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

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Harvard University-G. B. Dorr's Teachers & Education
Harvard University:
G.B.Dorr's Teachers/Education.
CAME Educid 4810.465 vol. 1877 no d
12/100
711
HARVARD
SEEF 26
LIBRARY
EXAMINATION PAPERS.
CTA
COLLECTED AND ARRANGED
R. F. LEIGHTON, A.M.,
MASTER MELROSE HIGH SCHOOL.
Note: Published three years after
SIXTH EDITION.
Dorr's graduatin, this resource
gives a clear idea of many of
the standards that would have
BOSTON :
applied in 1870 when he
GINN AND HEATH.
was admitted to the class of
1877.
1874.
due a 5518,8.5
0.465(1877)
HARVARD COLLEGE
SEE 26 1907
LIBRARY.
PREFACE.
Prof E. Emerton
THE following questions make a complete set of the
Examination Papers (except on the subject of Geometry)
which have been used for admission to Harvard College
Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1873,
since 1860. No papers on Geometry are given previous
BY R. F. LEIGHTON,
to 1866, as the requisites for admission to that department
a
the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
were changed in that year. The papers on Trigonometry
previous to 1871 are for examination for advanced stand-
ing ; since then, for admission to Course II.
These papers will furnish an excellent series of ques-
tions on Modern, Physical, and Ancient Geography Gre-
cian and Roman History; Arithmetic and Algebra; Plane
and Solid Geometry; Logarithms and Trigonometry; Latin
and Greek Grammar and Composition; Physics and Me-
chanics. They have been collected and published in this
form for the convenience of teachers and classes in high
schools, and especially for pupils preparing for college.
The papers for admission used hereafter, at the annual
examinations in June and September, will be added every
year to this volume.
MELROSE, Mass., March, 1873.
UNIVERSITY PRESS: WELCH, BIGELOW, & Co.,
CAMBRIDGE.
no y
CONTENTS.
HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY
3
NOTE.
MODERN AND PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY.
22, 196, 216, 251, 258, 282, 308
GREEK COMPOSITION
27, 197, 219, 246, 259, 283
GREEK GRAMMAR
40, 199, 219, 245, 260, 284, 311
GREEK PROSE
197, 220, 247, 261, 285, 312
IN the Harvard University Catalogue, published by C. W.
GREEK POETRY
198, 222, 263, 287, 315
Sever, Cambridge, a full collection of examination papers may
LATIN COMPOSITION
63, 201, 223, 238, 265, 289, 317
LATIN GRAMMAR
85, 202, 224, 237, 265, 289, 318
be found, comprising not only the papers set for Admission to
LATIN
203 - 207, 225, 228, 239
College, but also nearly all the final examination papers given
FRENCH
109, 252, 279, 303, 329
GERMAN
304, 330
in the several Courses of Instruction in the College, the papers
ARITHMETIC
111, 208, 229, 248, 272, 297, 323
given in the Divinity, Law, and Medical Schools, those set for
ALGEBRA
134, 209, 230, 249, 273, 298, 324
ADVANCED ALGEBRA
157, 210, 256, 274, 299, 325
Admission to the Lawrence Scientific School, and those used at
PLANE GEOMETRY
162, 211, 214, 232, 250, 274, 300, 326
SÓLID GEOMETRY
the Preliminary Examinations for Women. These make about
172, 212, 232, 255, 275, 300, 326
ANALYTIC GEOMETRY
176, 213, 233, 254, 276, 301, 327
160 pages of close type each year. The price of the Catalogue
LOGARITHMS AND TRIGONOMETRY
178, 208, 229, 302
PHYSICS
188, 307, 331, 332
is, in paper 50 cts., in cloth 75 cts.
CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
306, 331
PHYSICS AND ASTRONOMY
307,332
MECHANICS
190
ANCIENT HISTORY AND GEOGRAPHY
195, 216, 257, 281, 308
ENGLISH COMPOSITION
215, 235, 278, 302, 329
PLANE TRIGONOMETRY
234, 253, 277, 328
BOTANY
279, 307, 332
APPENDIX.
REQUISITES FOR ADMISSION TO HARVARD COLLEGE
335
APPENDIX.
HARVARD COLLEGE,
CAMBRIDGE, Mass.,
1876-77.
ACADEMIC YEAR.
The Academic Year begins on the Thursday following the last
Wednesday in September, and ends on the last Wednesday in June.
There is a recess of two weeks, beginning on the day before Christ-
mas.
REQUISITIONS FOR ADMISSION.
Candidates for admission to College in 1877 must be examined in one of the two following
Courses of Study, each embracing sixteen subjects.
COURSE I.
1. Latin Grammar (including Prosody).
2. Latin Composition and Latin at sight. This will include the
translation at sight of some passage in prose not included in the fol-
lowing requisitions.
3. Caesar, Sallust, and Ovid. Caesar, Gallic War, Books I. - IV. ;
Sallust, Catiline ; Ovid, four thousand lines.
4. Cicero and Virgil. Cicero, eight orations and the Cato Major
Virgil, Eclogues, and the Aeneid, Books I. - VI.
5. Greek Grammar (including metres).
6. Greek Composition (with the accents).
7. Greek Prose. Goodwin and Allen's Greek Reader; or Xeno-
phon's Anabasis, Books I.-IV. - and the seventh book of Herodotus.
8. Greek Poetry. Homer's Iliad, Books I.-III., - omitting the cata-
logue of ships.
APPENDIX.
337
336
APPENDIX.
The following books will serve to indicate the nature and extent of
9. Arithmetic (including the metric system of weights and meas-.
this requisition
ures, and the use and rudiments of the theory of logarithms). The
In Botany, Gray's How Plants Grow.
examples requiring the use of logarithms at the examination will be
In Physics, Balfour Stewart's Primer of Physics.
adapted to a four-place table.
In Chemistry, Roscoe's Primer of Chemistry.
10. Algebra (through quadratic equations).
11. Plane Geometry (as much as is contained in the first thirteen
In Astronomy, Rolfe and Gillet's Handbook of the Stars (first 124
pages).
chapters of Peirce's Geometry).
Candidates who offer Botany will be required to give evidence that
12. Ancient History and Geography. Greek History to the death
they can analyze simple specimens ; and those who offer Physics or
of Alexander ; Roman History to. the death of Commodus. Smith's
Chemistry, that they can perform simple experiments like those de+
scribed in the Primers referred to above.
smaller histories of Greece and Rome will serve to indicate the amount
of knowledge demanded in history.
COURSE II.
13. Modern and Physical Geography. The following works will
serve to indicate the amount of knowledge demanded in this subject
1. Latin Grammar (including Prosody).
in modern geography, Guyot's Common School Geography, or Miss
2. Latin Authors. Caesar, Gallic War, Books I. and II. Cicero,
Hall's Our World, No. 2 ; in physical geography, Guyot's Physical
six orations and the Cato Major; Virgil, Aeneid, Books I. 1 VI
Geography, Parts II. and III., or Warren's Physical Geography, the
3. Greek Grammar (including metres).
first forty-nine pages.
4. Greek Authors. Goodwin and Allen's Greek Reader, first 111
14. English Composition. Each candidate will be required to write
pages, or Xenophon's Anabasis, Books I. - IV. Homer's Iliad, Books
a short piece of English, correct in spelling, punctuation, grammar,
I. and II., omitting the catalogue of ships.
division by paragraphs, and expression. The subject for 1877 will be
5. Arithmetic. This requisition is the same as No. 9 of Course I.
taken from one of the following works: Shakspere's Henry V., Julius
6. Elementary Algebra. This requisition is the same as No. 10 of
Caesar, or the Merchant of Venice.; Irving's Sketch Book; Scott
Course I.
Talisman or Marmion.
7. Advanced Algebra. This subject, with the preceding, is regarded
15. French or German. The translation at sight of easy French
as embracing as much Algebra as is contained in the advanced text-
prose, or of easy German prose if the candidate prefer to offer German
books, such as the larger Algebras of Todhunter, Loomis, Greenleaf,
Proficiency in elementary grammar, a good pronunciation, or facility
etc.
in speaking, will be accepted as an offset for some deficiency in trans-
8. Plane Geometry. This requisition is the same as No. 11 of
lation. There will be no required examination in pronunciation, but
Course I.
it is recommended that attention be given to pronunciation from the
9. Solid Geometry (as much as is contained in Peirce's Geometry).
outset. Candidates who offer German in place of French will be re
10. Plane Trigonometry (by the Analytic Method as much as is con-
quired to study French in place of German during the Freshman year
tained in the first six chapters of Peirce's Trigonometry, or in the large
16. Physical Science. One of the three following subjects, the BE
print of the first eight chapters of Chauvenet's Trigonometry).
lection of the subject being left to the candidate
11, The Elements of Plane Analytic Geometry (as much as is contained
in Peck's Analytie Geometry, pages -151, omitting Artièles 40-43
1. Elementary Botany.
54, 57-61, 72, 74- and the more difficult problems)
2. Rudiments of Physics and of Chemistry.
12-16. These requisitions are the same as Nos. 12-16 of Course I.
3. Rudiments of Physics and of Descriptive Astronomy.
APPENDIX.
339
338
APPENDIX.
No particular text-book in Grammar is required but either Allen's
A principal aim in providing these examinations is to encourage
or Harkness's Latin Grammar, and either Goodwin's or Hadley's Ele-
teachers to carry the studies of their brighter and more diligent pupils
mentary Greek Grammar, will serve to indicate the nature and amount
beyond the bare requisitions for admission, in whatever direction taste
of the grammatical knowledge demanded.
or opportunity may suggest. Full employment may thus be secured
In Latin the following pronunciation is recommended as in
for the most capable student until he is thought mature enough to
father, à the same sound but shorter e like é in fête, e as in set i as
enter College, while his greater progress in school will make his Col-
in machine, r as in sit; as in hole, 8 as in nor as in rude, as in
lege course more profitable by enabling him to take up his studies
put j like y in year, c and g like Greek K and y.
is
at a more advanced stage, or to give more time to the studies of his
Instructors are requested to teach their pupils in pronouncing Greek
choice. It will be seen that a student may anticipate the whole work
to use the Greek accents, and to give (for example) a the sound of a in
of the Freshman year, and still remain four years in College.
father, n that of a in fate, & that of i in machine, etc.
It is earnestly recommended that the requisitions in Latin and Greek
THE CLASSICS.
Authors be accurately complied with real equivalents, however,
will be accepted, as, for example, Caesar's Gallic War, Books V. and
Candidates who present themselves upon Course I. may offer them-
VI., in place of Sallust's Catiline two additional orations of Cicero
selves for examination upon one or both of the following classical
in place of the Cato Major; the seventh book of the Aeneid in place
courses
of the Eclogues the last five books of the Aeneid in place of Ovid.
(1) Latin.
Candidates who enter College on Course II. substitute elective stud-
Livy, two books.
ies, amounting to four exercises a week, either in Mathematics or in
Horace, Odes and Epodes.
some other subject, for the Mathematics of the Freshman year.
The translation at sight of a passage from the philosophical works
No partial substitutions or interchanges between Courses I. and II.
of Cicero.
will be allowed, but candidates can present themselves on both courses,
The retranslation of the English of a similar passage into Latin.
or on one course with additional subjects belonging to the other.
(2) Greek.
PRELIMINARY EXAMINATION.
Plato, Apology and Crito.
Candidates for admission to the Freshman Class are allowed to
Homer, Iliad, Books IV. -VIII., or Odyssey, Books IV., IX.-XII.
divide the examination into two examinations separated by an inter
Euripides, Alcestis ; or Homer, Odyssey, Books V.-VII.
val of not less than an academic year. No candidate, however, will
The translation at sight of a passage from Xenophon.
did
be admitted to examination on a part of any subject, and no account
Translation from English into Greek.
will be made of, nor certificate be given for, the preliminary examina-
Candidates who pass with credit these examinations in addition to
tion, unless the candidate has passed satisfactorily in at least five sub
the classical examinations of Course I. above will be placed in ad-
jects.
vanced sections in Latin or Greek, or in elective sections in Latin or
OPTIONAL EXAMINATIONS.
Greek, or in other subjects, at their option, in place of the Freshman
The optional examinations will be held at the time of the examina
studies thus anticipated. All those who hope to attain distinction in
tions for admission in September those in Mathematics will also be
classical studies are strongly advised to pass these examinations on
held at the admission examinations in June.
entering, with the view of taking advanced courses in the Classics.
310
APPENDIX.
APPENDIX.
341
MATHEMATICS.
1. In the studies required for admission to the Freshman Class.
Candidates who present themselves upon Course I. are at liberty to
2. In all the required studies already pursued by the class for
offer/themselves for examination also upon subjects 7, 9, and 10, of
which he is offered and in as many elective studies as he would
Course II. and, upon passing such examination with credit, they
have pursued if he had entered at the beginning of the course.
will be admitted to an advanced section in Mathematics.
All candidates for admission to advanced standing must be exam-
Candidates who anticipate all the Freshman Mathematics will be
ined either in June or in September, at the times of the regular ex-
allowed to take elective studies in their place.
aminations for admission to the Freshman Class, and in conformity
Candidates who desire to attain special distinction in Mathematics
with the following rules
or Physics are advised to present themselves upon the advanced
1. All candidates for admission to advanced standing must first be
Mathematical subjects of Course II. in addition to the requisitions
examined for admission to the Freshman Class; for this examination
of Course I.
and also for examination on the studies of the Freshman year, they
PHYSICS.
may offer themselves either in June or in September.
Candidates who pass a satisfactory examination at admission upon
2. The examination on the studies of the Sophomore and Junior
the course in Physics of the Freshman year may substitute for that
years is held only in September, at the time of the regular examination
course an elective study.
for admission to the Freshman Class.
GERMAN.
In the case of graduates of other colleges who seek admission to
Candidates for admission who present French may offer themselves
Harvard College, the examination will be directed to ascertaining
for examination also in German Grammar and the translation of sim-
from their acquired powers and attainments their fitness to join the
ple German prose upon passing such examination with credit they
class for which they offer themselves, a minute acquaintance with all
will be allowed to substitute some elective course or courses in place
the ground they have previously gone over not being essential. Such
of the Freshman course in German.
candidates should bring evidence of their standing at the colleges
where they received their degree.
PRESCRIBED STUDIES OF THE SOPHOMORE AND JUNIOR YEARS.
Candidates for admission to the Freshman Class who are prepared
TIMES OF EXAMINATION.
to pass a creditable examination upon any of the prescribed studies
of the Sophomore and Junior years may pass such examination at
Two régular examinations for admission to the Freshman Class
the beginning of the Freshman Year, instead of at the beginning
are held each year, one at the beginning of the summer vacation, and
of the year in which the study is pursued, and thereby relieve them-
the other at the beginning of the academic year in the autumn.
selves from attendance at the exercises in that study in College.
In 1877 the first examination will take place on Thursday, Friday,
and Saturday, June 28, 29, and 30 and the second examination on
of
be
hi
ADVANCED STANDING.
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, September 28, and 29. 10 Each
-he
iti
Cobata
dorars
examination will begin at precisely '8 o'clock, A. M., on Thursday)
30
Candidates may be admitted to advanced standing as late as the
The candidates will assemble in Harvard Hall Attendance on the
beginning of the Senior year, provided they present themselves for
three days is required.
examination as directed below. The candidate for admission to ad.
The first examination will be held also in Cincinnati and candi-
vanced standing must appear on examination to be well versed in the
dates who desire to be examined there must send their names to the
following studies:
Secretary before June 15. Persons not intending to enter College
342
APPENDIX.
APPENDIX.
343
may pass the Cincinnati examination on payment of a fee of ten
ANTICIPATION OF PRESCRIBED STUDIES.
dollars. Candidates in Cincinnati will assemble at 8 A. M., on Thurs-
As the prescribed studies of the Sophomore and Junior years are
day, June 28, in some place to be announced in the daily papers of
of an elementary character, students who wish to be relieved from
that city.
attendance at College exercises in one or more of them will be so
No person will be examined for admission to College at any other time
excused, if they pass a satisfactory examination in such study or
than those above specified.
studies at the time of their examination for admission, or at the
beginning of the year in which the study is pursued in College.
Preparation for such examination can often be made while the stu-
ADMISSION WITHOUT MATRICULATION.
dent is preparing for College, or in the long vacation, and time may
The elective courses of study are open to persons not less than twenty-
be thus gained for higher courses of study.
one years of age, who satisfy the Faculty, without passing the usual
For information concerning the College not contained in this cir-
examination for admission, that they are fitted for the courses they
cular the Catalogue should be consulted.
select. They will receive no degree; but at the end of each academic
The College itself no longer issues an annual catalogue. "The
year they will receive a certificate of proficiency in those courses
Harvard University Catalogue" (price in cloth, 75 cents in paper,
which they pursue during the year, and in which they attain not less
50 cents) is published by MR. CHARLES W. SEVER, bookseller, Cam-
than seventy-five per cent.
bridge, Mass., to whom orders for it may be addressed.
Persons who wish to avail themselves of this provision must pre-
Circulars giving information about the professional schools of the
sent themselves at Harvard Hall, September 27, 1877, at 10 A. M.,
University, the Scientific School, and the Bussey Institution, may
with the necessary testimonials as to age, character, and fitness to
be obtained on application to J. W. HARRIS, Secretary, Cambridge,
M
Mass.
attend the courses they wish to pursue.
TESTIMONIALS AND BOND.
All candidates for admission are required, at the time of the final
examination for admission to the Freshman Class, to produce certifi-
cates of good moral character ; and students from other colleges are
required to bring certificates from those colleges of honorable dis-
mission.
Every candidate, if admitted, must furnish to the Bursar a bond
for four hundred dollars, executed by two bondsmen, one of them a
citizen of Massachusetts, as security for the payment of College dues.
If the student prefer, however, he may in place of the bond make
a deposit with the Bursar for the same purpose. A similar bond for
two hundred dollars, or a deposit, will be required of unmatriculated
students.
Coll.
Sci.
Grad.
Div.
Law
Med.
Den.
Vet.
Bus.
Hon.
B 3391
Dorr, George Bucknam
74-g hon
BORN
DIED
COLLEGE Dec, SCIENTIFIC 1853, GRADUATE Boston, DIVINITY mass LAW MEDICAL August DENTAL VETERINARY 1944 at BUSSEY Bar Karliar Hon 8/44 maine
29 at
1888-89
1870-771
1889-90
per clipping
B18.
4871-722
1890-91
1872-733
1873-744
AB 1874
SB
AM a
STB
LLB
MD
DMD
MDV
BAS
A.M. 1923
OCCUPATION
S. M.(Hon.) Univ. Maine 1924
p 3/29
Gov - Lit
DATE
RESIDENCE
DATE
BUSINESS ADDRESS
Ball '36
Bar Harbor. maine
1033/09
Somerset 42 Beacon St,
19
1913+
18 to walth uses
see 7/34
Boston mass
H.F.C. 5/40
Old Farm
Bar- Harbor, maine
Son of
Charles Hagen Dorr
and
mary Gray PATENTED Ward. MAY 25, 1897
LIBRARY BUREAU D2880,
[1874]
Hawaii Collage Class of 1874. Fiftie th Anniversary 1924]
[87]
Bennett, a- writer and translator of note. Three sons and
a daughter have been born to them: all are married, and
there are five grandchildren. The family home is at I2
Dane Street, Jamaica Plain, Boston, with a summer place,
The Moorings, Ogunquit, Maine.
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR was born in Jamaica Plain, Bos-
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR
ton, December 29, 1853, son of Charles Hazen and Mary
Gray (Ward) Dorr, and fifth in descent from Edward Dorr,
who came to Massachusetts Bay Colony and settled in Rox-
bury about 1660. Dorr prepared for college in Mr. Dix-
well's school.
After graduation Dorr lived for four years in Europe,
spending some of the time in travel. Returning to the
United States in 1878 he entered the Harvard Graduate
School, and for three years read philosophy, history, and
general literature. He served as chairman of the Visiting
Committee on Philosophy, which with the help of President
Eliot and the Faculty of the Department raised a fund for
the building of Emerson Hall. Later he again travelled in
Europe, and in Egypt and the Nearer East. He became in-
JAMES DWIGHT
1917
terested in the opening fields of mental suggestion, thought
transference and psychical research, working on the latter
subject in conjunction with Professor William James and
the English Psychical Research Society, which later pub-
lished a volume on his work. He travelled in the West
through the wilder portions, and took up the study of trees
and landscape planting: he founded the Mount Desert Nur-
series at Bar Harbor, and joined with President Eliot and
Bishop William Lawrence in establishing the Hancock
County, Maine, Trustees of Public Reservations. In 1916,
on Mount Desert Island, in territory once a portion of the
French Province of Acadia, Dorr founded Lafayette Na-
tional Park, the first in the East or bordering the sea, and
LOUIS
DYER
*1908
Nard College class of 1874. Effeenth Report. 1934]
Sixtieth
[14]
[15]
Portugal, and in that proscription concurs my good friend
SO much of the Island's scenically important lands had been
our doctor who lives next door. I intend, however, to rebel
acquired and placed in public reservation with the Trustees
and revolt."
that jealousy arose, and a bill was introduced in the Maine
Legislature, meeting in January, 1913, to take away their
DORR writes from Bar Harbor: My life these last half
charter and return their holdings to taxation. This bill I de-
dozen years offers little outstanding of which a tale might be
feated, but, after the hearing on it was over, returning to
told. One lives more interiorly and less actively as the years
Boston I went to President Eliot and told him what had hap-
go by.
pened, and that, without funds to develop or protect the
But the story of the Acadia National Park, in brief out-
lands we held, the only safe way, I thought, to secure the
line, I will gladly tell. It sprang from a desire I shared with
end we sought would be to get them accepted by the Federal
President Eliot, a friend and neighbor on these shores, to
Government as a national reserve. President Eliot, after a
make safe from disfigurement, and free of access to the public
first characteristic reaction that we could meet and fight the
of the future, a great coastal landscape wherein for a term our
attack as it arose, ended by agreeing, and I went to Wash-
own homes were set. In September, 1901, President Eliot
ington.
"
called a meeting at Seal Harbor of a few people upon whose
What happened at Washington would be too long a
interest in the matter he felt that he could count. The meeting
story. I met with friends and I met with obstacles, but in
was held, an association was formed, and President Eliot be-
the end I accomplished what I set out to do. The eighth of
came its president; I, its vice-president and executive officer.
July, 1916, our lands were proclaimed by President Wilson,
" Nothing further happened for the next half dozen years,
on the recommendation of his Secretary of the Interior,
but in September, 1907, President Eliot came to see me, laid
Franklin K. Lane, to be the Sieur de Monts National Monu-
up in my home after a surgical operation, to make a friendly
ment, named in honor to Pierre de Guast, Sieur de Monts,
visit and to tell me that an old friend of his and of my family,
the founder of Acadia, under a commission given him by
Mrs. Charles D. Homans of Boston, had given our associa-
Henry IV of France to take possession of the land, to colo-
tion its first gift of land, a bold rock-headland looking to the
nize it and Christianize it, laying the foundation for the
south across the sea, with a little mountain lake, sunk in
French Dominion in America. Two years and some months
woods, which lay behind it, the Beehive and the Bowl.
later this Monument was made a National Park by Act of
Encouraged, I told President Eliot that as soon as I got
Congress, first in the least, and unique in coastal situation, and
upon my feet again I would try what I could do to get the
in being created wholly by the gift of citizens. It bears the
dominant and crowning summit of the Island, Cadillac
name Acadia National Park."
Mountain, SO named by the Government on the Park's es-
tablishment in memory of the Island's first private owner,
JOHN FARLOW writes, May 2, 1934: continue to
Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, soldier of Acadia and founder
live at 127 Bay State Road, Boston, in the winter, and since
of Detroit. It is this summit, now widely visited, to which the
1930 have spent the summers in the White Mountains, New
Mountain Road, completed by the Federal Government two
Hampshire. I have not engaged in any business or profes-
years ago, ascends.
sional activities for a number of years, my duties as Librarian
With the help of a friend, I secured the land that fall,
Emeritus of the Boston Medical Library being merely nomi-
and, availing of every opportunity, at the end of four years
nal. The monthly meetings of the Massachusetts Historical
G.B. Dorr's Harvard Years ( 1870-1874): His Teachers
F.E. Anderson, B.A. Chicago 1969, A.M. Harvard 1872
Tutor (1870-72), Asst. Prof. of Greek (1873-78)
F. Bowen. Alford Professorship of Natural Religion, Philosophy, and
Civil Polity (1853-89) Frances Bowen
Ferdinand Bocher. A.M. Professor of Modern Languages (1870-1902)
Francis James Child. Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory. (1851-1876)
C.F. Dunbar. Professor of Political Economy. His appointment marked a new stage in the
teaching of that subject independent of the traditional moral philosophy (as taught
by Bowen). Dean of College Faculty (1871-1900). Dean of Faculty of A & S
(1876-1882)
Arthur Irving Fiske. A.M. 1869. Honors in Greek, Latin, and Ancient History. Tutor.
H.W. Fay
George Anthony Hill. A.B. 1865, A.M. 1870. Tutor (1865-71). Asst. Prof. Physics
(1871-1876)
Henry Howland. A.B. Honors in Greek, Latin, and Ancient History (1969). D. Phil. U. of
Heidelberg (1872). LL.B. Harvard (1878). Tutor (1872-1874). Instructor of
History and Political Economy (1872-1874).
C.L. Jackson. Asst. Prof. of Chemistry. Abroad 1873-75 for research in Germany. Later
Erving Professorship of Chemistry (1894-1912) Authored chemistry chapter in
S.E. Morison's Development.
George Herbert Palmer. Later Alford Professorship (1889-1913) formerly held by F.
Bowen. Successor is Josiah Royce (1914-1916). Authored lead chapter with R.B.
Perry of Morison's Development.
Andrew Preston Peabody. Plummer Professor of Christian Morals, and Preacher to the
University (1860-1881). Acting President of the University (1862).
William Henry Pettee. A.B. 1861. Instructor in Mining (1869-1871),
Asst. Prof. (1871-1875)
E.P. Seaver. A.B. 1864, A.M., LL.B. 1870. Asst. Prof. of Mathematics (1869-1874)
Note: See G.Santayana. Personsand Places: Trade ed. M.I.T.Pess, 1987.
2.
Clement Law Smith. A.B. Haverford, 1860. A.B. Harvard, 1862. Tutor of Latin
(1870-1873), Asst. Prof. (1873-1883), and continued until appointment as Pope
Professor 1901-1904.
John Throwbridge. S.B. 1865, S.D. Physics, 1873, Asst. Prof. (1870-188) and later
Rumford Professorship and Lectureship on the Application of Science to the
Useful Arts (1888-1910)
Charles J. White. A.B. 1859. was appointed a member of the Mathematics department by
presidential fiat "though his mathematical knowledge never went beyond the
point which a man specially interested in classics needed to reach in order to get
a Harvard A.B." (Morison, Development) Asst. Prof. Mathematics. (1872)
Roger Wolcott. A.B. 1870. LL.B. 1874. Tutor in French and History (1870-1871).
Later Governor of Massachusetts.
Sources: The Historical Register of Harvard University 1836-1936. C. 1937.
www.math.harvard.edu/history/officers/officers.txt
See also Harvard University Yearly Returns; Annual Scales; General Scales;
Yearly Returns: Examinations and Aggregates; and Absences and Tardiness at
Recitations and Lectures-all for 1870-1874.
This is not a complete list since faculty did not always sign their grade reports
to the administration.
September 9, 2007
BIB[AND (francis james schild[1,1016,2,3,4,6,3,3,5,100]AMC[1,5080,4,2])](11-1)
Page 1 of 1
Records 11 through 11 of 29 returned.
Author:
Child, Francis James, 1825-1896.
Title:
Papers, 1842-1925.
Description:
4 boxes (1.5 linear ft.)
Local Call No: MS Am 1922-1922.2
Notes:
Child graduated from Harvard University in 1846.
He was an American philologist and professor of English at
Harvard who studied, collected and cataloged folk ballads.
Correspondence of Francis J. Child, together with
personal account books from his student years at Harvard,
notebooks, journals, and commonplace books. Also includes
correspondence of Child's wife, Elizabeth Ellery Sedgwick
Child; and letters, 1912-1925, to Gilbert Campbell Scoggin
concerning Francis J. Child; and a daguerreotype of a group
including Child and his wife.
Gift of Mrs. Gilbert Campbell Scoggin, 1945.
Electronic finding aid available
http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:Fhcl.Hough:hou00096
For MS Am 1922, unpublished print finding aid
available in the Houghton Reading Room reference collection,
or consult the Houghton Accessions Records, 1973-1974, under
*73M-94.
For MS Am 1922.1 and 1922.2, unpublished print
finding aids available in the Houghton Accessions Records,
1945-1946, under *45M-584-593; and *45Z-8.
Francis James Child Papers (MS Am 1922-1922.2)
Houghton Library, Harvard University.
Subjects
Child, Francis James, 1825-1896.
Norton, Charles Eliot, 1827-1908.
Harvard University -- Faculty.
Harvard University -- Students.
American literature -- 19th century.
Ballads, English.
Philologists -- United States.
Account books. aat
Commonplace books. aat
Daguerreotypes. aat
Harvard graduates' papers. local
Other authors: Child, Elizabeth Ellery (Sedgwick)
Scoggin, Gilbert Campbell, recipient.
Location:
MH-H Houghton Library, Harvard University,
Cambridge, MA 02138. MS Am 1922-1922.2
Control No. : MAHV86-A220
Tagged display | Previous Record | Next Record I Brief Record Display | New Search
This display was generated by the CNIDR Web-Z39.50 gateway, version 1.08, with Library of Congress
Modifications.
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Francis James Child - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 1 of 6
Francis James Child
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Francis James Child (February 1, 1825 - September 11, 1896)
was an American scholar, educator, and folklorist, best known
today for his collection of folk songs known as the Child Ballads.
Child was Boylston professor of rhetoric and oratory at Harvard
University, where he produced influential editions of English
poetry. In 1876 he was named Harvard's first Professor of
English, a position which allowed him to focus on academic
research. It was during this time that he began work on the Child
Ballads.
The Child Ballads were published in five volumes between 1882
and 1898. They are a major contribution to the study of English-
language folk music.
[1]
Contents
Frances James Child. Undated
portrait by wood engraver Gustav
1 Biography
Kruell (b. Germany, 1843 - d.
2 See also
California, 1907)
3 Notes
4 References
5 Online Resources
Biography
Francis James Child was born in Boston, Massachusetts. His father was a sailmaker, "One of that class of
intelligent and independent mechanics" wrote his friend, scholar and social reformer Charles Eliot
Norton, "which has had a large share of developing the character of our democratic community, as of old
the
same class had in Athens or in Florence." ² The family was poor, but thanks to the city of Boston's
system of free public schools the boy was educated at the Boston's Grammar and English High Schools.
There his brilliance came to the attention of the principal of the Boston Latin School, Epes Sargent
Dixwell, [3] who saw to it that the promising youngster was furnished with a scholarship to attend
Harvard. At Harvard, "Frank" (nicknamed "Stubby" on account of his short stature), excelled in all
classes and also read widely for his own pleasure outside his studies. Although shy and diffident on
account of his working-class origins, he was soon recognized as "the best writer, best speaker, best
mathematician, the most accomplished person in knowledge of general literature" [4] and he soon became
extremely popular with his classmates. He was graduated in 1846, topping his class in all subjects and
was chosen Class Orator by his graduating class (of sixty), who received his valedictory speech with
"tumultuous applause". [5] Upon graduation Child was appointed tutor in mathematics at Harvard and in
1848 was transferred to a tutorship in history, political economy, and English literature.
In 1848, Child published a critically annotated edition (the first of the kind to be produced in America) of
Four
Old Plays of the early English Renaissance. [6] There were then no graduate schools in America, but
a loan from a benefactor, Jonathan I. Bowditch, to whom the book was dedicated, enabled Child to take
a
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Francis James Child - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 2 of 6
leave of absence from his teaching duties to pursue his studies in Germany. There Child studied English
drama and Germanic philology at the University of Göttingen, which conferred on him an honorary
doctorate, and at Humboldt University, Berlin, where he heard lectures by the linguists Grimm and was
much influenced by them.
In 1851, at the age of 26, Child succeeded Edward T. Channing as Harvard's Boylston Professor of
Rhetoric and Oratory, a position he held until Adams Sherman Hill was appointed to the professorship in
1876. Harvard had at that time an enrollment of 382 undergraduates and a faculty of 14, including the
president of the University, who was then James Walker.17
As a mathematician, wrote folklore scholar David E. Bynum, Child came to his interest "in what he
variously called 'popular', 'primitive', or 'traditional' balladry not by accident but by force of logic":
Child well understood how indispensable good writing and good speaking are to civilization,
or as many would now prefer to say, to society. For him, writing and speaking were not only
the practical means by which men share useful information, but also the means whereby they
formulate and share values, including the higher order of values that give meaning to life and
purpose to human activities of all sorts. Concerned as he thus SO greatly was with rhetoric,
oratory, and the motives of those mental disciplines, Child was inevitably drawn into
pondering the essential differences between speech and writing, and to searching for the
origins of thoughtful expression in English. [8]
During the twenty-five years Child was Professor of Rhetoric at
Harvard he undertook general editorial supervision of the
publication of a 130-volume collection of the works of the British
poets, many not previously generally available to the reading
public, which began appearing 1853. The volumes on the works
of Edmund Spenser (five volumes, Boston, 1855) and the English
and Scottish Ballads (in eight small volumes, Boston, 1857-
1858), Child edited himself. [9] Child planned a critical edition of
the works of Chaucer, as well. He soon realized that this could not
be done, however, since only one early (and faulty) text was
available. He therefore wrote a treatise, blandly titled
"Observations on the Language of Chaucer", published in the
Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1863),
intended to make such an edition possible. [10]
Child's linguistic researches are largely responsible for how
Chaucerian grammar, pronunciation, and scansion are now
Child, a devotee of antique roses,
generally understood. [11]
photographed (probably by Charles
Eliot Norton), in his rose garden.
Verses about "the rose and the briar"
Child's largest undertaking, however, grew out of the original
occur in many ballads.
English and Scottish Ballads volume in his British Poets series.
The material for this volume was mostly derived from texts in
previously published books. In compiling this work he realized
that the folio manuscript of Percy's Reliques, from which most of these texts were drawn, was not
available for public inspection, and he set about to remedy this situation. In the 1860s he campaigned
energetically for public support to enable the Early English Text Society, founded by philologist
Frederick James Furnivall, to obtain a copy of Percy's Folio and publish it, which they did in 1868. Child
and Furnivall then went on to found The Ballad Society, with a view to publishing other important early
ballad collections, such as that of Samuel Pepys. [12]
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In 1876 University of California President Daniel Gilman offered Child a research professorship at the
newly established Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, which Gilman was in the process of
organizing. Johns Hopkins was the first American university conceived on the German research model
initiated by Humboldt and divided into departments representing "the branches of knowledge", with
elective subjects and a graduate school dedicated to advanced studies. [13] In order to retain
him,
Harvard's
president Charles William Eliot created the tile of "Professor of English" especially for Child, freeing him
from supervising oral recitations and correcting composition papers SO that he could have more time for
research.
[14] Thereafter, Child devoted himself to the comparative study of British vernacular ballads,
using methods adopted from historical comparative philology to arrive at the earliest attested versions.
Child considered that folk ballads came from a more democratic time in the past when society was not
divided into classes, and the "true voice" of the people could therefore be heard. He conceived "the
people" as comprising all the classes of society, rich, middle, and poor, and not only those engaged in
manual labor as Marxists sometimes use the word. [15] Although Child concentrated his collections on
manuscript texts with a view to determining their chronology, he also gave a sedulous but conservative
hearing to popular versions still surviving. [16] Child carried his investigations into the ballads of
languages other than English, engaging in extensive international correspondence on the subject with
colleagues abroad, primarily with the Danish literary historian and ethnographer Svend Grundtvig, whose
monumental twelve-volume compilation of Danish ballads, Danmarks gamle Folkeviser, vols. 1-12
(Copenhagen, 1853), was the model for Child's resulting canonical five-volume edition of some 305
English and Scottish ballads and their numerous variants. [17] Since the ballads were known to have
been
a
pan-European (and North African) phenomenon, Child and Grundtvig also consulted with numerous
scholars in other parts of the world, such as, for example, the Sicilian physician, folklorist, and
ethnographer Giuseppe Pitrè. [18]
Child's final collection was published as The English and Scottish Popular Ballads, at first in ten parts
(1882-1898) and then in five quarto volumes, and for a long time this collection was the authoritative
treasury of their subject.
Professor Child worked and overworked to the last, dying in Boston after completing his task - apart
from a planned general introduction and bibliography. A biographical introduction was prefixed to the
work by his son-in-law and chosen successor George Lyman Kittredge.
A commemorative article in the 2006 edition of the Harvard Magazine states:
Child's enthusiasm and erudition shine throughout his systematic attempt to set the British
ballad tradition in context with others, whether Danish, Serbian, or Turkish. He made no
attempt to conceal or apologize for the sexuality, theatrical violence, and ill-concealed
paganism of many ballads, but it is characteristic of the man that in his introduction to "Hugh
of Lincoln," an ancient work about the purported murder of a Christian child by a Jew, he
wrote, "And these pretended child-murders, with their horrible consequences, are only a part
of the persecution which, with all moderation, may be rubricated as the most disgraceful
chapter in the history of the human race."[19]
Child added to the Harvard University Library one of the largest folklore collections in existence. He
served two terms as president, in 1888 and 1889, of the American Folklore Society, which was founded
with the mission of collecting and preserving African-American and Native American folklore equally
that of European derivation. George Lyman Kittredge succeeded Child as Professor of English literature
and modern languages at Harvard and considered himself the custodian of Child's scholarly legacy.
Kittredge was president of the American Folklore Society in 1904.
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Page 4 of 6
He is buried in the cemetery in Stockbridge, Massachusetts, in the "Sedgwick Pie", since (like Charles
Eliot Norton), he married into the Sedgwick family. His grave is not far from that of Mumbet, the first
slave to sue for her freedom in the courts, based on the law, and win, in 1781, and whose lawyer was
Theodore Sedgwick.
For a listing of all the Child ballad types, and links to more information on each individual type, see List
of the Child Ballads.
See also
Il Pesceballo
Notes
1.
^ Musical Traditions (http://www.mustrad.org.uk/reviews/child.html)
2.
^ Charles Eliot Norton, "Francis James Child", Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
32: 17 (Jul., 1897), pp. 333-339. Norton was Francis James Child's classmate at Harvard and became life-long
friend. See James C. Turner, The Liberal Education of Charles Eliot Norton (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins
University Press, 2002).
3. See "Epes Sargent Dixwell", Daedalus: journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 35 (1900):
625. http://books.google.com/books?
=TD0kOMNqrk4C&pg=PA625&lpg=PA625&dq=epes+sargent+dixwell&source=bl&ots=egGffk4IlV&sig=
20sargent%20dixwell&f=false)
4. ^ Turner (2002), p. 50.
5. ^ Turner (2002), p. 54
6.
^ Four Old Plays: Three interludes: Thersytes, Jack Jugler and Heywood's Pardoner and frere: and Jocasta,
a tragedy by Gascoigne and Kinwelmarsh, with an introduction and notes (http://books.google.com/books?
id=nn40AAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=Four+Old+Plays:+Three+interludes:+Thersytes,+Jack+Jug
27s+Pardoner+and+frere:+and+Jocasta,+a+tragedy+by+Gascoignetand+Kinwelmarsh,+with+an+introduction,
wbSTPPKHMT38AalnezWDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CBUQ6AEwAA#v=on
7. ^ David E. Bynum, Child's Legacy Enlarged: Four Generations of Oral Literary Studies at Harvard
University Since 1856 (Cambridge, Mass.: Center for the Study of Oral Literature, 1974)./
8. ^ David E. Bynum (1974).
9. ^ His Spenser, according to Professor Kittredge, "remained after forty years the best edition of Spenser in
existence" (quoted in The Cambridge History of English and American Literature, 1907-1921, Vol. XVIII
(http://www.bartleby.com/228/0243.html))
10. ^ The Cambridge History of English and American Literature, (1907-1921), cit.
11.
^ According to the Cambridge History of English and American Literature (1907-21), Child's:
"Observations on the Language of Chaucer" (1863) put definitely out of date the random and
arbitrary opinions - favourable or unfavourable, untrue or accidentally true - which critics
had ever since the Renaissance been pronouncing upon Chaucer's versification, and placed the
matter henceforth upon a basis of exact knowledge. Child's work has not had to be done over
again; it has been the point of departure for later research, and remains the classic memoir in this
field.
12. ^ See Sigrid Rieuwerts, "The Genuine Ballads of the People': F. J. Child and the Ballad Cause," Journal of
Folklore Research: 31: 1-3 (1994): 1-34.
13. ^ See Gerald Graff, Professing Literature: An Institutional History (University of Chicago Press, 1987).
14. ^ Jill Terry Rudy, "Transforming Audiences for Oral Tradition: Child, Kittredge, Thompson, and Connections
of Folklore and English Studies," College English: 66: 5 (May 2004): 532.
15. In his 1978 book Popular Culture in Early Modern Europe (New York: Harper and Row, 1978), Peter
Burke argues that before 1800 all classes of society did participate in popular culture in just this way.
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Francis James Child - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 5 of 6
16. The next generation of scholars engaged directly in field research from oral sources, and some, like music
educator Cecil Sharp, who was primarily interested in finding the tunes for the Child ballads, also collected
music and dances.
17.
For more about Grundtvig and Child, see Sigurd Bernhard Hustvedt, Ballad Books and Ballad Men
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1930), pp. 175-204 and 205-229, as well as their correspondence, pp.
247-300.
18. ^ Pitrè, who was the founder of the Italian Folklore Society and became an honorary member of the American
Folklore Society in 1890.
19. ^ John Burgess, "Francis James Child: Brief life of a Victorian Enthusiast: 1825-1896" (Harvard Magazine,
May-June 2006 (http://harvardmagazine.com/2006/05/francis-james-child.html))
References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed
(1911). Encyclopcedia Britannica (Eleventh ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Atkinson, David. "The English Revival Canon: Child Ballads and the Invention of Tradition". The
Journal of American Folklore: 114: 453 (Summer, 2001): 370-80.
Atkinson, David. The English Traditional Ballad: Theory, Method, and Practice. Aldershot, UK
and Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate, 2002.
Cheeseman, Tom, and Sigrid Rieuwerts, editors. Ballads into Books: The Legacies of Francis
James Child. Selected Papers from the 26th International Ballad Conference (SIEF Ballad
Commission), Swansea, Wales, 19-24 July 1996. Berlin (etc.): Peter Lang Verlagsgruppe, (Second
Revised Edition) 1999.
Graff, Gerald. Professing Literature: An Institutional History. University of Chicago Press, 1987.
Rieuwerts, Sigrid. "The Genuine Ballads of the People': F. J. Child and the Ballad Cause". Journal
of Folklore Research, 31: 1-3 (1994): 1-34.
Rudy, Jill Terry. "Considering Rhetoric's Wayward Child: Ballad Scholarship and Intradisciplinary
Conflict." Journal of Folklore Research: 35:2 (May 1998): 85-98.
Rudy, Jill Terry. "Transforming Audiences for Oral Tradition: Child, Kittredge, Thompson, and
Connections of Folklore and English Studies." College English: 66: 5 (May 2004).
Online Resources
Biography of Francis James Child at The Contemplator
(http://www.contemplator.com/history/childbio.html)
Burgess, John. "Francis James Child: Brief Life of a Victorian Enthusiast: 1825-1896". Harvard
Magazine, May-June, 2006. (http://harvardmagazine.com/2006/05/francis-james-child.html)
Olsen, Ian. Review of Mark and Laura F. Heinman's, Corrected Second Edition of Francis James
Child's English and Scottish Popular Ballads, volume 1, in Musical Traditions internet magazine.
http://www.mustrad.org.uk/reviews/child.htm)
"Francis James Child" entry 43 in The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in
18 Volumes (1907-21). Volume XVIII. Later National Literature, Part III, XXV. Scholars, no. 43.
"Francis James Child". (http://www.bartleby.com/228/0243.html)
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_James_Child"
Categories: American folklorists American folk-song collectors American educationists Harvard
University faculty 1825 births 1896 deaths
This page was last modified on 1 December 2010 at 03:36.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms
may apply. See Terms of Use for details.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_James_Child
12/19/2010
Child's Legacy Enlarged:
Oral Literary Studies at Harvard
Since 1856
David E. Bynum
OETRY and storytelling began SO long ago in prehistoric time
P
that no one can scientifically even guess how or when they
originated. But one thing is certain. Our biological ances-
tors did not cease to be a mere species of animal and become
mankind until the capacity for rhythmic language and narration had
evolved in them. In myth the world over, these mental powers are
said to be god-given and divine. They are at the very least indispens-
able to any practical definition of humanity.
For many millenia the only instrument of rhythmic words and nar-
rative known in any part of the world was the tongue men were born
with, not the stylus or the pen, for writing was not invented until too
late in human evolution for it to reveal anything about the origin of
speech. So for long ages the only way any knowledge could survive
from one generation to another was through oral tradition. Rhythmical
speech was the world's first great medium of communication for com-
plex ideas, and there were certainly media men of astonishing skill long
before anyone on earth knew how to write.
In North America the scientific study of oral traditions began at
Harvard College just a little more than a century ago. For 116 years,
Harvard College has been collecting oral traditions and disseminating
knowledge about them to anyone who could use that knowledge to
good purpose. Three men of the Harvard faculty launched this bril-
liant movement in American intellectual life. They were Francis
James Child, George Lyman Kittredge, and Milman Parry. The fol-
lowing pages are about those three men, their ideas, and their con-
tinuing impact on the life of our own time.
More than any literate men before them, Professors Child, Kittredge,
and Parry saw the protean shapes of pre-literate speech at work in the
237
22,# (1974)
Harvard University - Houghton Library / Harvard University. Harvard Library bulletin. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Library.
14
PLATE II
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD
THIS PHOTOGRAPH, APPARENTLY TAKEN BY CHARLES ELIOT NORTON,
WAS FOUND AMONG KITTREDGE'S PAPERS IN THE HOUGHTON LIBRARY;
IT SHOWS CHILD, WHO WAS FAMOUS FOR HIS ROSE-GARDENING, IN
THE YARD OF HIS HOME ON KIRKLAND STREET.
Harvard University - Houghton Library / Harvard University. Harvard Library bulletin. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Library.
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FEATURES
Francis James Child
Brief life of a Victorian enthusiast: 1825-1896
by JOHN BURGESS
MAY-JUNE 2006
F
rancis James Child, A.B. 1846, was a model of nineteenth-century academic
Commencement
achievement. Named Harvard's Boylston professor of rhetoric and oratory at
26, he was one of his century's leading Chaucer scholars and received
2016
Click Here to read our online
coverage sponsored by
honorary degrees from his alma mater, Columbia, and Göttingen. His close friends
the Harvard Alumni Card and
included Oliver Wendell Holmes, Henry and William James, and Charles Eliot
the Harvard Alumni Association
Norton. Yet today he is better remembered than many distinguished colleagues
because, at the height of his career, he decided to apply a gift for scholarship honed on
the study of traditional literature to the oral traditions of the folk ballad.
On Readers' Radar
That a sailmaker's son achieved eminence of any sort was largely because the Boston
of his youth was progressive enough to offer free public educationat least for white boysand
1. Rashida Jones '97: "Don't Just Follow
small enough to spot and foster talent. His record at Boston Grammar and Boston English came
the Rules"
to the attention of Epes Sargent Dixwell, A.B. 1827, headmaster of Boston Latin, who facilitated
2. Sarah Jessica Parker Speaks at
his admission to that school and then to Harvard College.
Harvard Law School Class Day 2016
3. Madeleine Albright Urges Graduates
to Look Beyond America's Borders
4. Live Life to Its Fullest, HBS Class Day
Speakers Urge
5. Final Club Fallout
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Harvard Magazine
Introducing
the Harvard Alumni Card
An undated engraving of Child, by Gustav Kruell. Note the
rose at the upper right. The provenance of this portrait is
unknown, but roses figure in a number of the Child ballads,
and Child had a rose garden of his own.
Engraving courtesy of Harvard University Archives.
Color added by Mark Felton
Child graduated first in his class and became a College tutor in mathematics and then in history,
political economy, and English. When a benefactor lent him funds for a trip to Europe, he took
a leave of absence from 1849 to 1851 to study in Berlin and Göttingen, an extraordinary
opportunity given his youth and background. On his return, he became Boylston professor, a
post he held for a quarter-century before becoming Harvard's first professor of English, in 1876.
He served as general editor of the British Poets, a popular series that ran to 150 volumes. He
issued a five-volume edition of Spenser's poems and the influential Observations on the Language
of Chaucer. And he introduced generations of undergraduates to these poets, to Shakespeare,
and to the Romantics.
He combined scholarship with a gift for friendship. He corresponded for three decades with
James Russell Lowell"Jamie," even when Lowell was ambassador to Great Britainand for near-ly
two decades with Miss Emily Tuckerman of Stockbridge, Mas-sa-chusetts, in each case
combining his love of literature with a sense of humor and humility not always associated with
his fellow academics. Time remained for his rose garden, his family, and more worldly
demands. Though ill-suited by nature to the rough and tumble of politics, he canceled classes to
canvass for Lincoln during the Civil War and joined in local political battles on behalf of his
adopted Brahmin class with enthusiasm, if not success.
But increasingly his life was dominated by one great and abiding passionthe preservation of a
ballad tradition that was dying even as Child struggled to record it. His first collection of ballads
appeared in eight small volumes (1857-58) in the British Poets series, but he had something far
more ambitious in mind: the comprehensive recordation of all known English and Scottish
ballads and their American and Canadian variants. That demanded patience in tracking
manuscripts across continents, judgment in interpreting and clarifying textual discrepancies,
and persistence in dealing with collectors ranging from the high-born Lord Rosebery to the
eccentric Devon clergyman Sabine Baring-Gould
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Harvard Magazine
In all, Child collected 305 ballads, ultimately published in five volumes (1882-98), including
"Lord Randall," "Sir Patrick Spens," and a good three dozen variations on the adventures of
Robin Hood. Some, like "Barbara Allen," had been in print for generations and were sung from
London to Appalachia. Others, like "Thomas the Rhymer" or "Tam Lin," evoke a world of
magic that survived outside the written record for centuries. Child's enthusiasm and erudition
shine throughout his systematic attempt to set the British ballad tradition in context with
others, whether Danish, Serbian, or Turkish. He made no attempt to conceal or apologize for
the sexuality, theatrical violence, and ill-concealed paganism of many ballads, but it is
characteristic of the man that in his introduction to "Hugh of Lincoln," an ancient work about
the purported murder of a Christian child by a Jew, he wrote, "And these pretended child-
murders, with their horrible consequences, are only a part of the persecution which, with all
moderation, may be rubricated as the most disgraceful chapter in the history of the human
race."
Our own period doesn't readily lend itself to an undertaking such as Child's, but the timing was
right for him, as for other Victorian obsessives. He could attack a subject thatinstead of being
studied half to deathwas in danger of disappearing entirely, with a level of knowledge and self-
confidence that eludes our more specialized age. For half a century, scholars and musicologists
embraced his collection, but added little to it. Then, in the 1950s, the ballads were taken up as
part of the folk-music revival, so that Time magazine, writing about Joan Baez in 1962, would
note, "Folkupmanship absolutely requires that a ballad be referred to as Child 12, Child 200, or
Child 209
" In succeeding decades, new interpretations have appeared regularly, remarkably
fresh and original given the ancient sources of the lyrics. Child passed on to subsequent
generations of audiences and performers a legacy of scholarship that they have been able to
enjoy on their own terms and express in their own fashion. In doing so, he preserved the
continuing vitality of the ballad tradition that he loved so much.
John Burgess, J.D. '76, is a senior partner in the Boston office of Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr,
where he practices corporate and international law.
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3/3
AN New York OLD-SCHOOL PROFESSOR.
ProQuest 23-Current
pg E4 Historical Newspapers: file): The Jul New 1923; York Times (1851-2007)
kindie, Musgrave who and Lord Barnard and Glen-
Harpit
Or milk out out o' stane
Or water fish out o' saul water.
That baien had malden's breast
Out of that never nune.
by them. it. He was always The chil.
dren knew world he came.
FORD says, He and LOWELL,' surrounded Mr.
who visited enjoyed us a charming BRAD- bear
time was with at Elmwood the last
that of one the other children." him, as The much as any
AN In The OLD-SCHOOL PROFESSOR
"teous childe old friend of this kind, last time
LIEL BRADFORD, Atlantic Monthly Mr.
Street dome' saw him who he colde was much of cour- wis.
souls, ponders a well-known reader GAMA. of
whom he with dozen big-eyed on Kirkland
JAMES original and delightful one of the of most curious,
curls shook had been talling children to
CHILD. one men, FRANCIS
bulged out of with his emotion, his stories. blue eyes His
who ciled made professors of human the few persons
tence the Some rest of the world to and their recon-
smilingly bear-where is the head. bear? " he Where is the
talking to and sternly, as if demanded. he
gular, salient, of his contemporaries exis-
themselves unstandardized, an-
roses, a band wreathed with his A
fairy child. the official bear-warden. were
imparters liberal education. were in
so of fairy favorite
always equal of to knowledge, their they weren't if, as
In
a Stubby lives children in with him
even the if in all colleges of successors: fifty and
arship world a of arid and jejune the memory
bade undergraduate the ritual or years ago
impossible great scholar like him schol- seems
tween genial human taboo for-
is permitted instructor and instructed intercourse be-
today. to the wiser youngsters which of
The
ing on sight his of a man anywhere
standardization own feet and careless stand-
and in the little is infinitely improving: of
there was CHILD was in his col-
leges were when colleges, which all
contact and an opportunity of prime,
beyond observation whose personal
Ph. D. that In that of a million theses value is
solemn Fanny BOWEN, provincial the Harvard, for
the in his cloak: old metaphysician,
The physicist, Gay affectionately LOVERING.
pupils, who Lothario by his irreverent dubbed
bellringer, ments to which gayly old applauded JONES, the experi-
spare old SOPHOCLES. added his who trembling the college hand;
College time House, with a little tailor spent over all his
bridge' the most Intelligent whom he pronounced in
nomical old BEN PEIRCE, man in Cam.
redeemed and mathematical whose astro-
horses: by old his habit of sublimity driving was
whom all the JIMMY MILLS fast
to see; Piggy actors and actresses PEIRCE,
exercise or running about the ath-
letic of men, EVERETT. the least came
he who could construe asking the occasional yard youth for
of 6, used to to repeat. it Horace, is said, whose odes
study, birthplace. for Dr.
HOLMES'S the old gambrel-roof at house, the age
and some a glass of sherry and an hour of
ETT'S library remark on EDWARD biscuit EVER.
SIBLEY with his skull-cap old JOHN LANGDON
7/1/12
per the most blustering in the library, and the his tem.
old election generous of men, who kindest,
treasure sermon more than loved an
FISKE. who of bihliography old any other
at Karl's. would take his glass of JOHN
anathema to thereby making beer
CEY WRIGHT. the powers: old himself
and guilty metaphysical and CHAUN.
Nation-Ivl of complicity in Mr. GODKIN'S thirsty.
But Stubby race they were!
man
He came from was one of the There Good was
He
CHILD!
angel shaved some fairy strath. People
days the him in his sleep. Some
appear. five If minutes for a professor that you
waited good old rule prevailed In those
a permitted he " didn't turn up, to
waited for Stubby.' Hall the expectant the
top of University cut. Somewhere you in had
with period his of waiting he was At 4:99 of the
marker
knows of son'e oldsters he locks. In
the time fairy smile. his fairy sure to appear,
oric and why:-Boylston Oratory. Professor was-God of
he ored had of to either of those He was great not enam. Rhet-
did it. correct the arts, but
world
strokes still. One can see his themes." blue-penciled He
quoted COLERIDGE As an or undergraduate you
other " bigwig. You RUSKIN or some
thing yourself just can say the same
ably He better," said the as azure well and critic. prob-
HAMILTON gave on the theory of Sir
" metaphysical moonshine, something or other, WILLIAM some
" or You the haven't looked into as Sir the subject.
well as subject: I do." but you know WILLIAM that
him, Stubby." What You joy couldn't fool as
submitting an amiable. philosophical it was to see
ing mogul to the visit of some anarchist,
ADAMS sent by the Overseers! examin-
consented to Stubby more smiled averse to
regulation. himself wasn't HENRY
own opinion. anecdotes: He but he wearily, had his
lish was thought that anything that
marker students in the world. was He the thought hardest
a to raise eminent class he the degrees of
certain soft." To save in Eng-
edge by 10 his estimation of was their persuaded
had worked per like cent.; and yet each knowl- man
own liked to work for a him-and dog-for everybody
Stubby opinion, squirted like had, in his
got
geyser
Chaucer SPENSER that is there out is. the The best edition of
tence. His a monument of his Six Text
memorial a noble and Scot-
tish balladry work is on English and persis-
used to say of that American scholarship. enduring He
deal a good easier deal than SHAKESPEARE. CHAUCER was a good
jority of in that, since There is
to the readers of the latter the ma-
has ever and Jacobean great words. many Eliza.
bethan meaning of a made
in the distinctions which time has are deaf
that charmed been under the influence Who that
he explored world of balladry of
of Oh, that unspeakable can rid himself, magic: if he would, which
And they they rade on and farther
And the knee waded through rivers on, aboon
they
saw
When But they heard neither the roaring sun nor of moon. the
Robin Hood you and saw Little Stubby John and you Little sea. saw
Reproduced
with
permission
of
the
copyright
owner
Further
The Scholar-Friends: Francis James Child
and James Russell Lowell
The double signing of the following pages calls for explanation. 'The
Scholar-Friends' in an earlier form was prepared by me with the intention
of making Francis James Child, through bis letters to James Russell Lowell,
better known not so much to specialists in English scholarship as to the
literate 'general reader.' Lowell's qualities as a letter-writer were already so
familiar through the abundant publication of bis correspondence that rela-
tively few of his letters to Child seemed essential to my immediate purpose.
When this paper, in its shorter form, was submitted to Mr G. W. Cottrell,
editor of the HARVARD LIBRARY BULLETIN, for publication in that journal, a
question of editing arose. Should the paper be extended, as be suggested,
by introducing more of Lowell's letters than I bad included? There were
good reasons for pursuing this course, especially on the ground that it would
link the friendship of the two men more closely with their scholarship.
From the considerable task of enlargement and rearrangement I should my-
self have shrunk; but, if a younger band and eye stood ready to undertake
it, why indeed should it not be done? With industry and skill Mr Cottrell
has performed this task. He has not edited the first person singular out of
the opening pages setting forth my initial part in the enterprise. Else-
where be has blended bis words happily with my own. He and 1 are equally
willing to accept the consequences of this collaboration.
M. A. DeW. H.
OWN through the ages letters have been the great pre-
D
servative of personality. The man who writes them can-
not help revealing himself. Nor does it stop there. The
tone and spirit of his letters vary with the natures of the
friends to whom he is writing, and, though of course less obviously,
the personality of each friend is suggested if not actually revealed.
The pages that follow speak, with this reciprocal illumination, for
the friendship of two Harvard scholars, Francis James Child and James
Russell Lowell. Lowell's eminent place among English letter-writers
has long been established, through the printing of large numbers of his
letters to his friends and to his daughter. Not so with Child. Only
one small collection of Child's letters, A Scholar's Letters to a Young
Lady, issued in 1920 in a limited edition, has shown the quality of his
correspondence.
135
Harvard Library Bulletin
v015#2 (1951):135-158-
The Scholar-Friends: Francis James Child
and James Russell Lowell
(Continued)
In 1872 Lowell, 'grown learned (after a fashion) and dull,' as he put
it, 17 from sixteen years of teaching, sought refreshment of spirit in
extended travel abroad. Failing to secure a leave of absence, and
provided with independent means through the sale of most of the
Elmwood estate, he simply resigned his professorship (to take it up
again, however, in 1874). The following note may reflect this radical
step, though he did not sail for England (with Mrs Lowell) until July.
Elmwood, 23" Jan, 1872.
Carissimo mio Ciarli,
I enclose my subscription to Chaucer's Society for the year, with best
love to him & you, rejoicing to find that you have survived Mrs J. W.
Howe. What geese they are with their Harvard College! I am just off for
Boston with Mabel to have our photographs taken under supervision of
Rowse.
affectionately always
J.R.L.
Writing from Berne in July 1873, Lowell, after referring specifi-
cally to his resignation, alludes to some difficulty, now obscure, re-
garding Child's own status. The 'fire' must be the great Boston Fire
of November 1872. The passage relating to Lowell's visit to Oxford
in June 1873, when he received the honorary degree of B. C. L., is not
his only account of this experience. With a special felicity it is de-
scribed in a letter to Henry Adams bearing the outward semblance of
prose but in reality a lively specimen of Lowell's ingenious rhyming.18 18
From this time on for several years, and particularly during Lowell's
sojourns abroad, balladry plays a conspicuous role in the correspond-
ence. Child by now, and partly under the stimulus of Gruntvig's
interest and encouragement, was fairly embarked upon the detailed
"In a letter to Jane Norton, 17 February 1872 (Letters of James Russell Lowell,
II, 282).
18 See New Letters of James Russell Lowell, pp. 198-201.
304
Harvard Library Bolletin vol. 5. (1951). Pt. 2.Pp.304f.
REPORT OF THE COUNCIL.
SINCE the Annual Meeting of May 13, 1896, the Academy
has lost by death seventeen members : -four Resident Fellows,
Thomas Tracy Bouvé, Francis James Child, Benjamin Apthorp
Gould, and Francis Amasa Walker; five Associate Fellows,
George Brown Goode, Atticus Green Haygood, Matthew Carey
Lea, Henry Newell Martin, and Hubert Anson Newton; and
nine Foreign Honorary Members, Heinrich Ernst Beyrich,
Ernst Curtius, Emil Heinrich Du-Bois Reymond, Hugo Glydén,
Friedrich August Kekulé, Baron Ferdinand von Mueller, Jules
Simon, James Joseph Sylvester, and Karl Weierstrass.
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD.
by
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD was born in Boston, on the 1st of February,
Charkes
1825. His father was a sailmaker, one of that class of intelligent and
independent mechanics which has had a large share in determining the
character of our democratic community, as of old the same class had in
Athens and in Florence. The boy was the youngest of five brothers and
sisters. He was sent to the public schools. His unusual capacities were
early displayed. He stood first in his classes, and was a favorite with his
schoolfellows. At the English High School he won all the prizes, and
having by chance attracted the attention of our venerable fellow citizen,
Mr. Epes S. Dixwell, then the Master of the Latin School, his father was
Thanks
induced, at Mr. Dixwell's suggestion, to allow him to proceed to the Latin
School, that he might continue his studies and be prepared for entrance
to college. He speedily caught up with the boys who had already made
progress in the study of Greek and Latin, and soon took the first place
here, as he had done in the schools which he had previously attended.
The sweetness of his disposition, the pleasant mingling in his nature of
gay spirits and serious purpose, his high principles, his unaffected modesty
won the affection of his teachers and of his comrades. His superiority in
Proc. of the American Academy of Arts Sciences
32, # (1897):333-339
334
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD.
his classes was so unmingled with pretension or conceit, that it was ad-
mitted without question or envy. Mr. Dixwell became strongly attached
to him, and, in view of the great promise of his talents and his character,
secured the means for his support in college, which he entered in the
autumn of 1842.* Harvard was then still a comparatively small institu-
tion, with no claims to the title of University but she had her traditions
of good learning as an inspiration for the studious youth, and still better
she had teachers who were examples of devotion to intellectual pursuits,
and who cared for those ends the attainment of which makes life worth
living. Josiah Quincy was approaching the close of his term of service
as President of the College, and stood before the eyes of the students as
the type of a great public servant, embodying the spirit of patriotism, of
integrity, and of fidelity in the discharge of whatever duty he might be
called to perform. Among the Professors were Walker, Felton, Peirce,
Channing, Beck, and Longfellow, men of utmost variety of temperament,
but each an instructor who secured the respect no less than the gratitude
of his pupils.
The Class to which Child belonged numbered hardly over sixty. The
prescribed course of study which was then the rule brought all the mem-
bers of the Class together in recitations and lectures, and every man soon
knew the relative standing of each of his fellows. Child at co took
the lead and kept it. His excellence was not confined to any one special
branch of study, he was equally superior in all. He was the best in the
classics, he was Peirce's favorite in mathematics, he wrote better Eng-
lish than any of his classmates. His intellectual interests were wider
than theirs, he was a great reader and his tastes in reading were mature.
He read for amusement as well as for learning, but he did not waste his
time or dissipate his mental energies over worthless or pernicious books.
He made good use of the social no less than of the intellectual oppor-
tunities which college life affords, and became as great a favorite with his
classmates as he had been with his schoolfellows.
The close of his college course was marked by the exceptional distinc-
tion of his being chosen by his classmates as their Orator, and by his
having the first part at Commencement as the highest scholar in the
Class. His Class Oration was remarkable for its maturity of thought
and of style. Its manliness of spirit, its simple directness of presentation
The pecuniary debt thus incurred was afterwards paid with interest. But
though only thus could Mr. Child's spirit of independence be satisfied, he cherished
through life the most grateful affection for the friend who had thus served him.
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD.
335
of the true objects of life, and of the motives by which the educated man,
whatever might be his chosen career, should be inspired, together with
the serious and eloquent earnestness with which it was delivered, gave
to his discourse peculiar impressiveness and effect.*
Immediately upon his graduation he was appointed Tutor in the Col-
lege, with duties of instruction in English. To the study of the English
language and literature he was led by taste, and his knowledge was
already considerable in this wide field, to the cultivation of which the
remainder of his life was to be in great part devoted, and in which he was
to become an acknowledged master. In 1848 he published his first work,
an edition in one volume of " Four Old Plays," all of the sixteenth
century, and of interest to the student of the development of the English
drama as exhibiting its conditions immediately before its splendid mani-
festation in the works of the Elizabethan playwrights. Nothing of the
kind had been done previously in America. The volume appealed to
but a small class of readers, but, with those who were competent to
judge of it, it established the reputation of its editor as a scholar of more
than usual competence of learning and sobriety of judgment.
In 1851, on the resignation of Professor Channing as Boylston Pro-
fessor of Rhetoric, Child was appointed his successor with leave of ab-
sence for study in Europe, before assuming the duties of the position.
The opportunities which Europe then afforded to the young American
scholar were diligently made use of. He obtained the degree of Doctor
of Philosophy at Gottingen in 1854, and in the autumn of the same year
he returned to his work at Harvard. A great part of his time was em-
ployed in the teaching of English composition, and the drudgery of cor-
recting students' exercises, but he had an indefatigable industry and a
steady ardor of learning, and he found time to carry on his own special
studies. He undertook the general superintendence of a series of the
works of the chief British Poets, and himself prepared for it the edition
of Spencer (1855) in five volumes, which for the use of the general
reader still remains the best. For the same series he compiled a Col-
lection of Ballads in eight volumes, published in 1857-58, which in
extent of range, in judgment in selection, and in thoroughness of liter-
ary and historical illustration, was far superior to any preceding similar
An eminent living graduate of Harvard, who was present on the occasion,
having come to Cambridge to take his entrance examination, has said that he re-
ceived from that oration his first vivid sense of the dignity of intellectual pursuits,
and his first strong impulse to devote himself to them.
336
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD.
work. But a more important piece of work, one of original investiga-
tion and displaying "wonderful industry, acuteness, and accuracy,"
was the treatise issued in the Memoirs of our Academy in 1862 under
the modest title of "Observations on the Language of Chaucer," t
which was followed in 1868 by a Supplement, entitled Observations
on the Language of Gower's Confessio Amantis." t " It is difficult
at the present day," says Professor Kittredge, " to imagine the state of
Chaucer philology at the moment when this paper appeared. Scarcely
anything, we may say, was known of Chaucer's grammar and metre
in a sure and scientific way. Indeed, the difficulties to be solved had
not even been clearly formulated.
Mr. Child not only defined the
problems, but provided for most of them a solution which the researches
of younger scholars have only served to substantiate. He also gave a
perfect model of the method proper to such investigations, - a method
simple, laborious, and exact." §
For many years after this Mr. Child published little, but with steady
purpose devoted such leisure as his incessant professional task allowed to
the extension of the vast stores of his learning, and to the accumulation
of the material for the main work of his life, a complete critical edition
of " The English and Scottish Ballads." At length in 1882 appeared
the first part of his work. The character of the undertaking was set
forth in a prospectus. The popular Ballads existing in the English lan-
guage had never been collected into one body ; a large portion of the
remains of the ballads was unprinted ; the text of much that was in print
was vitiated by editorial changes it was now proposed to publish all in
their entirety and their purity ; to include every independent version of
every ballad, and to record all important variations of different copies,
both printed and manuscript each ballad was to have a proper Preface,
and in the case of those ballads which the English have in common with
other nations an account was to be given of related traditions. The
work was to be completed by a general introduction, a glossary, and in-
dexes. The vast scale of this matured design became obvious on the
publication of the first part. The large range of the themes of the bal-
lads, the immense variety of local, historical, and romantic tradition
These are the terms used by Mr. A. J. Ellis, the learned author of the History
of English Pronunciation.
t Memoirs of the American Academy, New Series, Vol. VIII. pp. 445-502.
1 Ibid., Vol. IX. pp. 265-315.
§ From the admirable appreciation of Professor Child's character and works in
the Atlantic Monthly for December, 1896.
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD.
337
exhibited by them, the wide diffusion among the nations of Europe of
the legends which many of them embodied, opened a field of investiga-
tion of enormous extent, requiring acquaintance alike with many lan-
guages and many literatures. The task was one with which only a
scholar possessed of exceptional acquisitions could hope to accomplish
satisfactorily, and from which even the most industrious might have
shrunk. It had hardly a parallel in the variety of learning which it
exacted for its due performance, but this was not all it demanded in no
less measure fine critical acumen and poetic appreciation, - the gifts of
taste and culture as well as of scholarship. Mr. Child possessed them all.
" It was my wish," he said, in the Advertisement prefixed to the first
part, " not to begin to print The English and Scottish Popular Ballads,
until this unrestricted title should be justified by my having at command
every valuable copy of every known ballad.
What is still lacking is
believed to bear no great proportion to what is in hand.
Meanwhile
the uncertainties of the world forbid a longer delay to publish SO much as
has been got together."
From year to year the parts followed in rapid succession, - rapid in
view of the character of the work, - and in the Advertisement to
Part IX., which appeared in the spring of 1894, Mr. Child had the
satisfaction of saying that, to the extent of his knowledge of sources
the collection was complete, with the exception of a single ballad, which
is probably a variety of one or another here given in several forms."
Such had been the extraordinary success of his research, in which he had
been aided by many English and foreign scholars glad to assist in the
perfecting of a work which was of interest to them in itself, and which
roused their admiration by the manner in which it was executed.
The body of the work was complete but one more part was needed,
to contain a general Introduction, a Glossary, and Indexes. In spite of
failing health Mr. Child set himself resolutely to the drudgery involved
in this task. To the last month of his life he labored steadily, but with
a sense of weariness to which he had been unused. With the exception
of the Introduction the task was mainly accomplished, and the work was
left in such condition that it could be taken up and carried through by
the most competent hands next to Mr. Child's own, those of his disciple,
assistant, and friend, Professor Kittredge.
The year 1895-96 completed the fiftieth year of Mr. Child's service in
the University. It was a matter of satisfaction to him that during its
course he had been able, in spite of physical infirmity, to meet his classes
without the omission of a single lecture. The College year ended in
VOL. XXXII. - 22
338
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD.
June. He took no vacation, but busied himself in his study, and found
pleasure in his garden of roses. In August he became seriously ill, and
on the 11th of September he died.
Mr. Child's fame as a scholar is secure. His work is so done that it
can never be superseded. But to those who had the happiness of in-
timacy with him, his learning and all that he accomplished seem but as
secondary and accessory to the essential qualities of his character and his
manner of life. The sedentary nature of his occupations, and their nar-
row material confines within the limits of a University helped to preserve
the strongly marked and altogether delightful originality of his nature
from the pressure and attrition of the world, which speedily wear down
the marks of distinctive individuality and shape the mass of men into a
general dull uniformity. He had a most sympathetic and tender heart,
so easily touched that its impulses might sometimes have overcome the
restraint of good judgment, had they not been encountered by his keen,
kindly, and lively humor, which, while it generally saved him from senti-
mental extravagances, yet became often the inciter and ally of his liberal
sympathies. His charity might be abused, but his pity included even
the most open of impostors, and, taking a humorous enjoyment in the suc-
cess of deceits practiced upon himself, he chose rather to aid the unde-
serving than to let a single deserving needy man go by unhelped.
The same liberality of disposition was manifest in his relations to all
whom he could assist in literary or scholarly work. He made a friend
of every young scholar who sought from him advice or direction, and
gave his time willingly to serve interests not his own. He could be
merciless with pretenders, but he was marvellously patient with unpre-
tending and innocent incompetence.
With the highest sense of the duties and the privileges of his calling,
he did not regard them as exempting him from the discharge of the com-
mon duties of a citizen. He did not bury himself in his books, and he
had nothing of the indifference of a recluse to the affairs of the commu-
nity in which he lived. His feelings were strong and his judgment was
sound in regard to the matters affecting public interests. His opinions
carried weight, for they were based on principles and maintained with
clear intelligence and ready wit. If roused by argument, no one was his
match in the flash of wit and the play of humor. He took the part of a
good citizen in local politics; he was for many years an active member
and officer in local charities, and he served his term as a member of the
School Committee. At the time of the civil war he threw himself with
ardor into the service of the cause to which so many of the youth of Har-
FRANCIS JAMES CHILD.
339
vard, dear to him, were devoting themselves. He cherished with pecu-
liar tenderness the memory of those who fell in the war. He was the
main promoter of the two precious volumes of Harvard Memorial Biogra-
phies; and on the walls of his study, always before his eyes, close by the
portraits of his old masters in learning, the brothers Jacob and Wilhelm
Grimm, were those of his young heroic friends, the brothers Charles and
James Lowell.
His fidelity in the discharge of the exacting duties of his professorship
was complete. For far too many years far too much of his time was
occupied in the correction of students' themes. He never shirked this
wearisome drudgery. No teacher was ever more exacting of himself in
the discharge of his regular duties. In the later years of his life, when
he suffered much from gout and rheumatism, he did not allow pain or de-
pression of spirits to interfere with the regular discharge of his task as
instructor.
Even the dullest and most careless undergraduate could hardly fail to
be quickened and improved by such teaching as Mr. Child's. Here was
a master of most accurate and extensive learning, a scholar of unwearied
diligence and exact method, with the faculties and sympathies which
enabled him to impart his learning to his pupils, and to inspire in the
more capable among them something of his own enthusiasm for the best
GBD
in literature and life.
too
It is impossible not to regret that Mr. Child should not have done
So
more independent literary work. The several introductions to the Bal-
lads in his great collection, excellent as they are in their kind, very
seldom afford him free space for the display of his own genius; but they
abound in touches which light up the page with gleams of fancy or of
humor, and more rarely with a flash of poetic imagination that reveals
the restraint which the editor had imposed upon himself. His style when
at freedom was of the best, - for it was the simple expression of the
man himself.
Original, quaint, humorous, sweet, sympathetic, tender-hearted, faith-
ful, - these are the terms which first come to mind in describing him
the traits that these terms imply included all his intelligence, gave char-
acter to his work, and made his learning the least part of him.
Those who knew him best think of him mainly as one who had the
gift of love. He was a lover of nature, of poetry, of roses, of all that
was fair and sweet and good above all he was a lover of his fellow men.
When he died the world lost much more than one of its great scholars.
C. E. NORTON.
HOLLIS
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1.
Baccalaureate sermon, and oration and poem. Class of 1874.
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
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Cambridge, Press of J. Wilson and Son, 1874.
2.
Class Album. Class of 1874.
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
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3.
Class Album. Class of 1874.
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
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4.
Class Album. Class of 1874.
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
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5.
Class Album. [duplicate] Class of 1874.
Notman, William.
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6.
Eighth report of the class secretary /
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
Book
Boston Geo. H. Ellis, 1904.
Available Online via Google Book Search
7.
Eleventh report /
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
Book
Boston : Plimpton Press, 1924.
8.
Fifteenth report /
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
Book
Boston : Plimpton Press, 1934.
9.
Fifth report of the class secretary /
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
Book
Boston : Alfred Mudge & Son, 1889.
Available Online via Google Book Search
10.
Fourteenth report /
Harvard College (1780-) ). Class of 1874.
Book
Boston : Plimpton Press, 1928.
11.
Fourth report of the class secretary /
Harvard College (1780-) ). Class of 1874.
Book
Boston : Addison C. Getchell, 1884.
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19
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Henry Childs Merwin
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James Jackson Minot; M.D. 1878
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Germanic Lang., Boston Univ. 1892 - ; Prof. Sanskrit, Boston
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19
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Bachelors of Arts Harvard University 1874 Graduates
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Samuel Bayard Woodward; M.D. 1878
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18
* deceased date not shown
*N = No Date of death given and no Deceased date not
shown indicated. This book published in 1915 so this could
mean the person was still living in 1915.
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Harvard University Press in the Two Hundred and Seventy-Ninth Year of the College 1915.
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University Records
Dorr George Bucknam (A.B.1874)
Ov. Rec.
Vol XII On Committee, 461:
Vol.XIIION Committee, 10:
447.D:
UAII.10.7.1.
Dorr, George Bucknam ( A. B 1874)
acadomicalsories II
ov.
1896 Signed report as Chairman of Committee to Visit the
Department of Philosophy. Nov. 1896.
Dorr, George Bucknam ( A.B.1874)
admitted to the Freshman Class, 176: Matriculated, 245:
Privately od monished for absence From recitations, 289
vs iv 1812.1874
Faculty Privately admonished
From recitations, 19:176FF throwing Showballs in the
College yard, N4: Publisly admonished For alosance From
recitations, zovi Privately admonished
prayers 212 Warned oF danger of failure in Rhatoric,
2/9:
Bowen, Francis, 1811-1890. Correspondence: Guide.
Page 1 of 4
bMS Am 972
Bowen, Francis, 1811-1890. Correspondence:
Guide.
Houghton Library, Harvard College Library
(V)
Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138
C 2002 The President and Fellows of Harvard College
Descriptive Summary
Repository: Houghton Library, Harvard College Library, Harvard University
Location: b
Call No.: MS Am 972
Creator: Bowen, Francis, 1811-1890.
Title: Correspondence,
Date(s): 1724-1909 (inclusive) 1836-1892 (bulk).
Quantity: 1 box (.5 linear ft.)
Abstract: Correspondence of the American philosopher Francis Bowen.
Administrative Information
Acquisition Information: *71M-114.
Gift of Maria Bowen; received: 1931.
Historical Note
Francis Bowen was an American philosopher, editor of the North American Review and
professor at Harvard.
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FRANCIS BOWEN
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THE 10101
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BOWEN, FRANCIS (1811-1890), American
philosophical writer and educationalist, was born in
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September 1811. He graduated at Harvard ill 1833,
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taught for two years at Phillips Exeter Academy, and
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Harvard. After several years of study in Europe, he
settled in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and was editor
and proprietor of the North American Review from
Philosophy
1843 to 1854. In 1850 he was appointed professor of
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history at Harvard; but his appointment was
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disapproved by the board of overseers on account of
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reactionary political opinions he had expressed in a
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controversy with Robert Carter (1819-1879)
concerning the Hungarian revolution. In 1853 his
appointment as Alford professor of natural religion,
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moral philosophy and civil polity was approved, and
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he occupied the chair until 1889. In 1876 he was a
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consider currency reform, and wrote (5877) the
minority report, in which he opposed the restoration of
the double standard and the remonetization of silver.
He died in Boston, Massachusetts, on the 22nd of
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Present Condition of Speculative Philosophy (5842);
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American Political Economy (1870); Modern
Philosophy from Descartes to Schopenhauer and
Hartman-n (1877); and Gleanings from a Literary Life,
1838-1880 (1880).
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Haward University Department of Philosophy: Philosophy Prizes
Page 1 of 2
Harvard University
Department of Philosophy
Home
Philosophy Prizes
About the
Department
Below are listed four annual prizes in philosophy for which both Harvard undergraduate and graduate students may compete.
Programs
Further information about these prizes may be obtained at the Department of Philosophy's office.
All descriptions are taken from the Faculty of Arts & Sciences Office of the Secretary's Web page.
Courses
People
George Plimpton Adams Prize
From the fund established in 1974 for the Department of Philosophy by Beatrice Carrier
Colloquia
Seegal, in memory of Professor George Plimpton Adams, who guided her philosophy studies
at the University of California, a prize will be awarded to a College or Graduate School of
Arts and Sciences student submitting a dissertation on a subject designated by the
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Department of Philosophy, preferably in the field of history of philosophy. All senior honors
theses and all doctoral dissertations which are eligible under the terms of this prize will be
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considered without special application.
Bechtel Prize in Philosophy
Through the generosity of Edwin De T. Bechtel, a prize will be awarded annually for the best
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essay on a philosophical subject. Any philosophical topic is admissible, as long as it can be
treated with little or no use of technical symbols. The prize is open to students registered in
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Harvard College or the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. It will be "awarded by a
Committee of the Department of Philosophy, if the Committee unanimously determines that
it is a work of merit, fully deserving the award of the Prize." Essays must not exceed 10,000
words and must be submitted at Emerson 209a.
Francis Bowen Prize
The Francis Bowen Prize was established in 1938 by a bequest from Miss Maria Bowen, as a
memorial to her father, who held the Alford professorship of Natural Religion, Moral
Philosophy, and Civil Polity from 1853 to 1889. The prize will be conferred annually for the
best essay upon a subject in moral or political philosophy, and is open to students
registered in Harvard College or in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. Essays must
not exceed 10,000 words in length, and must be delivered to Emerson Hall 209a.
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~phildept/philosophy_prizes.html
8/5/2007
James Mark Baldwin
Page 1 of 3
James Mark Baldwin, (1861-1934)
In 1889 James Mark Baldwin came to Toronto from Princeton to found
the first psychological laboratory in the British Empire. The Baldwin
appointment created considerable controversy in Toronto. Baldwin was
a
proponent of the "new" experimental psychology emanating from
Germany, especially the laboratory of Wilhelm Wundt at Liepzig.
Torontonians of the late 1880's harbored strong nativist tendencies and
did not want an outsider teaching in Toronto. In addition, many in the
academic community held to an idealist philosophy and refused to accept
Baldwin's "materialistic," "elemental" view of mental life.
Baldwin won the appointment with the help of President Sir Daniel
Wilson. He was made professor of Logic, Metaphysics and Ethics in the
philosophy department. To the chagrin of his opponents, Baldwin soon
Balan
became a popular professor on campus. Misfortune, however, delayed
Baldwin's grand plans to establish a psychological laboratory at U of T.
A month after his inaugural lecture (given to the public, students, and
faculty), a fire destroyed University College. In the two years that
followed, Baldwin received funding to establish a new laboratory. The university provided four rooms
on the second floor of the West wing of the restored University College building. In 1893, with the
laboratory well established, Baldwin left U of T for a higher paying position at Princeton. Hoff, (1992);
Myers, (1982).
In the 1890's Baldwin emerged as a leading figure in experimental psychology. He was a founding
member of the American Psychological Association in 1892 and the sixth President of the APA in 1897.
In 1893, Baldwin organized the psychology exhibit at the World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago.
His landmark work on mental development in children (Baldwin, 1895b) included, for the first time in
psychology, experiments with children (namely, his own daughter Elizabeth). Baldwin was one of the
first experimental psychologists to apply Darwin's theory of evolution to his theories of development,
(Murray, 1988). In 1902, he published the Dictionary of Philosophy and Psychology, which contained
contributions from the leading figures in psychology and philosophy at the turn of the century.
In the Literature:
Baldwin, J. M. (1887). Postulates of Physiological Psychology. Presbyterian Review, 8, 427-440.
Baldwin, J. M. (1889a). Handbook of Psychology: Senses and Intellect. New York: Henry Holt & Co.
Baldwin, J. M. (1889b). The Idealism of Spinoza. Presbyterian Review, 10, 64-76.
Baldwin, J. M. (1890a). Philosophy Its Relation to Life and Education, Inaugural Address. Toronto:
University Of Toronto Press.
Baldwin, J. M. (1890b). New Work In Psychology, University of Toronto Quarterly, 1, 70-97.
Baldwin, J. M. (1890c). Psychology at the University of Toronto, American Journal of Psychology, 3,
285-286.
Baldwin, J. M. (1890d). Origin of Right or Left Handedness, Science, 16, 247-248.
http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/museum/baldwin.htm
1/24/2014
James Mark Baldwin
Page 2 of 3
Baldwin, J. M. (1891a). Notes. American Journal of Psychology, 3, 593.
Baldwin, J. M. (1891b). Handbook of Psychology: Feelings and Will. New York: Henry Holt & Co.
Baldwin, J. M. (1891c). Suggestion in Infancy. Science, 17, 113-117.
Baldwin J. M. (1892a). The Psychology Laboratory at the University of Toronto. Science, 19, 143-144.
Baldwin, J. M. (1892b). Suggestion and Will. In International Congress of Experimental Psychology,
Second Session, London, 1892 (pp. 49-56). London: Williams and Norgate.
Baldwin, J. M. (1892c). Origin of Volition in Childhood, Science, 20, 286-287.
Baldwin, J. M. (1893). New Questions in Mental Chronometry, Medical Record, (N.Y.), 47, 455-456.
Baldwin, J. M. (1894). Imitation: A Chapter in the Natural History of Consciousness. Mind, 3, 25-55.
Baldwin, J. M. (1895a). Types of Reaction. Psychological Review, 2, 259-273.
Baldwin, J. M. (1895b). Mental Development in the Child and the Race: Methods and Processes. New
York: Macmillan & Co.
Baldwin, J, M. (1895). Memory for Square Size, Psychological Review, 2, 236-239.
Baldwin, J. M. (1896). The Type Theory of Reaction. Mind, n.s. 1, 81-90.
Baldwin, J. M. (1926). Between Two Wars: 1861-1921 (2 vols.) Boston: Stratford Co.
Baldwin, J. M. (1930). James Mark Baldwin. In C. Murchison (Ed.). A History Of Psychology in
Autobiography (vol. 1.) New York: Rinehart & Winston.
Hoff, Tory L. (1992). Psychology in Canada One Hundred years Ago: James Mark Baldwin at the
University Of Toronto. Canadian Psychology, 33: 683-694.
Murray, D. (1988). A History of Western Psychology, 2nd edition. New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Myers, C. R. (1982). Psychology at Toronto. In M. J. Wright & C. R. Myers (eds.) A History Of
Academic Psychology in Canada (pp. 68-99) Toronto: C. F. Hogrefe.
UTMuSI
Brass Instrument Psychology Home
UTMuSI Home
http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/museum/baldwin.htm
1/24/2014
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1873. Class album of James Laurence Laughlin: an i
Page 1 of 6
HUD 273.704.9
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1873. Class
album of James Laurence Laughlin: an
inventory
TAS
Harvard University
©President and Fellows of Harvard College, 2013
Descriptive Summary
Repository: Harvard University Archives
Call No.: HUD 273.704.9
Creator: Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1873.
Title: Harvard College Class of 1873 class album of James Laurence Laughlin, 1873.
Quantity: 2 boxes.
Abstract: This class album is part of a series of Harvard class photograph albums, which
may be considered the nineteenth-century counterpart to yearbooks. This volume contains
photographs of instructors and administrators, class members, the campus and environs, and
individuals who drew the notice of the album's compiler, James Laurence Laughlin.
Acquisition Information:
Accession 13020; gift of June Carter, 1994 December 19.
Conditions on Use and Access:
The fragility of the class album may limit access or impose handling restrictions.
Last Update to Inventory:
This document last updated 2013 February 28.
Historical Note
These volumes are part of a series of Harvard class albums, which may be considered
the nineteenth-century counterpart to yearbooks. Individual students compiled their own
albums.
This album belonged to James Laurence Laughlin, a class member who went on to
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12/2/2013
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author: "Harvard College(1780 uery
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Authors:
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874.
Title:
Class Album. Class of 1874.
Description:
1 V.
Other title:
Title from shelflist: Class Album.
Subject:
Harvard University -- Photographs.
Harvard College (1780-). Class of 1874 -- Photographs.
Form/Genre:
Photograph albums.
HOLLIS number: 007517113 MARC HOLLIS Classic
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Harvard University Archives
HUD 274.704
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availability information under the alternate title. Check the shelves, or contact Harvard University Archives for more information.
© 2009 President and Fellows of Harvard College I Harvard home
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Alumni to Honor Harvard's President.
New York Times 1857-Current file); May 20, 1894; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg.1
Alumni to Honor Harvard's President.
BOSTON, May 19.-Twenty-five years ago to-
day Charles W. Ellot became President of Har-
vard University. When he assum : charge, there
were 563 students in the college and 1,097 in the
university as a whole; now there are 1,655 and
3,302 respectively. To keep pace with this in-
crease there has been a great development in the
corps of instruction. Now there are 322 pro-
fessors, assistant professors, instructors, and
tutors on the rolls of the university; then there
were only 87. Then $270,000 a year paid Har-
vard's expenses; this year it takes over $1,000,-
000. Dr. Eliot's anniversary will be noticed by
the alumni of the past quarter century, who have
raised $2,000 for the purchase of a gold medal
which will be given Dr. Eliot at the commence-
ment dinner June 27.
More Time for Prendergant.
CHICAGO. May 19.-Patrick Eugene Prender-
gast, murderer of Carter Harrison, will get an-
other continuance, probably for ten days or two
weeks, when he appears in court Monday for
trial as to his sanity. A continuance will be
asked for by his attorneys on the ground that
they are employed in other cases. and will be en-
gaged some time to come, and the State will en-
ter no objection.
CONDENSED CABLEGRAMS.
ROME. May .-The Chamber will begin con-
sidering Finance Minister Sonnino's nnancial
projects on Monday. Sonnino informed several
Deputies to-day that he should adhere infexibly
to his programme, not even abandoning his pro-
posal to reduce the Interest on the rente.
Copenhagen, May 19.-The British steamship
Horton, from Nava for Zaandam, put in here
to-day. She was slightly damaged in a collision
with the German briz. Emma Beug. from Ham-
burg for Koka. The Emma Beug sank, and four
of her crew were drowned.
Berlin, May 19.-The dock laborers' strike at
Stettin has been terminated by mutual conces-
sions, and the men have returned to work.
Paris, May 19.-The police have discovered a
plot to explode of bomb in the building in which
the guillotine is stared.
St. Petersburz. May 19.-The commercial treaty
between Austria and Russia has been formally
ratified.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
House (Edward
of Ryder and Harris,
In the nineteenth
Harvard dormitories,
this one on
achusetts Avenue, filled
Square.
1870-14
LA fourth dormitory, Holyoke House, located just across Massachusetts
Avenue and therefore outside the Yard, was an integral part of this cam-
paign of dormitory construction. Built during the first year of the new
administration, it was demolished almost a century later, in 1961, to make
way for Holyoke Center. Holyoke House was also designed by Edward
Harris, architect for Thayer Hall. Like College House, the older university
dormitory on Harvard Square, Holyoke House was provided with stores in
the ground story; space at the rear was reserved for a public restaurant (fig.
49). On the floors above were suites, each consisting of a study, two
bedrooms, and a bath. Though the public areas (stores, stair halls, and
corridors) had central heat, each suite was dependent on its own coal grate.
The use of a mansard roof on Holyoke House was prompted as much by
economy as by fashion: it was cheaper to construct a wooden roof covered
with slate than to carry up masonry walls for another story. The design had
a certain public role to play because it faced Massachusetts Avenue, and for
many years the stores on the ground floor set a standard of magnificence to
which still-provincial Cambridge was quite unaccustomed. These four
dormitories, totally different in appearance yet erected witKin the space of
three years, illustrate the architectural inconsistency of the Eliot administra-
tion and of America itself in these years.
Dormitory building drew attention to sanitation problems in the Yard
and to a need for improvements now that the city provided a water main
and a sewer line along Massachusetts Avenue. But the change from eigh-
teenth-century hand pumps and privies to modern plumbing came slowly.
The first dormitory to be equipped with cold running water was Grays Hall
(1862), but it had no inside toilets. "Water-trough privies," according to
the President's Report of 1870, were first installed in the south basement
Notz: Altered 1873, 1876, 1909. Demolished 1961.
6,0 President Eliot and the Harvard Yard
ADOLESCENTUR
*
1770
THE INSTITUTE OF 1770.
THE SPEAKING CLUB. - ITS OBJECTS. - EARLY MEMBERS. - THE MERCURIAN CLUB. - PATRIOTIC
ASSOCIATION. - THE SOCIAL FRATERNITY. - HERMETICK SOCIETY. - - THE INSTI-
TUTE OF 1770. - THE I. O. H. - SELECTION OF MEMBERS. THE LIBRARY. - ROOMS.
THE times were necding strong words from young Americans when Samuel
Phillips, John Warren, and the rest of the Class of 1771 began their Senior year;
while the College authorities, as these students remarked, in language not wholly
strange to later generations, showed "a cold indifference to the practice of Ora-
tory." What was called the "Speaking Club" was therefore organized, with
Phillips, later Lieutenant-Governor of the State, as President, and with a Secre-
tary who kept remarkably full and accurate records, happily still preserved, of
these first meetings. It was voted "that there be a stage to perform on, four
feet Diameter, not more than two Feet high, with the front Corners clipt and
upon the stage thus made and "clipt" Orations and Essays on the profoundest
themes were "performed" with great regularity. Warren spoke on " The Beauty
of the Heavenly Bodies"; Avery, on "The Odiousness of Envy' and Thomas,
on "The Pernicious Habit of drinking Tea ": each of which performances the
Record describes as " ejus compositionem." It was early voted also "that no
member shall speak in Latin without special leave from the President"; and "that
the Secretary provide candles."
Founded in this very earnest and business-like way, the Society throve and en-
dured, and numbered among its members in these early days such men as Chris-
topher Gore, Rufus King, James Freeman, Henry Warc, and John Quincy Adams.
Other societies, with a kindred purpose, appeared from time to time by its side,
and each in its turn was merged in the older organization. In 1773 it is written
that, " Having had intelligence that there is an honourable Club in College, known
by the name of the Mercurian Club, founded in 1771 by Fisher Ames" and
others, and "that these worthy Founders went upon the same noble principle in
founding their Club which is set forth in our Preamble," - therefore the two clubs
were united with great formality under the old name of The Speaking Club.
342
THE INSTITUTE OF 1770.
During the years 1778- the records are wanting, but there is a tradition
that the Society was maintained in secret by the Senior classes. Throughout
this early history there was much taking of oaths not to disclose the secret of
the Society, or even that there is such an one subsisting." This secret appears
to have been the fact that the Society was organized for the practice of oratory;
and in 1801 it seems to have occurred to the members that the name "Speak-
ing Club" might suggest the mysterious purpose of their meetings. "Being
actuated," as they write, "by the benevolent purpose to transmit this inviolable
secret unimpaired as a blessing to posterity," they changed the dangerous name
to that of Patriotic Association." It subsequently assumed the name of "The
Social Fraternity of 1770." In 1825 two more of its rivals, the 'Hermetick So-
ciety" and the combined with the "Social Fraternity," and the
enlarged Society took the name of "The Institute of 1770." Still later, in 1848,
the I. O. H., another club of the same nature, followed the lead of its fellows
and surrendered to the Institute. leaving it alone in its field until a few years
since. In 1837 the seal was designed by Rev. Samuel Longfellow, then in his
Sophomore year.
The Institute was originally a Senior society. In 1781, "the Senior Members,
being obliged to pay a more strict attention to their Collegiate Exercises than the
Duties of this Club would permit," resigned it to the Junior class. Later, by slow
processes of degeneration, Sophomores, and even promising Freshmen, were admitted.
Tradition has at last hallowed the maintenance of the Society by Sophomores
choosing at the end of their year ten Freshmen who in turn elect their classmates.
As carly as 1782 a Valedictory Oration was made a regular annual custom,
and it is still continued, with the addition of a Poem. The library of the So-
ciety has always been much used, has grown to bc of very considerable value,
and receives additions from the fund of each class at the end of its year of
active membership. It was kept at No. 2 Holworthy Hall, which room was occu-
pied free of rent by the Librarian, who was elected at the end of his Sophomore
year, and held the office during his Junior year. The Society has held its
meetings, in the rooms of its members, in Nos. 17 and 19 Massachusetts Hall
and in the lower and upper stories of the same building, until in 1873, when
the present rooms in Holyoke House, to which the library has been transferred,
were obtained and fitted up by the Class of 1875. The Institute thus stands
among the older College societies with a marked and creditable distinction. It
is the only one whose members, from a distant beginning, have devoted them-
selves to the definite purpose of declamation, composition, and debate, and
have not lost sight of or neglected this purpose, either from lack of interest
in it or from love of more social entertainment. The traditions of the past, the
needs of the present, and the inspiration of new competitors, all tend to keep
this original purpose alike clear and profitable.
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