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

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Harvard Riverside Associates-Harvard U. Cambridge Parkway Alums
Completed
July 2009 4
[c. 2008]
Harvard University Expansion & Francis R. Appleton
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
The pull of cosmopolitan Cambridge on Francis R. Appleton Sr. is largely unresearched. As a
Harvard College graduate he not only became a formidable force over many decades in alumnae
fundraising, but he allied himself with a Harvard chum named George B. Dorr to bring about a
highly fortuitous expansion of the campus. The recent centennial of this achievement went largely
unnoticed but TOR members should be aware that Appleton not only continued the family tradition
of America's oldest farm applied as well the property preservation lessons of Ipswich to his alma
mater-with help from a friend.
Growth of the Harvard curriculum, student body, and faculty since the 1870's when Appleton and
Dorr were students required enlarging the campus footprint. In the early years of the twentieth-
century, Dorr was a horticulturist who served on the college visiting committee to the philosophy
department, an outgrowth of his friendships with philosophers William James and Josiah Royce. He
recently agreed to serve as treasurer of an alumni committee that aimed to raise sufficient funds to
secure properties-that when gifted to Harvard-would enable the construction of an impressive
Harvard Yard boulevard to the Charles River. The muddy banks of the Charles were to be
transformed into an academic landscape that conformed to the urban vision of the City Beautiful
Movement. 1
The Harvard Board of Overseers had resolved in 1894 to develop plans for the university's growth
onto the unattractive Charles River waterfront. 2 Since Harvard had been slow to take an interest in
this blighted area, an alumni committee letter bearing Dorr's signature was sent to Harvard
graduates. It called their attention to the merits of constructing "a wide, park-like street connecting
TOR_Appleton_9_15
Page 1 of 4
2,
[Charles River] parkway with Quincy Square," providing a "dignified and suitable approach" from
the Harvard Bridge to Harvard Yard.
3
Harvard President Charles W. Eliot insisted that external funds needed to be secured to cover the
cost of property acquisition. Alumni contributions quickly reached $50,000 for redesign of DeWolfe
Street into an eighty-foot-wide boulevard to the Charles River; supplemental funding would still be
needed from the city, state, and the park commission. Dorr aroused the interest of Ralph Waldo
Emerson's grandson, Edward Waldo Forbes (1873-1969), who rallied others to envision a more
comprehensive plan that included all properties between DeWolfe and Boylston Street. 4
For more than a decade, Harvard overseer Francis R. Appleton Sr. partnered with Dorr, Forbes, and
his elder brother, banker W. Cameron Forbes (1870-1959), to raise sufficient funds to justify
Harvard's acquisition of scores of properties that separated the Yard from the Charles River. In
February 1907, Dorr opened his Commonwealth Avenue home in Boston to Governor Curtis Guild,
Cambridge Mayor Walter Wardell, and other prominent individuals who were receptive to
discussion of the Boulevard Plan.
5
Catholic school officials objected to the plan but it was Cambridge politicians who balked at the
expenses that would be borne by the city despite the $40,000 offered by Dorr's alumni associates.
Appleton reported that Mr. Dorr "and I did everything we could think of to push the matter along and
we guaranteed the $50,000
[but as a result of opposition at the various hearings before the City of
Cambridge Council the project became politically impossible."
6
Appleton then headed a new alumni group, the Harvard Riverside Associates (HRA), which
succeeded in raising more than $400,000. Yet a decade would pass before the HRA acquired all but
TOR_Appleton_9_15
Page 2 of 4
3.
22 of the 115 properties needed for the creation of the new Yard. 7
In 1913, the Associates would turn over their land holdings to the University, and construction of
freshman dormitories would begin shortly thereafter. A second Harvard Yard eventually emerged
after Dorr's De Wolfe Boulevard model was altered by the new Harvard administration of President
A. Lawrence Lowell (1856-1943), who would succeeded Eliot in 1909.
Francis Appleton would move forward with an array of projects unrelated to Harvard. But his
experience as Harvard Overseer and the champion of all manner of Harvard alumni endeavors
continued. Their shared interest in the quality of student accommodations, the aesthetics of
Charles River waterfront property, the most successful strategies for alumnae philanthropy and
the political skills required was shortly thereafter applied by Dorr in partnership with Charles W.
Eliot. These institutional advancement skills honed in Massachusetts were realized in 1916 with the
establishment in Maine of Acadia National Park. Closer to home, Dr. Eliot's presidency of the TOR
for nearly a quarter-of-a-century would extend the vision of his son, landscape architect Charles
Eliot. 8 Cambridge had been a useful hothouse for Appleton, Dorr, and Eliot.
ENDNOTES
1 "The City Beautiful Movement," xroads.virginia./edu/~cap/citybeautiful/city.html
2 B. Bunting, Harvard: an Architectural History (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985),
179. See also George Santayana's illuminating "The Harvard Yard," Persons and Places: the
.
Background of My Life (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1944): 186-202.
TOR_Appleton_9_15
Page 3 of 4
4.
3
Harvard University 1960: An Inventory for Planning (Cambridge: President and Fellows of
Harvard College, 1960), 4-4-B. See Dorr to Eliot, November 18 and December 27, 1902. Records
of the President of Harvard University. Charles W. Eliot. B.36. Harvard University Archives. See
Karl Haglund, Inventing the Charles River (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2003), 194-205.
4 Edward Waldo Forbes, Yankee Visionary (Cambridge: Fogg Art Museum, 1971), 48-81. The
Forbes memoir and commentary is available online. Charles U. Lowe, "The Forbes Story of the
Harvard Riverside Associates, "Lowell.harvard.edu/house/Forbes/new forbes.html
5 A list of Dorr's alumni associates was published in the Cambridge Tribune, V. 29
(February 2, 1907): 1.
6 Appleton to George F. Peabody, June 5, 1914. Appleton Papers. The Trustees of Reservations,
Archives and Research Center. B.6.f.19. These Papers contain richly detailed records of
Appleton's Harvard College years (1871-75), which mirror the academic environment of George
Dorr who was one year ahead of Mr. Appleton. Additional information is included regarding his
alumni leadership in raising alumni funds (B.5.f.10; B.6.f.18,19,40; B.7.f.6).
7 "To Bring Harvard Yard to Charles," New York Times (September 6, 1903), 28; the definitive
study of this process is Sharon Cooney's The Harvard Riverside Associates: Land Acquisition
South of the Harvard Yard, 1903-1918. Harvard University Archives.
8
Dorr to Eliot, May 10, 12, and 16; June 15; and October 28, 1907. Records of the President of
Harvard University, Charles W. Eliot. B.83.
TOR_Appleton_9_15
Page 4 of 4
8/10/2018
The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
M.D.
Charles U. Lowe '42
Written 1002
HOME / HOME / HISTORY /
The Land on Which Lowell was Built
Introduction
Because of the foresight shown by Edward Waldo Forbes, grand son of Ralph Waldo Emerson, and
Class of 1895 at Harvard, the University eventually owned all the land between Mt. Auburn Street
and the Charles River. [See Sidebars 1-6 at right.]
Even before entering Harvard as a student Forbes had shown a keen interest in land conservation in
the environs of Boston and was a member of Trustees of Public Reservations in 1902. After college
he spent two years at Oxford, traveled in Europe and began collecting fine arts. Upon returning to
the United States, he formed, in 1903, the Harvard Riverside Associates later to become the Harvard
Riverside Trustees. These were his vehicles for land acquisition. He assembled all the land not
already owned by Harvard or private clubs between Mount Auburn Street and the River north to
south and Bow Street and Boylston Street [now Kennedy Street] east to west. He gave part of the
assembled land to Harvard in 1912 and the remainder in 1918. Lowell House stands on land
conveyed partly in 1912 and partly in 1918. In 1909 President Eliot appointed Forbes Director of the
Fogg Museum, a title he retained until 1944. [Sidebar 7]
Forbes wrote this memoir in 1960, at the time, 87 years of age.
/
remember fairly distinctly that about the year 1945-6-or 7, / happened to be asked about
it
[the
history of the Harvard Riverside Associates either] by Charles Coolidge of the Corporation [or
by]
Bill Claflin, Treasurer of Harvard.
/ told them the story, / think; and / have thought that at that time / wrote a careful account of what
happened. The facts were pretty well burnt into my mind. So / think that even now nearly sixty
years later / think / can give a fairly accurate account of the main facts Of course / have forgotten
a great many details.
[This is] my story
of the Harvard River[side] Associates.
/ will begin by two facts that really did not have much to do with the story. One year Mr. [.Dudly
Pickman ] happened to tell me that when he was an undergraduate, Longfellow, the poet,
entered the room in which he and his companions were sitting and said to these college boys that
Harvard and its land ought to extend down to the river. This was told to me, / am pretty sure, after
/
had begun my work [assembling the land], but it has stuck in my mind that Longfellow was the first,
so far as / know, to have this idea.
When / was an undergraduate at Harvard, / used to belong
to a group of 12 who had all their
meals together at a boarding house. The mass of students had their meals in Memorial Hall, as /
remember it, for about $4.50 a week.
We, more fortunate fellows, had our meals in these
boarding houses. In my freshman year the house where we had our meals was on Mt. Auburn
8/10/2018
The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
Street near where Longfellow's "Spreading Chestnut Tree" where the blacksmith worked that was
near Church St [Site now marked by a plaque and a tree at # 40 Brattle Street] In the senior year we
had
our
meals
on
Mt.
Auburn St. It was a superior place; / think the best of them all, it only took
seniors and was a little more expensive, / think $7 instead of $6 [a week].
It was in one of those years when / daily walked towards the river that Cam [Cameron Forbes,
brother of Edward Forbes] who was a graduate, said to me "Harvard ought to own all the land
toward the river."
while / was still an Oxford student in the years 1900-1902, my brother wrote to me
That a
group of Harvard men thought that Harvard ought to have a dignified boulevard as [an] approach to
the college. So this group had banded together and started to buy a strip of land beside DeWolf St.
to make a dignified boulevard as an entrance to Harvard. He asked me to join and give some
money; and / think that / promised something between $1,000 ad $5,000, probably not more than
$1,000. [Sidebars 8,9]
When a year or so later / started the [Harvard] Riverside Associates [H.R.A.] as / remember it, this
"approach plan", was abandoned in favor of my large plan, and gave the H.RA. the money that they
had raised. / am not sure of this---[The funds were in fact transferred at a later date] / think that Mr.
George Dorr, [treasurer of Harvard] and Cam were the leaders in this movement.
[When] / was an Oxford student from 1900 -1902 / enjoyed greatly the river, and the little canals
running off the river, where occasionally we students used to get a boat and pole along through
these shallow little canals. Once / remember hiring a small sailboat, and taking her up the Thames
for a mile or two and then sailing back before the wind. / know also of the use that Cambridge
University made of its river. / think that my friend, Harry Fletcher, took me up to spend one Sunday
at Cambridge.
/ had studied in Oxford-English literature. / was at that time more interested in literature than in art
and / wanted to begin as a school teacher of English. However, in the autumn of 1901 while playing
full back on the New College rugby football against the Bristol School---/ received a serious
concussion- That had greatly injured my second year studies.-- was put into a nursing home for
six weeks ---and was unable to return to Oxford for the last few weeks of the college year. [After
recuperating in Florence, Forbes returned to the United States.]
After a summer at Naushon [Where the Forbes family compound was located] / came up [to Milton]
but it was too late to get a job in school. / became convinced that it was an important and
valuable thing to buy up that land and have it available for Harvard.
/
felt keenly the difference between the splendid use that the English universities made of their
rivers and the pitiful use that Harvard made of the Charles River.
Of course at that time the Charles River had tidal water.[Sidebar 10]
/
believe that the drainage in those days of Waltham and Watertown went into the Charles River and
was carried down to Cambridge--[L]et us say at low tide when the narrow stream came down
between ugly mud banks which / well remember. Then the tide would come running in and bring
this undesirable cargo refuse including typhoid, scarlet fever, and diphtheria germs up over the mud
banks and over the marshes on the south side of the river. [Sidebars 11-15]
When the tide would recede and the southwest wind, / suppose, would blow those undesirable
disease germs up into[the] Mt Auburn St. region. / remember that my older brother, Ralph, who had
delicate health as a freshman, started to live in boarding house near Mt. Auburn St. so / was told,
and [he] became sick. He was moved up oThayer Hall, No.34, where he lived through his college
and law school course. His brother, Cameron, joined him as a freshman, and three years later, after
Ralph had graduated, / joined Cam when he was a senior and / was freshman.
So in those days the Mt. Auburn St. region was thought to be a very undesirable part of Cambridge.
Now / think it was rather a slum like place yet the land in that part of Cambridge nearer Somerville
was cheaper and more healthy and the Corporation of those days was definitely spreading out
there. The Divinity school, the Agassiz Museums and the Hemenway and the Law School and other
buildings were examples.
/ think my memory is correct in saying that when / began to think of getting the land near the River-
was told that a dam was to be built and that the whole River basin could be improved. / believe
8/10/2018
The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
the actual dam was not built till a few years later [Planning for the dam was begun 1902 and
construction, starting soon there after, was completed in 1910.]
[President Eliot had written about the River in 1892] "In the first place the so called "River" was not a river. It
was a tidal estuary, shallow and muddy trough, broad in its seaward part, narrow and torturous in it's inward
extension and filled and almost emptied by the tide twice a day. Except at the extreme inland part of its
course the natural rim of this tidal trough is the ragged edge of a salt marsh. The marshes are planes of mud
overlying gravel or clay covered with salt grasses and penetrated by numerous crooked and narrow creeks"
[Sidebar 16]
[It is clear that Edward knew about the scheme Cam had developed for he wrote to Cam while still at Oxford,
on May 6, 1902] "I am much interested in the Harvard approach scheme. If / were at home / believe / would
try to push it through. But / hardly like to come early for it as / have such a futile winter's work here.' [And
again he wrote on May 9,] "I have just written to Dorr [George B. Dorr, treasurer of the Corporation telling
him / might be able to give a small contribution and asking him if he wants me to give Harvard men in
London a poke."
[As early as September 27, 1902 Forbes had written to his brother Cameron,] "I have talked over the matter
of Harvard land with various people and / hope to get to work at it some time this winter."
Here begins the real story. / knew nothing about business affairs / went either to my brother, Cam,
or to Mr. Augustus Hemenway for help and advice. / think it was Mr. Hemenway who told me that /
ought to form a company with a title and trustees. He told me that the firm of Loring and Coolidge
had done an excellent job in buying land for the South Station a few years before. They had hired
several different real estate men separately and privately to buy the houses one after the SO that
the owners of those houses would not know or suspect other that [it] was all one concern and jump
the prices way up.
So / went to Messers Loring and Coolidge and asked if they would do the same for us. / do not
remember in exactly what order the events took place, but we formed ourselves into the Harvard
Riverside Associates.
[It is not clear when the Harvard Riverside Associates was formed, but in the fall of 1902 Forbes began to
raise money and acquire land Formal incorporation did not take place until July, 1903.]
/ do not know at what stage / approached the Corporation but / did write to President Eliot and
asked if he would join us. In any case / remember well that he sent a courteous reply saying, "No."
[In 1943 Cameron, recalling the events of 1902-03 wrote as follows:] He [Edward] presented his plan of doing
this to the members of the Corporation and then included President Eliot and Mr. Henry Walcott, secretary of
the Corporation, among others. All Edward got was a rebuff. He was told to forget it and that the Corporation
had enough difficulties with the City of Cambridge due to removing areas from regions capable of paying
taxes.
Thereupon / wrote him [President Eliot] another letter asking if he minded having us go and do it on
our own. To that he replied "yes." [Sidebar 17]
[Forbes also wrote to LeBaron Briggs, Dean of Harvard College, who replied on November 26, 1902,] "I have
been talking to the President this morning about your suggestion in regard to the land between the University
property and the river. The President knows of no one who has had in mind forming such a syndicate
but
he does know that there are persons or sets of persons, who have their eyes on the land.
"
[By early December of 1902 Forbes had recruited the assistance of Thomas Perkins, H'91 & L'94 a senior
8/10/2018
The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
Corporation.]
4.
So we started in and / think that Mr. Hemenway and Cameron and / and other members of our
family subscribed. / forget what we raised at the start, perhaps $30,000 or less. We set [the real
estate firm of] Loring and Coolidge to work[probably early in December-Coolidge H '92 L '96] to
begin to buy the land but / understood that the neighborhood were all SO near to each other that
the word got around quickly that Harvard was at the bottom of this, and the prices began to rise
quickly which increased our difficulties but we kept on and / started going around to other people to
give or to join us.
[Inquiries about the availability of land must have started as early as December of 1902, for Perkins wrote to
Forbes on December 18, 1902 that two lots, the Bocher estate and the Harris estates, roughly the area
comprising of the present day Lowell House, were available only by purchase and cautioned Forbes against
buying them until] "you have made sure that the whole scheme is going through."
[On January 17, 1903, Loring and Coolidge provided the first specific details of the project. The land between
Mt. Auburn Street and the River not owned by Harvard or Harvard Clubs amounted to 468,114 sq. ft., had an
assessed value of $413,100 and could probably be purchased for $655,050,] "provided all the owners were
willing to sell" [Some time later it developed that there were 81 individual owners of 93 parcels in the section
of Cambridge under consideration.]
[On March 3d Forbes wrote again to his brother, now in the Philippines, where he was Governor
General:] "Things are moving slowly in the right direction with me. / am getting letters from Pres. Eliot +Prof.
Norton. Nelson [Perkins] has got a good letter from Mr. Higginson. The prospectus is written, but one or two
changes may be made. / will send you word of the progress when things get definite. We talked the plan
matter out to a finish in Nelson's office (he, J. Burden, Wetmore and I). We fixed it as necessary to show
Wetmore's plan. He is having it made, and / have just had a large new plan of the region as it now is and
sent to him."
[Wetmore was a real estate speculator and builder from New York. Forbes had met with him in New York and
got the feeling that Wetmore wanted to take over the project. Wetmore owned two dormitory buildings on
Cambridge and had drawn up plans to develop the area between Massachusetts Avenue and the River.
Perkins tried to reassure Forbes on the matter and had written to him as early as February 12:] "If you get
Frank Appleton and some other men in New York who are leaders both socially and financially, they can make
Wetmore come into camp without any possible doubt. Wetmore would not at all care to put himself in the
position of working against the wishes of such men, especially when they are working for the best interests of
the College."
[Forbes letter to Cameron of March 3, continues:]"It seems that Wetmore for some reason told --the whole
story. / suppose because he [Perkins] trusts him. You know [he] is a skunk. / find that he has been spreading
the report among. people that boundless millions are behind the scheme and that another Yard is to be put
there to make the place like Oxford. W--F. E's-land lady told him this. We are looking about for the best
metaphorical axe to hit [Wetmore] ---over the head with He has been getting our options at 3+ [or] four
time the assessed value. spite of[Wetmore] every thing is going pretty well. We have got options on about
270,000 sq. ft. Several more pieces are in line. It is just a matter of bargaining." [Wetmore succeeded in
publishing hi development plan in the Atlantic Monthly, January 15, 1910.]
[On March 12,1903 he wrote again to Cameron,] "All goes well. / have got about $100,00. / have only been
at it since Monday actively. President Eliot you know has written a strong letter expressing the views of the
Corporation. He told me today that the reason the Corporation threw it down at first was that they thought it
impossible We have got a large part of the Cambridge land now; and hope for more soon."
/ remember that / asked Mr. Henry Higginson [an overseer, donor of $100,000 toward the purchase
of Soldiers' Field and major patron of the Boston Symphony Orchestra] of the Corporation, and /
think President Eliot himself if they would write short letters of approval for our pamphlet which /
think that they did. [Sidebars 17-18]
[On March 30 Forbes wrote to Eliot thanking him for his strong letter of support. He went on to say:] "I sent
you a prospectus and a plan of the region which / have colored roughly. The red represents what is owned by
the College and Clubs. The blue represents what we have secured options on or bought We are practically
of getting many of the that are not colored in blue. In some cases it is merely a
8/10/2018
The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
question of price. / have made no progress lately in raising money for / have been obliged to stay home
with a cold. "[Sidebar 19]
5
At times things went smoothly [but] in the winter, February-March / had a bad case of the grippe
that the doctors thought that my lungs might have been infected.
In the meanwhile. / have just found a letter which / wrote to my brother, Cameron, / think about the
year 1945. That has a number of facts which / have forgotten and tells the story on the whole well. /
read it several days ago and now cannot remember all the exact statements in it. But / will continue
my story as / remember it now putting some facts that / have relearned from that letter, and adding
a
few stories that were not recorded in that letter.
[In early February, Perkins had advised Forbes to appoint trustees of The Harvard Riverside Associates Trust
which he did in early April. In addition to him self and Perkins, his board included Robert Bacon of New York
(H '80 and the Secretary of State in the administration of Theodore Roosevelt), James Abercrombie Burden (H
'93 and a man with access to the capitol markets of New York), and Agustus Hemenway (H '75, an Overseer,
and donor of the Gymnasium in 1875). Although formed early in the year, the Declaration of Trust was filed
only on June 30, 1903. The trust was designed to secure $400,000 from subscriber and authorized to secure
mortgages up to $600,000. The plan for the subscription was to raise $200,000 from New York and a similar
sum from Boston. The trust was to buy land, hold it for five years at which time further plans for the land
would be developed. When plans developed, the College could buy the land from the Trust at cost plus
interest.]
[By publishing a memorial volume in 1971 the Fogg Art Museum chose to celebrate the contribution Edward
Forbes had made to fine arts, to Harvard and to city planning. This volume made clear that in the years 1903-
04, Forbes, though consumed by fund raising, was also concerned with the utilization of the land that might
be acquired by the Harvard Riverside Associates. Forbes had obtained "a large detailed map of Oxford,
England showing the layout of the buildings, parks and fields in relation to the river as they existed in 1902
Forbes.. had obtained it from his friend Apthorp Fuller of Christ Church College, Oxford. His motivation
(Forbes' was> that someday Harvard would enjoy a new yard which would be at least reminiscent of the
charms of Oxford and Cambridge. Forbes had (also) requested information about the population of the
different colleges at Oxford as well as the acreage of the meadows, fields, and parks associated with these
colleges".]
/ remember well Jay Burden of New York, (H '93) who had once been Nelson Perkins' room mate in
college, joined us and became a trustee. He made two important successes which went a long way
towards making the plan succeed. As / remember it He had raised some [$]200,000 or [$]300,000
largely in small gifts of [$]5,000,[$]10,000 or so as / remember it. Jay boldly went to ten rich New
Yorkers and got one of them [each of them] to put in $20,000 making $200,000 an enormous
addition. For this money they each had shares of the H.R.Association.
/ have always remembered
one morning in New York while Jay Burden was rounding up the
10-$20,000 men, that there was a meeting. in the office of Mr.(I have forgotten the name). Cam and
/ were both invited to be present. / was so amused at seeing 12 accomplished magnates and my
poor little country boy self seated among them that / was very nervous. My nervousness on some
occasions caused me to have "the giggling" as my brothers called it. But though / was nervous as a
witch at finding my self sitting is such company yet, fortunately / did not disgrace myself and wreck
my plans by a fit of the giggles.
[Forbes had asked Perkins to develop the Prospectus for the fund raising and draft the Deed of Trust.
Probably unbeknownst to Forbes, Perkins was in correspondence with President Eliot as regards statements in
both documents. On February 28, he wrote to Eliot, "I hand you a new draft of the prospectus / have
changed [it] to meet your views," and on March 5th, said in another letter to Eliot: "I note the suggestion you
made on the second page [of the draft Prospectus] and will incorporate it."
[In the meanwhile, Forbes was experiencing difficulties in raising his portion of the subscription. He was
asking donors for small sums, $1,00 to $5,000. Perkins wrote to him at the end of March, "You can get the
Boston in small amounts. / must confess it seems to me necessary that we shall get some big
8/10/2018
The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
succeeded in getting options on nearly all the really important land and now the question of getting money
has become immediately pressing. It has become evident that someone with more experience than Edward
Forbes is needed. Men who should be subscribing at least $10,000 are giving only $1,000." He then suggested
that Lawrence Lowell should not only subscribe but get money as well and wrote, "what is needed is a man of
property and sufficient age to be on intimate terms with other rich men." It is ironic that Eliot rejected the
idea of engaging Lowell to assist in raising funds in the Boston area. Lowell, as President of Harvard was
eventually the principal beneficiary of the land acquired by the Riverside Associates.]
[Perkins, still concerned, wrote again to Eliot: "I think Edward Forbes can be a great deal of use as he has
time and is very zealous, but with $500,000 to raise at a time when money is so hard to get as it is now we
have to get men who will give more than $1,000."]
[The plan was to raise money by selling shares in the Harvard Riverside Associates to subscribers. The largest
subscribers were the ten men "on Wall Street" each of whom came in for $20,000. Forbes considered shares
in H.R.A. an investment paying 3% per year. Eventually the capitol was to be returned to subscribers when the
land was sold to Harvard at the original cost to H.R.A. A number of the New York subscribers did not really
expect repayment on their $20,000, and many waived their interest payments. On the other hand, J.P.Morgan,
among others, writing in 1908 felt that the Associates had been rather high handed in this matter and caused
both Forbes and Perkins to scramble.]
[Jay Burden took charge of fund raising in New York and since he needed only ten subscribers, action moved
with expedition and was probably complete by the end of March. Before he left to assume his responsibilities
in the Philippines, Cameron Forbes had collected $40,000, to implement his proposal to build a park and
boulevard along De Wolf Street from Quincy Square to the River. The plan had been held in abeyance in favor
of the more extensive proposal of the Harvard Riverside Associates. Edward succeeded
in
getting
the
trustees
of the De Wolf funds to divert them to his plan through the intervention of Dorr, Concomitantly, Dorr
obtained a release for Harvard from the obligation to construct the boulevard which had previously been
approved by the Cambridge City Council. Though negotiations for the transfer of these funds to the H.R.A had
begun early on, but the actual transfer, now $50,000 was not executed until 1908. At the same time, Eliot
promised the City of Cambridge that the land assembled by the Associates would not be takes off the tax
roles. This proved to be true only during his presidency since no land title was transferred to Harvard until
1912 when Lowell was in charge.]
We had to borrow a large sum of money from some anks.[Sidebars 20-22]
[To assemble the parcels, Loring and Coolidge had used both purchase and options with considerable success.
On March 16, Loring was able to tell Forbes that he had already bought 322,709 sq. ft leaving only 135,405
more to be secured.]
[Arrangements were made to obtain additional cash. The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York agreed
to mortgage at four and a half percent the parcels as acquired for three fifths of the purchase price.
Eventually, when land acquisition was reasonably complete these small mortgages would be combined under
a single financial umbrella. This point was not reached until the summer of 1906.]
[It became obvious by April that expenses were mounting; cash was needed to buy or renew short-term
(three month) options, interest on the moirtgages for taxes, as well as for maintenance of property. Malignly,
as the Associates improved their property, the City of Cambridge increased the assessed valuation and hence
the taxes. The original plan had been to service the mortgages from rental income from the parcels that
contained rentable housing. In the event, the income from rents failed to cover expenses.]
We had to find money to pay interest on these loans. Jay Burden suggested that / should find a
large number of guarantors, some promised 100 a year for 10 years, some 100 a year for 5 years
and some 50 a year for ten years and some fifty a year 5 years. / spent a great deal of time
principally in Boston and New York in finding a large number of guarantors.
[On May 3, 1903 the Trustees initiated what was called the "Guarentee Fund" to be managed by the City Trust
Company of Boston. The subscribers, eventually 100 in number, committed their sums as a maximum amount
which could be called up annually by the Trustees to meet any deficiencies in the accounts of the H.R.A..
Apparently the guarantor program was successful. Account books of the H.R.A show substantial income from
the guarantors.]
[On the 29th of June, 1903, George Baker in a letter to Forbes, acknowledged that the subscription of
$400,000 was complete. By the time that the Trustees registered the Harvard Riverside Associates Deed of
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The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
New York, and $465,000 from mortgages and acquired 78 parcels. While in letters and some documents
Forbes speaks of stock to be issued to subscribers, neither the Forbes files nor the Harvard Archived contain
7.
any paper that could be considered a stock certificate. It is questionable that such ever existed.]
At times things would move along smoothly. / was able to get a job of school teacher at Middlesex
School in the winter of 1903-04. During those lonely weeks / thought of my interests and decided
that / did not like school teaching
However,
in the spring of 1904 / decided to
go from
literature to art. / had for nine years or SO felt that English literature would be my field and / had
gone to Oxford to study that. However during the lonely years of the spring of 1904 / decided to
change and go from literature to art. / went abroad that summer with my mother and aunt
and [then] spent November again at Naushon on account of my health. In the next two years / went
abroad to study art from February to June, all that my health would stand. And worked on Harvard
R.A. while at home.
In the summer of 1908 [it was actually 1906] my mother invited me to go with her and four girls to
visit my brother in the Philippines. Before setting out, / got engaged to one of them,
Margaret [Laighton of Boston] We were all to start in November but a crisis came in the affairs of
the H.R.A. so / could not go with them, and stayed and begged money until well into September. [It
turned out that he continued fund raising until December 7]
We were all to start [on our trip to the Philippines] in November, but a crisis came in the affairs of
the H.R.A., so / could not go with them, and stayed and begged money until well into December
when / had got enough to make Nelson Perkins and Harold Coolidge allow me to go to join the
others and get married in my brother's house in Manila.
[The record here is not clear and several versions of the events are available. In 1990 the Cambridge
Historical Commission contracted with Sharon Cooney to write a detailed history of the Harvard Riverside
Associates. Her excellent rendering when read in conjunction with details found in the Forbes Memorial
published by the Fogg Museum in 1971 are helpful in gaining a useful picture of a very complex series of
events .Both documents agree that in the fall of 1906 there was what Forbes saw as a crisis in the affairs of
the H.R.A. demanding immediate and protracted fund raising. Income was insufficient to carry the large
mortgage. Forbes' letters to Cameron and to his fiance written during the fall of 1906 give a perspective of
events that no historian has been able to capture.]
/ have told in the 1945 version of my story how dismayed / was that J. Burden disregarded our
appeals to notify the ten New Yorkers that we were about to give away their shares to Harvard. /
begged Nelson and Harold to let me go down to tell the New York helpers what was happening as
Jay did not do it. But for some reason they would not let me do it. [His letters indicate that he did
finally go to New York.]
[Records of that period indicate that the concern of Forbes was that there were insufficient resources to
service the mortgage. The danger was that and the Mutual Life Insurance Company which held a mortgage of
$485,000 might foreclose. The solution was to pay off the mortgage Coolidge had paid $865,000 for the
property. New York and Boston had given a total of $400,000. If Harvard could be persuaded to provide a
$300,000 mortgage, execution of this plan meant that the H.R.A. had to raise $185,000 That was where Forbes
came in.]
[This letter, appears to have been written in late summer, 1906, to Cameron, who presumably was awaiting
his boat to carry him to Manila to take up his post as Governor General of the Philippians. "I am trying to get
the DeWolf money. All the committee [men] that / have seen so far are in favor of the idea; but there is a
complication in as much as Pres. Eliot has told the city authorities that the sum was ready and he will have to
tell them that the plan is being withdrawn. We are not quite ready yet to have them know so much. But /
think there will be no trouble eventually. / have been trying to get the University Associates to help us
The
best / have been able to get out of them at the present is that they will buy, if we like, such land as we
cannot afford and verbally agree to let us have it at a reasonable price. An agreement that would not bind
their successor. If that is the best they can do / think that we can only use them as a last resort, Give
my
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love to any San Francisco investor who want to come in on the ground floor of a hot stuff four percent
investment".]
[To Cameron, now in the Philippines, September 3, 1906. "But the Harvard Riverside Associates will probably
keep me hard at work for the next three months or so this winter and / ought to have a good long spell in
Germany working on their language and their galleries. The H.R.A. thing is a thing that has got to be done;
and / may be kept at it till the time when / must dash straight to Europe. Then there is the art museums, and
my work in general. So, / do not yet see much chance of a loop hole."
[To Cameron. "Boston, Oct. 25th 1906 / do not remember just how much / told you. / have since sent you
a telegram telling of my engagement to Margaret Laighton. / asked you not to reply by cable because / do not
want it known for some weeks. Margaret goes off with Mama and / have got to take of my coat and work for
some weeks on the Harvard Riverside matter. Also, / am going to beg for the Art Museum [presumably the
Fogg Museum]. / hope / can catch one of these boats Nov. 20 Nov.30 or Dec 7th or at worst Dec. 14 or 21']
[Forbes had written this note: "Letters from E.W.F. to Margaret Laighton who had gone to Manila with his
mother who was waiting for him to come so that they could be married."]
[Pride's Crossing Nov., 1906 "Yesterday afternoon / came down here and spent an hour or two with your
mother at Mrs. Swift's. Then she drove over with me to Harold Coolidge's where / spent the night"]
[
"I started in to beg day before yesterday. / made a bad beginning by getting 4 refusals. But one of them
telephoned that he had changed his mind after Harold Coolidge had got after him. So that / got $10,000 the
first day. The second day / got 12,000 but 9000 came from our family / had rather an amusing
time
in
the evening. / asked Harold and his wife whether there any people along the North shore who might give me
money. Mrs. C. took to it like a duck to water and canvassed the whole shore in their minds telling me who
had money."]
["As a result of my evening's entertainment / decided not to go to Boston in the morning. and went to
Topsfield.
So / planned a novel day of dashing about among these swell houses. It proved to be a delicious
clear cold northwest day. / took the train to West Manchester and walked up to the house of Cam's friend.
/
ought to have phoned first. But it worked out well Wasn't home; but his mother came down. She offered
me the automobile to take me to two other places which was just what / wanted. So, / gaily set forth talking
French with the chauffeur. At one of the places / got 3,000 from a Philadelphian who would have been hard
to catch elsewhere. At the other place / got nothing
/
telephoned
Mrs.
Proctor
to
tell
her
/
planned
to
hired an automobile at Beverly Farms She said, "Oh no, / will send mine over" Of course / was duly surprised
and humble, but again it was just what / wanted !!! You did not know what a horrible schemer you had
accepted. So, / lightly leapt into the "bubble" and sped off through Wenham and Hamilton which / had never
seen before, and stopped at two houses; alas- to find the victims out..
[ "He [Peter Proctor] took me out for a drive to the village of Topsfield and had just showed me the house of
his great grand father, Emerson, the brother of my great great grandfather, Emerson, when the pair of horses
took fright at something and got the jump on P and ran into the sidewalk throwing him out of the wagon. The
horses started to run across an open common. / leaned way out forward over the dasher to try to catch the
reins from the horses' backs; but just as / was almost touching them the horses wheeled at right angles, and
of
course / was off my balance so / was thrown out too. / landed on my hands and knees and bruised one
knee. / ran to Peter who was lying on the ground semiconscious and dazed. But he was not badly hurt. A
kindly man took us into his wagon and drove us towards the house and presently the automobile came out
flying to the rescue."]
[
"So, / did not have a very successful day as / missed several of the people / was trying for It must
seem
to you as if money was my only interest. / am thinking and talking money so much But / am like the person
who is determined to get to a place and whose horse baulks and bucks and kicks and so perforce pay
attention to the horse rather than to the distant city he sees ahead and longs to reach".]
[Milton, November 2,1906 "I wrote yesterday about my expedition in automobiles etc. and my well deserved
retribution for my sins. My knee is very much better today. It was lucky that / did not hurt my tongue, n'est-ce
pas? / can get along without my knee much better than by tongue just now. Think what a sad plight / would
be in if / had dislocated my tongue and sprained my outstretched hand with the hat in it / had a record day
and got $19,000 which brings me to $44,000, 4 ahead of time (time consists of ten a day) / have now got
up
to $57,000 at the end of 5 day's work. It looks now as if / really might get off on the Dec 7th boat / go to New
York on Wednesday night, and hope to have $100,000 before / start and to get $100,000 in three days there
!!!. Nothing like having modest expectations."}
[New York, November 8th, 1906. "I have just arrived in here in New York + waiting for J. Burden our New York
trustee to come and talk with me. / hope pretty definitely in a few days how things are going. / have got
about $70,000 so far in Boston and several are undecided, / have not seen. So, / expect to get $100,000 out of
the guarantors with some foundation. If so, all should go well']
["New York, November 9 th My first day in New York was not a great success. / found only a few and only got
one to accept. So, $1500 was my pitiful little day's work / hope for better things today."
[ "November 10, / have only got $2,500 definitely as the result of three days work. But many are thinking it
over and / think my three days work is really more $20,000 when they all decide / shall have to stay here at
least two or three days longer. / have got only about $75,000 definitely promised, but / think / know where
about $40,000 more is coming from among the people / have seen and others who are pretty sure to say
"yes". And / want at least $200,000. When shall be able to come still hope for Dec. 7th."]
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[Also on November 13 to "Cam: I am at Mary Amorey's struggling away with my Harvard R.A. proposition. You
know we are trying to put the thing on a sound basis. We have a $485,000 mortgage out, and if they
9.
foreclose we are likely to lose everything."] ["Milton, Nov.20th, / am disgusted tonight. Nelson Perkins and
Harold Coolidge say it will be out of the question for me to go on the seventh
About
$110,000
raised--
-$140 more to raise. Desperation. Where is it all going to come from ? How can / do it even before the 14th ??
/ am beginning to feel blue about it."]
[The money is coming in steadily and / am pretty sure / can succeed. But that is just the trouble. / foresee
that by the 1st (when / should have to leave to sail on he 7th). / shall probably have about 130,000 or
150,000. On the 7th / shall probably have 180 or 200,000']
["And then / fear it will drag on very slowly and if it proves that / must stay up to 250,000 it may take two or
three weeks more to get that"]
["Concord, Nov. 20th, Despair? / don't think / can escape till the 14th."]
["Nov 30th, When will this end ? How long must / be sacrificed to this wretched great white elephant of a land
? It rides me like Sinbad's old man of the sea. If / could only meet it on a dark night ! But what is the use of
bemoaning ? The only thing to do is to achieve, to accomplish, to arrive...' ']
["The situation is very complex now,+ big interests are involved. / am so tired of talking and thinking about it
that / will not say much; but you and Cam may like to know the outlines. / will give you the more technical
part of the facts for Cam's benefit.]
[/ had expected great things from J. Burden in New York about 10 days ago; perhaps 50,000 in two or three
days. At last, word came that Mr. Twombly, and some of the original subscribers objected to our prfound [?
proposed ] organization. Thereupon Nelson said he would force J. to bring them into line when he saw them
at the Yale game. But he didn't. J. Made a proposition for the Harvard corporation to help us.]
[Nelson on the following day brought that to the Corporation and they refused and made another which we
could not accept.. Then / went to New York to try to make J. Burden work. He said the situation was rather
serious, that the rich men of Wall St. were rather hot with the Corporation. They have given very generously
to the Teacher Endowment Fund and to this scheme, and they feel that the Corporation is small petty and
narrow. They say that the Corporation must come forward and help us, and J. Burden says the Corporation
must at least give us a mortgage of 300,000 at 3 1/2% to satisfy the New Yorkers."
["He talked over the phone to Nelson and said Nelson seemed to understand and favor his point of view. So, /
returned + then came thanksgiving. To day / have seen Nelson + he got Charlie Adams, the treasurer to come
in and / point[ed] out to them the danger they were in from a row with Wall St."]
["Charlie is SO very conservative that he saw all sorts of objections to the plan that didn't seem to me to have
much force. Oh, if only they would brace up and do something or if the Wall St. people would not be insistent
just at this point on small matters what a blessing it would be for me."]
["But here is a matter of some importance; in a way brought about by me and / have got to see it through.
The principal thing that worries me and makes me mad about it is that it takes so much time. / am going to
see the President (Eliot) to morrow and try to convince him and to make him hurry up."]
["The next Corporation meeting is not till Monday Dec. 10th so unless / can force them to have a special
meeting before, / can not sail on the 14th. Damnation- And if the Corporation decides the wrong way / don't
know when / can come. Hell Please excuse the above."]
["Of all pieces of miserable luck Nelson has just gone off an a vacation till Tuesday night. He says he will
probably have to see the New Yorkers before the Corporation meeting. So, / don't see how we can have that
meeting before Thursday in any case."]
["If the Corporation accepts the proposition however, / can go off flying for / have raised about 125,000 and
can soon get some 20,000 more / think and J. Burden can easily get the remaining 20,000 or 30,000 that will
be necessary."]
["Milton, Dec. 2nd / saw President Eliot yesterday + had an interesting talk. / hope / had some effect on him. /
had the nerve to ask him to call a special Corporation meeting about this matter. He gave me leave to ask
Charlie Adams to do it. If all goes well / may yet sail on the 14th / am now a little cheered up. / see by
looking at the sailing list that even if / don't get off till Dec. 23 / can still get to Manila by
[ At the end of this letter Forbes made the following notation
"December 6: Corporation Meeting
7: $130,000 promised
8: RR train
14: Sailed in the S.S. China" ]
[On the 6th of December 1906, the Corporation did indeed convene a special meeting and voted that the "the
treasurer was at liberty to take a three and a half percent mortgage of $300,000 on the real estate held by
the Harvard Riverside Associates" There is no record to indicate whether or not Forbes was privy to this
information before he left for Manila. Certainly Perkins must have known. Two years had to pass before
Harvard executed the mortgage and the Associated had to soldier on during that period .In 1908, the Income
from rentals was $28,942 and guarantors paid $18,139, but fees, taxes and maintenance expenses continued
to make foreclosure of the mortgage a threatening possibility.]
[On January 29,1907 Forbes married Margaret in Manila and set off on a European honeymoon. From
Florence, ever attentive to the H.R.A., he wrote to Cam in May of that year: "I have telegraphed home from
Rome to ask if the H.R.A. needed me this June and the reply came to stay till July if / chose. So, / suppose
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[Apparently, until the H.R.A had obtained all of the $185,000 in order to retire the New York mortgage
Harvard was reluctant to proceed with its own mortgage of $300,000 When he left for Manila and for his
wedding and European honeymoon, Forbes thought he had in hand $130,000 which he had so desperately
collected along the North Shore of Boston and in New York. When he returned from abroad in early July, this
sum had dwindled to $20,000, many of the promises of gifts apparently unfulfilled.]
[One explanation for this apparent difference is that of the $130,000 only $20,000 was deemed as a gift and
the remainder was merely a pledge. In a letter, January 26,1907, which must have reached Forbes in Manila,
or perhaps chased him as he traveled toward Europe with his new bride Perkins says "when you get home
[you must] see whether you can turn about $100,000 of the $130,000 that you raised
into
an
absolute
gift".]
[Soon after he was back in the United States, Forbes began to consider his responsibility for "begging" for
contributions. One of his first acts was to write to all the guarantors, asking that they fulfill their pledges
immediately rather than waiting for five or ten years as originally intended.]
[In a letter to Cam, Forbes now in Milton, summarized the situation as he visualized in early March 1908: "I
am going to telegraph you about the Harvard Riverside Associates, today probably. Nelson tells me / must be
back to beg in spite of bad times; because an opera house is being started, and / must get ahead of it. / wish
the opera house subscription would wait for another year because / can't wait." ]
["Our scheme is this. Last year you remember / worked on a scheme for keeping the thing going indefinitely
by issuing preferred stock for new money and getting the University to take the mortgage. Twombly and
others killed that just on the verge of success., Now. We propose once and for all to get rid of the land and
have the College take it.]
["The mortgage is $485,000. The college will take 300,000. We have on hand $20,000. / must raise $165,000.
Mr. Hemenway and / decided to start by trying to get 20 men at $5,000. So far / have only been at it a few
days. / have begun with people / felt pretty sure of, so as to have an amount to start with that will encourage
the others. / have got so far $30,000. / feel pretty sure / can get sixty or seventy thousand fairly quickly. Then
will come the tug."]
[Perkins and Forbes considered letting the mortgage be foreclosed and then buying back the land at "fire
sale" prices. They had paid $865,000 for the properties which in 1906 were worth only $515,000.Th approach
was rejected on several scores.]
[March 19,1908: Perkins decided that it was in the interest of Harvard to get the subscribers to assign their
stock over to the trustees of the H.R.A because reorganization was about to occur when the Trust would
expire in coming summer. have just gotten the paper which Nelson prepared. It was sent to Washington
and New York for Bacon's (now Secretary of State) and Burden's signature. / am expecting it back from Amory
Gardner today with signatures Then / can really take my coat off and start in."]
[March 19,1908 "We have at present $85,500"]
["We have got only 99,000 to raise. / feel sure the College will pay 25,000 more than their 300,000 though
they have not committed themselves. / am trying to get 20 men at 5,000 but / doubt that / can. / think it will
probably come in smaller units. We have decided that it is best to have the Trustees hold the land and the
University the mortgage."]
[Letting the trustees hold the land reflected the desire on the part of the University to avoid exacerbating the
tussle with the City of Cambridge whenever land was takes off the tax roles. At this time the H.R.A welcomed
receiving the $50,000 remaining from Cameron's DeWolf project.] Concomitantly Coolidge had written to
Forbes that the Associate controlled all but 17,500 sq. ft. of the original plan to acquire 8,114sq. ft.]
[On Independence Day, 1908, Forbes wrote to Cam: "The Harvard River Associates is practically finished. / had
hoped to be able to telegraph you that all the money was raised but owing to J. Burden's failure to do
anything we have not got all yet. / have raised about $154,000 and J. Burden 1,000. On Class Day J. told
Nelson that he thought he could get ten thousand more. But / have not heard from him since. Though / have
written to him begging him to let me know what he had got.'
[In the summer of 1908, the Harvard River Associates expired, and on July 11, the trustees turned their
holdings over to a new entity, the Harvard Riverside Trustees. Bacon resigned as a trustee and three new
trustees were added: Harold Coolidge (of Loring & Coolidge,) Frank Appleton of New York and Samuel Vaughn.
The
purposes
of
the H.R.A. Trust continued: "to ensure the management and development of the Trust estate
in such a manner as the trustees believe to be for the best interests of Harvard University; but the authorities
of the said University shall have no right to direct the trustees or control their actions except as herein
expressly provided." The Harvard River Trustees now controlled the parcels assembled by the Harvard River
associates.]
[Perkins wrote to Forbes in early August 1908 that approximately $165,000 was in the till. In the fall, Coolidge
had reduced the New York mortgage to $345,000 a debt which Harvard had assumed at a rate of 4%. The
Harvard mortgage was later reduced to $300,000. At this point, the debt in New York was cleared.]
[In early November, 1908, President Eliot announced his retirement and six months later, Lowell became
acting President. His accession to the "throne" on, October 9, 1909, marked a new and helpful attitude in
University Hall. Lowell had building plans.]
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/ cannot remember why, but / do remember that occasionally we had meetings and
Lowell was
with us.
Speaking of President Lowell, the first time that / met him was while President Eliot was still at the
helm. / had not known Mr. Lowell, but somebody told me that he was rich and generous. So, / called
on him and begged for money. He immediately promised $5,000 ( or is it $8,000 ). Then we fell to
talking. He had even then the idea of Freshmen Dormitories / am quite sure. That was surprise to
me; for / had thought in terms of the Oxford Cambridge Colleges. But we both agreed that we ought
to have the land. [Sidebar 23]
[The new Trustees made arrangements to convey part of their holdings to Harvard on January 5,1911 This first
trench covered the property from Mill Street east to west from Boylston Street ( now J.F. Kennedy Street ) to
De Wolf Street and south to the River This is the current northern boundary of Lowell House. This portion of
the Trustees' holdings provided the land upon which President Lowell could build his long sought after
Freshmen Dormitories.]
[By deed in 1912, the Trustees turned the remainder of their holdings to the College and this property
included the land upon which Lowell house was built.] [Sidebar 24-25]
Cambridge, MA
February 20, 2002
Dr. Charles U. Lowe '42
CharlesULowe@aol.com
The following photographs are Courtesy of the Cambridge Historical Commission:
[4] Bainbridge Bunting and Robert H. Nylander, Survey of Architectural History in Cambridge: Old
Cambridge.(Cambridge, Mass., 1973)
[5] Cambridge Planning Board Collection, Cambridge Historical Commission
[6] Cambridge Historical Commission
[10] Cambridge Historical Commission
[14] Cambridge Historical Commission
[15] Cambridge Historical Commission
The following photographs are courtesy of Harvard University Archives:
[1], [7], [13], [16]
The following photographs are courtesy of the Cambridge Historical Society:
[2], [3], [9], [12], [13], [19], [20], [21], [22], [24], [25]
Portrait of Edward Forbes
at the time he
graduated from Harvard [1]
Harvard and the River, 1890 [2],[3]
Earliest Map of Cambridge, 1670 [4]
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The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
11.
View from the Charles River, looking
toward the site of Winthrop House.
Lowell House is behind Winthrop. [6]
Photograph of Edward Forbes
as director of the Fogg Museum
(circa 1940) [7]
Letter from Cameron to Edward
in Florence, April 4, 1902,
Describing Details of the Plan: [8]
Dedham Polo Club, April 4, 1902
W. Cameron Forbes to E.W.F in Florence. [Edward Forbes was in Florence recovering from a
concussion he had suffered while playing rugby at Oxford]
Do you know the question of improving Harvard has come up actively + I only wish you were
here to put your shoulder to the wheel. The present plan is to build a boulevard from the Harvard
Union ( Quincy Square + Beck Hall ) directly to the River This will need a subscription of $50,000
from Harvard people. The City + the State + Park Commission etc. will put up $150,00 or more I
think. I have been put on the committee to bull the thing--will send you a circular soon. I am by no
means satisfied with the project and have suggested an alternative that a syndicate of 10 men to be
got together who will agreed to put up $50,000 each to buy the land to be improved not only by this
boulevard but by the River park. All that they get in fact between DeWolf [this boulevard] + Boylston
[ Now Kennedy Street]. I have agreed to be one of the 10 (+expect my family will stand in with
me.....) Understand this is not a gift. We buy the land + hold to be given to the University at cost if
they want it. You know this was done in the case of the Medical School. I don't know whether you
have heard about that. A fine tract of land was purchased + held by sundry Boston Gentlemen for
the purpose. Last summer Mr. J. P. Morgan gave the University a million dollars to start the Medical
School. Rockefeller gave it another million this autumn conditional upon our raising $750,00 more
which has been done + that with the previous fund + the value of the old buildings which will be
sold will give the establishment $5,000,000. How's that for high.
Now I want these same men who held that land + who are now released of that obligation to do the
same thing at Cambridge and hold it until some one comes along with five million for an
architectural school. The Harvard Library is in a bad way now + they need an even million or more
for that. I see by the paper that Cecil Rhodes has left [a] provision for two scholarships at Oxford for
every state in the United States. This strikes me as a very noble + enlightened philanthropy as it
should promote harmony + fuller understanding between two nations.
Well old chap, farewell + get well +remember I am yours always.
The Plan of Cameron Forbes [9]
Old Mill Pier [10]
Bunting has described the River banks: [11]
"They were a mixture of modest residences and commercial buildings and its river front was clogged
with an assortment of wharves, coal yards, storehouses and a power plant"
Photos of Charles River Area [12],[13],[14],[15]
The Salt Marshes of the Charles River [16]
8/10/2018
The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
Letter from Harvard President
12.
Charles W. Eliot [17]
March 5,1903
Dear Mr. Forbes;
The President and Fellows are of the opinion that the plan set forth in the draft of a prospectus sent
to me yesterday by Mr. Thomas Perkins would if it were carried into execution would confer a great
benefit to the College. It would give the College good access to the great public improvements
contemplated or already executed on the Charles River and its two banks and it would convert the
region between Mt. Auburn Street and the River between Boylston Street and De Wolf into a
handsome well laid out district, with none but good buildings well arranged upon the grounds. To
effect this great change in the present condition of that territory would contribute very much to the
dignity and pleasantness of the surroundings of the University.
The University cannot at present appropriate any of its funds or income to the promotion of this
admirable plan; but it is quite within the range of its present experience that it should be hereafter
provided with money which will enable it to avail itself of te thoughtful and ingenious provisions of
the plan devised to secure a great benefit to the College. A somewhat similar adventure on the part
of twenty friends of the Medical School has resulted in the acquisition by that school of an
admirable site for its new buildings, and other great advantages for medical education and research.
The President and Fellows will be very glad to hear that the undertaking described in the paper
above referred to has been successfully accomplished, and they feel that thereby very important and
very fitting provision has been made for the future growth of the University.
Very truly yours,
Charles W. Eliot
Letter from Overseer H.L. Higginson [18]
February 25, 1903
My dear Mr. Forbes;
I
have your letter of February 24, together with the prospectus of which you spoke.
The plan seems to me very good, so far as the College is concerned; that is to say it cleans up part
of Cambridge, and promises to make it more beautiful, and to open the College Yard, as it were,
down to the river. It is a fine and worthy object for the graduates; and the money will pay a high
rate of interest--not in pennies, but in a coin to be used after pennies have disappeared.
Very truly yours
H.L.Higginson
Map Sent to President Eliot [19]
Forbes' Working Map
of Acquisitions:
Harvard Property and
lots to be Secured
Page 1 [20]
Forbes' Working Map
of Acquisitions:
Harvard Property and
lots to be Secured
Page 2 [21]
Assessors' Map of 1903:
Area of Cambridge of
Forbes purchases [22]
Letter to Forbes from Coolidge
Regarding meeting with Lowell
(not yet president) [23]
May 25, 1908
8/10/2018
The Land on Which Lowell was Built I Lowell House
Dear Edward;
13.
I saw Lawrence Lowell on Friday and had a very satisfactory talk
We want to have a trustees'
meeting as soon as possible at which meeting President Lowell will present his views to the
Trustees. I want to leave it to him to appoint the date of the meting, but this is to ask you to let me
know in general when to will be convenient for you to have it. I am going to be away myself from
the 14th to the 29th of this month, but can call it any time after the 19th and before August 1st that
will suit President Lowell. How does this strike you?
Yours always,
Harold J. Coolidge
Deed to Lowell House Land
Page 1 [24]
Deed to Lowell House Land
Page 2 [25]
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Dear Mr. Epp;
Ron messages
I am not sure where I found out who Dorr was but it
probably was at the Harvard Archives. In writing
about the Riverside Associates using the Forbes
memoire as a scaffold, I tried to make it a habit
whenever possible to identify people he mentions.
There is a book at the Archives identifying Harvard
people, members of the Corporation, Overseers,
faculty, etc., up to 1936. I may have found Door
there. My guess is that since my Dorr was a member
of the Corporation he will be in that book. In
addition, the Archives may have a file on Dorr since
he was a Harvard heavy. They may be willing to tell
you by phone whether there is a file with additional
information. I don't know whether they will do that
but it is worth a try to save a trip. If they won't give
phone information, you might risk a trip since the
chances are good that they "know" him.
Phone of Archives: 617 495 2461
Good Luck.
Charles U. Lowe
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http://us.f841.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=551_1579557_22210_1897_861_0 4/7/2006
HARVARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
VE
RI
TAS
Harvard University Archives
Pusey Library
Harvard Yard
Cambridge, MA 02138
T 617.495.2461
F 617.495.8011
May 15, 2008
Ronald H. Epp
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
Dear Mr. Epp:
Barbara Meloni has asked me to respond to your most recent questions regarding
George Dorr and the Harvard Riverside Association.
Enclosed please find photocopies of the following:
-June 29, 1906 letter from Charles W. Eliot to George Dorr from the Eliot
Letterbooks (Call number UA I5. 150, Records of Charles William Eliot, Letterbook,
May 5, 1903-Dec. 11, 1906, volume 95).
-Description of Harvard Riverside Associates series from the Papers of Edward
Waldo Forbes (HUGFP 139.16 and HUGFP 139.16pf, 2 boxes). Although the Forbes
Papers can be made available for research in our reading room, please be advised that
some portions of the collection are stored off-site and advance notice is required to recall
specific boxes. If you would like to use this material please email or write to the
Archives at least three business days prior to your visit, indicating the boxes of interest,
SO that we may have the material on-site in time for your arrival.
Sharon Cooney's The Harvard Riverside Association: Land Acquisition South of
Harvard Yard, 1903-1918 is 33 pages long. If you would like to order a photocopy of the
5/30/08
8
paper please forward a check for $9.90 (33 pages @ $.30/page), payable to the Harvard
University Archives, to my attention at the above address.
Sincerely,
RobiniCarlow
Robin Carlaw
Researcher
Enclosures
UAI 5. .150
Records of Charles
Letterbook
May 5 1903 - use // 1716, V01.95
130X 61
Dave 15C
HARVARD UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES
Name
Shelf number
FORBES, Edward Waldo
HUG (FP) 139.16
HUG (FP) 139.16pf
Accession number:
Volume:
Box
Folder
Bd. Vol.
Total
See cover sheet
1
1 pf
2
Notes:
See also HUD 3748
Title of record series and dates:
Papers relating to Harvard Riverside Associates
1902-1958
Arrangement:
See folder list below.
Description (physical form, special subjects and correspondents, etc) :
Founded by EWF in 1902, the Charles River Association, later
Harvard Riverside Associates, was dedicated to preserving the landscape
between the University and the river. The series consists primarily of
correspondence regarding the early years of the organization. Included
in the pf folder are maps and drawings detailing plans for the proposed
acquisition and development of land.
Box 1
Correspondence and other papers 1903-1911
Correspondence and other papers 1912-1915
Correspondence and other papers 1916-1918
Correspondence and other papers 1943-1958
Miscellaneous notes
Letterpress volume (indexed)
1903-1909
Pf folder
Maps and drawings 1902-1916
30,
643
Millseive Va
you 18-1902
Dear my Elist,
I am down in
North Carolina
in
Virginia as it Chanen,
tought On after
hif which Ref Wavis
rd are making together
whiel I tell you he Order
to Efflan My dela, in
answer, you lette. of it
12th giving Mr a list of
name of New York men
for MU philosophical
Committee I thanks
had best leave the matter
Uni till they return, When
I Can Consult Mr Auste
toh about it as you Sug-
get I think a New
York man who 11 mild
be of influence mong
the new York Men of
think should culauly Human upon the
Committee if he will, because of his
wide reading in philosophy
j the thinght study be has given 5
the subject I spoke is The adaws
about Increasing the Committe this
way r usaw no objective W it, if
we could find the night than -
We have $63.200_
pledged toward
Hall at present, but
I direct one power W
Complete the Subscribtion
away Rottu men alen.
with regard 18 the
proposed approad
from the nives,
tell ym ifact, Where
Uu stand as I have
list been able to get
as get an, definite
statement from its men
who have lake change
of the New York Sub-
scriptens, but I
believe I am lafe a
saying that not less
than $33000- or 44000
have "ww been aind
We all_ and I feel
that to this Case the
of make a shert hill together thing
out Milehell While Shuetting of
the fact region mind about it
Sincerely yours,
Gings R. Dodge
President Charl. W. Eliot
Hervan's University
30 1702
643
Dear Sr
I beg leave LO acknowledge .1. 31
tion of the Harvard Approach Fund
The President is now 1ii in York
but
ex
pocts to return to Cambridge temerrov night end I shall bring your letter prompt
Ground them
George B
K
Dorr Egq.
643
Datesed University
Centrades December 29, 1902
Dear Sir
I the telogram
sent
to President Elist with your Zeliser of I
27th
Pay truly your E
Secretary to
George B Doz Esq
Enclosure
[12/27/1902]
643
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
My dea President Elist
Ihave just
got the Inclosed
telegram from Mr
affleton and in new
of the subfect it offers
I have 4w question
that $40000 Can be
Counted are, between
Rodton View York
and Could be soon
actually failed if
this would lusure
the recommen daten V
probable adoften of
au -
Sincerely Your,
Dee 271902
is
December 29.0
10/02
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
643
My dea President Usit
The Situation in put
This unit regard is the
Hanand Approach fund !
only $31000 have been
actually subscribed, , and
affection whom as you
know. I telegrabled you
list IS be able IS off
ust less than $40000 of
pollible on
has officed a bebay of the
New York men Th Shan unit
us here in make / of the
deficing so as is give
you call for - This does
you assurance of its he amount
in a letter whier I gst
from him after I sunt yun
out his Alegram-
that is 5 day, , be is willing
fn vailin, one half of 4/1000
to make liming referencial
will vaise the other half-
h New York if us here
This in seems 15 her we
3.
the whole amount needed on item basis has been
raised get abroad / in the paper, as du would
make it doubly difficult for us Is get the
many - and might in lear us thank
good a good portion at learN of its deficit our-
selver- appleta writer the that the demand
luads by the Harrand Cleak eftenden in New York
upon the this york then thake it difficult, be
finds, git them, for this
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
I understand the profession
15th plan unds consideration,
wide of its Avenue, / according
to le lighty feel i I think
the will le Sufficient for
rfn approach
the effect we Luky or been /
a parkway rust a teaming
road , but less than the would
In Inadequats, I feel
rl also doubt if all Sub-
devittion while an have would
be confirmed for an avenue of
less widel item.. its. _
affecten ask. the Is lethin
kum as early as possible what
the action of the board June
lle-, is, So that he way lote
410 these in raise, the among
needed, if the decision is
fainable is New approach,
while de matter is first -
and for the fame Halon I
Hould be glad w know of
it Myself-
Insti in ma, go through
successfully. l as
Sincerely Your
5
them. however The ground I got him is with
draw upon Was the officialis he would,
culturely leave (s lucenter to the legislation from
the Summer V then subsequent hostilig
build Mr Drog arranged the interes View
Wh of he should succede in gette leave 15
present at it and I law had a tile-
grow from him today La, in that in view of
this the Mumism pilition also would be withdrawn
OBii)
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
1960
AN INVENTORY FOR PLANNING
VE
RI
TAS
HARVARD UNIVERSITY PLANNING OFFICE
Cambridge President Fellows of Harvard College, 1960.
these buildings along with Holworthy Hall (1), built
in 1812, and proposed sites for six additional build-
ings. University Hall (6) was designed in 1815 by
Bulfinch and constructed on the site proposed in
this plan.
Arthur A. Shurtleff wrote of these and other
buildings to be added to the Yard in the two cen-
turies following.
"There is certainly nothing novel in the
scheme upon which these buildings are
grouped. Their placing was so much a matter
of commonplace in the days before the Revo-
lution that almost no documentary record
was made of it. Nevertheless, the persis-
tency with which the scheme was carried
out quarter century after quarter century
indicates the important place it held in the
minds of the upbuilders of the young Univer-
sity.
It is SO admirable a unit that imme-
diately when the word Harvard is pronounced
to one who has seen this quadrangle, a strong
and pleasing image of it comes to mind." 1
SUGGESTIONS FOR THE ORDERLY
ARRANGEMENT OF THE GROUNDS
OF HARVARD COLLEGE
Frederick L. Olmsted, Jr. 1896
Several proposals to construct the Charles River
Dam were made about the turn of the century. This
dam would create the Charles River Basin and
insure the conversion of the salt marshes and mud
flats along the river to stable park lands.
"Plans recently prepared by Frederick L.
Olmsted, Jr. and reproduced in an adjacent
column will provoke the interest of those
Harvard alumni who agree with him that a
new approach to the Yard from the Charles
might better the whole aspect of the Univer-
or GROUNDS
OF HARVARD COLLEGE
Frederick L. Olmsted, Jr. 1896
Several proposals to construct the Charles River
Dam were made about the turn of the century. This
dam would create the Charles River Basin and
insure the conversion of the salt marshes and mud
flats along the river to stable park lands.
HARVARD
"Plans recently prepared by Frederick L.
Olmsted, Jr. and reproduced in an adjacent
column will provoke the interest of those
Harvard alumni who agree with him that a
new approach to the Yard from the Charles
might better the whole aspect of the Univer-
sity.
Minor changes in the planning of the
University property would serve to lend
grandeur to this undying feature and would
enhance the dignity of Harvard's topographic
situation."2
The approach to the Yardfrom the Charles River
was only one feature of this plan. One can recog-
nize the numerous buildings (lightly shaded) pro-
posed for future expansion of the College in the
Yard and north of the Yard. Langdell Hall (1908,
1928-29) and Widener Library (1914-15) are the
only existing buildings which bear similarity of
site and bulk to these many proposals.
HARLES
RIVER
1. The College Yard - - Harvard University, Arthur
A. Shurtleff, Instructor of Landscape Architec-
NOV 1896
ture, 1904.
SUGGESTIONS FOR THE
2. Harvard Alumni Bulletin, May 15, 1948, Re-
ORDERLY-ARRANGEMENT-OF-THE-CROVNDS OF HA
creation of 1898 publication.
PLANNING OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY
STUDY FOR DIGNIFIED APPROACH TO HARVARD
COLLEGE -- Olmsted Brothers 1901
BIRD'S-EYE VIEW OF DE WOLFE PARKWAY
Olmsted Brothers 1902
HARVARD YARD
The attempt to create a link between the College
Yard and the Charles River as proposed by Olmsted
reappears with alignment variations in these and later
proposals for the development of Harvard College
and vicinity.
MASSACHUSETTS
HARVARD ST.
3/6/1902
QUINCY
SQUARE
ther
"The undersigned, graduates of Harvard, wish
to call your attention to a measure now pending,
which it is hoped will provide at last the digni-
fied and suitable approach to the college grounds
for which the need has long been felt. The
Charles River Parkway has already been laid
KEY MAP
ARROW ST.
Dria
out, and is now being constructed, following the
river bank along the Cambridge side, from Har-
vard Bridge to a point beyond the bridge cross-
ing from Harvard Square to Soldiers Field. This
BOW
ST.
will bring it, as may be seen on the accompany-
ing plan, within a short distance of the College
Yard.
MT. AUBURN
ST.
"What is now proposed is to construct a wide
park-like street connecting this river parkway
with Quincy Square, and thus provide a continu-
ous driveway, shaded with trees, and free from
STUDY FOR
DIGNIFIED APPROACH
car tracks, from the Harvard Bridge to Harvard
TO
College. It will also afford a more direct, as
HARVARD COLLEGE
well as more attractive, route between the Har-
DE WOLF ST. AND QUINCY SQUARE
vard Union and the University Boat House and
SCALE
group
Soldiers Field." 1
ARROW
ST.
river bank along the Cambridge side, from Har-
vard Bridge to a point beyond the bridge cross-
ing from Harvard Square to Soldiers Field. This
ST
will bring it, as may be seen on the accompany-
ing plan, within a short distance of the College
Yard.
MT. AUBURN
ST.
"What is now proposed is to construct a wide
park-like street connecting this river parkway
with Quincy Square, and thus provide a continu-
ous driveway, shaded with trees, and free from
STUDY FOR
DIGNIFIED APPROACH
car tracks, from the Harvard Bridge to Harvard
TO
College. It will also afford a more direct, as
HARVARD COLLEGE
well as more attractive, route between the Har-
DE WOLF ST. AND QUINCY SQUARE
vard Union and the University Boat House and
SCALE
Soldiers Field.
1
JUNE 1901
MILL ST.
GRANT ST.
RIVERVIEW AV.
08
COWPERTHWAITE ST.
4-4.B
It is assumed that the continued interest in
the lands along the Charles and their linkage to
the College Yard may be attributed in great por-
tion to the activities of the Harvard Riverside
Ansociates.
"The Harvard Riverside Associates,
Messrs. Thomas Nelson Perkins 91,
Augustus Hemenway '75, Harold J. Cool-
idge '92, and James A. Burden '93, led by
Mr. Edward W. Forbes '95 solicited con-
tributions to acquire property in this area.
This organization was eminently success-
ful and when the property was turned over
to the University in 1909 something over
$ 800,000 had been spent on land aquisi-
tions. It was in this manner through the
initiative of Mr. Forbes and the generosity
of alumni that Harvard obtained the sites
for the freshman halls and much of the
land on which the houses were later erec-
ted."2
I
A circular letter to the Alumni of Harvard
University, March 6, 1902, from George B.
Dorr, Secretary and Treasurer of an alumni
group.
"The Evolving Shape of Harvard," illustrated
lecture November 1956, Charles W. Eliot
2nd, Professor of Landscape Architecture.
PLAN OF PROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS FOR HARVARD SQUARE AND VICINITY
E. J. A. Duquesne 1913
A circular letter to the Alumni of Harvard
University, March 6, 1902, from George B.
Dorr, Secretary and Treasurer of analumni
group.
"The Evolving Shape of Harvard," illustrated
lecture November 1956, Charles W. Eliot
2nd, Professor of Landscape Architecture.
PLAN OF PROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS FOR HARVARD SQUARE AND VICINITY
E. J. A. Duquesne 1913
In February 1912 the Harvard Square Businessmen's Association petitioned the Mayor of Cambridge
to request the University to appoint a committee "to prepare a plan or plans as a basis for the present
and
future development of Harvard Square."1 President Lowell appointed four professors from the Faculty
of
Architecture to serve on this committee: Messrs. E. J. A. Duquesne, H. V. Hubbard, J. S. Humphreys
and H. L. Warren. "A few months later the University agreed to employ Professor Duquesne to prepare
the plans.
in consultation with the other members of the committee who were contributing their ser-
vices."2
The plan reprinted here was prepared by Professor Duquesne to accompany this report of the
University Committee. Several committee recommendations which may be identified in this plan include:
(a) widening Massachusetts Avenue from Central Square to Harvard Square and widening Boylston Street
between the river and Harvard Square, (b) abolishing Riverview Avenue and using the lands for
parking
along
the Charles River Road and to admit the proper placing of the new freshman dormitories parallel to
the
Charles
River Road. These proposed dormitories may be seen along the river and are similar to
Smith, Standish, Gore and McKinlock Halls. A proposed open area appears in the plan where Lowell House
now stands. In the Yard, Professor Duquesne proposed buildings similar to Memorial Church, Houghton
and Lamont Library. Additions to both Hunt and Robinson Halls and the replacement of Boylston Hall with
a considerably larger laboratory building were three additional unrealized proposals.
1. Letter to the Mayor of the City of Cambridge (Hon. J. Edward Barry), February 16, 1912, from Mr.
John Nolen.
2.
"The Future Development of Harvard Square," Report of the University Committee appointed by the
President of Harvard University at the request of the Mayor of Cambridge - 1913.
4-4-C
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Cambridge Tribune (4)
ALDERMEN RECONSIDER VOTE ON NEW POLICE DISTRICT ORDER [ARTI
Cambridge Chronicle 1 June 1907
Cambridge Chronicle (3)
n H. Corcoran and Rev. John J. Ryan, P. R. George B. Dorr, representing the Riversid
Category
-
was-
ARTICLE (7)
HARVARD ALUMNI [ARTICLE]
Cambridge Tribune 12 July 1902
Decade
d alumni associations, and already $18,000 has been sent to George B. Dorr, of Bostc
1880-1889 (1)
the
1900-1909 (6)
Harvard University. Harvard's Finances. [ARTICLE]
Word count
Cambridge Tribune 21 January 1888
e year there were the following which were over $1000: George B. Dorr estate, $4786.
51-1000 (4)
Paine estate, $1600;
>= 1001 (3)
BOULEVARD PLAN [ARTICLE]
Cambridge Tribune 2 February 1907
At a gathering Inst Saturday at the home of George B. Dorr, is Commonwealth avenu
was present
BOULEVARD PLAN BEING REVIVED [ARTICLE]
Cambridge Chronicle 2 February 1907
d at a meeting recently held at the residence of George B. Dorr, 18 Commonwealth av
a
PROJECT FAVORED [ARTICLE]
Cambridge Tribune 8 June 1907
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10/31/2013
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Page 2 of 2
d College, 50 State St., Boston, June 3, 1907. Mr. George B. Dorr, 18 Commonwealth
My Dear
FAVOR DE WOLF STREET WIDENING [ARTICLE]
Cambridge Chronicle 8 June 1907
, Harvard College, BO State St., Boston, June 3, 1907Mr. George B. Dorr, 18 Common
Mai*. My Dear
http://cambridge.dlconsulting.com/cgi-bin/cambridge?a=q&hs=1&r=1&results=1&txq=...
10/31/2013
TO BRING HARVARD
Symphony Orchestra, presented the univer.
sity with Soldiers' Field, the great play-
ground of some twenty-two acres on the
YARD TO CHARLES
Boston side of the river, where the various
athletic interests of the university are now
permanently established. In other words,
the Harvard man of a dozen years ago, un-
University Alumni Organization
less he happened to be connected with a
'Varsity or class crew, practically never
Scures Much of Land Be-
went down to the river. while nowadays he
is likely to cross it nearly every afternoon
tween Present Grounds
in Spring and Autumn on his way to the
athletic fields.
and River.
CHANGED CONNDITIONS.
This changed condition, which has incl-
AMBRIDGE, Mass., Sept. 4.-About 250
dentally strongly emphasized the fact that
C
years ago one Capt. Johnson. describ-
the university, visited annually by thou-
ing the then appearance of Harvard
sands of tourists. has no thorougly pleas-
College, wrote: The scituation of the
ant approach from the direction of Boston.
Colledg is very pleasant, at the end of a
has naturally brought into existence several
spacious plain. near a fair navigable river,
plans for connecting college and river by
environed with many Neighboring Towns
an attractive roadway, but these plans have
of note, being so near that their houses
so far been more expensive than the college
join with her Suburbs, the building thought
could undertake without outside assistance.
by some to be too gorgeous for a Wilder-
Meantime there remained the danger that
ness and yet too mean in other's appre-
the land between the college and the river
hension for a Colledg, it is at present in-
might at any time be purchased and used
larging by purchase of the neighboring
for factories or other permanent structures
houses." Since that time Harvard, one
equally out of harmony with the neighbor-
might say, has been chronically " inlarg-
ing university and with the purpose of the
ing by the purchasing of the neighboring
park authorities. The Harvard Riverside
HRA
houses, or their purchase for her by alumni
Associates were organized to prevent this
and others interested in the growth of the
possibility by acquiring the land and devel-
university and in the development of edu-
oping it in harmony with both interests.
cation. (The latest of these purchases,
In other words the newly acquired terri-
made in the interest of the university, al-
tory. although not owned by the college.
though not directly for that institution,
will be devoted largely to college purposes.
bids fair to restore something of this an-
continuing the movement of dormitories to-
cient water front and to give the old col-
ward the water front and offering an oppor-
lege a glimpse of the "fair navigable
tunity for the much needed connecting
river from which the growth of Cam-
boulevard.
bridge between the college yard and the
This latest change in Cambridge real es-
Charles has practically isolated her for
tate has, moreover, a broader interest than
several generations.
even the growth at the university. The
Charles River basin has from the beginning
LAND ALREADY SECURED.
of Greater Boston's park development been
During the past Summer a large part of
regarded as the natural centre of the sys-
the territory necessary, roughly speaking,
tem, and although some other parts of the
to continue the present Harvard yard
plan have been earller put into working op-
southward to the banks of the Charles has
eration. the most recent efforts are along
been acquired by the Harvard Riverside
the long-neglected banks of the river. A
Associates, an organization made up of
movement, for example, is now on foot in
several prominent Harvard alumni, with
Boston to dam the stream and transform
the intention of controlling it in the inter-
the river basin into what would be to all
ests of the university. As it now stands
intents and purposes a beautiful lake, and
the land between the college and the river
the borders of this prospective lake are
represents two distinct strata, and its con-
already emerging from the first bareness
dition is in Itself self-explanatory of the
of newly laid roads and newly planted trees
fact, at first glance surprising. that the
and shrubs into the orderly charm of
natural growth of Harvard has not already
pleasant driveways, well kept sea walls,
incorporated it. (This growth. however.
and pebbly beaches. Cambridge. along
has been to the north. away from rather
what was once the Harvard water front,
than toward the river. largely because such
has been one of the important and diffi-
has been the line of least resistance. he
cult problems of the landscape architects
very presence of the college. as well as
owing to the unsightly architecture that
the fact that the strip of land immediately
has grown up between the college and the
to the south bordered the main road to
river front. The destruction of these build-
Boston. early gave the southern boundary
ings and the erection of others in harmony
a high value as the site of stores and
with the modern good taste of college
dormitories. and thus placed a financial
architecture will eventually change the en-
barrier in the way of southward develop-
tire character of this part of Cambridge
ment as long as the land north of the col-
as well as provide a direct and charming
lege remained less valuable Beyond this
connection between Harvard University and
more expensive real estate. and extending.
the park system as a whole.
until the development within very recent
HOW BOSTON WILL BENEFIT.
years of the great Metropolitan Park sys-
When this actually happens the university
tem of which Boston and its neighboring
and the park system itself will beat a re-
cities is now so justly proud. to the very
markable and mutually helpful relation in
banks of the Charles, lies a strip of land
that practically every department of the
given over to the untidy dwellings that so
university will be part of development
oiten cluster about a water front-to nar-
of Boston and its environs by the park
row crooked streets. as a well-known
system. This relation is already typified
Harvard professor wrote some years ago,
by the Arnold Arboretum, the great tree
flanked with plain frame houses. streets
and shrub museum that is an inseparable
NO ingeniously constructed that no one of
portion of the metropolitan parks, as well
them offers so much as a glimpse of the
as by the Bussey Institution. The Harvard
water from the yard."
Agricultural College, whose location is also
CAUSES OF PAST NEGLECT.
part and parcel of the beautiful chain of
Tt must be confessed. however, that until
riverways, lakes. and open country that
recently the Yard cared very little to
begins In the very heart of the city and
look at the water. The graduate of a dec-
carries the traveler in a great irregular
arc until it brings him back to the ocean
ade ago can easily remember when not only
was the river front unattractive. but the
beaches. The Arboretum is managed by
inhabitants hostile: and It was not 90 Very
Harvard University, and its roads and
long ago in the history of Harvard rowing
pathways are maintained and policed by
that one bridge spanning the Charles was
the City of Boston-an arrangement that
makes the great tree and shrub museum
famous for the pretty girls that gathered
to watch the crews pass under it. and
a distinct university possession. and yet
another. nearer Cambridge, equally famous
hospitably opens its gates to all the people
of the Commonwealth.
for the cohorts of urchins who waited pa-
tiently to pelt the oarsmen with rocks, mud.
On the Boston side of the Charles also
the new Harvard Medical School will soon
and other missiles. The development of the
Metropolitan Park system, which has now
erect that institution in the Boston Fenway,
cleared the river banks and is rapidly es-
thus adding a new and architecturally beau.
tablishing a beautiful driveway along its
tiful institution to the famous Back Bay
region and a fresh link to the chain of
border. combined with an increased student
growth by which the university has devel-
interest in rowing. no longer as a sport con-
fined to the crews that represent the uni-
oped from a single building thought by
some to be too gorgeous for a wilderness
versity in the big races, but as a sport
open (I) and participated In by a large body
and yet too mean in others' apprehension
of students, has reintroduced the Yard to
for a college to a metropolitan institu-
the river. The final consummation of
tion. its various departments separated by
closer relations came when Mr. Henry T..
many miles as the bird flies and joined to-
gether by the beautiful walks and drives
Higginson, who is so well known through-
of a splendidly developed system of mu-
out the country as the benefactor of the
nicipal parks.
Published: September 1903
Copyright © The New York Times
Recomplete copy 7/31/18
x
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OTTEN
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OCTOBER 2013 I ANITA BERRIZBEITIA
Lou
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LANDING (Changes LANDING
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CAMBRIDGE
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SHOWING THE RESIDENCES 1 GARDENS
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THE PRINCIPAL CITIZENO OF THE Town
the adidas take 400 goo
NAMES SHOWN IN PARENTHESIS INDICATE THOSE
DESSONS DWELLING HEAL AT ANOTHER DERIOD
DATES INDICATE EXISTING OVILDINGS 4
THE TIME or THERE ERECTION
BY
One
QUOCOT B LILLIE
MARSH
Anita Berrizbeitia.
Opon Spaces of Harvard 1636-2013. (2013)
REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING:
Busquets, Joan, Felipe Correa, Luis Valenzuela, and Harvard University Graduate School, of Design. 2004. Bringing the Harvard
Yards to the River. Cambridge, Mass.]: Harvard Design School.
Bunting, Bainbridge and Margaret Henderson Floyd. 1985. Harvard An Architectural History. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap
Press of Harvard University Press.
Cambridge Massachusetts, Playground Committee. The Story of Cambridge Playgrounds in Schoolyards and Public Parks.
Cambridge.
Clarke, Theodore G., author. 2012. The Charles River A History of Greater Boston's Waterway. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publish-
ing, Ltd.
Craul, Phillip J., 1932-, Ellyn M. Meyers, Joe Wrinn, Valkenburgh Associates Michael Van, and Planning Group Harvard Uni-
versity. 1993. A Master Plan for the Harvard Yard Landscape Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Cambridge,
Mass.: Harvard University?.
Emmet, Alan, Douglas C. Allen, and Harvard University Department of, Landscape Architecture. 1978. Cambridge, Massachu-
setts, the Changing of a Landscape. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University].
Hall, Max. 1986. The Charles, the People's River. 1st ed. Boston: D.R. Godine.
Harvard University Department of, Landscape Architecture. 1974. Olmsted's Park System as Vehicle in Boston : Urban Open
Space History, Analysis & Proposals, 1875-1975-?. Cambridge, Mass.: Dept. of Landscape Architecture, Harvard University.
Harvard University Long Range, Planning Group. 1974. A Long Range Plan for Harvard University and Radcliffe College in
Cambridge and Allston. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Planning Office.
Houghton, Deborah, Paul Petschek, David Porter, Roy Rudenstine, Stanislaus von Moos, Holyoke Center Harvard University,
and Harvard University Department of Visual and Environmental Studies, Student problems. 1973. Holyoke Center,. Cam-
bridge, Mass.], Harvard University, Department of Visual and Environmental Studies.
Iori, Massimo, 1958- and 1887-1965 Le Corbusier. 1998. Le Corbusier: Carpenter Visual Art Center. Vol. 2. Milano: Unicopli.
Johnson, Carol R. and Pete Carey. 2010. Carol R. Johnson : A Life in Landscape. Allston, MA: Daybreak Press.
Lambert, Craig and John F. Kennedy. 2005. The Origins of the John F. Kennedy School of Government. Cambridge, Mass.: Ken-
nedy School of Government Case Program.
Marchione, William, 1942-. 1998. The Charles : A River Transformed. Dover, N.H.: Arcadia.
Massachusetts Daughters of the American Revolution Hannah Winthrop chapter, Cambridge Historic guide, to Cambridge.
1907. Cambridge Common in 1776. Cambridge, Mass.: Massachusetts Daughters of the American Revolution. Hannah Win-
throp chapter, Cambridge.
Mumford, Eric Paul, 1958-, Hashim Sarkis, Neyran Turan, Timothy Hyde, Eduard F. (Eduard Franz) Sekler, and Cammie
McAtte. 2008. Josep Lluis Sert: The Architect of Urban Design, 1953-1969. New Haven :Cambridge: Yale University Press
;Harvard University Graduate School of Design.http://hollis.harvard.edu/?itemid=%7Clibrary/m/aleph%7C011508276.
Peabody Terrace, Docomomo U.S., ,accessed September 18, 2013. http://www.docomomo-us.org/register/fiche/peabody_terrace
Tomfohrde, Karl Martin. 1935. A Public Open Space System for Somerville, Massachusetts, Submitted as Part of a Thesis for the
Degree of Master in City Planning, Harvard University, School of City Planning, Cambridge, Mass.
Shand-Tucci, Douglass and Richard Cheek. 2001. Harvard University : An Architectural Tour. 1st ed. New York: Princeton
Architectural Press.
Subscriptions made to Cambridge Parking - giving
and amounts subscribed.
1908
May
9
July
15
James J. Higginson, 16 E.41
TY
1,
P. T. Brown, 156 5th Ave.
200
00
"
17
H. D. Robbins, 1034 5th Ave.
10
"
23
A. H. Wiggin 42 W. 49th St.
100
"
G. V. Knowlton, Jr. 135 Broadway
05
"
J. Harsh
10
"
I. N. Chelps Stokes
10
"
"
Harry 7. black
118 E. 22 St.
100
24
Howard C. Smith
27 William St.
10
"
"
James W. Appletion
45 Wall St.
25
Aug.
1
F. H. Squihn
Ipswich, Mass.
50
"
22
78 Beekman St.
TO
Sep.
Chas. LicBurney
5
11
Lawrence Godkin
520 Park Ave.
100
6
E. D. lorgan
36 7.10th St.
25
903
Jan.
7
"
Jas. J. Highinson
100 Broadway
250
b
23
Robt. Datoon
16 E. 41 St.
"
29
1 Park Avenue
CUS
Chas. Sanier
1,000
it
Feb
3
59 Cedar Street
11
5
Panl Dama 1A 5th Ave.
1,000
11
Chos. S. Fairchild
11
40 Well St.
". Austin Wadsworth
850
"
13
50
Francis Shaw,
E. 41st St.
Mar
190
3
Lawrence E. Sextion
Beason St. costos
100
11
1111
34 Pine St.
W. R. Eurtington
100
"
Goo. Foster Peabody 43
51 Broadway
25
11
Jos. A. Stetison
Exchange
1,000
"
Geo. C. Clarke
10
"
Louis C. Clarked
Clarke Doage
"
"
D. Crawford Clarke
Co. 49 Wall
St.
Amos T. French
4
August Belmont
Tuxedo, N.Y.
25
R.P. Perkins
43 Exchange 17.
1,000
"
Chas. H. Russell
41 Union Sq.
25
"
Chas. O. Brewster
11 Eway.
250
"
Frank E. Randall
86 liberty
25
"
6
T. I. Browne, Jr.
GO Wall St.
50
11
11
James C. Carter
50
"
23
Geo. E. Turmure
54 Wall
Peanut
50
Apl
1
Jas. A. Burden, Jr.
64 Wall
100
"
8
"
Ront. Dudley Winthron
7 E. 91st St.
130
11
II. E. Tischorisher
40 Wall
1,000
May
1
F. L. Crawford
Boston
200
11
21
Edw. D. Brandegee Faulkner Farm, Broole
00
Dec.
7
904
H. i. VanDuser
1
E. J. Wendell
31 Nassau St.
50
Aug.
(Time
8 E. 38th St.
100
100
Carried Termard.
15,20
C
1207
1440778
624
n8
x
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Papers of Edward Waldo Forbes,
Edward Waldo Forbes
1860-1969?
English
Archival Material 68 containers of mss.
Includes personal and professional correspondence, lecture notes, diaries and calendars,
student notes and compositions, and writings.
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Find Items About: Forbes, Edward Waldo, (max: 21)
Title: Papers of Edward Waldo Forbes,
ca. 1860-1969 (inclusive).
Author(s): Forbes, Edward Waldo, 1873-
Year: 1860-1969?
Description: 68 containers of mss.
Language: English
Abstract: Includes personal and professional correspondence, lecture notes, diaries and
calendars, student notes and compositions, and writings. Correspondence includes
family and personal letters. Correspondents include W. Cameron Forbes, Edith
Forbes Webster, K.G.T. Webster, Ralph Forbes, Alexander Forbes, and Edith
Emerson Forbes. Also professional correspondence with Bernard Berenson and
T.S. Eliot; correspondence and other papers, 1903-1963, relating to the Museum of
Fine Arts and with Fogg Museum directors, John Coolidge and Paul Sachs; and
letterpress copybook, 1903-1918, of correspondence with Harvard Riverside
http://0-firstsearch.oclc.org.library.colgate.edu/WebZ/FSFETCH?fetchtype=fullrecord:sess...
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Associates. Correspondence, ca. 1900s, between Richard Norton and T.A. Fox also
is
included in the Forbes' papers. Forbes' writings consist of manuscript on the
history of the Fogg Art Museum, poetry and personal writings, such as
autobiographical sketches and family stories. Other material includes diaries, ca.
1888-1967; calendars, 1913-1968; personal notebooks with sketches, memoranda
and notes on museums and works of art; student notes, 1891, and compositions for
Harvard courses; notes, 1901-1902, for Oxford lectures; and memorabilia, such as
diplomas and certificates. Related publications and reference material also
available in repository.
SUBJECT(S)
Descriptor: Art -- Study and teaching.
Named Person: Berenson, Bernard, 1865-1959.
Coolidge, John, 1913-
Eliot, T. S. (Thomas Stearns), 1888-1965.
Forbes, Edward Waldo, 1873-
Forbes family.
Forbes, Alexander, 1882-1965.
Forbes, Edith Emerson.
Forbes, Ralph Bennett.
Forbes, W. Cameron (William Cameron), 1870-1959.
Fox, T.A.
Norton, Richard.
Sachs, Paul J. 1878-1965.
Webster, Edith Forbes.
Webster, K.G.T.
Named Corp: Fogg Art Museum -- Administration.
Fogg Art Museum -- History.
Harvard Riverside Associates.
Harvard University. Dept. of Fine Arts -- Students.
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Genre/Form: Autobiographies.
Certificates.
Diaries.
Diplomas.
Lecture notes.
Letterpress copybooks.
Poems.
Sketches.
Note(s):
Bio/History: Forbes graduated from Harvard in 1895, served as Director of Fogg
Art Museum, and taught fine arts at Harvard.
General
Info: Preferred citation: Edward Waldo Forbes Papers, Harvard University Archives./
Unpublished shelflist available in repository./ Occupation: Museum directors.
Entry: 19860707
Update: 20080423
Document Type: Archival Material
Accession No: OCLC: 122413292
Database: WorldCat
30000
WorldCat results for: (su = "Harvard Riverside
5
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Title: The Harvard Riverside Association : land acquisition south of Harvard Yard, 1903-
1918 Author: Cooney, Sharon Accession Number: 77066099
Libraries with Item: "The Harvard Riverside Ass..."( Record for Item I Get This Item )
Location
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HARVARD UNIV, ARCHIVES
HRA
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Title: The Harvard Riverside Association :
land acquisition south of Harvard Yard, 1903-1918.
Author(s): Cooney, Sharon.
Language: English
SUBJECT(S)
Descriptor: Real property -- Purchasing -- Massachusetts -- Cambridge --
History.
Named Corp: Harvard Riverside Associates -- History.
Harvard University -- Student housing -- History.
Document Type: Book
Entry: 20001121
Update: 20061218
Accession No: OCLC: 77066099
Database: WorldCat
http://0-firstsearch.oclc.org.library.colgate.edu/WebZ/FSFETCH?fetchtype=holdings:entit... 4/28/2008
OFFICE OF
CHARLES D. WETMORE,
3 EAST 33RD STREET,
NEW YORK.
May 25th, , 1903.
Francis R. Appleton, Esq.,
2 Maiden Lane, N.Y.
Dear Appleton:-
In regard to my subscription to the scheme for widening
DeWolf Street, Cambridge, I hand you herewith my note for $1,000. payable on
demand, which is at your disposal, it being understood that unless the widening
is made I am under no obligation on the note.
Very truly,
balan
( Mr C.D.W.)
(Enc.)
Edward Waldo Forbes,
Yanles Visionary.
Harvard U. 7099 Art Museum,
1971.
FOREWORD
EDWARD FORBES was paradox personified. Our generation thinks of him
IN the director who created the Fogg Museum. How else could he fairly
be described? Agnes Mongan has told in the introduction to this cata-
logue of the changes he wrought in his own institution and the influence
he exerted on all American art museums. Such an achievement would
surely have required a lifetime of hard, administrative work.
That is not how Forbes saw his life. The Fogg plays a major, but by
OCLC
un means a dominant role in his extended, unpublished autobiography,
"An Notes." Hard work? It is never suggested. Administration? The
word is not mentioned. His manuscript is a rambling tale of objects
and friends, a chronicle put together by a consistently warmhearted, oc-
disorganized amateur. And the impression that emerges from
Notz: See copy in FORBES FAMILY
the writing is identical with that conveyed by the man one met.
Ninone ever seemed less like our stereotype of a successful museum di-
file regarding Harvard
Lighthearted, carefree, obviously absentminded, he never seemed
to he graping the point one was trying to make. Could he concentrate?
Riverside Associates
A man of vision, certainly, but also a man of notions. It was a long time
before one became aware that if he yielded on his notions with easy good
human, he pursued his visions with quiet relentlessness.
lii this pursuit he brought an astonishing variety of talents. Most im-
Wintely, energy and a desire to begin making changes. Most funda-
il Mill for friendship based on an exceptional range of sympathy
mil an unerring eye for quality in people. He could evoke from hard-
Executives an idealistic dedication of which they did not know
they were capable; he could inspire the young and feckless to focus their
lis the at least one moment of significant creativity; he could direct
III to il lifetime of dogged devotion. Friendship meant ac-
3
HARVARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
Harvard University Archives
TAS
Pusey Library
Harvard Yard
Cambridge, MA 02138
T 617.495.2461
F 617.495.8011
May 15, 2008
Ronald H. Epp
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
Dear Mr. Epp:
Barbara Meloni has asked me to respond to your most recent questions regarding
George Dorr and the Harvard Riverside Association.
Enclosed please find photocopies of the following:
-June 29, 1906 letter from Charles W. Eliot to George Dorr from the Eliot
Letterbooks (Call number UA I5. 150, Records of Charles William Eliot, Letterbook,
May 5, 1903-Dec. 11, 1906, volume 95).
-Description of Harvard Riverside Associates series from the Papers of Edward
Waldo Forbes (HUGFP 139.16 and HUGFP 139.16pf, 2 boxes). Although the Forbes
Papers can be made available for research in our reading room, please be advised that
some portions of the collection are stored off-site and advance notice is required to recall
specific boxes. If you would like to use this material please email or write to the
Archives at least three business days prior to your visit, indicating the boxes of interest,
SO that we may have the material on-site in time for your arrival.
Sharon Cooney's The Harvard Riverside Association: Land Acquisition South of
Harvard Yard, 1903-1918 is 33 pages long. If you would like to order a photocopy of the
paper please forward a check for $9.90 (33 pages @ $.30/page), payable to the Harvard
University Archives, to my attention at the above address.
Sincerely,
Robin Carlow
Robin Carlaw
Researcher
Enclosures
LHI 5.150
Records of Charles
Letterbook
mays 1903 - tell // 17M V01.95
BOX / 161
David 158
HARVARD UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES
Name
Shelf number
FORBES, Edward Waldo
HUG (FP) 139.16
HUG (FP) 139.16pf
Accession number:
Volume:
Box
Folder
Bd. Vol.
Total
See cover sheet
1
1 pf
2
Notes:
See also HUD 3748
Title of record series and dates:
Papers relating to Harvard Riverside Associates
1902-1958
Arrangement:
See folder list below.
Description (physical form, special subjects and correspondents, etc) :
Founded by EWF in 1902, the Charles River Association, later
Harvard Riverside Associates, was dedicated to preserving the landscape
between the University and the river. The series consists primarily of
correspondence regarding the early years of the organization. Included
in the pf folder are maps and drawings detailing plans for the proposed
acquisition and development of land.
Box 1
Correspondence and other papers 1903-1911
Correspondence and other papers 1912-1915
Correspondence and other papers 1916-1918
Correspondence and other papers 1943-1958
Miscellaneous notes
Letterpress volume (indexed)
1903-1909
Pf folder
Maps and drawings 1902-1916
[6/26/1906]
85
18 Commonwealth Avenue.
Dear Prohiming Elist
this two letter.,7, adducled to
Isend you mt hist
you for Commont Certification
mining - On -
Ms. Ellis gift
to the Caud at Ba Harbs, N
3
2.
the other list regard W Thing
Walfut approact Then
that day will make fact
maltus Clear W the ofter Members
of the Certification r
the troubh h ifflam
them I also send you mt
the atla. of Pau Hain, etc.
D.
auda EGG th arthright
June 29, 1906.
Dear Mr. Dorr:-
The Corporation acted foverably on your request for the sale
to you of a portion of the Ellis land at Saul's Hiff, and left to me the
further arrangements for the sale.
Accepting your suggestion of Mr. David Ogden as a satisfactory
person to determine details of the transaction, I suggest that you invite
him to act, and say that we should be glad to have him consult local ex-
perts if he desires to do so. The Corporation agreed with you that def-
inite rights to bring veter-pipes and wires to the balance of the Ellis
land night well be part of the consideration.
I have approved the bill of Mr. M. W. Hill, and it will
shortly be paid by our Surser. will you kindly let him understand, at
your convenience, that his bill dated March 6 WHIS not received by Harvard
University until June 26?
The matter of the DeWolf Street widening was referred by the
Corporation to the Treasurer, Mar. Charles Francis Adams, 2d, 50 Stat St.,
Boston, with full power to take such action is you and he might think
expedient, except that the Corporation did not feel that they could call
The
in / subscription since the subscriptions were not made to them. Perhaps
you and Kr. Appleton could devise a call which should include & statement
that the President and Fellows have agreed to hold the money to apply it
-2-
U.S soon as possible to the purpose for which it was given.
I am going tomorrow to Mount Desert, SO that you can commun-
icate with ne at Asticou.
Very truly yours,
C. W. E.
Mr. George B. Dorr.
Old Farm,
July IGEC
Bar Garbor, Maine.
DEA President Elist.
I want post for unit regard IS
out West; which I hope to do in auacher week
He It approact matter before If
or to- So I send free cofies of Some Consifordine
which will show how things Hand at present
frank affleton W I am Want which Warran
unit the actuar I luChn Copy of a letter for
provided on to hit asking lue to awsum it
Halons I millers IS the adams, that the City
which I have done - fult house forth
how h a polition - when go M would be
lasia than to nced and be liable to Uu cutam
and possibly fail heavy damages without any
compendate gan - Deduction there damage. x
2
Old Farm,
Bar Garbor. Maine.
maki, the parker , likely the flu hit Call of its Uu
and the alimini Subscription from the Cod.of
provement - would Selm a flight our - and
Fill would be Jones butterment. also in that Can,
of off set in part at leact good past I
should think the Coct of its laud taken i While
the tax return - allowing for Janu College
parkway Would unquestionably be much
halley is th fulius M the Western Side of the
grate gm the land r the building on it than
it wh Could be without Refroument
I hope be get back before the matty Conus
before th City government, when I will glady I
do what Can to urge it But Whether
do or not M influence would be Hight
the true had Con When it will he important
this Companyed T/ fundles and it Second 15 the
Farm,
Bar Garbor, Maine.
press the math hour_ Late Altumni
the
subscription ma be difficult to oblaw, once
given up which lin ill might if hucellay be
possible to increase it even', and late the Luits
against the City will have been comprovided
when it be holder to buy
the truatter up again - and I feel a Though
as Uu that the parting is give Who
Mr Convenient deprifed pleased al will as
infertant. in The false for the College
Convenient approach to it how left possible
from Bella and the rivwside
a talf about it unit Padman Rales
the other day, who said lu thought theyrea a good
On also, on Wh tohole, life for happy the malti of
again again before the Cig but that Somehous le
Oclobu would be quite lady laught doington
My Option has been in New York the last two
Old Farm,
Bar Garbor, Maine.
weeks NLo, N as I was h Botter hepelf
autil (lu days ago I have not Illn Mi
But lu What the a few liver av be was
Since On the boat ging up. Both
give off said be had been over the land
again Cv studied it quite thought, and that
lu was lake that peper urit him W
New york where he Would theriel its qualter
Mau which au had referred I him runts
out his ofinion On it While in New Ink
and al I Hundred and he is effected how
today he will douth unti for shorts
as I will also do When I have seen him
thirty long, C B.Net
10/31/2013
Carbridge P.L. Website Notes
Cambridge Christe / Jeene 1907.
1. Regard undering of Je Wolf street fun mass ave
to Charle Rue Pachway "George B. Dour
report the Riverside Association sad he
was anthonyed to pay the cif $ 40,000. if
it would widen the Street."
Continidge Tribune, U.25
(12 July 1902)
% a Proposed Bueward : "Haward graduates have
now take u hand the tosh f raising 050 000
toward the expens of the proposed wideving
of Dewalfe street as an inducent to the
city to approve thereplan 4 Ami "to provide
a dignified + handsome approach H to
unwant gured." No metion of GBD.
Carbodyn Tuben .V. 29, # 49, 2/2/1907.
1.
"at a gathery last Saturday at the has
of gaoye B. wan, 18 Commonwealth avenue,
generhou guild unspresult or a Hawaed
Columnus, + Mayor Wardwell, Lake
Racholph Coolidge Robert Andraw & other
prominest men were also in attendance x
took part in the discussion of the plass, all
heating from then
2.
Committee Meeter : From R appleton, Rechard H. Dava,
Gwyn B. Don, Charles S. fair child augus tus
Hemenway, D.L. Higginson, Fredeuch
Samuel D.Warren t Hary Hearg S.van Daren.
Jr. Richard u. Saltonstall, Joseph B, Warner,
#.
Carbridge Tubum, 8 June 1907
Fen Hawad Collep, 6/3/1907
To: 18 Communical
my Dearlin Dam: Re Dain request
for info about college poley ie lord of
Howal Reverside desorate, "the
proporation has no intention of taby out of
toyation any land now taxed between
Mas due & the level ":- "the sleintenal
of the corporation in the plan of the Housed
Aiversede Associates is its in terest in
havery that past of their made more
beautiful + attentive.".
C-F Adoms, and, Theaver HC
Submitch g A.w.lope
Sehmeted use headlin DeWolf Street
boulevard Plan is approved z Commensirves
& by the Houseled Authorities." Front paya.
18 Consonwealth Avenue, Boston.
May 10th, 1907.
President Charles W. Eliot,
Harvard University,
Cambridge, Mass.
Dear President Eliot,
I have been thinking over the DeWolf Street matter,
which our talk this morning has helped to make clearer to me in its
various bearings, and I have also had a talk about it again with Mr
Daly. And I want to present the matter to you as I now see it,
in a statement which you can bring up before the Corporation if you
wish to do so at its meeting Monday.
In the first place, the more I look at it the less I like the
idea of making any private trade with Father Ryan with regard to
he Church property he is trustee for. It seens to me that doing
SO would put us in a false position and that if it came to public
knowledge, as sooner or 1 ter we must be prepared to have it do
and at the hearing itself quite possibly
it would be certain to
create a prejudice in Canbridge against our undertaking, a feeling
in which the College though itself taking no active part in the
affair would be involved with us as having knowledge of it. It
would look like
what it would really be in fact
a political
deal in which the friends of the College paid the Catholic Church
as represented by Father Ryan a certain sun of money for its polit-
ical support in getting a measure through in which the College was
interested. Incidentally, it would also subject the Church to
2
criticism for making a private deal by which through the use of Lts
political influence it reaped a benefit as land owner in which its
neighbors did not share and to the probable increase of ex ense
to the City in the claims from others it would lead to if the Perk-
way should be built; and the reaction from this criticism would
not be apt, it seems to me, to further friendly relations between
the Church and College.
And if such an agreement be made with Father Ryan publicly I
do not see how it could help having an importunate effect in giving
adjoining land owners Whose land would be taken for the Parkway
reasonable sround for placing a corresponding exorbitant value upon
their land and in creating ill feeling on their part if they fail
to get assurance also of obtaining it, nor now it could fail to
create opposition also on the part of the City Council to the whole
scheme on the ground of its expense upon the basis of such values.
Moreover, any payment made by the Alumi and not made to the
City to help it bear the cost of the improvement for which we are
petitioning would be quite certain to be resented, in Mr Daly's
opinion, by those members of the City government not in Father Ryan's
following but interested in the matter for the City from the economic
point of view.
For these reasons it now seens to me that it would not be best
to make any deal, either public or private, with Father Rvan but
simply to 80 ahead dealing straightforwardly and singly with the
one party with whom our Conrittee is legitimately concerned, the
City of Carbridge, offering it outright the $40,000. in subscription
from the Alwnni originally promised when the lines of the avenue were
laid out by the Board of Survey, and leaving it open to it to pass
a conditional vote if it choses based upon a larger contribution
from them
$50,000. in this case most probably, which I have no
3
doubt that Appleton and I would then be able to obtain within the
next few Months and which we both would gladly undertake to do.
although I personally do not feel able to make myself actually re-
sponsible at the present time for more than I have done already.
In this way whatever we do raise would 80, as it should, to the
City
if the Parkway should be built
to
help
lighten
the
expense to it of making an improvement which would be a benefit
alike to it and to the College. And I do not feel that the Catholic
Church would either have or seriously claim it had any arievance
against us in the matter. According to Archbishop Williams's own
statement, in declining an interview with Hr Daly and myself
Father Ryan to be also present the matter is one which they
regard as relating simply to the value of the land which would be
taken by the City. And according to what Archbishop O'Connell,
Archbishop Williams co-adjutor and appointed successor as I under-
stand it, also told me in the winter, this land does not enter into
their plans for future building or church use but is simply land
which they now wish to sell at a good price. And we have no right
to assume, nor has the Church, that the City would not pay its full
fair value for the land which it would take. on the contrary, I
think that the influence of the Church politically is such that it
would be likely to obtain from the City the highest price which real
estate values in the neighborhood would justify. But this matter
is purely one between the City and the Church as land owner.
We
as a Committee are simply asking the City to make an improvement
which in the opinion of its Park Board, as well as in that of real
estate experts and leading citizens, would be for its own great and
permanent advantage as well as for that OI the College, and which
if not made now is likely to become economically impossible to make
later. No injury would be done the Church by making it, nor any
4
other land owner, under present conditions and this the Church itself
acknowledges in stating that it is simply a question with it of
getting a good price for its land. There is no question of the
reloval of any church, of interference with any building plan, or
of injury done to any religious sentiment. It is a matter of
business pure and simple, and the business is one lying between the
City and the Church, with which our Co Difittee could not in point of
fact concern itself without laying itself open to the charge of
meddling with what does not concern it.
Under these circuistances it does not seem to me, as represent-
ins our Cormittee and speaking my opinion frankly while quite ready
to accept the Corporation's judguent in the matter, that sufficient
ground exists for its requesting us to withdraw from our undertaking
without bringing the matter to its legitimate conclusion in the
hearing now arranged for before the City. But that the City should
be siven the opportunity of deciding what action would be for its
best interest in regard to it. For it is not a College matter only
but one in which the City is really more concerned than it is, and
a public improvement which would be of permanent and constantly in-
creasing importance if it should now be made and which if not made
now it is likely to become permanently impossible.
with regard to the Church's attitude, which presents the only
reason as I understand it for such possible action on the Corpora-
tion's part, Archbishop O'Connell has put himself on record in his
letter to me in favor of the improvement upon public grounds and as
simply desiring for the Church a fair price for the land which would
ise taken; Archbishoy Williams has stated the matter to be simply one
of the value of this land; and Father Ryan, though exorbitant in his
clain with regard to the value of the land, has also put it on a
5
financial basis nurely. And the City, not oursolves, is the proper
person to discuss with the Church and other owners the value of the
land that would be taken. I do not therefore see how any strained
relations could result between the College and the Church under
these conditions, even ir the College itself were urgine the improve-
ment. But as a matter of fact the improvement is not being urged
by the College but by a Comittee of the Alumi organized quite in-
dependently of the College and not directly subject to its control.
This Comittee however would not have undertaken its work if it
had not been encouraged to do so by the government of the College
and been given its support. And as representing that Committee I
do not feel that any but the strongest reasons should lead the Cor-
poration now to request it to withdraw at the last moment
after
years of work done and personal responsibility assured and after
contributions to the undertaking have been asked for and obtained
and not to bring its members' endeavor to its legitimate conclusion
before the City government and give it the ouvortunity to decide upon
a matter in which the City's interest is, it seens to me, yet greater
than the College's
Personally, it does not seen to me that the chance of getting
tie improvement adopted, in the face of the existing economic ob-
stacles as well as political ones and others, is a considerable one,
but in bringing it before the City government we shall at least have
done all that we can do and can retire from the matter if we fail
with the sense, and with the record, of having done the best we could
to bring it to a successful issue. But if we withdraw now without
giving the City opportunity to decide what action it wishes to take
in the matter, not only those who have been interested with us in
the undertaking but people in the future, turning back to the op-
6
portunity which now exists, night fairly blane us for withdrawal
without bringing the thing to its legitimate conclusion and ascer-
taining whether it were possible of accomplisiment or not.
Hr Daly thinks there is a strong feeling at Carbridge among
the members of the City government and influential citizens inter-
ested in the matter that the improvement is a really immortant one
for the City and one whose need is going to be felt increasingly and
that the opportunity to make it now when so large a sw1 as $40,000.
(if no more) will be contributed by the alwani towards its cost,
and when its lines have been laid out and suits are pending on them
and no important buildings block the way, is one which will make men
think seriously before letting it 20 permmently.
What I have said about the difficulties in the way of making
arrangement with Father Ryan
financial difficulties apart
represents Mr Daly's view of the matter as well as my own, after
much discussion of it between us in its various bearings. And he
also feels that the course suggested is not only the one that would
present us in the best light and leave us in the best position in
the matter but that it is also quite as likely to lead to a suc-
cessful issue as one based on paying Father Ryan for the withdrawal
of his opposition, in view 01 the position in which this latter
course would leave us with regard both to the City government and
to other land owners within the Parkway lines.
In view of the responsibility which Mr Appleton and I are under
in this matter and the relation in which we stand to others inter-
ested in it, if the Corporation should finally decide to ask us to
withdraw our petition now before the Carbridge City government for
a hearing on it, in spite of the reasons which I here present for
its consideration against such action, I trust that the Corporation
7
will make its request to us to do so formally and in writing so
that it may justify us in the eyes of others interested with us in
the undertaking and before the public !'or our withdrawal, since
this would not be made on grounds of personal conviction but solely
in deference to the Corporation's wishes.
Yours sincerely,
HRA-
-
TREASURER'S OFFICE, HARVARD COLLEGE,
No. 50 State Street,
Boston, May 28,
1907.
Mr. George B. Dorr,
18 Conton wealth Ave.,
Boston, Nass.
My dear Mr. Dorr:-
Referring to your request i'or information concerning the policy
of the College in regard to the land or the Harvard Riverside Associates,
which information has become material because of certain statements made
at the recent hearing before the city Government on the proposed widen-
ing of Do Wolfe St, I beg to say that the College has at the present time
no interest in the Harvard Riverside Associates except six shares of the
stock which has been given to the College. It is entirely prohlenatical
whether the College will obtain any further interest in that land.
Whether the College ever obtains any further interest in the land of
the Harvard Riverside Associates or not the present Corporation has no
intention of taking any land now taxed between Massachusetts Ave. and
the rivor whether owned by the Harvard Riverride Associates or any one
else out of taxation. (In this connection, however, it is fair to call
attention to the fact that we have no authority to control the action
of our successors.
Very truly yours,
[Charles Adams]
Bar Harbor, Maine.
October 28th, 1907.
President Charles 1. Eliot,
Carbridge, Mass.
Dear President Eliot,
I enclose a copy of a letter I lately wrote Mr Appleton
on the De Holf Street Boulevard anttor, and or his answer. I
have
nothing to add to what I have said in my letter to him; you will be
able to draw conclusions from it and I shall be Elad to get any
suggestion about it that you can make me. It seens to ne possible
that Archbishop O'Connell, now that ne is actual head of the church
here, Might be made to feel it necessary to use his influence, for
the church's credit and good name if for no other reason, in support
of a mensure which he has himself endorsed and which springs from
the interest of aten whose judgment with regard to its importance and
whose good opinion he must value. And I should think him Man of
the world enough for it to be possible to SHOW him quite frankly
what Father Ryan's course has been and the discredit it would be to
the church, as well as injury to a useful undertaking, if it failed
to pass owing to opposition made in the church's name and springing
Iron motives SO univertity. Can you not help us in resterd to this
?
Some arrangement by which Father Ryan's credit with his parish would
be maintained could be arrived at if Archbishop O'Connell should
really take the matter up; and it seens to un that short of an
additional contribution large enough to carry the measure over the
2
read or opposition t.dis is the only was in which NO are likely
to win out side resulting as blings now abound.
I an very polistant to see our undertaking fail. I tenl
that
if it does it will be a source OI constant and increasing council in
the Casare, as the Richor Park and the college both. develop with a
needless bar 01. such a chapacter between them. I shall be coming
in again to Boston the Laston part of next week unit shall tion take
the matter us with Varron I'm I have just got a letter on the
subject.
Yours sincerely,
copy.
21 Haiden Lane
Now York
Oct. 24, 1907.
Dear Dorr:-
Your Letter of the 21st from Bar Harbor has just reached
no. I (0) coins to forward it to San. Warren for such observations
as l.e May make. ( 211 very : much disappointed at the situation, of
course, but not at all supprised that politics should spoil a
good
thing. ) I think Mr. Thurston has done his best to stop this
worthy enterprise, which, though discreditable to him, seens to
be effective. I know of no place to get the funds to pay a creater
share of this undertaking. As you have pointed out. it will be
hard enough to make good the pronises which you and I have of Tered.
The money which I have at interest in about fifty years will he
sufficient !
President Fliot is much interested in this and asked me re-
cently whit progress had been made. I was obliged to tell him
that matters were in status quo, Dlus a lawyer's bill. I think
he would be interested to hear from you. will you not write to
him and point out the situation ? He may know of a Cenerous man
to sive another $25,000 to the plan, and be is quite likely to know
of sone way to approach the interest of which you speak. It is a
share if this rond is not to 00 built; but I cannot see that you and
dopt
I have been renise in our efforts and I shall not despair of success
until the vote is taken.
Sincerely yours,
(Stated) Mannois R. Ampleton.
George R. Domn. Req.
COPY.
Bar Harbor, Kaine.
October 21st, 1907.
Francis R. Appleton, Usq.,
New York city.
Dear :- Appleton,
I went up to Roctor last week on a surrors tron Ir Daily
to attend a hearing of the Highway Commission at Cabridge, to whom
the Dewolf's Street Approach matter was referred by the City council
last July. The Highway Commission consists of seven members of
whon five were present Thursday evening, together with the Street
Comissioner; no one else was there but Mr Daly and myself. One
of the members of the Council was obviously in fevor of our scheme;
the other four, including the chairman N2 Blanchard, were discourag-
ina in the time they took about it, dwelling On! the opposition of
abuttors, the injury to the children's playeround and the loss of
opportunity to build a church upon it, the creat expense to the City
and the liability of over-running estimates, etc., etc., SO that
In Daly said to ne when we cane away "Someone's been senzing those
fellows ! They're adroid their recommending it may be used against
then in the elections." It struck ne the same way. It was dis-
appointing, for Hr Daly felt fairly confident last summer of cotting
the support of this confission, who are all as I understand it in-
dependents and not of Father Ryan's following. I went over the
question again with then at some length; showed that Father Ryan's
objection that the lot would be ruined for school purposes by the loss
2
of the land taken for the houlevard was not honest since he also
claimed he wanted to build a caurci on it which would take more room
away from the children's term the housewed would, and
that they naturlly and another lot in overship bought for the church;
showed with in Daly's assistance that the estinate 01 cost they
quoted was excessive; that the objections of abuttors, including the
caupen, were only or spren from the infinience
and ouent not to influence their judgment against camping out 2.
public improvement; and drelt on the permitment loss of the opportu-
nity to the city, as well 20 of our subscription, that would result
if the uniortaking were abandoned now. But J did not feel that I
made much headwing; they seemed to me afraid, as Me Daily said, that
it night ise made a change against then in the coming elections
extramadance, shown to Harvard college, injustice to the
poor who owned the land, injury to the school, etc.
This I write to explain the situation to you. The procedure
is for the Hi Empy Corrission to report to the City Council or the
measure; the city Council then vote upon it an if their vote is
favorable --- a majority vote only is needed in this instance
it is referred to the Board of Survey whose action in the motter
is little more then tornal as I understand it but who cannot act
upon it and report back to the City Council without civing the public
three weeks' notice or their hearing on it. The question of ay-
propriation does not come up until all this is done. If the ighway
Comission, composed as it is of independents, reports uninvorably --
or
fails to report Devorably upon the measure that will be the
end or it write certainly. And it struck both No Only and usself
that they were not likely to endorse it as matters stood. They
subjected to He mite openly that it the College or its friends would
Live one hundred thousand dollars instead of difty Whoteard they
3
would endome it without hordination, tast it was the expense to the
city of which they were spraid and the possible slor return or the
expense to the city throu mear building et the present time, and
that in this expense GOTEL be still nuther leavered to tue city
tile mitter would have a very directement Revent to them. I told then
that you and I and already Welled outselves for more than un lind
paised 02 Know with certainty that we could price, and that there
van ::0 BURPOO of with I knew validation ve could draw upon for more.
Ar Daily and I talkei the matter over at length before we
parted. Apert from increase of contribution to the undertaking
one think only seened to offer chance of success in bringing it
about, it seemed to us. And that is bringing influence to hear
on Father Ryan and his following, now that Archhishop Williams is
dead, through Apchbishop O'Connell who is naturally favorable to
it and Wito as a non C: the world and of affairs mast understand, and
could be further shown, as Archbiskop Williams could not what the
notives really are that have inspired Father Ryan's opposition in
this matter. And he also Might be mode to realize the discredit that
would stand to the church if a public improvement of the kind should
Tail through opposition made in the church's name upon motives so
unworthy. AS anchbiscop, his position now would be very different
from what it was last winter, and his control of the situation is he
chose to assert his auto.ity in the matter, whether for tie sake of
the public improvement or the church's credit, would probably to
conclusive. At all events it seems to be the one stone left as
yet unturned, and worth a trial. If three or your men, known to him
as mer of influence interested in public officious, should LO to him on
behalf 01 the University to telk the matter over, stating their inter-
est in the undertaking and whit tiley t'elt with record to Pather
4
Ryan's attitude in the matter. together with the seets ve have es to
its notives, sure event might ine arrived at by videh we would
cet the support 01 The Catholic following in the City council instead
of its apposition. The chance of course is a slip one at this
state - had Villions died a year 320 it would have
been another networ --- but slient as the chance in it seems to the
month taking, and so it seened to i.r' Daly. And the creation is
VI.OH can we best out to 80 with us and talk the matter over with
Archbish.op 0'Connell. The first thing that occurs to the is whether
there are not influential Untholics anone the alvery who could be
cot to take the matter up. are there any such in New YORK witom you
could interest in it ? or there or elsewhere MOON we could get
Hold of through others. Another thing that occurs to me is that
San Warren told the last winter they had elected O'Connell into his
dining club, and Sai is interested with us in this Matter
one of
the original corrittas on it. Personal equaintance of that kind
would Live us a better morning in the nation. And San may be able
to subjest others. I cannot COMIC up to town immediately myself, SO
if you are in Boston won't you take the Hatter up with him if you
think post. on with any one else that May occur to you.
Whitever we do :nut be done soon, for it ought to be done in
time to influence the report of the Highway Corrission to the City
Council. This report tany probably would have made next week but
in Daily undertook to see Mr Blanchard, in view of the possibility of
our being able to do sun thing alone this line and set him to hold
the report up for a while to give us time.
If we should be able to set a favorable report I'ron the
Commission and a myselity vote from the City Council, the witchst
course would tion be to get the inaured in the annual
5
Budget the Transing or the your, wion a majority wate would be
to 0836 it. vitile presented at another time or in mother
very a 1,770 their vote would DO 11/ communy.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) George 3. Door.
June 25, 1907
Door Mr. Dorr,
In response to your request I C1--
close Ur. Masterson's lothers to you, which
have been on file in this office. You will
see by this corresgo dence that Mr. Histor-
son should be addressed as Harris Masterson,
jr. His address is Huston, Texas, where, I
cum informed by acquintances of his,hy went
some ten days or a fortnight ago. Although
I have made a nuber of different inquiries,
I have been unable to obtain his father's
initials. I trust, however, you will have
no difficulty in getting into communication
with him now that, you have the son's address.
Very truly yours,
GREENE
Goorge B. Dorr, Esq.
Copy.
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
June 15th, 1907.
My dear Lr Daly,
I had 2. talk again with President Eliot yesterday with
regard to the DeWolf Street matter and he wishes to have it strongly
out in your argument at the next hearing and in whatever you may say
before committees or to committee men afterwards that we do not ask
that the City should build the parkway because Harvard College
would benefit thereby but on the ground that the gain resulting from
it will ultimately be a great one to the City itself and that it
cannot be economically done, if possible at all, if given up at
present and put off until a later day. Harvard College and its
Alumni wish to see the parkway built but they do not put forward
their desire in the matter as a reason for the City's building it
but only its own interest, which they feel not only justifies the
City's making the expenditure at the present time but would make it
unwise for it not to do so. And they feel that the special benefit
which the College would derive therefrom is fully cornensated by the
considerable portion of the expense of building it which the Alumni
offer now to bear.
President Eliot also wishes to make it clearly understood that
if the Alumni's present offer is not accepted the subscriptions now
obtained will be returned and the matter will end SO far as the
Geop
Alwnni and the College are concerned. And this, I may also state
The
again upon my own authority speaking in the name of the Alunni com-
mittee, will inevitably be the result of the rejection of our present
offer. We will not take the matter un again nor retain funds
enabling us to make a future offer.
Yours truly,
Gov. B. Don
TREASURER'S OFFICE, HARVARD COLLEGE
No. 50 State Street,
Boston, June 3, 1907.
Mr. George B. Dorr,
18 Commenwealth Ave.,
Boston, Mass.
My dear Mr. Dorr:-
Referring to your request for information concerning the
policy of the College in regard to the land of the Harvard Riverside
Associates, which information has become material because of certain state-
ments made at the recent hearing before the City Government on the proposed
widening of De `Wolfe St., I beg to say that the present Corporation has no
intention of taking out of taxation any land now taxed between l'assachusetts
Ave. and the rivor whether owned by the Harvard Rivorside Associates or any
one else.
The few pheces of private property that the University is
likely to need in the future Tie to the north of Kirkland Street. They are
comparatively low in price and the Bity would be the gainer, if they were
acquired by the College because of the resulting improvement of the neigh-
borhood.
The sole interest of the Corporation in the plans of the Har-
vard Riverside Associates is its interest in having that part of the city
certain
made more beautiful and attractive. The murs net result of such improve-
ments will be to increase the tax resources of the city, and to that result
the University looks forward with unqualified satisfaction.
Very truly yours,
6/19 litter
Dent on Day
face 15-1907-
TREASURER'S OFFICE, HARVARD COLLEGE
No. 5C Stato Street,
Boston, June 3, 1907.
lr. Goorge B. Dorr,
18 Commonwoalth Ave.,
Beston, Mass.
My
door Mr. Dorr:-
Referring to your request for information concerning the
policy of the Collage in regard to the land of the Harvard Riverside
Associates, which information laskoccmo material because of certain
statements rade at i.h. recent hearing before the city Geverment on the
proposed widoning or Do Folfo St. , I beg to say that the present Corpora-
tion has no intention of taking out of tuxation any land now taxed bo-
tween "mssachuset S Ave. and the river whether camed by the Harvard Acco-
clates or any one elso.
The solo intorest of the Corporation in the plans of the
Hervard Riverside Associates is its interest in having that part of the
city made more boautiful and attractive. The certain not result of such
improvements will be to increase the tax resources of the city, and to
that result the University locks forward with unqualified satisfaction.
Very truly youre,
26 East 37th Street,
New York, June 5, 1914.
George Foster Peabody, Esq.,
Saratoga Springs, New York.
Dear Sir:
About ten years ago you subscribed $1,000 toward
the proposed building of a boulevard from Charles River to
a point near Harvard Square, as a special and more wor thy
approach to the University.
All efforts to have this work accomplished, have
failed, and as there seems no prospect of any change in
the situation, it seems to be my duty to return the sub-
scriptions which were given to me for the purpose. There is
an accumulation of interest amounting to between 50 and
60 per cent of the original subscription.
Sometime about 1902 a Committee was organized in
Boston to carry through the project. There were plans and
circulars issued and the statement was made that the Cam-
bridge authorities would lay out and build the boulevard
if one quarter of the total cost of $200,000 was provided by
private subscription. I was asked to join the Committee
and ask for subscriptions in New York, which I did, and
obtained some which I have held ever since. The Boston
CBB
part of the Committee seems to have dissolved early, leav-
ing only Mr. George B. Dorr. He and I did everything we
could think of to push the matter along and even guaranteed
the $50,00 which we supposed was the only condition neces-
sary. There was opposition at the various hearings before
the City of Cambridge Counc il and there was not courage
enough to put the matter through, in order words, the project
became politically impossible.
While I am very sorry that this good thing could
not come off, it happens that it does not seem quite as
important now as when initiated because in the meantime
Harvard College, through its friends, has secured the right
to a large block of land between the River and Mt. Auburn
2
Street.
You probably know of this. Recently the freshmen
dormitories have been built on part of that land. In due
time the remaining portion of the land now covered with
houses and buildings, will come into possession of the
college and be formed into another college yard in some
fashion. The college is now trying to find from their own
resources means to clear up a small tract immediately be-
hind the new freshmen dormitories, in order to give more
suitable surroundings.
While I regret that the money collected for Harvard
objects should fail in the purpose, there seems nothing for
me to do but hand back the money to the subscribers with the
foregoing explanation. I am waiting a little before the
distribution because the bonds which represent the subscrip-
tions have gone Gown 8 little since the purchase some years
ago but I will not wait very long.
Vary truly yours,
COMMISSIONERS
CHARLES C.LESTER.
COUNSEL
GEORGE FOSTER PEABODY
CHAIRMAN
ALBERT WARREN FERRIS,M.D.
MEDICAL EXPERT
FRANK N. GODFREY
BENJAMIN F. TRACY
FREDERICK EDWARDS, C.E.
ENGINEER
IRVING G. ROUILLARD
SECRETARY
STATE OF NEW YORK
STATE RESERVATION COMMISSION
AT
SARATOGA SPRINGS
July 17, 1914.
Dear Sir:-
I have your esteemed favor of 15th July enclosing
to me check for $1,618.66, signed by you as Treasurer of
Cambridge Parkway subscriptions. I note that the amount
of
my
subscription of ten years ago with interest added, is now returned to
me because the project failed of accomplishment. I thank you
heartily for your letter and beg to return herewith the check duly
endorsed to your order. I request that the interest, at any rate,
shall be used for the Riverside Trustees. I will have to take a
few days to think further in case any suggestion should occur to
me as to other use for the benefit of Harvard University which you
might make of the principal sum, $1,000.
I am
Very truly yours,
Francis R. Appleton, Esq.,
26 East 37th St.,
New York, N. Y.
26 East 37th Street,
New York, July 16, 1914.
George C. Louis C. and D. Crawford Clark, Esqs.,
51 Wall Street, New York, N. Y.
Honored Sirs:
In further explanation of the enclosed check which
I send to your order for $1618.66. Your original subscrip-
tion to build the parkway approach to Harvard College yard from
the river, was $1,000. The accumulated interest is 61866%
When this project was started a dozen years ago, we were as-
sured by the Cambridge authorities that the road would be
built at a cost of about $200,000, provided Harvard men paid
one-quarter. Mr. George B. Dorr, of Boston, and ano ther,
promptly guaranteed $50,000 and proceeded to ask for sub-
scriptions.
At the hearings before the Cambridge Council, oppo-
sition developed and politics spoiled the whole thing. The
money subscribed has been held for 8. long time, hoping for
some better development, but as none has come it seems to be
my duty to return the money.
The disappointment isn't so great as it might be
because in the meantime a large tract of land has been bought,
between the river and Mt. Auburn Street, and held for the
future benefit of the College.
The Freshmen Dormitories are already built on the
Riverside on a portion of this land. In the future a drive-
way will probably be laid out through this land and will thus
bring about something similar to the original plan.
The Riverside Trustees, who hold the title to this
new land would be very glad to receive funds at any time to
hold for such future development whenever the College may come
into the possession of this new land.
I have held this money in my hands for so long, I
now feel as if I were parting with an old and familiar ac-
quaintance.
Sincerely yours,
AUGUSTUS l'EABODY LORING
LORING, COOLIDGE AND NOBLE
TELEPHONES MAIN 0.:31-0532-0533
HAROLD JEFFERSON COOLIDGE
COUNSELLORS AT LAW,
CABLE ADDRESS TOAST BOSTON
JOHN NOBLE.
+1) STATE STREET
FRANCIS RAYMOND BOYD.
SAMUEL VAUGHAN.
BOSTON MASS. November 17, 1915.
To the Trustees of the
Harvard Riverside Trust.
Gentlemen: -
I enclose herewith the annual summary of accounts of
the Harvard Riverside Trust for the year ending October 1, 1915,
and make the following report:
(1) As to income account. We show net earnings from
properties of $3,409.15 applicable to mortgage interest, as against
$8,557.73 which was the net earned by the properties last year.
Last year, however, owing to the existence of the guarantee fund,
we paid the College the full amount due as interest. This year
out of $9520. interest due at 4% on the $238,000. mortgage held
by the College, we were able to turn over only $3409.15. This
leaves us $6110.85 in default.
The cause for this serious decline in income is almost
wholly attributable to the Freshman dormitories which practically
closed up our private dormitories and caused a loss of over $4000.
There is no reason for thinking that this condition can be much
improved in the future, so far as our private dormitories are
concerned, although by strict economy we hope to make a somewhat
better showing this year. The College authorities have realized
the position in which we are placed, and have receipted on account
for such money as we could turn over to them. Other dormitories,
both public and private, have met with a similar shrinkage of
income, brought about by the requirement that all Freshmen should
-2-
room in certain specified buildings, and by the resultant scramble
for tenants from the three upper classes at greatly reduced
rentals. This condition was foreshadowed in my report of last
year, and the result has not been different from anticipation.
(2) Principal account. This account shows a balance on
hand of $6,929.11, made up of principal balances from earlier
accounts, and the proceeds of various transfers of property at
one time or another.
It represents principal which we have
retained as working capital and have not applied to the reduc-
tion of mortgage indebtedness.
(3) Properties account. This shows practically no change.
We have not bought or sold any land or conveyed any to the
College during the current year.
(4) Taxes. We paid this year a tax bill to the City of
Cambridge amounting to $8575.69. This is more than 1/3 of the
gross rentals that we get from our real estate, and as there
is but little of it unimproved, the tax burden is very serious.
We have made vigorous protests this year, but have got no re-
lief from the Assessors, who answer those who complain of the
real estate assessments in the neighborhood of Harvard Square
by saying that all the real estate in the City is going to be
revalued on a scientific basis some day - perhaps next year.
This is as far as we can get short of litigation.
(5) Physical condition. Our buildings have been maintained
in good condition except in cases where we thought that they would
-3-
soon be removed owing to their proximity to the Freshman
dormitories. In these cases repairs and maintenance have
been cut down to an absolute minimum, with a corresponding
loss of rentals.
In conclusion I would say that the development most to
be desired at present is the removal of a lot of tenement
houses in the immediate rear of the Freshman dormitories.
I have conferred several times with the College as to the
possibility of doing this, suggesting that if the College
was willing to forego the rentals, we might remove the build-
ings, and expend some of our principal in grading and planting
the ground. The College has not yet accepted this proposition,
owing to the immediate loss of income, but as the tenement
houses are becoming increasingly unproductive, I hope that
before long this change can be accomplished.
Yours very truly,
/tarm I Costwarer
Managing Trustee
P.S. A detailed statement of earnings and expenses
attributable to each property is on file in this office and
can be seen at any time.
VOTED: That the Board hereby gratefully acknowledges the
receipt of a fund of $3700. turned over by Mr. Francis R. Appleton
on July 8, 1916, to be expended, together with such other sums
as the Board might approve, for the development of a Close
behind the Freshman dormitories; and that the Board hereby wishes
to spread upon the record its thanks to the following persons,
contributors to the said fund in the following amounts:
George Foster Peabody
$1618.66
Frank E.Randall
80.93
Charles H.Russell
404.67
Charles S.Fairchild
404.67
E.D.Brandegee
80,93
Harry W.Mack
16.17
Miss Marion Stetson
16.17
Winthrop Burr
100.
I.N.P.Stokes
161.86
Balance of interest on
subscriptions after their
return
46.69
Interest on foregoing
132.
N.H.Stone
500.
F.R. Appleton, to even up
137.25
$3,700.
Dear Sir:-
On July 8,1916 ME Francis P. Appleton turned over to the
Harvard Riverside Trustees a fund of $3700. which he had previously
collected, with instructions that this same should be used in the
development of a Close in the rear of the Freshman tornitories
at Cambridge.
with this money, to which was added $2804.13, contributed
from the funds of the Trustees, thirteen tanement houses were
removed from the region, and it was graded, fencel and planted
with English elms and beeches in a manner that has greatly im-
proved the character of the neiwhorhood adjoining Min Freshman
buildings.
As you were one of the original subscribera to this fund
collected by Mr.Appleton, no has asked me to write thia a ort
statement of the application 01 he money, and to enclose a copy
S.D
of the vote of the Harvard Riverside Trustees, Da3801 at their
meeting of April 23,1918, expressing their appreciation and thanks
for your gift.
Yours very truly,
enc
( )
AUGUSTES PEABODY LORING
LORING, COOLIDGE AND NOBLE
HAROLD JEPPERSON COOLIDGE
TELEPHONES MAIN 6531-6532 6533-6534
CONSELLORS .77 Law
JOHN NOBLE
CABLE ADDRESS." TOAST BOSTON'
1/1 STATE STREET
FRANCIS RAYMOND BOYD
SAMUEL VAUGHAN
BOSTON. MASS.
Nev.13,1917
Francis R.Appleton Esq.
26 East 37th St.,
New York, Y.
Dear Sir:-
I enclose herewith the annual summary of accounts of
the Harvard Riverside Trust for the year ending October 1,1917,
and make the following report:
(1) As to income account: We show net earnings of $3628.77
paid to Harvard University on account of interest on their mortgage
of
$238,000. Last year we paid them $6700.27, the actual amount
due each year being $9520. I think we must expect the loss
of
rentals will be even more marked during the coming year and in
the indefinite future.
At present Shepard's Block, our largest dermitery, is vacant,
with but little prespect of being rented again in the future,
and I think we must expect on this account a considerable further
diminution of income in the years to come. In fact by the end of
another year the trustees are likely to have to face the problem
of insufficient income to meet current expenses and taxes, to say
nothing of mortgage interest. This condition is I believe entirely
attributable to three causes:- (1) removal of income producing
tenements; (2) competition of Freshman dermiteries: and (3) the
war, with its disturbing effect on rental values.
4
F.R.A.
-2-
The expense account has been most carefully watched to offset
as far as possible decreasing income, with the result of a better
showing than could have been anticipated at the beginning of the
year. Under our arrangement with the College, the total net
income was turned over at the end of the year, to be applied on
account of the mortgage interest,- it being agreed that our failure
to pay the full interest will not be considered a default entitling
the College to foreclose.
(2) Principal cash account. This account, which represents
our working capital, so to speak, shows a balance of each on hand
of $2161.99 and $10,000. invested in Liberty bonds. $4,367. was
spent in grading, planting and fencing the land in the rear of the
Freshman buildings from which the tenements had been removed
during the previous year.
(3)
Properties
account.
No change appears in this account
except that options given to the Iota Club to purchase 41-45
Winthrop Street for $12,000. have been further extended on an
additional payment of $600. towards the purchase price.
(4) Taxes.
The tax assessment for the year 1917 shows a slight
reduction from the previous year. The large reductions which should
have been made in view of the removal of thirteen buildings have been
to a great extent offset by increases in valuation of the land.
The physical condition of the remaining properties is good, and the
appearance of the neighberhood much improved by the treatment of
the land in the rear of the Freshman buildings.
No meeting of the trustees was held during the year, and it is
F.R.A.
-3-
desirable that before long a meeting of the Board be called to
consider certain points of general policy not fully covered by
existing votes.
Yours very truly,
enc acct.
Handle officers
P.S. A detailed statement of the earnings and expenses attributable
to each property is on file in this office, and can be seen at any
time.
October 1,1918
Harold J.Coolidge, Esq.,
Managing Trustee of the
Harvard Riverside Trust,
40 State St.,
Boston, Mass.
Dear Mr.Coolidge:
Answering yours of October 1st, I write to
say that the College will accept a deed from the Trustees of
the Harvard Riverside Trust property, conveying title to the
real estate, subject to such incumbrances as now exist: and
that the Corporation will place on its records a vote ex-
pressing their general sympathy with the purposes for which
the trust was created, and their intention of carrying out the
same as far as may not be inconsistent with the future policies
of the College.
Yours very truly,
(Signed)
Charles F.Adams,
Treas. H.C.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
CAMBRIDGE
PRESIDENT'S OFFICE
November 5, 1918
Dear Mr Appleton:
Now that the transfer of the
Riverside lands has been made to the College, I
want to tell you how much it means to us.
I
know that it has taken a great deal of work
and thought, not always under the easiest con-
ditions, or with entire recognition of the
great foresight that prompted it: but it seems
to me that the possession of this land will
mean everything to the University in time to
come.
Very truly yours,
a Sawrence Smell
Francis R. Appleton, Esquire
25 East 37th Street
New York City
8.
EDWARD WALDO FORBES
We were much saddened to learn of the passing of Edward
Waldo Forbes, first Honorary Fellow of IIC, on March 11, at the
1969
age of 95. Mr. Forbes built the William Hayes Fogg Museum at
Harvard into an innovation showcase and teaching institution. A
grandson of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Mr. Forbes took over the direction
of the Fogg Museum in 1909.
The New York Times on March 13 said that his most far-
reaching step perhaps was prevailing upon Harvard classmate, Paul
J. Sachs, to give up a career in his family's investment banking
firm and join in the direction of the museum. Their collaboration
was to last for 30 years. One of the results of their efforts included
the construction in 1927 of a building to house the enlarged collections.
The style of the museum and its relationship to teaching within
the University served as an example for curators everywhere.
To members of IIC, Mr. Forbes' great importance is in his
encouragement of the technical study of materials of fine arts. In
recognition of this work, he was made the first Honrary Fellow of
IIC on his 85th birthday in 1958. It was Mr. Forbes who brought
together the laboratory team under Mr. George L. Stout's direction,
with R. J. Gettens and R. D. Buck. His spirit, enthusiasm, and
insight led to the important work of that laboratory and to the training
of so many of the American leaders in museum conservation.
His was a leadership of example. His gentle enthusiasm kindled
a spirit and dedication towards the conservation and technical examination
of museum objects that has traveled far from the unpretentious museum
in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and burns as brightly as ever in those
who enjoyed the pleasure of his company.
Bulletin of the American group. International Institute
for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Work v.9, 2,
April 1969. Rg. 8.
1.
d Waldo Forbes,
nLee Visionary.
d U. : 7099 Art Museum,
1971.
FOREWORD
EDWARD FORBES was paradox personified. Our generation thinks of him
IN the director who created the Fogg Museum. How else could he fairly
be described? Agnes Mongan has told in the introduction to this cata-
logue of the changes he wrought in his own institution and the influence
he exerted on all American art museums. Such an achievement would
surely have required a lifetime of hard, administrative work.
That is not how Forbes saw his life. The Fogg plays a major, but by
OCLC
no means a dominant role in his extended, unpublished autobiography,
"An Notes." Hard work? It is never suggested. Administration? The
word is not mentioned. His manuscript is a rambling tale of objects
and friends, a chronicle put together by a consistently warmhearted, OC-
nationally disorganized amateur. And the impression that emerges from
the writing is identical with that conveyed by the man one met.
No one ever scemed less like our stereotype of a successful museum di-
fertur, Lighthearted, carefree, obviously absentminded, he never seemed
to be grasping the point one was trying to make. Could he concentrate?
A man of vision, certainly, but also a man of notions. It was a long time
before ene became aware that if he yielded on his notions with easy good
humar, he pursued his visions with quiet relentlessness.
Fa this pursuit he brought an astonishing variety of talents. Most im-
distely, energy and a desire to begin making changes. Most funda-
il Hill for friendship based on an exceptional range of sympathy
and
an unerring eye for quality in people. He could evoke from hard-
driving executives an idealistic dedication of which they did not know
were capable; be could inspire the young and feckless to focus their
he at least one moment of significant creativity; he could direct
to il lifetime of dogged devotion. Friendship meant ac-
3
2
Design; George Stout, appointed by Edward Forbes to be the
of the Fogg's Department of Conservation (he later became
f the Worcester Art Museum and the Isabella Stewart Gardner
Boston) Elizabeth Jones, our present chief of Conservation;
delbaum and Marjorie Kitchen FitzSimons, graduate students
iseum training course; Linn Orear, Editorial Assistant. Rosa-
Edward Waldo Forbes
bes Pickhardt, Ann Forbes, and Mr. and Mrs. Elliot Forbes
inuously and always graciously answered the endless queries
1873
July 16. Born on Naushon Island, Woods Hole, Massachu-
) them.
setts, the son of William Hathaway and Edith Emerson
a rapidly changing present with its necessary innovative and
Forbes. Educated at Milton Academy.
5 programs quite alters ways which even recently seemed fairly
1895
A.B., Harvard University.
emed well to record, as we are attempting to do in this exhibi-
1899
Purchased first Italian primitive in his collection while travel-
of the Fogg Museum's past and in so doing to honor one of its
ing and studying in Italy.
ors.
AGNES MONGAN
1000
Founding Member, Trustees of Public Reservations.
1000-1902
Special student, New College, Oxford, England.
1902
Formed Charles River Associates.
1003-1966
Trustee, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
1903-1904
Taught English, Grammar, and French at Middlesex School,
Concord, Massachusetts.
1904
Member, Committee on the Fogg Museum.
1904-1920
Standing Committee, Trustees of Public Reservations.
1907
January 29. Married Margaret Laighton of Boston.
1900-1944
Director, Fogg Art Museum.
1000-1041
Lecturer, Department of Fine Arts, Harvard University.
(gill 1919
Served in the American Red Cross, Italy.
1011
Honorary M.A., Harvard University.
1947
Trustce, Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut.
1911
Martin A. Ryerson Lecturer in Fine Arts, Harvard
University.
I lonorary Doctor of Arts, Harvard University.
104
1957
Board of Overseers, Harvard University.
1046
1060
Life Member, Trustees of Public Reservations.
I Honorary Fellow, International Institute of Conservation.
Mard h 11. Died in Cambridge.
xi
Beth A Mandelbaum and
3
Marjorie K. Fitz Simons Eds.
City Planner
FOREWORD
CITY planning encompasses many varied activities and interests. De-
pending on the particular individual and his preferences, it can be ap-
proached from any one of its many different aspects.
To the majority of people, city planning is basically a matter of eco-
nomics. Their interest is conditioned by economic feasibility. To others
it is rightly a social concern. To some, perhaps only a few, it is viewed in
its physical or form-giving aspect, which brings city planning into the
field of design. Those interested in the visual arts are most concerned
with this latter form-giving process, one that determines the final shapes
of the buildings and spaces in which we live. The awareness of the
physical aspects of city planning should not in any way diminish the im-
portance of the social and economic aspects. We are beginning to realize
that decay and pollution have gone so far that the traditional ways of
correcting present-day poor conditions have to be radically reformed or
abandoned, and new ways of financing the required changes must be
found.
Edward Waldo Forbes was mainly interested in the visual arts; for
him an interest in landscape architecture and city planning was a natural
outgrowth of his interest in the arts and his wish to live surrounded by
things beautiful. His ties to Cambridge and Harvard moved him many
years ago to apply his visionary gifts to his everyday environment. He be-
longed to that particular group of city planners, a gifted minority, who
react to the harmony or beauty of the environment, both natural and
man-made. Many planners today would call him a utopian or a dreamer
-anyone trying to follow a similar line of thought only a few years ago
was referred to as a "long-haired city planner." Attitudes have happily
changed. The continued destruction of our environment, and the serious
46
problems of our cities with which we have to cope, bring the utopian
dreamers of yesterday closer to today's reality.
4.
Edward Waldo Forbes worked and fought to create a better and more
harmonious environment. His approach was that of a man concerned
with the preservation of beauty. He believed it worthwhile to wage a
long battle to improve the conditions of the areas around the Harvard
University campus. Happily he was successful. Anyone familiar with the
In 1921 Harvard's President Lowell awarded an honorary degree of
University's development along the banks of the Charles will realize, in
Master of Arts to "Edward Waldo Forbes
whose
tenacity
of
purpose
reading this text, the considerable benefits both Cambridge and Harvard
in acquiring for the University the Riverside land, and works of art for
have derived from the pioneering efforts of Edward Waldo Forbes.
its museum, has achieved the incredible." Many are aware of the part
played by Forbes during his thirty-five-year directorship of the Fogg
JOSÉ LUIS SERT
Museum in providing the Harvard community and the public at large
with significant works of art. Less well known is Edward Forbes's role
as the guiding spirit and principal fund raiser of a group of Harvard
alumni who worked indefatigably during the first decade of the twen-
tieth century to acquire most of the land in Cambridge bounded on the
north and south by Mount Auburn Street and the Charles River, and
on the east and west by De Wolfe and Boylston Streets (see Figure I).
This land, upon which many of Harvard's undergraduate Houses now
were
stand, was purchased by Edward Forbes and his "Riverside Associates"
appleton
with the future development of the University in mind. The Riverside
Associates, formed initially as a private group with no special commit-
efforts,
ment to Harvard other than a strong loyalty, intended from the start
CBD's
massi
that the land which they had worked so hard to acquire would one day
be part of the University.
directed
Joices
An examination of the history of the Harvard Riverside Associates in-
volves many legal and technical considerations which will be discussed
here. The basic facts, however, have far-reaching conceptual ramifica-
off
space
tions. Edward Forbes's vision of the future, the transformation of the
muddy banks of the Charles River, with its factories and old unattractive
in
City
wooden buildings (see Figures 2, 3), into a second Harvard "Yard"
and
comparable with the residential colleges of Cambridge and Oxford, is
very much in the spirit of the concept of the "city beautiful," a phrase
often used by urban planners and landscape architects at the turn of the
account
abserts
century. In other words, Forbes, whose strong sense of the importance
of providing the public with beauty is apparent in his multifarious con-
tributions to the Fogg Art Museum, carried this idea over into the fields
that
of urban planning and conservation of open spaces. His efforts resulted
could
>
resulted
in a direct and powerful impact on the face of Harvard! The work of the
Harvard Riverside Associates also reflects the large-scale interest in town
1
Bentinck-Smith, W., "Forbes of the Fogg," Milton Bulletin, Vol. 4, February, 1941,
48
p. 4.
ILL
Notes See remainder of city planning
essay, Pgs. 49-88.
Karl Hagland
As an engineer I am unable to advise my friends to put money into per-
Inventing the Charles Rever 0
manent buildings for an institution [MIT] which by the time it gets to be
vigorously performing its use is faced by a continually increasing expense to
protect it against the encroachments of the sea, with a distant future when
Cambridge MIT Press, 2003.
submergence is inevitable.
See Pp. 194 f.
Hiram Mills to the president of MIT, 1912
People come here from the West and turn up their noses at the Charles river
basin. They state flatly what they would do with that basin if people out
The Colleges and the
West had the handling of it. It would be "something else than a wash basin
with some ducks in it."
Esplanades
Cambridge Tribune, 1928
In no city is unification of public sentiment more difficult to obtain. In none
are more numerous or more various plans offered every time a public improve-
ment is proposed
Will the thing be done? Who can tell? This is Boston.
The New York Times, on the plan to build a four-lane highway as
part of the new Esplanade, 1929
Today, there is only one esplanade on the Charles-the one with
the Hatch Shell and the fireworks, on the Boston side. But from
the first proposal of the new Boston Park Department in 1876 to
the completion of the islands and lagoons in 1936, the area was
officially called the Boston Embankment The Esplanade was across
the river in Cambridge. The name showed up first in the 1870s on
the maps and drawings of Charles Davenport, then in the street
plans and park proposals of the city of Cambridge a decade later.
But at some point after the completion of the Boston
Embankment in 1910, the name crossed the river to stay.
In the last decade of the nineteenth century, few signs of
active life or leisure could be seen along the river-mostly rowers
on the water and a few athletes at Harvard's recently dedicated
Soldiers Field. Then came the studied eclecticism of Carey Cage, a
small structure for indoor sports, and Harvard Stadium, the largest
reinforced concrete structure in the world at the time. In 1903, the
Charles River Dam was approved, and new parks and parkways
were built. Moving at a measured pace, Boston's universities dis-
I rontispiece Nett Boston Citile Ideance ( Sampaign, cember 1910. detail
covered the riverbanks.
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In : City planning, vol. 6:1, Jan. 1930, p. 15-19; with photo, plans.
HOLLIS Number : 003925374
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Record 54 out of 59
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Author : Shurcliff, Arthur A. (Arthur Asahel), 1870-1957.
Title : The Metropolitan plan. By A.A. Shurtleff.
Locations/Orders : Availability
Location : Cabot Science
i
Eng 450.13 [In storage. Consult Circ.
desk.] Holdings Availability
Description : p. Maps and plans.
Notes : In Massachusetts - Metropolitan improvements commission.
Public improvements for the Metropolitan District, 1909, pp. 187-
258.
HOLLIS Number : 006966778
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Source: Bunting i Robert H. Nylander. Old Cambridge CantridgettistorialComm. 1973.
and Coolidge but today after several changes in name known as Shepley, Bul-
finch, Richardson, and Abbott) did not obtain its first commission until 1893
(Perkins and Conant Halls), though it was to have a virtual monopoly of Harvard
commissions under President Lowell If not, in the long run, followers of H.H.
Richardson's style, this firm succeeded to his architectural practice, the partners
being trained in his office, and one of them, George F. Shepley, married to
Richardson's daughter.
If one may not speak of a single Eliot style of architecture, he can identify an
Eliot real estate policy. Its formation was in part historical, following a decisión
the Massachusetts Supreme Court (Massachusetts General Hospital VS. The
Inhabitants of Somerville) in March 1869, the first year of Eliot's tenure, which
had ruled that a city could not tax a charitable or educational institution for the
unimproved land it owned, Under this ruling Harvard was relieved of a yearly tax
burden of $2500. This was the signal to increase land acquisition, and before the
next year was out Harvard had acquired Jarvis Field (in exchange for the Delta
upon which Memorial Hall was to be built) and accepted the gift of 70 acres in
the Brighton marshes from Longfellow and his friends; in 1871 the 5.3-acre
Holmes Field was purchased for $31,500, bringing Harvard holdings in unim-
proved land to a value of almost $107,000. The other large gift of land was
Soldier's Field, donated by Major Henry Lee Higginson in 1890. President Eliot
decreed, however, that money saved in taxes should be expended for main-
tenance of grounds, thus repaying the community to some extent for tax losses.
In 1870 a campaign was launched to landscape the Yard; Jarvis and Holmes
374. PLAN SUBMITTED BY THE HARVARD
Fields were graded in 1874-75; $5000 was expended on brick and stone college
BOARD OF OVERSEERS TO THE CORPORATION,
sidewalks in 1874. Tree-planting and pruning went forward in 1869, 1871, 1876,
NOVEMBER 1896. PROBABLY DRAWN
and the late eighties.
new STIONSHOR THE
BY OLMSTED, OLMSTED & ELIOT
THE GROUNDS or HARVARD COLLEGE
If the policy of land acquisition was clearly a strong point of Eliot's administra-
tion, planning for its use was not, though it was a matter much discussed in
Peabody, Augustus Hemenway, and George Shattuck) commissioned a study of
the decades after 1890. The president's son, landscape architect Charles Eliot,
their own, entitled "Suggestions for the Orderly Arrangement of the Grounds of
after three years' work of supervising the grounds (1887-90), criticized the Cor-
Harvard College." This they submitted to the Corporation in November 1896
poration for not adopting a definite scheme for physical development: "This
(Fig. 374). Probably prepared by Olmsted, Olmsted and Éliot, the plan
a
permitting donors of buildings and gates to choose their sites is fatal to general
companying this report concentrates on the Yard and the North Yard, and
effect. Outside the quadrangle the Yard is already a jumble of badly placed
buildings and roads
"
attempts to patch together a sequence of axes and symmetrically arranged build
The same note is echoed in Charles McKim's exasper-
ings which looks more orderly on paper than it would have read in actuality
ated comment to the Treasurer that "some plan is woefully needed at Har-
vard
Another interesting aspect is the way it anticipates a library as large as Widener
" and it is confirmed by a resolution passed by the Board of Overseers
yet ignores Harvard Yard by attaching the huge building to the south of Gore
in 1894 and sent to the President and Fellows, pointing out the need for a plan
Hall and by providing a great porticoed facade fronting Massachusetts Avenue
for future development of college property. The resolution also recommended
the appointment of an advisory committee of competent professional men se-
From there a processional way leads to the river where a parkway was being
planned by the city.
lected by members of the university's governing boards to approve all plans for
future building.
The Olmsted proposal was characteristic of several others that followed during
The President and Fellows did not seem to think such plans for future develop-
the rest of Eliot's administration. none of them acted upon. As late as 1905, in
ment or the appointment of an advisory committee necessary. They did, how-
response to a report by the Visiting Committee on Fine Arts and Architecture
the Treasurer of the Corporation, Charles Francis Adams, wrote that the result
ever, commission a series of plans by Aspinwall and Lincoln (1895) showing the
boundaries of the college real estate in Cambridge and the locations of existing
of building during the previous sixty years "is a disgrace, and I imagine that
Eliot's long administration will hereafter be judged by it. Nevertheless the ideas
buildings, with notes concerning restrictions and conditions governing the place-
ment of buildings on the various parcels. Apparently the Overseers did not
contained in the various proposals inspired a group of loyal alumni to lay the
groundwork for future expansion toward the river, a topic to be discussed in
consider this a satisfactory solution, for a subcommittee of the board (Robert
relation to the Lowell administration.
182
386. VIEW OF HARVARD HOUSES FROM
387. KIRKLAND HOUSE, WILLIAM SMITH HALL, 1913.
ACROSS THE CHARLES RIVER. PHOTO OF 1936
SHEPLEY, RUTAN & COOLIDGE
The houses along the river form one of Greater Boston's majestic sights (Fig.
hip-roofed elevation found on the narrow ends of Harvard Hall is used at
386). Looking more like palatial residences than college dormitories, the
Standish Hall, though here the wooden cornice is more intricate than the original
structures are set among trees which unite them as a group yet preclude visual
worked in brownstone. When, because of their larger scale, the houses sometimes
competition between individual buildings. Several towers are discernible above
needed heavier or more elaborate architectural accents than colonial work
the treetops but not SO many as to clutter the scene, and the houses open toward
provided, the designer did not hesitate to turn to more opulent English
an almost idyllic foreground (if one can forget the traffic, of the riverfront and
precedents, as at Gore Hall, which recalls the late 17th-century garden facade of
parkway), the remarkable thing is how individualistic yet how harmonious are
Hampton Court. However, the one detail most popular with the Shepley office
the five large structures fronting the river. Each appears to have grown separately
was the console balcony and enframed window of the east facade of the Old
in response to its own set of requirements, yet they are harmonious because
State House in Boston. An almost exact replica of this famous composition was
those requirements were not dissimilar. Because there is so little evidence of
used on the facade of Fogg Museum and in simpler form and smaller scale at
monotonous repetition, it is hard to imagine that all were designed by one
McKinlock Hall and Eliot House. In short, this South Yard gives the feeling of a
architectural firm within a sixteen-year period.
neighborhood that has grown harmoniously over a period of time rather than of
one planned all at once by a designer standing at a drafting table. This, indeed, is
The houses along the river represent a conscious effort by the administration to
the difference between the feeling generated by the South Yard and that by the
extend the atmosphere of old Harvard Yard to a new South Yard and thus to
campus of Harvard Business School (1924) on the opposite side of the river,
symbolize the continuity of the Harvard "Collegiate Way of Life.' One means of
which seems to have sprung into being all on the same day (except, of course,
accomplishing this was the conscious Imitation of the architectural style used in
for additions since World War II).
the Yard. There could be no reproduction of specific old buildings, because the
new ones were much larger in scale, but each house was sited and detailed in a
Each house has its own character. Kirkland House, composed of Smith and
distinctive way. The plan of none of them is exactly the same, and some were
Bryan Halls, may be the least interesting, because of its rather fussy detail and
fitted to irregular sites. Even more subtle was the way architectural ornamenta-
the rigid planning of the main quadrangle (Fig. 387). The design is conservative,
tion was handled, with one dormitory borrowing details from a particular model,
with a profusion of somewhat dry ornament typical of the early 1900's. The
another from a different one, so that each achieved an individuality of its own.
formal symmetry of the completely enclosed main courtyard, which permits no
irregularity and provides no visual escape route other than by the axial entrance
Thus Kirkland House is the only one to use the twin chimneyed gable connected
arches, is confining and rather boring because it can be read at a glance; much
by a horizontal parapet found at Massachusetts Hall, and McKinlock Hall makes
livelier is the long narrow court formed by the addition of Bryan Hall (1931)
the only use of the stepped gable, volutes, and paired oculus windows from the
and closed off from Dunster Street by the tencing and planting around the
Old State House in Boston. The recessed entries with pilasters superimposed on
master's house garden. Hicks House as the house library is a welcome and
rusticated jambs of the old main (west) front of Hollis Hall were copied with
imaginative relief and represents Harvard's first effort to preserve an early
great appropriateness in the old Yard on Mower and Lionel Halls and later at
Cambridge building other than its own (Fig. 128). The large mass of the whole
McKinlock; the florid scroll work from the pediment of Holden Chapel is used in
complex works well in screening off the quiet tree-filled yard from noisy
simpler form at Dunster House. The pedimented pavilion superimposed on a
Boylston Street.
183
The hint of a rural environment conveyed by the pleasant lawns and courts of
improving the area for the benefit of the school, President Eliot made it clear
the South Yard is magnificently amplified in the park area along the Charles
River and beyond that by the campus of the Business School. The river is
that Harvard had no funds for such projects; anything accomplished here would
have to be done with outside finance. He also opined shrewdly that an
spanned by two handsome brick bridges, the Anderson (1912) and the Weeks
Memorial (1926), the latter a footbridge that also carries steam pipes to the
expression of university interest in such a project would cause land prices to
soar.
Business School buildings. Weld Boat House, a picturesque building from the
pre-Lowell era, was erected in 1906.
Attention was first called to the area in the late 1890's by discussions of
The development of the South Yard was slow and hesitant, spanning the last
improvements in the Charles River basin. It was proposed to construct a tidal
years of the Eliot administration and most of Lowell's. Even after the idea of a
dam that would stabilize the water level, to landscape the river banks, and to line
Yard had been accepted, the concept of how it should be designed changed
the river with carriage-ways. The earliest scheme (about 1894) for extending
drastically, beginning as a mere parkway connecting Harvard Yard with the river
Harvard toward the river was a proposal by Charles Eliot, the president's son, to
and expanding eventually to include the entire area between DeWolfe and
improve the Brighton lands-the Longfellow meadows and Soldier's Field-
Boylston Streets. The present concept of self-contained residential nuclei
already in university ownership. The idea of a physical link between Harvard and
connected by informal, tree-filled parks and streets with little traffic evolved
the river first appears, however, in the Olmsted plan commissioned by the
only gradually, and one is thankful that the realization of the project was
Overseers in 1896 (and mentioned earlier in relation to the North Yard) (Fig.
delayed long enough for the present scheme to mature.
374). This plan suggests a "park approach" from the river, that is, a boulevard
connecting the Yard with a carriage-way along the river. Typical of "City
The zoneGouth of Mt. Auburn Street known as Riverside was not an attractive
Beautiful" planning of that period, the proposal does little more than replace
one in the late 19th century (Figs. 67, 392). Containing a mixture of modest
Plympton Street with a 70-foot wide, tree-shaded avenue, whose axis is shifted
residential and commercial buildings, its riverfront was clogged with an ugly
slightly to conform to that of a hypothetical group of buildings to be erected in
amortment of wharfs, coal yards, storehouses, and a power plant. As late as 1898
the Yard, while ignoring the shabby Riverside district through which it passes.
Harvard was disposing of property south of Massachusetts Avenue instead of
acquiring ii. When planners and alumni began to discuss the possibilities of
Such a scheme was soon rendered obsolete by the construction between 1892
and 1903 of a series of costly dormitories along Mt. Auburn Street financed by
private capital. Fresh impetus was given the movement to connect Yard and river
by the actual construction in 1902 of a stretch of riverside parkway extending
between DeWolfe and Boylston Streets. Now the proposed connecting boulevard
was shifted to DeWolfe Street to avoid the new dormitories (Fig. 393). This
stage of the planning is illustrated by the 1901 proposal by F.L. Olmsted, Jr. for
the widening of DeWolfe Street, in which that thoroughfare is envisioned as a
392. AERIAL VIEW OF 1875 SHOWING SOLDIERS FIELD,
spur off the river parkway leading to Quincy Square and the Yard. A remnant of
RIVERSIDE, AND RESIDENCES FRONTING QUINCY ST.
this plan is the Class of 1880 Gate facing Quincy Square, an appropriate
architectural focus to terminate the proposed DeWolfe Street axis. This gate at
the bottom of a modestly high terrace has never led anywhere, neither when
erected in 1905 and Professor Palmer's house stood off center on top of the
terrace nor today when blocked by Lamont Library; its only purpose was to
provide a monumental terminus for the unrealized boulevard.
Early in 1902 a group of Harvard alumni mounted a campaign for funds to
augment those allotted by the city and Park Commission to enhance he
proposed aggrandizement of DeWolfe Street. At this point, however, a recent
Harvard graduate, Edward Forbes, entered the picture. Although he had
contributed to the boulevard project, he sensed deficiencies in it. Very soon he
realized the greater possibilities of acquiring the entire area between Mt. Auburn
Street and the river, an ambitious venture in which he was able to rally the
support of a number of influential alumni.
The story of his activities and some of the designs proposed for the improvement
of the area were presented as part of HIT exhibition honoring Mr. Forbes in 1971,
It was mounted by the Foga Museum of which Forbes for many years was
184
HARVARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
Harvard University Archives
TAS
Pusey Library
Harvard Yard
Cambridge, MA 02138
T 617.495.2461
F 617.495.8011
May 29, 2008
Ronald H. Epp
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
Dear Mr. Epp:
Enclosed please find a photocopy of the following, as requested:
Cooney, Sharon. 1990. "The Harvard Riverside Associates: Land Acquisition
South of Harvard Yard, 1930-1918." Unpublished paper, Cambridge Historical
Commission. (Call number HUD 3748.290)
Sincerely,
RobinCarlaw
Robin Carlaw
Researcher
Enclosure
THE HARVARD RIVERSIDE ASSOCIATES:
Land Acquisition South of Harvard Yard, 1903-1918
Sharon Cooney
Cambridge Historical Commission
August, 1990
1
THE HARVARD RIVERSIDE ASSOCIATES:
Land Acquisition South of Harvard Yard, 1903-1918
In his 1901-1902 Annual Report, President Eliot noted
that the acquisition scheme designed to secure land for the
Medical School in Boston actually placed too much land in
the hands of the University and that the University would
therefore sell the excess. While this decision by the
Harvard Corporation assuredly rankled with some members of
the Harvard community, it was probably met with approval by
another set of Harvard alumni and affiliates who were also
in favor of Harvard expansion. This group was dissatisfied
with Harvard's policy of expansion only to the north of the
Yard. The area south of the Yard was becoming increasingly
more attractive as a place for badly needed expansion by the
University. The city had completed by 1901 much of the
clean-up of the riverfront area, and had nearly finished
Memorial Drive. The students had demonstrated their own
preference for the Mount Auburn Street area, and made it a
desirable location for clubs and private dormitories.
Around 1901, several members of the Harvard community sought
to take advantage of the riverfront clean-up by initiating a
plan for transforming DeWolfe Street into a broad boulevard
to the River. The DeWolfe Street widening initiative was
part of a growing awareness of the possibilities for
improvement and expansion towards the river. Those
committed to the street widening commissioned plans for the
2
eventual development of that area, with DeWolfe Street
slashing through what, in 1902, was a district full of low
income houses and businesses, but which could be converted
into a grand new Harvard, if the plans were fulfilled.
Into this atmosphere stepped the Riverside Associates,
another group of Harvard alumni with an eye toward improving
the land south of the Yard for Harvard's sake. The actual
date on which the idea for the Riverside Associates took
hold is uncertain since sources vary. As early as January
7, 1902, Edward Forbes, one of the Associates, wrote a
letter to Harold Coolidge accepting his services as a real
estate agent securing land for the school.1 (Since this
letter was located in a Riverside Associates folder, it is
likely that the real estate transactions were to be made for
alumni rather than for the Harvard Corporation. ) In a
letter to McGeorge Bundy, Forbes set the date for the plan
between 1902 and 1904, 2 while another Associate, Thomas
Thomas
Nelson Perkins, set the date in the spring of 1903.3
The
,Veism
Parkers.
idea- for creating the group was conceived by Edward Waldo
Forbes. Forbes graduated from Harvard in 1895, and remained
C12.
active in Harvard affairs, holding a position with the
University until, in 1909, Eliot appointed him the director
of the Fogg Art Museum. In correspondence with his brother,
Cameron, while studying in Paris, Edward revealed his hopes
for Harvard's future. Edward was later to collaborate with
Cameron in gaining subscribers for the Associates. It is
likely that Edward's connection with Perkins was made
3
through his brother, who had lived with Perkins from 1898 to
1900. Perkins graduated from the college in 1891 and the
law school in 1894, after which he joined Ropes, Gray &
Loring, a Boston law firm. He became a fellow of the
University in 1905, a position he held until he died in
1937. Perkins wrote of his reasons for joining Forbes in
his plan in a letter to J. P. Morgan, Jr., , in 1908:
My first connection with the Harvard Riverside matter
was in the spring of 1903 when Forbes first took up the
subject. He then came to me to get me to draw various
forms of subscription papers for him, and I talked to
him about the matter a good deal. The plan of securing
and holding the land between Mt. Auburn Street and the
river for the benefit of the College seemed to me then
to have been a very good one, and it seems to me now to
have been a good one. At that time the College had
been growing with marked rapidity. Private dormitories
were being built and the character of the territory
between what was then Harvard Street, and is now Mass.
Ave., and Mt. Auburn St., had changed very markedly in
comparatively few years. The district immediately
south of Mt. Auburn Street was a very decided eyesore.
I believed as I still believe that it was a mistake for
the College to try to force the dormitory development
on the north side of the Yard, because I did not
believe any more than I do now that the college boys
wanted to live on the north side of the Yard and I
believed that the proper development for the college
was toward the river
"4
Forbes and Perkins were not alone in their visions for
Harvard's future, and land and options in the area south of
the Yard began to be bought in the names of various alumni.
Eliot and the College's Role
There is no documentation of the University's role in
dates!
the beginnings of Forbes' plan, but it is clear that Eliot
and other members of the University community were aware of
without
the plan almost from its conception. On November 26, 1902,
Dann
Elist
4
one University administrator mentioned that Eliot was aware
that there were men who were interested in buying the land
south of the Yard 5 H. L. Higginson, an overseer and the
principal donor of the Harvard Union, wrote a letter to
Forbes which was included in a prospectus for the Associates
on February 25, 1903. The letter expressed approval for the
project because "it cleans up a part of Cambridge, and
promises to make it more beautiful, and to open the college
Yard down to the river.6 It is clear that Eliot himself had
a hand in the creation of the Prospectus to be sent to
potential contributors, as well as in the actual make-up of
the Trustees. Perkins continued an extensive correspondence
with Eliot in February and March of 1903. On February 28,
for instance, Perkins sent a draft of the proposed
prospectus to Eliot for his perusal and asked him, if
everything was satisfactory, to write a letter to Forbes to
be included in the prospectus. 7 Eliot did write this
letter, and it was included in the final prospectus. The
letter, dated March 5, said that while the University was
not in a position to appropriate any of its funds or income
at that time, "it is quite within the range of its present
experience that it should be hereafter provided with money
which will enable it to avail itself of the thoughtful and
ingenious provisions of the plan devised to secure a great
benefit to the College.
8
Eliot's connection to the land acquisition scheme
appeared to be more firm in his correspondences with
5
Perkins. On March 24, Perkins wrote to Eliot to tell him
that they had succeeded in securing options for nearly all
of the important parcels. But, he wrote, Forbes was not
competent for the task of getting subscribers in Boston
because of his lack of experience. "Men who should
subscribe at least $10,000 are giving only $1,000 each and
with $500,000 to raise, small subscriptions will not do. "9
Perkins wanted to ask Lowell to do the job, and wanted
Eliot's opinion. For some reason, Eliot's letter books,
which contain a carbon of the letters which he sent from his
office, did not cover this brief period - one volume ended
just short of this period and the next one continued on
March 30 - and no other copy of the letters sent to Perkins
could be found. However, according to a letter sent to
Perkins dated March 26, Eliot did respond unfavorably to
Lowell's connection with the group as a fund raiser.
Perkins wrote, "I am sorry that you feel as you do about Mr. .
Lawrence Lowell. It seems to me that it is not SO much that
we need somebody else to take charge of the job of getting
subscriptions, as it is that we need some older person to
get the subscriptions. I think Edward Forbes can be of a
great deal of use, as he has time and is very zealous, but
with $500,000 to raise at a time when money is SO hard to
get as it is now, we have got to get men who will give more
than $1,000."10 Eliot must have written back because
Perkins thanked him for a letter he wrote on March 27, in
his own letter dated March 30. In that letter, Perkins
6
mentioned that he secured the help of Robert Bacon and
Augustus Belmont for soliciting subscriptions, possibly at
the suggestion of Eliot.11
The actions of Eliot and the Corporation belie what
seemed to be words of approval for the land scheme. Cameron
Forbes wrote a brief history of the Associates, which his
brother sent to the Harvard archivist in 1962. In that
history, Cameron wrote that the University was unfriendly to
the whole idea, especially because of the problems that they
already faced with the city over taxation. "The unfriendly
attitude toward the project which he encountered spread to
the community in which Edward was hoping to raise the
necessary money for the purchase of the land, and Edward met
with what amounted to a cold refusal to subscribe toward the
project. "12 While this explanation may have been a cover
for his own brother's faults as a fund raiser, the fact that
the University was hesitant at that time to take actions
which could anger the city was true. In his letter to J. P.
Morgan in 1908, Perkins mentioned that when he agreed to the
scheme he "knew nothing about the troubles that the College
was having with the City of Cambridge in regard to taxes,
and had no knowledge about the financial difficulties that
the College had to meet. "
As to Eliot's feelings toward the project, there is
much ambiguity. Obviously from his letters to Perkins and
Forbes in the planning stage of the scheme, Eliot was
somewhat in favor of the plan. However, he did not always
7
work with the Associates, and often acted in ways adverse to
the success of the project. In the fall of 1903, Eliot
spoke to a St. Louis meeting of Harvard graduates and said
that the Associates needed no more money. On January 21,
1904, Perkins wrote to Forbes, "I will try to see Cam and
find out what if anything he has done with President Eliot.
I should think a quick death was much too merciful. "13 On
June 28, 1904, Edward Forbes wrote to Eliot to ask him if he
would make a statement that rectified his error in St.
Louis, since the Associates were in fact in great need of
donors to cover the maintenance costs of the property.
Eliot agreed, though there was no evidence that he did
indeed rectify his mistake. In 1907, when allegations were
raised in the General Court that the University proposed to
take the Riverside lands out of taxation, Perkins sought
Eliot's help in placating the legislature, without
committing them to any future policy. 14 Eliot went ahead
and wrote to the chairman of the committee on taxation,
without first asking Perkins' opinion. Perkins probably
would have opposed sending the letter. In it, Eliot wrote
that the University's sole interest was in the
beautification of that area, that the idea that they would
take over the land was false, and that that Corporation
would not take any of the land out of taxation. 15
Essentially, Eliot committed his administration and the
Associates in a way against which Perkins had warned him.
Eliot probably meant what he wrote to the legislature, and
8
Eliot truly did not think that the lands held by the Associates
would be used by the University while he was in office.
Since the trust was set up with a five year time limit, it
is evident that the Associates and Eliot were not agreed
upon the future of the Riverside lands. While Eliot was
aware of the Associates' plans, and approved of their
efforts to a degree, he was not entirely willing to commit
the University to these plans, and perhaps did not see a
need for the South Yard which the Associates planned for
from the start.
The available records of the Overseers and the
Corporation do not show any official discussions of or
policies concerning the Associates. The Board of Overseers
had commissioned a report on the state of the dormitories
shortly before the Associates came about, and Lowell and
Harold Coolidge's brother, Archibald, were members of the
commission which recommended a comprehensive housing plan in
their 1902 report. However, this cannot be assumed to have
been accepted as correct policy by the Board, and the
fortuitous time at which the report was published may have
been strictly coincidental. Nevertheless, the report proved
portentous since Lowell soon assumed office and made the
South Yard project his prime concern.
The Organization of the Associates
Forbes' idea for securing land for the school
culminated in the Harvard Riverside Associates, a trust
designed to manage and develop the lands held by the group
9
with an eye toward Harvard's future expansion. However,
much activity was completed before the Declaration of Trust
was filed with the Registry of Deeds in 1903. Forbes
solicited the help of Harold Coolidge for coordinating the
actual purchase of the land for the group, and, after
Forbes
October, 1903, used Loring and Coolidge to manage the
property and handle the financial affairs of the trust. 16
Harold Coolidge had graduated from Harvard in 1892 (Law,
1896), and was a member of the Randolph Trust and the
University Associates, along with his brother, Joseph
Randolph Coolidge. Forbes chose Coolidge on the basis of
his success in buying the land for South Station. 17
Coolidge had been able to stem the inflation which usually
accompanies large land deals by using several small brokers,
each of which purchased two or three properties for the
group. This plan would be ideal for the land acquisition
scheme in Cambridge, SO long as word did not get out who was
behind the purchases and the area of land of interest to the
buyer was kept a secret.
Word of the Associates' activities seemed to reach the
3/17/03.
newspapers by March 17, 1903. The Boston Globe wrote on
that date that the land south of Mt. Auburn Street was ideal
for a group interested in beautifying that area, a strong
hint at what was to come. The Globe calculated that there
were eighty-one owners in the area in question and that it
would not be a difficult venture to secure the land. The
Boston Herald wrote a piece on the scheme on April 23, 1903,
10
writing, "The plan is merely an independent movement on the
part of some graduates who believe that ten or twenty years
hence they may have done something of real service to the
college. Word of the Associates' plans, however, did not
reach the press until the Prospectus was published, at which
time most of the land which the Associates were interested
in had already been purchased, or had already been secured
through options. The Crimson did not write of the scheme,
in fact, until after the land had all been purchased, in
1905. They wrote on March 17 of that year, "Their
acquirement of the land between Massachusetts Avenue and the
Charles points to a day when this section can be rid of its
squalor and made both useful and attractive." Overall, the
press reports of the developments in that area were positive
and approving.
Coolidge must have acted quickly after being
commissioned by Forbes, because Forbes showed a map to Eliot
on March 30, 1903, which showed the large number of houses
that the Associates had already secured, either outright or
as options for future sale. The area covered by the map
demonstrated that the Associates had already secured most of
the lands between Massachusetts Avenue and the river.18
Several very important tracts remained to be bought,
nevertheless, and Coolidge continued to negotiate for their
sale.
Other than Forbes and Perkins, the original Associates
included Robert Bacon, James A. Burden, and Augustus
11
Hemenway. Robert Bacon was chosen as a trustee because of
his connections in Boston and New York. Bacon, a member of
the class of 1880 and an overseer for eighteen years
beginning in 1895, was a good choice for gaining subscribers
and coordinating the Associates' activities. (Bacon was
later appointed secretary of state by another Harvard
graduate, Theodore Roosevelt. ) James Abercrombie Burden,
class of 1893, had strong connections in New York and
Boston, and was an asset in gaining the initial capital
necessary to buy the properties. Augustus Hemenway, class
of 1875, was an overseer, and gave the University the
gymnasium in 1878. These men agreed to be trustees for the
Associates and, in 1903, signed the Declaration of Trust
(June 30, 1903, 3047-567). The Trust was designed to secure
subscribers for up to $400,000 and to allow the trustees to
take up to $600,000 in mortgages, all to be used to purchase
the lands south of Massachusetts Avenue between DeWolfe
Street and Boylston Street. Included in the trust agreement
was a clause which stipulated that if the land had not been
sold in five years the shareholders would determine what
ought to be done with the trust. The Associates were
hopeful that by that time the University would be in a
position to buy the land.
The Associates attempted to keep the logistics of the
Trust simple: $200,000 would be secured from ten New York
alumni, and the rest would be secured in Boston. The New
York subscription was easy to fulfill - Robert Bacon, James
12
Stillman and seven other prominent alumni put forward
$20,000, while Burden and Charles Wetmore, the private
dormitory investor, joined to complete the subscription.
Wetmore was particularly enthusiastic about the scheme and,
in February, 1903, offered his architectural firm's services
for the future building plans. 19 Shortly afterward, he
sketched a plan for the area. Wetmore's firm submitted
another plan for the area which was published in the
Harper's Weekly, January 15, 1910. In August of 1903,
Wetmore went one step further and offered to sell the group
his properties in Cambridge at cost. 20
The Boston subscriptions were more difficult to
achieve. By March 30, 1903, the Boston committee only had
promises for $100,000. The group continued to use the
Forbes brothers to find subscribers, however, and they
achieved the full $200,000 needed. The combined $400,000
was used to purchase tracts within the desired area, and the
trustees secured a mortgage on these tracts in order to
purchase the remainder.
Beyond the initial outlay of money for the purchase of
the land, the trustees had to maintain the properties and
pay the mortgage. The trustees expected to use the rentals
from their properties to pay the mortgage as well as a three
percent dividend to the capital investors. In the event
that the rents were not sufficient to cover this expense,
the trustees secured promises from one hundred alumni
guarantors to fill the gap. While the initial subscription
13
was expected to be an investment (in Forbes' eyes at least) ,
the guarantees were to be outright gifts. Forbes admitted
that his initial impression was that the subscriptions were
an investment, and that the capital subscribed would be
returned to the investors, but it was evident to Forbes by
1906 that it was unlikely that the subscribers would regain
their initial investment. 21 Few of the subscribers actually
thought of the transaction as an investment even in 1903,
and were motivated more out of concern for Harvard than for
financial gain. In fact, many of the subscribers stipulated
that they did not want the dividends or the money
returned. 22
It became clear at an early date that the
guarantors would be necessary to carry the properties. Part
of the problem sprang from the fact that the city, upon
learning of the alumni's efforts, raised the assessed values
of the properties, requiring higher taxes, because of the
perceived wealth of the new owners. Also, much of the
property was of poor quality, and therefore could yield only
minimal rents. ( One exception was Shephard's Hall at 29-33
Holyoke Street, which was rented to Harvard students. ) By
the time that the five-year trust expired, the financial
situation was precarious.
In a statement dated 1908, Forbes wrote, "The title
will still be held by the Trustees because the relations
between the Corporation and the City of Cambridge are
strained on account of the question of taxation. "23 The
Associates and the stockholders had to decide what to do
14
with the seventy-eight parcels of real estate which they had
bought by that date for a total of $865,000. They decided
1908
to redesign the trust under the new name, Harvard Riverside
Trustees. First, the guarantors were asked to convert the
guarantees to an outright cash subscription in exchange for
stock. Second, the University put up an additional $300,000
to pay part of the $485,000 mortgage on the land. Third,
Harvard had the right to nominate one trustee and would be
consulted before any mortgages were taken or dividends paid.
Finally, Bacon was no longer to be a trustee, and Frank
Appleton, Harold Coolidge, and Samuel Vaughan ( one of
Perkins' associates) were made trustees. The purpose of the
trust was reiterated: "The purpose of this trust is to
ensure the management and development of the trust estate in
such a manner as the trustees believe to be for the best
interests of Harvard University; but the authorities of the
said University shall have no right to direct the trustees
or control their actions, except as herein expressly
provided" (October 1, 1908, 3405-70). The indenture
included a stipulation that, upon receipt of the land, the
University would pay the Trustees rent.
Putting the Land to Use
Shortly after the new trust agreement had been
completed, several changes at Harvard occurred which
affected the land scheme. First, it became apparent that
the attempts to widen DeWolfe Street would never be
successful, owing to the City's arguments with the
15
University over taxation, and the fact that St. Paul's Roman
Catholic Church was opposed to the widening, since it stood
comments
GSD;
to lose some of its property. The group behind the street
widening project agreed to give the money that they had
raised to the Trustees (a total of about $50,000). This
donation to the Riverside Trustees' cause was interesting,
especially since Perkins refused to write a letter in
support of the plan in 1907, for fear of tying the hands of
the Trustees in the future.
A second important event put the Riverside Trustees'
plans into action - President Eliot retired from office, and
his successor, A. Lawrence Lowell, became acting president
in May, 1909. No record is available as to the relationship
between Lowell and the land scheme prior to 1909, and
Lowell's letters in that period did not include
correspondence with the group. However, the fact that
Perkins had considered Lowell as a potential fund raiser for
the group, and the fact that Lowell had himself expressed
the need for further development of the college plant, lend
themselves to the notion that Lowell had considerable
knowledge of, if not relations with, the Trustees. Very
early after taking office, Lowell put his interest into
Note:
motion. On July 6, 1909, Coolidge wrote to Forbes that he
Chich
had had a long discussion with Lowell concerning the plans
the
for the land development which Guy Lowell and Emerson had
already completed. 24 After that, Coolidge continued an
BRD.
active correspondence with Lowell, explaining to him the
16
movements of the trust in detail, especially Coolidge's
efforts to purchase the remaining tracts which were deemed
necessary for the dormitory plans. (Coolidge would have been
required to do this because of the stipulation in the trust
agreement of 1908. However, there was no indication that he
had kept this kind of correspondence with Eliot. )
One example of Lowell's involvement, through
correspondence with Coolidge, concerned the land at the
corner of Plympton and Riverview streets. In December of
1909, Coolidge wrote Lowell to explain to him the
difficulties which he was having in purchasing two lots
owned by Michael O'Sullivan. Eleven Riverview and 101
Plympton were important to the plans which the Trustees had
already commissioned. O'Sullivan, a contractor who had laid
the foundations of many Harvard buildings, owned a great
deal of land of interest to the Trustees, and had sold many
lots to them (i.e., the properties on the north side of Mill
Street, 14, 16, 18 and 20 Mill Street, and several lots and
houses within the boundaries of Mill, DeWolfe, Riverview and
Plympton streets). The houses at 11 Riverview and 101
Plympton Street were of a finer quality than those which he
had already sold. O'Sullivan lived in 11 Riverview with his
wife, and his cousin occupied 101 Plympton. It is likely
that the Trustees had avoided purchasing the two houses at
an earlier date because it would have been expensive to hold
the properties, due to their higher assessed value, but it
may also have been the case that O'Sullivan had refused to
17
sell (there was no mention of these two houses in the
correspondence prior to 1909).
In his December 6 letter, Coolidge described the
difficulties which he had had with O'Sullivan. O'Sullivan
refused to consider a sale for cash "saying that he was too
old a man to break up his home. "25 When Coolidge offered
to
move the house to the corner of DeWolfe Street, and to pay
him a cash bonus, he said he would need to think about it.
A while later, O'Sullivan said he would need three more
weeks to think about it, but Coolidge was pessimistic about
the chances that he would sell at a price which the Trustees
could afford. At the end of the letter, Coolidge reminded
Lowell not to say anything about the plans to outsiders,
since this would hurt the groups' efforts at securing the
last tracts of land. In February, 1910, Coolidge offered
O'Sullivan $25,000 for his lot and his cousin's lot.
Coolidge again prescribed silence concerning the exact plans
for the dormitory. Interestingly, by that time, Wetmore's
original plan for the area had already been published in the
January 15, 1910 Harper's Weekly. This may have been the
reason behind O'Sullivan's recalcitrance. Several other
owners had refused to sell for reasonable prices, because
they knew that their properties were desired for the planned
new dormitories.
In the end, the University was forced to build around
O'Sullivan's buildings, and, in 1926, when John F.
O' Sullivan tried to sell the land to the University, Lowell
18
refused to buy, saying that it was of no use to them at that
time since Gore was already built. 26 The two houses still
remain, although they have since been purchased by the
university.
The example of the O'Sullivan dealings demonstrates
both the difficulty which Coolidge faced in securing the
last tracts of land, and the close relationship which Lowell
maintained with the group. Lowell worked closely with the
Riverside Trustees, but also had an agenda of his own. In
1910, he commissioned his own plans for the dormitory
development, which he then showed to the Trustees.
Foregoing the Trustees' own favored architects, Lowell chose
Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge, and, by June of that year, had
shown the plans to Forbes. No clear indication of the
feelings of the Trustees as to Lowell's taking command of
the project is extant, but Forbes did write of the incident
in a letter to William Emerson.
I asked H. C. and N. P. what effect (Lowell's plans)
would have on our previous relations with Wetmore,
which I have told you about. Harold replied that we
the trustees of the HRT are really under no obligation
in this matter. While we were the only people
interested in the development of this land, we did a
certain amount of planning. Now the President comes
along and chooses any architect who he pleases and
makes some plans. 27
The plans which Emerson and Guy Lowell had made, and
which Coolidge had shown to Lowell only a year before, were
disregarded by the President, who had his own vision for the
area. This created a delicate situation for the Trustees,
because it could alienate one of the projects most dedicated
19
supporters, Charles Wetmore. Wetmore, who had his
associate, Vernon Howe Bailey, design the plan which was
published in the Harpers' Weekly that same year, had agreed
to aid the group in 1903 with the understanding that he
might be given the commission. While no legal claim was
held by Wetmore, it is likely that Lowell's disregard for
the Trustees' position created a bad feeling among its
members. Nevertheless, the Trustees continued to work with
Lowell toward creating a workable plan. The land would not
be transferred to the University until the Trustees were
satisfied with the plans.
Essential to gaining the Trustees' approval was the
creation of a plan which kept the access to the river and
the broad vistas which had been central to the Trustees' own
plans. The plans of Emerson, Guy Lowell, and Charles
Wetmore included a quadrangle with an opening to the river,
around which were to be built various large dormitories.
The effect of these plans was to make a second yard, more
grand in scale than the Old Yard, and making use of the
entire area below Mt. Auburn Street. Each of these plans
made room for various club buildings along Mt. Auburn,
incorporating that social structure into the campus
environment. This was in keeping with the Trustees'
standing policy of selling lots to the clubs. Also, the
major private dormitories were to be incorporated in some
way into the overall plan for the campus. This foreshadowed
the eventual sale of many of them to the University.
20
The Trustee's plans were different from the eventual
1
plan for the area, for three reasons. First, Lowell had his
own idea as to how the area ought to look, and Shepley,
Rutan & Coolidge created a plan which did not have one
central quadrangle, but rather, several smaller courtyards,
allowing for better use of the area. The plan was in
keeping with what came to be known as the house system. The
house system, a concept not actually realized until the
second phase of dormitory building had been completed, was
modelled after the English universities' colleges. The term
"house" was substituted SO as not to diminish the importance
of Harvard College. Each dormitory would be its own
"house", complete with a library and dining hall. Again,
these features were not introduced until the second building
phase, in the twenties.
The Shepley plan also prevented the South Yard from
eclipsing the importance of the old college Yard, because of
the smaller scale of the quadrangles and the buildings
themselves. This, however, did not allow for the vast open
space to the river which the Trustees' plans had included,
but the Trustees eventually accepted the plan, probably
realizing that their hands were tied if they truly hoped to
have their dream realized in the immediate future. Lowell,
with his own very decided view of the College's future, was
unlikely to compromise. The Shepley plan was the one used
to raise the money to begin construction.
21
2
A second reason why the final plans for the area's
development differed SO greatly from what had initially been
offered by the group's architects was that the plans were
restricted by the unavailability of certain tracts of land.
As was the case with the real estate at 11 Riverview and 101
Plympton Street, the Trustees were unable to purchase
several pieces of land which could have been important parts
of the new dormitory area. Berry, who owned the land at the
south corner of Dunster and South streets, refused to sell
for less than $19,000 because he knew that the plans
required his property. 28 Likewise, Delaney refused to sell
the lot next door, 20 South Street, for a price which the
Trustees could afford. 29 The plans, therefore, had to
be
altered, preventing the building of Smith Hall at South
Street. Delaney continued to hold out, and, in 1930, when
the University built Bryan Hall just below South Street,
they could not build the center section because that lot had
been rented to someone unwilling to break the contract. This
Hall could not be finished until 1933. The plans for Gore
Hall were altered to build around the O'Sullivan property.
Those lots were never incorporated into the dormitory
system.
3
The third factor in settling where the buildings would
be placed was the necessity to retain as many properties as
possible as renting properties. Since the rents helped to
pay the taxes, the more lucrative rentals were essential to
the Trustees' plans. The first buildings were built in an
22
area where there were few buildings. For instance, Gore
Hall required the razing of only ten properties, while
Standish and Smith Halls were built on land which had held
mostly warehouses. Thus, the final plans for the first
phase of buildings reflected the desire on the part of the
Trustees to maintain a strong rental base among the
remaining properties.
On July 17, 1912, the Trustees conveyed one-third of
their land to the University. The Riverside Trustees met in
the end of April of that year to approve the plans designed
by the University's architects. Some alterations were made,
due to the inability to purchase some of the lots, but there
was no documentation as to what recommendations the Trustees
may have made at their meeting with respect to the access to
the river and the open vistas to the river. It is likely
that they were willing to accept the plans fairly readily,
since they wanted to see the plans which they made ten years
before put into action. Also, the Trustees were having
financial difficulties, and giving some of the land over to
the school would relieve some of their burden, while perhaps
boosting their appeal to the potential alumni contributors.
Upon receipt of the buildings, the University had to fulfill
the stipulation of the 1908 Trust agreement which required
the paying of $2,400 to the Trustees. This amount was equal
to the amount of taxes which was due on the lands
transferred to the University for the year 1911. In
November, 1912, the Trustees signed a transfer deed with the
23
City of Cambridge to pass the rent on to the City. 30 This
action may have been prompted by a desire to placate the
City, after the school removed SO many properties from
taxation.
Lowell continued to raise the money for the building
campaign and, after deciding that construction would begin
in the summer of 1913, he wrote to Coolidge to give notice
to the renters in that area. Only three buildings which the
Trustees transferred to the University for the first phase
of building had outstanding leases: 8 Mill Street, 72-74
Boylston Street, and 78-80 Boylston Street. Two of these
buildings were actually demolished for the first three
dormitories. Gore, Standish and Smith Halls were completed
in 1913, and opened for rent to students in the fall of
1914. The Trustees maintained their interest in the
development of that area, and Coolidge wrote to Lowell in
the spring of 1914 to ask if he might tear down the row of
houses behind Gore Hall, on Mill Street. 31
These buildings,
according to Coolidge, were "a poor class of property" and
an eyesore, and ought to be removed before the students
moved into the dormitories. Also, the house at the corner
of Holyoke and South streets was in the way of the Holyoke
Street widening, and had to be removed. Lowell recommended
not removing the houses to the north of Mill Street, because
of the great deal of rental income the Trustees would lose.
However, these houses were removed shortly thereafter. 32
Later, in April, 1918, Coolidge again asked about removing
24
houses for aesthetic reasons, this time on the south side of
South Street between Dunster and Holyoke. Coolidge called
the four houses "tenements in very bad repair, and said
that he asked for University permission because it would
change the status of the mortgage. 33
The Trustees continued to hold the remainder of their
property, until in 1918 the group's financial difficulties
forced it into bankruptcy. The rentals of the group's
properties "look very sick at present, " Coolidge wrote in
April, 34 and, by September of that year, he wrote that the
group could not pay its taxes, and that the College must
foreclose. 35 Forbes wrote Coolidge that he was sorry about
the state which the Trust was in, and that he hoped that the
University could take over the property. 35 By October 1,
the College accepted the transferral of all of the Trust's
property along with its mortgage. The Riverside Trustees
were disbanded (Perkins continued raising money for the
University as head of the Endowment Fund, beginning in
1919). Included in the transfer were houses and one major
dormitory, Shephard's Hall, which together could provide 170
student rooms. The University put the rooms to immediate
use, since they faced a shortage of housing.
This shortage led to the start of the second phase of
dormitory building. The University used the land remaining
from the transferral of the Riverside lands, and augmented
it with an acquisition program of its own. This campaign
had many of the same characteristics as that led by Harold
25
Coolidge, including the use of independent brokers and the
difficulties which the buyers had with inflated prices.
While McKinlock Hall was built primarily on lots from the
Riverside lands, the University was pressed to purchase the
area on the opposite side of DeWolfe Street, since the
Trustees had concentrated their efforts between DeWolfe and
Boylston. Thus, it was the University which was behind the
removal of the large numbers of low income homes between
Grant Street and the river, all within a span of a few
years, around 1926-1927.39
The Harvard Riverside Trustees served a vital purpose
in the creation of present day Harvard. One observer in
1921 wrote to Lowell,
I remember SO well the time fifteen years ago, when
Eleanor and I crossed on the steamer with you, and
heard you talk of your ideas for Freshmen. I could
hardly follow you then; for the plan seemed SO
diametrically opposed to Harvard tendencies at the
time, that the mere question of discipline seemed to me
insoluble, and seemed of itself to present a fatal
obstacle. And now it has all worked out so well! In
the evening, as I walked through the quadrangles, there
seemed to be, in spite of the newness of everything - a
feeling of classic shades, and a touch of the
atmosphere of Oxford Cambridge. 39 Sherrard Billings. 11/22/21
and
Despite Lowell's own motivating force after he assumed the
president's chair, the dream of a dormitory system for
housing the College could not have been affected in such a
short time without the help of the alumni who organized the
land acquisition scheme. More importantly, the development
of that dormitory system might have occurred to the north of
the Yard, away from the river, and the development of that
26
part of the city might have been very different. The
Trustees' activities and those of Lowell's Administration in
the decades after that first transferral of land changed the
tenor of the riverside community forever.
Architectural Designs Completed for the Riverside Trustees
Various designs for the area south of Mount Auburn
Street were made for the Riverside Trustees prior to
President Lowell's final decision to use the firm of
Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge. The first of these plans was
1.
completed around the time that the group began its
fundraising. One set of plans, signed "V", is dated
January, 1903, and was probably created by Guy Lowell, or
one of Lowell's associates. In this plan, Holyoke and
DeWolfe streets are wide, straight, tree-lined boulevards
leading from Mount Auburn Street to the river. A series of
smaller quadrangles, with buildings of a scale similar to
those in the old Yard, is scattered across the area. Most
of the building seems to be placed north of an extended,
broader Mill Street, though the plans disregarded the actual
layout of the streets in that area in 1903, and designed the
area around a new grid of streets. The main focal point of
the plan is Holyoke Street, which is bisected by a large
quadrangle. Holyoke continues to the river, and across a
bridge to Soldiers' Field. To the left of that Holyoke
quadrangle is another smaller quadrangle, and to the right
are another smaller quadrangle and a larger one comparable
in size to the Holyoke quadrangle itself. These four
27
quadrangles are connected. The buildings themselves are of
uneven design and proportion.
2.
A second plan finished around 1903 was probably
designed by Charles Wetmore. The plan was finished prior to
the purchase of the Riverside lands, since it includes a
dotted line surrounding those lands proposed to be purchased
for the University. However, the date for the completion of
the plan was after 1902, since it shows Hampden Hall, built
in 1902. It is likely that this plan was designed by
Charles Wetmore, because he had mentioned plans to submit a
design, and because this design is similar in many respects
to the 1909 plan designed by his firm. This earlier plan is
highlighted by a large, domed building positioned on the
south side of Mt. Auburn Street and equidistant from Holyoke
and DeWolfe streets. This domed building overlooks the
river, across a broad quadrangle which ends at the parkway,
and sports an overlook at the other side of the parkway.
Several large rectangular buildings are placed symmetrically
around the quadrangle. Wetmore also gives attention to the
area between Mt. Auburn Street and Massachusetts Avenue ,
incorporating the already existing private dormitories into
a series of squares, with fully ( or nearly fully) closed
courtyards in the center. The clubs themselves are also
represented, though Wetmore locates them in different areas
which allowed for greater symmetry and conformity to the
overall scheme. Finally, Holyoke Street ends at a large
bridge crossing the river to Soldiers' Field. Interestingly,
28
Wetmore's plan, like that of "V", does not utilize the area
by the river, between Holyoke and Boylston, which became
important in the final plans for the South Yard. Likewise,
no use is made of the land to the east of DeWolfe Street.
3.
A third early plan was designed by William Emerson. It
is not clear at what date this plan was executed, but it is
likely that it is one of the plans which Coolidge showed to
Lowell when he took office in 1909. The plan only examines
the area below Mt. Auburn Street, and most of the work is
between Dunster and DeWolfe streets. The focal point is in
the center of this area, between Dunster and Plympton
streets. However, unlike the plans of "V" and Wetmore,
Emerson's plan takes into account the existing street
patterns to a large extent, and does not attempt to
straighten or square the streets to force a symmetry. At
the river is a large, open, tree lined yard, stretching the
distance between Holyoke and Plympton streets, and from Mill
Street to the river. Just north of the yard is the largest
complex, extending to Mt. Auburn Street in the north, and
bounded by Holyoke and Plympton streets. The complex
borders the streets, with a large open space bisected at its
center by a row of buildings. To the west of Holyoke Street
is another complex, which extends from Mt. Auburn to the
parkway, allowing the end of the complex to overlook the
yard. This effect is mirrored on the east side of Plympton
Street, and an imperfect symmetrical effect is achieved.
Across the Parkway, these complexes end in an overlook at
29
the river. The basic symmetry of the plan is broken by an
additional building complex to the west of Dunster Street,
just south of South Street. All of the buildings in the
Emerson plan are uniform in design, and are three stories in
height.
4.
Vernon Howe Bailey, representing Warren & Wetmore,
designed another set of plans which were published in
Harpers' Weekly in 1909. This plan has many of the features
of the 1903 Wetmore plan, with some distinct variations.
Unlike the original, this plan does not attempt to redesign
the area between Massachusetts Avenue and Mt. Auburn
Street, where the principal private dormitories had already
become established. The entire plan consists of a series of
nine uniformly large rectangular buildings. These buildings
form a square by lining Holyoke, Mt. Auburn and DeWolfe
streets. The three buildings along Holyoke Street are
distinct because they are on the outside of the square
formed by the three streets. The three buildings on Mt.
Auburn Street, and the three on DeWolfe Street, are located
on the inside of the square. This allows this south campus
to appear to be more centered in relation to Harvard Yard.
The three rows of buildings surround a large open courtyard
which overlooks the river. Holyoke Street itself is
broader, and leads to a large, ornate bridge, which links
the campus to Soldiers' Field. Like the earlier Wetmore
plan, the central building is domed, though it is not
30
distinguished in any other way from the rest of the
buildings.
These four plans may not have been the only plans which
were produced for the proposed new dormitories. Several
plans for the area had been prepared in relation to the
DeWolfe Street widening project, most notably by the Olmsted
brothers. Also, Shepley, Rutan & Coolidge may have offered
plans prior to 1910, though these were not available. It is
interesting to note that, while these four plans prepared
for the Riverside Associates share certain common traits,
they bear only slight resemblance to those which were
actually adopted by President Lowell.
31
NOTES
1 Harvard Riverside Associates (HRA) Correspondence, 1902-
1909. HUD 3748.510
2 Forbes to Bundy, March 2, 1960. Harvard Riverside
Associates General Folder. HUD 3748
3 Perkins to J.P. Morgan, August 11, 1908. HRA
Correspondence, 1902-1909. HUD 3748.510
4 Ibid.
5 L. B. R. Briggs to Forbes, November 26, 1902. HRA
Correspondence, 1902-1909. HUD 3748.510
6 Eliot Papers, 1903, box 134, folder #988. UAI.5.150
7 Perkins to Eliot, Feb. 28, 1903. Eliot Papers, 1893-1903,
box 118, folder 274. UAI.5.150
3/5/1903
8
HRA Correspondence. HUD 3748.510
9 Eliot Papers, 1893-1903, box 118, folder 274. UAI.5.150
10 Ibid.
11 Ibid.
12 HRA General Folder. HUD 3748
13 HRA Correspondence. HUD 3748.510
14 Eliot Papers, 1903-1909, box 237, "Perkins". UAI.5.150
15 Letter to Hon. Allen T. Treadway, March 18, 1907. Lowell
Papers, 1919-1922, folder 183. UAI.5.160
16 Perkins to Robert Bacon, October 29, 1903. HRA
Correspondence. HUD 3748.510
17 Forbes to Clifford Shipton, Harvard Archivist, 1962. HRA
General Folder. HUD 3748
18 Lands Papers College Lands, Maps, 1900- UAI.15.740 pf.
19 Perkins to Burden, February 10, 1903. HRA Correspondence.
HUD 3748.510
20 Perkins to Forbes, Aug. 3, 1903. Ibid.
21 Forbes to Perkins, Dec. 6 , 1906. Ibid.
32
22 Accounts and reports for the Riverside Associates. HRA
Financial Records. HUD 3748.728
23 HRA General Folder. HUD 3748
24 E. W. Forbes: Correspondence of the HRA. HUG 4401.12
25 Lowell Papers, 1909-1914, folder 851. UAI.5.160
26 Lowell Papers, 1925-1928, folder 337. UAI.5.160
27 Letter dated June 27, 1910. EWF: Correspondence of HRA.
HUG 4401.12
28 Coolidge to Lowell, April 30, 1912. Lowell Papers, 1909-
1914, folder 851. UAI.5.160
29 Coolidge to Lowell, May 20, 1912. Ibid.
30 Lowell Papers, 1909-1914, folder 375. UAI.5.160. See
deed 3773-39, March 31, 1913, assignment of rent charge to
City of Cambridge.
31 Letter dated April 30, 1914. Lowell Papers, 1909-1914,
folder 366. UAI.5.160
32 Lowell to Perkins, June 2, 1914. Lowell Papers, 1909-
1914, folder 1270. UAI. 5. 160
33 April 8, 1918. Lowell Papers, 1917-1919, folder 1760.
UAI. 5. 160
34 Ibid.
35 C. F. Adams to Lowell, September 16, 1918. Lowell Papers,
1917-1919, folder 414. UAI.5.160
36 Sept. 25, 1918. EWF:Correspondence of the HRA. HUG
4401.12
37 Coolidge Letter, September 19, 1918. Lowell Papers, 1917-
1919, folder 456. UAI.5.160
38 For a list of lots purchased those years, see UAI.5.160
Lowell Papers, 1928-1930, folder 192.
39 Sherrard Billings to Lowell, November 22, 1921. Lowell
Papers, 1919-1922, folder 981. UAI. 5. 160
1
INF
19/28
a
Harvard's "Constructed Utopia" and the Culture of Deception: The Expansion toward the
Charles River, 1902-1932
Author(s): BENJAMIN J. SACKS
Source: The New England Quarterly, Vol. 84, No. 2 (June 2011), pp. 286-317
Published by: The New England Quarterly, Inc.
Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/23054804
Accessed: 22-05-2017 15:38 UTC
Note: See also-
1. Bunting, B. Harvard : An Architectural History.
Cambridge Harvard U. P., 1985. Pp. 123f.
2. Shand-Tucci, D. Harvard University: An Architectural
Tour Princeton: Princeton U.P., 2001.
5/26/2017
XFINITY Connect
Re: "Constructed Utopias"
Benjamin J. Sacks
12:45 PM
To Ronald Epp
Dear Dr Epp,
Thank you so much for getting in touch with me. I am thrilled to know that at least one person has read the article; one
never knows once they have been published and squirreled away into a journal. I am afraid I have not yet your new book,
although I am aware of it. I have always held a soft spot for New England history and geography (I'm a New Hampshire
native myself).
I want to thank you, as well, for bringing this error to my attention, and I must assume full responsibility for it. I am sorry
too that Dr Lowe never reached out to me. I remember his article well; it was, indeed, one of the very few substantive,
scholarly efforts to tease out what happened at tum-of-the-century Harvard. I hope that the mistake did not cause him
too much distress - that would have certainly never been my intention!
I don't know what the process to make a revision would be for an academic journal, but I'll contact the New England
Quarterly in the coming days and see what they can do. At worst, if I ever return to the subject for a book-length work,
I'd certainly correct the mistake.
Thank you again,
My very best,
Benjamin
Benjamin J Sacks MA FRGS (mobile)
From: Ronald Epp
Sent: Wednesday, May 24, 2017 12:09
Subject: "Constructed Utopias"
To: Benjamin J. Sacks
Dear Mr. Sacks:
I
have just completed a careful reading of your 2011 NEQ article on the Charles River expansion
undertaken by Harvard. For more than a decade this expansion has been of great interest to me
since the subject of my 2016 Creating Acadia National Park: The Biography of George Bucknam Dorr
played a role, as you have noted on page 293 and again on 296. For more about this book,
google "Epp and Acadia."
I
have learned much about the property acquisition process from your pioneering work but I would
be remiss if I didn't make you aware of an error derived from your references to Charles U. Lowe's
"The Forbes Story." I communicated with Dr. Lowe first in September 2007 and again in April 2010
pointing out that Dorr's middle name was not as stated in the article and that Dorr was not the Treasurer
of Harvard, though his maternal grandfather-Thomas Wren Ward-had been from 1830-1842. Dr. Lowe
wrote to me that he was "humiliated by your corrections and wish that there was a way to correct the essay"
(which was not my intention, to be sure). Since his death in 2012 this resource persists. I brought this matter to
your attention out of respect for the quality of your scholarship.
Most cordially,
Ronald
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
532 Sassafras Dr.
Lebanon, PA 17042
717-272-0801
eppster2@comcast.net
CULTURAL LANDSCAPE REPORT
THE ESPLANADE
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS
Prepared for
The Esplanade Association
10 Derne Street
Boston, Ma 02114
Prepared by
Shary Page Berg FASLA
11 Perry Street
Cambridge, MA 02139
January 2007
http://www.esplanadeassociation.org/park/history.html
CONTENTS
Introduction
1
PART I: HISTORICAL OVERVIEW
1.
Early History (to 1893)
4
Shaping the Land
Beacon Hill Flat
Back Bay
Charlesgate/Bay State Road
Charlesbank/West End
2.
Charles River Basin (1893-1928)
11
Charles Eliot's Vision for the Lower Basin
The Charles River Dam
The Boston Esplanade
3.
Redesigning the Esplanade (1928-1950)
20
Arthur Shurcliff's Vision: 1929 Plan
Refining the Design
4.
Storrow Drive and Beyond (1950-present)
30
Construction of Storrow Drive
Changes to Parkland
Late Twentieth Century
PART II: EXISTING CONDITIONS AND ANALYSIS
5.
Charlesbank
37
Background
General Landscape Character
Lock Area
Playground/Wading Pool Area
Lee Pool Area
Ballfields Area
6.
Back Bay
51
Background
General Landscape Character
Boating Area
Hatch Shell Area
Back Bay Area
Lagoons
3
7.
Charlesgate/Upper Park
73
Background
General Landscape Character
Charlesgate Area
Linear Park
8.
Summary of Findings
84
Overview/Landscape Principles
Character Defining Features
Next Steps
BIBLIOGRAPHY
90
APPENDIX A - Historic Resources
92
APPENDIX B - Planting Lists
100
Trestees of Reservations: Castle Hill Archives
2/27/08
Short Box List for Appleton Papers
Box 1-A
Appleton Genealogy, English Ancestry
Box 1-B
Appleton Genealogical Material
Box 1-C
Misc. notes, correspondence and printed matter re early Appleton family
members and collateral branches of family.
Box 1-D
Papers of General James Appleton (1785-1862) and his son Daniel Fuller
Appleton (1826-1904)
Box 1-E
Papers of the children of Gen. James Appleton
Box 1-F
Misc. Papers and genealogy of the Randolph family
Box 1-G
Papers of the Lanier and Egleston families (maternal lines of Appleton
family)
Box 2
School papers of Francis Randall Appleton, Sr. (1854-1929)
Boxes 3-5
Material related to Francis Randall Appleton, Sr. at Harvard College,
Class of 1875.
Box 6
Personal papers of Francis Randall Appleton, Sr. See file 19, page19,
Box 7
Combined personal and business papers of FRA, Sr., from 1916 until his
death in 1929.
Box 8
Misc. Papers of the children and granddaughters of Daniel Fuller Appleton
A)
Files 1 - 20. Speeches of Francis Randall Appleton, Sr. (1854-1929
B)
Files 21-37. - Miscellaneous papers of James Waldingfield Appleton
(1867-1942)
C)
Files 38-41. - Miscellaneous personal papers of Randolph Morgan ("Budd")
Appleton (1862-1940), brother of Francis Randall Appleton, Sr.
D)
Files 42. Miscellaneous personal papers of Ruth Appleton Tuckerman
(1857-1929), sister of Francis Randall Appleton, Sr.
E)
Files 43. Miscellaneous personal papers of Ruth Appleton Wendell (1891-
1943), daughter of Francis Randall Appleton, Sr.
F)
Files 44. Miscellaneous personal papers of Alice Appleton Hay (1894-1943),
daughter of Francis Randall Appleton, Sr.
Appleton Papers.
Box 6 :
File 13 Correspondence to FRA, Sr. Primarily New York Farmers Association
and American Relief for France (1916), ca. 1891-1927
File 14 Ephemera and printed matter, Porcellian Club Dinner of 1891
File 15 Application, Society of Colonial Wars, ca
File 16 Meadow Brook Club (hunt club, Long Island, NY), mortgage w/ FRA as
a trustee (and founding member), 1894.
File 17 Menu, banquet given to Oxford and Cambridge Track Athletic Teams in
NYC in 1901
File 18 Correspondence re: "Gate at Harvard in Memory of Rev. Joseph
McKean, founder of the Porcellian Club. File dates 1901-2.
File 19
Correspondence re: Cambridge Parkway (1904-1912). A cooperative
venture of Harvard classmates and associates, who purchased land along
the Charles River for the benefit of improving the outlying areas around
Harvard for building a boulevard approach to Harvard Yard in
cooperation with City of Cambridge. Includes canceled checks.
File 20 Correspondence re: Professional organizations and associations.
[Notc: See also Box 7,file 6 : Harvan Riverside Trust.]
File
21 Oversize certificates, re: Metropolitan Museum (NYC), and South
Carolina
File 22 Correspondence re: Harvard College Teachers Endowment Fund
File 23 Correspondence from FRA, Jr to FRA, Sr and FLA (his mother and
father), 1905-8
File 24
Correspondence to FRA, Sr and FLA from FRA, Jr and Charles Lanier
Appleton during tour of France, via Liverpool. As young men,
following their graduations from Harvard. Includes a photograph of the
brothers taken in France. 1906-7
File 25 Correspondence re: "New House" at 26 Eat 37th St., NYC (1907)
File 26 Re: Loan to Samuel E. Hall, 1908-13
File 27 Legal document re: assignment of patent to J.F. Ross and FRA, Sr. for
process for partially molded concrete (1909)
Appleton Farms, Family Papers
19
Trustees of Reservation
Easte Hill.
2/27/08.
TTOR Appleton Papers. Notss
62 boxes.
Francis Kandall Appleton Sr. (1854-1929)
Howard Class of 1875.
Box 2, ,3-5, 6,7,25,
47 Thayer Hall
Porcellian Club
21 Haward Hol workhy U.Gew Hall
B3.F.1
telle fr. Nathanappleton, 10 Commonader
Are 6/21/74 to
"Dea Broth Senter,
Accq. of breella Clch
B3f3 Cataloger it the Alple Chapte, AKE
Clas of 77.
No listy to 6BD use 74.
B3.844 Twenty plas letter of accept /regret
for Class Day 1875.
B 4.F.5 1871 Sept. Expense Book
B4.F7. Books
History 2 Livy Fundets 2 Chem
Horace Xeopler Levy
Rabinz
haled Gron
Hist And gen
Philosic
$ 678 Plato
Cocero
Ings
hatrait
in Overett
Q
TOR
Appleton
B5.fl Exams: Tear Pepers.
B5.FZ tyan Question.
Junior Paper - (copied)re rack list
Melon. Harvad Culey Clas of 1874.
Secretary's Report # / (1874).
B5.flo. Hastz-Ruday Club. 1874.
Porr not list as Member or Officer
C 50 Nuber in dan
I forward Directory fa 1873-74.
GBD listed.
The Hagenta Vol. 3 (6/19/74), # 10.
$ Exam 1874.
Committees Appt. by the Board of Overee
1904.
Regulation of in Fourty of Homes College
35fill
Adopted 1871.
Ariginal of Room, 28 July 1871.
Iu Febs. 1577, FRA is Matriculated.
47 They Hall. for 4 years
35 f(3 easy. n.d. "My Life".
THE CAMBRIDGE TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1902
CAMBRIDGE-TRIBUNE
dreamstime masclea and tange Are the
the
development
of
higher
TD
children who have to stay the city
any alderen is wast and need)
Subscription for One Year
Perhaps the ideal vacation school will
Single Copy
500's
be found when these letter. too team be
e
By wall from of postage
takes late-the country: when . city like
a
THE - THINKS to
Cambridge ran lease a large tract of
b
morning Street
field and woodland not too far away.
b
Coops for
/
ullies - Friday
can take all children but the youngers
ADDRESS all number and wake checks
from the city streets during July and
payable $ THE CANDRIDGE THINGS
Rowaun , GAMWELL and J. Les -
August, returning them. If necessary,
p
and /
each Sunday, for home care and rells
a
tous Instruction: can take them in al
Telephone Cambine
classes of a store or two on walks and
at
Place - CARWEN CLASSIC
teaching without books ard on the spot.
of
the radiments of such sciences - but
m
SATURDAY, JULY is -
any. sociogy and geology, such arts
It
as swimming and first old to the In
in
THE PROPOSED BOULEVARD.
Jures, and such duties as public clean-
.
liness and ridiness self-restraint and
Harvard graduates have now taken
respect for the property and comfort of
in hand the task of raising $60,000 to
others
ward the expense of the proposed wid
Such lessons, la their relation to
ening of DeWolfe street as an Induce
daily life. can be better thught in the
ment to the city to approve the plan and
natural tife of a country home than in
undertake the work. The plan was sug
the artificial life of a schoolroom, and
gested by Harvard men to provide
such summer school might be a favor
dignified and handsome approach to the
ite with every child and a power for
university grounds and It is often spek
good In the community. It would cost
en of as the Harvard parkway. But It
money. but # would return a hundred
Is by no means the university slose
cents on the dollar.
that would be benefited by its construe-
Lion. The city would share in no small
degree the benefit of the ornamentation
of the district traversed, and the adven-
tages of the connection of the riverway
and Massachusetts avenue.
The city is spending a hundred thou
sand dollars a year for the construction
of . beautiful bonlevard from the rest
dential district of Boston to the centre
of Cambridge as ture to ead-pleasure
travel to come this way, and to buy.
build and settle here. What that bonie
vard win he In methetic and material
value to the city may even now be un-
derstood by a glahee at the beginnings
near Harvard bridge. The roadbed is
rapidly approaching readiness for trav
et from that point to near Harvard
square. Just beyond lies Massachusetts
avenue, the outlet to the northern see
tion of the city. From Garden street to
Porter square It is the handsomest
mile of readway In Cambridge, but
there in no adequate connection between
the two boulevards.
It is true that Baylaton street was
widened for that purpose. but It will
never he much used in that way. In
the first place, the river parkway
swings away from Maspachusetts are
aus at DeWolfe street, and to follow It
around to Boylatun street, and so to
Harvard require. would be a waste of
time In the second place. to save mon
ey. the street was widened on the WTOUK
side and its entrance to Harvard square
Is on of the most dangerous crossings
in the city for driver. bleyelist or pedes
Irian. In the third place It is distinctly
a business street. with delivery wagons
loading and unloading by the sidewalks
all the time. and so in undestrable for
pleasure travel either by wheel or
afent.
Two of there reasons do not apply to
DeWolf* street. which furnishra the
shortest and most direct rosnection be
tween the riverway and Massachusetts
avenue. and is a residential street. The
third an be avaided by the lesson of PX.
perience. The laying out of a boule
varil here on wisely chown Haes will be
a great benefit to the city.
VACATION SCHOOLS.
A correspondent of the Bonton Trans
tript writes strongly against varation
schools as at present conducted. arging
that children who have been grown in
wheelhouses for nine months of the
year should have at least three months
is the open air. and that immature
minds which have been entivated to
their fullent extent for three-fourths of
the year should He follow for the re
mainder. or at least should be given a
rotation of crops, in support of his ar
gument, he states that children who are
Indured at the opening of the term to go
to school If left to their own Inclination
give It up as soon as the first enthusi
usm wears off. Nature rebels Against .
never-varying restine. and the children
have to be foreed to continue going each
day. or the record of attendance be
comes se bad as to cast discredit on the
windom of the plan. To such an extent
is this true that school reminities have
adopted rules that no child can be en
rolled at the beginning of the term WE
less the parents agree to compel It to at
land to the end, whether the child en
Jeys the work or not.
This is an unjust and an unwise poll-
cy. Varation schools like evening
schools. should be entirely voluntary
The pupil of the latter is old enough to
attend It for a purpose, and to continue
or to stop with good reason. The pu
pll of the former is not, as rule, old
enough to be troubled with purposes or
reasons, and the temptation to parents
whose day is filled with hard work. to
get rid of the care of them for half the
day is great. The record of attendance
might not show so well If children were
allowed to drop out when the contine
meat became distasteful, but It would
be more beneat If It showed exactly
how much of study is destred by chil
drea during the hot months of number
Children whose parents - take them
to the country are not hodied up at Iss
sons during that thank but
lodse In the Belds like to