodman Loomis
1894
Artemas Ward
1835
167 ABBOTT LAWRENCE
1822
Henry Artemas Ward
1848
William Nye Davis
1857
Edward Alexander Strong
1866
Annah Delano
1863
175 ROBERT GOULD SHAW
1822
James D. Thomson
1866
John Haven Cheever
1855
Robert Hooper, Jr.
1866
David Williams Cheever
1869
Joseph Hurd
1867
176 THOMAS CORDIS
1822
168 MARSHALL BINNEY SPRING
1822
Thomas Aspinwall
1856
169 Avos LAWRENCE
1822
Francis Henshaw and Com-
William Richards Lawrence
1836
pany
1880
Susan Coombs Lawrence
1885
Charles Smith Bradley
1880
George Brune Shattuck
1886
Fanny L. Francis
1889
170 IBRAEL THORNDIKI, Jr.
1822
Nelson Slater Bartlett
1891
Edward Greely Loring
1844
177 JOHN BELLOWS
1822
George Washington Warren
1844
George Alexander Otis
1826
Helen Talcott Jones
1884
John Brazer Davis
1827
George Pemberton Bangs
1884
James Murray Robbins
1835
Robert Hallowell Gardiner,
Archibald Murray Howe
1887
Trustee
1893
178 ABIJAH FISK
1822
William Lowell Putnam
1898
Hercules M. Hayes
1824
Robert Hallowell Gardiner,
John Williams
1829
Trustee
1898
Hercules M. Hayes
1830
Albert Thorndike
1903
Simon Eliot Greene
1830
Robert Hallowell Gardiner,
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
1831
Trustee
1903
John Henry Jenks
1832
171 WILLIAM PRATT
1822
Samuel Griswold Goodrich
1833
William Parsons Winchester 1845
John Mackay
1840
Eliza Gill Winchester, William
William Davies Sohier
1845
Sohier, and Charles Berkley
William Sohier
1872
Johnson, Trustees
1851
William Davies Sohier
1893
William Minot, Jr., Trustee
1891
179 SAMUEL DORR
1822
Laurence Minot and Joseph
Charles Hazen Dorr
1845
Henry Russell, Trustees
1901
George Bucknam Dorr
1894
Simmons Female College
1903
180 SAMUEL WHITWELL, JR.
1822
172 JAMES HALL
1822
Benjamin Franklin White
1837
James Trecothick Austin
1841
Charles Royal Bond
1839
Susanna Williams
1847
Thomas William Parsons, Jr. 1840
Edward Alexander Williams
1860
Horace Wayland Wadleigh
1897
Sarah Ann Elizabeth Wil-
Mary Evert Goodwin
1897
liams
1872
Mary Evert Nazro
1902
Thomas Williams Williams
1875
Henry Hornblower
1902
Charles Merrick Gay
1879
181 FRIDERIC WILLIAM PAINE
1822
Georgie McClure
1894
Gardiner Leonard Chandler,
Georgie Lee
1897
Jr.
1835
173 JOHN TAPPAN
1822
David B. Tower
1837
John Gallison Tappan
1872
Rufus Choate
1839
Frederick Herbert Tappan and
Mary Ann Palfrey Russell
1865
Mary Swift Tappan
1888
182 FRANCIS STANTON
1822
Digitized by Google
Original from
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
The Athenaum Centenary
The Influence and History
OF THE
BOSTON ATHENAUM
=
FROM 1807 TO 1907
WITH A RECORD OF ITS OFFICERS AND BENEFACTORS
AND A COMPLETE LIST OF PROPRIETORS
PRINTED FROM THE INCOME OF THE
ROBERT CHARLES BILLINGS FUND
THE BOSTON ATHEN/EUM
1907
V.
FC
Contents
PAGE
I. THE INFLUENCE OF THE ATHENAUM ON LITER-
ATURE IN AMERICA
I
By BARRETT WENDELL
II. THE FIRST ONE HUNDRED YEARS OF ATHE-
NAUM HISTORY. A CHRONOLOGICAL SKETCH
13
By THE LIBRARIAN
III. SPECIAL COLLECTIONS IN THE ATHENAEUM
57
IV. PERMANENT FUNDS OF THE ATHENAEM
67
V. CHIEF GIFTS AND BEQUESTS TO THE ATHE-
NAEUM
73
VI. PUBLICATIONS ISSUED BY THE ATHENAUM
89
VII. FOUNDERS OF THE ATHENAUM
107
VIII. OFFICERS
113
IX. PROPRIETORS
123
X. MEMBERS OF THE STAFF
215
INDEX
225
I
THE INFLUENCE OF THE ATHEN/EUM
ON LITERATURE IN AMERICA
BY BARRETT WENDELL
THE influence of the Boston Athenxum is a fact not so
much in history as in the memories, and in the lives
of those who have had the happy fortune to know and
to feel it. At least hereabouts- - and they still pleas-
antly pretend that true Bostonians regard the universe
as radiating from the newly gilded dome of the State
House - there has never been anything else quite
like this truly social library, now grown to its hun-
dredth year. It is in no sense a private place, yet it has
qualities of privacy as fine as those of houses where the
very fact of your reception is in itself a subtle pleasure.
It is not a public place, where the whole world may
jostle you until you wonder whether in some better
world than this you may find yourself, if you are good
here, among angels without elbows; yet it has the
impersonal generosity of such publicity as makes your
presence in its halls and alcoves a cordial matter of
course. It is not a haunt of solemn scholarship, dedi-
cated to the almost religious pursuit of learning, as if
1912
J.C Gry
116
THE BOSTON ATHEN/EUM
John Richards
1821-1822
Peter Oxenbridge Thacher
1823-1825
Francis Calley Gray
1826-1832
George Ticknor
1833
George Hayward
1834-1836
Thomas Greaves Cary
1837-1845
John Amory Lowell
1846-1859
George Livermore
1860-1865
Andrew Townshend Hall
1866-1875
Charles Francis Adams
1876
Charles Deane
1877-1884
Robert William Hooper
1885
James Elliot Cabot
1886-1898
John Chipman Gray
1899-1904
Howard Stockton
1905-
TREASURERS
John Lowell
1807-1810
Joseph Tilden
1811-1815
Nathan Appleton
1816-1827
Thomas Wren Ward
1828-1836
Josiah Quincy, Jr.
1837-1851
Samuel Hooper
1852-1853
Henry Bromfield Rogers
1854-1867
Arthur Theodore Lyman
1868
Henry Bromfield Rogers
1869-1876
Charles Pickering Bowditch
1877-1898
Alfred Bowditch
1899-
SECRETARIES
William Smith Shaw
1807-18231
Henry Codman
1824-1827
1 Under the By-Laws of 1822 the Secretary ceased to be a Trustee ex
officio.
120
THE BOSTON ATHEN/EUM
Thumma
Erastus Brigham Bigelow
1852-1857
Charles Eliot Norton
1852-1864
James Brown
1853-1855
Samuel Gray Ward
1853-1855
Martin Brimmer
1854-1861
Henry Tuke Parker
1854
Charles Eliot Ware
1855-1879
Robert William Hooper
1855-1884
Uriah Atherton Boyden
1855-1856
Edward Newton Perkins
1856-1898
Francis Edward Parker
1856-1876
William Appleton, Jr.
1856
Edward Clarke Cabot
1857-1875
James Elliot Cabot
1857-1885
Francis Parkman
1858-1893
Charles Russell Codman
1858-1863
Gardiner Howland Shaw
1860-1867
Francis Boardman Crowninshield
1860-1875
George Washington Wales
1860-1896
Lemuel Shaw
1862-1884
Alexander Hamilton Rice
1864-1881
Charles Storer Storrow
1864-1878
Christopher Toppan Thayer
1865-1880
Charles Deane
1866-1876
Samuel Eliot
1866-1879
Benjamin Smith Rotch
1868-1882
Arthur Theodore Lyman
1876-1898
Ephraim Whitman Gurney
1877-1886
John Chipman Gray
1877-1898
Henry Cabot Lodge
1879-1898
Howard Stockton
1880-1904
Thomas Buckminster Curtis
1880-1881
Clement Hugh Hill
1881-1889
118
THE BOSTON ATHEN/EUM
James Perkins
1807-1819
Fridays
Samuel Eliot
1807-1810
Samuel Dexter
1811-1815
Richard Sullivan
1811-1821
John Lowell
1811-1813
Josiah Quincy
1813-1815
John Richards
1814-1820
John Davis
1816-1821
Joseph Tilden
1816-1822
David Sears
1819-1822
John Lowell
1820-1821
Theodore Lyman, Jr.
1821-1826
Edward Everett
1822-1823
Francis Calley Gray
1822-1825
Amos Lawrence
1822-1825
Charles Jackson
1822
Henry Codman
1823-1827
Samuel Swett
1823-1827
William Sturgis
1823-1825
Thomas Wigglesworth
1823-1828
George Ticknor
1823-1832
Nathaniel Bowditch
1826-1833
Samuel Dorr
1826-1827
Edward Brooks
1826-1829
George Hayward
1827-1833
Israel Thorndike
1828
Henderson Inches
1828-1831
Joseph Coolidge, Jr.
1828-1829
Franklin Dexter
1828-1835
Charles Pelham Curtis
1829-1834
John Lowell, Jr.
1829
Isaac P Davis
1830-1844
Edward Wigglesworth
1830-1850
134
THE BOSTON ATHEN/EUM
Lemuel Shattuck
1845
155 WILLIAM STURGIA
1822
Clarissa Baxter Shattuck
1860
William Hurd
1866
Miriam Stedman Shattuck
1883
Alexander Strong Wheeler
1866
145 JONATHAN AMORY
1822
156 JOHN BRYANT
1822
Jonathan Amory
1830
Waldo Higginson
1868
Henry Grew
1831
Henry Munson Spelman and
Zelotes Hosmer
1836
Francis Clarke Welch,
Henry Roby
1837
Trustees
1895
James Frothingham Hunne-
157 HENDERSON INCHES
1822
well
1851
Henderson Inches
1858
146 JESSE PUTNAM
1822
Martin Brimmer Inches
1885
Benjamin W. Putnam
1862
John Chester Inches
1885
Dupee, Beck and Sayles
1869
Francis Clarke Welch, George
Elbridge Gerry Cutler
1870
Brimmer Inches, and Ber-
147 CHARLES JACKSON
1822
nard Stearns Clark, Trus-
Samuel George Snelling
1864
tees
1902
William Fletcher Weld
1886
158 ISAAC WINSLOW
1822
Ellen Homer Weld
1893
Benjamin Pollard Winslow
1862
148 SAMUEL PICKERING GARDNER
1822
Edward Reed
1882
Peter Thacher Homer
1844
John Orne Green
1885
Margaret Homer
1887
159 GORHAM BROOKS
1822
Margaret Homer Davis
1892
Peter Chardon Brooks, Jr.
1858
149 PATRICK TRACY JACKSON
1822
Ellen Brooks
1865
Lydia Jackson, Trustee
1860
Edward Dearborn Maynard
1884
Elizabeth H. Webster
1865
Harriet Elizabeth Ely
1888
Arthur Reed
1876
Elizabeth Brewster Ely
1891
150 CHARLES BRADBURY
1822
160 GEORGE HALLET
1822
Charles Browne
1855
Caleb Cushing
1828
Edward Ingersoll Browne
1879
161 CHARLES THORNDIKE
1822
Francis Clarke Welch and
Charles Greely Loring, Ad-
Charles Thorndike, Trus-
ministrator
1846
tees
1903
Ezra A. Bourne, Trustee and
Robert Breck Williams
1904
Guardian
1851
151 HORACE GRAY
1822
Charles Edward Cotting
1883
William Story Bullard
1849
Julius Auboineau Palmer
1883
William Norton Bullard and
Oliver Willard Mink
1901
Stephen Bullard, Trustees
1897
162 AUGUSTUS THORNDIKE
1822
152 FRANCIS CALLEY GRAY
1822
William Cranch Bond Fifield
1860
William Gray
1858
Lorin Fuller Deland
1889
William Gray, Jr.
1858
163 BENJAMIN GUILD
1822
Chester Guild, Jr.
1860
Eliza Guild
1861
Francis Batcheller
1877
Edward Chipman Guild
1861
Susan Burley Cabot
1889
Katharine Rand Mead
1892
153 JOHN CHIPMAN GRAV
1822
164 EDWARD BROOKS
1822
James Beck
1864
Francis Brooks
1878
Edith Doane Beck
1875
Edmund March Wheelwright
1887
Charles Edward Wilson
1876
165 EBENEZER APPLETON
1822
154 THOMAS WREN WARD
1822
Alden Bradford Weston
1832
Charles L. Field
1858
Peters and Parkinson
1878
John Sidney Davenport
1867
Francis Manning Stanwood
1879
Augusta Kimball Horton
1876
166 EBENEZER ROLLINS
1822
BOSTON DIRECTORY.
87
Dodge Nathaniel, mason, Market place
Doggett Elizabeth, widow, rear 28 Back
Doggett John & Co. (Samuel S. Williams and Samuel
Doggett, jr.) looking-glass warehouse, 12, 14
and 16 Market street
Doggett Mercy, nurse, 17 North
Doggett Noah, surveyor of lumber, Sea
Doggett Samuel, jr. see John Doggett & Co.
Dogherty Hervey, labourer, Cookson place
Dogherty Mark, labourer, Cookson place
Dolbear Betsey, widow, Distill-house square
Dolbear Ebenezer P. caulker, Gibbs lane
Dolbear Edmund P. see Hayden & D.
Dolbear Nancy, mantuamaker, 31 Middle
Dole Joseph, cooper, Chambers
Dollanty Robert, blacksmith, Ship
Dolliver Thomas, sail maker, Hancock's wharf, house
8 Ship
Dominick Joseph, hackman, Federal
Dommett Charles M. saddler, Marlboro'
Dommett George, manufacturer of whale bone whips
and trunks, 6 Dock square, house Hawkins
Dommett Nancy, boarding house, 3 Suffolk
Donnaling William, goldsmith, Cambridge
Donnison James, cordwainer, Elliot
Donnison William, blacksmith, back 37 Pleasant
Donnison William, South Bennet
Doolon Andrew, labourer, 2 Wharf
Dorety James, hair dresser, 10 Old State House, house
South Russell
Dorion John, confectioner, Butolph
Dorman James, labourer, Ship
Dorr Andrew C. merchant, house Elliot
Dorr E. Ritchie, attorney, 90 Court
Dorr Henry, merchant, houre 35 Newbury
Dorr John, merchant, 41 Central wharf, house Milk
Dorr John, jr. see Brewer, Barrett & D.
Dorr Joseph H. merchant, Central wharf, house Grid-
ley lane
Dorr Joseph, rope maker, back 26 Pleasant
Dorr Samuel, merchant, house 28 Atkinson
Doubt Catharine and Mary, 43 North
Douglass Elijah, Purchase
Dow Ann, widow, Purchase
7/3/2017
No. 035: November, 1945 :: Athenaeum Items, A Library Letter From the Boston Athenaeum (Newsletters 1934-2008)
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21 found in document
Received a gift of papers from the late GBD
relating to pelsons "closely associated with 'the BA.
of highree interest are u ms. letters on Athenasam affairs
from Natherial bruditch to Thomas Handasyd Perkeies and
Page 1
Thomas Wien Word written between 1826 ad 1839. There
are also notes ié social life of Boston. One isan onswer to
Many
a invitation to denner alto spend the right at the
Junicy, / January 1908, ad signed "WilliamEveratty"
house of george Dorr and his mother in booton It is dated )
Page 2
expressly he doubts about his ability to cone us thout
servants +volets for "I can wait upon masof, harrydone
the effort? Everett then describes annoy way behaviors of
d desire to be let alone.
so for 50 odd years, much 4 better thousy other man.
Page 3
Object Description
[Note: Enoui ufery to Mary
Contributors(s)
Warren, Howland S.
Dauds of she verie alein in 1908
Title
No. 035: November, 1945
Variant title(s)
Athenaeum items.
Link to library
http://catalog.bostonathenaeum.org/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=5619
catalog
Page 4
Date
1945
Publisher
Boston : Boston Athenaeum
Physical
V. : ill. ; 23-28 cm.
description
Summary
No. 1 (Mar. 1934) Issue for Nov. 2004 incorrectly numbered 131 was issued between no. 132 (Apr. 200
no. 133 (summer 2005). Numbering duplicates that of no. 131 (Dec. 2003). Frequency varies. Athenae
manuscript index compiled by Howland S. Warren.
Source
No35_1945_November.pdf
Rights
Collection of the Boston Athenaeum. May not be reproduced or quoted without written permission. For more inf
see http://www.bostonathenaeum.org/node/46
Description
Title
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About the Boston Athenaeum
Rights & Reproductions
Contact Us
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Notes on the Text
Hodges wrote quite legibly in pen or pencil, and I have retained his
spelling, punctuation, and capitalization. The few words I could not
make out I have enclosed in carats :>. For the sake of clarity, I have
supplied some words and letters, as well as some Greek and "Anglo-
Greek" words in brackets. I have quoted from two principal printed
sources in the text. The first, Almon Danforth Hodges and His Neighbors:
An Autobiographical Sketch of a Typical Old New Englander (Boston:
Privately printed, 1909), is referred to as ADH; the other, Record of the
Service of the Forty-fourth Massachusetts Volunteer Militia in North Carolina,
August 1862 to May 1863 (Boston: Privately printed, 1887), as Record.
Bibliographical Notes
Useful general reference sources for Civil War history include:
Stephen David Heidler, Encyclopedia of the American Civil War: A
Political, Social, and Military History (Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, 2000);
Mark Mayo Boatner III, The Civil War Dictionary (New York: David
McKay Co., 1959); E.B. Long, The Civil War Day by Day (Garden City,
NY: Doubleday, 1971); Patricia L. Faust, ed. Historical Times Illustrated
Encyclopedia of the Civil War (New York: Harper & Row, 1986). Two
superb illustrated biographical sources are Ezra J. Warner's Generals in
Gray ([Baton Rouge]: Louisiana State University Press, 1959) and
Generals in Blue ([Baton Rouge]: Louisiana State University Press,
1964). Also consulted were: Robert B. Roberts, Encyclopedia of Historic
Forts (New York: Macmillan, 1988); Paddy Griffith, Battle Tactics of the
Civil War (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1989); Warren Ripley,
Artillery and Ammunition of the Civil War (New York: Van Nostrand
Reinhold, 1970); United States. Naval History Division, Dictionary of
American Naval Fighting Ships (Washington: 1964-); Edward S. Farrow,
A Dictionary of Military Terms (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Co.,
1918). The exploits of the Massachusetts regiments are detailed in
James L. Bowen's Massachusetts in the War 1861-1865 (Springfield, MA:
Clark W. Bryan & Co., 1889). There are a number of excellent Web
sites on various aspects of the Civil War and Civil War period, partic-
ularly www.civilwarhome.com. Also consulted for specific topics were:
(army organization) www.nps.gov/gett/getttour/armorg.htm (dis-
I 6
eases) www.carolyar.com; www.cdc.gov; www.buildingbetterhealth.
com; (music) www.ccel.org; www.cyberhymnal.org www.negrospiritu-
als.com.
Besides the essential Record, other accounts of the Forty-fourth
Regiment include: De Forrest Safford, ed. The Bay State Forty-Fourth: A
Regimental Record (Boston: M.O. Hall & Co., [1863]); Zenas T. Haines,
Letters From the Forty-Fourth Regiment M.V.M.: A Record of a Nine Months'
Regiment in the Department of North Carolina in 1862-3 (Boston: Printed
at the Herald Job Office, 1863) and the edited version of these letters
by William C. Harris, In the Country of the Enemy: The Civil War Reports
of a Massachusetts Corporal (Gainesville: University Press of Florida,
1999); Kinston, Whiteball and Goldsboro (North Carolina) Expedition,
December, 1862 (New York: W.W. Howe, 1890); Henry Austin Clapp,
Letters to the Home Circle: The North Carolina Service of Pvt. Henry A.
Clapp, Company F, Forty-Fourth Massacbusetts Volunteer Militia, 1862-1863
(Raleigh: Division of Archives and History, N.C. Dept. of Cultural
Resources, 1998); and John Jasper Wyeth, Leaves From a Diary Written
While Serving in Co. E, 44 Mass., Dep't of No. Carolina from September,
1862, to June, 1863 (Boston: L.F. Lawrence & Co., 1878). There is also a
Web site devoted to Massachusetts in the Civil War: www.letterscivil-
war.com.
Information on Hodges and his Harvard classmates is found in the
Class of 1864 Secretary's Reports (1864-), and their photographs in
Portraits: 1864-1904 (Boston: Printed for the Class, 1904).
As discussed in the introduction, the history of Roxbury as a com-
munity in the nineteenth (and twentieth) centuries is fragmentary.
Important primary sources detailing day-to-day affairs are the news-
papers published in Roxbury, such as the Roxbury Gazette and Norfolk
County American (1847-1850), the Norfolk County Gazette (1849-1865),
and the Roxbury Gazette and South End Advertiser (1861-1895). The
Roxbury Directory: Containing the City Record, the Names of Citizens, and a
Business Directory (published annually, 1847-50, biennially 1852-60 by
Adams, Sampson, & Co.) contains valuable demographic and econom-
ic detail. The growth and development of Roxbury is the subject of the
mayor's annual address to the city council (1847-1868). The numerous
pamphlets that were issued during the eighteen-fifties and eighteen
sixties on the subject of annexation by Boston, such as Another Word for
Old Roxbury: In Reply to the Report of a Committee in Favor of Annexation
(Boston: J.M. Hewes & Co., 1852), frame this interesting debate.
Nostalgia is the theme of Roxbury Centennial: An Account of the
II7
Celebration in Roxbury, November 22, 1876 (Boston: Rockwell and
Churchill, 1877), an account of a dinner party less than a decade after
annexation where the thought of a suburban and independent Roxbury
seemed like a distant memory. The Dudley School student essayists of
Roxbury Past and Present (Roxbury, MA?: [between 1914 and 1918])
allude to Roxbury as a working-class neighborhood of Boston that
was increasingly the home to Irish-American and Jewish-American
families. The remarkable A Story of Eliot Church by Walter E. Davis
(Boston: Eliot Congregational Church of Roxbury [1959]]) is a church
history that portrays the changing social dynamics of the community in
the twentieth century, particularly as a consequence of the migration of
African American families to Boston from the South after World War
II. The Roxbury Crossing Historical Trust is working to "collect, pre-
serve and promote the cultural, historical and authentic history of the
Greater Roxbury area and its residents." The Trust's home page is
www.rcht.org. The Roxbury Heritage Trail, a Web project of the 2003
advanced placement history class at the John D. O'Bryant School of
Mathematics and Science, is a well-executed virtual tour of historical
sites in Roxbury, located at www.obonline.org/features/heritage
trail/INTRO.HTM.
Acknowledgments
I want to reiterate my thanks, on behalf of a grateful institution, to
Henry H. Meyer, Jr., for his generous support of this project, and to
his sister, Mrs. Charles B. Douglas, for sharing the Hodges papers
with me. Their devoted stewardship of their family's history will ben-
efit students of American culture far into the future.
My thanks to Stein Helmrich and Michael Trocchi, Northeastern
University Cooperative Education students, who, as interns, made the
initial transcription of the diary of Almon D. Hodges, Jr., and to my
colleagues in the Reference Department, Mary Warnement, who
helped with Hodges' Latin, Greek, and Anglo-Greek words and
phrases, and Lisa Starzyk-Weldon, for producing scans of the illustra-
tions used. I am grateful to Richard Wendorf, for his constant encour-
agement and kind words, and to Ann Wadsworth for taking the time
amid other pressing publication projects to edit my text.
118
BOSTON ATHEN/EUM
Reports for 1974
[ 42 ]
Schedule C
RESTRICTED FUNDS
BOOKS
Principal
Income
9/30/74
9/30/74
Appleton, Samuel
$ 30,515.91
$ 5,065.14
Billings, Robert Charles
5,000.00
835.50
Bowditch, Nathaniel Ingersoll
2,227.92
365.53
Bromfield, John
624,642.05
42,310.71
Cunningham, Henry W.
3,915.74
652.73
Friedman, Lee M.
25,919.31
1,625.19
Gray, Russell
5,000.00
835.50
Green, Charlotte Nichols
5,000.00
835.50
Hemenway, Alfred
5,000.00
835.50
Hersey, Heloise
3,542.00
600.51
Johnson, Harriet
1,000.00
44.68
King, Stanley & Margaret P.
6,000.00
886.20
Lang, Howard W.
20,000.00
2,763.10
Matthews, Albert
4,508.54
616.61
Morse, Samuel T.
7,000.00
591.40
Nichols, Frederick
18,917.35
3,159.22
Nichols, J. Howard
2,000.00
339.42
Nichols, Lyman
10,000.00
1,679.16
Parkman, George F.
66,246.67
11,077.36
Parsons, Susan
4,581.08
222.83
Sullivan, Thomas Russell
1,000.00
156.66
Terry, George F.
1,000.00
46.31
Ward, Thomas Wren
5,000.00
835.50
Income from Securities
$76,380.26
Reimbursement for Books sold, lost
or destroyed
1,379.89
$858,016.57
$77,760.15
13
NOS.
SUBJECTS.
l'ROPRIETORS.
19 Marble Copy of the Statue of Cleopatra.
W. H. Hodgkinson.
20 The celebrated Statues, called Night and Day," by Michael
Angelo.
Ilon. T. H. Perkins.
The originals of these casts (which form a part of the momument erected in honor of
Julian Medici, in the Church of San Lorenzo, at Florence,) are universally consid-
cred among the most sublime and poetical conceptions of Michael Angelo. For minute
criticisms of this triumph of niodern art, we would refer the reader to the description by
Vasari and the opinions of other distinguished writers on the arts. The casts were
presented to Col. T. II. Perkins, by our townsman, Horatio Greenough, now residing in
Florence, and are, by the kindness of Col. Perkins, deposited at the Athenreum. The
following extract from a letter from Mr. Greenough to Col. Perkins, will serve to show
that they may be considered as rare acquisitions to the lovers of the Fine Arts in this
country -
"I became possessed a few month since, of casts from the celebrated statues by
Michael Angelo, representing Night and Day.
They are proof casts, made to try the moulds ordered here by the King of the
French, and were. by the terms of the contract, a perquisite to the moulder. They are
for all purposes of study and criticism, identical with their originals, and are in the best
state, and quite new."
[Extract from Historical Sketches of the Old Painters.")
'Michael Angelo deeply deplored the unhappy state of Florence. The lines written
by him under the figure of Night, are expressive of the state of his feelings. Though
the softer elements of his character had not been fostered by maternal kindness, there
was not wanting a deep spring of sensibility, which circumstances sometimes caused to
overflow. Under the celebrated statue of Night, which had been intended for the tomb
of Julian de' Medici, Baptist Strozzi wrote the following lines:
Night whom thou seest so calmly sleeping
Was by an Angel formed.
Though by this marble held in keeping,
By life the figure's warmed.
Yet, should thy mind of doubt partake,
Thou need'st but speak and she'll awake.
ORIGINAL.
" 'La Notte, che tu vedi in s' dolci atti
Dormire, fu da un Angelo scolpita
In questo sasso ; c perche dorme ha vita;
Destala, SC nol credi, e parleratti.
"Michael Angelo shortly after observed the writing, and with an emotion which fully
evinced his sensibility, wrote this reply, in the person of Night:-
Grateful to me is this repose;
More grateful still to be of stone.
While o'er my country evil flows,
To see nor feel is peace alone.
Then let me sleep o'er ills forgot:
Speak low ! I pray thee wake me not.
ORIGINAL
Grato mi è il sonno, più l'esser di sasso;
Mentre che il daono e la vergogna dura,
Non veder, non sentir, m' è gran ventura;
Però non mi destar, deh parla basso.'"
21 Marble Copy of the Statue of Cleopatra.
Athenzeum.
22 Cast of an antique fragment of a Statue of Hercules, called the
Torso.
Athenicum.
23 Cast of the Statue of the Venus de Medicis.
Athenwium.
24 Cast of the colossal Head of Juno.
George C. Ward.
25 Marble Bust of Loammi Baldwin, Esq.
Athenaum.
14
Nos.
SUBJECTS.
PROPRIETORS.
26 Group of Uncle Toby and Widow Wadman, by Ball Hughes.
Mr. Dorr, N. Y.
"I am half distracted, Capt. Shandy, said Mrs. Wadman, holding up her
cambric handkerchief to her left eye, as she approached the door of my uncle Toby's
sentry.box- a mote-on sand-or something- know not what, got into
this eye of mine-do look into it-is it not in the white
"In saying which, Mrs. Wadman edged herself close in beside my uncle Toby, and
squeezing herself down upon the corner of his bench, she gave him an opportunity of
doing it without rising up- Do look into it --said she.
Honest soul! thou didst look into it with as much innocency of heart, as ever child
looked into a raree-show box: and 't were as much sin to have hurt thee.
If a man will be peeping of his own accord into things of that nature-I've
nothing to say to it.
'My uncle Toby never did : and I will answer for him, that he would have sat qui-
etly upon a sofa from June to January, (which, you know, takes in both the hot and cold
months) with an eye as fine as the Thracian Rhodope's beside him, without being able
to tell, whether it was a black or blue one.
"The difficulty was to get my uncle Toby to look at one at all.
eT is surmounted. And
"I sec him yonder with his pipe pendulous in his hand, and the ashes falling out of it
-looking and looking-then rubbing his eyes-and looking again-with twice the
good nature that ever Galileo looked for a spot in the sun.
In vain for by all the powers which animate the organ-Widow Wadman's left
eye shines this moment as lucid as her right-there is neither mote, or sand, or dust, or
chaff, or speck, or particle of opaque matter floating in it-there is nothing, my dear
paternal uncle! but one lambent delicious fire, furtively shooting from every part of it,
in all directions, into thinc-
If thou lookest, uncle Toby in search of this mote one moment longer-thou
art undone."
Tristrum Shandy, chap. 24.]
27 Marble Bust of the Hon. Daniel Webster, by Powers.
Athenxum.
28 Cast of the Statue of the Venus of the Capitol.
Athenrum.
29 Marble Bust of the late Hon. Judge Prescott, by Frazec.
Athenium.
30 Cast of the Apollino.
Athenicum.
31 Marble Bust of the Hon. John Lowell, by Frazee.
Athenxum.
32 Cast of the Statue Antinous.
Athenaram.
33 Marble Bust of Sappho, after the antique.
W. H. Hodgkinson.
34 Marble Bust of A. Slidell McKensie, by Henry Dexter.
Athenxum.
35 Cast of the Statue of the Discobolus.
George F. Ward.
36 Christian Pilgrim, by T. G. Crawford.
Mrs. Cleveland.
37 Marble copy of Canova's Statuc of the Dancing Girl.
Athenium.
38 Marble Bust of Daniel Webster, by Frasec.
Athenxum.
39 Cast of the antique Statue of the Boy extracting a Thorn from his
foot.
Athenium.
40 Genius of Fishing. Copy from Tenerani.
N. Perkins.
41 Genius of Hunting. Copy from Tenerani.
E. N. Perkins.
42 Cast of the Statue of Cupid, by Trentanove.
Athenium.
43 Marble Bust of a Vestal.
44 Small Marble copy of the Statue of Diana hunting.
W. H. Hodgkinson
45 Dante-The Original Statuette.
C. C. Perkins.
46 Original model of the statue of the Dying Indian, by P. Stephenson.
47 Statuette of the Indian hunting the Buffalo, by P. Stephenson.
48 Marble Bust of the late Hon. John Quincy Adams.
Athenxum.
49 Marble copy of the Statue of the Venus de Medicis.
W. H. Hodgkinson
50 Marble Bust of Chief Justice Marshall, by Frazee.
Athenaum.
51 Marble Statue of Ceres. (From the Bonaparte Collection.)
E. W. Dana.
52 Cast of the Bust of the IIon. Josiah Quincy, by T. G. Crawford.
53 Cast of the Statue of the Venus of the Bath.
Athenium.
THE BOSTON ATHENAUM
Art Exhibition Index
1827-1874
COMPILED AND EDITED BY
Robert F. Perkins, Jr. & William J. Gavin III
Mary Margaret Shaughnessy, Assistant Editor
THIS
THE LIBRARY OF THE BOSTON ATHENAUM
BOSTON, MASSAC 11 USETTS . 1980
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
XI
PREFACE
XIII
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
XV
LIST OF EXHIBITION CATALOGUES
3
ARTIST INDEX
9
OWNER INDEX
177
SUBJECT INDEX
233
DESCRIPTIVE COMMENTARIES
279
You
Gallery Arhenzum of paintings exhibitions Jt recladed the Boston both Athenzum. old gruster and Wood engraving from Ballou's Pictorial Vol 8, March
is Marguers (Plate NX/) contemporary appears at the humpern top left and of the American printing William 31, Moren 1855, Hunr's p. 201.
ART EXHIBITION INDEX
OWNER
197
DORR. EDWARD
Madanna and Child. after Repharl 1870-1872
Jordaens, Jacob, Marriage of Alexander the Great, from the Gallery of the
Madonna and Injant Christ and Saint, after Cimabue, 1857-1873
Prince of Orange, 1843
Speeckaert. Michel Joseph. Flowers, 1837, 3853-1874
Strutt, William Thomas Interior of a Cottage. after Ostade 1857
DORR. J.
The Smokers. after Teniers, 1857-1873.
Haigdon, Sylvester Phelps, Pulpit Roch Nahant, 1861.
Tomkins, Peltro William, David with the Head of Golisth, after Guey.
Unknown, Landscape with ruins, 1829.
cino, 859.1873
Girl with a Horn.Rook after R Schidone, 1857-1873
DORR, JOHN
Holy Family, after A del Sarto, 1857.18
Rosa da Tixoli, Carlic Drinking, 1829.
Madanna and Child after Correggio. 1857-1873
DORR, SAMUEL A.
Madanna and Child, after Raphael 1857 1873
Adriactissen, Alexander, Still Life. 1832.
Madonna, Child and St. John, after Raphaci. 1839-1873
Meulen, Adams From van der. Winter Scree, 1832.
Madanna, Inlant Christ, and St. john. after A. del Sarto, 1857
1873.
Teniers, David, 11, Smokers (2), 1832.
Madones. Injant Christ Elizabeth, and St. John after A. del
Unknown, Christ bearing the cross, 1832
Sarta 18601893
Dogs, 1832
Meeting of Mary and Elizabeth after S. del Piembo 1857-1873.
St. Anne, 1832.
Tomkins, P. W. and Hodgson. W. W. Danie. after Titran, 1857 1873
DOW, MR. (S.)
Holy Family after Bordone 1870 1871.
Hayward, Joshua Henshaw, Portrait of s Lady. 1843.
Lot and six Daughters, after G. Reni, 1853-1873
Newton, Gilbert Stuart, Mr. Rates of London, 1842
Tomkins, P. W and Violet, P. N., Diana and Action. after Titian, 1857
1873.
DOWLEY. LEVI A.
Uwins. Thomas. St Amand Receiving St. Raho after Rubens. 1857-1869.
Brown, George Loring, lake Albano, 1855. 1856.
Woman taken in Adultan after Rubens, 18551873
Landwage 1855 (1). 1856 (3). 1857 (3), 1859.
Violet, Pierre Norl, Christ in the Sepulchre, after Guerrino, 1857 1873.
Moonlight, 1855. 1856
Injant Christ, after G. Reni, 1852-1873.
Rachel recreting the Household Gods of Lohan after P. do Cor.
DOWSF. THOMAS, INCLUDING WATERCOLOR COLLECTION
tona. 1857.1873
Andriessen, Anthony, Dead Game. 1827, 1831.
Samuel and his Mother after Rembrands 1857 1873.
Ansell, Charles and P. W. Tomkins, Allegory of Human Life, after
Vielet, P. N., and Tomkins, P. W., Diana and Acteon. after Titian, 1857
Titian. 1857-1873
1873.
Holy Family, alter Bordone, 1857.186.
Westall William. FM on the water at Dort. after Cuyr. 1857-1873.
Craig. William Marshall, A Windmill, often Rembrands 1857.1873.
Wight, Moses, Thomas Doure 18th 1850 1871.
Death of Regulus, after S. Rold, 1857.1873
Wonverman Philips (after). Village Festival, 1857-1873
Flight into Egypt. after A. Carrarci, 1857.1873.
Unknown, Christ calling Peter and Andrew 1852-1859
handscape. after Claude 1850.1873.
Head a female, 1837.
Landscape and Figures, after Cloude. 1857-1873.
Head a light and shadow, 183r.
Landscape and Figures, after P. Potter, 1857 1873.
Holy Family. 1858.1870
Landreape and Figures Mid Day alter Claude 860-1873.
Jetus led from the Garden of Gathremane, 1857 1874.
Landscape with Rainbow after Rutens. 1857.1873
Madanna and Child, 1858-1870.
Portrait of Himsell, after G. Dou. 1857-1873.
River scene by moonlight, 1831.
Rachel Secreting the Household Gods of Lahon, after Murillo,
Rural one 1831.
1857-1873
Sunret 1857-1873
St. Amand Receiving St. Babo. alter Rubens 1870.1873.
DRAPER. I..
The Happy Shepherds, after Berchem. 1857-1873
Darley, Jane Cooper, Portraits of Two Children, 1830.
Domenichino (after). Raptism of Christ 1857-1873.
Doughtr. Thomas. Landscape (2), 1807. 1831.
DUFF. J.
Eusebi, Luis, Incredulity of St. Thomas, after ran der Werf. 1857
Currie. George. Pleasant Dev. 186s.
1873
Hall, George Henry, The Fruit Seller, 1864.
Evans, Richard, Portrait of Berchem, after Rembrandt, 1857.1873.
Hiddeman, Friedrich Peter. The New Coat. 186g
Greuze, Jean Baptitte, Chapesu Blanc. 1863.
Jolly, Baron, Bossuet Peraching before the Court, 186g
Head of a Girl. 1857-1873.
Lanfant de Men Francois Louis, Hims to the Virgin, 1864
Le Nieligh 1827.
Morviller, Joseph, Cold Morning 1864.
Grimani, Holert Jacobux, Head of a Girl, 1859.1874
Roffieen. lean Francois Xavier, Lake Luccene, 1864.
Guercino (after). Jesus led from the Garden of Gethremane by the High
Schen, Henri van, The Bird's Neit, 1804.
Priett, 1857.1874.
Tschaggeny (Charles Philogene2), Horses. 1864.
Hodgenn, W. W., Christ Appearing in St. Peter, after A. Carracci, 1857-
Verboeckhoven Eugène Joseph, Sheep. 1864
1873.
Weber, Paul, Old Man of the Mountain 1864.
Christ Calling Pelm and Andrew after Domenichino. 1857 1873
Unknown Democritus and Heraclitus, 186a.
Gaston de Foir, after Giorgione. 1857-1873
Egypt, Right into, 1864
Madonna and Child, after Raphael 1857-1869. 1873.
DUPEE. A.
Marriage of St. Catherine after Parmicinino, 1857-1873
Bradford, William, leckes Arround. 1864.
The Name after Grirlandajo. 1857-1873
The Virion of St. Augustine, alter Garolalo, 1857-1873.
DURAND. ASHER B.
Huysum. Jan van, Fruit Piece, 1827. 1857 1878.
Casilear, John W., Landscape 1853.
Flowers. 1857-1874.
DUTTON, MRS.
Poussin (after). The Story of Calisto. 1857-1873
Allston, Washington, Ecening Hymn. 1857, 1859.
Raphael (after). Holy Family. 1857-1871, 1872, 1873.
Satchwell, Robert William. A Female Head after Giotto, 1857-1873
DUTTON, L
Heads of Aporties, after Giotto, 1857-1873.
Allston, Washington, Evening Hymn. 1850.
CLASS AND CULTURE IN
BOSTON:
THE ATHENAEUM, 1807-1860
RONALD STORY
University of Massachusetts, Amherst
RECENT STUDIES HAVE DEMONSTRATED THAT THE POST-REVOLUTIONARY
Boston elite handily survived in the face of the democratic capitalist forces
of ante-bellum America. In Boston, as in other cities, the elite actually in-
creased its control over the economic system and its share of total com-
munity wealth. Moreover, this elite seems to have achieved a unique cohe-
siveness and a singular cultural complexion, so much so that by the 1860s it
had acquired the distinctive title of "Brahmin Boston." It may in fact be
argued that the ante-bellum era witnessed the birth, rather than the death,
of a genuine Boston upper class. ¹
Institution-building, particularly in the economic sphere, was integral to
the process of class evolution. By 1850 the Boston elite controlled a network
of commercial, financial and manufacturing enterprises which extended
their sway throughout New England and helped them to maintain their
prominence and identity in the decades to come.2 The evolution of a viable
social class, however, entails more than economic activity. It involves such
matters as the modification of individualistic or acquisitive behavior in the
interests of a larger group; the integration of potentially rival families, eco-
nomic interests and politico-religious groupings; the harmonization of
business and nonbusiness, particularly cultural, elements; the acculturation
'An upper class may be said to differ from an elite in the greater proportion of community
wealth it controls; in the greater cohesion of its occupational, familial and generational
components; and in its greater consciousness of its interests vis-à-vis antagonistic social ele-
ments. This is the meaning of the terms as employed here, with elite being used in general for
the era before the 1850s and upper class thereafter.
See, e.g., Robert K. Lamb, "The Entrepreneur and the Community," in William Miller,
ed., Men in Business (New York: Harper, 1962). pp. 94-98, 106-13, 119, 350; Vera Shlakman,
Economic History of a Factory Town: A Study of Chicopee. Massachusetts (Smith College
Studies in History, Vol. 20, nos. 1-4, Oct. 1934-July 1935), 39-42, 243-47.
American Quarterly 27 (1975):178-199.
Note: T.W.Ward is Treasurer of Athenaeum. 1828-1836,
succeeding Nathan appleton (1816-1827).Josiah V.P.
quincy succeeded T.W.W. F.C. gray
(1826-1832), President(883-1836).