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

Page 1

Page 2

Page 3

Page 4

Page 5

Page 6

Page 7

Page 8

Page 9

Page 10

Page 11

Page 12

Page 13

Page 14

Page 15

Page 16

Page 17

Page 18

Page 19

Page 20

Page 21

Page 22

Page 23

Page 24

Page 25

Page 26

Page 27

Page 28

Page 29

Page 30

Page 31

Page 32

Page 33

Page 34

Page 35

Page 36

Page 37

Page 38

Page 39

Page 40

Page 41

Page 42

Page 43

Page 44

Page 45

Page 46

Page 47

Page 48

Page 49

Page 50

Page 51

Page 52

Page 53

Page 54

Page 55

Page 56

Page 57

Page 58

Page 59

Page 60

Page 61

Page 62

Page 63

Page 64

Page 65

Page 66

Page 67

Page 68

Page 69

Page 70

Page 71

Page 72

Page 73

Page 74

Page 75

Page 76

Page 77

Page 78

Page 79

Page 80

Page 81
Search
results in pages
Metadata
Clubs-Tavern Club
CLUBS:- Tavern Club
ABIGAIL, the Library Catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Page 1 of 2
Massachusetts
Historical Society
ABIGAIL
Founded
1791
the Library Catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society
Search
Titles
History
Help
ABIGAIL Home
Database Name: Massachusetts Historical Society
Search Request: Keyword Anywhere = Boston clubs
Search Results: Displaying 8 of 100008 entries
Previous
Next
Bibliographic
Holdings
Table of Contents
MARC View
Tavern Club records,
Relevance:
Format:
Mixed Material
Electronic resources:
Click here to access the guide to this collection.
Call number(s):
OFFSITE STORAGE
Request unavailable
Please follow the link to the electronic resource. Requesting may be
possible there.
Ms. N-200 (oversize only)
Creator:
Tavern Club (Boston, Mass.)
Title:
Tavern Club records, 1879-1992.
Description:
19 record cartons (stored offsite) and 8 oversize boxes (stored
onsite). Preliminary arrangement only.
Restrictions:
THE BULK OF THIS COLLECTION IS STORED OFFSITE.
ADVANCE NOTICE IS REQUIRED FOR ACCESS TO THIS
COLLECTION.
Collection is on deposit. Users must sign an agreement regarding
procedures of use for this collection.
Scope:
Records of the Tavern Club, a Boston social club founded in 1884
by and for men primarily interested in the arts and sciences.
Records include members' files, annual meeting and committee
http://balthazaar.masshist.org/cgi-bin/Pwebrecon.cgi?v1=8&ti=1,8&Search%5FArg=Bosto...
3/1/2020
The Neighborbood
35
III
Street. "Bright, active-minded and energetic," refined and
cultured, interested in the arts, literature and science, they
The Neighborhood
were far from being of the "dangerous classes" Mayor Palmer
alluded to, but banded together together because of their
artistic tastes. "It occurred to some of them after a time that
of the Tavern Club
it might be possible and agreeable to form a small club, to
which congenial persons might be admitted, where they could
JOHN T. GALVIN
dine regularly in company, and where they could have full
control of the arrangements," one of them recalled later.
On July I, 1884, the young men hired rooms at I Park
In 1883, Chester A. Arthur was in the White House. Ben-
Square, at the easterly corner of Boylston Street, beneath the
jamin F. Butler was Governor of Massachusetts. The state's
studio of artist Frederick Porter Vinton, and over the grocery
two U.S. Senators were Henry Laurens Dawes of Pittsfield
store of F. C. Lord and Company. On July 25, 1884, they
and George Frisbie Hoar of Worcester. All were Republicans,
held their first meeting in the club rooms "to effect an orga-
except Butler, a sometime Republican candidate, elected as a
nization." The name "Tavern Club" was suggested by Dr.
Democrat. Albert Palmer (Republican) of Roxbury, a native
Royal Whitman. "The Tavern Club was organized by a group
of Candia, New Hampshire, graduate of Dartmouth College,
of painters, writers, musicians, doctors, and other good com-
a former teacher at Boston Latin School, and treasurer of the
pany with [William Dean] Howells as our first president,"
Jamaica Pond Ice Company, was serving his single one-year
wrote Owen Wister (Tavern President, 1929-1935). "Henry
term as Mayor of Boston.
Irving was our first guest of honor. He came to supper after
In his Inaugural Address, Mayor Palmer had spoken of
the play and stayed until six the next morning. I sang him a
Boston as "in many respects, the model municipality of the
lot of songs, and went down at nine to my hard high stool,
continent. In a time of great public blessings," Palmer con-
at 40 State Street [Union Safe Deposit Vaults] with quite a
tinued, "when the mercies of Providence are being dispensed
head." Three years later, when their "somewhat ramshackle
to us with a bountiful hand, let us not esteem it the least of
building" was slated for demolition, the Tavern Club moved
them that we are a metropolis that has no 'dangerous classes'
around the corner to Number 4 Boylston Place, not far from
of any considerable strength, and needs not, as do some of
the Boston Public Library, which was then on Boylston
the cities of older civilizations, to lie in terror and rise up in
Street. "This quiet cul-de-sac" was lined on both sides with
dread of its own inhabitants."
houses, three of which, like the one purchased by the Tavern
It was at this time that several young men, "unmarried and
Club, had been constructed about 1819 by one Beza Tucker.
without definite homes where they took their meals," began
The others had been built during a South End building boom
meeting often at a restaurant on Church Street called the
in 1855.
Carrollton, and, later, at an Italian restaurant on Boylston
The Tavern Club bought the house next door to it in 1909.
Charles B, Everitt.
The Tavern club at One Hundred
1959-1984. Boston: The Taven Club,
1984.
38
The Tavern at One Hundred
The Neighborhood
39
Number 5 was connected to Number 4 by a bridge across an
also introduced. In general, nevertheless, Number 4 looked
alley leading to Columbus Place (which, in turn, led to Eliot
SO much as it had since 1887 that the fire was almost forgotten.
Street). This addition provided space for a billiard room on
The other major threat to the club's Boylston Place home
the second floor and a guest bedroom above. The construction
began in the early 1970's when Boston Urban Associates,
of the Eliot Street Garage shortly after World War I destroyed
Inc., headed by developer Mortimer Zuckerman, cast a
most of the houses beyond the Tavern Club, and several
greedy eye on the 34 acres bounded by Boylston-Essex and
buildings along Eliot Street, and eliminated Columbus Place.
Stuart-Kneeland Streets, between Arlington and Knapp. Ac-
"Patrons on foot, including many Taverners, happily entered
cording to a letter the Tavern Club received from the Boston
the garage from Boylston Place until early 1971, when the
Redevelopment Authority at the time, Boston Urban Asso-
doorway was walled up, but the little street has always re-
ciates planned to "provide a development link between the
mained a cul-de-sac as far as wheeled vehicles are concerned,"
Downtown, Retail and Office centers and the Back Bay" to
Walter Muir Whitehill wrote. In 1920, the Tavern Club
"strengthen and improve this area." Historic buildings along
bought Number 6 Boylston Place, and for many years the
the easterly side of Boylston Street were to be demolished in
apartments in that building were rented. In 1983, the top
favor of high rise office buildings. The Tavern Club faced
floors at Nos. 5 and 6 were leased and renovated as head-
two alternatives: either to be surrounded, and dwarfed by,
quarters of the India Wharf Rats, an old Boston social club,
40-story structures, or to allow its buildings to be eliminated.
a most welcome new tenant in Boylston Place.
John D. Warner, Director of the Boston Redevelopment Au-
Since the Tavern Club's move to Boylston Place a century
thority, held out little hope for the club, indicating that saving
ago, it has had to face two emergencies that threatened its
the Tavern's buildings did not fit in with the plan for the
existence there. The first was the near fatal fire-fatal to the
area. He suggested the Tavern Club relocate near the Quincy
building, but not, of course, to the spirit of Taverners-that
Market.
occurred in the early morning of December 23, 1956. The
"Stripped of all legalisms," Taverner Brad Trafford pointed
fire destroyed everything above the first floor. It was decided
out in an advisory to Club Treasurer Andrew Willis on Oc-
to rebuild. (Whitehill said that the member who raised the
tober 12, 1971, "the notion behind the Project is that it is
possibility of moving to another location "narrowly escaped
perfectly all right to take a man's land from him by force,
being strung up on the nearest lamp post.") Taverners of the
tear down his building at public expense, pay him a sum
architectural fraternity, traditional, modern and middle-of-
determined by litigation, and then give the site to another
the-road, all devised plans for reconstruction. It was decided
man, all simply because there is reasonable hope that the
instead to restore the "musty ruin to its original dinginess,"
second man will arrange to put up a more expensive and
and the dining room on the second floor and theatre on the
correspondingly more taxable building."
third became much as they had been before the conflagration.
On August 2, 1971, Mayor Kevin H. White submitted the
As a concession to modern times, an elevator was installed,
plan for renewal of the area and for a "cooperation agreement"
gift of Taverner W. Cameron Forbes, former Governor-Gen-
between the BRA and the City of Boston. From September
eral of the Philippine Islands. New kitchen equipment was
to the end of the year, the Boston City Council held 16 public
40
The Tavern at One Hundred
The Neighborbood
41
hearings on the proposal. On September 21, the Tavern's
were guests of the Tavern Club at lunch, the purpose of
President, David McCord, Secretary Stacy Holmes and Fran-
which was to discuss the project. Hal Lyman was chairman
cis W. Hatch, Sr., represented the Club at one of these
of this ad hoc meeting with His Honor. No commitments were
hearings. They urged the City Council to preserve the Tavern
made, but again, Taverners had an opportunity to press their
Club as a significant landmark whose artistic, literary and
case. The mayor seemed sympathetic. On June 6, 1972,
theatrical tradition had made many contributions to the qual-
Mayor White informed President McCord that he and Ken-
ity of life in Boston. Hatch told how the Club, facing the
ney had "taken a personal interest in the matter."
crisis of the fire of 1956, had worked desperately to stay at
"I can assure you," Mayor White wrote, "that membership
the same location. "There were a few good-natured words
in the Tavern Club will be informed of any action which will
from councilmen," Stacy Holmes reported, "and the attitude
affect the future location of the Tavern Club."
was cordial and sympathetic." It was not sympathetic enough.
The first break came on June 9, 1972 when, after several
On December 6, the council approved the redevelopment
hearings, the Massachusetts Department of Community Af-
plan. On December 8, 1971, it gave the first of two required
fairs, headed by Commissioner Miles Mahoney, rejected the
approvals for a loan of $6.8 million for certain public improve-
Park Plaza Development plan. On June 12, 1972, Boston City
ments in connection with the Park Plaza Project. On Decem-
Councillor Christopher lanella moved to rescind the $6.8
ber 27, it again voted the loan, and, two days later, Mayor
million loan, a move that would have killed it. Councillor
White gave the plan his unqualified approval. It also had the
Albert O'Neil voted with Ianella, while seven councillors-
backing of the Governor, business, labor and the daily press.
DiCara, Kerrigan, McDonough, Moakley, O'Leary, Piemonte
The matter was not all one-sided. During this frenzied
and Tierney-supported the mayor and voted for the loan.
activity by the proponents, opposition began to build when
On June 12, 1973, the plan was resubmitted to the state. The
citizens realized that the Park Plaza Project was not only a
Department of Community Affairs rejected it then and on
threat to buildings within the area, but also the adjoining
three additional occasions. On February 4, 1974, the Boston
neighborhoods (Bay Village, Back Bay), Boston Common and
City Council rescinded approval of the plan and the "coop-
the Public Garden. The plan envisioned structures SO tall that
eration agreements" of 1971. A week later, Mayor White
their deep shadows would have inhibited enjoyment of the
vetoed that action, contending that the Council "cannot ab-
Common and the Garden for all time. The 40-story towers
rogate an agreement or contract for development." Mahoney
would have caused gusts of wind up to 60 miles an hour in a
was fired for his opposition. One reporter wrote that the battle
city that does not need any more wind. Heading the oppo-
was like covering politics in the Middle East, and it was far
sition were the Friends of the Public Garden (whose president
from over.
was and still is Taverner Henry Lee) and the Park Square
Citizen pressure led to the formation of the Park Plaza Civic
Improvement Association. A large share of the opposition's
Advisory Committee, consisting of civic, business and com-
legal expenses was met by individual Taverners.
munity organizations. Although unfunded for a year, the
On Tuesday, April 18, 1972, Mayor White and Robert T.
CAC set to work feverishly to bring about a realistic compro-
Kenney, Director of the Boston Redevelopment Authority,
mise for the development of the area. In March, 1974, Lewis
42
The Tavern at One Hundred
1 be Neighborhood
43
S. C. Crampton, the new Commissioner of the Massachusetts
height of buildings around Boston Common and the Public
Department of Community Affairs, approved the compro-
Garden.
mise plan. There was no action by the Boston City Council
The process of realistic compromise entered its first stage
in 1975.
with the demolition of the Eliot Street Garage, the Union
On January 12, 1976, the Park Plaza Civic Advisory Com-
Oyster House adajacent to the garage and the Gary Theatre
mittee submitted a 57-page report to the Boston Redevelop-
(formerly the Plymouth, built in 1911). On this site the Com-
ment Authority, dealing with such problems as wind and
monwealth of Massachusetts has erected an 8-story, $91 mil-
shadow, traffic and air quality, noise and vibration. It con-
lion red brick building which meets the height restrictions
tained 29 specific recommendations, one of which concerned
devised in the Park Plaza fight. Along with housing the state's
height. It advocated limiting to 125 feet the height along
transportation agencies, it will have 18-hour-a-day mixed use
Stuart Street and Boylston Street, between Tremont Street
activities on the ground floor. Designed by a Taverner, the
and Hadassah Way, with a 50-foot setback, a far cry from
late Marvin Goody of Goody, Clancy & Associates, the build-
the 40-story structures in the original proposal. All the Ad-
ing will make it possible for the first time since 1971, not only
visory Committee's recommendations eventually were
for Taverners to park in an adjacent building in the evening,
adopted by the Boston Redevelopment Authority. The Bos-
but also to walk through an atrium from Stuart Street to the
ton City Council took no action in 1976, but on November
conviviality of Number 4 Boylston Place.
23, the State supported a project radically reduced in scope.
The State Transportation Building will be fully occupied
On December 28, 1977, Boston Urban Associates agreed to
by the summer of 1984. It is the first of two major buildings
alter the original plan SO that the Commonwealth could build
in the Park Square area. On the western corner of Park
a transportation building. At that time, Robert F. Walsh was
Square, where many Taverners have parked their cars in
Director of the Boston Redevelopment Authority. On the
recent years, the Four Seasons Hotel and Condominiums are
same day, the city council unanimously approved the new
under construction. Scheduled to be completed in 1985, this
plan. On June 6, 1977, the mayor submitted to the council a
will provide 283 luxury hotel rooms and 100 condominium
request for approval of the amended project, reduced in scope
apartments.
and height, and this compromise passed.
Other changes are under way in the neighborhood of the
The long-drawn-out battle to save the neighborhood of the
Tavern Club. Early in 1983, Emerson College acquired the
Tavern Club was an historic one, whose effect will be felt for
Saxon Theatre on Tremont Street. Known to all Taverners
many years to come, not only in the immediate area of the
as the Majestic, it was built in 1903, the "second of Eban
Club but all across the city. The banding together of neigh-
Jordan's three benefactions to Boston" (the others: Jordan Hall
borhood groups set a model for citizen action. A "miserable
and the Boston Opera House, of happy memory). According
proposal," as Walter Whitehill called it, went down to defeat.
to Douglass Shand Tucci, the handsome old Majestic "is the
Taverners named Hatch, Lally, Lee, Lodge, Saltonstall, Traf-
only known local work of famous Boston architect, John
ford and others too numerous to mention here, were vital to
Galen Howard, who, after MIT, the Ecole des Beaux Arts
this effort, whose success set such essential guidelines for the
and an apprenticeship with H. H. Richardson, sought his
44
The Tavern at One Hundred
The Neighborbood
45
opportunity out west where he became a very distinguished
there was for years "a magnificent concentration of dealers in
architect and teacher." Emerson College plans to spend $1.5
music and musical instruments." A few remain. The Boston
million on the restoration of the Majestic, the first college to
Music Company at 116 Boylston Street, an old and respected
move into the theatre district with its own productions, which
neighbor of the Tavern Club, retains one of the handsomest
will include a variety of dramatic, musical theatre and theatre
store fronts in the city. One small company selling pianos and
for children presentations by students.
organs is sandwiched in between a pizza parlor and a beauty
The Shubert Theatre, built in 1904, and the Wilbur, de-
academy. At 156 Boylston Street, Carl Fischer ("when you
signed by Clarence Blackhall, the first president of the Boston
think of music it is only natural you think of ") can still
Architectural Club, and constructed in 1914, are both very
provide Taverners and others musically inclined with band,
much in business. The Metropolitan Theatre, built in 1925,
orchestral and choral music. In Steinert Hall at 162 Boylston
one of the largest theatres in the world, has gone through
Street (the corner of what was Carver Street), M. Steinert has
several changes in recent years. As the Metropolitan Center,
been in business since 1896. The showroom still features
under the guidance of Taverners David Crockett and Harry
Steinway pianos and Baldwin organs. Two stories below,
Lodge, it installed a new acoustical system and deepened the
there is still an auditorium for 650 people, now, alas, much
stage to accommodate large dance and opera companies. Re-
in need of repair. (When Steinert Hall opened on Dec. 15,
cently, it was renamed the Wang Center for the Performing
1896, the Boston Sunday Journal gave it an entire page. Of
Arts for its most generous benefactor, Dr. An Wang of Wang
the auditorium it said: "Here, 35 feet below the level of
Laboratories and his family. The Wang gift of $4 million
Boylston Street, away from the noise and bustle of traffic,
includes $1 million for interior and exterior renovations (al-
and the confusion of sound of everyday life, there lies hidden
ready completed), and $3 million to be matched by other
a temple of music-one of the daintiest, most artistic and
contributions by 1985. Chairman of the Wang Center's chal-
unique ever built, surpassingly beautiful to the eye and trium-
lenge fund drive is Taverner George P. Gardner, Jr., who, at
phantly successful to the ear.")
this writing, already has reached $1 million of this goal. On
Boylston Place, itself, will be changing. It is scheduled for
the north side of the Wilbur, on that odd lot at the corner of
rehabilitation. By the middle of 1984, the Tavern Club, Boar's
Tremont and Stuart Streets, a new 10-story building is
Head Tavern and Next Move Theatre will become more
planned for theatrical and advertising offices and, on its first
familiar Boston landmarks as Boylston Place becomes a major
two floors, a restaurant. Construction is expected to start in
pedestrian link from Boston Common through the Transpor-
the summer of 1984. Architect in charge: Taverner Hugh
tation Building to the theatre district. New lighting and a
Shepley of Shepley, Bulfinch, Richardson and Abbott.
newly resurfaced street will transform this pot-holed, disrep-
Along Boylston Street, the old Touraine Hotel has "gone
utable alley, and make the Tavern Club a more visible part
condominium," and the Little, Colonial and Walker Buildings
of the neighborhood. Free-standing art, trees and benches are
have been, or are being, renovated. The Colonial Theatre,
expected to bring the public to Boylston Place, but more
Clarence Blackhall's 1900 masterpiece, is still bringing theatre
significantly, Boylston Place will bring historic and cultural
companies to Boston. Between the theatre and Park Square
enjoyment to the public.
214 The Tavern at One Hundred
Memorials
215
table, usually sitting where the compass points northeast. The
WILLIAM JAMES
small coffee cup is there beside him, untouched, just as Nick
*
1962 *
carefully put it down, the saucer on top, never underneath.
And he is saying
But you, too, can hear.
It was my good luck to know William James intimately for
Thomas Adams
more than fifty years, but to try to give an impression of the
man is very difficult. Probably impossible. He was like no
one else I have ever known. A shy person, who had many
friends, a brave person who usually knew where he stood and
expressed his views, a democratic person who was always
discovering some shy writer in New York City. Bill was
devoted to his father and mother in a mystical kind of way.
He, himself, read very little philosophy, nor did he suffer
philosophers gladly, but to some observing person who had
been caught by a word, or a phrase or a chapter of what his
father had written, he would devote hours.
Bill was a good athlete but not a winning one. As bow oar
on the Harvard crew he was more interested in why the water
hit his oar quicker when he was rowing No. 6 than in the
time the shell was making.
Bill thought he knew no philosophy, but he lived it-the
kind his father believed in. The butler of a very well-known
man in New York once took me aside and said: "I have been
all over the world in the last twenty-five years but the greatest
gentleman I have seen is William James."
He was an idealist. He never read a Sunday newspaper.
Too many trees were destroyed to create the Sunday edition.
And these oppositions were all observed quietly. He hated
bigness. Much as he loved Harvard, for his own sake and for
his father's sake, his devotion was tempered by the fact that,
in his judgment, it was too big.
He was a perfectionist. After a portrait which he had done
was finished as far as anyone could see, he would put in an
extra touch or two, in his judgment ruin it, and then consign
216 The Tavern at One Hundred
Memorials
217
it to the waste basket. Like one of his Uncle Henry's heroes,
BENJAMIN JOY
he was never satisfied, never content. The portrait in our
*
1969 *
dining room was the exception. It came at the end.
He lies in that lovely meadow at Chocorua, near the big
Benjamin Joy was a member of the Tavern from 1912-1969.
rock, facing the lake.
He loved the Tavern for fifty-seven years as one cares for a
Lewis Perry
best friend.
Ben had a sparkle about him, a bubbling sense of humor
and a keen sense of fun. Until his eighties, this very human
quality never faltered. It was his hallmark, like "Sterling"
stamped on real silver.
In addition, he was a man of infinite variety. As a Harvard
College undergraduate at the turn of the century-despite
being quite able if occasion suited to wear a sober, serious
demeanor-he raised some notable Hell in secret pranks, as
undergraduates in those times used to do for daring and for
fun.
After graduation, he was by turn engaged in Boston news-
paper work and later in commercial banking (at a surprisingly
high level for his youth); still later, in investment banking in
New York, in foreign banking in Paris; and ultimately as
Paris partner of Morgan et Cie on the Place Vendôme until
his retirement. During World War II, his service in the Amer-
ican Army of Occupation in Germany was recognized by the
award of a Distinguished Service Medal.
On returning to America in his sixties, he retired to a large
wooded estate in Harvard, Massachusetts, commanding an
exquisite prospect of distant mounatains; and delighted there
to entertain his many friends, to take prodigious walks and
to chop prodigious quantities of firewood. Later, in surprise
at still being alive and spry, he returned to the area of his
forefathers, taking residence at 41 Beacon Street, appropri-
ately just below Joy Street, in a spacious apartment with tall
windows looking out over the Frog Pond. The return of the
2
The Neighborhood of the
Copyright 1971 by the Bostonian Society
Tavern Club, 1630-1971
By WALTER MUIR WHITEHILL
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
M
A. DEWOLFE HOWE in his 1934 semicentennial history of the Tavern
Club recalled how young men in the nineties had sung, when sufficiently
elevated, a topographical ballad that began:
DEC 7 1989
There's Berkeley and Dover,
Tremont and Hanover-
Frances Loeb Library
Graduate School of Design
But ach du lieber Boylston Street!
AIP4662
As the Tavern Club has never been more than a stone's throw away from Boyl-
ston Street in the eighty-seven years of its life, its members, friends, and neigh-
GIFT OF PREOF JOHN COOLIDGE
bors may have some reasonable curiosity about the region and the changes that
it has weathered in the 34 I years that have passed since Boston was settled in
1630.
Through the colonial period, this was a rural, unsettled patch of country be-
tween the southwest extremity of the Common and the muddy shore of the
Back Bay, which was covered by water only at high tide. Washington Street,
the only dry-shod connection with the Roxbury mainland, was named in honor
of the general only in 1788; that portion of Boston's main thoroughfare be-
tween Essex Street and the fortifications (at today's Dover Street) on the nar-
row neck of land that connected Boston with the rest of New England was
previously known as Orange Street. On Captain John Bonner's map of 1722,
the first to be published, Frog Lane is shown running northwest from Orange
Street to the Common; a few scattered houses and a large number of trees are
represented on it. Although the building in 1732 of a new Congregational meet-
inghouse in Hollis Street, presided over by the Reverend Mather Byles, poet,
punster, and wit, gave this end of town a new social coherence, Frog Lane
looked as rural on the Bonner map of 1769 as it had in 1722.
In 1740 when the three seventeenth-century burying grounds in Boston-
King's Chapel, the Granary, and Copp's Hill-were becoming overcrowded,
various undertakers and gravediggers petitioned the selectmen to buy a new
cemetery in the south end of the town. With that alacrity that has always charac-
73.8
terized municipal affairs in Boston, a committee that was appointed eight years
W54
Boston, MA: Bostoni an Society, 1971.
TheTOWN of
CharlesRiver
BOSTON
IN
New England
by
John Bonner
1722
COMMON
Dorchefter Flatts.
\ NewPlan off Great Town of BOSTON Nin New Englandin AM
With the many Additionally Buildings New Street to the Year 1760
ChartesRiver
COMMON
Scalcof Male
The region as shown in the 1722 and 1769 editions of Captain John Bonner's map of Boston.
it, but as they are paid by the piece, or work they do, there is no other restraint
upon them but to come at 8 o'clock in the morning, and return at 6 in the
evening. They are the daughters of decayed families, and are girls of character-
none others are admitted This is a work of public utility and private ad-
vantage." It was also the source of the frigate Constitution's first suit of sails.
When in April 1787 the Hollis Street meetinghouse of 1732 burned, it was
replaced within the year by a new one that was Charles Bulfinch's first venture
in church architecture in Boston. This structure, although admired as far afield
as Philadelphia, served the congregation for less than twenty-five years, for the
Boston Gazette of I February 1810 carried this ingenuous advertisement:
Meeting-House for Sale
The Meeting-House of Rev. Mr. Holley in Hollis Street, being found
too small to accommodate the society worshipping there, and being of
wood, cannot conveniently be enlarged, the proprietors have determined
to take down the present House, and to erect a brick one of enlarged
dimentions. Notice is hereby given to any society in the vicinity of Bos-
Second meetinghouse of Hollis Street Church, 1787, designed by Charles Bulfinch, engraved
ton, that may be about to build a House for Public Worship-that the
for Massachusetts Magazine, IV, December 1793.
materials of the present house will be disposed of on very reasonable
terms, and liberal credit-the principal part of which are as good as new.
Application must be made prior to the Ist of March, to either of the
later spent six more years considering the problem before a two-acre lot between
Subscribers:-
the Common and Frog Lane was purchased in 1754. Finally on 24 November
WM. DALL,
1756 the selectmen concluded that the "Burying Place at the foot of the Com-
J.D. WILLIAMS,
mon was fit to bury the dead in" and appointed a caretaker. This fourth town
EPH'M THAYER,
burial place was called the South Burying Ground until 1810 when with the
creation of a new one further south on Washington Street, it acquired its present
JABEZ ELLIS,
Jos. RICHARDS.
official designation of the Central Burying Ground.
Thirty years later the quick joined the dead in Frog Lane, for the first factory
Boston, Jan. 17, 1810.
for the manufacture of cotton duck for sailcloth was set up in 1789 in a large
lot on the corner of Tremont Street, as the result of a bounty offered by the
N. B.-Any person having Bricks, Stone, Lyme, and other materials
General Court to encourage this industry. George Washington, who was taken
wanted to complete the New House, will please apply as above.
to see it on 28 October 1789 as one of the important sights in Boston during his
state visit, noted in his diary that "it appeared to be carrying on with spirit, and
Although a used meetinghouse would hardly seem a saleable commodity
is in a prosperous way. They have manufactured 32 pieces of Duck of 30 or
today, a buyer was found, for the building was dismantled and moved by water
40 yds. each in a week; and expect in a short time to increase it. They have 28
to Weymouth where it was set up again, although with an altered façade and
looms at work, and 14 girls spinning with both hands, (the flax being fastened
without its twin towers. In the days before streets were encumbered by over-
to their waste.) Children (girls) turn the wheels for them, and with this as-
head wires, Bostonians seem to have thought nothing of moving buildings. The
sistance each spinner can turn out 14 lbs. of thread per day when they stick to
Abbé Claude Robin, a French Army chaplain who came to Boston in 1781,
Third meetinghouse of Hollis Street Church, 1811, interior.
In this instance there was the convenience of being able to float the discarded
meetinghouse down the harbor to Weymouth by raft. It was noted by a resi-
dent of Weymouth in 1877 that this "comely, symmetrical little building" was
still in use though "the people there have done their best to spoil it by remodelling
and modernizing it. Luckily they had not money enough to quite spoil it." The
Third meetinghouse of Hollis Street Church, 1811, exterior.
building was, however, destroyed by fire in 1897. The new third Hollis Street
observed in his New Travels through North-America (Boston, 1784) of wooden
meetinghouse, of brick with a graceful spire, was dedicated on 3 January 1811.
When the ropewalks between Pearl and Atkinson Streets burned in 1794,
buildings in New England:
the townspeople of Boston (in the words of Mayor Nathaniel B. Shurtleff)
All the parts of these buildings are so well joined, and their weight is so
"opened their hearts, though they closed their senses" by granting the owners
equally divided, and proportionate to their bulk, that they may be re-
the marshy flats at the foot of the Common for the erection of buildings to re-
moved from place to place with little difficulty. I have seen one of two
place those destroyed. Thus ropemaking came to part of the area that is today
stories high removed above a quarter of a mile, if not more, and the
the Public Garden, giving Frog Lane somewhere to go. Having acquired a
whole French army have seen the same thing done at Newport. What
destination, the road fifteen years later was given the more urban designation
they tell us of the travelling habitations of the Scythians is far less won-
of Boylston Street, for on 23 May 1809 John Quincy Adams (whose house was
derful.
on the site of the Hotel Touraine) laid the cornerstone for a new market house
Boylston Street, looking from Washington Street toward the
Common, about 1864. Boylston Market is in the left fore-
ground; on the right, at the intersection of Tremont Street,
a hoarding encloses the lot cleared after the burning of the
Winthrop House.
Boylston Hall and Market, photographed after 1876.
and hall on the southwest corner of Washington Street and Frog Lane. This
handsome building designed by Charles Bulfinch, was named in honor of
Adams' kinsman, Ward Nicholas Boylston, who gave the clock that adorned its
cupola. It relieved the congestion of Faneuil Hall in more ways than one, for
there were butcher stalls below and a hall above, which was for twenty-two
years the headquarters of the Handel and Haydn Society. Boylston Hall and
Market was, regrettably, like so many of Bulfinch's handsome buildings, de-
molished in 1888; its cupola and clock, moved first to the Crystal Lake Brewery
of William T. Van Nostrand and Co. in Charlestown, wound up decorating
Calvary Methodist Church in Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington. The Boylston
Building, designed by Carl Fehmer, that was constructed on the site of the
Bulfinch hall in 1888, is now somewhat shabby.
Putting ropewalks at the foot of the Common was a lamentable idea, for their
presence blocked any development of Boston to the westward. So in February
Park Square in 1837, from a contemporary lithograph by Robert Sturn, reproduced in 1902
by C. E. Goodspeed, showing the first Boston and Providence Railroad station.
Park Square houses in 1861, photographed from the tower of the second Boston and Providence
Railroad station. (Boston Public Library)
Boston Public Library, Boylston Street, about 1885. One of the red brick houses between the
Library and the Hotel Pelham has been replaced by a six-story bow-fronted commercial build-
ing, while the Adams house has given way to the Hotel Boylston, built in 1871. (Boston
Athenxum)
Boston Public Library, Boylston Street, before 1870. Between the library and the Hotel
Pelham are two four-story red brick houses. Part of the John Quincy Adams house can be
seen at the corner of Tremont Street beyond the Hotel Pelham.
Boston Public Library, Boylston Street, about 1899. The library has been abandoned and is
about to be demolished; Arthur Little's shop front at 44 has been altered; the Hotel Touraine
has replaced the Hotel Boylston, and the present Masonic Temple has been completed.
than four-sided, has been since 1855 known as Park Square. Like Scollay and
Copley Squares, this was an unplanned afterthought, set apart and dignified by
the name of square solely because of the increased use of buildings that faced
44 Boylston Street, between 1883 and 1885. This seven-story
upon it. Nevertheless Park Square and Boylston Street were soon filled with
commercial building, designed by Arthur Little in 1882, which
red brick Greek Revival houses of the sort familiar on Beacon Hill and in Bay
replaced the brick house next to the Public Library, housed
Village.
the tenants whose signs appear in the photograph only in those
three years. (Society for the Preservation of New England
The character of the portion of Boylston Street facing the Common was set
Antiquities)
by the construction there of the Boston Public Library's first building, for which
1824, when the site, so cheerfully given away thirty years before, was no longer
the cornerstone was laid on 17 September 1855. This imposing edifice, designed
remote, the city regained this land by paying the owners the large sum of
by Charles Kirk Kirby, was opened on New Year's Day 1858, and served for
$55,000. Notions of dividing the area into streets or turning it into a cemetery
thirty-seven years until the present library in Copley Square was completed in
were squelched at a general meeting of citizens held on 26 July 1824, which
1895. Just as the Boston Public Library pioneered in its field, the adjacent Hotel
sustained Mayor Josiah Quincy's view that the land that today comprises the
Pelham, built in 1857 at the corner of Boylston and Tremont Streets, was the
Public Garden should be annexed to the Common "and forever after kept open
first apartment house in any city along the Atlantic seaboard of the United
and free of buildings of any kind, for the use of the citizens." In the next decade
States. Its builder, the opthalmologist Dr. John Homer Dix (1811-1884),
Boylston Street and Charles Street (which separated the Common from the new
having been impressed by the manner of life in French cities, tried the type
Public Garden) became main entrances to the city, for the Boston and Provi-
here, complete with mansard roof. Like the old City Hall in School Street, and
the design of Commonwealth Avenue, the Hotel Pelham was a clear reflection
dence Railroad, which opened in 1835, brought its trains across the Bay Bay
on trestles to a station in Pleasant Street in what, although triangular rather
of the style of the French Second Empire. King's Handbook of Boston in 1878
spoke of the Pelham as the first instance of "the 'French flat' or Continental
ENAL
Hotel Pelham before being moved in 1869. The Adams house is on the left.
system of dwellings, sometimes called 'family hotels'-a single tenement oc-
cupying the whole or part of a floor, instead of several floors in a house." The
original architect is unknown, but when in 1869 the city undertook to widen
Tremont Street, Nathaniel J. Bradlee superintended the moving of the struc-
ture, which covered 5,800 square feet of ground and weighed an estimated
10,000 tons. This engineering feat would have enchanted the Abbé Robin, for
the huge mass of masonry was successfully moved without disturbing the oc-
cupants or disarranging the interior.
A similar feat was noted by Charles Francis Adams in his diary on 29 August
1870: "The Boylston Market has been moved eleven feet, in the same way that
the Pelham Hotel was moved last year. And the Street will be a fine one."
Earlier in the year Adams had demolished his father's former residence at the
corner of Tremont and Boylston Streets and begun the construction of a five-
story stone building in the Gothic manner, designed by W. T. Sears of the
architectural firm of Cummings and Sears. Although the foundations were laid
in May 1870 and the exterior of the building was nearly completed by Christmas,
Hotel Pelham being moved in 1869 for widening of Tremont Street. (Boston Public Library)
Adams noted on 20 January 1871: "The question yet remains what use to put
it to." It seems extraordinary, even in the world of real estate speculation, to
Hotel Touraine under construction in 1897. (Boston Athenium)
have built so elaborate a building without any clear conviction of its purpose
other than as a source of profit; eventually it became the Hotel Boylston, an-
other instance of "French flats," like the Pelham across the way. Its life was
brief, for before the end of the nineteenth century the Boylston was supplanted
by the taller Hotel Touraine, designed by Nathaniel J. Bradlee's successors,
Winslow and Wetherell, with a profusion of well-executed French Renaissance
detail. Karl Baedeker in the 1899 edition of his United States approvingly de-
scribed the Touraine as "a large and sumptuously equipped house, with internal
decorations in the style of the Château of Blois, a handsome library with 4,000
well chosen volumes, a view over the Common and a telephone in every room;
R. from $2 (without bath) or $3 (with bath), meals à la carte." The Touraine
continued to be admired for a quarter of a century; thereafter with competition
from newer hotels it gradually slipped. Having been closed in the late sixties as a
hotel, it has now been converted into apartments; the upper floors of the exterior
are as handsome as ever, although the ground floor has been vulgarized by in-
congruous "modernization."
On the opposite corner of Boylston and Tremont Streets there stood in the
middle of the nineteenth century the six-story hotel known as the Winthrop
Ruins of the Winthrop House after the fire of 5 April 1864.
Masonic Temple, built 1864-1867.
House, which burned on the night of 5 April 1864. Its site was soon occupied
ing the Civil War by the addition of a one-story wing, at which time the clock
by a seven-story granite Gothic Masonic Temple, with octagonal towers 120
was placed in a new tower, where it could be seen more readily from a distance.
feet high, designed by Merrill G. Wheelock. The cornerstone was laid on
Columbus Avenue, projected in 1860 from Park Square to the Roxbury line
14 October 1864, and the building was dedicated on 24 June 1867 with cere-
over land of the Boston Water-Power Company running parallel to the Boston
monies that included an immense street parade in which President Andrew
and Providence tracks, was begun in 1868. As first laid out it began at Church
Johnson marched. This Masonic Temple was replaced in 1897-1899 by the
Street, directly behind the Boston and Providence station. To carry it through
present granite one, designed by Loring and Phipps in a more restrained style.
without altering course to Park Square required the demolition of the passenger
For the last two-thirds of the nineteenth century Park Square was dominated
station, a matter that the city negotiated with the railroad in 1870-1871. Con-
by successive stations of the Boston and Providence Railroad. The simple temple-
sequently a new Gothic station designed by Peabody and Stearns, with an im-
like shed that served as a terminal when service began in 1835 was soon re-
pressive clock tower, was built at a cost of $800,000 on the triangular site
placed by a brick station, with a large clock on its roof. This was enlarged dur-
between Columbus Avenue and Providence Street now occupied by the Statler-
Winslow Lewis house (on Boylston Street between Carver Street and Park Square) and the
second Boston and Providence Railroad station, about 1857.
Hilton Hotel and the adjacent office building. The new station was proudly
hailed by King's Handbook of Boston (1878) as "the most convenient and com-
fortable, as well as the most beautiful, architecturally speaking, in the United
States, and
the longest in the world, being 850 feet from end to end."
Arlington Street then ran only from Beacon to Boylston Streets, for the new
passenger station extended to the middle of the Arlington-Berkeley block.
Berkeley Street, however, connected the Back Bay with the South End, then as
now, by a bridge over the tracks. Train yards occupied a large area directly be-
hind St. James Avenue in the Berkeley-Clarendon block. Clarendon Street
ended at the tracks, which Dartmouth Street crossed by bridge. This Gothic
The enlarged second Boston and Providence Railroad station shortly
station lasted less than three decades, for in 1896 the Boston Terminal Company
before demolition. The ground floor of the Winslow Lewis house was
was organized to build in Atlantic Avenue at Summer Street a South Union
converted to a grocery store about 1870.
Station to accommodate all lines entering Boston from the south and west.
as an eyesore; only after the first world war did the region become a new busi-
When the New Haven Railroad, which had taken over the Boston and Provi-
ness district.
dence, moved this line to the South Station in 1900, the Park Square station and
In spite of the availability of "French flats" and the hurlyburly that surrounds
its yards were abandoned. Long after its demolition the yards remained vacant
a railroad station, the houses on Park Square were still being occupied by re-
Boston and Providence Railroad yards in the 1890s. The towers of the New Old South Church
and Trinity Church (left) rise behind the Hotel Ludlow at the corner of Clarendon Street and
Third Boston and Providence Railroad station in process of demolition. (Society for the Pres-
St. James Avenue.
ervation of New England Antiquities)
Site of Boston and Providence Railroad yards in the 1900s.
Third Boston and Providence Railroad station train shed in process of demolition. (Society for
the Preservation of New England Antiquities)
I
1 Park Square in the 1880s when the Tavern Club occupied the second floor. The attic roof of
the Winslow Lewis house was raised in the late 1870s to give greater height to William Morris
Hunt's studio. (M. A. DeWolfe Howe, A Partial, and not Impartial, Semi-Centennial History
of the Tavern Club, 1884-1934)
Dr. William Norton Bullard, the first Secretary of the Tavern Club, recalled
that "In the years 1883 and 1884 a small number of bright, active-minded,
energetic young men, unmarried and without definite homes where they took
their meals, found themselves in the habit of meeting at certain restaurants where
they could conveniently lunch and dine. More especially did they frequent one,
known as the Carrollton, on the corner of Church and Providence Streets, di-
rectly opposite what was then the side entrance of the Boston and Providence
Railroad Station. They were all interested in artistic, literary, or scientific
subjects, and they soon formed a small set among themselves, apart from the
other frequenters of these places. It occurred to some of them after a time that
it might be possible and agreeable to form a small club, to which congenial per-
sons might be admitted, where they could dine regularly in company, and where
Park Square gate of Boston Common about 1880, showing towers of Boston and Providence
Railroad station and Arlington Street Church.
they could have full control of the arrangements." Consequently in 1884 they
hired the second floor of I Park Square, the area above Lord's grocery and
below the studio of F.P. Vinton who had stated emphatically he would let it for
HOTEL
PELHAM
Boston
VAN RENSSELAER
T
The neighborhood of the future Tavern Club in 1874 as shown in G. M. Hopkins' atlas of
Boylston Place about 1890. (Drawing in John W. Farlow, The History of
the Boston Medical Library)
Boston.
Before the end of the nineteenth century the Boston Public Library migrated
anything except a whorehouse. In this former haunt of William Morris Hunt
to Copley Square, while the Boston Medical Library moved to a new building
was formed the Tavern Club, of which William Dean Howells became the first
in the Fenway beside the Massachusetts Historical Society. In the late nineties
president. A Mr. Vercelli, who ran a restaurant in Boylston Street, obliged as
Boylston Street was temporarily disturbed by the construction of the Tremont
steward; the first club dinner in the new quarters was served on I September
Street Subway, the first to be built for trolley car operation in the United States.
1884. The following month the first special dinner occurred, in honor of
The Boston Transit Commission, created by the Legislature in 1894, built the
Wilhelm Gericke, who had just arrived in Boston to succeed Georg Henschel
subway, which was owned by the City of Boston and leased for operation to the
as Conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. Guests at other special dinners
West End Street Railway Company (subsequently the Boston Elevated Rail-
in the first six months included Edmund Gosse, the actors Henry Irving and
now the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority). The first section, from
Lawrence Barrett, George Augustus Sala, and Mark Twain.
Park way, Street to the Public Garden, was opened on I September 1897. The west-
When the somewhat ramshackle I Park Square was scheduled for demolition
ern entrance was in Boylston Street between Arlington Street and Church
in 1887, the Tavern Club moved around the corner to a red brick house at
Street (now Hadassah Way). During World War I when automobiles in-
4 Boylston Place. This quiet cul-de-sac which led off Boylston Street just beyond
creased in number, a free parking space, capable of accommodating perhaps exit as
the Boston Public Library was then lined on both sides by similar houses. Just
as twenty cars, was created in Boylston Street between the subway
beyond the club an alley led through to Columbus Place, which in turn con-
and many Park Square. This was a refuge, reluctantly sought in extremities, by ag-
tinued to Eliot (now Stuart) Street. When the Tavern Club moved to the
grieved Bostonians who could find no curbside area nearer their destinations.
house where it has stayed for well over eighty years it had bookish neighbors
The Public Library in Boylston Street, deserted by its original occupants, was
besides the Boston Public Library, for the Boston Medical Library was across
leased in October 1896 to the Bowdoin Square Theatre for use as a pop concert
the place at number 19 and the Boston Library Society at number 18.
Subway exit (opened 1897, discontinued 1940) at Boylston and Arlington Streets in 1934.
Subway construction along Boylston Street on 1 May 1895, looking west.
The interior decorations of the theatre are in rich hues, crimson and
gold the prevailing tints. The dome shows arabesques on a gold ground,
forming a frame to eight groups of cupids. Jewels of varied colors set in
hall and beer garden, for entertainment and business were displacing learning
the walls below the cornice aid in producing brilliancy. The effect of
and residence as the characteristics of this corner of Boston. In 1884 the Hollis
the whole is heightened by the use of ivory and gold on the gallery fronts,
Street Church had migrated to the Back Bay, as many other downtown congre-
the designs for which are made up of cupids, flowers, and fruit.
gations had done, settling at the southeast corner of Newbury and Exeter
The Hollis Street Theatre for more than half a century was the home of
Streets in a red-brick turreted extravaganza, designed by George A. Meacham,
serious drama. The Agustin Daly Company performed there, as did Julia
that was destroyed in 1966. The shell of their 1811 meetinghouse was con-
Marlowe, Maude Adams, and Walter Hampden. It was demolished in 1935.
verted into the Hollis Street Theatre from designs of John B. Hall. Completed
As the Tremont Theatre had opened in 1889 in Tremont Street, near the
in November 1885, it was opened on the ninth with the first Boston perfor-
Masonic Temple, this corner of the city seemed on its way to becoming a theatre
mance of The Mikado, which ran through the entire winter. The 1,650 seats, 750
district. The disused Public Library was sold in February 1899 for $850,000 to
of which were on the orchestra floor, made this the fourth largest theatre in
the Frederick L. Ames estate, which demolished it and built a combined theatre
Boston. Bacon's Dictionary of Boston, published in 1886, commented approvingly
and office building on the site. The Colonial Theatre, a vast house, lavishly
upon the sumptuous appearance of the new building.
decorated with a profusion of gold, opened on 19 December 1900 with "Ben
Little Building (site of Hotel Pelham) and Colonial Building (site of Boston Public Library) in
1934.
Hur." Within the next fourteen years four other theatres were built only a block
or two away: the Majestic (1903), Shubert (1910), Plymouth (1911), and
Wilbur (1914). The ten-story Colonial Building, of which the theatre formed
a part, radically changed the scale and height of Boylston Street, with correspond-
ing repercussions in Boylston Place. The Boston Library Society in 1903 moved
from 18 Boylston Place to 114 Newbury Street where it remained until 1939
when, having lived too long on its capital, it was charitably absorbed by the
Boston Athenxum. In the second decade of the nineteenth century the Hotel
Pelham and adjacent structures were replaced by the Little Building, the most
glamorous office building of the era of World War I, complete with direct
access to the Boylston Street subway station and an Automat restaurant in the
basement that enchanted me as a small boy. Although the food and company
at the Tavern Club are infinitely preferable, I still remember the delight of
getting milk out of a lion's mouth after inserting a nickle Through most of the
twentieth century the ground-floor shops on Boylston Street between the
Colonial Theatre and Park Square have had a magnificent concentration of
dealers in music and musical instruments; precisely why I have never discovered,
for the block is far removed both from the old Music Hall near Hamilton Place
and Winter Place and its successor Symphony Hall and the New England Con-
servatory of Music in Huntington Avenue, but there they have been as long as I
can remember. Although I have never bought a piano from any of them, I would
feel lost without them, especially the Boston Music Company, at 116 Boylston
Street since 1926, which has one of the handsomest shop fronts in Boston.
116
BOSTON MUSIC CO
116
I
Shop front at 116 Boylston Street. (Boston Music Company)
The construction of the Eliot Street Garage soon after World War I caused
the demolition of the end houses of Boylston Place and the obliteration of Colum-
bus Place, as well as of a number of contemporary buildings along Eliot Street.
In 1909 members of the Tavern Club had bought the adjoining house at 5
Boylston Place, which was in 1914 annexed to number 4 by a bridge across the
alley leading to Columbus Place, which provided space for a pool table on the
second floor and a bedroom above. Number 6, owned by an old German musi-
cian, was bought in 1920 for protection, as the builders of the Eliot Street
Garage would have gained a right of way for an automobile entrance from
Boylston Place on 23 December 1956 during the Tavern Club fire. (Tavern Club)
Boylston Place had they been able to secure that property. Patrons on foot, in-
cluding many Taverners, happily entered the garage from Boylston Place until
Tavern Club Library in March 1971. (Stacy Holmes)
Hatch and John Harriman brought down the house, but the next morning the
clutter had been swept away and members were on hand for the admirable
Friday's fish chowder. Early on Saturday morning the twenty-third, a fire that
had started in a neighboring building at 144 Boylston Street swept into the
Tavern Club, gutting everything above the second floor. Fortunately the first
floor was undamaged except by smoke. In any other city a club would have re-
Tavern Club, Boylston Place in March 1971. (Stacy Holmes)
garded such a fire as a providential excuse to move to glittering new quarters
elsewhere. Not so in Boston. While other friendly clubs provided Taverners
early 1971 when the doorway was walled up, but the little street has always
with space for meetings, the reconstruction of 4 Boylston Place progressed. A
remained a cul-de-sac as far as wheeled vehicles are concerned.
single forward-looking type who had suggested the possibility of considering an-
Numbers 4, 5 and 6 are the only survivors that suggest the pleasantness of
other location narrowly escaped being strung up on the nearest lamp post. Unan-
Boylston Place when it was a residential enclave beside the Public Library.
limously the decision was made to rebuild and stay put. Francis W. Hatch,
Night clubs and beauty parlors have supplanted the Boston Medical Library
then President, was asked what was being done to preserve the dinginess. "Your
and the Boston Library Society as neighbors, but indoors the Tavern Club
President assured the questioner that every effort was being made to duplicate
goes happily on its way. On 21 December 1956 a Christmas play by Francis W.
our shabby gentility. 'I am glad to hear this,' observed the troubled one. 'Last
spring I asked a visitor from London to dine with me at the Tavern. He was
Tavern Club Dining Room at luncheon, March 1971. (Stacy Holmes)
The Librarian of the Tavern Club, R. H. Ives Gammell, seated below
the portrait of Holker Abbott by John Singer Sargent in March 1971.
(Stacy Holmes)
delighted with the place. He said, We have nothing in London any dingier!"
So at vast effort and expense the Tavern Club weathered the 1956 fire so
successfully that it is all but forgotten. Number 4 Boylston Place looks almost
exactly as it has since 1887; even though some convenience in the kitchen and
an elevator were surreptitiously introduced, the atmosphere is unchanged. May
it stay so for another eighty years, and then some. Solid Boston law firms may
have moved into new towers, and even bought new furniture, but none of their
partners, or anybody else, wants a stick of the Tavern Club changed, EVER.
Tavern Club Dining Room set for dinner, March 1971. (Stacy Holmes)
Acknowledgments
Except where noted in the captions, illustrations are from the collections of
the Bostonian Society. Several photographs were generously provided by the
Boston Athenxum, the Boston Public Library, and the Society for the Preserva-
tion of New England Antiquities, while Stacy Holmes especially took several
pictures of the Tavern Club. Marc Friedlander, Associate Editor of The Adams
Papers, generously furnished details of the construction of the Hotel Boylston,
while Frederic E. Delzell of the Boston Music Company provided a picture of
their fine shop front. Miss Barbara Timken assembled the illustrations, and was
of great assistance in preparing the final draft of the text.
W. M. W.
6432 036
Birth
2rob
A PARTIAL
(AND NOT IMPARTIAL)
SEMI-CENTENNIAL HISTORY
OF THE
NOBISC
HOLMES
LOWELL
.
CUSHING
LOEFFLER
TAVERN CLUB
CHAPMAN
PADEREWSKI
ADAMOWSKI
1884-1934
By M. A. DEWOLFE HOWE
THE SEMI-CENTENNIAL TRIPTYCH
(See page 153)
PRINTED FOR
THE TAVERN CLUB
MDCCCCXXXIV
I2
History of the Tavern Club
The Beginnings
I3
the Club was incorporated, begin with a section headed
the grocery shop on the corner of Boylston Street and
'Name and Purposes' and reading as follows: 'This
Park Square, having fitted up the second floor as a living
club shall be called the Tavern Club (an incorporated
apartment. Because of financial depression he had given
it up and retired to the studio. He mentioned this and we
society) and is constituted for the purpose of the pro-
asked him what restrictions he would make on a possible
motion of literature, drama, music, science, art, and
tenant. I recall his emphatic statement that he would let
other civic purposes, and for the establishment and
it for anything except a whore house.
maintenance of one or more club-houses or places for
We saw our opportunity, organized the club, and moved
special meetings in the City of Boston.'
in. The only expense was for the furnishing and utensils,
In a manuscript volume, 'The Rules of the Tavern
as the Italian restaurant proprietor - I have forgotten his
Club,' preserved in the archives of the Club, and in
name - assumed all the responsibility.
I suggested the name, having, I assume, Dr. Johnson in
all Club books before 1919, the opening section is headed
mind, but Munzig was by far the most important member
simply 'Name,' and reads 'This Club shall be called
in this formative stage. He induced the retiring Mr.
the Tavern Club and is established for dining and social
Howells to accept the presidency and was active in suggest-
purposes.' Such certainly was its original object, and
ing the entertainments, usually given in Vinton's studio,
such, essentially, it has remained.
which became a regular feature. The club was a success
from the start and two years later moved to its present
The name of Tavern - recalling inevitably Dr. John-
quarters.
son's familiar dictum, 'There is nothing which has yet
been contrived by man by which so much happiness is
Vercelli, as we shall see later, was the forgotten name
produced as by a good tavern or inn' - has been cred-
of the restaurateur and it was for three rather than
ited by early members to the invention of one of their
two years that the Club remained in Park Square. But
members, Dr. Royal Whitman of New York. In answer
Dr. Whitman's title to the naming of the Club stands
to my request for a verification of this tradition, and
clear - as well as Vinton's receptive attitude towards
for any other remembrances that might occur to him,
tenants of all sorts but one.
Dr. Whitman has written (February 7, 1933):
A manuscript list of the members at the time of the
meeting in the Park Square rooms is made up of the
The origin of the Tavern Club is as you suggest. A
following names: T. Adamowski, Robert D. Andrews,
number of young men who dined at the Carrollton on
William P. Blake, William N. Bullard, Edward Burnett,
Church Street and later at an Italian restaurant on Boylston
Sigourney Butler, Frederic Crowninshield, Elbridge G.
Street had discussed the project of establishing a dining
club. While the project was in the air, Munzig and I met
Cutler, E. K. Dunham, H. S. Durand, Thomas C.
the painter, Vinton, on Boylston Street. He had married
Felton, James G. Freeman, I. M. Gaugengigl, F. B.
a year or two before and had taken Hunt's studio over
Greenough, George G. Hayward, C. duV. Hunt, Herbert
14
History of the Tavern Club
The Beginnings
15
Jaques, S. W. Langmaid, E. C. Lee, F. W. Lee, J. D. H.
the Tavern Club seem in retrospect of a naiveté almost
Luce, J. H. McCollom, G. C. Munzig, A. J. Parsons,
Arcadian. Simple pleasures - like proceeding in force
B. C. Porter, Morton Prince, H. P. Quincy, W. L. Rich-
on a summer evening from the club rooms to the Public
ardson, Arthur Rotch, J. M. Sears, H. H. Sprague,
Garden pond and filling two swan boats for an innocu-
G. Stedman, C. W. Sturgis, F. S. Sturgis, T. R. Sullivan,
ous voyage of the placid waters - leeways of leisure,
G. H. Tilden, G. B. Upham, F. P. Vinton, F. S. Watson,
with frequent, casual occasions for good music and
W. F. Weld, J. T. Wheelwright, R. Whitman, Owen
infinite talk, whether lofty or trivial in theme, quiet
Wister. (43.)
enjoyment of a reasonably ordered state of society,
A printed list, on a single page, issued a little later
freedom from the disillusions which have SO blighted
has these additional names: Henry B. Chapin, Arthur E.
the latter end of our half-century - all these were the
Davis,* Frederic Homer (who did not join), Thomas
possessions, quite taken for granted, of such a company
Lee, John T. Linzee,* Charles E. Sampson,* Henry W.
as that which started our brotherhood on its way. If
Swift,* J. M. Torroja, Henry Wainwright, William D.
the tone of the laudator temporis acti forces itself into
Howells, Eustace Jaques, R. H. Fitz,4 John Boyle
some of the pages to follow, it is only because the earlier
O'Reilly. (13.)
days of any period through which one has lived are apt
In the present official list of forty-eight Charter Mem-
to seem the more golden: even SO it may be hoped that
bers the five names starred in the second of these lists
the Tavern will appear less changed in essentials than
are added to the forty-three of the first.
many of the institutions and ways of life that surround
Before considering in any detail what soon began to
it. For better or worse its annals belong to the social
happen in the new quarters it is desirable to bring to
history of a period.
mind the simple Boston, the relatively uncomplicated
society, of fifty years ago. One cannot recall it without
remembering that the telephone was then rather a
speculative opportunity than a daily necessity, that
gas illumination and horse-cars had not yet given place
to the electric light and the trolley, and that the motor-
car was still further in the future than these impending
'improvements.' It is a truism that with the changed
mechanics of living the spirit of living has been cor-
respondingly transformed. Certainly the Boston of
1884 and the little assemblage of young men who formed
The Ursa's Major
IO7
many other things. But before this 'dismal finish' was
reached, the actual dinner had scored a triumphant
success.
The speech most vividly remembered was the re-
sponse of President Eliot, elected earlier in the year to
honorary membership, to the toast, 'The New Members.'
With characteristic impressiveness he declared his frank
envy of men who had always enjoyed such fellowship
as the Tavern afforded, an experience denied to him in
part by qualities in himself which he deplored, and in part
by the necessity to conserve, through all his earlier years,
the limited strength of his eyes for the constant work
he felt obliged to perform. This expression of honest
wistfulness for lost pleasures revealed an endearing
human quality in the speaker, less widely realized then
than it came to be as the years went on.
A lighter classic in the memory of the Club relates
to an interchange between Norton, who responded to
the toast of 'The Ex-Presidents,' and Professor A. S.
Hill, who performed a similar office for 'The Bear.' In
the course of Norton's speech, which came early in the
evening, he said in his mellifluous diction - and phonetic
spelling must be used to recall the sound of it all -
that 'The Tavern Club is an oasis in the Sa-hah-ra of
American civilization.' When Hill came to speak, in
his brisk Yankee manner, he quoted these words, but
with another vowel sound: 'Professor Norton tells us
that the Tavern Club is a Sa-hair-a in the desert of
American civilization' - to which came the gentle
protest from Norton, smiling with all benignancy: 'I
said Sa-hah-ra.' No spelling can bring back the brief
I44 History of the Tavern Club
Wendell to Wister
145
and blending with these qualities a sympathy and saga-
cious Yankee humor that rounded the fruits of the union
The non-residents, though naturally more in evidence
into works of art. The subject of these remarks would
on special occasions than through frequent resort to the
probably rather not have them made, as it were, in his
Club House, have always constituted an important ele-
presence; but those for whom they are made SO far out-
ment in the membership - a fact to which the election
number him that 'the ayes' in favor of making them may
of one of their members, Owen Wister, also a Charter
be said to have it, all but unanimously.
Member, to the presidency in 1929, and every year since
But it is time to turn from officers to members, and an
then bears convincing testimony. Another non-resident,
officer shall be cited to justify what was said in the
John Jay Chapman, elected first in 1885 - only to re-
last paragraph but one about the constant debt of the
sign in less than two years - and again in 1909, was
in his Annual Report of 1924:
Club to the members themselves. Thus Daniel Sargent
preparing at the time of his death in November, 1933,
a volume of reminiscences which he called 'Retrospec-
tions.' A brief section of it was headed, 'The Tavern,'
Of course, no one has any idea that the officers have
and I am fortunately permitted to quote it here. It
anything to do with the prosperity of the Club. Those
who govern that are the members themselves who hang
will speak for itself, not merely with the voice of a non-
up their mortality on the pegs in the Tavern Club hall,
resident exceptionally qualified to speak at all, but
also in terms of what the Tavern has meant to all classes
light of the billiard room, or in that shadowy vestibule
and move round momentarily immortal in the Elysian
of its membership:
of dreams, the library, or in that tunnel of ghastly thunder,
The Tavern
the squash court. They maintain the Monday
There were a lot of agreeable men, old and young, in
are astronomers, They the the musicians builders nights. singers, nights. They the
are and story-tellers, the
and about Boston at the time of my graduation (1884)
of Tavern Club
and of my years in the Law School, and a group of them
Fremont-Smith, they are Breed, and Rock, and Charlie
turned by degrees into the Tavern Club. I vividly remem-
Coolidge. They are Waddy. They belabor the House
ber one of their early meetings in the rooms of Frederick
Committee. They lose their pipes in the Tavern Club.
Vinton, the painter. It was a dinner given to Salvini -
They swallow up the new members, they are the new mem-
bers. Their laughter is our ambrosia.
at which the great actor recited the death scene from La
Morte Civile and managed at the climax to dispose himself
There is one class of members of which no mention
on the floor with the grace of a gigantic serpent - the
has been made in the preceding pages - the non-residents,
serpent of the Laocoon.
As time went on, the Tavern came to play an important
grown in members from six in the first printed Club-
part in the history of Boston. The group was always made
book, to 72 in the last, far more startlingly than the
up of old and young, distinguished and undistinguished,
residents have grown from IOO, through 125, to 150.
artists, actors, musicians, literary men, amateurs and
professionals; and it has always retained its informal,
160 History of the Tavern Club
The Tavern Muse
161
Soul of the victor, silent, adamant,
Till happy chance up to the Tavern led:
Now truly 'all the neighbors know his face.'
And here with joy I found once more my way,
Each bottle bears the essence, fragrant, keen,
Here where the man speaks with the boy's frank tongue;
The vital potion that shall make us whole;
Laughs the lad's laugh, catches youth's wine-foam jest;
Spare not - guest, brother - of your Wisterine,
Where stiffened throats supple in blithesome song,
Still brew your antiseptic of the soul!
And lips white-bearded yet in smiles are young;
M. A. DEW. HOWE
Here, where, though heads be gray, we find the zest,
WITH A PRESENT OF CHAMPAGNE
The mirth that to immortal youth belong.
ARLO BATES
(At 'Dinner to Perrier Jouet,' February 3, 1904)
Brothers in Tavern, you have willed
A sparkling guest to entertain;
To RICHARD HODGSON
And, as you sit with glasses filled,
(Valentine Dinner, 1905)
o hear an absentee complain:
We boast of Clay and Webster,
Pity, my brothers, his sad plight
We talk of eloquence,
That may not dine with you tonight.
We honor Celtic fluency,
And think it is immense.
His spirit and his heart are sore,
I sing the song of Richard,
His fortune, like the wine, is brute,
My vocalist divine,
But they that cannot go to war
My leather-lunged and chesty-toned
Make haste to send a substitute:
Australian valentine.
In his dull stead this foam of France
Shall make your gain from his mischance.
His lower notes are bully,
OWEN WISTER
His vocal cords are geared,
They run on an endless pulley,
GRIEVED FOR LOST YOUTH
And feed words through his beard.
(November II, 1904)
His valves all open outward,
Grieved for lost Youth, who not for prayers would stay,
Unscrew, and - Hully gee!
But mocking with light laughter, her fair head
You're glad to run for rest and peace
Gold aureoled with her sunny hair, had fled
To a boiler factoree.
Like some wild dryad down a woodland way,
Taking the cheer and brightness of my day -
His engines are high-powered,
I walked beside grim beldam Age instead;
They run with no exhaust,
162 History of the Tavern Club
The Tavern Muse
163
The triple-expansion, jaw-bone type,
I'm done. Now change your glasses
With a draught that's always forced,
And charge the bill to me:
Two hundred pounds of pressure steam,
Drink deep the health of Dicky,
In a roaring, open flue,
But drink it quietly.
A nine-inch walking talking beam,
Drink Mumm, if that's your liquor,
And a tandem racing screw.
But keep mum all the same,
And if he asks who wrote this skit,
We read of Buller's army,
Why
-
Kruger is my name.
Assailed by shot and shell,
Oom PAUL
With fierce Long Toms and bursting bombs,
[F. S. STURGIS?]
That make war seem like hell.
But if I were Sir Redvers,
And I could take my choice,
From 'THE COMING OF AGE OF THE BEAR'
I'd draw off every man but Dick
(On three monkeys belonging to Jack Tilden: at Dinner, December I, 1905)
And let him throw his voice.
Those members who date back for ten years, or farther,
Will recall that sad trio, Maud, Gwendolyn, Arthur.
You talk of Clay and Webster!
Poor Arthur, the butt of the Simian race,
He'd make that clay a brick:
Of pathetic physique, and of lacrimose face.
You've heard Joe Adamowski!
His physical assets were ribs and expression,
He'd make Joe Adams sick:
Inordinate legs, and an air of depression.
Trot out your Morse and Watson,
His habits? His habits it's best not to mention;
And let them do their worst,
They were not always neat, nor controlled by convention.
Then turn the valve in Dicky's jaw
Arthur lived upon hope, and so little he'd eat
And count the words that burst.
That the marvel was how he could be indiscreet!
Unlike fair King Arthur, this 'monk' was unable
O Richard, o my talker!
To be a gay Knight, and join the 'Round Table,'
If I but had your voice,
Peace be to his ashes, if there were any left,
I'd not waste time on psychic work,
Of bodily substance so sadly bereft.
Or spirits, howe'er choice.
With pathetic endeavor he ran his brief course;
But I'd go and be a siren,
On his brow was engraven 'a life of remorse.'
And work my rosy lips,
F. S. STURGIS
With a six-inch steam attachment,
On the Chelsea Ferry Slips.
230 History of the Tavern Club
And well I doubt a Taverner could be
VIII
Who has not talked to Holker Abbott today.
THREE AFTER-DINNER SPEECHES
And who of us can forget the man death took,
Just as we lit the lights here in the hall,
And turned the fiftieth page of our Club-book,
No RECORD of the vast majority of speeches at Club
And told our friends to be prompt at the festival?
dinners remains. Out of the few that survive in the
written word three are given here, both for themselves
For instance Harry Lyman, and our droll,
and for their representation of notable occasions be-
Our unforgettable Waddy, with his fist
tween 1900 and 1920.
Grown like a root about his pipe's black bowl,
Standing four-square to steady the world's list.
SPEECH BY OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES
So let the rats gnaw every Tavern wire,
AT DINNER IN HONOR OF S. WEIR MITCHELL, MARCH 4, 1900
And drink up all our gas, and even devour
It is for others to give their appreciations, SO far as may be
The matches so we cannot strike a fire,
consistent with the modesty of our guest, of his double achieve-
Or let our mighty Treasurer, our tower,
ment in science and in literature. We have here distinguished
doctors and the writers of successful books. It is for them to
Our seven-foot Henry Vaughan, refuse to us -
speak according to their calling of what our guest has done in
Which he will not - that little craintive mite
each. For I doubt if any one man would assume for himself
Of coal-fire in the library cavernous,
even a corner of Dr. Mitchell's mantle large enough to cover
And make us pay hereafter for black night.
him in the attempt to do justice to both. I offer my few words
of welcome in the more modest capacity of the representative
We have the light. We have the fifty years. -
of another doctor, who in his day, I am encouraged to believe,
Wister and Agassiz and Huntington and all
paid his debt to his profession, and who also was not unknown
You officers that guide us, it appears
in letters. It was a pleasure and pride of his later years to call
We have no need for lighting in this hall.
Dr. Mitchell his friend. His son would be wanting in human
DANIEL SARGENT
feeling if he did not join in this occasion with a full heart.
I shall venture for a moment away from the field of personal
reflection. It seems to me that in one sense the sphere of litera-
ture is narrowing. Art and religion, in spite of their kinship,
long have lived under separate roofs. Law left the hands of the
priests even further back. Today the whole domain of truth
concerning the visible world belongs to science. One half re-
232 Three After-Dinner Speeches
Three After-Dinner Speeches 233
sents sporadic aperçus about the universe because he discovers
that they are fragments of an actual or possible science. It no
ings; that art no longer is a handy man about the house with a
longer would be possible for any but superficial persons to re-
general business of imparting useful information, but that it
more and more definitely is and will be confined to the function
peat Mrs. Browning's attitudinizing exclamation concerning
the poets: 'I speak of the only truth-tellers now left to God.'
of making us feel what it is for others to prove and in the main
We know that God is not SO hard up as she professed to think.
to discover. For the most part thinkers belong in the opposite
We yield back scant sympathy to Tennyson's posing 'Vex not
camp. Few indeed are the men who unite in any degree the
thou the poet's mind with thy shallow wit.' We know that the
power to disclose truth and the power to make it live in our
epoch-making ideas have come not from the poets but from the
hearts. Few are they who at once can reveal and charm.
I have made these general reflections, partly because they
philosophers, the jurists, the mathematicians, the physicists -
from the men who explain, not from the men who feel. We
naturally come into my mind when I think of literature, and
realize that explanation and feeling are at the opposite poles of
because, while no general proposition is worth a straw, the chief
intellectual life, and require and come from opposite interests
end of men is to frame them, but mainly in honor of our guest,
and opposite gifts. We no longer ask of belles lettres that they
who presents SO very unusual an example of success at both the
should be a 'criticism of life' in Matthew Arnold's phrase, as
poles. A man must indeed command large forces who can turn
though they should help us to fix our attitude toward the world.
both flanks of the enemy and not himself be cut in two.
We do not read novels for improvement or instruction. We do
not want 'medicated fiction' - to quote what once was said
SPEECH BY ROBERT GRANT
to my father - we want only to be amused, to be moved, to be
AT DINNER IN HONOR OF PRESIDENT LOWELL
uplifted, and to be charmed.
OCTOBER 26, 1909
To my mind the great realistic movement is perfectly con-
sistent with what I have said. The end of art is to pull the
Abbott Lawrence Lowell! By virtue of the authority reposed
trigger of an emotion. But what will pull the trigger depends
in me by those members of the Honorable and Reverend the
upon the audience. If they know too much to believe a ghost
Board of Overseers who are also members of the Tavern Club
story even for half an hour, there is no use in telling them ghost
I hereby congratulate you that this is one of the last functions,
stories. If the instantaneous photograph has made them notice
if not the last, in the orgy of felicitation and ceremonial by
more exactly how animals move, the old pictures of races, in
which you have been inducted into office. You ought to be
which the horses' legs stuck out straight fore and aft, no longer
pretty well used up. It is no fault of your admirers that your
give them the feeling of speed, and the pictures miss their end.
cheeks still retain the glow of prolonged youth and your eyes
Realism seeks more truth, not because truth is the end of art,
their habitual keen animation; that your digestion is unim-
but because at the present day more truth is the condition of
paired and that your stock of stories and metaphor still holds
our feeling what the artist wants to make us feel.
out.
So I say that there has been a further differentiation of call-
In the attempts to set forth worthily your characteristics the
choicest flowers of speech not only of the English language but
ree After-Dinner Speeches
of soul emancipation.
Day has outgrown now the days of the Civil
LIST OF MEMBERS
imits then presented. It has become a national
tomorrow we shall have the privilege to share
tion's mourning and every hamlet in our broad
THE following list attempts to include all members of the Tavern
uth, East, and West, will reverently strew with
Club, past and present, resident, non-resident, and honorary. The
ves of their beloved and honored dead, of the
names of living members are printed in boldface type.
e Spanish War, of the Great World War, and
Gaps and inconsistencies in the Club records impose similar
and on every side benedictions and God-speed
defects here. A few names cannot be given in full, and certain dates,
On my own behalf this evening, on behalf of
especially of resignations, must be omitted or approximated. The
time, and for my friends here tonight I am sure
letter C (for circa) stands before dates which are known to be but
ged to say to you, Welcome and Benediction.
approximately correct. The list must obviously be read 'E. & O. E.'
1885 Abbott, Holker. Died 1930.
1887
Bacon, Gorham. Non-res.
1889
Adamowski, Josef. Resigned.
1912
Bacon, Robert. Died 1919.
1884
Adamowski, Timothee. Char.
1902
Bailey, Walter Channing.
Mem. Resigned 1910. Re-el.
1892
Baker, George Pierce. Resigned.
1931.
1934
Baker, Myles Pierce.
1934
Adams, Charles Francis.
1893
Balch, Franklin Greene.
1916
Agassiz, George Russell.
1915
Baldwin, Thomas Tileston.
1933
Aldrich, Richard Steere. Non-
Died 1923.
res.
1894
Bancroft, Wilder Dwight. Non-
1897
Aldrich, Thomas Bailey. Hon.
res. 1901. Resigned 1932.
Died 1907.
1915
Barbour, Thomas.
1922
Aldrich, William Truman.
1886
Barrett, Lawrence. Non-res.
1932
Allen, Philip Ray.
Died 1891.
1920
Alsop, John De Koven. Non-
1904
Bartlett, Francis. Died 1913.
res. Resigned.
1899
Barton, George Edward. Re-
1924
Ames, Adelbert, Jr. Non-res.
signed.
1887
Ames, Oliver. Resigned 1892.
1911
Bass, Robert Perkins. Non-res.
1896
Ames, Winthrop. Now non-
1888
Bates, Arlo. Died 1918.
res.
1887
Bates, Samuel Worcester. Re-
1933
Amory, Harold.
signed.
1884
Andrews, Robert Day.
Char.
1909
Baynes, Ernest Harold. Non-
Mem. Died 1929.
res. Died 1925.
1886
Apthorp, William Foster. Died
1900
Bell, Gordon Knox. Non-res.
Benson, Frank Weston.
1913.
1892
1894
Atkinson,
Robert
Whitman.
1888
Betts, J. Sanford. Non-res. Re-
Died 1934.
signed 1889.
1892
Attwood, Francis Gilbert. Died
1929
Bigelow, Chandler.
1900.
1924
Bigelow, Edward Livingston.
1884
Bacon, Francis Henry.
Now
1899
Bigelow, Henry Forbes. Died
non-res.
1929.
1919
Bacon, Gaspar Griswold.
Re-
1894
Bigelow, Joseph Smith. Died
signed.
1930.
244
List of Members
List of Members
245
1906 Bigelow, Lewis Sherrill.
Non-
Chase, Theodore. Died 1894.
1896
Cummings, Charles Kimball.
1885
res. Resigned 1933.
Browne, Alexander Porter. Re-
1889
1887
Bigelow, William Sturgis. Died
signed 1892.
1928
Chittenden, George Peters. Now
1925
Curtis, Charles Pelham.
1884
1919
Curtis, Charles Pelham, Jr.
Bullard, William Norton. Char.
non-res.
1926.
Blake, Gerald.
Mem. Died 1931.
1923
Chittenden, Gerald. Non-res.
1892
Curtis, Francis Gardner. Died
1910
1900
Churchill, Winston. Non-res.
1915.
1902
Blake, John Bapst.
1885 Bunker, Dennis Miller. Died
Resigned.
1906
Curtis, James Freeman. Now
1884
Blake, William Payne.
1890.
Char.
non-res.
Mem. Died 1922.
1930
Burke, John Randolph.
1930
Claflin, William Henry.
Clemson, Walter John.
Re-
1922
Curtis, Richard Carey.
1896
Blaney, Dwight.
1884
Burnett, Edward. Char. Mem.
1899
signed 1933.
1912
Cushing, Harvey. Now non-res.
1912
Blumer, Thomas Spriggs.
Resigned.
Clough,
Charles
Ayer.
Died
1884
Cushing, Hayward Warren.
1900
1884 Burnett, Harry. Died 1927.
1886
Blunt, John Elijah. Resigned.
Died 1934.
1888
1896
Bohlen, Charles. Non-res. Re-
Burnett,
John
Torrey.
Re-
1908.
Cushing,
Howard
Gardiner.
signed 1897.
Clymer, William Branford Shu-
1897
signed.
1897
Non-res. C 1907. Died 1916.
1886
1884
Booth, Edwin. Resigned 1888.
Burrell, Herbert Leslie. Died
brick. Died 1903.
1910.
Cobb, Boughton. Non-res.
1884
Cutler, Elbridge Gerry. Char.
1916
Bowditch, Edward. Died 1929.
1926
1895
Bush, Samuel Daere. Resigned.
1908
Cobb, Frederick Codman. Now
Mem. Resigned 1886.
1884
Bowditch, Henry Pickering.
1922
Cutler, George Chalmers, Jr.
1884
Butler, Sigourney. Char. Mem.
non-res.
Hon. 1907. Died 1911.
Non-res. Resigned 1931.
1907
Resigned 1889.
1931
Cobb, Robert Codman. Non-res.
Bowditch, John Perry. Re-
Cobb, Stanley.
1922
Cutler, Robert.
1928
signed C. 1911.
Byrd, Richard Evelyn. Hon.
1920
1887
Bowditch, Nathaniel Ingersoll.
Byrne, Francis Henry Balfour.
1893
Codman, Charles Greenough.
1922
Danielson, Richard Ely.
1896
Non-res. 1908. Resigned.
Non-res. Resigned.
1884
Davenport, Francis Henry.
Resigned.
1922
Codman, Charles Russell.
1884
Davis, Arthur Edward. Char.
1887
Bowditch,
1887
Vincent
Yardley.
Cabot, Arthur Tracy. Died 1912.
Mem. Resigned 1886.
Died 1929.
1928
Cabot, Charles Codman.
1899
Codman, John Sturgis.
Collins, Alfred Quinton. Died
1887
Davis,
Charles
Edward,
Jr.
1889
1918
Bowen, John Templeton. Re-
Cabot, Frederick Pickering.
1887
Resigned 1907.
signed C. 1903.
Died 1932.
1903.
1884
Bradford,
Hickling.
Cabot, Henry Bromfield Jr.
Colt, Henry Francis.
1896 Davis, Theodore Montgomery.
1933
Edward
1929
Non-res. Died 1915.
Died 1926.
1907
Cabot, Samuel.
1933
Compton, Karl Taylor.
1933
Conant, James Bryant.
1926
Deane, Frederick.
1888
1887 Bradford, George Hillard. Died
Carey, Arthur Astor. Resigned.
Converse, Frederic Shepherd.
1894
DeFord,
Henry.
Resigned
1922
1890.
Carey, Arthur Graham.
1899
1887
Coolidge, Charles Allerton. Re-
1907.
1888
1887 Braggiotti, Isidore. Non-res.
Carter, John Ridgeley. Non-
De Koven, Reginald. Non-res.
res. Resigned.
signed.
1889
c
1901. Resigned 1931.
Coolidge, Charles Allerton, Jr.
Died 1920.
1922 Breed, William Bradley.
1889
Chadwick, George Whitfield.
1922
Coolidge, Harold Jefferson, Jr.
1893
Deland,
Lorin
Fuller.
Died
1901
Brewster, George Washington
Died 1931.
1930
1887
Coolidge, John Templeman.
1917.
Wales.
Chamberlin, William Everett.
1890
Resigned 1888.
1912
Coolidge, John Templeman, Jr.
1919
Denny, George Parkman.
1905
Brice, Walter Kirkpatrick. Non-
c 1901
Coolidge, Lawrence.
1887
Dixey, Richard Cowell. Died
res. Died 1926.
Chanler, Robert Winthrop.
1932
Coolidge, Thomas Jefferson.
1915.
1902
Briggs, LeBaron Russell. Hon.
Non-res. Resigned C 1905.
1925
Died 1934
Chanler, Winthrop. Non-res.
1915
Copeland, Charles Townsend.
1885
Doe, Orlando Witherspoon. Re-
1894
Resigned 1905.
Courtney, Paul Graham.
signed 1887.
1885
Brimmer, Martin. Hon. Died
1933
1887
Cranford, Kenneth Rylance.
1904
Dorr, George Buckman. Now
1926
1896.
Chanler, Theodore Ward. Non-
non-res.
res. Resigned 1933.
Resigned 1890.
1893
Brooks, Frederick. Resigned.
1884
Chapin, Henry Bainbridge. Re-
1914
Croly, Herbert David. Non-res.
1888
Dumaresq, Francis. Died 1902.
1922
Brooks, Henry Howard.
Died 1929.
1895
Dunham, Carroll, Jr. Non-res.
1923
Brooks,
Winthrop
signed 1886.
Sprague.
Died 1923.
Now non-res.
1887
Chaplin, Heman White. Re-
1894
Crosby, Stephen Van-Rensse-
laer. Resigned. Re-el. 1932.
1884
Dunham,
Edward
Kellogg.
1888 Brown, John Appleton.
signed.
Char.
Mem.
Non-res.
1892.
Non-
1925
Chapman, Chanler. Non-res.
1913
Croswell, James Greenleaf. Non-
res. 1891. Died 1902.
Died 1922.
1928
Brown, John Nicholas.
1885
Chapman, John Jay. Non-res.
res. Died 1915.
Now
Resigned 1887. Re-el. 1909.
1884
Crowninshield, Frederic. Char.
1885 Dunham, Theodore. Now non-
non-res.
Died 1933.
Mem. Resigned 1886.
res.
246
List of Members
List of Members
247
1884 Durand, Henry Strong. Char.
Mem.
1905
Non-res.
Fletcher,
Guitèras, Ramon. Non-res. Re-
1887
Hodgson, Richard. Died 1905.
Horace.
1888.
Died
Non-res.
1885
1929.
Died 1919.
signed 1891.
1889
Holmes, Oliver Wendell. Hon.
1889 Duveneck, Frank.
Gulick, Charles Burton.
Died 1894.
Non-res.
1890 Foote, Arthur. Resigned 1933.
1933
1918 Forbes, Allan. Resigned 1932.
1904
Hale, Herbert Dudley. Non-
1894
Holmes, Oliver Wendell. Hon.
1892. Died 1919.
1907 Forbes, Charles Stewart. Now
res. Resigned 1908.
1898
Homans, Robert. Resigned.
1888 Dwight, Theodore Frelinghuy-
William.
Resigned
non-res.
Hale, Philip.
1887
Hooper,
sen. Resigned.
1912
1918
1885 Dyer, Louis. Resigned 1890.
Forbes, Francis Murray.
1894
Hale, Philip Leslie. Resigned.
1891.
1932
1925
Hopkins, Ernest Martin. Non-
1933 Edmonds, John Buckeley. Non-
Forbes, Francis Murray, Jr.
1933
Hall, John Loomer.
1908
res.
Forbes, John Wells. Resigned.
1920
Hamlen, Joseph Rochemont.
res.
1925 Edgell, George Harold.
1899
Forbes, William Cameron.
1897 Hamlin, Charles Sumner. Re-
1897
Hopkinson, Charles Sydney.
1884
1884
Eldridge, William Thompson.
Freeman, Horace Vinton. Re-
signed.
1887
Hopkinson, John Prentiss. Died
signed 1886.
1909 Hammond, John Hays. Non-
1900.
Non-res. 1887. Resigned.
1884
Freeman, James Goldthwaite.
1884
Horton, Charles Paine. Re-
1884 Eliot, Amory. Resigned.
res.
1904
Eliot, Charles William. Hon.
Char. Mem. Died 1912.
1885 Harding, Emor Herbert. Re-
signed 1893.
1923
1884
Howard, Thomas Howard. Non-
Died 1926.
Fremont-Smith, Maurice.
signed.
1885 French, Daniel Chester. Re-
1930 Harkness, Edward Stephen.
res. Resigned 1889.
1913
Elliott, Howard. Non-res. Later
signed.
1893
Howe, Mark Antony Wolfe.
Non-res.
res. Died 1929.
1884 Harris, Francis Augustus. Re-
1917 Howe, Wallis Eastburn. Non-
1887 Elliot, John Wheelock. Died
1913 Frothingham, Channing.
res.
1920
1925.
Gammell, Robert Hale Ives.
signed 1886.
Gardiner, Robert Hallowell.
1896 Hathaway, Horatio. Non-res.
1884
Howells, William Dean. Hon.
1921
Emerson, William.
1934
1888. Died 1920.
1910
Endicott,
1933
Gardiner, William Tudor. Non-
Resigned.
William
Crownin-
res.
shield.
1896 Hathaway, Thomas Schuyler.
1918
Howland, Llewellyn.
1911
1919 Evarts, Richard Conover. Re-
Gardner, George Peabody, Jr.
Non-res. Died 1924.
1920
Hubbard, Edward Arthur.
1887
signed 1933.
1909
Hay,
Clarence.
Non-res.
Re-
1887
Hubbard, Eliot. Resigned 1932.
Gardner, John Lowell. Died
signed.
1884
Hunt, Clyde Du Vernet. Non-
1908 Fairbanks, Arthur. Now non-
1899.
1884
Gaugengigl, Ignaz Marcel. Char.
1884 Hayward, George Griswold.
res. 1893. Resigned.
res.
Char. Mem. Died 1910.
1921
Huntington, James Lincoln.
1885
Fairchild, Charles. Resigned.
Mem. Resigned 1917.
1899
Non-res.
Gay, Frederic Lewis. Died 1916.
1886 Heard, John, Jr. Non-res. Died
1900
Hurlbut, Byron Satterlee. Died
1921
Fairchild,
Gordon.
1929.
1884
Gericke, Wilhelm. Hon. 1890.
1895.
Res. 1931. Died 1932.
Augustus.
Died
1901
Hyde, Arthur. Non-res. Re-
1908
Farley, John Wells.
Died 1925.
1886
Hemenway,
signed 1905.
1888
Fearing, Daniel Butler. Non-
1899 Goodhue, Bertram Grosvenor.
1931.
1924
Hemenway, Lawrence.
1900
Hyde, James Hazen. Non-res.
res. Resigned 1890.
Non-res. Died 1924.
Resigned.
1906
1884
Felton, Thomas Cary. Char.
Goodrich, Wallace.
1933
Henderson, Lawrence Joseph.
1888
Grant, Robert. Resigned and re-
Henry, Barklie McKee. Non-
1892
Ingersoll, Henry McKean. Non-
Mem. Died 1898.
1927
res. Resigned 1897.
elected.
res. 1928.
1891
Fenollosa,
Ernest
Francisco.
Hepburn, Andrew Hopewell.
1884
Jackson, Frank. Died 1921.
1885
Died 1908.
Gray, Morris. Resigned 1893.
1919
1913
1924
Herter, Christian Archibald.
1886 Jackson, James. Resigned 1896.
1900 Fessenden, Franklin Goodridge.
Gray, Morris, Jr.
Gray, Ralph Weld.
Higginson,
Henry
Lee.
Hon.
1915
James, Alexander Robertson.
1912
Non-res. Died 1931.
1884
Now non-res.
1884
1911 Field, Whitcomb.
Gray, Reginald. Resigned 1893.
1897. Died 1919.
Died
1902
Greeley, Russell Hubbard. Non-
Adams
Sherman.
Hon.
1911
James,
Henry
Hon.
Died
1896
Hill,
1912.
1916.
1932 Finley, John Huston, Jr. Non-
res. 1907.
1908. Died 1910.
1901
1899
Hill, Arthur Dehon.
1911 James, Henry, 2nd. Resigned
res.
Greene, Henry Copley.
1928.
1886
Greenleaf, Edward Hale. Re-
1926
Hoar, Samuel.
James,
William.
Hon.
Died
1896 Fiske, Arthur Lyman.
Re-
signed.
Hobart, Richard Bryant.
1906
signed.
1908
Boott.
Hodges, Harrison Blake. Non-
1910.
1884
1913
Fitz, Reginald.
Greenough,
Francis
1891
res. Died.
1908
James, William, Jr.
1884
Fitz,
Reginald
Heber.
Char. Mem. Died 1904.
Char.
1922
Griswold, Roger.
1885
Hodges, William Donnison. Re-
1884
Jaques, Eustace. Non-res. 1890.
Mem. Died 1913.
Died 1920.
1888
Guild, Curtis, Jr. Died 1915.
signed 1888.
248
List of Members
List of Members
249
1884 Jaques, Herbert. Char. Mem.
Died 1916.
1885 Lodge, Henry Cabot. Resigned
Meyer, George von Lengerke.
1893
Page, Thomas Nelson. Non-res.
1890.
1913
Died 1918.
Died 1922.
1913
Jenkins, MacGregor. Resigned.
1923
1884 Johns, Clayton. Died 1932.
Lodge, Henry Cabot, 2nd.
1885
1912
Joy, Benjamin. Now non-res.
Loeffler, Charles Martin.
1890
Millet, Josiah Byram.
1910 Paine, Ralph Delahaye. Non-
Mills, Charles Elliott. Non-res.
res. Died 1925.
1885
Lombard, Warren Plimpton.
1930
1906
Kernochan, Marshall Rutgers.
Minott, Joseph Otis. Non-res.
1932
Paine, Richard Cushing.
Non-res.
Non-res. Resigned.
1902
Died 1909.
1929
Palmer, Franklin Hall.
1888
1921 Kidder, Alfred Vincent. Non-
Longfellow, Alexander Wads-
Moffat, Donald.
1902
Parker, Herbert. Non-res. Re-
worth. Died 1934.
1931
res.
Monks, George Howard. Died
signed 1933.
1887
1922
Kimball, Day. Resigned 1926.
Lovett, Robert Williamson.
1884
1933.
1894
Parker, Horatio William. Non-
1887
Kinnicut, Leonard Parker. Non-
Died 1924.
Moors, John Farwell.
res. Died 1919.
1894 Lowell, Abbott Lawrence.
1911
res. Died 1911.
Morize, André. Resigned.
1933
Parker, James, 2nd.
1904
Lowell, Frederic Eldredge. Re-
1919
1895
Kinnicutt, Lincoln Newton.
1891
Morse, Edward Sylvester. Died
1894
Parker, John Harleston. Re-
Non-res. Died 1921.
signed 1932.
signed.
1900
Lowell, Guy. Died 1927.
1925.
1914
Kinnicutt, Roger. Non-res.
1886
Morse, Henry Lee. Died 1929.
1933
Parker, John Harleston, Jr.
1922
1884
Lowell, James Hale.
1885
Lowell, James Russell. Hon.
1914
Morton, James Madison. Non-
1886
Parker, William Lincoln. Died
Kip, Charles Hayden. Resigned.
1933
Ladd, William Edwards.
1915.
res.
1888
Lamb, Horatio Appleton. Died
Died 1891.
Muck, Karl. Resigned 1918.
1904
Parker, William Stanley.
1888
Lowell, John Jr. Died 1922.
1912
1926.
1884
1926
Munro, Donald.
1930
Parkman, Francis. Non-res.
1906 Lane, Gardiner Martin. Died
Luce, John Dandridge Henley.
1926
Munro, Edward Squibb. Non-
1929
Parkman, Henry, Jr.
Char. Mem. Died 1921.
res. 1929.
1884
Parsons, Arthur Jeffrey. Char.
1914.
1893
Luce, Matthew.
1887
Munro, John Cummings. Died
Mem. Died 1915.
1919
Lang, Malcolm.
1892
1884
Lund, Fred Bates.
Langmaid, Samuel Wood. Char.
1902
Patten, William Samuel. Died
1903
Lyman, Henry. Died 1934.
1910.
Mem. Died 1915.
1900
Lyman, Theodore. Resigned
1884
Munzig, George Chickering.
1927.
1932
Lanman, Thomas Hinckley.
Char. Mem. Died 1908.
1917
Peabody, Francis Weld. Died
1886
Lassiter, Francis Rives.
C 1903.
Murchie, Guy. Resigned 1933.
1927.
Re-
1884
McCollum,
John
1899
Hildreth.
Neilson, William Allan. Non-
1888
Peabody, John Endicott. Re-
signed 1888.
1932
Laughlin, Henry Alexander.
Char. Mem. Died 1915.
1921
signed 1899.
1916
res.
1893
Lavallé, John. Non-res. Re-
McCoy, Frank Ross. Non-res.
1894
Nevin, Ethelbert. Died 1901.
1887
Perkins, Edward Cranch. Re-
Resigned.
1885
Nickerson, George Augustus.
signed 1907.
signed.
1910
1884
Lee, Elliot Cabot. Char. Mem.
Maclaurin, Richard Cockburn.
Died 1901.
1910
Perkins, John Forbes.
Died 1920.
Nikisch, Arthur. Resigned 1893.
1931
Perkins, Thomas Nelson. Hon.
Died 1920.
1922
MacLeish, Archibald. Resigned
1890
1884 Lee, Francis Wilson. Char.
1885
Norton, Charles Eliot. Hon.
1905
Perry, Bliss.
1930.
Mem. Died 1923.
Died 1908.
1896
Perry, Edward Wright. Later
1893
1888 Lee, Henry. Hon. Mem. Died
McLennan, John Stewart. Non-
1904
Olmstead, Frederic Law. Re-
non-res. Resigned.
res. 1903.
1899.
signed.
1915
Perry, Lewis. Non-res.
1927
1916
Lee, Roger Irving.
Marquand, John Phillips.
1889
1884
Olney, Richard. Resigned.
1905
Peters, Andrew James.
1884
Mason, Marion Otis. Non-res.
O'Reilly, John Boyle. Resigned.
1888
Peters, Edward Gould. Re-
Lee, Thomas. Resigned 1885.
1884
Lincoln, Merrick.
Died 1890.
1914
Non-res.
Osborne, Maurice Machado.
signed 1889.
1902
Mason, Philip Dana. Died
1927
Died 1923.
1904
Osborne, Thomas Mott. Non-
1920
Phillips, John Charles.
1900 Lincoln, Waldo. Non-res. Re-
1907.
res. Died 1926.
1913
Phillips, William. Now non-res.
1931
Matthiessen, Francis Otto. Re-
signed 1932.
1884
Osgood, James Ripley. Resigned.
1923
Pickman, Edward Motley.
1884
Linzee,
signed 1932.
John
Torrey.
Char.
1902
Mauran, John Lawrence. Non-
1885
Otis, Harrison Gray. Resigned
1901
Pier, Arthur Stanwood. Now
non-res.
Mem. Resigned 1891.
1886.
1922 Little, Clarence Cook. Non-res.
res. Died 1933.
1922
Otis, James.
1928
Pitman, Theodore Baldwin.
1884
Mercer,
William
Resigned 1933.
Robert,
Jr.
Otis, William Sigourney. Died
1890
Plummer,
Charles
Warner.
Resigned.
1891
Non-res. Resigned 1897.
1920
Little,
James
Lovell.
Resigned
1930
Merrick,
1893.
John
Vaughan.
Non-
1932.
1895
Paderewski, Ignace Jan. Hon.
1933
Pollock, Harry Evelyn Dorr.
res.
1914
Page, Arthur Wilson. Non-res.
Non-res.
250
List of Members
List of Members
251
1920 Pool, Eugene Hillhouse. Non-
1892
Saint Gaudens, Augustus. Non-
Thayer,
William
Roscoe.
Died
1884 Sprague, Henry Harrison. Char.
1909
res. Resigned 1931.
1884 Porter, Benjamin Curtis. Char.
res. Hon. 1904 Died 1907.
Mem. Died 1920.
1923.
1884
Sampson, Charles Edward.
1884
Stedman,
George.
Char.
Mem.
1892
Thiebault,
Eugene.
Non-res.
Mem. Non-res. 1893. Died
Char. Mem. Now non-res.
Resigned 1886.
Resigned.
1908.
1894
Santayana, George. Resigned.
1906 Stephens, Henry Morse. Non-
1894
Thomas, Douglas Hamilton, Jr.
1898 Potter, Austin. Resigned.
1897
Sargent, Charles Sprague. Re-
res. Died 1919.
Died 1915.
1926
Powel, Harford Willing Hare,
signed.
1931 Stillman, Chauncey Devereux.
1887
Thomas, John Babson. Non-
Jr. Now non-res.
res. Active 1896. Resigned.
1919
Sargent, Daniel.
Non-res.
1894
Pratt, Bela Lyon. Died 1917.
1890
Sargent, John Singer. Non-res.
Prince, Frederick Octavius. Re-
1891
Stimson, Frederic Jesup. Re-
1930
Thompson, Leslie Prince.
1884
Hon. 1904. Died 1925.
1894
Thompson, Lewis Sabin. Re-
signed C 1911.
signed 1888.
1884
1887 Sargent, Joseph, Jr. Died
Prince, Morton. Char. Mem.
1892
Storer, Bellamy. Non-res. Re-
signed.
1910.
signed.
1890
Thorndike, Paul.
Died 1929.
Samuel
1928 Sargent, Lucius Manlius. Re-
1884
Story, John Patten. Non-res.
1885
Thorndike,
Lothrop.
1900
Pritchett, Henry Smith.
Now
signed 1931.
Resigned 1886.
Died 1911.
non-res.
1888 Sargent, Sullivan Armory.
1931 Proctor, Robert.
1923
Stratton, Samuel Wesley. Died
1920 Thorndike, William Tecumseh
1884
Sears,
Sherman. Resigned 1931.
Joshua
1895
Putnam,
Herbert.
Montgomery.
1931.
Non-res.
Char. Mem. Died 1906.
Strong, Richard Pearson.
1884 Tilden, George Horton. Char.
1901. Resigned.
1915
1910
Sedgwick, Ellery.
1885
Stuart, Charles U.
Resigned
Mem. Non-res. 1893. Died
1884 Quincy, Henry Parker. Char.
1931
Sedgwick, Henry Dwight.
1886.
1910.
Mem. Died 1899.
1934
Sedgwick, William Ellery. Non-
1896
Sturgis,
Charles
Russell.
Died
1884
Torroja,
Joachin
Maria.
Re-
1895 Renshaw, Alfred Howard. Non-
res.
signed 1886.
1909.
res. Resigned.
1904
1884
Sturgis, Charles William. Char.
1912
Trask,
William
Ropes.
Died
1891
Reynolds, Edward.
Sewell, Frederick E. Resigned.
1886
Shattuck, Frederick Cheever.
Mem. Died 1913.
1933.
1928
Reynolds, George Phillips.
Tucker,
Lawrence.
Resigned
Died 1929.
1884
Sturgis, Francis Shaw. Char.
1885
1933
Rhinelander, Philip Hamilton.
1887 Shattuck, George Brune. Re-
Mem. Died 1922.
1886.
1903
Rhodes, James Ford. Hon.
signed.
1890
Sturgis, Richard Clipston.
1904
Tweed, Charles Harrison. Non-
1917. Died 1927.
1930
Shattuck, George Cheever.
1916
Sullivan, James Amory. Now
res. Died 1917.
1904 Rice, Alexander Hamilton. Now
1932
Shattuck, Henry Lee.
1884
Upham, George Baxter. Char.
non-res.
non-res.
1891
Richards
Shaw, Henry Russell. Resigned
1884
Sullivan, Thomas Russell. Char.
Mem.
1921
Theodore
William.
Mem. Died 1916.
1901
Vaughan, Henry Goodwin.
C 1904.
Hon. Died 1928.
1884 Shepley, George Foster. Re-
1885
Sumner,
Allen
Melancthon.
1884
Vinton, Frederic Porter. Char.
1884 Richardson, William Lambert.
Mem. Died 1911.
signed.
Died 1901.
Char. Mem. Died 1932.
1884 Sherman, Horace Vinton. Re-
1928
Sutton, Harry, Jr.
Resigned
1907
Wadsworth, Eliot.
1932 Ricketson, Oliver Garrison, Jr.
1884
Wadsworth, Oliver Fairfield.
signed.
1931.
Non-res.
1915
Shurcliff, Arthur Asahel.
Swift, Frederick. Non-res. Re-
Died 1911.
1890
Ritter, Louis. Resigned.
1884
1922
Sills, Kenneth Charles Morton.
signed 1890.
1891
Wadsworth, Oliver Fairfield, Jr.
1886
Robinson, Edward. Non-res.
Non-res.
1884 Swift, Henry Walton.
Char.
Resigned.
1906. Died 1931.
1921
Sims, William Sowden. Hon.
Mem. Resigned 1888.
1910
Wadsworth, Philip.
1922
Rock, John.
1888
Slater, William Albert. Non-
1919 Tallack, John Francis.
Now
1911
Wadsworth, Richard Goodwin.
1885
Rogers, Henry Munroe.
res. Resigned.
Resigned 1932.
non-res.
1884
Rotch,
Arthur.
Char.
Mem.
1900
Slocum, William Frederick. Non-
1892
Tarbell, Edmund Charles.
1893
Wadsworth, William Austin.
Died 1894.
res. Died 1934.
1884
Tarbell, George Grosvenor. Re-
Non-res. Died 1918.
1889
Russell, Averly Claude Holmes.
1890 Smith, Francis Hopkinson.
signed.
1884
Wainwright, Henry. Died C 1904.
Non-res. Resigned.
Non-res. Died 1915.
Taylor, Henry Osborn. Non-
1887
Walker, Charles Howard.
1896 Russell, William Eustis. Died
1917
1903
Smith, Jeremiah, Jr.
res. Resigned 1932.
1923
Walker, Charles Rumford. Now
1896.
1892
Smith, Joseph Lindon.
non-res.
Now
1927
Terry, Lawrence.
1919 Russell, William Eustis, Jr.
non-res.
1924
Thayer, Edward Carrington.
1884
Walker, Henry Oliver. Non-
Died 1932.
1928
Spencer, Theodore.
1930
Thayer, William Greenough.
res. 1889. Died 1929.
252
List of Members
1885
Ware, Arthur Lowell. Resigned.
1912
1913
Ware, Gordon. Died 1920.
Whiting, Jasper.
1887
1884
Warner, Charles Dudley. Hon.
Whitman, Royal. Char. Mem.
OFFICERS OF THE CLUB
Died 1900.
Resigned 1890.
Warner, Langdon.
1922
1909
Whitney, Edward Allen.
1886
1902
Warren, Edward Ross.
Whitney, Henry Austin. Died
1884
Warren, Joseph Weatherhead.
1889.
1931
Whitney, Hugh.
PRESIDENTS
Resigned 1892.
1888
1902
Warren, Samuel Dennis. Died
Whitridge, Roland Barker.
William Dean Howells,
1884-1887
1910.
Non-res. 1903. Resigned 1907.
1885
Warren, William.
Whittier, Charles Albert. Re-
Henry Lee,
1888-1889
1884
Resigned
Charles Eliot Norton,
1890-1898
1888.
signed 1888.
Henry Lee Higginson,
1899-1919
1884
1920
Watson,
Francis
Wiggins, Charles, 2nd.
Sedgwick.
1922
Wiggins, John Gregory. Non-
Barrett Wendell,
1920-1921
Char. Mem.
Bliss Perry,
1921-1928
1909
res.
Weed, Arthur Henry.
Died
1931.
Williams, Gluyas.
Frederick Cheever Shattuck
1928-1929
1929
1926
Owen Wister
1929-
1918
Weed, Charles Frederick.
Willis, Harold Buckley.
1886
1884
Weld, William Fletcher. Char.
Winch, William Johnson. Died
Mem. Died 1893.
1919.
1916
1932
Wells, Edgar Huidekoper. Non-
Winship, Lawrence Leathe.
VICE PRESIDENTS
1884
Wister, Owen.
res. Resigned.
Char.
Mem.
1892
Wells, Stiles Gannett.
1893
Wolcott, Henry Roger. Non-
Charles Eliot Norton,
1886-1889
Died
1907.
res. Died 1921.
Thomas Russell Sullivan,
1886-1908
1893
1909
Wendel, Theodore. Died 1932.
Wood, Leonard. Hon. Died
Henry Munroe Rogers,
1887-1900
1887
Wendell, Barrett. Died 1921.
1928.
Martin Brimmer,
1890-1896
1893
1884
Wendell, Jacob, Jr. Non-res.
Wright, Frederick Eleazer. Re-
Henry Lee Higginson,
1896-1898
Died 1911.
signed 1886.
Oliver Wendell Holmes,
1898-1902
1895
Wharton, Edward
1917
Young, Benjamin Loring.
Adams Sherman Hill,
1900-1906
Robbins.
1924
Non-res. Resigned.
Young, Owen D. Non-res.
Henry Pickering Bowditch,
1902-1907
1884
1914
Zantzinger, Clarence. Non-res.
Abbott Lawrence Lowell,
1906-1908
Wheelwright, John Tyler. Char.
1885
Mem. Resigned.
Zerrahn, Franz Eduard. Died
Arlo Bates,
1908-1911
1928.
James Ford Rhodes,
1909-1910
1924
White, James Clarke.
1925
Zinsser, Hans.
John Bapst Blake,
1910-1911
Robert Grant,
1911-1914
Edward Hickling Bradford,
1912-1914
Elected in week before Semi-Centennial
William Roscoe Thayer,
1914-1915
1934
Bacon, Leonard. Non-res.
Francis Sedgwick Watson,
1914-1915
1934
1934
French, Stanley Goodwin.
Fuess, Claude Moore. Non-res.
Frederick Cheever Shattuck,
1916-1918
1934
Kittredge, Henry Crocker.
Philip Hale,
1916-1928
Non-res.
Barrett Wendell,
1919-1920
Edward Reynolds,
1920-1921
Holker Abbott,
1922-1923
Edward Reynolds,
1924-1928
Christian A. Herter,
1929-1930
Benjamin Loring Young,
1929-1933
William Cameron Forbes,
1930-1931
Philip Hale,
1931-1934
George Russell Agassiz,
1933-
Lewis Perry,
1934-
September 14 1206
I shall march in the para de with the Tavern Club on
and y Holder
Saturday, May 27th.
in Bear feet I suppose.
9000 Taren bye
Signed
loseph Lindon Smith.
DEAR OLD BEAR
OF COURSE
I WILL HELP
ON
YOUR HALLOWEEN
PARTY
FARE WELL DEAR 0.0
BEAR
J.LS
NOV
21
1914
shall come to the
Friday, April 7th.
95 MOUNT VERNIN STREET
BOSTON
APRIL 30TH.MIS
Signed
y
HERE
LIES
KER
QUEEN TII
FAMOUS
QUEEN OF
EGYPT
XVIII DYNASTY
2
DEAR JIMMIE
I shall come to the Hallowe'en dinner on Thursday, October 29
THIS POOR 3030-BEAR CAN'T
COME TO THE NARRENABEND
Signed
JOJOWILLCOME
APRIL 5
JOJO WAS iN IT.
RESPONSES AND GREETINGS FROM JOSEPH LINDON SMITH
260 Chronology of Tavern Club Events
Chronology of Tavern Club Events 261
February 19
March 12
Doctors' Dinner: 'A Day with the Specialists'
1905
Orphans' Dinner
March 31
Narrenabend: Auction of Shields: 'Harpin & Co.'
January 20
Billiard Dinner
April 25
April 28
Musicians' Night
Dinner in honor of C. W. Eliot, J. C. Warren and H. P. Bowditch
February 14
St. Valentine's Dinner
March 15
Dinner in honor of Booker T. Washington
May 5
Annual Meeting
March 31
Narrenabend and 'The Men of Gad's Hill': Dickens Revival
May 15
Special Meeting: Question of enlarging Club House
April 24
Tavern Club Symphony Concert
June 3
August II
Fête Champêtre, at the Hoosic-Whisick Club
May I
Annual Meeting
Fête Maritime, off Marblehead
June I
Business Meeting
October 30
Hallowe'en: Pony Raffle: Dinner in honor of Crown Prince of Siam
June 2
Baseball Game with St. Botolph Club
November 14
Dinner in honor of Chief Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
June 9
Fête Champêtre (Augustus Hemenway, host)
December 22
Christmas Feast: 'R.L.S.' by A. S. Pier
November 14
Informal Dinner and Talk: 'An Egyptian Tomb,' by Joseph Lindon
Coming of Age of the Bear and 'The Carnival of Crime,' by T. R. Sul-
Smith; 'The Philippines,' by W. Cameron Forbes
1903
December I
January 10
January 20
Twelfth Night Supper (an act of 'Twelfth Night,' Shakespeare)
livan and J. L. Smith
Dinner before Artists' Festival
December 23
Funeral Services for Richard Hodgson
February 5
February 24
Dinner in honor of John Singer Sargent
1906
March 14
Literary Dinner: "Mercedes," by T. B. Aldrich
January 19
Dinner in honor of Gov. Curtis Guild
March 27
Supper in honor of Dr. Wilfred Grenfell
January 31
'The Pipe of Desire,' by G. E. Barton and F. S. Converse
April 14
Dinner in honor of Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood
April 20
Narrenabend: 'The Mercedes of the West,' by A. S. Pier
February 14
St. Valentine's Day and 'Tom Thumb the Great'
Musical Evening: Gericke
March 2
Dinner in honor of Edward Robinson
May 4
Annual Meeting
March 71
Mystery Play: Ames, Greeley and Johns
May 28
Pop Concert
March 9)
June 2
Dinner in honor of Collier's Weekly, and 'Town Tropics vs. Jolliers,'
October 6
Baseball Game with St. Botolph Club
March 23
December 4
Fête Champêtre (Augustus Hemenway, host)
April 3
Narrenabend and 'The Tribulations of Bec Bac,' by W. Cameron
by A. S. Pier
Hallowe'en Dinner
December 22
Forbes
December 3I
New Year's Eve Supper
Christmas Dinner: 'The Vanished Bride,' by Henry Copley Greene
April 6
Luncheon in honor of Robert Loraine
April 26
Luncheon in honor of H. G. Wells
1904
April 30
Dinner in honor of Wilhelm Gericke
January 15
Dinner in honor of Owen Wister: 'We Bostonians,' by Barrett Wendell
May 7
Annual Meeting
February 3
Baseball Game with St. Botolph Club
Dinner in honor of 'Perrier Jouet'
June 12
February 25
Fête Maritime: Gerfalcon and Gundred (Upham and Vaughan, hosts)
Musical Dinner
June 20
March 24
Narrenabend: Old Home Week, 'The Chivalrous Doctor,' by A. S. Pier
October 29
Hallowe'en and Minstrel Show
April 27
Musical Evening: Gericke
November 2
Dinner in honor of Henry Arthur Jones
May 2
Christmas Dinner: 'The Three Wishes' and 'The Need of Men,' by
Annual Meeting
December 21
May 26
G. E. Barton
Farewell Dinner in honor of W. Cameron Forbes: 'Buzzard Gold,' by
T. R. Sullivan and J. L. Smith
December 31
New Year's Supper
June 21
Baseball Game with St. Botolph Club
1907
August 23
September 21
October 12
Fête Champêtre (Arthur Cabot, host)
Fête Maritime: Gerfalcon (George Upham, host) from Marblehead
January 18
Dinner in honor of Winston Churchill
Informal Luncheon in honor of Prof. Barrett Wendell
January 25
Supper in honor of Forbes Robinson
November I
January 28
Artists' Festival Dinner
November II
Dinner in honor of Rt. Hon. James Bryce
February 9
Yale Dinner in honor of President Hadley
Twentieth Anniversary of the Tavern Club: Concert: 'Bear and For-
bear,' by M. A. DeW. Howe; 'Lord Ullin's Daughter'
March 8
Naturalists' Dinner in honor of Ernest Harold Baynes
December 23
March 15
Dinner in honor of Dr. Karl Muck
December 31
Christmas Dinner: 'Wild Animals We Have Known,' by F.S. Sturgis
Narrenabend: Lawyers' Night. 'A Meeting of the Boston Bar Associ-
New Year's Supper
April 8
ation
To/Ox
is
Darre
A
Needer
LIST
OF THE
Jage
OFFICERS AND MEMBERS
OF THE
&
Tabern Club
(ao
BOSTON:
PRINTED FOR Che Cabern Club
MCMXXXII
OFFICERS OF
if
The Tabern Club
1932
President
OWEN WISTER
Vice-Presidents
PHILIP HALE
B. LORING YOUNG
Secretary
JAMES LINCOLN HUNTINGTON
Treasurer
HENRY GOODWIN VAUGHAN
Directors
SAMUEL CABOT
ROBERT CUTLER
FREDERICK DEANE
DONALD MUNRO
EDWARD CARRINGTON THAYER
GEORGE BAXTER UPHAM
JASPER WHITING
I
Gift of Arthory Girbandez 86
Z.HI
Ucust.
Officers
LIST OF MEMBERS
Elections Committee
OF
GEORGE P. DENNY
The Tabern Club
SAMUEL HOAR
THEODORE B. PITMAN
MAY, 1932
CHANNING FROTHINGHAM
HENRY LYMAN
Resident Members
JOHN ROCK
1931. Timothée Adamowski
CHANDLER BIGELOW
1916. George Russell Agassiz
J. RANDOLPH BURKE
1922. William T. Aldrich
F. MURRAY FORBES, SR.
1932. Philip R. Allen
House Committee
1902. Walter Channing Bailey
J. RANDOLPH BURKE
1893. Franklin Greene Balch
MAURICE M. OSBORNE
1915. Thomas Barbour
LESLIE P. THOMPSON
1892. Frank Weston Benson
1929. Chandler Bigelow
Librarian
1924. Edward L. Bigelow
PHILIP HALE
1910. Gerald Blake
1902. John Bapst Blake
Chairman Pool Committee
1896. Dwight Blaney
DWIGHT BLANEY
1912. Thomas Spriggs Blumer
1922. William Bradley Breed
Club House
1901. George Washington Wales
No. 4 BOYLSTON PLACE
Brewster
2
3
Sep 31 1939
421960
Gift
The Tavern Club
List of Members
1922.
Henry Howard Brooks
1922.
Robert Cutler
1930.
J. Randolph Burke
1922.
Richard Ely Danielson
1928. Charles C. Cabot
1884.
Francis Henry Davenport
1907. Samuel Cabot
1926.
Frederick Deane
1922. Arthur Graham Carey
1919. George Parkman Denny
1928. George Peters Chittenden
1930. William H. Claflin, Jr.
1925. George Harold Edgell
1899. Walter John Clemson
1921. William Emerson
1920.
Stanley Cobb
1910. William Crowninshield Endi-
1922. Charles Russell Codman
cott
1899. John Sturgis Codman
1919. Richard Conover Evarts
1929. Henry F. Colt
1899. Frederick Shepherd Converse
1921.
Gordon Fairchild
1922. Charles Allerton Coolidge, Jr.
1908.
John Wells Farley
1931.
Harold J. Coolidge, Jr.
1932. John Huston Finley, Jr.
1890. John Templeman Coolidge
1913.
Reginald Fitz
1912. John Templeman Coolidge, Jr.
1907.
Arthur Foote
1925. T. Jefferson Coolidge
1918.
Allan Forbes
1915. Charles Townsend Copeland
1918.
Francis Murray Forbes
1896. Charles Kimball Cummings
1932. Francis Murray Forbes, Jr.
1925. Charles Pelham Curtis
1899. William Cameron Forbes
1919. Charles Pelham Curtis, Jr.
1923. Maurice Fremont-Smith
1922. Richard Carey Curtis
1913. Channing Frothingham
1912.
Harvey Cushing
1920. Robert Hale Ives Gammell
1884. Hayward Warren Cushing
1911. George Peabody Gardner, Jr.
4
5
The Tavern Club
List of Members
1906.
Wallace Goodrich
1885. Charles Martin Loeffler
1913.
Morris Gray, Jr.
1888.
Alexander Wadsworth Long-
1912.
Ralph Weld Gray
fellow
1901.
Henry Copley Greene
1894. Abbott Lawrence Lowell
1922.
Roger Griswold
1922. James H. Lowell
1893. Matthew Luce
1912.
Philip Hale
1892.
Fred Bates Lund
1920.
Joseph R. Hamlen
1903.
Henry Lyman
1924.
Lawrence Hemenway
1919. Andrew H. Hepburn
1927. John P. Marquand
1924. Christian A. Herter
1931. Francis O. Matthiessen
1899.
Arthur Dehon Hill
1931. Donald Moffat
1926.
Samuel Hoar
1884. George Howard Monks
1908. Richard Bayard Hobart
1911.
John Farwell Moors
1897. Charles Sidney Hopkinson
1926. Donald Munro
1893. Mark Antony DeWolfe
Howe
1927.
Maurice M. Osborne
1918. Llewellyn Howland
1922.
James Otis
1920. Edward Arthur Hubbard
1921. James Lincoln Huntington
1932.
Richard C. Paine
1908. William James
1929. Franklin H. Palmer
1904. William Stanley Parker
1919. Malcolm Lang
1929. Henry Parkman, Jr.
1932. Thomas H. Lanman
1910.
John Forbes Perkins
1916. Roger I. Lee
1905.
Bliss Perry
1920. James Lovell Little
1905. Andrew James Peters
6
7
The Tavern Club
List of Members
1920.
John Charles Phillips
1930.
William Greenough Thayer
1913. William Phillips
1930.
Leslie P. Thompson
1923. Edward M. Pickman
1890. Paul Thorndike
1928. Theodore B. Pitman
1912. William Ropes Trask
1926.
Harford W. H. Powel, Jr.
1931. Robert Proctor
1884. George Baxter Upham
1901. Henry Goodwin Vaughan
1891. Edward Reynolds
1928. George P. Reynolds
1907. Eliot Wadsworth
1884. William Lambert Richardson
1910. Philip Wadsworth
1922.
John Rock
1911. Richard Goodwin Wadsworth
1885. Henry Munroe Rogers
1887. Charles Howard Walker
1909.
Langdon Warner
1919. Daniel Sargent
1902. Edward Ross Warren
1908. Sullivan A. Sargent
1918. Charles Frederick Weed
1910. Ellery Sedgwick
1924.
James C. White
1931. Henry Dwight Sedgwick
1913.
Jasper Whiting
1930. George Cheever Shattuck
1922. Edward Allen Whitney
1915.
Arthur A. Shurcliff
1931.
Hugh Whitney
1903. Jeremiah Smith, Jr.
1920. Charles Wiggins, 2d
1928. Theodore Spencer
1929.
Gluyas Williams
1915. Richard Pearson Strong
1926.
Harold B. Willis
1890. Richard Clipston Sturgis
1884.
Owen Wister
1927. Lawrence Terry
1917. Benjamin Loring Young
1924. Edward Carrington Thayer
1925.
Hans Zinsser
8
9
The Tavern Club
List of Members
Non-Resident Members
1926. Theodore W. Chanler, Cam-
1922. Adelbert Ames, Jr., Hanover,
bridge, Massachusetts
New Hampshire
1925.
Chanler Chapman, New York
1896. Winthrop Ames, New York
City
City
1909. John Jay Chapman, New York
1894. Robert W. Atkinson, Brookline,
City
Massachusetts
1923. Gerald Chittenden, Concord,
New Hampshire
1884. Francis Henry Bacon, Boston,
1926. Boughton Cobb, New York
Massachusetts
City
1887. Gorham Bacon, Yarmouthport,
1931. Robert C. Cobb, Littleton,
Massachusetts
Massachusetts
1894. Wilder Dwight Bancroft,
1908. Frederic Codman Cobb,
Ithaca, New York
Gloucester, Massachusetts
1911. Robert Perkins Bass, Peter-
1906. James Freeman Curtis, New
boro, New Hampshire
York City
1900. Gordon Knox Bell, New York
City
1904. George Bucknam Dorr, Bar
1906. Lewis Sherrill Bigelow, North
Harbor, Maine
Andover, Massachusetts
1908. Arthur Fairbanks, Hanover,
1923. W. Sprague Brooks, Orleans,
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
1907. Charles Stewart Forbes, Paris,
1928. John Nicholas Brown, Provi-
France
dence, Rhode Island
1896. Francis Henry Balfour Byrne,
1902. Russell H. Greeley, Grasse,
New York City
France
10
II
The Tavern Club
List of Members
1909. John Hays Hammond, New
1922.
Clarence
Cook
Little,
Bar
York City
Harbor, Maine
1930. Edward S. Harkness, New
1923. Henry Cabot Lodge, Beverly
York City
Farms, Massachusetts
1927. Barklie McKee Henry, New
York City
1893. John Stewart McLennan, Ot-
1925. Ernest Martin Hopkins, Hano-
tawa, Canada
ver, New Hampshire
1902. John Lawrence Mauran, St.
1917. Wallis Eastbourne Howe, Prov-
Louis, Missouri
idence, Rhode Island
1930. J. Vaughan Merrick, 3d, New-
port, Rhode Island
1915. Alexander Robertson James,
1890. Josiah Byram Millet, New
Dublin, New Hampshire
York City
1912. Benjamin Joy, Paris, France
1930. Charles E. Mills, Dedham,
Massachusetts
1906. Marshall Rutgers Kernochan,
1914. James Madison Morton, Jr.,
Tuxedo Park, New York
Fall River, Massachusetts
1922. Alfred Vincent Kidder, Ando-
1926. Edward S. Munro, New York
ver, Massachusetts
City
1914. Roger Kinnicutt, Worcester,
1899. Guy Murchie, New York City
Massachusetts
1921. William Allan Neilson, North-
1900. Waldo Lincoln, Worcester,
ampton, Massachusetts
Massachusetts
1904. Frederick Eldridge Lowell,
1914.
Arthur
Wilson
Page,
New
Concord, Massachusetts
York City
12
13
The Tavern Club
List of Members
1902.
Herbert
Parker,
Lancaster,
1919. John Francis Tallack, New
Massachusetts
York City
1930. Francis Parkman, Southboro,
1893. Edmund C. Tarbell, Ports-
Massachusetts
mouth, New Hampshire
1915. Lewis Perry, Exeter, New
Hampshire
1923.
Charles R. Walker, New York
1901. Arthur Stanwood Pier, Con-
City
cord, New Hampshire
1884. Francis Sedgwick Watson,
South Dartmouth, Massachu-
1904. Alexander Hamilton Rice, New
setts
York City
1893. Theodore Wendel, Ipswich,
Massachusetts
1922. J. Gregory Wiggins, Pomfret,
1884.
Charles
Edward
Sampson,
Connecticut
New York City
1922. Kenneth Charles Morton Sills,
1924. Owen D. Young, New York
Brunswick, Maine
City
1900. William Frederick Slocum,
Newton Center, Massachu-
1914. Clarence Clark Zantzinger,
setts
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1892. Joseph Lindon Smith, New
York City
1931. Chauncey Devereux Stillman,
Honorary Members
New York City
1897. Thomas Bailey Aldrich: 1907
1916. James Amory Sullivan, Asolo,
1884.
Henry Pickering Bowditch: 1911
Veneto, Italy
1902.
LeBaron Russell Briggs
14
15
The Tavern Club
List of Members
1885. Martin Brimmer: 1896
Charter Members
1928. Richard E. Byrd
Timothée Adamowski
1904. Charles William Eliot: 1926
Robert Day Andrews
1884. Wilhelm Gericke: 1925
William Payne Blake
1884. Henry Lee Higginson: 1919
William Norton Bullard
1896. Adams Sherman Hill: 1910
Edward Burnett
1889. Oliver Wendell Holmes: 1894
Sigourney Butler
1894. Oliver Wendell Holmes
Frederic Crowninshield
1884. William Dean Howells: 1920
Elbridge Gerry Cutler
1911. Henry James: 1916
Arthur Edward Davis
1906. William James: 1910
Edward Kellogg Dunham
Henry Strong Durand
1888. Henry Lee: 1889
Thomas Carey Felton
1885. James Russell Lowell: 1891
Reginald Heber Fitz
1885. Charles Eliot Norton: 1908
James Goldthwaite Freeman
1895. Ignace Jan Paderewski
Ignaz Marcel Gaugengigl
1931. Thomas Nelson Perkins
Francis Boott Greenough
1903. James Ford Rhodes: 1927
George Griswold Hayward
1921. Theodore W. Richards: 1928
William Dean Howells
Clyde Du Vernet Hunt
1890. John Singer Sargent: 1925
Herbert Jaques
1920. William S. Sims
Samuel Wood Langmaid
1903. Augustus St. Gaudens: 1908
Elliot Cabot Lee
1887. Charles Dudley Warner: 1900
Francis Wilson Lee
1909. Leonard Wood: 1928
John Torrey Linzee
16
17
The Tavern Club
John Dandridge Henley Luce
John Hildreth McCollum
George Chickering Munzig
Arthur Jeffrey Parsons
Benjamin Curtis Porter
Morton Prince
Henry Parker Quincy
William Lambert Richardson
Arthur Rotch
Charles Edward Sampson
Joshua Montgomery Sears
Henry Harrison Sprague
Printed, with decorations drawn by F. G.
George Stedman
;
Attwood, from designs of D.B. Updike,
Charles Wilkins Sturgis
at the press of Geo. H. Ellis
Francis Shaw Sturgis
Co. (Inc.), Boston,
Thomas Russell Sullivan
May thirty-first
Henry Walton Swift
MCMXXXII
George Horton Tilden
George Baxter Upham
Frederic Porter Vinton
Francis Sedgwick Watson
William Fletcher Weld
John Tyler Wheelwright
Royal Whitman
Owen Wister
18
X
The Tavern Club
at One Hundred
1959-1984
0
EDITED BY CHARLES B. EVERITT
113068
G. ERIC JONES LIBRARY
ATLANTIC UNION COLLEGE
SO. LANCASTER, MA. 01561
MCMLXXXIV
Copyright © 1984, by The Tavern Club
All rights reserved.
Table of Contents
The One Hundreth Anniversary
of the Tavern Club
Foreword
PRESIDENT PAUL C.
Manufactured in the United States of America
REARDON
vii
First Printing
Designed by David Ford
In Taberna
DAVID T.W.
MCCORD
ix
The Presidential Range
M.A. DEWOLFE
HOWE
I
I Tavern Plays and
Playwrights: A Backward
CHARLES G.K.
Glance
WARNER
7
II Music at the Tavern
HUGH SHEPLEY
31
III The Neighborhood of the
Tavern Club
JOHN T. GALVIN
34
IV Presidents I I lave Known
DAN SARGENT
46
V Friday Lunch
GEORGE HOMANS
53
HS
2725
VI Of Deans and Dons
JOHN FINLEY
58
BV
VII Schoolmasters in the Tavern
FRANCIS PARKMAN
7 '
T3
1984
vi
Contents
VIII Taverners in the Bush
GORDON WILLEY
80
IX Doctor in the House ?
DAVID CROCKETT
98
Foreword
X Tavern Club Art and Artists
ROLLIN VAN N.
in the First Century
HADLEY
103
1984 finds the Tavern in its usual jolly mood. For here it is,
100 years old, sailing serenely on its way, with a boatload of
XI Taverners in Politics
contented passengers, all cagerly facing a second century of
FRANCIS W.
"comfort and joy." If Orwell's Big Brother were to display
HATCH, JR.
120
his dismal appearance in Boylston Place this year, he would
XII Taverners on Deck
be promptly clapped into a comic role in some upcoming
PHILIP S. WELD
125
production on the stage at No. 4.
Samuel Johnson outdid all subsequent lexicographers in
XIII Poetry at the Tavern
SELECTED BY
defining "club" as an "assembly of good fellows meeting under
PIERRE A.
certain conditions." Since 1884, a painstaking Elections Com-
DUHAMEL
144
mittee has eased the road to membership in the Tavern of
many "good fellows." A succession of officers has respected
XIV The Tavern Between Hard
the "conditions" which the club founders had in mind.
Covers: A Centennial
LLEWELLYN
Mark A. DeWolfe Howe after two years of individual effort
Bibliography
HOWLAND III
161
described the club's first half century in a volume which was
published in 1934. On the Tavern's 75th birthday, Ted Weeks
XV Tavern Memorials to
SELECTED BY PAUL
edited a "medley" of contributions from Taverners on aspects
Celebrated Friends
BROOKS
of club life, using vignettes about individual members, COV-
178
ering the period from 1934 to 1959. All good Taverners
Chronology of Tavern Club
should read these two publications to appreciate in full what
Events, 1959-1984
258
a heritage is ours.
Now an industrious committee, led by John Taylor, has
Officers and Members of the
brought together in this Centennial Year a collection of essays
Tavern Club, May I, 1984
on the Tavern and the accomplishments of its members,
271
bringing us up to date. These accounts speak for themselves.
But do they not portray the fidelity of the club's "Johnson-
The Contributors
286
ian Conditions" described by Lewis Perry when he spoke of
Centennial Book Committee
287
The Neighborbood
35
Street. "Bright, active-minded and energetic," refined and
cultured, interested in the arts, literature and science, they
The Neighborbood
were far from being of the "dangerous classes" Mayor Palmer
alluded to, but banded together together because of their
of the Tavern Club
artistic tastes. "It occurred to some of them after a time that
I
it might be possible and agreeable to form a small club, to
JOHN T. GALVIN
which congenial persons might be admitted, where they could
dine regularly in company, and where they could have full
control of the arrangements," one of them recalled later.
On July I, 1884, the young men hired rooms at I Park
In 1883, Chester A. Arthur was in the White House. Ben-
Square, at the easterly corner of Boylston Street, beneath the
jamin F. Butler was Governor of Massachusetts. The state's
studio of artist Frederick Porter Vinton, and over the grocery
two U.S. Senators were Henry Laurens Dawes of Pittsfield
store of F. C. Lord and Company. On July 25, 1884, they
and George Frisbie Hoar of Worcester. All were Republicans,
held their first meeting in the club rooms "to effect an orga-
except Butler, a sometime Republican candidate, elected as a
nization." The name "Tavern Club" was suggested by Dr.
Democrat. Albert Palmer (Republican) of Roxbury, a native
Royal Whitman. "The Tavern Club was organized by a group
of Candia, New Hampshire, graduate of Dartmouth College,
of painters, writers, musicians, doctors, and other good com-
a former teacher at Boston Latin School, and treasurer of the
pany with [William Dean I Howells as our first president,"
Jamaica Pond Ice Company, was serving his single one-year
wrote Owen Wister (Tavern President, 1929-1935). "Henry
term as Mayor of Boston.
Irving was our first guest of honor. He came to supper after
In his Inaugural Address, Mayor Palmer had spoken of
the play and stayed until six the next morning. I sang him a
Boston as "in many respects, the model municipality of the
lot of songs, and went down at nine to my hard high stool,
continent. In a time of great public blessings," Palmer con-
at 40 State Street [Union Safe Deposit Vaults] with quite a
tinued, "when the mercies of Providence are being dispensed
head." Three years later, when their "somewhat ramshackle
to us with a bountiful hand, let us not esteem it the least of
building" was slated for demolition, the Tavern Club moved
them that we are a metropolis that has no 'dangerous classes'
around the corner to Number 4 Boylston Place, not far from
of any considerable strength, and needs not, as do some of
the Boston Public Library, which was then on Boylston
the cities of older civilizations, to lie in terror and rise up in
Street. "This quiet cul-de-sac" was lined on both sides with
dread of its own inhabitants."
houses, three of which, like the one purchased by the Tavern
It was at this time that several young men, "unmarried and
Club, had been constructed about 1819 by one Beza Tucker.
without definite homes where they took their meals," began
The others had been built during a South End building boom
meeting often at a restaurant on Church Street called the
in 1855.
Carrollton, and, later, at an Italian restaurant on Boylston
The Tavern Club bought the house next door to it in 1909.
70
The Tavern at One Hundred
in Tavern literary history, as does now the gifted Rodney
VII
Armstrong.
Professor Fritz Robinson's Celtic likewise passes to the
Schoolmasters in the Tavern
glad-hearted Charles W. Dunn, long the lively Master of
Quincy House. If sociology sounds solemn, it too turns joy-
FRANCIS PARKMAN
ous in George C. Homans, font of companionship and con-
tinually surprising information. Whether Robert G. Gardner
Schoolmasters and perhaps especially headmasters are a no-
whose cinema brilliantly records Indonesian, African, Ethi-
ticeably large group in the Tavern's total membership. Why
opian, and Indian life is a sociologist, an anthropologist or an
do they join it SO cagerly, if they have the chance?
artist may be doubtful; he is all three but chiefly an artist.
One might ask, to start with, why does a school man want
The Professor of International Relations Daniel S. Cheever
to become a headmaster? One who looks back on a term of
happily returns from Pittsburgh to Boston University, his
headmastering during the pre-war years and compares the
oceanic concerns converging toward those of his early boss,
task then with that of modern times is bound to realize that
the master of the subject (as of much else) Elliot L. Richardson
it was simpler in the earlier days than now. The schools
and increasingly now of Former Governor Sargent. Professor
needed more capital then (they always do) but raising it in
Roger Prouty widely expounds the related subject of British
those depression days was virtually impossible. The modern
Constitutional History at the Boston branch of the University
headmaster has concerns, in addition to fund-raising, that
of Massachusetts. Many of these fields joined in Samuel Eliot
were missing in the '30s. To name a few, he must be alert to
Morison, stylist, linguist, world traveler in peace and war,
the drug problem and ready to cope with the issues raised by
acute portrayer of past and present societies and of their
the almost universal rush to coeducation. He has to have
history-changing leaders, an historian of Parkman's dimension
visible and functioning lines of communication to and from
framed by Dana's and Melville's seas, a writer not destined
faculty and students in matters of policy and discipline. He
for oblivion. The too rare pleasure of his company through
must be certain that school policies and actions in admissions
his full years shines on.
of students and engaging faculty and staff satisfy legal re-
quirements against discrimination and his own conscience and
that of the community. And finally, if he has to dismiss a
student for poor work or bad behavior, or fire a poor teacher,
he had better be sure that the individual's rights are protected
by proper legal procedure, or he may risk finding himself and
the school defendants in a lawsuit.
So the question remains: why do headmasters like to be
Taverners? I offer this theory. In spite of all the developments
72
The Tavern at One Hundred
Schoolmasters
73
making headmastering more difficult and less appealing these
days, the school head is still a powerful figure. Those who
deal with him-teachers, students and parents-recognize his
power, and he can't help sensing their attitude. It all works
to make him feel pretty important. I remember a talk by Dr.
Drury of St. Paul's at a long-ago meeting of the Headmasters
Association, warning his hearers of the dangers of getting to
feel that they are God. If the headmaster is intelligent enough
to have been made a headmaster, he will realize (consciously
or unconsciously or with help from his wife) that it is dan-
gerous for him to spend all his time in an atmosphere where
he is generally regarded as god-like. Therefore he is happy to
belong to a club whose members are oriented to matters
intellectual as he is, but where he will be treated on his own
merits just like everybody else and where certainly no one
will regard him as god-like. He can also enjoy meeting other
headmasters in this atmosphere, and thus frequently learn,
what is balm to every schoolhead, that other schools and other
heads have the same kind of troubles as those that are both-
ering him.
William G. Saltonstall
Whatever the reasons that schoolmasters feel comfortable
at the Tavern, the Tavern has always welcomed them as
members. Twenty-five years ago, in 1959, nineteen members
had been or were or were about to be headmasters. In 1983
there were almost exactly the same number. The earlier list
was headed by Lewis Perry, the President of the Club as well
as Principal at Exeter. Other heads were the equally legendary
Frank Boyden of Deerfield; the headmaster of Andover, suc-
cessor to Jack Fuess who received his 25-year medal that year;
the heads of a number of other New England schools as close
by as Noble and Greenough and Roxbury Latin, and as far
away as Miss Porter's School in Connecticut and St. George's
Bliss Perry
in Rhode Island. The list was rounded out by the head of
74
The Tavern at One Hundred
Schoolmasters
75
the Hill School in Pennsylvania and that of Fountain Valley
make noontime absences practically impossible. Thus a school
in Colorado (where Lewis Perry's son was head). The schools
teacher, asked if he'd like to be proposed for the Tavern,
often referred to as the St. Grottlesex group were well rep-
understandably must in most cases regretfully decline.
resented.
Looking at the list in 1983 we find that of the nineteen
Equally appreciated at the club were seven school men, not
school heads in 1959, nine have gone to a better world, but
heads. This shorter list started with Arthur Stanwood Pier,
of the remaining ten all but one are still members of the Club;
a member since 1901 who in a long segment of his distin-
two have become fifty-year medalists and a third is close to
guished career taught at St. Paul's School. The much loved
that distinction. Several other school heads have come and
Wells Kerr, after years as dean at Exeter, retired to spend
gone as members within the quarter-century under review:
more years teaching in Colorado. Gerry Chittenden, long-
Charlie Sheerin, Dave Wicks, Jerry Pich and Kim Smith.
time teacher at St. Paul's, was a member since 1923; and
Johnny Hallowell retired headmaster of Western Reserve
Craig Wylie, who had been a St. Paul's School teacher turned
Academy in Ohio, came back and resumed teaching at the
later to book publishing.
Belmont Hill School and was a Taverner for several years
To make eight, I include Dave McCord, who, though never
before he died.
a member of a school faculty, has probably taught more
Several new names on the list are heads of schools not
children in more classrooms than most school heads have ever
previously represented by a member; several schools whose
faced. And I also count Cary Potter, who after several years
heads were members in 1959 are missing, but in more than
of teaching at Roxbury Latin moved to the National Associ-
one case the head who was a member in 1959 has been
ation of Independent Schools, of which he later became the
succeeded by a new head, who himself has been made a
president, a post whose holder is consultant and adviser to
member. But let no one think that there is any school whose
the school heads, boards of trustees and other school officials
head is a sure bet for membership. I remember an occasion
of the hundreds of schools of all sorts and sizes in its mem-
when my own nomination of a headmaster was almost re-
bership. In that capacity he served for fourteen years.
jected because I had pointed out to the great disapproval of
Why are the classroom teachers, pure and simple, SO out-
the Committee on Elections, that the man's two predecessors
numbered by men at the top? The Tavern membership rolls
as head of that particular school had been members of the
include many college and university presidents, but probably
Tavern.
as many or more from university teaching faculties. The
How does one evaluate the contribution any member makes
relative shortage of school teachers can hardly be attributed
to the Tavern and its life? And what can be said of the school
to the Club's Committee on Elections; more likely we can
men's contributions? Lewis Perry tells us that the best Tav-
look for the reason to the nature of the school teacher's life,
erners are those who are like no one elsc. The only thing that
not to mention his proverbially low financial rewards. In a
can be said with certainty of this group of school members is
boarding school, dormitory duties and other scheduled chores
that every one of them would like to feel that he has at least
make evenings out a rarity, and classroom responsibilities
a few of the other qualities of good members that are scattered
160 The Tavern at One Hundred
Christmas Poem
XIV
We circle our sun with an atmosphere
Amoebas can breathe
The Tavern
And SO can we
And though it gets cold
Between Hard Covers:
This time of year
The sun in the grain
Still brings good cheer
A Centennial Bibliography
And the grape in the bottle
Is bright and clear
LLEWELLYN I1OWLAND 111
And snug on our planet
Are we;
So stopple your bottle of aerosol,
In the Tavern Club there are three libraries. The first is the
Throttle down the gas,
west-facing chamber we are pleased to call our sanctum, on
the tumbled shelves of which stand none too many books in
It's a fragile craft we live upon
none too fine condition. I Ierc we speak often enough of books,
And we're going a bit too fast;
but read them seldom and write them not at all.
It's a lovely rock in empty space
And we'd like to make it last;
The second library (which could exist in fact, but does not)
A precious ship in a shining sea
is that ursine archive where every book ever written by a
Of burning stars in a galaxy
Taverner is collected in the first state of its first printing, in
And ours is the only place to be;
pristine dust jacket (if called for), complete with an apposite
Then fill your glass with the gentle wine
author's inscription, the whole contained within a full po-
And one to another be ye kind
lished black calf folding case, onlaid with green morocco (bear
And to the earth be kind also.
rampant), gilt, as bound by Zaehnsdorf, Douglas Cockerell,
Cobden-Sanderson, or Marius-Michel.
Thomas Boylston Adams
And the third library? This is the fantastical palace of
1977
words that houses not merely every book, pamphlet, jape or
jest ever uttered by a Taverner, but every such a Taverner
might have committed-or may yet. This is where a century
of Taverners are gathered in person: old friends forever young
in the fellowship of the Bear.
In the first Tavern library, and in the third, each of us is
welcome, each at home. But the second library is, I suspect,
unknown territory for many of us. At least it was to me, until
162 The Tavern at One Hundred
Between Hardcovers
103
Howe. Oliver Wendell Holmes, John Jay Chapman, Barrett
I started exploring its card file. Only slowly have I begun to
Wendell, Frederick Pickering Cabot, and Henry Lee Higgin-
understand the importance of it. For the fact is we Taverners
spend more time writing books or editing them than we do
son were among Howe's Tavern marks. A Partial (and not
reading books about books. The Tavern a club of odd vol-
impartial) Semi-Centennial History of the Tavern Club, 1884-193
is another testament to the care and affection Howe lavished
umes? Never! Ours is a gathering of complete works.
Our first president, William Dean Howells, set the all
on his friends at Boylston Place.
important example. When he was not managing The Atlantic
Perhaps the most intimate portrait of a Taverner in print
Monthly or Cosmopolitan (this was before the time of Helen
was provided by our late and former member George San-
Gurley Brown), serving as U.S. consul in Venice, or presid-
tayana in The Last Puritan. Both Santayana and the putative
model for Oliver Alden in The Last Puritan subsequently wrote
ing at the Tavern, he was writing. Between 1860 and his
death in 1919, Howells added over 100 titles to the Bibliog-
about the character of Oliver, denying that Oliver had any
rapby of American Literature, thus becoming our first literary
real-life counterpart. Nor does the slightest scandal attach to
Centuriator.
Santayana's brilliant portrait of his doomed hero. Still, it
Another of our heavy hitters was Henry James. It was
caused consternation in some quarters. When, only two years
James' misfortune to have been elected to the Tavern only
later, in 1937, our late member John P. Marquand published
late in life, when the weight of his prose matched the gravity
The Late George Apley, more than one in our midst took the
of his reputation. A few more years at Boylston Place, and
whole thing very personally.
we might have got him writing The Return Of The Screw or
Of course, anyone can write a book, and many do. Getting
Daisy Miller Meets Tootsie for our Narrenabends. In 1981 a
it published is more complicated. From the first, editors and
copy of James' Works, New York, 1907-1917, 26 volumes,
publishers have been ubiquitous in our midst. That these
fetched $4,400 at Sotheby Parke Bernet. It was one of 156
publishers have also often been writers is simply a reflection
numbered sets, bound in full morocco gilt. There was no bear
of the creative spirit that burns at the hearth in all three
Tavern libraries.
on the binding.
Henry James looms large in the Tavern's literary history
Nor have our publishers been averse to the exercise of a
not simply, or even primarily, because he was an honorary
certain benign and bearlike nepotism. In this The Atlantic has
member of the Club with a clubman's ample waistcoat. My
been the chief practitioner: Howells, Aldrich, Bliss Perry,
research suggests that he is also the American writer most
Ellery Sedgwick, Ted Weeks and Bob Manning topped the
frequently written about by succeeding generations of Tavern
masthead for 95 of The Atlantic's most recent 115 years, and
Richard Danielson used to own the magazine (as he owned
literary historians and critics.
The tradition of Taverners writing about Taverners is a
the splendid monthly The Sportsman, which was edited by
Christian A. Herter and contributed to by many another
very striking one, as well as somewhat hazardous to assay in
such a piece as this. Certainly no member of the Tavern
Tavern member). But Houghton Mifflin's record for nepotism
observed the tradition more faithfully than Mark A. DeWolfe
hasn't been too bad either: Henry Laughlin, Paul Brooks,
164 The Tavern at One Hundred
Between Hardcovers
165
Craig Wylie, and Dick McAdoo represented the Tavern's
over to Yale some-George Pierce Baker was one such-of
ascendency at 2 Park Street for fully fifty years. The Tavern
our own best. It was Archibald MacLeish who, perhaps in-
authors whom The Atlantic Monthly Press chose not to pub-
spired by his Harvard legal education, wrote that Boylston
lish, Houghton Mifflin generally did. Sometimes (Sam Mor-
Place was "a flight of climbing stairs with acropolis at the end
ison is a fine example) they shared a Taverner between them.
of it." Up these steps have climbed a pantheon of Elis, in-
Why Little, Brown was for SO long SO conspicuously missing
cluding (but not limited to) Lefty Lewis, F. (). Matthiessen
from the Tavern rolls-and SO briefly represented on them-
and Archie himself. At the Tavern Yale deities assumed a
is an intriguing question, for which I have no publishable
mortal dimension and were known to take a glass or two of
answer. Nor is there any truth to the rumor that the Tavern
vin ordinaire. And SO do they still.
Club is a wholly owned subsidiary of Affiliated Publications,
No, the influence of Harvard on the Tavern, though per-
Inc.
vasive, is also incidental. We live with it as we live with
One Tavern adjunct has practiced nepotism in an altogether
Boston's weather, having little occasion to live without it.
shameless manner, supplying us with authors, editors, librar-
Besides, the Harvard connection of many a Tavern member
ians, savants and sages in an endless variety of trim sizes and
is solely through the Tavern. William Dean Howells was but
binding styles, all of them crimson. It is a great temptation
the first of a distinguished line of Taverners who matriculated
to follow various of the lines of intellectual descent from our
from no college whatsoever.
largely Harvard-educated Founding Fathers and First Sons:
Studying the card files of Widener Library and the BPL,
as for example from Charles Norton to Barrett Wendell to
I have struggled to impose some logic on this short-form
Alan Heimert; or from Reginald Heber Fitz (and before him
Tavern bibliography, to seek out that one book (or body of
Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes) to Myles Baker or Franny
work) that might help characterize its author in relation to
Moore; from Charles William Eliot to Wilder Bancroft to
the Tavern. It can't be done.
James Bryant Conant. In virtually all the professions and arts,
For every Tavern author who fits a category, there are two
something of a Harvard-Tavern dynasty has been estab-
who fit none. We are a club of lawyers who wrote their
lished. Yet such genealogical excursions are really beside the
greatest briefs in verse. We are a club of poets whose finest
point. Better that we ask what our dynasts were doing when
lines have been cast into some faraway trout stream. We are
they weren't busy contributing to the Tavern bibliography.
a club of anglers whose most memorable catches were the
The answer to this question could hardly be more simple:
authors we edited or published. We are a club of publishers
they repaired to Boylston Place for an evening of levitation.
who galleys are a Shipmate stove and whose proofs are
So do they still.
watertight Sou' westers. For every Taverner who professes,
The relative paucity of hardcover (or even paperbound)
there is a Taverner who professes not to. For every Taverner
Yale men at the Tavern is no great loss. For we have always
who earns his livelihood on State Street, there is a Taverner
had the best of Yale (just as the best of Yale generally manages
who is a minister of state.
to acquire a Harvard graduate degree). We have even given
This being the case (and even if it were not), I hope that
166
The Tavern at One Hundred
Bibliography
167
the list that follows may insire others to compile their own
with John Dewey. Edited by Hadley Cantril. New Brunswick,
centennial bibliographies of our much-loved club. I hope the
N.J., 1960.
list will inspire Taverners to help fill the many egregious gaps
Bacon, Gaspar Griswold. The Constitution of the United States in some
in the library at Boylston Place, as well as in their own. I
of its fundamental aspects. Cambridge, 1928.
hope, finally, that you will forgive me my bibliographical
Bacon, Leonard. Rhyme and punishment. New York, (1936). DAB
lapses and idiosyncracies, as I forgive you the vast forests that
Supp. 5-29.
you have caused to be felled in your zeal to be bound between
Baker, George Pierce. Dramatic Technique. Boston and New York,
1919. DAB Supp. 1-45.
hardcovers.
Bancroft, Wilder Dwight. Applied colloid chemistry: general theory.
New York, 1921. DAB Supp. 5-36.
Bates, Arlo. Pattie's perversities. Boston, 1881. DAB II-45. Wright
389.
Bibliographies are lichens on the walls of learning: harmless
Baxter, James Phinney, 3rd. Scientists against time. Boston, 1946.
scales of green and gold that give booksellers pleasure. I
Pulitzer Prize, 1947.
'mention seven standard bibliographies in the following com-
Baynes, Ernest Harold. Wild bird guests: how to entertain them. New
pilation. These are Whitman Bennett's A practical guide to
York, 1915.
American nineteenth century color plate books (1800-1900), New
Belknap, Waldron Phoenix, Jr. The discoveries of
concerning the
York, 1949; Jacob Blanck's Peter Parley to Penrod, New York,
influence of the English mezzotint on Colonial painting. Cambridge,
1961; Jacob Blanck et al, Bibliography of American literature
1955.
[BAL], New Haven and London, 1955- ; Dictionary of Amer-
Bentinck-Smith, William. Building a great library: the Coolidge years
at Harvard
Cambridge, 1976.
ican biography [DAB], New York, various editions; Wright
Bigelow, William Sturgis. Buddhism and immortality. Boston, 1908.
Howes' US-iana (1650-1950) [Howes], second edition, New
DAB II-261.
York, 1962; Leslie T. Morton's A medical bibliography (Garrison
Blake, John Bapst. See Burrell, H. L.
and Morton) [G-M], fourth edition, (Aldershot, 1983); and
Bowditch, Henry Pickering. The growth of children. Boston, 1877.
Lyle H. Wright's American fiction
[Wright], second edi-
DAB II-494.
tion, San Marino, 1969.
Bowditch, Vincent Yardley. Life and correspondence of Henry T. Bow-
ditch. Boston and New York, 1902. Two volumes.
Adams, Thomas Boylston. A new nation. Chester, Conn., 1981.
Bradford, Edward Hickling. Treatise on orthopaedic surgery. New
Agassiz, George Russell (editor). Letters of Colonel Theodore Lyman
York, 1890. DAB II-556. G-M 4353.
from the Wilderness to Appomatox. Selected and edited by
Bos-
Briggs, LeBaron Russell. School, college, and character. Boston and
ton, 1922.
New York, 1901. DAB Supp. 1-119.
Aldrich, Thomas Bailey. The story of a bad boy. Boston, 1870. DAB
Brock, Horace. Flying the oceans: a pilot's story
Lunenburg, Vt.,
I-158. BAL 269. Peter Parley to Penrod, p. 35.
1978.
Ames, Adelbert, Jr. The morning notes of
including correspondence
Brooks, Paul. Roadless area. New York, 1964.
168 The Tavern at One Hundred
Bibliography
169
Brown, Herbert Ross. The sentimental novel in America, 1789-1860.
Duhamel, P. Albert. After strange fruit. Changing Literary taste in
Durham, N.C., 1940.
post-World War II Boston. Boston, 1980.
Burrell, Herbert Leslie. Case teaching in surgery. Boston, 1904. John
Dunn, Charles W. Highland Settler. Toronto, 1956.
Bapst Blake was joint author.
Eliot, Charles William. Annual reports of the President of Harvard
Bullard, William Norton. The relation of tea drinking to disorders of the
University. Cambridge, 1869-1909. DAB VI-71 Also, editor, The
nervous system. [Boston, 1887.]
Harvard Classics, New York (1909-26). 52 volumes.
Byrd, Richard Evelyn. Discovery. The story of the Second Byrd Antarctic
Enders, John Franklin (editor). Journal of Immunology. Boston, 1942-
Expedition. New York, 1935- DAB Supp. 6-91.
1958. Nobel Prize in Medicine and Physiology, 1954.
Carey, Arthur Astor. New nerves for old
Boston, 1914
Endicott, William Crowninshield. Memoir of Samuel Endicott: with a
Chafee, Zachariah, Jr. Freedom of speech. Cambridge, 1920. DAB
genealogy
Boston, 1924. DAB VI-158
Supp. 6-105.
Farnsworth, Dana Lyda. Mental health in college and university. Cam-
Chamberlain, Samuel. Etched in sunlight. Fifty years in the graphic
bridge, 1957.
arts. Boston, 1968.
Fenollosa, Ernest Francisco. Epochs of Chinese and Japanese art. Lon-
Chapman, John Jay. William Lloyd Garrison. New York, 1913. DAB
don, 1911. Two volumes. DAB VI-325.
Supp. 1-168.
Ferris, Theodore Parker. The image of God. New York, 1965.
Churchill, Winston. Richard Carvel. New York and London, 1899.
Finley, John Huston, Jr. Thucydides. Cambridge, 1947.
DAB Supp. 4-163. Wright 1044.
Fitz, Reginald Heber. Perforating inflammation of the vermiform appen-
Cobb, Stanley. Borderlands of psychiatry
Cambridge, 1948.
dix; with special reference to its early diagnosis and treatment. [Phila-
Compton, Karl Taylor. Five atomic bombs and the future. Birmingham,
delphia, 1886] DAB VI-433.
Ala., 1959. DAB Supp. 5-125.
Fletcher, Horace. Fletcherism: what it is; or how I became young at
Conant, James Bryant. The chemistry of organic compounds. New York,
sixty. New York, (1913). DAB VI-464.
Forbes, Alexander. Quest for a Northern air route. Foreword by Samuel
1933.
Copeland, Charles T. (editor). The Copeland reader: an anthology
Eliot Morison. Cambridge, 1953.
New York and London, 1926. DAB Supp. 5-13.
Forbes, Allan. Sport in Norfolk County. With a chapter on polo by
Croly, Herbert D. The promise of American life. New York, 1909.
W. Cameron Forbes and a preface
by Henry Goodwin
DAB Supp. 1-209.
Vaughan. Boston, 1938.
Crowninshield, Frederic. Mural painting. Boston, 1887. DAB IV-
Forbes, Elliot (editor). Life of Beethoven, by Alexander Wheelock
578.
Thayer. Boston, 1968.
Curtis, Charles Pelham. Lions under the throne: a study in the Supreme
Forbes, W. Cameron. The Philippine Islands. Boston and New York,
Court
Boston, 1947. DAB Supp. 6-142.
1928. Two volumes. DAB Supp. 6-210.
Cushing, Harvey. The life of Sir William Osler. Oxford, 1925. Two
Fuess, Claude Moore. Daniel Webster. Boston, 1930. Two volumes.
volumes. DAB Supp. 2-137. Pulitzer Prize in biography, 1926.
Galvin, John T. Twelve mayors of Boston, 1900-1970. (Boston, 1970).
Cutler, Robert. Louisburg Square. New York, 1917.
Gammell, Robert Hale Ives. Dennis Miller Bunker. New York, 1953.
Dahl, Francis. W. Dabl's Boston. Boston, 1946.
Gardner, George Peabody. Ready about. New York, 1959.
Dow, Sterling. Prytaneis: the decrees honoring the Athenian councillors.
Gay, Frederic Lewis. A descriptive catalogue of
colonial books at
Athens, 1937.
the Jamestown Tercentennial Exposition. Jamestown, 1907.
170
The Tavern at One Hundred
Bibliography
171
Grant, Robert. Jack Hall; or the schooldays of an American boy. Boston,
centennial of the Tavern Club, 1884-1934). [Boston], 1934. (M.
1888. DAB. Supp. 2-257. Peter Parley to Penrod, p. 87.
A. de Wolfe Howe wrote or edited biographies or selected works
Gray, Morris. The city's voice. Boston, [1923].
of the following Taverners: F. P. Cabot, J. J. Chapman, II. D.
Grew, Joseph Clark. Turbulent era: a diplomatic career of forty years
Higginson, O. W. Holmes (Jr.), James Russell Lowell, Charles
Boston, 1952. Two volumes.
Eliot Norton, James Ford Rhodes, and Barrett Wendell. For his
Gummere, Richard Mott. The American colonial mind and the classical
life of Wendell he received the Pulitzer Prize in Biography, 1924.
tradition. Cambridge, 1963.
Howells, William Dean. The rise of Silas Lapham. Boston, 1885. DAB
Hadley, Rollin van N. Drawings
Isabella Stewart Gardner
IX-306. BAL 9619. Wright 2829.
Museum. Boston, 1968.
Howells, William White. Mankind in the making; the story of human
Hale, Philip. Boston Symphony programme notes
1901-
evolution. New York, 1959.
Edited by Lawrence Gilman. Garden City, 1935. DAB Supp.
Howland, Llewellyn. The middle road. South Dartmouth, (1961).
370.
Howland, Llewellyn, III, (editor). A book for Boston. Picture editor,
Hammond, John Hays. The autobiography of
New York, (1935).
Isabelle Storey. Boston, (1980).
I
Two volumes. DAB Supp. 2-275.
Hurlbut, Byron Satterlee (editor). Defoe's History of the great plague.
Hammond, Mason. The city in the ancient world
Cambridge,
Boston and London, 1895.
1972.
James, Henry. Novels and tales. New York, 1907-1917. 26 volumes.
Hayes, Bartlett Harding, Jr. American drawings. New York, (1965).
DAB IX-579. BAL 10528-10749. Wright 2909-2937.
Heimert, Alan. Religion and the American mind; from the Great Awak-
James, Henry, II. Charles W. Eliot. President of Harvard University,
ening to the Revolution. Cambridge, 1966.
1869-1909. Boston, 1930. Two volumes. Pulitzer Prize in Biog-
Henderson, Lawrence Joseph. The fitness of the environment. New
rapby, 1931.
York, 1913. DAB Supp. 3-351.
James, William. The varieties of religious experience. New York, 1902.
Herter, Christian Archibald. Toward an Atlantic Community. New
DAB IX-590.
York, (1963).
Janeway, Michael. See, Manning, Robert J.
Hodgson, Richard (editor). Myers, F. W. H. Human personality and
Jenkins, MacGregor. Emily Dickinson. Boston, 1939.
its survival of bodily death. New York, 1903. Two volumes.
Johns, Clayton. The reminiscences of a musician. Cambridge, 1929.
Hofer, Philip. Baroque book illustration. A short survey
Cam-
DAB Supp. 1-451.
bridge, 1951.
Kennedy, John Fitzgerald. Profiles in courage. New York, 1956. Pu-
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Sr. The contagiousness of puerperal fever.
litzer Prize in History, 1956.
[Boston], 1843. (Subsequently reissued as Puerperal fever, as a private
Kenny, Herbert A. Literary Dublin: a history
New York, (1974).
pestilence. Boston, 1855.) DAB IX-169. Currier, p. 33. G-M 6274
Kidder, Alfred Vincent. Introduction to Southwestern archacology. New
(6276).
Haven, 1924. Howes K-121.
Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Jr. The common law. Boston, 1881. DAB
Kinnicut, Leonard Parker (joint author). Sewage disposal. New York,
Supp. 1-417.
1910. DAB X-418.
Homans, George Caspar. The human group. New York, 1950.
Kinnicut, Lincoln Newton. To your dog and mine. Boston, 1915.
Hopper, Bruce C. Pan-Sovietism. Boston, 1931.
Kittredge, Henry Crocker. Cape Cod, its people and their history. Bos-
Howe, Mark Antony de Wolfe. A partial (and not impartial) semi-
ton and New York, 1930.
172
The Tavern at One Hundred
Bibliography
173
Lally, Francis J. The Catholic Church in a changing America. Boston,
Manning, Robert J. Who we are. An Atlantic Chronicle. Boston,
1962.
(1969). Michael Janeway was joint author.
Lewis, (Joseph) Anthony. Gideon's trumpet. New York, (1964).
Marquand, John Phillips. The late George Apley. Boston, 1937. DAB
Lewis, Wilmarth Sheldon (co-editor). The Yale edition of Horace Wal-
Supp. 6-427. Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, 1938.
pole's correspondence. New Haven, 1937-19
Matthiessen, Francis Otto. American renaissance. Art and expression
Lincoln, Waldo. Genealogy of the Waldo family. Boston, 1902. Two
in the age of Emerson and Whitman. London and New York,
volumes.
(1941). DAB Supp. 4-559.
Lippmann, Walter. A preface to morals. New York, 1929. Lippman
Mendenhall, Thomas C. A short history of rowing in America. Boston,
was awarded a Pulitzer Prize Special Citation in 1957, a Pulitzer
1980.
Prize, 1962.
Meyer, Cord, Jr. Peace or anarchy. Boston, 1947.
Lodge, Henry Cabot, Jr. As it was: an insider's view. New York,
Minot, George R. The development of liver therapy in pernicious anemia.
1976.
[Stockholm, 1934 Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine, 1934.
Lowell, Abbott Lawrence. The government of England. New York,
G-M 3140. Joint author was William P. Murphy.
1908. DAB Supp. 3-468.
Moffat, Alexander White. The galley guide. A purely humanitarian
Lowell, Guy. Smaller Italian villas and gardens. New York, 1916.
work. New York, 1928.
DAB XI-457.
Moffat, Donald. The Mott family in France. Boston, 1937.
Lowell, James Russell. Works. Cambridge, 1904. 16 volumes. DAB
Moore, Francis D., Jr. The metabolic care of the surgical patient. Phil-
XI-458. BAL 13035-13256. (Lowell's The Biglow papers, Cam-
adelphia, 1959.
bridge, 1848, is listed in the Grolier Club catalogue One hundred
Morison, Samuel Eliot. History of United States naval operations in
books famous in English literature, 1902.)
World War II. Boston, 1947-62. 15 volumes. (Morison was
Lyman, Henry. Successful bluefishing. Camden, Maine, (1974).
awarded the Pulitzer Prize in Biography in 1943 and again in
Lyman, Charles. Hibernaton and torpor in mammals and birds. New
1960).
York, 1982.
Morse, Edward Sylvester. Japanese homes and their surroundings. Bos-
McAleer, John. Rex Stout: a biography. Boston, 1977.
ton, 1886. DAB XIII-242.
McCord, David Thompson Watson. One at a time. Boston, (1977).
Murchie, Guy. The spirit of place in Keats. London, (1955).
What cheer; an anthology of
humorous verse, gathered
Murdock, Kenneth B. Literature and theology in Colonial New England.
and with an introduction by
New York, (1945).
Cambridge, 1949.
In sight of Sever: essays from Harvard. Cambridge, 1963.
Murray, Henry Alexander, Jr. Explorations in personality: a clinical
McFarland, Ross Armstrong. Human factors in air transportation:
and experimental study
New York, 1938.
occupational health and safety. New York and London, 1953.
Norton, Charles Eliot. Notes of travel and study in Italy. Boston, 1860.
MacLaurin, Richard Cockburn. On the nature and evidence to title of
DAB XIII-569.
reality. New York, 1901. DAB XII-119.
Oliver, Andrew. Portraits of John and Abigail Adams. Cambridge,
MacLeish, Archibald. Collected poems. Boston, 1932-1977. Pulitzer
1967.
Prize in poetry, 1932, 1953. Bollingen Prize in poetry, 1953.
Oliver, Peter. A new chronicle of "The compleat angler." New York,
(MacLeish was awarded a Pulitzer Prize in drama for his verse
1936.
play J. B., Boston, 1959.)
O'Reilly, John Boyle (joint author). The king's men: a tale of to-morrow.
174
The Tavern at One Hundred
Bibliography
175
New York, 1884. Robert Grant was a joint author. DAB XIV-
Richardson, William Lambert. Address on the duties and conduct of
53. Wright 2236.
nurses in private nursing. Boston, 1886. DAB XV-578.
Osborne, Thomas Mott. Within prison walls; being a narrative of
Richardson, Wyman. The house on Nauset Marsh. New York, (1955).
personal experience. New York and London, 1914 DAB XIV-
Robinson, Fred N. (editor and translator). Irish lives of Guy of War-
75.
wick and Bevis of Hampton.
Paderewski, Ignace Jan. The Paderewski memoirs. New York, 1938.
Rock, John Charles. The time has come: a Catholic doctor's proposals to
With Mary Lawton.
end the battle over birth control. With a foreword by Christian A.
Page, Thomas Nelson. The old South. New York, 1891. DAB XIV-
Herter, New York, 1963.
141.
Rogers, Henry Munroe. Memories of ninety years. Boston, 1928.
Paine, Ralph Delahaye. Roads of adventure. Boston, 1922. DAB XIV-
Saltonstall, Leverett. Salty: recollections
as told to Edward A.
154.
Weeks. Boston, 1976.
Perera, Guido Rinaldo. Leaves from my book of life. Boston, 1974-
Saltonstall, William G. Lewis Perry of Exeter: a gentle memoir. New
1977. Three volumes.
York, 1980.
Perera, Ronald Christopher (co-editor). The development and practice
Santayana, George. The works of
Triton edition. New York,
i of electronic music. Englewood Cliffs, 1975 With Jon H. Appleton.
1936-1940. 15 volumes. DAB Supp. 5-601.
Perry, Bliss. And gladly teach. Boston, 1935 DAB Supp. 5-541.
Sargent, Charles Sprague. Manual of the trees of North America. Bos-
Phillips, John Charles. A natural history of the ducks
With plates
ton, 1905. DAB XVI-354.
by Frank W. Benson
Boston and New York, 1922-1923.
Sargent, Daniel. Sir Thomas More. New York, 1933.
Two volumes.
Sedgwick, Ellery. The happy profession. Boston, 1946. DAB Supp. 6-
Phillips, William. Ventures in diplomacy. Boston, (1953).
571.
Pier, Arthur Stanwood. The story of Harvard. Boston, 1913.
Sedgwick, Henry Dwight. Horace. Cambridge, 1947.
Pollack, Harry Evelyn Dorr. Round structures of aboriginal Middle
Shattuck, George Cheever. Diseases of the tropics. Cambridge, 1950.
America. New York, 1936.
Sims, William Sowden. The victory at sea
Garden City, 1920.
Prince, Morton. Dissociation of a personality. New York, 1905.
In collaboration with Burton K. Hendricks.
DAB XV-230.
Sissman, L. E. Dying: an introduction. Boston, 1968.
Prouty, Roger W. The transformation of the Board of Trade, 1830-
Smith, Francis Hopkinson. Colonel Carter of Cartersville
Boston
1855. London, 1957. Rosa Lewis Medal, 1958.
and New York, 1891. DAB XVII-265. Wright 5013. (See Whitman
Rathbone, Perry T. The Forsyth Wickes Collection. Greenwich, (1968).
Bennett, p. 98, for description of Smith's Venice of to-day, New York,
Rhinelander, Philip H. Is man incomprehensible to man? Stanford,
1895.)
1973.
Spencer, Theodore. Shakespeare and the nature of man. New York,
Rhodes, James Ford. History of the Civil War. New York, 1917.
1942.
DAB XV-531. Pulitzer Prize in History, 1918.
Sprague, Henry Harrison. Women under the law of Massachusetts.
Richards, Theodore William. Experimentelle Untersuchungen über
Boston, 1884.
Atomgewichte, 1887-1908. Hamburg, 1909. DAB XV-556.
Stephens, Henry Morse. History of the French Revolution. New York,
Richardson, Elliot L. The creative balance: government, politics, and the
1886, 1891. Two volumes. DAB XVII-578.
individual in America's third century. New York, 1976.
Sullivan, Thomas Russell. Passages from the journal of
1891
1903. Boston and New York, 1917.
176 The Tavern at One Hundred
Bibliography
177
Taylor, Francis H. A taste of angels. New York, 1948. DAB Supp.
Woods, Robert Coldwell. The necessary majority: middle Americans and
6-620.
urban crisis. 1972.
Thompson, Leslie P. Fishing in New England
New York, (1955).
Wyzanski, Charles. Whereas-a judge's premises; essays in judgement,
Vermeule, Cornelius Clarkson. Roman imperial art in Greece and Asia
ethics, and the law. Boston, (1965).
Minor. Cambridge, 1968.
Zaleznik, Abraham. Human dilemmas of leadership. New York, 1966.
Vogt, Evon Z., (co-editor). Prebistoric settlement patterns: essays in
Zinsser, Hans. Rats, lice, and history. Boston, 1935. DAB Supp. 2-
honor of Gordon R. Willey. Albuquerque. 1983.
744.
Warner, Charles Dudley. The complete writings of
New York,
1904. 15 volumes. DAB XIX-462. Wright 5790-5793.
Warner, Charles G. K. The winegrowers of France and the government
since 1875. New York, 1960.
Warner, Langdon. The enduring art of Japan. Cambridge, 1952. DAB
Supp. 5-729.
Ward, John William. Red, white, and blue; men, books, and ideas in
American culture. New York, 1969.
Weeks, Edward Augustus. My green age. Boston, (1973).
Weld, Philip Saltonstall. Moxie: the American challenge. Boston, 1981.
Wendell, Barrett. A literary history of America. New York, 1900.
DAB XIX-649.
Wheelwright, John Tyler. Rollo's journey to Cambridge. Boston, 1880.
White, James Clarke (joint author). The autonomic nervous system. 3rd
edition. New York, 1952. G-M 1335-
White, Nelson, C. Abbott H. Thayer, painter and naturalist. Hartford,
1951.
Whitehill, Walter Muir. Boston: a topographical history. Cambridge,
1959.
Willey, Gordon Randolph. An introduction to American archaeology.
Englewood Cliffs, [1966-1976], 2 vols.
Williams, Gluyas. The Gluyas Williams gallery; drawings by
New
York, (1957).
Wilmerding, John. A history of American marine painting. Salem and
Boston, -
Wister, Owen. The Virginians. New York and London, 1902. DAB
Supp. 2-728.
Wolff, Robert Lee. Nineteenth-century fiction: a bibliographical catalogue
New York, 1981-
The Tavern at One Hundred
Memorials
215
usually sitting where the compass points northeast. The
WILLIAM JAMES IT
coffee cup is there beside him, untouched, just as Nick
*
1962 *
illy put it down, the saucer on top, never underneath.
he is saying
But you, too, can hear.
It was my good luck to know William James intimately for
Thomas Adams
more than fifty years, but to try to give an impression of the
man is very difficult. Probably impossible. He was like no
one else I have ever known. A shy person, who had many
friends, a brave person who usually knew where he stood and
expressed his views, a democratic person who was always
discovering some shy writer in New York City. Bill was
devoted to his father and mother in a mystical kind of way.
He, himself, read very little philosophy, nor did he suffer
philosophers gladly, but to some observing person who had
been caught by a word, or a phrase or a chapter of what his
father had written, he would devote hours.
Bill was a good athlete but not a winning one. As bow oar
on the Harvard crew he was more interested in why the water
hit his oar quicker when he was rowing No. 6 than in the
time the shell was making.
Bill thought he knew no philosophy, but he lived it-the
kind his father believed in. The butler of a very well-known
man in New York once took me aside and said: "I have been
all over the world in the last twenty-five years but the greatest
gentleman I have seen is William James."
He was an idealist. He never read a Sunday newspaper.
Too many trees were destroyed to create the Sunday edition.
And these oppositions were all observed quietly. He hated
bigness. Much as he loved Harvard, for his own sake and for
his father's sake, his devotion was tempered by the fact that,
in his judgment, it was too big.
He was a perfectionist. After a portrait which he had done
was finished as far as anyone could see, he would put in an
extra touch or two, in his judgment ruin it, and then consign
216 The Tavern at One Hundred
Memorials
217
it to the waste basket. Like one of his Uncle Henry's heroes,
BENJAMIN JOY
he was never satisfied, never content. The portrait in our
*
1969 *
dining room was the exception. It came at the end.
He lies in that lovely meadow at Chocorua, near the big
Benjamin Joy was a member of the Tavern from 1912-1969.
rock, facing the lake.
He loved the Tavern for fifty-seven years as one cares for a
best friend.
Lewis Perry
Ben had a sparkle about him, a bubbling sense of humor
and a keen sense of fun. Until his eighties, this very human
quality never faltered. It was his hallmark, like "Sterling"
stamped on real silver.
In addition, he was a man of infinite variety. As a Harvard
College undergraduate at the turn of the century-despite
being quite able if occasion suited to wear a sober, serious
demeanor-he raised some notable Hell in secret pranks, as
undergraduates in those times used to do for daring and for
fun.
After graduation, he was by turn engaged in Boston news-
paper work and later in commercial banking (at a surprisingly
high level for his youth); still later, in investment banking in
New York, in foreign banking in Paris; and ultimately as
Paris partner of Morgan et Cie on the Place Vendôme until
his retirement. During World War II, his service in the Amer-
ican Army of Occupation in Germany was recognized by the
award of a Distinguished Service Medal.
On returning to America in his sixties, he retired to a large
wooded estate in Harvard, Massachusetts, commanding an
exquisite prospect of distant mounatains; and delighted there
to entertain his many friends, to take prodigious walks and
to chop prodigious quantities of firewood. Later, in surprise
at still being alive and spry, he returned to the area of his
forefathers, taking residence at 41 Beacon Street, appropri-
ately just below Joy Street, in a spacious apartment with tall
windows looking out over the Frog Pond. The return of the
new England Quarterly 4542 (1972):
BOOK REVIEWS
285
But I think the failure to bring Perkins to life lies elsewhere.
The authors have chosen to handle the genuine problem of or-
ganizing their material by dividing it in an inflexible chronologi-
cal manner. As the continuum flows by, they chop it off and place
each resulting piece in a compartmentalized chapter. Of these
there are thirty-five. Sometimes the arrangement works well. An
episode, inherently insipid or inept, is cut down to natural size-
the Hartford Convention is an example. Another time, as in the
case of the Nahant sea serpent, the arrangement inflates a piece of
antiquarian nonsense. Sometimes a gimmick contrives to serve as
a connection between happenings not related: "Perhaps some
groundswell of violence sent the tremors of violence from Santo
Domingo to the northwest coast of America." Sometimes a chap-
ter, in spite of its separateness, has enough life to move-a case in
point is the unexpected transformation under necessity of a half-
trained youngster, John P. Cushing, nineteen years of age, into
the principal resident of the Perkins firm in Canton, a post Cush-
ing occupied for a quarter of a century. Still, the volume as a whole
remains a collection of episodes. Why in view of the scholarship
here displayed, this should be the dominant impression is some-
what of a puzzle. Inevitably the question arises whether the fault
may not lie in Perkins himself. Although he acquired riches and
dispensed them with insight, it may be that he was a dull man, too
reserved or too calculating to strike fire. We are all too familiar
with the formal occasions when individuals from the Establish-
ment have seats at the head table. The curious ask "why?" Perhaps
the answer to this question is that this remains a biography of an
"eminent" figure. When he rises to respond to a tribute, he really
doesn't have much to communicate. Fittingly enough the authors
leave Perkins as a man in a posed portrait looking out at the
graveyard where he lies buried.
EDWARD C. KIRKLAND.
John
The Collected Works of John Jay Chapman. Edited by Melvin H.
Bernstein. (Weston, Massachusetts: M & S Press. 1970. 12 vol-
Washer
umes. Pp. 4,350. $210.00.)
Although John Jay Chapman (1862-1933) was born in New York
City and lived in that state for most of his life, he was the grand-
from:
286
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY
son of Maria Weston Chapman, Massachusetts abolitionist and
colleague of William Lloyd Garrison. Thus he may be considered
a kind of "honorary Bostonian," entitled to have this admirable
assembly of his writings mentioned in THE NEW ENGLAND QUAR-
TERLY. He was, moreover, a member of the Harvard class of 1884.
His first wife, Minna Timmins, was a Bostonian. Although they
settled in New York City after their marriage in 1889, where Chap-
man plunged into local politics in opposition to Tammany Hall,
the Tavern Club in Boston, which he joined soon after its founda-
tion, remained a haven in crisis. Of it he wrote: "For many years
GIDD
I have used the Tavern as a nest, a secret habitation, a refuge in
times of crisis, tragedy, or fatigue." After the death of his oldest
too?
son Victor, the first American aviator to be killed in action in
World War I, he "stayed at the Tavern for ten days and read
Plato's Republic, and in the intervals resorted to the Public Gar-
dens and took tours in the Lohengrins. In more recent years," he
continued, "when I have had some particularly hard job on hand,
something that required an astronomical abstraction of mind
varied by the relaxation of familiar faces, cups of tea, pipes of
tobacco, and no appointments to keep, I have moved on to Boston
and roomed at the Tavern."
John Jay Chapman was cast in a unique mold. He was a man of
strong opinions, vividly expressed. For want of a better descrip-
tion, the Dictionary of American Biography characterized him as
"essayist, poet, and 'crusader.'" In a tribute after his death in 1933,
Owen Wister wrote: "He wrote seventeen short books. You will
have to look for them in secondhand bookshops. The first (so he
told his Harvard classmates on their forty-fifth anniversary) sold
1800 copies, the second 1342, the third 811, the fourth 103; after
which he stopped counting. His work was very uneven. He was im-
patient. Had he taken pains more often, had he buckled down to
it always, as he did sometimes-as, for instance, he did when he
wrote his essays on Emerson and the Greek Genius-he would
have left a shelf unsurpassed in our literature by none of its kind."
But whether Chapman buckled down to a subject or not, he in-
variably struck sparks and was seldom dull.
In 1929 when Chapman was still living, the reprinting of his
works was urged in the New Republic by Edmund Wilson. Now
more than forty years later it has been accomplished through the
BOOK REVIEWS
287
enthusiasm and effort of Melvin H. Bernstein, Professor of En-
glish at Alfred University, and the M & S Press. Owen Wister was
right when he said that you will have to look for Chapman's works
in the secondhand bookstores. He was wrong about their number,
for not seventeen but twenty-seven are assembled in this twelve
volume edition. They are reproduced in offset with brief introduc-
tions by Professor Bernstein, but without the "scholarly appara-
tus" and textual criticism that arouses Edmund Wilson's ire in
collected editions of earlier American writers. The attempt here is
to provide libraries with copies of books that would be uncom-
monly hard to assemble in the secondhand market.
The first volume is a small folio (9" X 12") to accommodate the
38 issues of Chapman's monthly newspaper The Nursery, later
The Political Nursery that he published in New York between
March, 1897 and January, 1901. Here too is a brief memoir of the
author by his articulate son, Chanler A. Chapman, and a biblio-
graphical checklist by David M. Stocking. The other eleven vol-
umes are 6" X 9", within which format the books can be readily
reproduced. Volume two contains Chapman's two books on poli-
tics, Causes and Consequences and Practical Agitation; volume
three, criticism and memoirs, reprints Emerson and Other Essays
and Memories and Milestones; four and five contain seven volumes
of plays and poems, published between 1892 and 1919. The sixth
volume, dealing with education, reprints Learning and Other Es-
says (1910) and New Horizons in American Life. Chapman's ven-
ture in biography, William Lloyd Garrison, occupies volume
seven, while volume eight, devoted to World War I, contains his
Deutschland Über Alles (1914) and the letters from France of his
son Victor. There follow two volumes of Greek studies, essays and
translations, one on religion, and one on world literature.
This is a remarkable assembly of thoughts on many many sub-
jects. Professor Bernstein's introductions, though brief, lead the
reader on. As an example, take this paragraph from his introduc-
tion to Chapman's Greek studies: "Greek literature is simply too
universal to be left to the specialist. Learned introductions to
Greek classics had kidnapped Cerberus from the doorways of
Hades and placed him at the doorways of learning. Adult mis-
education was immortalized in printed 'definitive' texts by Ger-
man and English scholars which exhausted the reader before he
288
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY
even got near the text. More, the scholarship was less Greek and
more Teutonic or English, more bookish than experience, more
forbidding than inviting, more misguided than inspiring. Reading
German psychology and philosophy and British esthetic moralism
into Greek plays might be good for Germans and Englishmen. But
it was bad for Greek literature, and worse for American readers."
The M & S Press has rendered a valuable service in collecting
Chapman's works and returning them to print.
WALTER MUIR WHITEHILL.
The Plain People of Boston, 1830-1860: A Study in City Growth.
By Peter R. Knights. (New York: Oxford University Press. 1971.
the
Pp. xiii, 204. $7.95.)
The publication of Peter Knights's Plain People of Boston may
be a significant event in American historiography. Issued in Ox-
ford's "Urban Life in America Series" under the auspices of two
deans of the urban history field, Richard Wade and Eric Lampard
(who wrote the foreword and afterword, respectively), sponsored in
part by the University of Pittsburgh history department, and de-
signed to complement the work of Stephan Thernstrom, among
others, the book appears as an exemplar of an important stream of
quantitative, neo-positivist scholarship. In it Knights sets out to
answer static questions that might be described with equal ac-
curacy as sociological or historical: Where did people come from;
what did they do; where did they live; and when they moved,
where did they go? Knights is seeking to present basic demographic
data from which historical analysis may proceed. He throws down
the gauntlet of what has been called "New Left History" by claim-
ing that Boston's antebellum elite "have been studied ad nauseam,"
and that his book tells the story of the forgotten "plain people."
But despite repeated assertions that his study concerns people, it is
in fact about censuses and city directories, a series of tabulations
and cross-tabulations in which people appear nameless and face-
less-only in aggregate, statistical forms.
Knights's scholarship has numerous virtues. He is always direct
and candid; his prose is clear, uncluttered, and free of the social
scientific jargon that sometimes sets historians' teeth on edge. His
6/7/06
In Vol- 11 (pp. 247-248) of
The Correspondence of Wm. James
WJ will to ma. dele'oeff Home
(7/14/06) that he has be
freght tears No Howe's memoir
of R.Hodgron following his death
"A tiver, better, hearteer they
could not pooring be written
Work head at the Tower Club
6 my 1906 A published I the llb.
Roth Have Hodgeon were Towerners.