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

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Clubs-Somerset
CLUBS: Somersen
GEORGE B. DORR: SOCIAL CLUB MEMBERSHIP
Boston:
Engineer Club Not a member though visited as guest.
Saturday Club Not a member though Samuel G. Ward was a founder.
Somerset Club 1874-1937
Tavern Club 1904-1932
Union Boat Club 1889-1913
University Club No evidence of membership though visited as guest
Union Club No evidence of membership though F.C. Gray and Samuel G. Ward
were founders at the outset of the Civil War.
New York, NY
Harvard Club. No evidence of membership though visited as guest.
Washington D.C.:
Cosmos Club 1921-1935
Dorr Clubs821
THE SOMERSET CLUB
"Merely corroborative detail, intended to give artistic verisi-
militude to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative."
From The Mikado, Act II
By HUGH WHITNEY AND WALTER MUIR WHITEHILL
W
HAT I like about the Order of the Garter," Lord
Melbourne, Queen Victoria's proto-Prime Minister,
is reputed once to have observed, "is that there is no
damned merit in it." At any time during the passage now
jovially elapsed of the Somerset Club's first hundred
years, a member, if driven to epitomize his sentiments re-
garding that institution, might appropriately have deliv-
The David Sears house as originally built
ered himself, mutatis mutandis, in the same spirit. The
world, to be sure, is replete with societies for the promo-
tion of virtue or suppression of vice, for the cultivation of
knowledge, useful and otherwise, and for the propagation
of doctrines, salutary, pernicious, or merely demented.
But the true "club," that characteristic invention of Eng-
lish-speaking men, is properly concerned with no such
matters. It is designed as a place where individuals mu-
tually congenial should be able at will to enjoy, either one
another's companionship, or a more than domestic priva-
cy, and where, as far as kindly circumstances may favour,
the chosen alternative will find itself enhanced by the
availability of good food and drink. The founders of the
Somerset Club a century ago proposed to establish ex-
actly this kind of association, nor have the generations af-
ter them, inheriting a tradition they fostered, thought fit
to depart from it. The following comment, for instance,
The David Sears house as enlarged
which Mr. Charles E. Perkins wrote to his wife in 1873,
The Somerset Club, 1872-1951
when she had been distressed at the measures adopted to
Boston:1951.
8
THE SOMERSET CLUB
THE SOMERSET CLUB
9
deal with a certain troublesome member, reveals an add
the lost "Version Q," dear to New Testament critics
mirable grasp of their intent and unhesitating fidelity
"higher" school, is recoverable today as an hypoth-
thereto:
only. Hence the authors, if they have heavily relied
Your letter of Wednesday is very interesting & I wish
upon a folklore of hearsay, and if on one really interesting
could respond in kind. I note what you say about
point they can but conjecture an explanation, may not
suppose what Society wants is agreeable sensations-peace
unjustifiably claim indulgence.
plenty & politeness-and when anybody makes a noise &
There is a quite staggering degree of vagueness about
makes it unpleasant he is disliked, no matter how many real
everything to do with the early history of the Club except
virtues he may possess. Social clubs are not established to
purpose. That is made unmistakably clear in a docu-
protect men in their abstract rights, or to carry on disputes &
with forty-one signatures reproduced in the 1913
controversies, but to promote cheerfulness, good feeling, har
history.
This reads:
mony & pleasant intercourse, & when they don't do this they
soon fade away. If a man makes himself agreeable, society
WG the undersigned with a view of establishing a Club upon
goes no deeper & the same is true if he makes himself dis
plan of the London Clubs to afford the conveniences of
agreeable-hence agreeable bad men & women are more high-
Restaurant, Reading, Billiard and Card rooms etc agree to
ly prized than disagreeable good ones.
the sum of one hundred dollars each to a Treasurer or
Committee to be chosen by the ballot of a majority of our-
"Happy the nation that has no history." The same is
it being understood that the sum resulting from this
quite as true of microscopic communities, and among
abscription is to be invested in furniture and stock for the
these is far more likely to apply, two propositions for
proposed Club, the buildings for which it is designed to hire
which the Somerset Club can furnish demonstration at
upon
sufficient lease.
once conclusive and comical. Whatever periodic vicissi-
Thomas C. Amory, Jr.
Rich. S. Fay
tudes of cuisine and vintage they unmurmuringly en-
Francis B. Crowninshield
Chas. B. Fessenden
dure, the present membership will not utterly deny that
H. Whitwell
G. R. Russell
they have also been known to exhibit, at fairly frequent
J. lasigi
Tho. H. Perkins, Jr.
intervals, identifiable symptoms of collective bien être.
Thos. G. Cary, Jr.
Geo. C. Crowninshield
The dearth of historical substance, however, in a pro-
Geo. T. Lyman
James D. Russell
fessed "history" might perhaps elicit surprise, and even
S W. Rodman
John Bryant, Jr.
reproach. Yet in fact the records of the Club are sparse
W Hooper
Francis Codman
in the extreme, and, when preserved at all, tantalizingly
S G. Ward
F. C. Loring
laconic. The very dates of resignation or death, prior to
N. Thayer
Joseph Lyman, Jr.
1870, are herein derived from a list previously printed in
John H. Gray
David Sears, Jr.
1913, and this in turn must charitably be supposed to rep-
Wm. Amory
Henry Bryant
James S. Amory
S. Hooper
resent a then surviving contemporary manuscript that,
10
THE SOMERSET CLUB
J.L. Motley
Edward N. Perkins
R.M. Mason
Thos. Motley, Jr.
F.L. Dutton
C. J. Higginson
Fred R. Sears
Edw. Motley, Jr.
Fred A. Whitwell
A. Tucker, Jr.
Wm. S. Rogers
Benj. E. Morse
Edw. A. Crowninshield
By way of explaining (or confusing) the issue, a later
hand has added a heading "Originators of the Somerset
Club-about - A.D. 1846" and a note reading: "The signers
were all members of the Tremont Club at the time it OC-
cupied rooms in Tremont Street opposite where the Bos-
ton Museum now is (May 1885). This document was
drawn up and signed about A.D. 1846." The 1913 history
alleges that these gentlemen, at first called the Travel-
lers Club and later the Tremont Club, occupied chambers
in Tremont Street (between Beacon Street and Scollay
Square); that they possessed no restaurant but that re-
freshments were brought in as required. They are further
alleged to have adopted on September 12, 1851, the name
of Beacon Club, soon after changed to Somerset Club, and
to have bought for their home a fine granite house on the
corner of Beacon and Somerset Streets. This house was
one of a pair built soon after the War of 1812 by David
Hinckley. The easterly of these houses was bought in
1829 by Joseph Peabody for his son-in-law and daugh-
ter, Mr. and Mrs. John Lowell Gardner, who lived there
until 1867, while Mr. Hinckley occupied the westerly
house until his death. It was purchased by Benjamin W.
Crowninshield in 1831, and upon his death in 1851 the
The Hall
Club acquired it. It is said to have been opened to mem-
bers on April 1, 1852, but the 1913 history (with its
curious habit of contradicting itself) prints immediately
8
THE SOMERSET CLUB
THE SOMERSET CLUB
9
deal with a certain troublesome member, reveals an ad-
like the lost "Version Q" dear to New Testament critics
mirable grasp of their intent and unhesitating fidelity
of the "higher" school, is recoverable today as an hypoth-
thereto:
esis only. Hence the authors, if they have heavily relied
Your letter of Wednesday is very interesting & I wish I
upon a folklore of hearsay, and if on one really interesting
could respond in kind, I note what you say about X- I
point they can but conjecture an explanation, may not
suppose what Society wants is agreeable sensations-peace,
unjustifiably claim indulgence.
plenty & politeness-and when anybody makes a noise &
There is a quite staggering degree of vagueness about
makes it unpleasant he is disliked, no matter how many real
everything to do with the early history of the Club except
virtues he may possess. Social clubs are not established to
its purpose. That is made unmistakably clear in a docu-
protect men in their abstract rights, or to carry on disputes &
ment with forty-one signatures reproduced in the 1913
controversies, but to promote cheerfulness, good feeling, har-
mony & pleasant intercourse, & when they don't do this they
history. This reads:
soon fade away. If a than makes himself agreeable, society
We the undersigned with a view of establishing a Club upon
goes no deeper & the same is true if he makes himself dis-
the plan of the London Clubs to afford the conveniences of
agreeable-hence agreeable bad men & women are more high-
Restaurant, Reading, Billiard and Card rooms etc agree to
ly prized than disagreeable good ones.
pay the sum of one hundred dollars each to a Treasurer or
"Happy the nation that has no history." The same is
Committee to be chosen by the ballot of a majority of our-
selves, it being understood that the sum resulting from this
quite as true of microscopic communities, and among
subscription is to be invested in furniture and stock for the
these is far more likely to apply, two propositions for
proposed Club, the buildings for which it is designed to hire
which the Somerset Club can furnish demonstration at
upon a sufficient lease.
once conclusive and Comical. Whatever periodic vicissi-
tudes of cuisine and vintage they unmurmuringly en-
Thomas C. Amory, Jr.
Rich. S. Fay
dure, the present membership will not utterly deny that
Francis B. Crowninshield
Chas. B. Fessenden
H. Whitwell
G.R. Russell
they have also been known to exhibit, at fairly frequent
J. Iasigi
Tho. H. Perkins, Jr.
intervals, identifiable symptoms of collective bien être.
Thos. G. Cary, Jr.
Geo. C. Crowninshield
The dearth of historical substance, however, in a pro-
Geo. T. Lyman
James D. Russell
fessed "history" might perhaps elicit surprise, and even
S. W. Rodman
John Bryant, Jr.
reproach. Yet in fact the records of the Club are sparse
W. Hooper
Francis Codman
in the extreme, and, when preserved at all, tantalizingly
S. G. Ward
F. C. Loring
laconic. The very dates of resignation or death, prior to
N. Thayer
Joseph Lyman, Jr.
1870, are herein derived from a list previously printed in
John H. Gray
David Sears, Jr.
1913, and this in turn must charitably be supposed to rep-
Wm. Amory
Henry Bryant
resent a then surviving contemporary manuscript that,
James S. Amory
S. Hooper
THE SOMERSET CLUB
11
after that statement the text of a notice inviting members
to meet there on March 26, and concluding with: "P.S.
The Club House will be open to the families of members
and their friends, on Wednesday the 24th inst., during
the day and evening."
The house, from the account given of it by Mrs. John
Mason Warren (Mr. Crowninshield's daughter) in her
Reminiscences of my life, must have been well adapted
to the uses of the club. Two drawing rooms, with mahog-
any doors and Italian marble mantels supported by Ca-
ryatides, occupied the Beacon Street façade on the ground
floor, while to the left of the front door ( which was on
Somerset Street) was the dining room. At the end of a
long hall with marble columns, interspersed with busts, a
circular staircase led to the first floor, where were a music
room, library and bedrooms. Nathaniel I. Bowditch, writ-
ing in the Boston Evening Transcript for August 24,
1855, describes the club house as "so well known to
'Young America' for its elegant appointments; or, as de-
serted wives sitting at home might prefer to call them, its
seductive attractions." The last phrase seems singularly
unkind in view of the fact that the Club maintained a la-
dies' restaurant, reputed to be the first of its kind in the
country. If the wives of members had had any gumption,
they might easily have persuaded their husbands to take
them there. If they sat at home, deserted, it was clearly
their own fault.
It does not follow that because, as already suggested,
The Hall Dome
history in the grand manner has hitherto fortunately
passed by the Club's doors, its passing has always been
very remote from their thresholds, or that inside them it
has never made felt a closer approach than "the rumble
of a distant drum" could convey. Through successive
THE SOMERSET CLUB
THE SOMERSET CLUB
13
many members have worn their Country's coat, and
from "the steamer de Molay, off Cape Hatteras," only four
have died wearing it. They are remembered, not
days after the event:
erated, here.
The more I think of the passage of the Fifty-fourth through
on the twenty-eighth of May, 1863, history em-
Boston, the more wonderful it seems to me. Just remember
marched in arms, with stern drums beaten loud,
our own doubts and fears, and other people's sneering and
fillours superbly spread, along Somerset Street, where
pitying remarks, when we began last winter, and then look at
Club occupied its original home, and of which it still
the perfect triumph of last Thursday. We have gone quietly
the name. The Negro infantry of the Fifty-fourth
along, forming the Regiment, and at last left Boston amidst
Milianchusetts, under Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, were
a greater enthusiasm than has been seen since the first three
to embark for the south, and the blood-offering be-
months troops left for the war. Everyone I saw, from the Gov-
Fort Wagner.
ernor's staff (who have always given us rather the cold shoul-
(mund this brief juxtaposition with the ceremonial
der) down, had nothing but words of praise for us.
to an heroic tragedy a luxuriance of legend has
It must be remembered that, though the youthful Shaw
virginated itself. In that cycle the most dramatic, and
never belonged to the Somerset Club, several of his near
credited, episode describes how when Colonel
relatives, and a larger number of men with whom he was
and his men came abreast of them they were hissed
at least acquainted, were, or had been, members. He must
Club windows. In the light of all surviving first-
have known perfectly well which was its house, and it is
dioridence that it has been possible to consult the story
extremely difficult to believe either that a gross affront
to be definitely apochryphal. Among the notices
from such a quarter could have escaped his observation,
parade printed in the course of the following week
or that a justified contempt would have led him SO com-
Boston papers, including William Lloyd Garri-
pletely to ignore the occurrence as in some degree to falsi-
Liberator, which could hardly have missed such an
fy his actual experience.
infurunity to point a moral, if not simultaneously to
Moreover, the impression left by Colonel Shaw is most
fill & tale, there is no reference to any show of hostility
explicitly confirmed by the former Captain, Luis F.
On the contrary, the Daily Journal for the
Emilio, who also marched that day, in his history, A
uternoon states that the spectacle was "vociferous-
Brave Black Regiment, published not quite thirty years
hired by vast crowds." The next morning the Post
later, in 1891. And the short preface thereto testifies that
what grandiloquently declares: "the Fifty-fourth
"throughout the compilation General A. S. Hartwell,
Event was yesterday wafted to glory"; while accord-
Colonel N. P. Hallowell [Colonel Shaw's Second-in-Com-
the Daily Courier one finds it "respectfully received
mand during the parade, but transferred immediately
many cases cheered."
thereafter, on May 30th] and Captain Charles C. Soule,
more telling, however, is the description fur-
all of the Fifty-fifth Massachusetts Infantry
mani-
bv
Colonel Shaw himself in a private letter dated
fested unflagging interest." Thus the details presented
14
THE SOMERSET CLUB
THE SOMERSET CLUB
15
below may be presumed to rest on firmer authority than
of the building, perhaps to some equally pleasant counter-
one man's personal recollection might afford.
part of the modern "Bricks." He may also have said, but
"As the companies filed into the street," writes Captain
here remembrance has regrettably faded, that they first
Emilio, "the command was received with cheers from a
pulled down the front blinds.
large gathering. One hundred policemen, under the
What thus remains unquestionably true is that a large
Chief, Colonel Kurtz, were present to clear the streets.
majority of the Club were out of sympathy with the exist-
Unknown to the general public, reserves of police were
ing Administration, at the very least unenthusiastic about
held in readiness undercover, to repress any riotous pro-
the war, and particularly opposed to the recruitment of Ne-
ceedings."
gro troops for service therein. Members who had attend-
Preceded by Gilmore's band, the line of march was taken up
ed Harvard must often have been close friends of men in
through Pleasant, Boylston,
Somerset and Beacon Streets
the Confederate forces, since Southern students, while
to the State House. All along the route the side-walks, win-
not as numerous as formerly, continued to come to Cam-
dows and balconies were thronged with spectators, and the
bridge till war began. A son of General Lee, for example,
appearance of the Regiment caused repeated cheers and way-
was in the Class of 1858. Mrs. John Mason Warren men-
ing of flags and handkerchiefs. The National Colours were
tioned the habit of many Boston families of remaining in
displayed everywhere. Passing the house of Wendell Phil-
town during the last fortnight of August to entertain the
lips, on Essex Street, William Lloyd Garrison was seen on the
Southern friends, who invariably came to attend their
balcony, his hand resting on the head of a bust of John Brown.
sons' Commencement exercises. "My father [B. W.
Only hearty greetings were encountered; not an insulting
word was heard, or an unkind remark made.
Crowninshield]," she wrote, "having been SO much in
Washington, had many friends among the families of the
It should be noted that the italicized closing sentence very
Middletons, Pringles, and others. My father and mother
distinctly echoes one contained in the Liberator's issue for
and Mr. Harrison Gray Otis of Beacon Street, the Tick-
June 5th, 1863: "There was nowhere along the line a
nors, and many others gave a series of dinners, dances,
word of disapproval-not a sneer was heard, nor an un-
etc., at that season, and all felt that that was the gay time
kind word expressed."
in Boston, and that everyone should be there prepared for
Finally, one of the present writers was told nearly
the gaiety." The war had separated at least some Bos-
twenty years ago by John Torrey Morse, Jr., the late dis-
tonians from Southern cronies, and business interests had,
tinguished editor of the American Statesmen Series, and
of course, suffered, especially the cotton mills. The preva-
biographer of Lincoln, that he had been in the Club on
lent opinion was no doubt very similar to that which Colo-
the same day, though not at the time, the Fifty-fourth pa-
nel Shaw, writing on April 5th, 1861, acknowledges he
raded, that the alleged hissing was to his certain knowl-
had himself held prior to the attack on Fort Sumter-"]
edge entirely fabulous, and that the members who were
have been a Disunionist for two years." Only, unlike his,
about simply withdrew in their disapproval to the back
it had undergone no such conversion as impelled him to
16
THE SOMERSET CLUB
continue in the same sentence, "but as there seems to be
no way of making a peaceable separation without giving
up everything, I am glad, for the credit of the Country,
that they will probably act now with some firmness."
But the attitude suggested, if preponderant in the Club,
was by no means unanimous there, and the distaste
aroused in them by its constant expression, often any-
thing but restrained, caused a number of the minority,
certainly as many as forty-eight and probably forty-nine,
among whom were such men as James Russell Lowell
and Charles Eliot Norton, to combine during the spring
of 1863 with others like-minded, who were not members,
in founding the Union Club, which by October 15th of
the same year had taken up residence on Park Street in
the quarters it has ever since retained. Union Club records
show definitely that four additional members of the Som-
erset Club were admitted that year. It is in fact quite like-
lv to have been six. For two names, however, middle ini-
tials do not coincide in both catalogues. It is also slightly
dubious which of two John Codmans was a Union Club
founder. An unidentified spokesman for those founders
as a group was inspired to phrase their common motive
with classical concision: "We want," said he, "a place
where a gentleman may pass an evening without hearing
copperhead talk." The quotation is borrowed from Sam-
uel Lothrop Thorndike's Brief Sketch prepared for the
Union Club in 1893.
Feeling ran very high indeed. According to Mr. Morse,
in the conversation previously mentioned, it was for a
few years after the war SO acute that members of the re-
spective clubs did not greet one another in the streets. Its
disappearance he described as "sudden," and he claimed
to have been the first man who subsequently belonged to
THE SOMERSET CLUB
17
both. The last assertion is given precisely as it is remem-
bered. What Mr. Morse doubtless meant to say was that
he had been the first candidate elected to both clubs after
amicable relations were restored. Seven Somerset Club
men, though they participated in the Union Club's foun-
dation, continued as members of the senior club for a
decade or longer, two of them until they died, while an
eighth, David Sears, had not withdrawn up to his death
in 1871. Similarly, Mr. Morse must have meant that
some, or most, members of each club exchanged "the cut
direct" on meeting, unless we are to presume the few with
dual membership had contrived to master an esoteric
discipline whereby one is enabled conveniently to ignore
one's own existence beyond club portals! That a certain
abruptness may truly have characterized the renewal of
amity is apparent from the fact that in 1872 fourteen
founders of the Union Club re-entered the Somerset, to
which they had all belonged in the fifties, though at un-
specified intermediate dates they had resigned therefrom.
It remains puzzling that three, otherwise exactly com-
parable re-entries are recorded, one for 1863, and two for
1866, together with the first admission of another Union
founder in 1865. Roger Wolcott (whose father, Joshua
Huntington Wolcott, had resigned permanently in 1865)
became a member of the Somerset Club for the first time
in 1872, only to be sternly admonished by his mother for
joining "that gang of wanton sybarites!"
Unfortunately Mr. Morse's interlocutor, neither fore-
seeing the present task, nor guessing what its pursuit
would disclose, did not secure from him the solution,
which he could indubitably have provided, to a further
exceedingly curious relevant problem. The mystery is
that between 1861 and 1865 only one member of the
18
THE SOMERSET CLUB
THE SOMERSET CLUB
19
Somerset Club, William Amory Prescott, in 1863, re-
Houghton and Dutton. That firm demolished the house in
signed never to return, and he did not join the Union Club
1904 in order to erect a department store building, now
either then or afterwards. Yet in the year which brought
devoted to recruiting offices, the Veterans Administra-
the Confederacy's surrender there were seventy-three fi-
tion, and other government functions.
nal resignations, more than a fifth of all the 361 elected
David Sears' house was built in 1819, from plans of
from 1852 to January 1st, 1866, and nearer a quarter of
Alexander Parris, upon land that had formed part of John
the 327 members listed up to that date whose resigna-
Singleton Copley's farm. As originally designed it was a
tions or deaths did not precede the end of 1864. What is
two story, free-standing, granite house-perhaps vaguely
more, the total includes but fifteen, at most, whose Union
inspired by the Hotel de Salm (1782-86) in Paris-with
Club membership began in 1863! Some climax of dis-
a single central semi-circular bay window [the present
agreement must have been responsible for this exodus.
Morning Room], flanked by a pair of windows on either
Any specific provocation, however, that might have taken
side. The decorated marble panels above the windows
place within the Club to act as immediate cause would
were carved by Solomon Willard, the architect of the
surely have become traditional, and that, one may sus-
Bunker Hill Monument. A water colour reconstruction
pect, with no less embroidery than has been spun over the
by the late Ogden Codman shows the original appear-
lack-lustre realities touching Colonel Shaw and his regi-
ance, with the principal entrance from a court to the east.
ment.
To the left of the entrance hall was the dining room, now
In default of solid data, the most plausible assumption
demolished, like the kitchens that were placed on the
would seem to be that, when President Lincoln was assas-
right. The entrance led into the present Hall, beyond
sinated in April, men who had supported him throughout,
which were two Drawing Rooms, with windows overlook-
and had been increasingly irked by continual attacks on
ing a garden that was between the house and the hand-
his policies and ridicule of his person, found themselves
some mansion at No. 45, built by Harrison Gray Otis in
no longer able to tolerate an atmosphere the very exist-
1806. Around 1830 building on Beacon Hill was sharp-
ence of which they had come to hold partly to blame for
ly accelerated, and land became rather too valuable to be
Booth's murderous undertaking.
retained in gardens and courtyards. In 1831 David Sears
Herewith the balance of this random chronicle de-
bought twenty-five feet of the garden from Otis, and the
scends precipitately, and for good, from the fringes of
following spring both gentlemen began to build houses
the sublime. It also descends to the familiar, for, in 1871,
that covered the entire area between numbers 42 and 45.
upon the death of David Sears, the Somerset Club pur-
Otis built the present 44 as a separate brick house, but
chased his house at 42 Beacon Street, and removed thith-
Sears made number 43 (designed for his son-in-law, Wil-
er in April 1872. The old club house was sold to the Con-
liam Amory) as a granite continuation of his own house,
gregational Association, who put it to more pious and
with a second bay window and a lower level entrance from
less genial uses until 1896, when it was again sold to
Beacon Street. Presumably at this time a third floor was
20
THE SOMERSET CLUB
THE SOMERSET CLUB
21
added to number 42. In 1838-39 David Sears altered his
tinue to do so! Above the Dining Room was a Billiard
own house still more radically by building the present
Room of equal size, and beyond that, above the kitchens,
number 41 in the courtyard to the east. This involved de-
a Bowling Alley. The Billiard Room gradually fell into
molishing part of the dining room (reducing the windows
disuse to such an extent that it did not seem worth while
to the east of the original bay from two to one) and rig-
to pay for attendants. It was consequently converted in-
ging the present direct entrance from Beacon Street in its
to a Badminton Court that was even less successful. In
place. Another son-in-law, George C. Crowninshield, OC-
1949 it was altered into a series of small bedrooms that
cupied 41 until 1852, when William Amory moved there,
now admirably supplement those on the third floor. The
leaving 43 for still a third son-in-law, William C. Rives,
Bowling Alley continued to provide the occasion for
Jr. When purchased by the Somerset Club in 1871, ex-
sweaty congeniality until the fire of January 1945-to be
tensive alterations were made by the architectural firm of
alluded to later in this tale-that - caused its demolition.
Snell and Gregerson, who built the present Dining Room
Card rooms and private dining rooms occupied the front
in the rear courtyard, 1-behind a screen wall-a maze
of the second floor.
of kitchens and other dependencies. The Drawing Room
The court yard upon which the Dining Room western
of 43 [Room No. 5], then revamped into a thoroughly
windows open proved one of the most delightful assets of
comfortable dark Library, was, in 1948, partially "re-
the house. Completely enclosed, with high walls, whose
stored" from the style of the seventies back to the thirties.
covering of vines simulates a verdure tapestry, the noises
The original Drawing Rooms of 42 were some years ago
of the street seem far away. During the summer months,
superbly decorated in the Empire style by the late Her-
the awning-covered terrace, known affectionately as the
bert Browne, in a manner that would have doubtless
Bricks, becomes the center of the Club on fine days, in
greatly pleased Alexander Parris, but Snell and Greger-
spite of the Damoclean menace from the numerous birds
son's Dining Room-with its leather walls, carpets and
who nest in the vines, and even, occasionally, on the awn-
damask table cloths-remains entirely untouched as an
ing. Of the battery of ancient rocking chairs that former-
example of the taste of the seventies. Twenty years ago
ly furnished the Bricks, all but two-and they veritable
there was talk of doing it over and altering its Victorian
monsters, constructed from tree trunks of the primeval
character to something approaching an architect's idea
forest-have recently been replaced by Hong Kong cane
of the English eighteenth century. Fortunately-at least
chairs without rockers. To these, takers of tobacco quick-
in the view of these writers-the architect, who was wait-
ly retire after luncheon for the cigars, cigarettes and pipes
ing upon the Executive Committee with drawings for
that they are still forbidden in the Dining Room.
these changes, was kept waiting SO long, by a press of
The Ladies' Restaurant occupied the ground floor bay
elections and other business, that his temper became
of number 43, the door of which was used by ladies,
somewhat frayed. Words passed, and the Committee de-
guests at private parties and "strangers." It was connect-
cided to let well enough alone. May their successors con-
ed with the remote kitchens by a series of labyrinthine
22
THE SOMERSET CLUB
catacombs of such length and complexity as to stagger
the imagination. For several decades it consisted simply
of the oval room, designed by Ogden Codman, but in
1924 a second, rectangular, room to the eastward, was
contrived by Herbert Browne out of an area devoted in
happier days to the wine cellar. This room, with its red
plush banquettes and graceful wall brackets with Wedg-
wood plaques is a triumphant proof of what an imagi-
native architect can make out of a cellar! It served as a
model for still a third room, added from designs of J.
Hampden Robb, immediately after the late war.
In 1896 the William Amory house at 41 Beacon Street
was purchased by the Club and made over into apartments
for permanent residents. The front room on the first floor
was converted into an additional sitting room, known as
the War Room-presumably from a few relics of the
Spanish-American War there installed. Although very
popular thirty years ago as a gathering place after lunch-
eon, it is now chiefly used by members who wish to talk
quietly with guests.
The gastronomic inclinations of the Club are indicated
by a circular-undated but, to judge by its typography,
reaching back to the early years-that lists the variety of
dishes that could be sent from its kitchens to members'
houses.
The Undersigned, Cook to the Somerset Club, is prepared
to furnish Hot and Cold Dishes to Members of the Club at
their Houses. As early notice as possible is requested.
Among the dishes are the following:
24
THE SOMERSET CLUB
THE SOMERSET CLUB
25
Presumably he was prepared to offer an even greater va-
in the club house and that none were wearing their hats.
riety on the spot. The tradition of sound French cooking
Fifty years ago smoking was forbidden in both masculine
has continued for a century-even though the spelling on
and feminine Dining Rooms, but by 1919 it was allowed
the menus is frequently quite as bad as P. Rienzi's!-
in the Ladies' Restaurant after 8:30 P.M. In 1924, when
yet such essentially New England delicacies as fish balls,
the east room was added to the Ladies' Restaurant, smok-
fried cod with pork scrap, and clam pie have always been
ing was permitted there, although it was still forbidden
forthcoming and have not suffered in preparation by a
in the oval room, but within a year that rule was relaxed
French hand. Some ill-advisedly meddlesome innovator
against everything but pipes. The men's Dining Room
once successfully badgered the responsible authorities to
stoutly remains tobacco-less, except on the nights of the
purchase a complete set of "granite ware," and substitute
monthly club dinners, when the bars are lowered. In
it for the copper cooking utensils, which he declared were
1905 pipe smokers were confined to the War Room,
"dangerous." Owing to an imperfect glaze on the new
Bowling Alley and the Bricks. In 1918 they were toler-
equipment, the very first meal prepared therein afflicted
ated in the Morning Room and in private rooms "if there
numerous partakers with acute lead poisoning. Copper
is no objection by any one present," and by 1923 Rooms
was forthwith restored, and has never again been deposed
8 and 10, the Billiard Room and the Lower Hall had been
from its admirable offices.
added to their bailiwick. In 1925 the present rule of no
Every now and again an officer of the club will ques-
tobacco in the Dining Room and no pipes in the Ladies'
tion the validity of the French tradition: one of the writers
Restaurant was adopted.
has even had to do battle to convince a past president that
It is an odd detail that for over sixty years members al-
an admirably prepared brandade de morue was not to be
most invariably wore their hats, after the fashion of the
confused with fish hash. The action of the Executive Com-
House of Commons, in all parts of the Club except to
mittee on January 12, 1882, in cabling "Engage no serv-
table. The shelved eyesore near the Dining Room, on
ants for Club" to Joseph Peabody, who contemplated en-
which they were formerly disposed, quit its post at last
gaging a woman in Paris to make coffee for the Club,
doubtless sprang from a distaste for French coffee rather
only after it had held out close to a generation more. A
facetious disquisition around this theme appears under
than French cooking. Shortages, increased costs, O.P.A.
"Club Life" in King's Dictionary of Boston, published in
theories of cutting meat, and similar afflictions, have mul-
1883, where the differences between New York and Bos-
tiplied difficulties, but a founder of 1851 would, were he
able to attend, doubtless find the victuals offered at a
ton are emphasized:
Christmas buffet luncheon much to his liking, both as to
There is a reserve in the social life of the New-England
variety and quantity.
metropolis, which is reflected in its clubs. This is noticeable
Such a Rip van Winkle would be struck, however, by
even in the gayest and most buckish of these establishments.
the fact that many members of 1951 were smoking pipes
The habitué of the "Somerset," that reservoir of Boston blue
blood, can be readily distinguished from the swell whose head-
26
THE SOMERSET CLUB
quarters are the fashionable "Union" in New York. The for-
mer has a more composed, self-conscious air than the latter,
as if the solemn traditions of Puritan decorum weighed
even the jauntiest devotee of fashion. A cynic might ascribe upon
herited this obligations inconsistency between genial phi- in-
manner to the painful sense of
and acquired tastes; while the
losopher would set it down to the conflict between culture and
and not burdened by intellectual aspirations, can have no con-
climate. The New-York club-man, who is jaunty by nature,
ception of the sense of responsibility which afflicts his Boston
brother. A suggestive indication of this is shown in the
eral custom in clubs here, - with the single exception of gen- the
thought-stopper "Somerset,"-of of club-men permit The of
members keeping their hats off. brains
in the Puritan city are too active to
in the shape of a tile, whereas in "Gotham" a
from escaping upwards.
this is a necessity to prevent such ideas as club-men there have
In the same year, 1883, Matthew Arnold, engaged in
land from the Somerset Club: "I am invited to all the
a lecture tour of the United States, wrote home to Eng-
clubs, and this is one of the best clubs in the world." Ei-
ther hats indoors meant little to him, or he found them
home-like, for-although he maintained an air of superi-
or critical detachment when offered pie for breakfast in
the Andover-he was quite unreserved in his descriptions of
Somerset as a "first rate" and "capital" club.
If the Civil War was analogous to a ravaging Septem-
de siècle in Boston recalls rather our own sunlit Indian
ber hurricane, the climate of the nineteenth-century fin
Summer than the sadder autumn of Europe. And its fine
the weather held, a triumphant anachronism, even beyond
premonitory frosts that commenced in 1914. The air
it breathed, the leisured relish, and stars-in-their-courses
stability, wafts back delightfully from two momentary
34
THE SOMERSET CLUB
THE SOMERSET CLUB
35
sages below, from an account carried by the Boston Post,
As they burst into flames the flue became so hot it set fire
have a native flavour to which the addition of much sea-
to the [upper] floors
the firemen had to use axes and hooks
soning would be supererogatory:
to get at the slowly burning laths and joists.
The Somerset Club at 42 Beacon Street, Boston's oldest
"John R. Capen" [sic], the Post winds up abruptly, "is
and most exclusive club for men, sustained a $7,500 loss last
night when the grease in the kitchen took fire. Deputy Chief
president of the club."
Louis C. Stickel sent in a second alarm when he arrived at
While that evening's diners were thus signally main-
the scene and found that the fire had mushroomed out through
taining a brahminical detachment above (and below) the
the ceilings of the second and third floors, where the bowling
merely utilitarian tohu bohu, a taxi from the station,
alley and the servants' quarters are located.
adroitly threading impediments, deposited Mr. J. M.
Although the fire created considerable excitement among
Bullard at his destination, the entrance of No. 42. He was
the firemen and police who were detailed there, the club mem-
ushered in by its guardian, who proffered no comment
bers were not disturbed in the dining room, where they sat at
whatever, aside from a greeting of civility and the infor-
dinner while the firemen fought the smouldering fire with gas
mation, scrupulously delivered, "Mr. So-and-so was most
masks on the first, second and third floors. The only recogni-
anxious you should lunch with him here tomorrow."
tion given the fire was the opening of one window in the first
The proportionate concern this incident exemplifies is
floor lounge at the front of the club to let some of the acrid
smoke out.
not perhaps without bearing upon a reminder which must
conclude these notes. For it would be unpardonable if we
[The hospitable precedent of the Arctic owl upon which,
failed here to set down our warmest gratitude to all who
had he been there, Saint Francis, who treats the element,
have rendered the Club such tireless, faithful service, and
jocondu e robostosu e forte, as male, might embarrassing-
especially to those twenty-two men and women who last
ly have insisted, seems somehow to have been overlooked.]
Christmas had collectively been in its employ for more
Otherwise there was no sign about the tightly curtained win-
than half a thousand years. Our oldest friend, William
dows that anything unusual was happening inside.
O'Connor, had then stood by us in the bar since 1896; the
The club members continued to come and go, swinging
average reached almost a quarter of the century, and none
their canes, undisturbed by the mass of fire fighting apparatus
of the twenty-two could count less than thirteen years.
outside. One, more curious than the rest, came out to the door
with a glass of what looked like Scotch and soda in his hand,
but he did not remain long.
According to Deputy Stickel, the fire started in the kitchen
where the chef was busy broiling chickens, steaks and
chops [O quanta qualia?!] over an open grill. The grease laden
fumes rose into the flue above
and were carried up to the
roof.
OFFICERS OF THE SOMERSET CLUB
Presidents
Francis Boardman Crowninshield
1852-1853
Charles Henry Warren
1853-1855
Richard Sullivan Fay
1855-1857
David Sears, Jr.
1857-1860
Patrick Grant
1860-1863
Henry Greenough
1863-1866
Henry P. Sturgis
1866-1868
Nathaniel Pope Russell
1868-1872
John Nelson Borland
1872-1876
Nathaniel W. Curtis
1876-1881
Thomas Jefferson Coolidge
1881-1882
Francis Winthrop Palfrey
1882-1883
Jacob C. Rogers
1883-1888
Frederick Wainwright Bradlee
1888-1893
John Alden Loring
1893-1896
Eben Rollins Morse
1896-1901
Eugene Van Rensselaer Thayer
1901-1905
Walter Cabot Baylies
1905-1911
Arthur Lithgow Devens
1911-1914
Walter Cabot Baylies
1914-1915
William Hooper
1915-1923
Herbert Mason Sears
1923-1929
Charles Kimball Cummings
1929-1934
Samuel Huntington Wolcott
1934-1940
John Revere Chapin
1940-1947
George Saltonstall West
1947-1950
Oliver Wolcott
1950-
38
OFFICERS
OFFICERS
39
Treasurers
Secretaries
Samuel Hooper
1852-1853
George Theodore Lyman
1852-1853
George Theodore Lyman
1853-1857
Harrison Ritchie
1853-1857
Harrison Ritchie
1857-1858
Charles Russell Codman
1857-1859
William Boardman Rice
1858-1859
John D. Bates, Jr.
1859-1861
Henry Whitwell
1859-1860
H. Gardiner Gorham
1861-1865
Edward Wainwright Codman
1860-1861
Ives G. Bates
1865-
George Bigelow Chase
1861-1863
Robert Marion Pratt
1866-1868
Francis Skinner Fiske
1863-1866
William P. Fay
1868-1869
Benjamin Crowninshield Mifflin
1866-1868
Franklin Burgess
1869-1870
Franklin Burgess
1868-1869
William P. Fay
1870-1871
William P. Fay
1869-1870
Joseph Lewis Stackpole
1871-1873
Franklin Burgess
1870-1871
Hall Curtis
1873-1881
Albert F. Heard
1871-1872
George Middleton Barnard, Jr.
1881-1882
Robert Marion Pratt
1872-1876
Francis Caleb Loring
1882-1887
Nathaniel Thayer, Jr.
1876-1877
Robert Grant
1887-1891
Benjamin E. Morse
1877-1881
George Stackpole Dabney
1891-1892
James Jackson
1881-1887
Edward B. Haven
1892-1895
Francis Caleb Loring
1887-1888
Samuel Hammond
1895-1898
Charles Whitney
1888-1889
John Torrey Burnett
1898-1899
John Torrey Linzee
1889-1895
Samuel Hammond
1899-1920
Thomas Sprague Edmands
1895-1897
John Revere Chapin
1920-1940
Arthur Lithgow Devens
1897-1911
Augustin Hamilton Parker, Jr.
1940-1942
James Lawrence, Jr.
1911-1919
Dunbar Lockwood
1942-1946
John Adams Blanchard
1919-1936
Augustin Hamilton Parker, Jr.
1946-1951
Frederick Josiah Bradlee, Jr.
1936-1950
Nelson Slater Bartlett, Jr.
1951-
Robert Forbes Perkins
1950-
40
OFFICERS
OFFICERS
41
Members of the Executive Committee
Edward Brooks
1895-1900
Charles Francis Adams, Jr.
1947-
Frederick Brooks
1893-1895
Franklin Burgess
1871-1872
Rodolphe Louis Agassiz
1919-1925
William Truman Aldrich
John Appleton Burnham, Jr.
1883-1886
1943-1946
Oliver Ames
William Appleton Burnham
1896-1905
1896-1908
Francis Hardon Burr
1948-
Charles Walter Amory
1877-1879
Robert Amory
Heman Merrick Burr
1916-1919, 1922-1930
1918-1920
Roger Amory
Addison Child
1876-1877
1928-1943
William Appleton
Francis Codman
1852
1901-1911
Francis Reginald Bangs
1907-1939
Ogden Codman
1886-1893
Russell Sturgis Codman, Jr.
1934-1949
Charles Lowell Barlow
1925-1934
Charles Benjamin Barnes
1918-1924
Amory Coolidge
1920-1921
Charles Benjamin Barnes, Jr.
Lawrence Coolidge
1939-1942
1947-1951
Thomas Jefferson Coolidge
1921-1925
Nelson Slater Bartlett, Jr.
1949-1951
William Appleton Coolidge
1931-1933
John P. Bayley
1868-1871
Walter Cabot Baylies
Charles Kimball Cummings
1927-1929
1899-1905
Willis Paine Beal
Charles Pelham Curtis, Jr.
1920-1927
1936-1941
Edward Mauran Beals, Jr.
Nathaniel W. Curtis
1875-1876
1941-1951
Charles Sumner Bird
1942-
Richard Cary Curtis
1930-1933
Francis Blake
George Stackpole Dabney
1881-1882
1893-1895
Francis Stanton Blake
1900-1903
Henry Rogers Dalton, Jr.
1912-1918
Henry Spring Blake
Charles Stratton Dana
1890-1894
1910-1916
Archibald Blanchard
Aaron Davis
1914-1919
1937-1947
John Adams Blanchard
Frederick Myers Dearborn, Jr.
1951-
1917-1919
Thomas Spriggs Blumer
Charles Devens
1951-
1934-1948
T. Dennie Boardman
Frederic Dexter
1876-1878, 1880-1882
1884-1888, 1896-1905
John Perry Bowditch
Gordon Dexter
1896-1907
1923-1924
Charles Boyden
William Sohier Dexter
1871-1875
1879-1881
Frederick Josiah Bradlee
1913-1919
Robert Gray Dodge
1942-1947
Frederick Josiah Bradlee, Jr.
1925-1936
Daniel Appleton Dwight
1868-1871
Frederick Wainwright Bradlee
Thomas Sprague Edmands
1888-1890
1868-1871, 1884-1888
John Lewis Bremer
Philip Van Rensselaer Ely
1893-1895, 1909-1912
1918-1922, 1932-1937
Percival Lowell Everett
1882-1883
19
OFFICERS
OFFICERS
43
Dudley Bowditch Fay
1890-1896, 1906-1913
William P. Fay
Henry Lyman
1924-1934
1871-1875
Augustus Flagg
Amos Lawrence Mason
1870-1871, 1879-1881
1876-1880, 1892-1894
Elisha Flagg
George Burnap Morison
1919-1928
1905-1920
George Peabody Gardner, Jr.
Eben Rollins Morse
1895-1896
1916-1918
Frederic Sprague Goodwin
John Torrey Morse, Jr.
1878-1880
1933-1940
Robert Grant
Warren Motley
1926-1932, 1942-1947
1897-1908
Edward Gray
Henry Mulliken
1874-1876
1889-1893
George Saltonstall Mumford, Jr.
1942-1942
Francis Gray
1911-1918
Francis Calley Gray
1946-1949
1933-1939
Raiph Weld Gray
James W. Paige
1852
1933-1940
Francis B. Greenough
Augustin Hamilton Parker
1916-1925, 1929-1935
1877-1881
Heary Greenough
Francis Stanley Parker
1909-1913
1852, 1871-1872
Frederic Parker
Valcolm Whelen Greenough
1912-1916, 1919-1928
1929-1938, 1939-1941
Randolph Clark Grew
Theophilus Parsons
1888-1892, 1896-1899
1902-1914
Samuel Hammond
1905-1910
1872-1874
William Samuel Patten
Elward B. Haven
1905-1914, 1919-1923
1882-1886
Joseph Peabody
1881-1882
Charles Head
1899-1902
Augustus Thorndike Perkins
1869-1871
Rodert Homans
1911-1915
Rodert Chamblet Hooper
Thomas Nelson Perkins, Jr.
1938-1941
1874-1875
Dudley Leavitt Pickman
1883-1885
Samuel Hooper Hooper
1897-1909
Robert Marion Pratt
1870-1871
Berry Sargent Hunnewell
1896-1899
Frederic Octavius Prince
1871-1872
Berjamin Jov
1942-
Edward Hutchinson Robbins Revere
1914-1920
Charles H. Joy
1881-1883
Francis W. Lawrence
James Hampden Robb
1940-1942, 1947-
1881-1882
Henry Sayles
1876-1878
James Lawrence
1928-1933
David Sears
1871-1872
Join Endicott Lawrence
1941-1942, 1949-1951
Hubert Corev Leeds
Henry Francis Sears
1894-1896, 1898-1904
1904-1916
Herbert Mason Sears
1896-1900
Ribert Livermore, Jr.
1946-
Berry Caboc Lodge
Knyvet Winthrop Sears
1871-1872
1935-1936
Mexander Wadsworth Longfellow, Jr.
Richard Dudley Sears
1889-1893
1895-1897
George Brune Shattuck
1882-1883
Augustus Peabody Loring, Jr.
1950-
Robert Gould Shaw
1882-1884
Francis Bacon Lothrop
1925-1929
Francis Peleg Sprague
1875-1877, 1878-1881
44
OFFICERS
Henry Stackpole
1885-1889
MEMBERS OF THE SOMERSET CLUB
William Stackpole
1882-1890
Robert Hooper Stevenson
1872-1874
A single date, followed by a dash, indicates a present
Robert Hooper Stevenson, Jr.
1920-1926
member. Two or more dates, followed by a dash, indicate
Lawrence Mason Stockton
1899-1910
the years of election of a present member who resigned
Richard Cutts Storey, Jr.
1936-1942
but subsequently rejoined the club. A dagger or asterisk
Franklin Howard Story, Jr.
1874-1876
following the last date indicates the year of final resigna-
Charles Edwin Stratton
1896-1897
tion or death of a former member.
Eugene Van Rensselaer Thayer 1886-1889, 1896-1901
Eugene Van Rensselaer Thayer, Jr.
1908-1917
t-Resigned
*-Died
0-No data
John Eliot Thayer, Jr.
1925-1931
Alanson Tucker, 2d
1875-1877
George Abbot
1885-1901
Lawrence Tucker
1880-1882
Franklin Pierce Abbott
1893-1923*
William Warren Tucker
1869-1871
Gordon Abbott
1899-1937*
Leverett Saltonstall Tuckerman
1896-1898
Gordon Abbott
1935-
George Phinehas Upham
1872-1875
Grafton St. L. Abbott
1891-1908-
Arthur Wainwright
1894-1896
Grafton St. L. Abbott
1913-1915*
William Phillips Walley
1875-1876
Henry W. Abbott
1852-1879-
John Warren
1902-1912
Holker Abbott
1898-1930*
Rudolph Weld
1917-1919
Jere Abbott
1872-1893-
George Saltonstall West
1921-1947
Josiah Gardiner Abbott
1872-1876-
Frank Stanley White
1943-1946
Marshall K. Abbott
1881-1899*
Henry Austin Whitney
1872-1874
Samuel A. Browne Abbott
1872-1912-
Hugh Whitney
1950-
Walter Abbott
1890-1919*
Samuel Whitwell
1852
Arthur Adams
1903-1943*
S. Horatio Whitwell
1877-1879
Brooks Adams
1871-1913-1927*
Alexander Whiteside Williams
1947-
Charles Francis Adams
1872-1879-
Oliver Wolcott
1941-1950
Charles Francis Adams
1893-
Samuel Huntington Wolcott
1915-1921
Charles Francis Adams Jr.
1939-
Charles Fuller Woodard
1940-1942
Edward L. Adams
1885-1895-
Eben Wright
1868-1869
George Caspar Adams
1888-1900*
Henry Adams 2nd.
1904-1932+
John Adams
1914-1931-
Portland Public Library
588311
66
MEMBERS
MEMBERS
67
Edward Delano
1875-1881*
William Sohier Dexter
1858-1863-1908*
Lyman Delano
1921-1941-
Morton Lyndholm Deyo
1950-
Clarence Bigelow Denny
1902-1920*
Benjamin Harrison Dibblee
1924-1933-
Clarence Holbrook Denny
1872-1924*
Evans Rogers Dick
1929-1944-
Daniel Denny Jr.
1892-1896*
Watson Bradley Dickerman
1945-1947-
George Parkman Denny
1922-1944-
Brenton Halliburton Dickson
1885-1927*
George Derby
1852-1867-
Brenton Halliburton Dickson Jr.
1902-1943-
George Strong Derby
1873-1875-
Brenton Halliburton Dickson 3rd.
1928-1936-
George Strong Derby
1910-1913-
Richard C. Dixey
1882-1915*
Hasket Derby
1872-1882
Benjamin H. Dixon
1853-1872-
Hasket Derby
1945-1949-
George Basil Dixwell
1873-1885-
Arthur Lithgow Devens
1854-1859-1867*
Edwin Sherrill Dodge
1931-1938*
Arthur Lithgow Devens
1878-1914*
James F. Dodge
1872-1877-
Arthur Lithgow Devens Jr.
1908-1918-1931-1938+
Joshua Cleaves Dodge
1873-1888-
Charles Devens Jr.
1872-1877-1891*
Robert Gray Dodge
1932-
Charles Devens
1950-
Malcolm Donald
1929-1949*
George Dewey
1875-1878-
Arthur Donner
1878-1920-
Arthur Dexter
1867-1897*
Oscar W. Donner
1890-1911-
Edward Dexter
1872-1878-
Georges Frederic Doriot
1947-
F. Gordon Dexter
1853-1863-1895
Benjamin Humphrey Dorr
1888-1894-1923*
Franklin Dexter
1854-1857*
Charles H. Dorr
1872-1879-
Franklin Dexter
1879-1927*
George Bucknam Dorr
1872-1876+
Franklin Dexter
1928-
George Bucknam Dorr Jr.
1874-1937+
Frederick Dexter
1868-1895*
Joseph Dorr
1889-1892-
George Dexter
1872-1910*
Samuel Dorr
1860-1872-
George M. Dexter
1852-1865-
William Ward Dorr
1873-1876-
George Ticknor Dexter
1894-1927*
Augustus Flagg Doty
1917-1951*
Gordon Dexter
1887-1937*
George Harmon Doty
1894-1923*
John Lindsay Dexter
1938-1946-
George William Webster Dove
1878-1889-
Parkman Dexter
1896-1914-
Tracy Dows
1904-1937*
Philip Dexter
1890-1934*
Benjamin Helm Bristow Draper
1931-1944*
William Dexter
1920-1943*
Eben Draper
1934-1937-
William Endicott Dexter
1917-1944-
Eben Sumner Draper
1904-1914*
A Brief History of the
3/03
SOMERSET CLUB
of Boston
With a List of Past and
Present Members
1852-1913
GBD.
Sea
89.4
Prepared by
A Committee of the Club
1913
Preface
IT has been considered advisable to publish a brief history
of the Somerset Club from its organization to the present
time, a period of sixty years, that in this way the memory
of the names and lives of many distinguished gentlemen
of Boston who played an important part in making our
COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY THE SOMERSET CLUB
city what it was in a former generation, and who made this
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Club one of the most distinguished social associations of
our country, shall be held in due honor by their succes-
sors, and that there shall be preserved the roll not only of
our predecessors but of all those also with whom we have
been associated.
The preparation of this volume has been entrusted to a
special committee by the government of the Club.
The Club is greatly indebted to Mrs. Charles W. Amory,
Dr. J. Collins Warren, Dr. Henry F. Sears and Mr. Charles
F. Read of the Bostonian Society for valuable information
concerning the houses of the Club.
367
668341
History of the Somerset Club
IN 1846 there existed an association of gentlemen (called
at first the Travellers, later the Tremont Club), which
occupied chambers in Tremont Street described as opposite
the old Boston Museum, a playhouse. It possessed no
restaurant, but refreshments were brought in from without
as wanted. It consisted of forty-one members.
These gentlemen, whose names are given below, adopted,
September 12, 1851, the name at first of Beacon Club, soon
changed to Somerset Club, and purchased for their new
home the stone building on the eastern corner of Somerset
and Beacon streets. This edifice, with the adjoining Gard-
ner house, was built in 1816 by Mr. David Hinckley, and
was called the finest house in Boston at that time. Its site
had been previously occupied by the ancient "Stone house"
of Rev. James Allen of the First Church, who owned " a far
larger part of the territory of Boston than was ever owned
by any other individual." The Hinckley house was in-
herited and occupied by his daughter, who married W. G.
Hodgkinson, Esq. It was purchased of her in 1831 by Hon.
Benjamin W. Crowninshield, who removed at that time
from Salem. The interior, filled with beautiful furniture,
paintings, and statuary, is well described by his daughter,
Mrs. J. Mason Warren, in her interesting Reminiscences
privately published a few years ago.
"Gleaner" (Nathaniel I. Bowditch) thus alludes to the
Club house in one of his interesting communications in the
4
Somerset Club
Boston Transcript, 1855, as "so well known to 'Young
America' for its elegant appointments, or, as devoted wives
sitting at home might prefer to call them, its seductive
attractions."
After Mr. Crowninshield's death in 1851 the house was
purchased by this Club and opened to members April I, 1852.
During its occupancy a ladies' restaurant was opened in
connection with the Club, probably the first of its kind in
the country. Here follows a copy of the call for the meet-
ing of organization: -
BOSTON, March 20th, 1852.
SIR:
The Subscribers to the Club, at the corner of Beacon
and Somerset Streets, are requested to meet in their Club
House, on Friday, the 26th inst., at 7 o'clock P.M., to
receive the report of their Committee; to establish a Con-
stitution and By-Laws, and transact such other business as
may come before the meeting, preparatory to occupancy.
JOHN D. BATES,
For the Executive Committee.
P.S. The Club House will be open to the families of
members and their friends, on Wednesday the 24th inst.,
during the day and evening.
The property was held under an instrument in the form
of an indenture, which begins as follows: "Whereas by an
indenture made on the Seventeenth of April in the year of
our Lord 1852 between Francis B. Crowninshield, Esq.,
Samuel Hooper, Esq., and James Davis, the younger,
merchant, all of the city of Boston, on the one part, and
Somerset Club
5
Francis Bassett, Frederick H. Bradlee and David Sears, Jr.,
all of said Boston, Esquires, who executed the same on
behalf of the members of the 'Somerset Club,'" etc.
Messrs. Crowninshield, Hooper and Davis became trustees,
under whom the property was held for the benefit of the
shareholders; but in 1855, 240 six per cent bonds, of $250
each, to the amount of sixty thousand dollars, were issued,
subject to a sinking fund of $1000 per annum, and shares
to this amount were retired.
After twenty years, in 1871, the Club again felt it neces-
sary to obtain more capacious quarters, and purchased
the Sears Mansion, 42 and 43 Beacon Street, at a cost of
$210,000, to which it removed the following year. The old
Club house was then sold to the Congregational Association,
and was known as the Congregational Building. In 1896 it
was purchased by Houghton and Dutton, who in 1904 took
the structure down, and erected on its site the western
corner part of their present stores.
The land upon which the Sears Mansion was erected was
a part of the eleven acres previously owned by John Single-
ton Copley, the celebrated artist, and originally belonged to
Blackstone.
Copley speaks of it as his farm on Beacon Hill. There
he painted many of his famous portraits. All that we know
of the house is that it was painted yellow, and that near it
was that of "Master Vinal" the schoolteacher, where the
Otis house, now the residence of W. Austin Wadsworth,
Esq., stands.
In 1774 Copley left Boston, went to Europe, and did not
return. The British forces erected fortifications upon his
6
Somerset Club
lands. In his absence his house was sold without his knowl-
edge. In 1796 he sent his son, later Lord Lyndhurst, Lord
High Chancellor of Great Britain, to Boston to recover his
property. The suit was compromised by Messrs. Otis and
Mason on payment of four thousand guineas. The date of
the demolition of the Copley house has not been ascertained.
Upon this Copley lot Mr. Sears built his handsome stone
house on the line of Beacon Street, and inserted a tablet
with the following inscription: "Mansion House, erected
by David Sears in the year one thousand eight hundred
and nineteen - A. Parris, architect." The ornamental
marble tablets upon the front were carved by Solomon
Willard, who was the architect of Bunker Hill Monument.
The original Sears house had but one bow, with windows
from the basement to the roof on each side of it. The en-
trance was upon its eastern side through a courtyard lead-
ing to a stable in the rear. There were trees in this yard,
as well as in that on the western side of the house, and an-
other story was added. Behind the old house (Copley's)
stood a barn, which was converted into a temporary hos-
pital for the wounded British officers after the battle of
Bunker Hill. When Mr. Sears was digging the foundations
of his house the workmen came, a: a depth of several feet
under the surface, to a gigantic moccasined foot, perhaps
21/2 feet long, broken off at the ankle, and carved from a kind
of limestone not found in this vicinity, which he presented
to the Boston Athenxum, where it seems to have been lost
sight of.
"Even Mr. Copley would admit that the houses of
Messrs. Sears, Parker and Appleton have more than
Somerset Club
7
made good the two domiciles which are delineated in all the
dignity of yellow paint on the original plan of the Mt.
Vernon purchase. Except the old powder house we have
seen that only these two houses (Copley's and Master
Vinal's) appear on a plan of an Estate containing a million
of square feet, upon which now stand probably five hundred
houses." Gleaner, in 1855 vide 5th Report of Record Com-
missioners.
Later the building was extended westward by the erection
of an additional bow upon land adjoining belonging to the
Harrison Gray Otis estate. (The house now standing be-
tween the Club and the Otis Mansion, occupied by Mr.
Richard C. Dixey, was built in 1823 by Mr. Otis, in his
garden, for his daughter, Mrs. Ritchie.) In 1853 another
house was built by Mr. Sears covering the courtyard of the
mansion to the eastward, thus closing access to the stable.
The main entrance was then changed to its present position
facing Beacon Street.
Before occupation by the Club certain additions were
made to the house in the rear under the direction of Messrs.
Snell and Gregerson, architects. The old stable was razed,
and a large and stately dining-room was erected as an L,
with a billiard hall above it. At right angles to it a kitchen
was built, and in the story over it was constructed a bowl-
ing alley. Enclosed by these structures a large and pleasant
court was constructed, some sixty feet square. Sodded and
surrounded by vines, shrubs and flowers, it forms a delight-
ful outside lounging place in summer. Many changes were
made within the old edifice to fit it for the purposes of
a club house. In the process of reconstruction a secret
8
Somerset Club
chamber in the attic was discovered, filled with old Madeira
wine, stored there at an unknown period and apparently
forgotten by the former owner. Several dining-rooms for
private entertainments were included in the alterations. In
one of them, a large and beautiful room, many college class
dinners and notable banquets have been served. Among
its adornments may be mentioned an immense Chinese
punch-bowl, the gift of Mrs. Henry P. Sturgis, and the
handsome dinner service, twenty-one pieces of Sheffield
plate, which was brought to Philadelphia from Paris by
Richard Rush, our Minister to France, 1847-1849. He
purchased it from an old French family which was in posses-
sion of it for fifty years. Mr. Rush had his coat of arms
engraved upon it. He and Webster, it has been said, were
intimate friends, and the former, knowing Webster coveted
it, offered to sell it to him. Some of Webster's friends,
knowing this, bought it and presented it to him, and had his
name inscribed upon the pieces. After Webster's death,
October 24, 1852, the "Marshfield Club," consisting of some
twelve members of the Somerset Club, purchased a large
part of the service and presented it to the Club.
A ladies' restaurant was also constructed, with a separate
entrance, on the lower floor of the western bow. In 1872,
when the Club first occupied their new premises, all sup-
plies (such as coal, ice, provisions) and ashes, were carried
through a passage from the rear of No. 43 Beacon to Spruce
Street. Complaint having been made to the Supreme
Court that although the estate No. 43 owned a right of
way to Spruce Street, estate No. 42 had no such right, there-
fore the Supreme Court granted an injunction against its
Somerset Club
9
further use by No. 42. It thus became necessary to build
a tunnel or subway under the house from Beacon Street to
the rear of the Club, otherwise everything must have been
carried through the front doors.
During his occupancy of the mansion many distinguished
men were entertained in it by Mr. Sears, among others
Daniel Webster, Rufus Choate, Prescott, Everett, Motley,
and often, before the Civil War, gentlemen from the South.
In 1896 the adjoining house, 4I Beacon Street, formerly
occupied by William Amory, Esq., was purchased by the
Club and annexed. Its site was once the courtyard of the
Sears estate.
At the opening of the Club house, April 30, 1872, a re-
ception was given to ladies, and its rooms were beautifully
decorated with flowers.
During the "Peace Jubilee" in 1872, a notable concert
was given in the courtyard by the band of the English
Grenadier Guards under the leadership of the well-known
Dan Godfrey.
The front of the building was at one time covered by the
luxuriant growth of the Japanese vine, Ampelopsis Veitchii,
sometimes called the Boston ivy, imported from England
by Mr. Robert M. Pratt, perhaps its earliest introduction
into this city. After having been for years one of the most
attractive sights in Beacon Street, it was partly winter-
killed, and reluctantly removed.
Certain public events and celebrations have brought
many notable personages to Boston from time to time, to
whom the hospitalities of the Club have been extended,
including several Presidents of the United States, members
10
Somerset Club
of Royal Families, representatives of foreign governments,
Governors of other States, officers of visiting military forces
and of foreign and national squadrons, and men well known
in literature, science and art. Their names will be found in
the list of Distinguished Visitors.
It is pleasant to write that the Club still retains the
popularity it has SO long enjoyed and with its 600 members
Officers, Trustees, and Honorary
has a waiting list of nearly 1000.
Members
32
Somerset Club
1903 PROF. H. E. ARMSTRONG, England.
1904 LORD MONSON, England.
1904 MAJ. GENERAL THE EARL OF DUNDONALD, Canada.
1904 HON. COSMO GORDON-LENNOX, London.
1904 REAR ADMIRAL RIVET and Officers of Cruiser Duplière.
1904 EARL OF EUSTON, England.
1904 LORD CLAUD HAMILTON, England.
1904 RT. REV. BISHOP POTTER, New York.
1904 HON. FRANKLIN MURPHY, New Jersey.
Past and Present Members
1904 GENERAL VON LOEWENFELD, Germany.
1904 COUNT VON SCHMETTOW, Germany.
1905 SIR CHARLES WENTWORTH DILKE, London.
1905 HON. CHARLES NAPIER LAWRENCE, London.
1905 VISCOUNT ST. CYRES, London.
1905 SIR CHARLES RIVERS WILSON, London.
1905 PRINCE KOUDACHEFF, St. Petersburg.
1905 ADMIRAL SIR EDWARD H. SEYMOUR, London.
1905 SURGEON GENERAL S. SEEKUZI, Japanese Navy.
1905 BARON SCHOENBERG, Austria.
1906 His EXCELLENCY TAI HUNG C111, Imperial Commissioner.
1906 His EXCELLENCY JUAN FONG, Imperial Commissioner.
1906 COUNT GLEICHEN, London.
1907 SIR HORACE CURZON PLUNKETT, Dublin.
1907 MONSEIGNEUR LE COMTE VAYDE VOYA, Budapest.
1907 PROF. PAUL VINOGRADOFF, Oxford.
1907 GILBERT MURRAY, England.
1907 CAPTAIN SIMONETTI CAR and Officers of Italian cruiser Varese.
1907 ADMIRAL SIR A. H. MARKHAM, England.
1908 U. S. GRANT, Washington.
1908 ADMIRAL SIR LEWIS BEAUMONT, London.
1908 LORD REVELSTOKE, London.
1909 ADMIRAL Z. D. BARAUDON and Staff, German Navy.
1909 PRINCE SAN FAUSTINO, Italy.
1911 COUNT VON BERNSTOFF, Washington.
1911 COMTE DE CHAMBRUN, Washington.
1912 SIR WILLIAM Ramsay, England.
Past and Present Members
NOTE. - Owing to the fact that the early records of the club are incomplete,
data regarding certain members are not recorded. Symbols indicate as follows:-
- Present Membership, t Resigned, * Deceased, O No Data.
ABBOTT, HENRY W.
Boston
1852-18791
AMORY, CHARLES
Boston
1852-1874-1884
AMORY, JAMES S.
Boston
1852-1884*
AMORY, THOMAS C.
Boston
1852-1889*
APPLETON, NATHAN|
Boston
1852-1861*
APPLETON, SAMUEL A.
Boston
1852-1865*
APPLETON, THOMAS G.
Boston
1852-1872-1884*
APPLETON, WILLIAM, JR.
Boston
1852-1877*
AUSTIN, EDWARD
Boston
1852-1865
AUSTIN, JAMES T.
Boston
1852-1865
AMES, SAMUEL
Boston
1853-1865
AMORY, WILLIAM
Boston
1855-1872-1888
APPLETON, CHARLES H.
Boston
1856-1873*
AMORY, GEORGE W.
Boston
1861-1875-1899*
ANDERSON, JOHN F.
Boston
1861-1902*
ARKLAY, DAVID
Boston
1862-1865
AMORY, ARTHUR
Boston
1865-1895-1911
AMES, JOSEPH
Boston
1865- 0
APPLETON, NATHAN, JR.
Boston
1865-1906*
AMORY, WILLIAM, JR.
Boston
1865-1907*
ADAMS, JOHN QUINCY
Boston
1866-1894*
AMORY, FREDERICK
Boston
1867-
AMORY, COPLEY
Boston
1868-1879*
APPLETON, FRANCIS H.
Boston
1870-
AMORY, E. LINZEE
Boston
1870-1911*
AMORY, CHARLES W.
Boston
1871-1913*
ADAMS, BROOKS
Boston
1871-1913-
ABBOTT, JERE
Boston
1872-1893
ABBOTT, JOSIAH G.
Boston
1872-1876
ADAMS, CHARLES FRANCIS
Boston
1872-18791
ADAMS, CHARLES FRANCIS, JR.
Boston
1872-
AMORY, FRANCIS I.
Boston
1872-
ANDREWS, F. W.
Boston
1872-1903*
APPLETON, WILLIAM, JR.
Boston
1872-
ARKLAY, PATRICK
Boston
1872-1874
AUSTIN, IVERS J.
Boston
1872-1876
ABBOTT, S. A. B.
Boston
1872-1912
AMES, ALBERT T. B.
Boston
1872-1879
44
Somerset Club
Somerset Club
45
DWIGHT, THOMAS
Boston
1852-1875-1876*
DOVE, GEORGE W. W.
Andover
1878-1889
DURANT, HENRY F.
Boston
1852-1865
DWIGHT, JAMES
Boston
1879-
DEXTER, F. GORDON
Boston
1853-1863-1895
DALAND, EDWIN F.
Boston
1879-1888
DIXON, BENJAMIN H.
Boston
1853-1872
DEXTER, FRANKLIN
Boston
1879-
DEXTER, FRANKLIN
Boston
1854-1857*
DUPEE, WILLIAM R.
Boston
1880-1911*
DEVENS, ARTHUR L.
Boston
1854-1859-1867*
DANA, CHARLES S.
Boston
1880-
DEXTER, WILLIAM S.
Boston
1858-1863-1908*
DIXEY, RICHARD C.
Boston
1882-
DWIGHT, DANIEL A.
Boston
1859-1911*
Davis, CHARLES, JR.
Boston
1883-
DORR, SAMUEL
Boston
1860-1872
DUMARESQ, HERBERT
Boston
1885-
DWIGHT, HOWARD
Boston
1861-1863*
DICKSON, BRENTON H.
Boston
1885-
DALE, THERON J.
Boston
1863-1871*
DEXTER, GORDON
Boston
1887-
DALE, EBEN
Boston
1863-1875*
DALE, WILLIAM J., JR.
Boston
1887-1897*
DUNCAN, DAVID
Providence
1864-1872-
DORR, BENJAMIN H.
Boston
1888-1894-
DALE, EBEN, JR.
Boston
1866-1889*
DORR, JOSEPH
Boston
1889-1892
DEXTER, ARTHUR
Boston
1867-1897*
DEXTER, PHILIP
Boston
1890-
DWIGHT, CHAPMAN
Boston
1867-1875
DONNER, OSCAR W.
Boston
1891-1911
DEXTER, FREDERIC
Boston
1868-1895*
DAVIS, BANCROFT C.
Boston
1891-
DEACON, EDWARD P.
Boston
1868-1875
DENNY, DANIEL, JR.
Boston
1892-1896*
DANA, SAMUEL B.
Boston
1869-1911*
DOTY, GEORGE H.
Waltham
1894-
DEIION, WILLIAM
Boston
1870-1875*
DUNCAN, HON. G. A. P.
Boston
1894-
DALTON, SAMUEL F.
Boston
1871-1872*
DABNEY, FREDERICK L.
Boston
1894-
DABNEY, GEORGE S.
Boston
1871-1900*
DEXTER, GEORGE T.
Boston
1894-
DELAND, EDWARD F.
Boston
1872-1876
DABNEY, WILLIAM H.
Boston
1895-1897
DERBY, HASKET
Boston
1872-1882
DEXTER, PARKMAN
Boston
1896---
DEVENS, CHARLES, JR.
Boston
1872-1877t
DALTON, HENRY R., JR.
Boston
1896-
DEXTER, EDWARD
Boston
1872-1878
Davis, HORATIO
Boston
1900-1910*
DEXTER, GEORGE
Boston
1872-1910*
DAVIS, AARON
Boston
1900-
DODGE, JAMES F.
Boston
1872-1877
DENNEY, CLARENCE B.
Boston
1902-
DABNEY, WALTER
Boston
1872-1899*
DICKSON, BRENTON H., JR.
Boston
1902-
DENNEY, CLARENCE H.
Boston
1872-
Davis, C. CLAFLIN
Boston
1902-
DORR, CHARLES H.
Boston
1872-1879
DABNEY, GEORGE B.
Boston
1903-
DORR, GEORGE B.
Boston
1872-1876
DRAPER, EBEN S.
Boston
1904-
DODGE, JOSHUA C.
Boston
1873-1883
DANA, HAROLD W.
Boston
1904-
DWIGHT, THOMAS, JR.
Boston
1873-1911
Dows, TRACY
New York
1904-
DERBY, GEORGE S.
Boston
1873-1875
DUPEE, WILLIAM A.
Boston
1906-
DIXWELL, GEORGE B.
Boston
1873-1885
Davis, LIVINGSTON
Boston
1907-
DORR, WILLIAM W.
Boston
1873-18767
DEVENS, ARTHUR L., JR.
Milton
1908-
DABNEY, ALFRED S.
Boston
1874-1911*
DALTON, PHILIP S.
Milton
1909-
DORR, GEORGE B., JR.
Boston
1874
DERBY, GEORGE S.
Boston
1910-1913
DABNEY, FREDERICK
Boston
1874-1884
DABNEY, ALFRED S., JR.
Boston
1910-
DEACON, HARLESTON A.
Boston
1875-1896-1898
DRESEL, ELLIS L.
Boston
1911-
DELANO, EDWARD
Fairhaven
1875-1881
DEWEY, GEORGE
Charlestown
1875-1878
ELLIS, PAYSON P.
Boston
1856-1863*
DABNEY, LEWIS S.
Boston
1875-1908*
ELLIS, MATTHIAS
Boston
1858-18797
DAVIS, EDWARD L.
Boston
1876-1912*
EVERETT, HENRY S.
Boston
1866-18837
DALAND, TUCKER
Boston
1877-1883
EVERETT, PERCIVAL L.
Boston
1871-18917
DONNER, ARTHUR
Boston
1878-
EMMONS, N. H.
Boston
1872-18737
DEVENS, ARTHUR LITHGOW
Boston
1878-
EMMONS, ROBERT W.
Boston
1872-18737
64
Somerset Club
Somerset Club
65
TUCKER, WILLIAM W.
Boston
1852-1862-1885*
THOMAS, RUFUS K.
Boston
TUDOR, FREDERICK
Boston
1905-
1852-1865*
THORNDIKE, LOTHROP
Boston
TAPPAN, LEWIS W.
Boston
1906-1911*
1853-18741
THORNDIKE, RICHARD K.
Boston
TRAIN, ENOCH
Boston
1907-
1853-1865
TIMMINS, GEORGE II.
THORNDIKE, JOHN R.
Boston
Boston
1908-
1854-1873
TYSON, GEORGE
Boston
THORNDIKE, CHARLES
Boston
1908-
1858-1910*
TURNBULL, CHARLES D.
Boston
TUCKERMAN, NEWCOMB C.
Boston
1908-
1858-1860*
THAYER, JOHN E., JR.
Lancaster
TILDEN, CHARLES L.
Boston
1911-
1859-1865
Boston
THAYER, EZRA R.
Boston
THOMPSON, JOHN DIXWELL
1912-
1863-1875*
TURNBULL, CHARLES N.
Boston
1868-1875
THAYER, S. V. R.
Boston
UPHAM, GEORGE P.
Boston
1852-1901*
1870-1871*
Boston
UPTON, GEORGE B., JR.
Boston
TAPPAN, WILLIAM R.
1856-1872-1904*
1870-1873*
Tyson, GEORGE
UPHAM, J. BAXTER
Boston
Boston
1872-1890
1870-1881
TUCKER, RICHARD D.
UPHAM, HENRY
Boston
Salem
1880-1882*
1871-1899*
THORNTON, WALTER S.
New Bedford
UPHAM, GEORGE P., JR.
Boston
1882-1891*
1871-1905*
TREDICK, T. S.
UPDIKE, D. BERKELEY
Boston
Portsmouth
1898-
1871-1872
TUDOR, WILLIAM
Boston
1872-1875
TUCKER, ALANSON, 2d
Boston
VAN BRUNT, DUDLEY B.
Boston
1872-1877t
1872-1909*
THAYER, NATHANIEL, JR.
VAN BRUNT, CHARLES
Boston
Lancaster
1880-1899*
1872-1911*
TUCKER, LAWRENCE
Boston
VAN ALEN, J. H.
New York
1882-1886*
1872-1912*
TUCKERMAN, LUCIUS
Boston
1872-1876
TOWNSEND, HENRY E.
Boston
WAINWRIGHT, PETER
Boston
1852-1865
1873-1876
TURNER, N. DANA
Boston
WARD, SAMUEL G.
Boston
1852-1861-1865
1874-1893*
TWOMBLY, H. McK.
Boston
WARD, GEORGE C.
Boston
1875-1910*
1852-1865
TUCKERMAN, LEVERETT S.
Boston
WARD, H. ARTEMUS
Boston
1875-
1852-1870
TYLER, SIDNEY F.
WARREN, CHARLES H.
Boston
Philadelphia
1879-1885t
1852-1870-1873
THAYER, E. V. R.
Lancaster
WELCH, FRANCIS
Boston
1880-1907*
1852-1865
TILDEN, GEORGE H.
Boston
WELLS, BENJAMIN S.
Boston
1880-1882
1852-1865
TOUZALIN, A. E.
Milton
WHARTON, WILLIAM CRAIG
Boston
1882-1889*
1852-1881
TESCHEMACHER, HERBERT E.
Boston
WHEELWRIGHT, ANDREW C.
Boston
1882-1907*
1852-1894-1908*
THORNDIKE, GEORGE QUINCY
Boston
WHITNEY, HENRY A.
Boston
1883-1886*
1852-1889*
THORNDIKE, JOHN L.
Boston
WHITNEY, ISRAEL
Boston
1883-
1852-1865
THAYER, BAYARD
Lancaster
WHITWELL, FREDERICK A.
Boston
1883-
1852-1881-1912*
TWEED, CHARLES H.
New York
WHITWELL, SAMUEL
Boston
1885-
1852-1865
TUCKERMAN, CHARLES S.
Boston
WHITWELL, S. HORATIO
Boston
1885-1889-1904*
1852-1904*
THAYER, JOHN E.
Lancaster
WHITWELL, HENRY
Boston
1885-
1854-1887*
THACHER, THOMAS C.
Boston
WINTHROP, ROBERT C., JR.
Boston
1886-
1855-1905*
TOWER, RICHARD G.
Lexington
WOLCOTT, J. HUNTINGTON
Boston
1887-
1856-1865
THOMAS, WASHINGTON B.
Boston
WEBSTER, SIDNEY
New York
1889-
1858-1870
TRASK, WILLIAM ROPES
Boston
WHITNEY, WILLIAM M.
1894-
Beverly
1859-1879
THORNDIKE, HARRY H.
Boston
WRIGHT, JOHN H.
Boston
1894-
1861-1879*
THORNDIKE, AUGUSTUS
Boston
1895-1910-
WRIGHT, EBEN
Boston
1862-1865-1881
THAYER, FREDERICK W.
Boston
WHEATLAND, GEORGE, JR.
Boston
1896-1913*
1864-
TAYLOR, FREDERICK S.
Boston
WHIPPLE, JEREMIAH
Boston
1896-
1864-1872
TOOKER, JOHN S.
England
WINCHESTER, THOMAS B.
Boston
1900-
1864-1883-1902-1904*
THORNDIKE, PAUL
Boston
WINSOR, HENRY, JR.
Boston
1902-
1865-1882-1894*
THACHER, LOUIS B.
Boston
WRIGHT, GEORGE W.
Boston
1904-
1865-18701
THAYER, E. V. R., JR.
Lancaster
WELD, B. RODMAN
Boston
1904-
1865-1909*
WELLES, GEORGE D.
Boston
1866-18741
iBoston - Your Guide to Massachusetts History
Page 1 of 1
Boston
BOSTON HISTORY AND ARCHITECTURE
David Sears House / Somerset Club
Alexander Parris, 1819 / 1832
"Architecture is inhabited sculpture."
Constantine Brancusi
At 42 and 43 Beacon St. the
Somerset Club dominates its section
of Beacon hill. Its double bays rise
above the roof line, and a substantial
rusticated wall in front of it sets a
monumental tone. Though French in
design, the cartouches on its bowed
front and the strong roof line give it
styling which fits with its federalist
is
styled neighbors.
Perhaps the most interesting element
of the building is how it has been
remade as the Beacon Hill
neighborhood grew. Originally the
mansion of David Sears, this was a
free standing building, with only the bay on the right, and a garden between it and the
Charles Bulfinch at 45 Beacon St.
As land values skyrocketed through the 1820's, maintaining yards and separate structur
become financially impractical. The Sears family doubled the home's size, establishing i
expensive dwelling in 1830's Boston.
Merging these mansions was clearly not a consideration when they were constructed. TI
neighboring Otis House had a large oval salon facing the Sears House. When these buil
connected, the Sears House had to be built around the Otis' curved side.
In the 1860's Sears relocated to his country estate, the Longwood Cottage and Farm, in
Brookline enclave which he had developed. The Sears House underwent a final expansi
Somerset Club took it over in 1872 and added the third floor which is seen here. This fin
Search iBoston
completed the Sears House's transformation from being a distinctive granite mansion, to
like row-house seen here as the Somerset Club.
Massachusetts Architecture I Public Art & Places I Historic People & Events I Research About
Copyright © 1997-2002 David Wieneke. All rights reserved. I Terms of Use Contact Us
http://www.iboston.org/mcp.php?pid=sears
4/22/2002
ONLY BEEN TO THE CLUB."
Boston Daily Globe (1872-1960); Apr 12, 1892; ProQuest Historical Newspapers Boston Globe (1872 1901)
pg. 5
"ONLY BEEN TO THECLUB."
Whether to the Somerset or
Some Other.
Dis Wife May Determine by Reading
the Terms of Admission.
What it Costs to "Belong," to Say
Nothing of Refreshments.
Inasmuch as Austin Corbin. rich man and
railroad king. was blackballed by the gov.
ernors of the Union Club of New York the
other day. the conditions of admission to
some of the "swell" clubs of this town may
be interesting.
There is not a club in Boston that sets RO
gh an entrance fee as the Union of New
ork, although in several Boston clubs the
early dues are larger than in the Union.
he constitution and by-laws of the club
iat has excluded Austin Corbin provide
at the executive function connected with
16 management of the institution shall re-
de in a governing committee consisting of
1 members.
The SIX blackballs that are said to have
sen cast in the vote on the question of Mr.
orbin's membership were unnecessary. It
ould have taken only two blackballs to
ave done the business. The constitution
rovides that one adverse ballot in every 10
otes is sufficient to decide unfavorably the
undidature of any person attempting to
on the club.
The membership of the union IS limited to
200. The admission fon is $300, three
mes as large as that of the tip-top Somer-
et of this city. The yearly assessments of
he Union Amount to $75.
It IS said that the blackballing of Austin
'orbin is regarded by a great many men as
D interesting development of the antagon-
im of certain elements in the Union Club
award millionnaires and the club that the
millionnaires are organizing.
But this statement is absurd. becauso
any of the members, indeed, the main-
tays of the club. are all wealthy men.
The Somerset Club of this city 14 looked
ipon generally as the most exclusive insti-
ution of the kind in Boston. The number
if members. it is provided first. must not
xceed 550, and many aristocratic "fellahs"
ave to wait for years sometimes before
her can get in.
There is n committee on elections that
loes the work of determining the eligibility
1 candidater. The Somersot. like nearly
it the "swell" clubs, does not admit to
membership persons under 21 years of age.
he committee on elections consists of the
cretary of theclub and 14 other members.
obert Grant, writer and water commis-
oner. is the present secretary. The elections
Are Held Annually,
1d by open or secret ballot, as the dis.
nguished gentlemon of the committee
ay decide. There must beatleast 10 mom-
ers of the committee present, and one
Iverse ballot in every five votes will ox-
udo the candidate.
The non Iv-elected member must pay
100 within (ii) days and the proportionate
art of the annual assessment for the un-
cpired portion of the current club year.
:ckoning from the first day of the month
Iter that in which the member was elected.
Any officer of the ariny and navy on duty
ithin the New England States may be ad-
itted in the use of the club in the manner
rovided for the election of members. by
aying one-half the annual assessment.
hich entities him to SIX months member-
hip. He may renew this six months' mem-
ership at the beginning of every six
months by paving half the annual assess-
rent in advance.
The entrance teo ot the Puritan Club is
nly $30. and the annual assessment $35.
The Puritan Club is composed for the
lost part of Harvard graduates. and a pro-
ision of the club is that no undergraduate
all be admitted to membership.
There is n committee on elections. coin-
osed of the secretary and 14 other mem-
ers of the club. who pass on candidates re-
uesting admission. The request must be
1 the form of a written application. and
10 ballot of the election committee may be
pen or secret. Ten members of the elec-
on committeo constitute a quorum. and
no adverso ballot in every five votes is suf-
cient to exclude a candidate.
The executive committee may expel mom-
ers on a two-thirds vote. but au appeal to
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
he club can follow. either in the case of ex-
ulsion or a defeated candidacy, and a two-
hirds vote of the club
May Overritte the Action
f the election committee or the executive
ommitree. Such a vote must be by secret
allot.
In the Algonquin Club there is a commit-
30 on admissions. That "does the busi-
less" for the candidate. The entrance fee
t the Algonquin is $100. The successful
andidate must pay his proportion of the an-
uni assessment at the times of entering the
lub. The membership in the AlgOnquin is
limited to 700.
The constitution of the Algonquin pro-
ides that the action of the committee on
dmissions shall be secret, confidential and
inal. and that no member of the commit-
ce shall be questioned or allowed to state
LS to the action of the committee in the
aso of any candidate.
Two negativo votes in the committee on
admissions are suflicient to exclude the
andidate. An expelled member hns a
right to appeal to the club. The committee
S composed of 16 members.
The annual dues in the Alconquin are
$100 a year in advance. Army and navy
nembers have greater privileges so far ns
admission fees are concerned in the Algon-
quin than in the Somersot. Payment of
$100 entities an army or navy member to
admission unconditional.
The bedrooms in the Algonquin and Som-
erset are engaged for no longer than a week.
with the condition that the bedroom may
10 retained so long as no other member
wishes one. In this as in all clubs there is a
distinct provision of the constitution (which
provision, it is needless to say. is daily disre-
garded) that no mony shall be paid to any
servant under any circumstances.
The membership of the Union Club is
limited to 600. The committee on elec-
tions consists of the secretary and 15 other
members, and the presençe of nine mom-
bers of the committee constitutes à quorum
for business.
The entrance fee is 8100 and the annual
assessment is $75. Tho committee on elec-
tions simply passes on a candidato's eligi-
bility. and a majority of the committee
May Vote the Candidate Eligible,
The members of the club elect the candi-
late directly. In all cases of elections the
roting is by secret ballot. Thirty votes are
necessary for a ballot in any case. and six
votes in 30, or one-fifth of any number of
votes cast for a candidate, if the one-fifth
be adverse, may reject.
Votes are not counted unless marked for
or against the name on the slate.
A member elected after the first of July
pays one-half the assessment and his
entrance fee to get into the club. Two
thirds vote of the executive committee
expels a member. and a two-thirds vote of
the club on an appeal may reverse the
action of the executive committee.
Army and navy officers have privileges
such as the Somerset. Algouquin and other
clubs afford.
In regard to games, the Somerset Club
prohibits any kind of card playing between
the hours of closing on Saturday night and
opening on Monday morning.
The Union Club prohibits any games on
Sunday, and the Algonquin and Union pro-
hibit the presence of dogs on the premises.
One of the Union's laws is against pipe
smoking at all, and another is against smok-
ing during club meetings.
The Somersou Club prohibits any whist-
ling in the building, and any conversation
in the library, and charges 35 cents for
every game of cards played. and prohibits
any gaine of cards in bedrooms.
The membership of the Tavern Club is
limited to 126. The admission fee is S50,
and the annual assessment is $30. A com-
mittee on elections determines the candi-
dacy of any prospective member, and the
candidate is elected by four-fifths of at least
25 votes.
There is an election committee in the
Country Club: it consists of 11 members.
and at every voting on a candidate at least
SIX members must be present. Two black
balls exclude. The entrance fee is 850 and
the annual assessment 850.
The entrance fee to the Boston Athletic
Association is 850. The annual dues are
$40. Elections are made by the governing
committee of 20 members. One adverse
ballot in every six votes excludes a candi-
date. The membership is limited to 2000
active members,
In most of the "swell" New York clubs
the entrance fee is $300 and the annual
assessments $75.
Providence Y. M. c. A. Election.
PROVIDENCE April Y. M C. A.
elected officers tonight as follows: Presi-
dent. William A. Spicer: vice-presidents.
James S. Kenyon and J. William Rice: re-
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Boston Daily Globe (1872-1960); Jun 19, 1892; ProQuest Historical Newspapers Boston Globe (1872-1901)
pg. 28
IN LEAFY BOWERS.
heavy swelling blossoms swing in the
Brower, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Dwight, Gen.
breeze On either side of the old carriage
and Mrs. Francis A. Walker. Mr. and Mrs,
way is a tree whose leaves sinko softly the
H. W. Haynes, Mrs. Julia Ward Howo and
windows at one end of the house.
Mr. and Mrs. John Elliott are all. some
The porch is hung with vines, and in the
heavily. some lightly. covered for one or
Boston Houses with Walls of
lower windows are potted plants. There is
two stories with vine4.
young tree also in the space before the
Besides these there are a good many
house that is shut off by a mo lern iron rail.
others. but the most picturesque at this
Living Green.
Inc.
end of the street IS Nos 272 and 274.
Clinging Wisteria Makes Somerset Club
a Baronial Castle.
Edwin Austin's House is Perhaps the
Most Picturesque.
HADOWS disappear
along Beacon kt. in
summer who thefun
is high. The level
avenue stretches
away in an unbroken
blaze of light.
From any point nt
either end. the jour-
noy up or down the
estect is not inviting.
Put there are green
spots in the desert
of brick and stone.
and these present the appearance of verl.
table bowers of bliss They are seen best
In the cooi of the evening, when the sun's
raya are 110 longer direct, but at any umo
they are sweet and fair to look upon.
In the crowded Janes of the tenement
house districts one may catch an occasiona
glimpso of a single struggling plant in it
cracked flower pot, or, more frequently, in a
broken cup or a box or n tin dish, among
the debris that litters the fire-escapes; and
one imagines the wealth of foliage that
would appear If the flower-loving feeling
could find sinple expression.
In the homes of the rich this feeling finds
MR.
P.
1..
HIGHINSON'S
HOUSE
273
AND
274
BEACON
ST.
expression as ample as may be wished.
The green spots 111 the desert of brick and
stone on Beacon st. are the vine clad walls
Two tall columns support on each
This IS the house of Mr. and Mis. Francia
of the houses and the blussom-filled win-
side the roof of the porch. and
1. Maginson. The effect of the arrange-
dows.
the postman lingers An the cool Alisdo
ment here 14 as beautiful as anywhere on
while he tells the young woman in the
the street. only the growth 14 not no large
A walk un Beacon st. or Commonwealth
doorway how hot 10 is down the bare street.
The house itself 14 very handsome, with
av. or Marlboro or Nowbury sta any day
You can imagnio what heinterior of such
its large portico and sweeping front. The
after the 16th of May, or botter, after the
n housa must be. In every room there
vines or the entire length and about
1st of June, will develop a multitude of
would be the evidences of the master's love
one-third of the height of the building.
beautiful pictures.
for the simple and the beautiful, and the
l'her are trained across a succession of
small port-holes, which are almost entirely
concealed by the leaves of the plant.
You may catch a elimpso occasionally of
the fresh young face of a protty housemard
though one of these portholes. The vines
form thick clusters in the spaces between en
the windows, and when they flower the
blossoms fall into the rooms when the win-
dows are open.
Mrs. Robert C. and Mr. William Hooper
occupy the house next door. No. 276, and
this 14 also handsomely decorated. But the
house noxi door. that of Mr. and Mrs. John
Shepard, is bare,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Princo, nt 200, Mr.
and Mrs. 1. Stackpolo, at 202, Mr. and
Mrs F. Warren. nt 201 and Dr Olivor
Wendell Holme< at 290, where Judge O.
W. Holmo". Jr.. and his wife also live, are
training vines over the fronty of their
houses
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Riley, at 300, have
rather abundant growth of vines on then
honso.
On Commonwealth nv. on what is somo-
times called the swell side, the most pict-
uresquely garlanded house 19 No. 1. in
which Mrs. James S. Amory and Frederic
Amory live.
Noxi door is the house of Mis. Bonjamin
Roteh, and this is also prettily covered
with wisteria vinery.
Mrs. Otis Norcross at No. O. Mrs. J. Amory
Codman, at 13. Miss R. A. Amory Mrs.
John O. Burnham and Mi. .and Mrs. Charles
Fry, at 21, have their dwellings present n
handsomo appearance. The vines here are
not very strong yet, however.
At No. 61, where Georgo C. Gardner lives.
with MISS Olza E., and John L. Gandner, 2d.
there are spreading vines over the front of
the house, and at 177. the home of Mr. and
Mrs. John Quiney Adams, and 197 the
home of Dr. and Mrs F. M. Rotch. there
handsome appearance of green leaves and
bright-hued plants.
There are many other houses on the
nvenue that are decorated. but none so
beautifully as somo on Marlboro and
Beacon sts.
On the lower and of Marlboro st. there
are reveral houses that present an extremo-
1y handsome appearance.
Such a house 14 that on the corner of
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
modern structure with a great many
cornicos and angles and windows linmense
trails of the wisterin vino run entirely
Around the building, and the house is in n
position so comparative oly isolated that
every feature stands out conspicuously.
The whole structure presents an imposingly
handsome front.
THE SOVERSET CLUB,
Probably the house of the cosiest appear-
anco in summer on Marlbolo st. is that of
Mr. and Mrs. Donjamin W. Crowninshield,
in half nn hour's walk. more than n hun-
very walls would breatho comfort and
161.
died houses may be seen whose occupants
peace
From Dartmouth to Exeter ste. on Marl.
failfill literally the scriptural injunction to
In that chamber at the top of the house,
boro, there are about n dozen abundantly
his under ouo's our vine and fur tree.
where the big bunches of the heavy vino
foliaged trees which preserve in that par.
No building or Beacon st. presents a more
have erept over the sill and must bo lifted
ticular portion of the thoroughfare n degree
striking appearance than the Somerset
out beforo the window can be closed, you
of shado on the hottest days that Is truly
Club. From the top of Beacon hill it may
might look across the trees of the Common
rural. The cal's in gome through the sheet
be seen 11 little way down the street; and if
and CC the ships in the offing, and on n
there appear to bo PASSING through
a
a man could exclude from his vision all nd.
quet might the voices of whispering lovers
densely staded country road.
sacent scenery and from his mind all
on the shaded sents below unglit mingle
The hon-0 of the Crowninshields has
knowledge of present surroundings he
with the bounds of revelry in the adjacent
several trees 111 the front yard. and the
could very easily imagine the tower-like
club.
heavy branches nlmo-t completely obstruct
walls of the Somer-ot Club to be the abid.
You look at this house twice, and say:
n view of everything except the front door.
the place of some lord of the castled Rhone
"That should have been the birthplace of a
Resides this, the walls of the house are
Tho very modern window shados dispel
great figure in history.
this illusion, to be sure. but thore Is little
Moro than a AC010 of houses in the next
hung heavily with the wisteria vine, and
the lilac blossoms in the dooryard' bloom
else about the building that would not fit
fow blocks are hung more or less heavily
profusely.
Into picture of a sylvan rular's abode.
with vinos. No. 103, occupied by Mr. and
No. 182, occupied by Drs. J. Orno Green
A very heavy growth of th8 wisterin vino
Mrs. S. Tilton: 110, the house of S. Hain-
and H. Derby, 19 tastefully decorated with
covers the entiro building. It begins bolow
mond 117. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Gray
vino and wv.
the stone wall along the street and cans the
127, Mrs. W. C. Wharton: 130, H. 11. Hun-
The houses of Dr. and Mrs. F. W. Draper.
top of the tower front. At a little distance
nowe.) 131, Mrs. () Browster 133, Harry
of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Whitwell. of Mh. and
the windows look as if thoy might have
Burnott 136, the house of Mr and Mrs.
Mrs. Herve of Mis. 11. G. Hutchins,
been cut out of the vine.
Frederick C. hooks, which is conspicuous
of Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Sawy of M19 Ben-
When the sun's mass are firercest their
for the beauty of the arch of wisterinsover
jamm W. Thayer, of Mrs. Lucian Skinner,
darts are sheathed in the heavy folds of the
the doorway 137, Mr. and Mrs. 11. C. Gib.
of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Seabury, in which
clambering plant and all is cool twilight
son 145. the house of Mayor and Mrs. Na-
live the 50114 Frank and W. H. of Mr.
within the room.
than Matthews 49. the 111,509 Collins,
and Mrs. John E. Hudson, of Mrs. Henry
he house that presents the most beauti.
165, Mr. and Mrs. 1. C. Richardson 176,
Upham. of Mr. and Mrs. A. II. Hardy, of
ful appearance Beacon st. No 15. The
tho home of John C Gray: 178, William
Mr. and Mr S. M. Crosby are more or less
Somerset Club occupies No, 42 and 13. No.
G. Russell 180, Mrs. Benjamin T. Reed
abundantly hung with wisteria.
41. which is occurred by Mrs. William
181. 111. and Mrs. F. G. Morrill 187, Mr
Throughout the Back Bay there are hun-
Amory, and No. are on either sido of the
and Mr. William S. Appleton 191, Mrs. S.
dredy of houses that apparently are only
club. hese have few lengths of vine on
Chayer, 107. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
just beginning the decoration of the fronts
tho walls, but No. 15. which is occupied by
l'ord; 182, Mr. C. Allen Browne; 200, Mrs.
with wisteria and Ivy, and there are many
of these on Newbury and Marlboro sts.
which in n few years will present an ex.
tremely handsome appearance. but are now
somewha ragged Hooking
Throughout the South End the use of the
Back Bay vvy IS becoming common. On
great number of the houses on the side
streets vely pretty effects have been accom.
plished by the 1190 of ivy and the Wisterna
vinc.
MR LDWARD AUSTIN'S HOUSE os BEACON ST.
Mr. Edward Austin, 13 far and away the
F. 1. Norton: 211. Mis A. S. Josselyn 213,
more me ght on the street.
Mi and Mrs. C Kenny 215, Mr. H. C.
Noll door, No All. IS the house of Mr and
Hutchins, 21 Mr. W. c. Lovering 219,
Mrs Eben 1. Jordan. and it receives ome
Mri Will un Mixter 221. Mr. Charles 1..
vindo and beauty from the wealth of
Thaver M. and Mr. S. B Dana, 190,
followe of 4:; but the house of Mr and Mrs.
Mr. and Mr. Fre berick H. Prince: 102.
Martin brimmer. which 1. next to the Jor-
Mrs. Item Date 191. Mr. G A Meyer
dais stands out in unleated mudity. It
196, Mr and Mrs. James Means: 105, the
gh and narrow building with a stucco
Misses Pre scott, Mr June, 11 Dinforth and
front of nondescript color, and 11 looks like
Mr. and Mrs Almon U. Strout: 200. Rev. 11.
a swell fat.
Allen; 202, Mr. and Mrs G. P. Motley:
The house of Edward Austin has a very
204, Mrs. Harvey Jewell: from 218 to 232,
old-fashtoned appearance The root is Hat,
in which live Dr. Edward H. Bradford and
and the chimnoys are the kind that almost
Mrs. Charle F. Brodford, Mrs. H. H. Allen
always surmounted the fashionable res).
and Mrs. Waldo Adams: and from 239 to
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
ONCE THE SOMERSET CLUB.
Boston Daily Globe (1872-1960); Dec 11, 1892; ProQuest Historical Newspapers Boston Globe (1872-1901)
pg. 15
ONCE THE SOMERSET CLUB.
of the American College and Education
Society
On the third floor beside the offices al.
ready enumerated are the office of the Con.
grovational Church Building Society the
But Now the Congregational
Non West Education Commision and the
Boston Seaman's Friend Society.
All these organizations are oitner directly
House Its Name.
related to the American Board or under its
control.
The building WRA occupied by the board
in 1872. In the d. dicatory exercises It was
Where Wine Flowed Copiously Long
said: n the winter of 1620 the Pilgruns
found for themselves a permanent home in
Ago, God's Word Prevails.
Piymouth in the winter of 1872 their prin-
ciples of church order first find a lodgment
in they have founded and inade
illustrious.
Busy Hive Where Religion Finds Work
At this dedication Rev. Dr. M. M. Dexter
presented n part of a bown stone window.
Meet for Pious Hands,
cap taken by himself from the ruins of the
old Manor House at Sorooby, Eng.. in
which, while it was occupied by William
Brow-ter. the Mayllower church was
When you walk up Reacon st. again ob.
crailed. He exhibited also one of the
serve the massive granite building on the
rudely-carvcc oaken boams from woodon
corner of Somerset at High up on the face
ceiling of the little chanel of the Mauor
of the building are the words in raised Iron
House. which beain In bia opinion was over
the heads of the litt'e company when ther
letters:
covenanted together "to walk in all His
"Congregational House."
ways made known or to be made known 10
If you care to go to the trouble of reading
thoin. at whatever cost, the Lord assisting
them.
the directory In the hall of the building
Dr. fimothy Gordon presented a piece of
you will find that every room in the house
the rock on which the Plymouth fathers
is occupied by some religious society or the
and mothers first landed in 1020.
representative of memissionary endeavor.
The rolics are preserved in the library
today across the hall from the parlors
Perhaps you may be tempted to enter the
through which the Sonierset Club swells
rather forbidding hall on the Somerset st.
sauntered carlessly 30 years and more nga
side and walk up the broad winding stairs.
The Gardner house, 7 Beacon st., 13 now a
THE CONOREOATIONAL HOUSE.
The floors are wooden and evidently very
part of the Congregational House. In 1828
old. and there is all air throughout of misty
the record of the deeds is that William
antiquity.
Appleton sold this house to Joseph Pea-
body. Francis and George Penbody deeded
You would be right If you should guess
the property In 1814 to Catherino. who be.
that this venerable building has a strange
came the wilo of John L. Gardner. In
history. For what contrast could be more
1871 John In and Catherine Gardnor sold
Interesting and improssive than that which
the house to the American Congregational
Association.
is afforded by the fact that A quarter of a
The house which is the Congregational
century ago thosmartest set of Boston club-
House proper was originally the old Hinok-
dom hold Its nightly revels where the ma.
loy mansion.
chinory of a great religious factory grinds
More than 230 years ago the first stone
house over built in Boston was erected on
on today with unvarylue energy and regu.
this very spot by Rev. James Allen, in
larity.
whose family the property remained about
Hero. indeed, was the home of the Somer-
150 years.
set Club. and if It ever should interest you
It was about 1812 that David Hinokley,
merchant, horan the erection of what lie
enough to make the effort you would find
called "a large. elegant atone mansion.
after n slight search the room in which was
Even in these days 11 might, under favora-
the buffet of the club. and which is now the
bio conditions, be called large and elegant,
office of Rev. O. C. Creagan, Held
and in tho.o days it was pronounced far and
away the handsomest house in Boston.
tary of the American Board of Commission.
David Hinckley WAS vory rich, and he Im-
ers for Foreign Missions.
ported. the glass for the windows of his
And directly across the way from this
mansion from England.
mom you may find Rev. Dr. Edward E.
But in 1813 war broke out between this
Strong at work as the editor of the Mis.
country and Great Britain. and the work on
sionary Herald in the apartment where the
David (linckley's mansion was suspended.
swell clubmon of a past genoration lounged
Whon it was finally, completed It was
at the card tables of a dreary alternoon.
without doubt the handsomest house In
The main entrance to the Congregational
Boston.
House is on Beacon st. Entering hero. the
David Hinckley sold the entire estate in
first door on the right leads to the rooins of
1820 for 340.000 to Hen'nmin Wiggin. The
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
the woman's board. You may find hero at
property included all the original estate, of
any time of six days of the week abundant
old Samuol Eliot,
ovidence of the hard work that IS doing by
In 1833 it is found that the property has
this organization.
come into the hands, of William f. Otty.
Noxt door 18 the librarian's office, and dl-
who for the nominal consideration of $100
rectly ahead is the lbbary. "This is the de-
disposes of the property to William G.
partment of which everybody in the build-
Hodgkinson.
ing is proudest. Indeed it WAS the effort to
For $38,500 William G. Hodgkinson sold
establish a suitable library that lod to the
the property in 1832 to Benjamin W.
occupancy of the building. The room for
Crowninshield, who, when he was gathered
the library. which contains many thousands
to his fathers, left the estate to his six chil.
of very rare works of the thoologians of
dren. Elizabeth Crowninshield, Mrs. Mary
conturies dead and gone, was added to the
Mifflin. Francis B. Crowninshield, George
original building.
0.0 owninshield and Mrs. Anna Warren.
On the loft of the entrance nro the par-
These six children sold the house and
lors of t110 old house, and beyond these is
property to John D. Bates and Samuel
the office of the treasurer of the A. B. C. F.
Hooper in 1857 for $43,000.
M. On the right 18 a room that is occupied
Thereupon James Davis, Hooper and
by the clorks of the treasurer, and a little
Francis B. Crowninshield made arrange-
farther is the business office of the Congre-
ments with the Somersot Club to occupy
gationalist, which is noxt door to the mail.
the "stone mansion.'
ing department.
In 1871,* Jamies Davis, Samuel Hooper.
On the noxt floor are the several socre-
and F. O. Prince as trustees disposed of the
taries of the Amorican board, the offices of
property for $140,280, to the American
the editor of the Herald, of the prudential
Congregational Association.
committee. the City Missionary Society. the
The purchase of the Gardner and the
American Congregational Union. the Amer-
Soinersat Club estates cost the association
Ican Missionary Association and the Massa.
3,484.12.
chusetts Homo Missionary Society. Besides
Today the ASHESSORS rockon that there is
these are the musoum of curiosities and the
$501,000 worth of real property in the
offices of the clerk and copyists of the
Congregational house. Of tlile, 8335,000
board.
worth is taxed, and $266,000 worth is ex-
On the fourth floor is Pilgrim Hall, where
empt.
the Congregational ministers meet every
Is It not interesting that out of this house
Monday morning.
which was the home of fashion and wealth
On the first floor 19 the book store of the
for more than hall n century, 5,000,000 of
Congregational Sunday School and Publica.
copies of religious periodicals annually are
tion Society. and here is the office of the
distributed over the world amonz
Seaman's Friend Society.
those whom the humble Christ CRIME to
The American Peaco Society Is on the sec-
save, the children and the feeble, and the
ond floor. On this floor are the offices also
ignorant and two poor.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
7/17/2019
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The Somerset Club, 42 Beacon St., Boston, ca. 1875 [graphic].
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Main Author:
J.W. Black & Co., photographer.
Title:
The Somerset Club, 42 Beacon St., Boston, ca. 1875 [graphic].
Actions
Contributors, etc.:
Sears, David, 1787-1871.
Pick up at Circulatio
Boston : Black & Co., ca. 1875.
Print
Publishing Details:
Description:
1 photographic print : b&w ; image 23 X 18.7 cm., mount 25.4 X 21 cm.
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Subject: The Beacon St. facade of the Somerset Club building.
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Summary:
Notes:
Graphite inscriptions on verso identify location and donor.
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Photographer's imprint blindstamped into blue cardboard mount below the
lower right corner of the image.
Originally the home of David Sears (1787-1871), the building was
purchased by the Somerset Club in 1871, and the Club house opened in
1872.
Local Notes:
Gift of Miss Dorothy Codman, 1952. #1952.6.
Retrospective conversion record.
Subjects:
Sears, David, 1787-1871--Homes and haunts--Pictorial works.
Somerset Club (Boston, Mass.)--Pictorial works.
Boston (Mass.)--Buildings, structures, etc.--Pictorial works.
Beacon Street (Boston, Mass.)--Buildings, structures, etc.--Pictorial works
Genre Terms:
Photographs--United States--1870-1880.
Provenance/Publisher/etc.:
Codman, Dorothy. donor
Linked Resources:
Scanned image available here
Location:
Prints and Photographs Dept. (Appointment required)
Call Number:
(photo) A B64B6 Cl.so.(no.1)
Number of Items:
1
Status:
Not Charged
Actions:
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O der Digital Scans
Reference URL: http://catalog.bostonathenaeum.org/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibld=433451