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

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Clubs-Saturday Club
CLUBS: Studday
Club.
ABIGAIL, the Library Catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society
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Massachusetts
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ABIGAIL
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the Library Catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society
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Database Name: Massachusetts Historical Society
Search Request: Keyword Anywhere = Boston clubs
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Ms. N-879 (oversize only)
Creator:
Saturday Club (Boston, Mass.).
Title:
Saturday Club records, 1864-1995.
Description:
14 boxes (stored offsite); 1 oversize box and 1 folder in drawers
(stored onsite).
Restrictions:
THE BULK OF THIS COLLECTION IS STORED OFFSITE.
ADVANCE NOTICE IS REQUIRED FOR USE OF THIS
COLLECTION.
Scope:
Records of the Saturday Club, a Boston dining club organized in
1855 by individuals involved with the arts and sciences, including
correspondence, biographical sketches, and drafts related to the
publication of The Early Years of the Saturday Club, edited by
Edward Waldo Emerson in 1918; The Later Years of the Saturday
Club, 1870-1920, edited by M. A. De Wolfe Howe in 1927; and
http://balthazaar.masshist.org/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?v1=26&ti=21,26&Search%5FArg=Bo... 3/1/2020
ABIGAIL, the Library Catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Page 2 of 3
Saturday Club: A Century Completed, edited by Edward W. Forbes
and John H. Findley in 1958. Also includes financial records,
membership lists, office correspondence, typescripts, news
clippings, publishing proofs, club histories, rulebooks, personal
correspondence, and photographs. Correspondents include Charles
E. Norton, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Richard Henry Dana, Jr.,
Charles W. Eliot, and Bliss Perry.
Finding aids available:
Collection guide available at: http://www.masshist.org/collection-
guides/view/fa0358
Local notes:
Formerly cataloged as "Saturday Club."
Photographs removed to the MHS Photo Archives.
Subject(s):
American literature -Societies, etc.
Biography --Collections.
Clubs -Massachusetts --Boston.
Men --Societies and clubs.
Science --Societies, etc.
Other Author(s):
Dana, Richard Henry, Jr., 1815-1882.
Eliot, Charles William, 1834-1926.
Emerson, Edward Waldo, 1844-1930.
Finley, John H. (John Huston), 1904-1995
Forbes, Edward W. (Edward Waldo), 1873-1969.
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 1809-1894.
Howe, Mark De Wolfe, 1906-1967.
Norton, Charles Eliot, 1827-1908.
Perry, Bliss, 1860-1954.
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The early years of the Saturday club, 1855-1870,
Edward Waldo Emerson
1918
English
Book xii, [2], 515, [1] p. front., pl., ports. 25 cm.
Boston, New York, Houghton Mifflin Co.,
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Find Items About: Emerson, Edward Waldo, (max: 12)
Title: The early years of the Saturday club, 1855-1870,
Author(s): Emerson, Edward Waldo, 1844-1930.
Publication: Boston, New York, Houghton Mifflin Co.,
Year: 1918
Description: xii, [2], 515, [1] p. front., pl., ports. 25 cm.
Language: English
Contents: 1. The attraction -- 2. 1855-1856: The Saturday Club is born: also The magazine or Atlantic Club
-- 3. 1856: Louis Agassiz -- Richard Henry Dana, Jr. -- John Sullivan Dwight -- Ralph Waldo
Emerson -- Ebenezer Rockwood Hoar -- James Russell Lowell -- John Lothrop Motley --
Benjamin Peirce -- Samuel Gray Ward -- Edwin Percy Whipple -- Horatio Woodman -- 4. 1857:
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow -- Oliver Wendell Holmes -- Cornelius Conway Felton -- 5. 1858:
William Hickling Prescott -- John Greenleaf Whittier -- 6. 1859: Nathaniel Hawthorne -- Thomas
Gold Appleton -- John Murray Forbes -- 7. 1860: Charles Eliot Norton -- 8. 1861: James Elliot
Cabot -- Samuel Gridley Howe -- Frederick Henry Hedge -- Estes Howe -- 9. 1862: Charles
Sumner -- 10. 1863: Henry James -- 11. 1864: John Albion Andrew -- Martin Brimmer -- James
Thomas Fields -- Samuel Worcester Rowse -- 12. 1865 -- 13. 1866: Jeffries Wyman -- 14. 1867:
Ephraim Whitman Gurney -- 15. 1868 -- 16. 1869: William Morris Hunt -- 17. 1870: Charles
Francis Adams.
Standard No: LCCN: 19-1503
http://firstsearch.oclc.org/WebZ/FSFETCH?fetchtype=fullrecord:sessionid=sp02sw13-40420-edx
9/22/2005
FirstSearch: WorldCat Detailed Record
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SUBJECT(S)
Descriptor: American literature -- Massachusetts -- Boston -- History and criticism.
Authors, American -- Homes and haunts -- Massachusetts -- Boston.
Authors, American --- 19th century --- Biography.
Named Corp: Saturday Club (Boston, Mass.)
Geographic: Boston (Mass.) --- Intellectual life -- 19th century.
Class Descriptors: LC: F73.1; Dewey: 810.9
Responsibility: by Edward Waldo Emerson
Document Type: Book
Entry: 19721109
Update: 20041108
Accession No: OCLC: 491202
Database: WorldCat
00
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11/29/2016
Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Saturday Club
MHS
Records
1864-1995; bulk: 1885-1965
Guide to the Collection
COLLECTION SUMMARY
CREATOR:
Saturday Club (Boston, Mass.)
TITLE:
Saturday Club records
DATES:
1864-1995
BULK DATES:
1885-1965
PHYSICAL
13 boxes, 1 cased volume, and 1 oversize box
DESCRIPTION:
CALL NUMBER:
Ms. N-879
REPOSITORY:
Massachusetts Historical Society , 1154 Boylston Street, Boston, MA 02215
library@masshist.org (mailto:library@masshist.org)
ABSTRACT
This collection contains the records of the Saturday Club, a Boston social and literary organization, including
correspondence, membership records, financial records, drafts and research for the club's published books of
biographical sketches, and printed material.
HISTORICAL SKETCH
The Saturday Club was informally founded in Boston in 1855 on the initiative of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Samuel
Gray Ward, and Horatio Woodman. Other notable founders and early members included Louis Agassiz, Richard
Henry Dana, Jr., James Russell Lowell, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. The club met
for dinner and conversation at 3:00 pm on the last Saturday of every month at the Parker House. The club
gradually became more formalized until it incorporated in 1886, for the purpose of "having conversation and
discussion upon historical, literary, scientific, and artistic subjects." The monthly meal was changed to a 1:30 pm
Pork
lunch in 1898, and the club changed its primary meeting location to the Union Club in 1902. Besides
conversation and club business such as the nomination of members, meetings could include occasional guests,
lectures, readings, and polls on current events. The other major activity of the Saturday Club was the publication
on a regular basis of books containing biographical sketches of deceased members, detailing their lives and
their involvement in the Saturday Club. The first published book, Early Years of the Saturday Club, 1855-1870,
was written by Edward Waldo Emerson. In succession are: Later Years of the Saturday Club, 1870-1920, edited
by M.A. de Wolfe Howe; Saturday Club: A Century Completed, edited by Edward W. Forbes and John H. Finley,
Jr.;
The Saturday Club, 1957-1986, edited by Thomas B. Adams and Paul Brooks; and Saturday Club: the 150-
Year Milestone, 1986-2006, edited by James Engell and Michael Sinagel. The Saturday Club continues to this
day.
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Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
attendance cards, and lists of members. Financial records include account books, financial reports and
statements, banking records, securities records, bills and receipts, and royalty statements from Houghton Mifflin
for the club's books.
Publication drafts and research include biographical material about members that was gathered for publication
of the club's books. Biographical research material ranges from newspaper clippings and excerpts from
correspondence to notes, memos, and drafts related to the books' production and their introductory chapters.
Printed material includes annual members' pamphlets, members' memoirs, book reviews, membership charts,
Bliss Perry's Recollections of the Saturday Club (1942), and miscellaneous printed materials.
ACQUISITION INFORMATION
1864-1927 records deposited by Mark A. DeWolfe Howe, 1929
1927-1965 records deposited by Thomas Boylston Adams and Elliot Forbes, various dates.
1965-1995 records deposited by the Saturday Club, July 2009.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE COLLECTION
I. Administrative records, 1864-1965
This series includes correspondence; meeting minutes, attendance, and other membership records; legal
records; and financial records. The correspondence concerns administration and activities of the club, such
as meetings, new members, elections, finances, and book production. Prominent correspondents include
Charles E. Norton, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Richard Henry Dana, Jr., Edward Waldo Forbes, Edward Waldo
Emerson, Mark Anthony DeWolfe Howe, Charles W. Eliot, Bliss Perry, and John H. Finley, Jr. Membership
records include bound record books, attendance cards, and lists of members. Meeting minutes include
committee reports, and describe such activities as nomination of members, votes, and discussions. Legal
records are primarily records of the club's incorporation. Financial records include an account book,
treasurer's annual reports and statements on expenditures and income, banking records, bills and receipts,
and royalty statements from Houghton Mifflin and Company.
A. Correspondence, 1885-1963
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains correspondence related to the administration and activities of the Saturday
Club. Correspondence throughout the subseries concerns attendance at meetings, nominating new
members, acceptance of membership, and election of officers.
From 1870 to 1890, Charles E. Norton, Oliver Wendell Holmes, and Richard Henry Dana, Jr. were
central correspondents in their roles as club administrators. Other early correspondents include
Ralph Waldo Emerson, William Dean Howells, John A. Andrew, Phillips Brooks, George F. Hoar, and
Charles Francis Adams. Topics of correspondence include club issues such as ensuring attendance
and discussion, as well as current events.
Edward Waldo Forbes became secretary in 1910, and was a major correspondent from that point
until his resignation in 1961. Much correspondence concerns his project to collect autographs of club
members who had not signed the second Saturday Club record book, as well as portraits of all club
members. Other frequent topics from 1910 to 1961 include member resignations, bylaws, club
maior tonic the club's finances such as
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Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Club: A Century Completed dates from 1948 and 1950, while that related to its production dates from
1955 to 1958, primarily with editors Edward Waldo Forbes and John H. Finley, Jr.
1885-September 1926
Box 1
October 1926-1934
Box 2
1935-1947
Box 3
1948-1963
Box 4
B. Meeting minutes, attendance, and membership records, 1864-1963
Arranged chronologically and by record type.
This subseries contains Saturday Club record books, minutes and attendance records, and lists of
members. The Saturday Club record books consist of two bound volumes with typescript copies. The
first record book contains attendance records by meeting, notes on the adoption of club rules, and
lists of people nominated and chosen for membership. The second record book includes the 1886
records of incorporation, charter, bylaws, club election reports, and summaries of meetings from
1886 to 1925. Also present are attendance cards mailed to the Union Club by members to indicate
that they would be present at the next luncheon. Membership records include lists of members and
material from Edward Waldo Forbes's project to collect portraits of all club members, as well as
autographs of club members who had not signed the second Saturday Club record book.
i. Saturday Club record books, 1875-1925
Volume 1, 1875-1887
Box 5
Folder 1
Volume 1 typescript, 1875-1887
Box 5
Folders 2-3
Volume 2, 1886-1925
Cased Vol.
Volume 2 typescript, 1886-1913
Box 5
Folders 4-9
ii. Loose records, 1910-1959
1910-1950
Box 5
Folders 10-36
1951-1959
Box 6
Folders 1-10
iii. Members' signatures and portraits records, 1910-1959
Box 5
Folders 10a-10b
iv. Attendance cards, 1918-1947
Box 6
Folders 11-24
V. Membership lists, 1864-1963
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Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Box 6
Folder 26
D. Financial records, 1889-1965
Arranged chronologically and by record type.
This subseries contains an account book, financial reports and statements, banking records,
securities records, bills and receipts, and royalty statements. The account book was kept from 1889-
1912 by Oliver Wendell Holmes and club treasurers W.W. Goodwin and Edward W. Forbes. The
financial reports and statements include treasurer's annual reports and statements by W.W.
Goodwin, Edward W. Forbes, and William H. Claflin. Securities records contain Edward W. Forbes'
records of shares and bonds, including stock receipts and letters to stockholders. Starting in 1930,
J.M. Forbes and Co. handled the club's securities, and the securities records consist only of
statements from them. The securities records also include a bound volume kept by Edward W.
Forbes that shows security accounting by company. Bills and receipts are for routine club activities
such as lunches.
i. Account book, 1889-1912
Box 6
Folder 27
ii. Financial reports and statements, 1909-1965
1909-1931
Box 6
Folder 28-32
1932-1965
Box 7
Folders 1-6
iii. Banking records, 1901-1930
Box 7
Folders 7-19
iv. Securities records, 1918-1961
1918-1935
Box 7
Folders 20-28
1936-1961
Box 8
Folders 1-24
V. Bills and receipts, 1921-1946
Box 8
Folders 25-28
vi. Royalty statements, 1922-1959
Box 8
Folders 29-31
II. Publication drafts and research, 1906-1963
This series consists of notes, memos, drafts, and research for the biographical sketches in the club's books
Early Years of the Saturday Club, Later Years of the Saturday Club, The Saturday Club: A Century
Completed, The Saturday Club: 1957-1986, and The Saturday Club: The 150-Year Milestone. The drafts
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Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Box 9 Folder 1
ii. Chapter drafts, 1906-1918
Arranged chronologically.
Box 9
Folders 2-8
iii. Biographical drafts and research, 1906-1918
Arranged alphabetically.
Adams, Charles Francis
Box 9
Folder 9
Appleton, Nathaniel
Box 9
Folder 10
Andrew, John A.
Box 9
Folder 11
Brimmer, Martin
Box 9
Folders 12-16
Brownell, Henry H.
Box 9
Folder 17
Cabot, James Elliot
Box 9
Folder 18
Dana, Richard Henry, Jr.
Box 9
Folders 19-20
Dwight, John S.
Box 9
Folder 21
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Box 9
Folders 22-23
Felton, Cornelius
Box 9
Folder 24
Fields, James T.
Box 9
Folder 25
Forbes, John Murray
Box 9
Folders 26-27
Gurney, Ephraim W.
Box 9
Folder 28
Hedge, Frederick H.
Box 9
Folder 29
Hoar, Ebenezer Rockwood
Box 9
Folders 30-31
Holmes, John
Box 9
Folder 32
Holmes, Oliver Wendell
Box 9
Folders 33-35
Howe, Samuel Gridley
Box 9
Folders 36-37
Hunt, William Morris
Box 9
Folder 38
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Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Sumner, Charles
Box 10
Folder 11
Ward, Samuel Gray
Box 10
Folder 12
Whipple, Edwin P.
Box 10
Folder 13
Whittier, John Greenleaf
Box 10
Folder 14
Wyman, Jeffries
Box 10
Folder 15
B. Later Years of the Saturday Club, 1921-1927
This subseries consists of notes and memos from production of Later Years of the Saturday Club,
and drafts and research for book chapters, including biographical sketches of club members.
Notable biographical subjects in this subseries include Charles Francis Adams, Thomas Bailey
Aldrich, Richard Henry Dana, Sr., Charles W. Eliot, William Dean Howells, Henry James, Jr., William
James, and Francis Cabot Lowell.
i. Notes and memos, ca. 1921-1927
Box 10
Folders 16-18
ii. Chapter drafts, ca. 1921-1927
Arranged chronologically.
Published chapter drafts
Box 10
Folders 19-21
Unpublished chapter drafts
Box 10
Folders 22-30
Unpublished chapter drafts
Box 11
Folders 1-9
iii. Biographical drafts and research, ca. 1921-1927
Arranged alphabetically.
Adams, Charles Francis II
Box 11
Folders 10-11
Agassiz, Alexander
Box 11
Folder 12
Aldrich, Thomas Bailey
Box 11
Folder 13
Amory, William
Box 11
Folder 14
Bowditch, Henry P.
Box 11
Folder 15
Brooks, Phillips
Box 11
Folders 16-17
Clarke, James Freeman
Box 11
Folder 18
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Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Fiske, John
Box 11
Folder 26
Gibbs, Oliver Wolcott
Box 11
Folder 27
Godkin, Edwin L.
Box 11
Folder 28-29
Goodwin, William W.
Box 11
Folder 30
Gray, Asa
Box 11
Folder 31
Gray, Horace
Box 11
Folder 32
Gray, John Chipman
Box 11
Folder 33
Higginson, Henry Lee
Box 11
Folder 34
Hoar, George Frisbee
Box 11
Folder 35
Hoar, Samuel
Box 11
Folder 36
Hooper, Edward W.
Box 11
Folder 37
Howells, William Dean
Box 11
Folder 38
James, Henry Jr.
Box 12
Folders 1-2
James, William
Box 12
Folders 3-4
Lowell, Francis Cabot
Box 12
Folder 5
Lowell, John
Box 12
Folder 6
Lyman, Theodore
Box 12
Folders 7-8
McCall, Samuel W.
Box 12
Folder 9
Maclaurin, Richard C.
Box 12
Folder 10
Olmstead, Frederick Law
Box 12
Folder 11
Parkman, Francis
Box 12
Folder 12
Peabody, Robert S.
Box 12
Folder 13
Perkins, Charles C.
Box 12
Folder 14
Perkins, Edward N.
Box 12
Folder 15
Pickering, Edward C.
Box 12
Folder 16
Rov 12
Foldor 17
11/29/2016
Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Box 12
Folder 24-25
C. The Saturday Club: A Century Completed, 1941-1958
This subseries consists of notes and memos from production of The Saturday Club: A Century
Completed, and drafts and research for biographical sketches of club members. Notes and memos
include assignments of authors to biographical sketches, a book review of the completed book,
suggested chapter mottoes, and Bliss Perry's 1942 notecards on the progress of research for the
book.
Notable biographical subjects in this subseries include William C. Endicott, Edward Waldo Emerson,
and Alfred North Whitehead.
i. Notes and memos, ca. 1941-1958
Box 12
Folders 26-28
ii. Biographical drafts and research, ca. 1941-1958
Arranged alphabetically.
Cushing, Harvey
Box 12
Folder 29
Edgell, George Harold
Box 12
Folder 30
Emerson, Edward Waldo
Box 12
Folder 31
Endicott, William C.
Box 12
Folder 32
Haskins, Charles Homer
Box 12
Folder 33
Grant, Robert
Box 12
Folder 34
Loring, William Caleb
Box 12
Folder 35
Lowes, John L.
Box 12
Folder 36
Lyman, Theodore
Box 12
Folder 37
Maginnis, Charles Donagh
Box 12
Folder 38
Moreland, Edward L.
Box 12
Folder 39
Walcott, Henry Pickering
Box 12
Folder 40
Warren, Bentley Wirt
Box 12
Folder 41
Whitehead, Alfred North
Box 12
Folder 42
D. The Saturday Club: 1957-1986, 1960-1963
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Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Pickman, Edward Motley
Box 13
Folder 4
Miscellaneous members
Box 13
Folder 5
E. The Saturday Club: 150-Year Milestone research, 1957-1963
This subseries contains newspaper clippings on James R. Killian and biographical research and
drafts on various other members.
Box 13
Folders 6-7
F. Publication memoranda, 1906-1963
This subseries includes notes from the publication of the club's books, lists of possible biographical
sources, suggested mottoes, and research material on unidentified biographical subjects.
Box 13
Folder 8
III. Printed material, 1896-1995
A. Annual members' pamphlets, 1896-1955
Arranged chronologically.
Member pamphlets produced for annual meetings contain lists of club officers and present members
with their addresses, recent club votes, the charter and bylaws, and lists of past members with their
dates of death. Sometimes the lists have been used to keep track of tasks, such as finding portraits
of all members.
Box 13
Folders 9-13
B Members' memoirs, 1905-1928
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries contains printed memoirs of club members. Some of the memoirs are also authored
by club members, such as Edward Waldo Emerson and Moorfield Storey. Some were printed for
private circulation, and others were published in periodicals or by historical or professional societies.
Woodward Hudson, Memoir of Samuel Hoar,
Box 13
Folder 14
1905
Edward Waldo Emerson, Memoir of Ebenezer
Box 13
Folder 15
Rockwood Hoar, 1907
Moorfield Storey, Charles Francis Adams,
Box 13
Folder 16
1915
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Saturday Club Records, 1864-1995
Arranged chronologically.
This subseries consists of book reviews of The Early Years of the Saturday Club and The Saturday
Club: A Century Completed, from publications such as Harper's Monthly, The New York Times, The
Boston Sunday Globe, and Newsweek. Also included is an advertising mock-up of The Later Years of
the Saturday Club.
Box 13
Folder 20
D. Bliss Perry, Recollections of the Saturday Club, 1942
cheese
This subseries contains two printed copies of Bliss Perry's Recollections of the Saturday Club, written
in 1942. Perry describes his memories of his interactions with the club and its members, atmosphere,
discussions, and lunches over time.
Box 13
Folder 21
E. Membership charts, 1949-1995
1949-1965
Oversize Box
1995
Mss. Large
F. The Saturday Club: A Century Completed illustration mock-ups, ca. 1957
The subseries consists of illustration mockups for The Saturday Club: A Century Completed. The
illustrations contain measurements, captions, and descriptions of where they will be placed in the
book.
Box 13
Folder 22
G. Miscellaneous printed material, 1920-1960
Arranged chronologically.
Included are invitations; a program for Moorfield Storey's funeral service; addresses, including one by
Moorfield Storey; a memoir of club member George Santayana by Joel Porte; articles, including one
inscribed to Edward W. Forbes, obituaries; genealogical material; and material related to the Union
Club of Boston, #8 Park St.
Box 13
Folders 23-25
PHOTOGRAPHS REMOVED FROM THE COLLECTION
The following photographs were removed from the collection to the MHS Photo. Archives:
New England Magazine N.S. 19, (1898):24-34
THE FOGS.
By Frank Walcott Hutt.
T
HERE were no mists in all the morning sky,
And here lay open lea and heather-wold,
And yonder, cliffs and uplands, steely-cold,
And in the offing, fair ships coursing by.
But late I heard the sea-mew prophesy
Along the downs, with clamor harsh and bold;
And at high noon a little cloud uprolled,
And shut the world out from the day's great eye.
And now a deep bell booms far out at sea;
And all the windward islands and the plains
Dip in the sudden miracle of white;
And sighingly the waves' lone minstrelsy
Falls on the ear like the far plash of rains,
While the Fog lover comes to WOO the Night.
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
By George Willis Cooke. (1848-1923)
HE Saturday Club,
the results of the manner in which its
which has occupied
meetings were conducted. In his
SO unique a place in
diary, under date of October 14. 1854.
the literary life of
Alcott made this record: "Dine at
Boston, originated
the Albion with Emerson, Lowell,
in Emerson's custom
Whipple, Dwight, Hayne (of South
of visiting Boston
Carolina), and Woodman; and we ar-
on the last Saturday of each month to
range to meet there fortnightly here-
take a look at the new books in the
after for conversation." Mr. Frank
"Old Corner Bookstore." He was
B. Sanborn records in his life of Al-
also in the habit of dining on these
cott that in December, 1854, he
occasions with a few intimate friends
was at the Albion with Emerson,
at the \lbion restaurant or the Parker
Dwight, Alcott and an Englishman
House.) This practice began with him
by the name of Cholmondeley, when
so early as the time of the Town and
various literary topics were discussed.
Country Club, founded by Alcott
A few months later, during the last
about 1849, and was perhaps one of
week in May, 1855, a dinner was
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
25
given to Lowell, at the Revere House,
day Club owed its existence to acci-
by his friends. At the head of the ta-
dental causes or to the demands of in-
ble on this occasion sat Longfellow,
tellectual fellowship, In 1854 it had
and at the foot Felton. On Longfel-
taken a definite form, SO far at least as
low's right were Lowell, Agassiz,
it had become an established custom
George T. Davis, F. H. Underwood,
for a few literary friends to meet once
Holmes, T. K. Parsons, Estes Howe,
a fortnight or once a month for a din-
Charles W. Storey, H. Woodman, and
ner and literary conversation.> Long-
B. Rölker. On his left were Emer-
fellow recorded in his journal that he
son, Edmund Quincy, Charles E.
dined with the club February 28, 1857,
Norton, J. S. Dwight, Thomas G. Ap-
at the invitation of Agassiz, and was
pleton, William W. White, John
asked to join it, which he thought he
Holmes, Robert Carter, Henry Ware
would do. At the meeting of the club
and Professor Benjamin Pierce.
It
in April, the fiftieth birthday of Agas-
is evident that the personal and intel-
siz was recognized. Longfellow pre-
lectual associations begun in the
sided and read the poem beginning:
Transcendentalist and Town and
It was fifty years ago,
Country clubs continued even after
In the pleasant month of May.
those clubs had ceased their exist-
ence; and that from time to time there
Clever and humorous poems were
came together the men who composed
also read by Lowell and Holmes. In
them, with others of the same intel-
September Longfellow says that
lectual and literary interests.)
Charles Mackay dined with the club,
In his biography of Richard Henry
that the session was a quiet one, and
Dana, Charles Francis Adams says
that the heat of the room took away
that when Emerson visited the book-
all life and animation. He mentions
store of Phillips and Sampson, on the
that in May of the next year he again
last Saturday of each month, he met
dined with the club, and that he felt
there Horatio Woodman; and by de-
vexed on finding plover on the table,
grees they got into the custom of go-
and proclaimed aloud his disgust at
ing to the old Albion restaurant or to
seeing the game-laws thus violated.
the Parker House to dine. At this
He added that if any one wanted to
time Dwight was accustomed to dine
break a law, let him break the Fugi-
at the Parker House, and he probably
tive Slave law, as that is all it is fit for.
joined Emerson whenever he was
The fullest and most explicit ac-
there. Then Woodman invited oth-
count of the origin of the Saturday
S.G.W.
ers, including Samuel G. Ward, a
Club was that set down in his journal
banker and one of Emerson's friends.
by Richard Henry Dana, the younger,
The next person added to the group
under date of August 6, 1857. "It
seems to have been Edwin P. Whip-
has become an important and much
ple, the essayist and lecturer, then a
valued thing to us," he wrote. "The
rising literary man in Boston. Wood-
members are Emerson, Longfellow,
man was a lawyer, a man of attractive
Agassiz, Lowell, Pierce, Motley,
social qualities, and one who had a gift
Whipple, Judge Hoar, Felton,
for managing such dinners as these
Holmes, S. Dwight, H.
S.G.W.
Mr. Sanborn says, "he had no partic-
Woodman and myself. We have no
ular sympathy with the Transcenden-
written rules, and keep no records.
talists, except as they became famous,
Our only object is to dine together
but a certain love for literature and
once a month. Our day is the last
literary men; he was also an epicure,
Saturday in every month, and we dine
knowing how to provide good din-
at Parker's. A unanimous vote is re-
ners and at which Boston tavern his
quired to elect a member. The ex-
friends ought to dine."
pense of the dinner is assessed upon
It will thus be seen that the Satur-
those present and charged at the of-
26
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
fice, SO we have no money affairs to
had no connection with each other
attend to. Guests are permitted, but
except as the same persons belonged
each man pays for the guest he in-
to both In his biography of Emer-
vites. The club had an accidental
son, Doctor Holmes says that the At-
origin, in a habit of Emerson, Dwight,
lantic Club never had an existence,
Whipple and one or two more dining
and that there had erroneously been
at Woodman's room at Parker's OC-
supposed to be some connection be-
casionally; for Woodman is a bach-
tween the Saturday Club and the
elor, a literary quidnunc and gossip,
Atlantic Monthly. On the other hand,
or as Gould says, 'a genius broker.'
Francis H. Underwood, who took an
Ward is a friend of Emerson's, and
active part in bringing the magazine
came. From this the club grew,
into existence, and who was the assist-
S6W
Ward, Dwight, Woodman, Whipple
ant or office editor for some years
and Emerson being the originals.
from its very beginning, said in a let-
Agassiz, Pierce and I were early in-
ter to Doctor Holmes: "You remem-
vited to meet with them. This made
ber that the contributors met for din-
it more of a regular thing, and we es-
ner regularly. It was a voluntary, in-
tablished our verbal rule as to mem-
formal association. The invitations
bership, guests and expenses. Lowell
and reminders were from my hand, as
came in soon after, and then Motley
I conducted the correspondence of the
and Longfellow. The first formal
magazine. I have hundreds of letters
vote we had for members was at this
in reply, and it is my belief that the
stage, for up to this time unanimous
association was always spoken of
consent was obtained by conversation.
either as the Atlantic Club or the At-
The vote brought in Holmes and Fel-
lantic dinner. Your very decided state-
ton, which made the number fourteen,
ment seems to me (in the ordinary use
as many as we think it best to have."
of phrases) erroneous." In his biog-
The Saturday Club was sometimes
raphy of Doctor Holmes, Mr. John T.
known as the Atlantic Club; but the
Morse confounds the Atlantic dinners
two were quite distinct from each
and breakfasts with the meetings of
other, though in his biography of Em-
the Saturday Club, though Dr.
erson Doctor Holmes seems to con-
Holmes himself did not fall into such
fuse them together. Longfellow says
an error. He did somewhere speak
that on May 5, 1857, he dined at the
of the Atlantic Club as "suppositi-
Parker House with Phillips, the pub-
tious"; and it is this statement against
lisher, to talk about the new magazine
which Mr. Underwood protested. The
the latter was proposing to publish.
fact seems to be that the Atlantic Club
The other persons present were Em-
consisted only of the gatherings of the
erson, Lowell, Motley, Holmes, Cabot
contributors to the Atlantic Monthly,
and Underwood.
In 1860 James T.
on invitation of the publishers, who on
Fields, of Ticknor and Fields, then
such occasions gave them a breakfast
the publishers of the Atlantic Monthly,
or a dinner.
breakfasted Longfellow, Bryant,
A letter written by Moses Dresser
Holmes and others. Such gatherings
Phillips, the head of the firm of Phil-
as these, called together by the pub-
lips and Sampson, and given in Doc-
lishers of the magazine to bring about
tor Hale's "James Russell Lowell and
acquaintance and good fellowship
His Friends." describes the first din-
amongst its leading contributors, and
ner given by the publisher to his con-
that suggestions might be secured as
tributors, in the early summer of 1857.
to its management, formed what has
Doctor Hale says that this was "the
properly been called the Atlantic
first of a series which the Saturday
Club. It included many of the mem-
Club of Boston has held from that day
bers of the Saturday Club: but they
to this day;" but in this statement he
were not only not the same, but they
is mistaken, as already clearly indi-
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
27
cated. Mr. Phillips wrote to a rela-
ity to believe that you will think them
tive in these words: "I must tell you
the most natural thoughts in the world
about a little dinner party I gave
to me. Though I say it that should
about two weeks ago. It would be
not, it was the proudest day of my
proper, perhaps, to state that the or-
life.
igin of it was a desire to confer with
It was natural that the Saturday
my literary friends on a somewhat ex-
Club should have been given the
tensive literary project, the particu-
name of the Atlantic on the part of
lars of which I shall reserve till you
outsiders, who recognized the fact
come. But to the party: My invita-
that many of the members contributed
tions included only R. W. Emerson,
to the magazine. The Saturday Club
H. W. Longfellow, J. R. Lowell, Mr.
was also sometimes spoken of as the
Motley (the 'Dutch Republic' man),
Literary Club; and it was popularly
O. W. Holmes, Mr. Cabot, and Mr.
designated as Emerson's or Agassiz's
Underwood, our literary man. Im-
club. It was also now and again
agine your uncle at the head of such a
laughed at as "The Mutual Admira-
table, with such guests. The above
tion Society," probably by those who
named were the only ones invited, and
would have been rejoiced to have se-
they were all present. We sat down
cured entrance to it Of this designa-
at 3 P. M., and rose at 8. The time
tion of the club Dr. Holmes wisely
occupied was longer by about four
said: "If there was not a certain
hours and thirty minutes than I am in
amount of mutual admiration among
the habit of consuming in that kind of
some of those I have mentioned [as
occupation, but it was the richest time
members, it was a great pity, and im-
intellectually by all odds that I have
plied a defect in the nature of men
ever had. Leaving myself and 'lit-
who were otherwise largely en-
erary man' out of the group, I think
dowed." In 1859 Richard Henry
you will agree with me that it would
Dana dedicated his "Cuba and Back"
be difficult to duplicate that number
to "the gentlemen of the Saturday
of such conceded scholarship in the
Club" and this fact sufficiently fixes
whole country beside. Mr. Emerson
the name made use of by the members
took the first post of honor at my
from the beginning. About the year
right, and Mr. Longfellow the second
1888, a bequest of money being made
at my left. The exact arrangement of
to the club, it was incorporated as
the table was as follows:
"The Saturday Club."
Mr. Underwood.
In his account of the club Dana
Cabot.
Lowell.
says that it was thought best not to
Motley.
Holmes.
have more than fourteen members.
Longfellow.
Emerson.
His biographer tells us that this limit
Phillips.
was imposed by Dana himself, and in
a somewhat arbitrary manner. "In
They seemed SO well pleased that
other words, Dana, in this as in other
they adjourned, and invited me to meet
cases, held himself high and believed
them again to-morrow, when I shall
in exclusiveness; accordingly, though
again meet the same persons, with one
never allowing his position to be mis-
other (Whipple, the essayist) added
understood, he had been liberal with
to that brilliant constellation of Philo-
his blackballs. The result was that, in
sophical, Poetical and Historical tal-
order to elect any one, it became nec-
ent. Each one is known alike on
essary for the other members to watch
both sides of the Atlantic, and is read
for some occasion when Dana was
beyond the limits of the English lan-
away, and then rush in their candidate
guage. Though all this is known to
before he got back." The club slowly
you, you will pardon me for intruding
grew in its membership, however,
it upon you. But still I have the van-
Prescott being added in 1858; Haw-
28
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
Adirondack Club
thorne, Thomas G. Appleton and
Another incident was the formation
John M. Forbes in 1859; Charles
of the Adirondack club, which in Au-
Eliot Norton in 1860, - the earliest
gust, 1858, made an excursion into
member admitted of those now living;
the wilderness of the Adirondack
J. Eliot Cabot, S. G. Howe, F. H.
Mountains. The party consisted of
Hedge and Estes Howe in 1861;
Emerson, Lowell, Agassiz, Hoar,
Charles Sumner in 1862; Henry
John Holmes, Wyman, W. J. Still-
James in 1863; Martin Brimmer,
man, Estes Howe and Woodman.
James T. Fields, S. W. Rowse in
Lowell was the leader and planned the
1864; John A. Andrew and Jeffreys
excursion; though Woodman seems
Wyman in 1866; E. W. Gurney in
to have been the practical guide and
1867; John G. Whittier in 1868; Wil-
factotum. A rough hut was built on
liam M. Hunt in 1869; Charles Fran-
the shore of Follansbee Pond; flannel
cis Adams and Charles W. Eliot in
shirts were worn, fir boughs and
1870; Charles C. Perkins in 187.1;
blankets furnished the beds, and the
Francis Parkman, Alexander Agassiz,
fare was the fish and game of the wil-
R. H. Dana, Sen., Wolcott Gibbs,
derness. After breakfast each morn-
Horace Gray, Edward N. Perkins in
ing a mark was shot at, which Agas-
1873; Asa Gray and William D. How-
siz once hit, having never before fired
ells in 1874; Edmund Quincy in 1875;
a gun, and steadily refusing to do SO
and James Freeman Clarke in 1877.
again. Emerson bought a riflc, which
An interesting incident in the early
he seems not to have used. A guide
history of the club was that Emerson,
one night paddled him into the lake,
Hawthorne and E. Rockwood Hoar,
and a deer was pointed out to him,
living at Concord, to which the Fitch-
but he did not shoot. This trip was
burg road then had no train running
described by Emerson in his poem
after the club broke up, were obliged
called "The Adirondacks," published
to leave in the midst of the session or
in his "Mayday and Other Pieces,"
remain in town over the night and
1867. He fitly described the wild life
Sunday. Under these conditions
of the woods, saying that:
Judge Hoar provided a remedy by
No placard on these rocks warned to the
having his carry-all meet them at
polls,
Waltham and convey them to their
No door-bell heralded a visitor,
homes. It may be supposed that this
No courier waits, no letter came or went,
last part of the journey may have had
Nothing was ploughed or reaped or bought
or sold.
in store the best wine of the feast; for
Lowell describes Agassiz at the club
He describes how Agassiz and Wy-
meetings as listening intently to Hoar,
man dissected the deer, trout and
other creatures slain in wood and
Pricked with the cider of the Judge's wit
water; and he thus speaks of the man-
(Ripe-hearted homebrew, fresh and fresh
ner in which the other members of
again).
the party spent their time:
The reason for this night ride will
be seen from a note made by Emerson
All day we swept the lake, searched every
cove,
in his journal. in 1862: "Cramped for
Watching when the loud dogs should drive
time at the club. by late dinner and
in deer.
early hour of the return train; a cramp
Or whipping its rough surface for a trout;
which spoils a club. For you shall
Or bathers, diving from the rock at noon;
Challenging Echo by our guns and cries;
not, if you wish good fortune, even
Or listening to the laughter of the loon;
take the pains to secure your right-
Or. in the evening twilight's latest red,
and-left-hand men. The least design
Beholding the procession of the pines;
instantly makes an obligation to make
Or, later yet, beneath a lighted jack,
In the boat's bows. a silent night-hunter
their time agreeable, - which I can
Stealing with paddle to the feeding-grounds
never assume."
Of the red deer, to aim at a square mist.
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
29
Longfellow refused pointedly to go
own mind the great achievement of
on this excursion, because he had
his life was the founding of the Satur-
heard that Emerson had bought a
day Club, and his connection with
gun, and he keenly felt the danger
that club, which could only have come
which might arise from such an in-
about through his being its founder,
strument in the hands of a philoso-
was the thing of which he most prided
pher, one more familiar with the in-
himself."
finite than with powder and game.
After the disappearance of Wood-
When asked why he would not join
man, it seems to have in part fallen
the party, he said that "somebody will
upon Dwight to manage the affairs of
be shot."
the club. Writing to a friend, in Oc-
During the earlier years of the Sat-
tober, 1877, he said: "We had a de-
urday Club, Horatio Woodman was
lightful club dinner yesterday, Will-
its purveyor, giving voluntary atten-
iam Story sat at my side. J. F. Clarke
tion to the menu and the other neces-
too was there as a new member, and
sities of its existence. He was a clever
seemed radiantly happy. Also Bay-
and a witty man, had a social quality
ard Taylor, who is giving a course of
that his intellectual gifts did not equal,
Lowell lectures on German literature
and by his genial comradeship won
- how that would have interested
the friendship of men who in every
you! I had a long talk with him and
way were greatly his superiors. In
Doctor Hedge on the Nibelungen Lied,
later years he appropriated the funds
and in the evening I heard him lecture
of his friends, resigned from the club,
on that subject, which was very inter-
and committed suicide, as Adams
esting; his lectures are crowded."
says, or disappeared from sight, about
Some of Dwight's plans for seating
1870, as is stated by Mr. Sanborn.
the members and guests, preserved by
Doctor Holmes says that the club had
him, indicate who were present or ex-
no Boswell, and its golden hours
pected on certain dates. Thus, in
passed unrecorded. Mr. Adams ex-
April, 1873, his sketch provides for
presses the regret that Woodman did
Holmes, Dana, Adams, Howe,
not serve it in this capacity, for he had
Dwight, Eliot, Hoar and Estes Howe.
all the qualities that would have made
In May of the same year twenty-one
him successful in such a role, adding
members were present and eight
that "he had a craving for the ac-
guests. On this occasion Longfellow
quaintance and society of men of rep-
sat at the head of the table and Agas-
utation, and indeed lacked only the
siz at the foot. On the right of the
industry to have been a sort of Bos-
chairman were Robert Dale Owen,
well. In connection with the Satur-
Parkman, Perkins, Dana, Appleton,
day Club also an abundant field of in-
Dwight, Judge Kent, Holmes,
teresting gossip and reminiscence
Adams, Senator Boutwell, Forbes,
opened before him, had he known
Wyman and Professor Gurney. On
enough to labor in it. An amusing
his left were Emerson, II. W. Bellows,
story-teller, with a natural eye for
Hedge, Henry James, Fields, Eliot,
character and a well developed sense
Hoar, Count Corti, C. C. Perkins,
of humor, Woodman had at his
Cabot, Rev. Charles H. Brigham, H.
command an almost inexhaustible
G. Denney, Whipple and Dr. E. H.
fund of anecdotes relating to the men
Clark. The journal of Richard Henry
who in those days made the Parker
Dana gives the reason for SO large an
House and its somewhat famous res-
attendance. "Our club dined to-day,"
taurant a sort of headquarters.
he wrote, "the largest number we
Though during the rebellion he was
sufficiently active and prominent to
is Dwight's connection with the club which has led
me to make this study, as a part of my forthcoming bi-
have been offered the position of As-
ography of Dwight, whose life touched so many of the in-
sistant Secretary of War, yet in his
tellectual interests of Boston in his time, in so interesting
a way.
30
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
ever sat down, partly as the last of the
the occasion go by without an expres-
season to which many come, but
sion of our feeling towards him. I
chiefly to welcome Emerson, on his
propose that, instead of nominating
return from Europe and Egypt. It
him for election as a regular member
was really rather a brilliant gathering.
of the club, which we would gladly
Yet, as we sit at a long table, and the
have done years ago, we unanimously
room is on the street and, being warm,
declare him an honorary member and
the windows open, we have no general
permanent guest of the club,' etc., etc.
conversation. All the talking is in
Agassiz put the question, and they all
sets of two to four each. Towards the
rose to their feet in response, and gave
end of the dinner we change places a
him a hearty cheer. It was very grat-
little. Emerson looks years younger
ifying, touching, and in the best pos-
for his European tour, and is in good
sible taste."
spirits."
During the first decade of its exist-
Dana was wrong in saying that this
ence, at least, before other clubs in
was the last meeting of the season, for
great numbers had been organized,
at the June dinner Emerson sat at the
the Saturday Club was of real service
head of the table and Agassiz at the
to its members. It gave them social
foot. There were present Holmes,
recreation, and it brought to them
Brimmer, Pierce, Forbes, Cabot,
mental stimulus. It brought together
Dwight, Howe and Hoar, with Weiss
many distinguished people, as Doctor
and Barnard as guests. At the Jan-
Holmes mentions, and it was a place
uary meeting of 1877, Judge Hoar
where the intellectual leaders of the
was at the head of the table, and op-
city could meet men from other cities
posite him was Edmund Quincy. On
and other countries in a friendly and
the right of the chairman were
happy way. "At one end of the table,"
Holmes, Harding, C. C. Perkins,
says Doctor Holmes, "sat Longfel-
Brimmer, Estes Howe and Dwight;
low, florid, quiet, benignant, soft
and on his left were Emerson, Park-
voiced, a most agreeable rather than a
man, Gibbs, Gray, Godkin, Norton
brilliant talker, but a man upon whom
and Edward N. Perkins.
it was always pleasant to look, -
A pleasant episode in the history of
whose silence was better than any
the club was the admittance of Rich-
other man's conversation. At the
ard Henry Dana, senior, the author of
other end of the table sat Agassiz, ro-
"The Buccaneer," "The Idle Man,"
bust, sanguine, animated, full of talk,
and other works in prose and poetry,
boy-like in his laughter." Mrs. Agas-
as an honorary member of the club,
siz says that her husband was espe-
the only person accorded such distinc-
cially attached to the club; and Doctor
tion. Under the date of October 28,
Holmes remarks that "the most jovial
1873, the younger Dana wrote in his
man at table was Agassiz, his laugh
journal: "Yesterday my father had a
was that of a big giant." Around him
great success and pleasure. I took
were usually grouped the men of wit,
him to the club to dine. We had Em-
and those who most enjoyed laughter
erson, Longfellow, Agassiz, Charles
and fun. In this connection Jules
Francis Adams, Sumner, Holmes,
Marcou, the biographer, of Agassiz,
Judge Hoar, President Eliot and oth-
has said that the members "lingered
ers, our usual set; and, after a while,
long round the table, while hour after
Emerson rose and asked a moment's
hour passed in animated conversation,
attention, and said: 'We are gratified
in which bon mots and repartees were
to-day by the presence of Mr. Dana.
exchanged as rapidly as a discharge
He has a higher as well as an older
of fireworks - an encounter of anec-
claim on the respect and honor of men
dote, wit and erudition. At such
of letters and lovers of literature than
times Agassiz was at his best, with
any of us here, and we must not let
his incxhaustible bonhomie. With
a
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
3I
lighted cigar in each hand, he would
While Holmes's rockets curve their long
force the attention of every one
ellipse,
And burst in seeds the fire that burst again
around him. Excited by the pyro-
To drop in scintillating rain.
technic wit of James Russell Lowell,
Judge Rockwell Hoar and Doctor
Later on in the poem he describes
Holmes, Agassiz, whose vivid imagi-
the breaking up of the club meeting,
nation was always on the qui vive, was
and says:
not a man to let others eclipse him.
Then would come one of his made-up
Now forth into the darkness all are gone,
stories - a mixture of dream and sci-
But memory, still unsated, follows on,
Retracing step by step our homeward walk,
ence. If he thought any one in the
With many a laugh among our serious talk.
company was doubting its truth, he
would look at him with a dumb re-
Then follows an account of his con-
quest not to betray him. On the next
versations with Agassiz as they find
occasion he would repeat the same
their way homeward, and of the re-
story without any hesitation, and the
luctant "Good-night" with which they
third time he told it, he was sure that
parted from each other when the end
it really happened, and was true."
of their walk had been reached.
Lowell said nothing about the club
Doctor Holmes said that he was not
in his letters, SO far as they have been
able to forget the very modest, deli-
published; but he wrote to Motley,
cate, musical way in which Longfel-
when ambassador of the United States
low read his charming verse addressed
to Great Britain: "I have never seen
to Agassiz on the occasion of his fifti-
society, on the whole, SO good as I
eth birthday; and Mrs. Agassiz says
used to meet at our Saturday club."
the poet had an exquisite touch for
In his memorial poem to Agassiz,
occasions of this kind, whether serious
however, he described the club with a
or mirthful. If the wit and laughter
poet's appreciation and sympathy Of
of the club flowed around Agassiz,
Agassiz and his place at the table
the quieter conversation secured its
these are his words:
opportunity near Longfellow, on
whose left Emerson most often found
Once more I see him at the table's head
his place. Longfellow often spoke of
When Saturday her monthly banquet
the club in his diary, and with evident
spread
To scholars, poets, wits,
enjoyment and appreciation of its
All choice, some famous, loving things, not
meetings. He seldom does more than
names,
mention his attendance, with perhaps
And SO without a twinge at others' fames;
some brief word as to who was pres-
Such company as wisest moods befits,
Yet with no pedant blindness to the worth
ent and what was done of special im-
Of undeliberate mirth,
portance; but his frequent reference to
Natures benignly mixed of air and earth,
it indicates how much it was in his life
Now with the stars and now with equal zest
for some years.
Tracing the eccentric orbit of a jest.
Emerson was described by Doctor
Again he says of Agassiz:
Holmes as usually sitting near the
Longfellow end of the table, "talking
Ample and ruddy, the board's end he fills
in low tones and carefully measured
As he our fireside were, our light and heat,
utterances to his neighbor or listening
Centre where minds diverse and various
and recording any stray word worth
skills
remembering on his mental photo-
Find their warm nook and stretch unham-
pered feet;
graph." "I went to the club last Sat-
I see the firm benignity of face,
"urday," wrote Holmes to Motley, in
Wide-smiling champaign, without tame-
April, 1870, "and met some of the
ness sweet,
friends you always like to hear of.
I
The mass Teutonic toned to Gallic grace,
The eyes whose sunshine runs before the
sat by the side of Emerson, who al-
lips
ways charms me with his delicious
32
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
voice, his fine sense and wit, and the
biographer says that outside of his
delicate way he steps about among
own front door there was nothing that
the words of his vocabulary, and at
gave him SO much pleasure as did the
last seizing his noun or adjective, -
Saturday Club. "He loved it; he
the best, the only one which would
hugged the thought of it." He could
serve the need of his thought." "I
not keep its affairs out of his letters,
well remember amongst other
and he gossiped about its doings with
things." says Doctor Holmes again,
a flowing pen.
Evidently it had a
"how the club would settle itself to lis-
large place in his heart, because of the
ten when Dana had a story to tell. Not
fellowship it gave him, and because of
a word wasmissed, and those who were
the noble men with whom it brought
absent were told at the next club what
him into frequent contact
they had lost. Emerson smoked his
In writing to Motley, in February,
cigar and was supremely happy, and
1861, Holmes shows how important
laughed under protest when the point
the club had already become in his
of the story was reached." Probably
life, for he says: "The club has
no one attended the club more regu-
flourished greatly, and proved to all
larly than Emerson, for he greatly en-
of us a source of the greatest delight.
joyed the meetings; and he was wont
I do not believe there ever were such
to praise the brilliant conversation he
agreeable periodical meetings in Bos-
heard there. His own attitude was
ton as these we have had at Parker's."
that of an eager listener, and he took
Writing to the same friend, in 1865,
less satisfaction in speaking himself
he again expresses his interest in the
than in hearing the clever men about
club meetings. "What a fine thing it
him. In 1864, when the club held a
would be," he says, "to see you back
Shakespearean anniversary meeting,
at the Saturday club again! Longfel-
he rose to speak, stood for a minute or
low has begun to come again. He
two, and then quietly sat down. Speech
was at his old place, the end of the
did not come, and he serenely permit-
table, at our last meeting. We have
ted silence to speak for him.> Emer-
had a good many of the notabilities
son continued his connection with the
here within the last three or four
club until about 1875, always taking a
months; and I have been fortunate
warm interest in the meetings, until
enough to have some pleasant talks
his failing speech and memory made
with most of them." "We come to-
them no longer attractive to him.
gether on Saturdays and have good
No one can doubt that Doctor
talks and pleasant." he says in 1871,
Holmes furnished his full share of the
"rather than jolly times. Many of your
wit and wisdom of the club. He has
old friends are commonly there,
written of it in his biographies of Mot-
among the rest Summer not rarely.
ley and Emerson, as well as on other
There is a great deal of good feeling,
occasions. In his letters it was a fre-
I think, in our little circle of literary
quent subject of mention, especially
and scientific people. I find Longfel-
to those correspondents, like Motley
low peculiarly sweet in disposition,
and Lowell, who were themselves
gentle, soothing to be with, not com-
members of the club. He first men-
monly brilliant in conversation, but at
tioned it in his biography of Motley,
times very agrecable, and saying ex-
and then said that "it offered a wide
cellent things with a singular mod-
gamut of intelligencies, and the meet-
esty." Ten years later many changes
ings were noteworthy occasions. The
had taken place in the club; some of
vitality of this club has depended in a
the members had died, and others had
great measure on its utter poverty in
gone away to Europe or were too far
statutes and by-laws, its entire ab-
away from Boston to attend the meet-
sence of formalism, and its blessed
ings. "I go to the Saturday club quite
freedom from speech-making." His
regularly," wrote Doctor Holmes to
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
33
Sat. Club/Parker House) May 31.1573
longfellow
R.Dale Owen
0
o
Emerson.
0
Fr. Parkman
a
0
H.W. Bellows.
Ed. r Perkinso
R.H. a
:
0
Ryer Dr. Hedge.
o
Hirry Junes.
T.G. Applican o
o
J. T. Fields
I S. Deight
0
Pres. Elist.
dudge Kent
Present:
a
0
21 members
Judge Hour.
O. W. Holmes
a
Count Corti.
Chro. Fr. Adarse 0
S
guests
guests
C.C. Perkins.
Sen. Bortwill
a
0
I. Elist Cabet
Julk Farbes
a
c
Rew. Chao Brighan
Jeffies Winners.
o
H. 9. Deving
Peef. Gurrage
o.
E P. Whipple
0
Dr. E.H. Clark.
0
Agassing
absent.
Martin Brinner
C.E. Morter
Wm. M.Hurt
** *
Estes Howe
PaintB Pierce
I.A. andrew
G.S.S.Howe
S.W.Rouse
C.C.Felter
J.R. Sowell
Chus Sunser
N.Hawthome
J.L. Motley
S.G.Ward, t
H Wordman
TABLE PLAN FOR THE SATURDAY CLUB DINNER, MAY 31, 1873, BY
JOHN S. DWIGHT.
34
THE SATURDAY CLUB.
Lowell, in 1883. "but the company is
the dinners, and SO were Judge
more of ghosts than of flesh and blood
Hoar and Mr. J. M. Forbes. These
for me. He lamented the fact that
three, with a few intimate friends like
Longfellow, Agassiz, Emerson, Low-
Lowell and James Freeman Clarke,
ell, Hawthorne, Motley and Summer
who came less frequently, kept up a
no longer attended, and added, "I feel
steady fire of bright sayings and
as if I belonged to the past." He pro-
jokes, to which the younger genera-
posed. however, with the aid of the
tion was often glad to listen in silence.
younger members, to keep the club
Since the death of Doctor Holmes
alive until Lowell could return to give
and Judge Hoar, everything is
some fresh life to it. He had already
changed in this respect ; but the din-
lamented that the club was not what
ners of the club still remain as social
it was when Lowell had attended its
and informal as ever. though the old
meetings. Finally, in 1890, he com-
leaders are gone.
plained that he hardly saw a face of
For twenty years. beginning about
the old times, except those of Dwight
1850, the Saturday was the leading
and Hoar, "where we used to have
club of Boston, and it contained most
those brilliant gatherings." His biog-
of the men of wit. brilliant parts and
rapher savs that probably no other
literary reputation who lived in or
member of the club felt about it as
near the city. It was a gathering of
Doctor Holmes did, and adds that of
genial friends, who sought good fel-
all who sat at its table he was by far
lowship and intellectual relaxation.
the most brilliant talker. We may ac-
The meetings were social and not lit-
cept this opinion without admitting
erary; no essays were read. and no lec-
the truthfulness of Mr. Morse's state-
tures were given.> At one meeting of
ment that if Holmes had traveled
the club, when a reporter forced his
largely he would have held the club in
way into the room before dinner and
less esteem. Such a statement falsely
asked Doctor Holmes what subjects
assumes that more of cosmopolitan-
were to be discussed, he received the
ism would have made Doctor Holmes
reply. "We do nothing but tell our old
another man, and would have saved
stories. We never discuss any-
him from enjoying the men he met at
thing." Except on rare occasions
the Saturday Club
the literary part of the meeting
SGW.
Mr. Samuel G. Ward, now a resi-
consisted of conversation only. The
dent of Washington, is the only orig-
dinner was the central object, and
inal member of the club now living.
that was expected to bring out quite
The other older members are Senator
enough of social chat and conversa-
Hoar. Professor Norton, President
tional stir of thought to give the meet-
Eliot, Judge Grav. E. L. Godkin, J.
ings a real interest. There being no
M. Forbes and Wolcott Gibbs. The
rules to observe and no red tape to
club still continues to meet at the Par-
follow, the meetings were purely in-
ker House, on the last Saturday of
formal, and therefore cheerful and
each month. except July, August and
cordial. All the members knew each
September. There are now thirty-
other intimately, and consequently
eight members. Chief Justice Field
felt quite at home with each other and
of the Supreme Court of Massachu-
ready for the free expression of
setts is the president, and Professor
thought and sentiment. Already the
W. W. Goodwin of Harvard Univer-
club has assumed a considerable im-
sity is the secretary. There is not in
portance in the literary history of Bos-
the club at present so large a propor-
ton, and that importance is likely to
tion of literary men as formerly. A
increase as the history of the club is
member has said of the club, in 1884,
more fully known and as its members
that Doctor Holmes was then presi-
are looked at from a time more re-
dent; and he was always present at
mote.
7/10/2020 S.G.W.
In 1856 when they strudge Clerk was formed,
The Early year of the S.Clists clearer "undoubted
Miginal members, include SGW. The we active
when he was back in poston and suce mudered
in business, years before relocation to
nyc (see pg. 19).
Fellow members: Louis agassis; Richard H. Dave Sh,
John Sollera Durfet. RWE, Shaneze R.Hoor,
J.R. Lovelle, John Lothrop Monley,
Pelrce, SGI; Edwin Parey whipple
Horetro Woodman.
Queton To what extent does S6W
appear in the extant Papers of
each follow charter member ?
also, given Alwair W.Halmes -Charles LE Norton
Thomas gold appleton, & Carrelous
cmuay Felton
EARLY YEARS OF THE SATURDAY CLUB
By AMY LOWELL
New York Times (1857-1922); Mar 1919;
ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851-2006)
pg. 80
EARLY YEARS OF THE SATURDAY CLUB
Dr. Emerson's History of This Well-Known
ler. A number of them went to study in
given in alphabetical order, were: Louis
Germany; students of medicine, and nnt-
Agassiz, Richard Henry Dana. Jr., John
Literary Organization Not Unlike an Old-
ural science, and art went to Paris; eculp-
Sedivan Dwight, Ralph Waldo Emerson,
tors sailed direct to Rome: and others,
Cornelius Conway Felton, Ebenezer Rock-
Fashioned New England Album
nebulous as to their design. traveled vague-
wood Hoar, Oliver Wendell Holmes. Henry
ly about Europe unbibing general cul-
Wadsworth Longfellow, James Russell
ture." So was the Brahmin caste aug-
Lowell, John Lothrop Motley, Benjamin
By AMY LOWELL
presents them. these gentlemen are SO
mented by a new selection. These traveled
Pierce, Samuel Gray Ward, Edwin l'ercy
THE EARLY YEARS OF THE SATURDAY
good as to verge on the colorless. LuckNy
Americans were at once brought together
Whipple, and Horatio Woodman. Such
CLUB, 1875-1870. By E-ward Waldo
we know that such was not the case.
and set apart. But to them America owes
was the personnel of the club during the
Emerson. With illustrations. Boston and
New York: Houghton Millin Company.
If one has the knowledge and energy to
her greatest liberal advance.
early years of 1855-6-7. They met at 3
1918. $7.50.
readjust the point of view a little, this ac-
Man has always been a clubable animal,
o'clock on the last Saturday of every
T
of us who were not quite born
count of sixteen of New England's most
yet it Is somewhat startling to find this
month, and freqently lingered until 9. Or
yesterday remember when it was
stirring years is absorbingly interesting
natural instinct springing up in one of the
those who could, lingered, for the Concord
the fashion to have plush and
We must remember that theBoston of those
most austere of men. Emerson's anxiety
members had a last train to catch, until
leather bound albums containing
days way a small town in a very young
to meet and talk and listen adds a pleasant
Judge Hoar concelved the brilliant idea of
country. It lay a long sea voyage away
touch to a portrait none to understandingly
having his son drive his carryall to Wal-
photographs of one's family and friends,
and even of the places one had visited,
from the movements of the great world.
drawn. hitherto. For it was Emerson who
tham, which boasted a later train. Then
It was a peculiar community. this Brahmin
conceived the idea of the Saturday
home. ten miles to Concord, still talking to
laid out conspleuously on the parlor table.
Boston of the '50s. The tradition of edu-
Club." and his much younger friend, Mr.
the jog-jog of his big black horse in the
1 was reminded of this old custom the mo-
ment I took a copy of The Early Years
cation which caused the early settlers to
Samuel Gray Ward, who aided and abetted
lampless starlight of country lanes.
of the Saturday Club into my hands.
found Harvard College so early as 1636
him in his desire, and who, by stepping
It is all very long ago. Another world in
had persisted. These people had read and
in and making his own name conspleuous
customs, ideas and taste. More spring-like
Size, weight, format, were almost exact;
studied omniverously for two centuries.
in the affair. solved the problem of a
and hopeful than ours, when Longfellow
only. instead of the plush or leather bind-
They were steeped in the Bible, they were
fortunate and stable club." Mr. Ward was
could write: lovely morning tempted
ing. this volume is clothed in decent bot-
familiar with Shakespeare and Milton. with
a man of the world who knew who would
me into town. In the street, met Prescott,
tic-green cloth. a pleasant reminder of the
tightly buttoned frockcoats of the mld-
Baron and Defor. and Addison and Alex-
go well with who, it kind of knowledge
rosy and young, with a gay blue satin
century. It must be admitted, however,
ander Pope. They were stern and right-
which Mr. Emerson may very well have
waisteoot, gray trousers, and shoes." This
been without. Yet it was Horatio Wood-
cous folk, and conduct was to them the
was the historian of The Reign of Fer-
that since we are obliged to read these
man, 11 gentleman quite unknown to fame,
portraits, and not merely look at them. the
most important subject with which a man
dinand and Isabella and "The Con-
form or the book is a great disadvantage.
could occupy his mind. But, with all this,
who practically founded the club. Coming
quest of Mexico." Both facts are typical
from Maine. lie was somewhat outside the
No one but is stevedore could hold it for
there was a vein of poetry running through
of the adolescent viges and glory of the
circle. but he had the good taste to like
their granite seriousness which. now that
times. One waxes superlative like Dr.
more than a minute: and, in these de-
the Puritan grip was relaxing. was begin-
remarkable then, and with a zeal worthy of
Emerson as one thinks of it.
generate days. reading desks seldom make
IL Doswell, he was in the habit of asking
a part of the furniture of a private library.
ning to make itself felt. To change the
There are many pictures with just such
such to dine with him at various taverns.
This is a club record, designed for its
metaphor. the times were ripe for an abun-
cross-lights in them in the book. Long-
Dr. Could speaks of Woodman as " a
dant blossoining Amusement," as Dr.
fellow is translating Dante's "Divina
members. and, as such. is fitting. The
genius broker :: in the words of W: S.
Emerson says, " was occasional and secon-
Commedia," and Norton is working on the
club members will cherish it; SO should
Gilbert. I think he might bc described as
dary: they still lived in the presence of the
Vita Nuova." Every Wednesday eve-
the public. but will the public read it?
pushing young particle.' But he
unseen; they worshipped and went apart
ning these two and Lowell meet together
Scarcely in its present clumsy proportions,
must have done his pushing with a certain
for solitary thought.
and criticise what has been done and then
I imagine. As one of them. I cannot suf-
Duty walked
tact. for the remarkable men went to his
ficiently deprecate this most unfortunate
beside them from childhood." But set
we have a little supper. to which one or
dinners: and what was a dream to Emer-
barrier of weight and size. which must
off against this. and more important than
two other friends come in, and at which
son. and a matter of discussion with Ward.
all, they possessed to a superlative degree
we always have a pleasant time." We see
somehow be overcome, and which can
became in Woodman's hands an actual
the dry. strong tang of native Yankre
Norton and Parkman working evening af-
never be overcome sufficiently to make the
table. set in a front room? of Parker's
humor.
ter evening on the revision of The Ore-
reading other than 8 physical weariness.
Hotel, and round the table were gathered
The young nien of the time were seized
gon Trail in the solitary counting room
To Bostonlans, The Saturday Club
four poets. one historian. one essayist,
with a veritable nostagga for the culture of
after office hours. There is Judge Hoar,
is n tradition; but, in spite of the firm
one biologist and geologist. one mathema-
the older countries. Coleridge and Carlyle
swimming the Tiber just to see if he could;
belief in its widely advertised reputation.
tician and astronomer. one classical
had opened their (yes to German philoso-
and Lowell, shinning up a pine tree four
which the club itself seems to hold, I
scholar, one musical critie. one Judge. two
phy and to the poetry of Goethe and Schil-
doubt whether many present-day readers
lawyers, and one banker." Their names,
(Continued on Page 146)
not brought up in the shadow of the State
House ever heard of it. This fact alone
justifics the publication of the book.
We have had it recrudescence of New
England lately. The autobiographies of
Charles Francis Adams and his brother
Henry. e letters of Miss Susan Hale,
have turned the reading public's attention
back to the time when New England was
America, or at least the thinking pa t of
It. Dr. Emerson's book is a series of dis-
solving view3 of the period-slight, mere
hints of pictures quickly withdrawn. but
of an intriguing charm.
The original plan," says the preface,
WILL to preserve first a record of the first
half-century of its [the club's) existence.
By sanction of the club only sixteen years
of its history are here presented, but they
tell of its golden age."
Here. at the outset, we come across the
chief fault of the book-its exaggeration.
The men dealt with were most of them
remarkable, some eminent, but to open
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
the volume with this paragraph:
In the middle of the last. century a
constellation, which--as separate stars
of differing magnitude, but all bright-
had for twenty years been visible, at
first dimly, in i e New England heav-
ens, ascending, was seen as a group,
gave increasing light and cheer here
and to the westward-journcying sons
and daughters; reached ,our zenith:
even began to be reported by star-
gazers beyond the ocean.
is to create an instant prejudice against
the attitude of the author. That is mere
bombast and rhodomontade. and there is
far too much of it in the book. The au-
thor has been brought up in the shadow
of these great ones, and yet he was not
one of then. a fact which might have
saved him from much breathless admira-
tion: but his book would have been more
interesting had he been able to draw off
and gain a little perspective. Also, he is
too much concerned to place halos on all
and sundry. The result is an annoying
confusion of values. In the individual
portraits. too, the piquant charm of char-
acter is largely lost. as is the case in those
photographs where much working to oblit-
erate wrinkles has resulted in a smooth
vacuity of expression. As Dr. Emerson
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
EARLY YEARS OF
THE SATURDAY CLUB
( Continued from Page 141)
teen feet in circumference for the same
excellent reason: and Emerson, trying to
shoot a deer and excusing himself for his
EARLY YEARS OF
probably Intentional failure to do 80 by
THE SATURDAY CLUB
explaining that all he could see was a
square mist." They go to hear Jenny
( Continued from Preceding Page)
Lind. under the management of P. T. Bar-
num, sing in a hall over the Fitchburg
bags contain no volume of Browning
Railroad Station: the Cambridge residents
They were too provincial to be alive to
charter an omnibus and lurch through
still, small voices attempting a new speech.
The Port " into town to see Warren at
They are too provincial still to heed, oven
the Museum or Fanny Kemble at the Bos-
If they must perforce hear. Speaking of
ton Theatre.
& prose address by Professor Pierce, Dr.
Work and play and abundance of both.
Emerson exclaims: This joyous paean
It is true that this was a mutual admira-
a nobler poem than the vers libre
offered
tion society. but admiration is quite as
as such today."
And
again:
necessary a condition to success as criti-
cism is, and even If we take Lowell's esti-
Longfellow, like Tennyson, has been
mate with a grain of salt, they were an
regarded with superior pity by apos-
ties and practitioners of the rugged
unusual group of men. In a letter from
the involved, the lawless in form and
England, probably during a little momen-
subject He, a man sweet, wholesome
tary wave of homesickness, Lowell says:
normal, did not deal with pathological
but universal experiences. To him se-
I have never seen dvilization at se
lection, purity, and finish were inevit-
high a level in some respects as here.
able.
In plain living and high thinking, I
fancy we have, or used to have, the
Did Dr. Emerson but realize it, this
advantage, and I have never seen so-
gratuitous attack is most complimentary.
ciety on the whole as good as I used
Touch6, Prince!
to meet at the Saturday Club.
Mr. Dwight, in the last number of
This was written in 1883, and already
Dwight's " Journal of Music," essayed a
the used to have" rings somewhat sadly
more graceful valedictory on the same
across the page. For the descendants of
theme:
the tradition have altered It, and not for
We candidly confess that what now
the better. The " plain living still per-
challenges the world as new music
sists, but the high thinking has unfor-
falls to stir us to the same depths of
soul and feeling that the old masters
tunately mostly degenerated into .. tall
did.
Startling as the new
talking." Such is the danger of assuming,
composers are, and novel, and curious,
ready-made, the virtues of one's ances-
brilliant, beautiful at times, they do
not bring us nearer heaven. We feel
tors.
no inner call to the proclaiming of the
It must be admitted that the 'high
new gospel.
thinking in the book becomes a trifle
This is the real tragedy of age, for de
wearlsome. They say what we consider
not even the Scriptures tell us that heaven
needs no statement. People are con-
has many mansions? Professor Parry pro-
stantly referred to as shining spirits,"
codes the quotation I have just given
poems are " sublime": Mr. Fields can
with this admirable traism: H Ultimately,
think of no higher tribute to Hawthorne
as is inevitable, the younger generation
than to say that .. his writings have never
parted company from him and took Its
soiled the public mind with one unlovely
own road."
Image''; and Dr. Hosmer, admiring, but
Times have changed with hurricane
worriedly apologetic, continues the bur-
swiftness in these latter years. The rup-
den:
ture with the past has been severe, far
Humanity rolls before him as it did
more severe than other generations have
before Shakespeare, sometimes weak,
known. I say have known," because
himself sometimes suffering, heighten to happy. heroic, regulate joy. depressed, He mitigate its did movement, not Its exultant, concern BORROW. to
the beginnings they do not always know.
They did not know Walt Whitman. But
its or
even changing more slowly, the artists of
His work was to portray It as It moved,
and in that conception of his mission
the Saturday Club had prejudice to en-
he established his masterfulness as an
counter. William Hunt, returning home
artist, though it abates somewhat, does
after two years spent in studying with the
it not, from his wholeness as a man?
Barbiron painters, was stirred by an at-
Hawthorne himself, master of prose
tack in The Advertiser from some authori-
though he was, takes a .. vast satisfac-
ty at Harvard on the modern French
tion in Longfellow's poetry, and Dr.
painters." He replied in a scathing
Emerson, loyal to inherited estimates, an-
article:
nounces with a fine dogmatism: Evan-
The standard of art education is in-
geline '-a pocm that will hold its place
deed carried to a dizzy height at Har
in literature while true affection lasts." I
vard University when such men as
Millet are ranked as triflers.
.
cannot think that true affection " has
It is not worth while to be alarmed
quite departed from the world, -but even
about the influence of French art. It
Dr. Emerson must be aware that .. Evan-
would hardly be mortifying If a Millet
geline." in the opinion of the modern
or a Delacroix should be developed in
Boston. It is not our fault that we
critic, fell out of her niche so long ago
inherit ignorance in art; but we are not
that the moss is growing where she stood.
obliged to advertise It.
Yet I believe that Longfellow might
The chapter on Hunt is particularly de-
have been a poet in another place at an-
lightful. He must have been an unusual
other time. The little poems to Lowell,
man, far more than his pictures would
lead us to suppose. There is something
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
one in French and one in Italian, prove
prophetic in his remark when Dr. Holmes
it. The truth seems to be that he was
a kind of literary chamcleon. French and
handed him a little Japanese vase asking
if he would like to see it. Hunt ex-
Italian verse is not goody-goody, and
claimed: " Like to see it? By God, It's
Longfellow unconsciously took on the nn-
one of those damned ultimate things!"
tional characteristics with the tongue. It
One wonders why, with so much insight
is a thousand pities that these self-centred
and real artistic sensitiveness, he was not
Brahmins were deaf to Walt Whitman
and Poe, but why did their English mail-
(Continued on Following Page)
(Continued on Following Page)
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
EARLY YEARS OF
THE SATURDAY CLUB
( Continued from Preceding Page)
greater painter. Perhaps we are an-
swered by the words of one of his pupils:
Even what Is called the moral passion
had a place in his art." In fact, it may
have been Puritanism which throttled him.
There were a goodly array of writers in
th. Saturday Club, one painter, (the other
does not count,) and one musician. But
there were also scientists. and the chapters
on Acassiz, Professor Pierce, and Jeffries
Wyman are among the most interesting of
all. They would only be garbled by quota-
tion. but there is a pleasant little remind-
er of these remote times in the fact that
In. Wyman 11.25 member of the Boston
Fire Brigade and ran with the old tub."
which means that the brigade was a volun-
teer organization with a small hand pump
on wheels as the only apparatus, if we ex-
copi the leather bucket which each member
owned and was bound to bring, duly
marked with his initials. My grandfather's
bucket still hangs in the hall of a member
of the family.
Professor Pierce I remember well. and
his sweet. benignant face. 1 must have
seen him many times. but once stands out
In my memory. A certain dinner party
to which I was brought to see the great
ones of the earth. after the fashion of our
educationally forethoughted parents. Mr.
Longfellow carried me round the table in
a scrap basket. and the recollection of that
ride is quite as vivid as though it were
yesterday. Certainly, if there were great-
er poets and painters than these of the
Saturday Club. there were few greater
scientists anywhere in the world at that
time. At one of the great expositions in
Paris a mural tablet was erected with the
names of all the eminent mathematicians
of the world carved upon it; Archimedes
headed the list. which contained only
twenty-one names: the last was Pierce.
Probably the part of this large book in
which the world will be most interested is
that dealing with the civil war. The times
are so like those terrible ones which we
have just lived through. The narrative
of following years pursued by Dr. Emer-
son is most excellent: we hear the rumors
of war, we see the club and their friends
getting ready. we watch with them from
the tall windows as their sons march away.
It is almost too painful. We used to read
such things as history: now they are cruel
fact.
Dr. Emerson gives us many glimpses
behind the scenes. He tells how Messrs.
Forbes and Aspinwall agreed to send n
vessel with powder and food to Fort Sum-
ter, in case it should be attacked, advanc-
Ing the money at their own risk. But
before the matter could be arranged Fort
Sumter had fallen. The railroad bridges
between Baltimore and Washington are
burned. but Mr. Forbes charters steamers
in Boston and Fall River and the Massa.
chusetts troops are sent safely to Wash-
ington by sea. Three years pass, the war
continues; but, great and devastating as
it was. it did not sap every spring of life,
as the present war has done. Longfellow
still works on his translation of the In-
ferno ": Agassiz goes to South America on
scientific expedition, and young men of
military age are among his assistants. The
Saturday Club was composed of men in the
middle period of life, and we see the war
from their angle. Particularly important
in this connection are the chapters on
Summer, and Forbes, and Andrew, and
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Charles Francis Adams.
At last comes peace, and the Harvard
Commemoration. and Dr. Emerson ac-
knowledges what I have always heard as
a matter of family history, that Lowell's
faunous "Ode," written for the occasion.
made no great impression at the time;
was, in fact, overshadowed by Phillips
Brooks's opening prayer.
Only commensurate with the desire for
knowledge in these Boston Brahmins was
their extraordinary faculty for seeking it
at the wrong sources. Hunt fuddles his
sense of color at the palette of the Barbi-
zon painters; Henry James and Elliot Ca-
bot confuse themselves to ineptitude upon
German philosophy; Norton sits at the
feet of Ruskin. and as one of the .. Com-
mittre of Fifty foists upon posterity the
ghostly eyesore of Memorial Hall. Even
Agassiz, adopted member of the caste, de-
nied Darwinism with all the vigor of his
per-onality. They might have done better
by New Enzland had they really been
"constellations" instead of small and
very fixed stars. But then, they might
not have bren at all. By them we have
bein kept fifty years behind the mind of
Europe: without them we should probably
have been one hundred years behind.
I have spoken of Dr. Emerson's habit
of exaggeration and his sentimentality; he
also has allowed himself to report the
same ancedotes in a number places,
but still his are the best chapters in the
book. It is not his fault that some of
these Saturday Club members are people
of
extremely slight importance. l'rofes-
( Continued on Page 150)
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
EARLY YEARS OF
THE SATURDAY CLUB
( Continued from Page 148)
sor Perry's contributions are the papers
on Dwight, Lowell, Motley, Whipple,
I'rescott, Whittler, Hedge, and Estes
Howe-at least these are signed by him;
there are only eight, and the preface says
that he wrote nine; but the proofreading
has been scamped and some of the chap-
ters are unsigned. Professor Perry's
pages lack the snap of Dr. Emerson's,
but they have a juster idea of proportion
and a nice sense of humor. Baffled by the
difficulty of placing the required aura
about the head of Estes Howe, Professor
Perry solves the difficulty most neatly by
calling him " a personable gentleman of
Intellectual tastes." Mr. Moorfield Storey
is responsible for the chapters on Sumner
and Charles Francis Adams. They are
clear, straightforward narratives, but
without the epigrammatic brilliance which
is usual to Mr. Storey. Mark A. Do-
wo!f Howe on James T. Fields is verbose
and none too animated, and ex-Governor
McCall, dealing with his predecessor,
Governor Andrew, is simply dull. Mr.
Forbes's paper on Martin Brimmer owes
its charm to the excerpts from John
Jay Chapman's autobiographical volume
" Memories and Milestones," and is
marred by injudicious praise of Mr. Brim-
mer's amateurish book on Egypt. Evl-
dently Mr. Forbes has not escaped the un-
reasoning hero worship peculiar to the
Emerson family.
Such is the record of this pleasant old
club: and, even if we differ with the au-
thors in their critical pronouncements,
here and there, it is eminently a volume
with a perfume hanging about it, and one
which it is a pleasure and profit to read
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
THE SATURDAY CLUB
FLORENCE HOWE HALL
New York Times (1857-1922); Apr 13. 1919:
ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 2006)
pg. 92
THE SATURDAY CLUB
The New York Times Review of Rooks:
A
S one who well remembers many of the
members of the Saturday Club.
I should be glad to add a postscript
to Miss Amy Lowell's very interesting but
not altogether sympathetic review of Dr.
Emerson's book, published in THE TIMES
Book REVIEW of Sunday, March 23. Miss
Lowell fancies that the Brahmins of the
Saturday Club," as she calls them, were
a self-centred group of men. No one who
saw them in the flesh and who was old
enough to listen to their delightful talk
would say this. If they had been, they
could scareely have concealed this damning
fact from the critical and rather satirical
eyea of a schoolgirl, the present writer.
True, I never attended a meeting of the
Saturday Club, although my father, Dr.
Samuel Gridley Howe, belonged to it. But
cleven of the original fourteen members,
and some of the later ones, were from time
to time guests in the household of my par-
ents. Certain of them we knew very well.
They were all middle-aged or elderly men,
by no means the heroes of young feminine
Imagination. Yet their conversation seemed
wholly delightful to it girl who loved Alh-
letie sports quite as well as reading, per-
haps a little better.
Miss Lowell says:
It is a thousand pities that these self-
centred Brahmins were deaf to Walt
Whitman and Poe, but why did their
English mail bags contain no volume of
Browning? They were 100 provincial to
be alive to still small voices, attempt-
ing a new speech.
Has our poetess forgotten that Emerson,
one of the founders of the club. was among
the first to recognize the genuine of Whit-
man? : Leaves of Grass : was published
in 1855. Emerson's cordial letter of recog-
nition and praise, (written July 21. 1855.)
contains the phrase:
I greet you at the beginning of a great
career.
Whitman had this sentence printed in
letters of gold on the covers of the volumes
of the second edition of : Leaves of Grass."
Edward Everett Hale in January, 1876,
published in The North American Review,
then under the editorship of the Rev.
Andrew P' Peabody, a favorable review of
it. 1a this he speaks of " the freshness,
simplicity and reality of the book. of the
author's wonderful sharpness and dis-
tinctness of imagination." In April, 1860,
Lowell, then editor of The Atlantic
Monthly, printed in the magazine. Whit-
man's Bardic Symbols.
I remember well the appearance of the
first edition of "Leaves of Grass, although
1 was less than'ten years old when it was
published. The volume I saw was prob.
ably a presentation copy to my mother,
Mrs. Julia Ward Howe. It was a tall
quarto, 50 thin as to suggest the idea that
it was stread out to cover as much space
as possible. I heard it discussed by my
elders and gained a vague impression that
the young man who wrote it was some-
what coarse. I do i.ot know who invented
the phrase: The barbarie yawp of Whit-
man." Unkind and unjust as it is, it
would seem to describe his utterances quite
as appropriately as that of the still small
voice."
The men of the Saturday Club did not
need to " look in their English mail bags
for volumes of Browning," since these were
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
promptly republished by Messrs. Ticknor
and Fields of the "Old Corner Book-Store."
It is needless to say that this was fre-
quented by the literary men of that day.
Mr. Fields was not a charter member of
the Saturday Club but joined it later on.
The club was founded in 1855, the year in
which " Men and Women : was published.
On Nov. 29, 1855 Robert Browning
wrote to Fields: "I take advantage of
the opportunity of the publication in the
United - States of my * Men and
Women --for which you. being more
righteous than the law, have liberally
remunerated me- to express my earn-
est desire that the power of publishing
in America this and every subsequent
work'of mine may rest exclusively with
you and your house." (From the
sketch of James T. Fields in the
Early Years of the Saturday Club.")
It might seem superfluous to say that
the writings of Edgar Allan Poe were well
known to the literary men of Boston at the
time of which we are speaking. had not
Miss Lowell appeared to doubt this.
FLORENCE HOWE HALL.
New York, April 7.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
108
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY 32,41 (Mar. 1959)
past, as he then saw it, augured well; but the act of "predicting"
it was still more important than the results. The historian devised
a rational order strong and complex enough to contain the mani-
fold, refractory data of the past; taking his science from the age,
he gave in return a model of how scientific reason could function
in the American democracy.
This fine biography invites us to reflect on the significance of
that achievement. Sketching the milieu in which Adams worked,
Mr. Samuels emphasizes the sense of a New Empire which per-
vaded American intellectual life as well as business enterprise. A
good example is the work of the geologists whom Adams knew
and admired, and the implication is that the spirit which moved
Clarence King to conduct his survey of the Fortieth Parallel in-
spired Adams also: as an historian he mapped his own cross-sec-
tion, reckoning the nation's resources and potentialities in human
terms. Like the great Surveys, the great History was a contribution
towards the rationalization of American society in a time when
disruption and grab seemed the dominant way of life. While the
gilded monuments of that divided age have long since peeled, its
more durable intellectual works show their value more clearly than
ever.
J.C. LEVENSON.
The Saturday Club: A Century Completed 1920-1956. Edited
by Edward W. Forbes and John H. Finley, Jr. (Boston: Hough-
ton Mifflin Company, 1958. Pp. xix, 410. 47 portraits. $10.00.)
Bostonians have a natural affinity for banding into dining
clubs. Some of these groups salve their New England consciences
by preparing or sitting through papers; some maintain the polite
fiction of serving the public good in one manner or another; oth-
ers quite honestly exist for the higher purposes of eating, drink-
ing, and smoking in congenial company. Organizations of this
kind find it convenient to call themselves after the day of the
week upon which they meet. The Wednesday Evening Club has
brought together clergymen, lawyers, physicians, and a composite
fourth class described as "merchants, manufacturers, and gentle-
men of literature and leisure" at an increasingly late hour since
BOOK REVIEWS
109
1777. Although Wednesday can clearly claim seniority, other days
of the week have not been forgotten. The Thursday Evening
Club, for example, is now in its 114th year, and the Saturday Club
in its 104th in 1959.
The doings of most Boston dining clubs survive in the imperma-
nent memories of their members. Sometimes there is a thin cen-
tenary volume, but mostly the historian has to approach them
through tantalizing fragments in letters and diaries. The Saturday
Club, by contrast, with three stout quarto volumes, fully illus-
trated, clearly takes the prize for the convenience, completeness,
and extent of its published record.
In 1918, Dr. Edward W. Emerson, son of its founder, Ralph
Waldo Emerson, published The Early Years of the Saturday Club
1855-1870. Dr. Emerson began work on this volume, which con-
tains summaries of each year's doings, followed by lives of de-
ceased members who had been elected in those years, intending
to preserve a record of the club's first half century. As the fulness
of treatment would have made this an unreasonable burden, he
limited himself to the first sixteen years, and even SO achieved a
514-page volume. Nine years later, M. A. DeWolfe Howe, edited
a second volume Later Years of the Saturday Club 1870-1920.
Here the pattern changed somewhat. The annual summaries of
club activities were eliminated and the record confined to biog-
raphies by many hands. Seven were by Dr. Emerson, four by Mr.
Howe, the remainder by other members. Now The Saturday Club:
A Century Completed 1920-1956, edited by Edward W Forbes,
grandson of the founder, and Professor John H. Finley, Jr., Mas-
ter of Eliot House, brings the record down to date.
The third volume matches its predecessors in format and dig-
nity, but let no one be fooled thereby into dismissing it as a nos-
talgic modern sequel to the record of a mighty but lost past. It is
anything but that. To me it is the most exciting of the three.
Grant that it includes fond memories of a few men who carried
into modern times the virtues of a vanished past. It also contains
the lives of men who have been mighty contributors to the present,
and future. Among the subjects described is Alfred North White-
head, who wrote
Mankind is now in one of its rare moods of shifting its outlook.
The mere compulsion of tradition has lost its force. It is the busi-
110
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY
ness of philosophers, students, and practical men to re-create and
re-enact a vision of the world, conservative and radical, including
those elements of reverence and order without which society
lapses into riot, a vision penetrated through and through with
unflinching rationality.
We must produce a great age, or see
the collapse of the upward striving of our age.
So are Dr. George Richards Minot, Nobel prize winner for his
development of liver therapy in pernicious anemia, and Theodore
Lyman, whose discovery of a series of lines in the ultraviolet spec-
trum of atomic hydrogen "turned out to be the 'prototype of all
spectral series' and became the experimental cornerstone of the
celebrated quantum theory of atomic structure developed by
Bohr in 1913." Karl Compton of M.I.T., Dr. Harvey Cushing
and others of their stripe are included. Justice Holmes, President
Lowell, Bishop Lawrence, humanists of the quality of E. K. Rand,
John Livingston Lowes, and C. H. Grandgent, such historians as
Charles H. Haskins and Archibald Cary Coolidge, and the unique
naturalist Thomas Barbour, are all here with the scientists as [a
result of the Saturday Club's remarkable gift for choosing mem-
bers for the fine temper of their minds rather than the sub-section
of learning in which they use them. After running through the
contents of the third volume, one questions the validity of Dr.
Emerson's claim to have dealt with the club's "Golden Age" in
the first.
Many hands of many ages have made this volume; hence it
avoids being a consistent collection of eulogies of old school
friends. Sometimes, as with Dr. George Richards Minot and Dr.
Hans Zinsser, the sketches are by a contemporary friend and
colleague; in these cases the biographer is Dr. Paul Dudley White.
The masterly sketches by Charles P. Curtis, Zechariah Chafee,
Lucien Price, and John Finley describe members somewhat, or
even considerably, older than the writers. While many of the
members have been made the subjects of extended biographies
elsewhere, the sketches in this volume often add valuable supple-
mentary information derived from personal knowledge.>
Charles P. Curtis, for example, in writing of the Sacco-Vanzetti
case, in his sketch of President Lowell, tells how he was Bishop
Lawrence's "errand boy" in petitioning Governor Fuller to ap-
point the Lowell-Grant-Stratton committee.
BOOK REVIEWS
111
The Bishop wanted no publicity. I took the petition one Sunday
morning to the Governor's personal counsel, Joseph Wiggin, at
his home, with the Bishop's instructions that Wiggin was to let
me know the next morning that the Governor had it. If not, I said,
the Bishop would present it in person, walking alone and in public
up the front steps of the State House at noon, and I was instructed
to inform the newspapers. This, of course, was not necessary.
The passage that I have italicized above does much to explain
William Lawrence's methods and his great accomplishments.
George R. Harrison's account of Karl Compton's wrath at the
destruction of the Japanese cyclotrons by the U. Army after the
signing of the surrender (pp. 350-351) and Zechariah Chafee's
record of a conversation with T. N. Perkins on the manner of cop-
ing with politicians (p. 263) are equally worthy of notice.
In their several ways the sketches give vivid pictures of their
varied subjects. Witness the account of Nelson Perkins.
A close friend, who was seeking an office of national importance,
came into Perkins' office to show him several letters of recommen-
dation obtained from distinguished persons. Perkins put his feet
on his desk, read through the laudatory epistles, spat in the waste-
basket, and said, "Brains of Napoleon and character of Jesus
Christ."
Or John Finley's perceptive description of Edward Kennard Rand:
His friendships, one felt, included the ancient authors, and as
Horace easily addressed Roman friends in poems that held echoes
of the Greek authors, SO Rand mingled present and past in the
common light of cheerful fellowship, as if, compared to fellow-
ship, time were irrelevant. Lightness was his code and signature;
he by nature shunned the thunders of Cicero, even the gravity of
Virgil, for Horace's smiling indirection and deceptive ease. Some-
thing may have been lost to his teaching and writing by this cast
of mind. He did not like to deal with things massive and central,
perhaps because they struck him as obvious. Moreover, he pre-
ferred not to speak ill, hence would calmly neglect dull pages of
an author to fix with joy on a redeeming phrase.
Any one who wishes to meditate upon the nature of the Satur-
day Club and the blending of personalities that has assured its
continuing vitality, will find food for thought in a folding chart
at the end of the book that lists past and present members and
indicates at a glance the composition of the club at any time dur-
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY
ing its first century. This graph, which emphasizes the overlapping
of generations more clearly than anything I have seen elsewhere,
was characteristically enough, devised by an engineer member,
Edward Loyburn Moreland.
The Saturday Club: A Century Completed is a remarkable
record of a remarkable organization. It is equally readable both
for profit and for pleasure. Can one say more?
WALTER MUIR WHITEHILL.
The American Heritage Book of the Revolution. By the Editors
of American Heritage. Editor in Charge, Richard M. Ketchum.
Narrative by Bruce Lancaster, with a chapter by J. H. Plumb.
(New York: American Heritage Publishing Co., and Símon and
Schuster. 1958. Pp. 384. $12.50.)
Although it is rather more than just a picture book, The Revo-
lution claims our attention chiefly on account of its 600-odd il-
lustrations, many of which, according to the editor, have never
before been reproduced. Most of the illustrations are contem-
porary, but not quite all: there are a few later primitives and
some "artist's conceptions" of dubious authenticity. Several of
these, incidentally, are not identified as such in the captions or
even in the credits in the back of the book. About a third of the
pictures are in full color.
Bruce Lancaster's narrative of the events from 1763 to 1783 is
both longer and rather better than one expects to find in a book
of this sort. True to the form, it is short on analysis and long on
action and "colorful" details. ("British Sergeant Hugh McQuar-
ters dropped his linstock to the breech of the piece that suddenly
flamed out in stunning explosion
") But in spite of his histori-
cal novelist's penchant for linstocks, shrilling and muttering fifes
and drums, and secondary characters with irrelevant nick-names
-my favorite is Gen. George "Joe Gourd" Weedon-, Mr. Lan-
caster manages to tell the essential story. He sticks to the facts,
eschewing patriotic embellishments; he is fair to the British and
Loyalists; and he is generous and accurate in his comments on
the importance of the French alliance.
Most of Mr. Lancaster's chapters are followed by several pages
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New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
Sat. day 31.1573
Longfellow
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DIAGRAM OF A SATURDAY CLUB DINNER, IN THE HANDWRITING OF
JOHN S. DWIGHT
A diagram of the seating plan at the Saturday Club during
an 1873 meeting, drawn by member John Sullivan Dwight.
(Courtesy Susan Wilson)
"Some people might have a vision of the Saturday Club of
older white males sitting around a table in the 19th century
would essentially he accurate and that certainly is
2/7/2020
New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
The ARTery
New Literary Group Turns History Of
Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club'
On Its Head
06:49
March 24, 2017
By Erin Trahan
Anita Diamant speaking during a meeting of the School Street Sessions.
(Andrea Shea/WBUR)
This article is more than 2 years old.
2/7/2020
New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
If you walked down School and Tremont streets in Boston in
1855 you might've run into the likes of Emerson, Thoreau or
Longfellow. If it was a Saturday night, you might see them
talking literary shop over gin punch and cigars inside the
brand new Parker House Hotel. But you wouldn't be invited
in.
This private, all-male club was known as the Saturday Club
and now a bunch of mostly female Boston-based poets have
thrown open the doors to host public literary events at the
same, historic location.
Get local arts and culture news, critiques, events and ticket
giveaways sent to your inbox each week with The ARTery's
newsletter. Sign up now.
Omni Parker House historian Susan Wilson says the group
of poets, philosophers and scientists started meeting at the
hotel when it opened in 1855.
"The president of Harvard would be sitting here, Francis
Parkman the famous historian would be sitting there, and
[John Greenleaf Whittier would come in and Thoreau
snubbed his nose because he didn't like the cigar smoke,"
she describes. "There's a famous quote from Thoreau. He
mentioned that he didn't really eniov coming to the Saturdav
2/7/2020
New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
Club at the Parker House because it was SO smoke filled he
said, 'I much prefer the men's room at the Fitchburg
Railroad. "
The Saturday Club lays claim to many famous firsts,
including Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's supposed first
reading of his widely-recited Paul Revere poem. Wilson says
that it cannot be proven, but "allegedly when he was working
on 'Paul Revere's Ride,
Longfellow read it first to the
people here."
The Atlantic Monthly magazine started in the Saturday
Club's smoke-filled rooms and Charles Dickens - while
touring the United States - debuted "A Christmas Carol" to
its gentlemen members.
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New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
The door to Charles Dickens' suite at the Parker House Hotel when he
visited in 1867-68 is still in the hotel today -- but on display. (Courtesy Susan
Wilson)
Wilson explains that into the 20th century it was very
common for clubs to be either male or female. "Louisa May
Alcott or Harriet Beecher Stowe or other women of the era
wouldn't be coming to the Saturday Club meetings," she
says. "This was a guys' club."
Today's club is very different. Sure, people gather around one
enormous table in the still-elegant Omni Parker House. But
the events are free, open to anyone, and are organized by a
committee dominated by female writers. Boston's poet
laureate Danielle Legros Georges is one of the co-founders.
"There are wonderful discussions that take place in schools
and universities but we're interested in something
extracurricular that was open to the public that was open to
students and all kinds of people," says Legros Georges.
The club's latest guest speaker was best-selling local author
Anita Diamant. She read a passage from Virginia Woolf's "A
Room of One's Own, which she says inspired her to write
historical fiction about women's lives.
"What I find deplorable, I continued, looking about the
bookshelves, is that nothing is known about women before the
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New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
18th century. "
"When I read that in the 1970s, we knew more about women
before and after the 18th century, but there was still a sense
that we were missing a lot," Diamant said.
After the talk and roundtable dialogue, Diamant says she
thinks that while reviving the tradition of the old club is a
great idea, she's not sure the men who made up the original
club would know how to work this particular room.
"It's nice to remember that these literary lights from the past
sat at a long table," she says. "I don't think they would
recognize this as continuous from what they did. I think they
would be freaked out by it. I can't imagine them, thinking
'What are they doing here?''
The new group was only temporarily called the Saturday
Club. That's thanks to an unexpected email received by co-
founder poet Joe Bergin. "It was from the president of the
Saturday Club. And he very cordially set us straight and said
that the Saturday Club did indeed still exist and we would be
well advised to find a new name for ourselves. So fair
enough," recalls Bergin.
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New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
Sat. hey 31.1573
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DIAGRAM OF A SATURDAY CLUB DINNER, IN THE HANDWRITING OF
JOHN S. DWIGHT
A diagram of the seating plan at the Saturday Club during
an 1873 meeting, drawn by member John Sullivan Dwight.
(Courtesy Susan Wilson)
"Some people might have a vision of the Saturday Club of
older white males sitting around a table in the 19th century
and that would essentially be accurate and that certainly is
2/7/2020
New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary "Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
no longer accurate today," says James Engell. He would
know. The Harvard professor of English literature is
president of the Saturday Club - yes, the one started in 1855
is still ticking.
The Saturday Club is still invite-only but Engell says there
are female members and people of color. But try to find it
online as Bergin did? Nothing. And it's no longer a literary
club. Engell calls it an "old-fashioned conversation club" for
leaders of all professions.
"People don't keep it secret, there's no oath about secrecy,
there's no secret handshake - there's nothing like that,"
Engell laughs. "It's not that kind of society, it's not a society
in that sense. It's a simple club."
The new group is now called the School Street Sessions. Like
today's Saturday Club, both groups embrace the increasingly
rarefied art of conversation.
With five gatherings behind the group, covering topics from
African-American literature during colonial New England to
textile workers' lives as told through poetry, the Sessions are
gearing up for its Women's History Month meeting with a
lineup of local women poets reading women poets. As
always, conversation will continue in the bar downstairs as it
did after Diamant's talk, when I spoke with Boston College
sociology professor Eve Spangler, a first-timer who came
with a book club friend
2/7/2020
New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
Spangler admires what she calls the Victorian-era bar's
"noisy but atmospheric" décor with wainscoting and tin
ceilings. Then she explains that as a social science writer she
attends a lot of events related to her subject of study, the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, but not literary events. "So this
was fun," she says.
School Street Sessions advisory committee president, poet
Deborah Melone, says there's a core group who attends and
often faces she doesn't recognize. She got involved with the
group because of how it was taking an idea from Boston's
elite and opening it up to everyone. "I was thrilled that there
was this slightly rebellious aspect of it and I think that's
working," she says.
Poet Sandee Storey, also one of the Sessions' organizers, says
she has longed for a forum that presents "non-fiction
elements as they've been dealt with in literature - especially
in New England. And now we finally have one," she says. "So
we can talk about the mill workers, through poetry. We can
talk about immigrants through poetry."
Storey also organizes a poetry reading series in Jamaica Plain
and for her the School Street Sessions add a new dimension
to Boston's literary community. "It's unique. I don't know of
any other places where there's literature and history all in
the same program. We're not a historical society and we're
not a literary organization, we're both. And SO the
2/7/2020
New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
Members of School Street Sessions' advisory committee Danielle Legros
Georges, Deborah Melone and Mary Bonina. (Andrea Shea/WBUR)
While the past has certainly inspired the group, Legros
Georges says they are now more concerned about the future.
"We've become our own thing, a new thing, even though we
drew inspiration from that group initially, maybe less of a
focus on the Saturday Club. I mean I like the history - I like
our history and its history - but I think we're kind of
moving beyond that."
Yet in one last striking similarity to the Saturday Club, the
School Street Sessions has no web presence, either. To learn
more, you need to send an email to the president.
2/7/2020
New Literary Group Turns History Of Boston's Legendary 'Saturday Club' On Its Head I The ARTery
The next School Street Session is a celebration of Women's
History Month with a lineup of local women poets reading
other women poets. It's on Saturday, March 25, at the Omni
Parker House at 3:30 p.m. and is free and open to the public.
This segment aired on March 24, 2017.
Erin Trahan
Film Writer
Erin Trahan writes about film for The ARTery.
More.
We noticed that you are using an adblocker. If you are not already a member,
please consider a donation. Thank you!
C Copyright WBUR 2020
2/7/2020
Saturday Club (Boston, Massachusetts) - Wikipedia
Saturday Club (Boston,
Massachusetts)
The Saturday Club, established in
1855, was an informal monthly
gathering in Boston, Massachusetts, of
writers, scientists, philosophers,
historians, and other notable thinkers
of the mid-Nineteenth Century.
Contents
Overview
Gallery
Further reading
References
"A Group of the Saturday Club",
External links
from Life and Letters of Oliver
Wendell Holmes, 1896
Overview
The club began meeting informally at the Albion House in Boston. [1]
Publishing agent and lawyer Horatio Woodman first suggested the
gatherings among his friends for food and conversation. [2] By 1856, the
organization became more structured with a loose set of rules, with
monthly meetings held over dinner at the Parker House. [1] The Parker
House served as their place of meeting for many years. It was a hotel built
in 1854 by Harvey D. Parker. [3][4]
The gatherings led to the creation of the Atlantic Monthly, to which many
of the members contributed. [2] The name was suggested by early member
Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. [5]
2/7/2020
Saturday Club (Boston, Massachusetts) - Wikipedia
X
The original members of the group included Woodman, Louis Agassiz,
Richard Henry Dana Jr., and James Russell Lowell. [2] In the following
years, membership was extended to Holmes, Cornelius Conway Felton,
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, and William Hickling Prescott. [6]
Other
members included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Asa Gray, John Lothrop Motley,
Benjamin Peirce, Charles Sumner, John Greenleaf Whittier, and others.
Invitations to the group were considered a sort of affirmation of acceptance
into Boston's high society. Ohio-native William Dean Howells was invited
by James Russell Lowell in 1860 and recalled in a memoir that it seemed
like a rite of passage. Holmes joked that Howells's presence serve as
"something like the apostolic succession the laying on of hands". A few
years later, Howells was named editor of the Atlantic Monthly, which
published many of the works by members of the group. [7]
In 1884, Oliver Wendell Holmes published a poem titled "At the Saturday
Club" in which he reminisced about the gatherings. By then, many of its
members were dead. Ralph Waldo Emerson's son, Edward Waldo
Emerson, published two books about the Saturday Club and its members in
the early 20th century. A version of the Saturday Club still exists in Boston.
Gallery
Ignored Samuel g. Ward whose conversations
c Emerson inopined its creation.
2/7/2020
Saturday Club (Boston, Massachusetts) - Wikipedia
Oliver
Wendell Louis Agassiz
Benjamin Peirce
Holmes
Charles Sumner and Parker's,
School Ralph
Waldo
Henry Wadsworth Street, Boston, 1855 Emerson, ca. 1872
Longfellow, 1863
Asa Gray
John
Lothrop
Motley, ca. 1860
Further reading
2/7/2020
Saturday Club (Boston, Massachusetts) - Wikipedia
Adams, Thomas Boylston. Saturday Club 1957-1986. Boston:
Saturday Club, 1988.
Emerson, Edward Waldo. Early years of the Saturday Club, 1855-1870
(https://books.google.com/books?id=sqkRAAAAYAAJ).Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1918.
Emerson, Edward Waldo. Later years of the Saturday Club, 1870-
1920. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1927.
Forbes, Edward Waldo. Saturday Club: A Century Completed, 1920-
1956. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1958.
Holmes, Oliver Wendell. "At the Saturday Club (https://books.google.co
books?id=bMxaAAAAMAAJ&dq=saturday%20club%20%22oliver%2
Owendell%20holmes%22&Ir=&as_drrb_is=q&as_minm_is=0&as_miny
maxm_is=0&as_maxy_is=&num=100&as_brr=1&as_pt=BOOK
S&pg=PA269#v=onepage&q=saturday%20club&f=false)". 1884.
References
1. Mellow, James R. Nathaniel Hawthorne in His Times. Baltimore: The
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1980: 539. ISBN 0-8018-5900-X
2. Gale, Robert L. A Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Companion. Westport,
CT: Greenwood Press, 2003: 210. ISBN 0-313-32350-X
3. Whitehill, Walter Muir. "Review of The Saturday Club: A Century
Completed 1920-1956" by Edward W. Forbes and John H. Finley, Jr.
The New England Quarterly, Vol. 32, No. 1 (Mar., 1959), pp. 108-112.
4. Morison, Samuel Eliot. "Review of Later Years of the Saturday Club" by
M. A. DeWolfe Howe. The New England Quarterly, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Apr.,
1928), p. 267.
5. Broaddus, Dorothy C. Genteel Rhetoric: Writing High Culture in
Nineteenth-Century Boston. Columbia, South Carolina: University of
South Carolina, 1999: 46.ISBN 1-57003-244-0.
6. Gale, Robert L. A Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Companion. Westport,
CT: Greenwood Press, 2003: 210-211. ISBN 0-313-32350-X
7. O'Connell, Shaun. Boston: Voices and Visions. Amherst, MA:
University of Massachusetts Press, 2010: 92. ISBN 978-1-55849-820-4
External links
Guide to the Saturday Club Records (http://www.masshist.org/collectio
n-guides/view/fa0358), Massachusetts Historical Society
2/29/2020
ABIGAIL, the Library Catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Massachusetts
Historical Society
ABIGAIL
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1791
the Library Catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society
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Search Request: Subject Browse = Clubs Massachusetts Boston.
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Friday Club (Boston, Mass.)
Title:
Friday Club (Boston, Mass.) records, 1859-1884.
Description:
1 vol.
Scope:
Records of the Friday Club of Boston, Mass. kept by
William Whitwell Greenough. Established as an eating
and discussion club and composed mostly of Harvard
graduates, the Friday Club met to discuss
philosophical, political, and historical subjects. Records
document attendance, guests, and, for the earlier
years, topics of conversation. Among the members
were Charles Francis Adams, Louis Agassiz, Benjamin
R. Curtis, C.C. Felton, James Russell Lowell, and
George Ticknor.
2/29/2020
ABIGAIL, the Library Catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Old shelf mark: 35.10.
Subject(s):
Adams, Charles Francis, 1807-1886.
Agassiz, Louis, 1807-1873.
Curtis, Benjamin Robbins, 1809-1874.
Felton, C. C. (Cornelius Conway), 1807-1862.
Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
Ticknor, George, 1791-1871.
Harvard University --Alumni and alumnae.
Clubs --Massachusetts -Boston.
Other Author(s):
Greenough, William W. (William Whitwell), -1899.
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4
108
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY V.32,#1 (1959).
past, as he then saw it, augured well; but the act of "predicting"
it was still more important than the results. The historian devised
a rational order strong and complex enough to contain the mani-
fold, refractory data of the past; taking his science from the age,
he gave in return a model of how scientific reason could function
in the American democracy.
This fine biography invites us to reflect on the significance of
that achievement. Sketching the milieu in which Adams worked,
Mr. Samuels emphasizes the sense of a New Empire which per-
vaded American intellectual life as well as business enterprise. A
good example is the work of the geologists whom Adams knew
and admired, and the implication is that the spirit which moved
Clarence King to conduct his survey of the Fortieth Parallel in-
spired Adams also: as an historian he mapped his own cross-sec-
tion, reckoning the nation's resources and potentialities in human
terms. Like the great Surveys, the great History was a contribution
towards the rationalization of American society in a time when
disruption and grab seemed the dominant way of life. While the
gilded monuments of that divided age have long since peeled, its
more durable intellectual works show their value more clearly than
ever.
J.C. LEVENSON.
The Saturday Club: A Century Completed 1920-1956. Edited
by Edward W. Forbes and John H. Finley, Jr. (Boston: Hough-
ton Mifflin Company, 1958. Pp. xix, 410. 47 portraits. $10.00.)
Bostonians have a natural affinity for banding into dining
clubs. Some of these groups salve their New England consciences
by preparing or sitting through papers; some maintain the polite
fiction of serving the public good in one manner or another; oth-
ers quite honestly exist for the higher purposes of eating, drink-
ing, and smoking in congenial company Organizations of this
kind find it convenient to call themselves after the day of the
founded
week upon which they meet. The Wednesday Evening Club has
1777
brought together clergymen, lawyers, physicians, and a composite
fourth class described as "merchants, manufacturers, and gentle-
men of literature and leisure" at an increasingly late hour since
927
See
BOOK REVIEWS
109
1777. Although Wednesday can clearly claim seniority, other days
of the week have not been forgotten. The Thursday Evening
1845
Club, for example, is now in its 114th year, and the Saturday Club- 1855
in its 104th.
The doings of most Boston dining clubs survive in the imperma-
nent memories of their members. Sometimes there is a thin cen-
So too
tenary volume, but mostly the historian has to approach them
GBD!
/
through tantalizing fragments in letters and diaries. The Saturday
Club, by contrast, with three stout quarto volumes, fully illus-
trated, clearly takes the prize for the convenience, completeness,
and extent of its published record.
1918
In 1918, Dr. Edward W. Emerson, son of its founder, Ralph
Waldo Emerson, published The Early Years of the Saturday Club
1855-1870. Dr. Emerson began work on this volume, which con-
tains summaries of each year's doings, followed by lives of de-
ceased members who had been elected in those years, intending
to preserve a record of the club's first half century. As the fulness
of treatment would have made this an unreasonable burden, he
limited himself to the first sixteen years, and even so achieved a
1927
514-page volume. Nine years later, M. A. DeWolfe Howe, edited
a second volume Later Years of the Saturday Club 1870-1920.
Here the pattern changed somewhat. The annual summaries of
club activities were eliminated and the record confined to biog-
raphies by many hands. Seven were by Dr. Emerson, four by Mr.
Howe, the remainder by other members. Now The Saturday Club:
A Century Completed 1920-1956, edited by Edward W. Forbes,
1959
grandson of the founder, and Professor ohn H. Finley, Jr., Mas-
ter of Eliot House, brings the record down to date.
The third volume matches its predecessors in format and dig-
nity, but let no one be fooled thereby into dismissing it as a nos-
talgic modern sequel to the record of a mighty but lost past. It is
anything but that. To me it is the most exciting of the three.
Grant that it includes fond memories of a few men who carried
into modern times the virtues of a vanished past. It also contains
the lives of men who have been mighty contributors to the present,
and future. Among the subjects described is Alfred North White-
head, who wrote
Mankind is now in one of its rare moods of shifting its outlook.
The mere compulsion of tradition has lost its force. It is the busi-
110
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY
ness of philosophers, students, and practical men to re-create and
re-enact a vision of the world, conservative and radical, including
those elements of reverence and order without which society
lapses into riot, a vision penetrated through and through with
unflinching rationality.
We must produce a great age, or see
the collapse of the upward striving of our age.
So are Dr. George Richards Minot, Nobel prize winner for his
development of liver therapy in pernicious anemia, and Theodore
Lyman, whose discovery of a series of lines in the ultraviolet spec-
trum of atomic hydrogen "turned out to be the 'prototype of all
spectral series' and became the experimental cornerstone of the
celebrated quantum theory of atomic structure developed by
Bohr in 1913." Karl Compton of M.I.T., Dr. Harvey Cushing
and others of their stripe are included. Justice Holmes, President
Lowell, Bishop Lawrence, humanists of the quality of E. K. Rand,
John Livingston Lowes, and C. H. Grandgent, such historians as
Charles H. Haskins and Archibald Cary Coolidge, and the unique
naturalist Thomas Barbour, are all here with the scientists as a
result of the Saturday Club's remarkable gift for choosing mem-
bers for the fine temper of their minds rather than the sub-section
of learning in which they use them. After running through the
contents of the third volume, one questions the validity of Dr.
Emerson's claim to have dealt with the club's "Golden Age" in
the first.
Many hands of many ages have made this volume; hence it
avoids being a consistent collection of eulogies of old school
friends. Sometimes, as with Dr. George Richards Minot and Dr.
Hans Zinsser, the sketches are by a contemporary friend and
colleague; in these cases the biographer is Dr. Paul Dudley White.
The masterly sketches by Charles P. Curtis, Zechariah Chafee,
Lucien Price, and John Finley describe members somewhat, or
even considerably, older than the writers. While many of the
members have been made the subjects of extended biographies
elsewhere, the sketches in this volume often add valuable supple-
mentary information derived from personal knowledge.
Charles P. Curtis, for example, in writing of the Sacco-Vanzetti
case, in his sketch of President Lowell, tells how he was Bishop
Lawrence's "errand boy" in petitioning Governor Fuller to ap-
point the Lowell-Grant-Stratton committee.
BOOK REVIEWS
111
The Bishop wanted no publicity. I took the petition one Sunday
morning to the Governor's personal counsel, Joseph Wiggin, at
his home, with the Bishop's instructions that Wiggin was to let
me know the next morning that the Governor had it. If not, I said,
the Bishop would present it in person, walking alone and in public
up the front steps of the State House at noon, and I was instructed
to inform the newspapers. This, of course, was not necessary.
The passage that I have italicized above does much to explain
William Lawrence's methods and his great accomplishments.
George R. Harrison's account of Karl Compton's wrath at the
destruction of the Japanese cyclotrons by the U.S. Army after the
signing of the surrender (pp. 350-351) and Zechariah Chafee's
record of a conversation with T. N. Perkins on the manner of cop-
ing with politicians (p. 263) are equally worthy of notice.
In their several ways the sketches give vivid pictures of their
varied subjects. Witness the account of Nelson Perkins.
A close friend, who was seeking an office of national importance,
came into Perkins' office to show him several letters of recommen-
dation obtained from distinguished persons. Perkins put his feet
on his desk, read through the laudatory epistles, spat in the waste-
basket, and said, "Brains of Napoleon and character of Jesus
Christ."
Or John Finley's perceptive description of Edward Kennard Rand:
His friendships, one felt, included the ancient authors, and as
Horace easily addressed Roman friends in poems that held echoes
of the Greek authors, SO Rand mingled present and past in the
common light of cheerful fellowship, as if, compared to fellow-
ship, time were irrelevant. Lightness was his code and signature;
he by nature shunned the thunders of Cicero, even the gravity of
Virgil, for Horace's smiling indirection and deceptive ease. Some-
thing may have been lost to his teaching and writing by this cast
of mind. He did not like to deal with things massive and central,
perhaps because they struck him as obvious. Moreover, he pre-
ferred not to speak ill, hence would calmly neglect dull pages of
an author to fix with joy on a redeeming phrase.
Any one who wishes to meditate upon the nature of the Satur-
day Club and the blending of personalities that has assured its
continuing vitality, will find food for thought in a folding chart
at the end of the book that lists past and present members and
indicates at a glance the composition of the club at any time dur-
112
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY
ing its first century. This graph, which emphasizes the overlapping
of generations more clearly than anything I have seen elsewhere,
was characteristically enough, devised by an engineer member,
Edward Loyburn Moreland.
The Saturday Club: A Century Completed is a remarkable
record of a remarkable organization. It is equally readable both
for profit and for pleasure. Can one say more?
WALTER MUIR WHITEHILL.
The American Heritage Book of the Revolution. By the Editors
of American Heritage. Editor in Charge, Richard M. Ketchum.
Narrative by Bruce Lancaster, with a chapter by J. H. Plumb.
(New York: American Heritage Publishing Co., and Simon and
Schuster. 1958. Pp. 384. $12.50.)
Although it is rather more than just a picture book, The Revo-
lution claims our attention chiefly on account of its 600-odd il-
lustrations, many of which, according to the editor, have never
before been reproduced. Most of the illustrations are contem-
porary, but not quite all: there are a few later primitives and
some "artist's conceptions" of dubious authenticity. Several of
these, incidentally, are not identified as such in the captions or
even in the credits in the back of the book. About a third of the
pictures are in full color.
Bruce Lancaster's narrative of the events from 1763 to 1783 is
both longer and rather better than one expects to find in a book
of this sort. True to the form, it is short on analysis and long on
action and "colorful" details. ("British Sergeant Hugh McQuar-
ters dropped his linstock to the breech of the piece that suddenly
flamed out in stunning explosion
") But in spite of his histori-
cal novelist's penchant for linstocks, shrilling and muttering fifes
and drums, and secondary characters with irrelevant nick-names
-my favorite is Gen. George "Joe Gourd" Weedon-, Mr. Lan-
caster manages to tell the essential story. He sticks to the facts,
eschewing patriotic embellishments; he is fair to the British and
Loyalists; and he is generous and accurate in his comments on
the importance of the French alliance.
Most of Mr. Lancaster's chapters are followed by several pages