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

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Lenox, MA Highlawn and Highwood
Lenox, MA.
High lown and Highwood
History of Lenox, Massachusetts - Berkshire County
Page 1 of 2
A HISTORY OF LENOX
LENOX IS FOR AIL SEASONS
Lenox was a prosperous farming and mill town -- the seat of Berkshire
County -- that was suddenly "discovered" by famous and wealthy residents of
Boston and New York in the mid 1800s.
Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote "The House of Seven Gables" while living in a
little red cottage just outside of town (the cottage actually is in Stockbridge,
but Hawthorne thought he lived in Lenox because its village center was much
closer). Hawthorne's series of children's stories, "Tanglewood Tales,"
provided the name for a neighboring estate.
A recreation of Hawthorne's cottage, near Tanglewood, is open for tours in
the summer.
In 1845, Samuel Gray Ward, the Boston banker who later was to finance the
U.S. purchase of Alaska, built a summer home near Hawthorne's cottage.
Ward told his friends back in Boston about the beautiful Berkshire
countryside and the mild summer weather. Soon, many of them were joining
him as summer, or even year-round residents. Among the early "summer
people" was Fanny Kemble, one of the most noted Shakespearean actresses
of the day.
By the late 1800s, Lenox and Stockbridge were booming as the summer
homes of many of the country's elite. The peak building year in Lenox was
1885, when construction began on several of the gigantic mansions these
wealthy families whimsically called "cottages."
The most magnificent of them all was Shadowbrook, built for railroad baron
Anson Phelps Stokes on 900 acres at the edge of Lenox and Stockbridge.
With 100 rooms, it was one of the largest homes in North America. Andrew
http://www.lenox.org/history.html
9/9/2003
History of Lenox, Massachusetts - Berkshire County
Page 2 of 2
Carnegie later bought the house, and died there in 1919.
The Guilded Age ended in the early twentieth century, when the income tax
and other factors made it impossible for the "cottagers" to maintain their huge
summer homes in the Berkshires. Several of the cottages have been converted
to hotels or schools.
One of the grandest cottages in Lenox is open for public tours: The Mount,
built by novelist Edith Wharton. The Mount is now undergoing a restoration
to bring it back to its former grandeur.
A new era for Lenox and the Berkshires began in the 1930s, when music
lovers began sponsoring symphonic concerts in the summer months. In 1937,
the Boston Symphony Orchestra began offering concerts at its new summer
home, the "Tanglewood" estate between Lenox and Stockbridge. A year
later, the orchestra inaugurated its huge new concert hall, the "Shed."
In the succeeding six decades, Tanglewood has become famous as one of the
world's leading music festivals, attracting more than 300,000 listeners each
summer. Other summer arts festivals, featuring theater, music and modern
dance, have joined in making the Berkshires the summer cultural capital of
the Northeast United States.
Back
Antiques & Galleries Il Artists, Artisans and Musicians II Banking & Insurance Il Calendar of
Member Openings & Events Il Cultural Schedules Il Churches & Synagogues Il Communications,
Marketing & Public Relations Il Education & Camps Il Health, Fitness & Personal Image Il A
History of Lenox Il How to Get to Lenox Il Links Il Live and Work in Lenox Il Lodging Il Historic
Lenox Village Map Il Town of Lenox Map Il Picnics & Catering Il Professional Services Real Estate
Il Restaurants Il Retail Il Retirement & Nursing Homes Il Things to Do II Trades, Manufacturing &
Business Services Il Travel & Transportation Il Weddings & Conferences
http://www.lenox.org/history.html
9/9/2003
Page 1 of 3
Encircling Laurel Lake
For more than fifty years
the Rev. Samuel Shepard
preached in Lenox church
to all the countryside. "His
Lenox was not the Lenox
of to-day. On every
southern hillside, with
protecting walls of forest to
the north, stood ample
farmhouses. The valleys
"Yokun Farm," the Judge Walker house,
were luxuriant with corn
as it looked in 1865, when the Hon.
and waving grain. Town
Richard Goodman purchased it of Judge
Edwards Pierrepont, minister to
meeting day found the old
England under Grant.
town house--which is still
standing and still in use-full
of as fine a set of New England farmers as any town could
boast. Eloquence was the rule." [1]
Familiar figures of old days in Lenox were Major Caleb Hyde,
Samuel Collins, and Colonel Elijah Northrup (his house of 1778
is still standing on Main Street, the residence of Henry
Sedgwick), also Representatives Asher Sedgwick, Oliver
Belden, and William 0. Curtis, Senator Charles Mattoon,
County Treasurer Joseph Tucker, James Robbins, and Judge
William Walker who came from old Rehoboth in 1770, and
purchased some 200 acres on Walker Hill (now Lanier Hill).
Judge Walker always drove four horses or four oxen; in his
house, Yokun farm, remain still the huge chimney, and
exquisite French wall-paper laid on in 'Yok-un Farm," the Judge
Walker house, as it looked in 1865, when the Hon. Richard
Goodman purchased it of Judge Edwards Pierrepont, minister
to England under Grant. sheets, and the room in the L, "
where Madame Walker directed her maidens at their spinning.
"Yokun " has been the home for many years of the family of
the Hon. Richard Goodman.
Judge Walker raised his
gambrel-roof on a most
attractive height, whence
may be observed the clear
waters of three
embowered ponds-
Makheenac, Lily, and
Laurel Lakes; this latter is
literally a mountain
mirror." Seated beneath
Yokun's honeysuckle
"Yokun" to-day; built by Judge Willaim
summerhouse on the west
Walker in 1794, and remodelled;
residence of Mr. Richard Goodman.
knoll, one becomes the
guest of the clouds, the
cirrus trains which float or scud across Bald Head and
Monument, to be finally drowned in the azure distance of
Sheffield's proud Dome. One of the prettiest of days is when
"the clouds are sticking across,"- as the daughter of a Cape
Cod fisherman expressed it, her weather eye unconsciously
alert for the smacks outside the bar.
http://www.berkshireweb.com/themap/lenox/history/laurel.html
9/10/2012
Page 2 of 3
On the hither side of Laurel Lake is the broad sweep of
"Erskine Park," the summer home of the inventor George
Westinghouse; thence you may command, set in sublime
scenery, "Yokun" and the "Allen Winden of Charles Lanier,
Esq., on this Walker's or Lanier's Hill.
'The Perch" of Fanny Kemble also overlooks Laurel Lake, on
which she spent long days fishing for pickerel, "the most
patient fisherman hereabouts."
Where willows dip, by the western shore of Laurel Lake, the
close-cropped upland rises to the terraces of The Mount," the
home of Edith Wharton. Simplicity is the accent of this estate
by the author's preference, and the house is a copy of Beton,
the seat of Lord Brownlow in Lincolnshire. June is full of
invitations to the outdoor revel of bird-folk and flowers; quite
equal here to the scene at Elvetham in Hampshire, poetized by
Peter Lylly, for the occasion of "The Honorable Entertainment
given by the Queen's Majestie in Progress" by the right
Honorable the Earle of Hertford. Thus runs the Dittie of the Six
Virgins' Song:
"Now birds record new harmonie,
And trees doe whistle melodie!
Now everie thing that nature breeds
Doth clad itself in pleasant weeds.
0 beauteous Queene of second Troy,
Accept of our unfained joy!" [2]
Still another estate in the literary annals of Lenox touches
Laurel Lake- Wyndhurst," originally the Blossom Farm" of
the Rev. John Hotchkin, Principal of the celebrated Lenox
Academy. Henry Ward Beecher wrote Star Papers here and
the height is known as "Beecher's Hill." Gen. John F. Rathbone
christened the place "Wyndhurst" ; it looks out upon
bewitching October Mountain, and the Housatonic Valley. The
ivy-mantled tower of the "Tudor" mansion of the present owner,
John Sloane, Esq., commands a sweep of sixty miles across
Berkshire from Greylock to the Dome.
In the appropriate landscape setting of "Wyndhurst" yearly
blooms the memory of the power and charm of Charles Eliot
and Olmsted the elder.
Adjoining the Beecher farm is Coldbrooke, the estate of
Captain John S. Barnes, who has an unusual collection of war-
relics of 1812. Coldbrooke is the summer 'home of James
Barnes the author.
The early estate of Mrs. Dorr, a sister of Samuel Gray Ward, is
now part of " Blantyre," the present estate of Robert W.
Paterson, Esq. His collection of paintings includes the
signatures of Meissonier, Romney, Bridgman, Henner, and
Lembach. The furniture is modelled after Hatfield House, and
includes pieces from the Marquand collection. The old Albany
post-road used to run through the Paterson and Barnes places.
The Elizabethan villa built by George H. Morgan, Esq., on the
http://www.berkshireweb.com/themap/lenox/history/laurel.html
9/10/2012
Page 3 of 3
old Ogden Hagerty estate and designed by Arthur Rotch, well
becomes its setting of magnificent old pines. Mrs. Hagerty held
the earliest salon in Lenox, and among other interesting events
Christine Nilsson sang in her drawing-room. Miss Hagerty
became the wife of the gallant Robert Gould Shaw.
The foundation of the Parish of Trinity Church was
begun as early as 1771: its fine group of buildings of
Berkshire limestone. are largely memorials. The parish
house is a gift of the Hon. John E. Parsons, the chimes,
of George H. Morgan, Esq., the chancel, of the
Kneeland family, the campanile tower of Mrs. R. T.
Auchmuty and F. Augustus Schemerhorn. Tablets have
been placed to Chester Alan Arthur, twenty-first
President of the United States, Major-General Paterson,
Debby Hewes Quincy, Wm. Ellery Sedgwick, Richard
Goodman, Mrs. John E. Parsons, Miss Sarah
Schermerhorn.
"Sunnyridge," the old Brevoort place, is the house of
George Winthrop Folsom, Esq.
Between the Lanier and Goodman estates is that of
Cortlandt Field Bishop, Esq., the president of the Aero
Club of America. one of the new marvels applying
science to sport, combined with valuable explorations of
earth and air; the earliest ascensions were made in
Pittsfield.
NEXT
The BerkshireWeb
Return to the BerkshireWeb
http://www.berkshireweb.com/themap/lenox/history/laurel.htm
9/10/2012
home.gif
Page 1 of 2
History of Blantyre
Nearly one hundred years ago, Blantyre began its life as a gift of love. A
successful merchant, Robert Paterson, had been invited to Lenox,
Massachusetts in the late 1890's by his good friend John Sloane, a founder of
furniture store W&J Sloane. Paterson was immediately infatuated with the area
and its elegant way of life. At the time Lenox already had many great estates,
prompting the area to be known as "the queen of inland resorts" or, as
Cleveland Amory wrote, "the Switzerland of America."
Paterson decided this was where he wanted to spend summers with his wife, the
love of his life, and his family. He set about acquiring 220 acres next door to
Sloane so that he could begin to build his dream house. It was to be a
spectacular property, built on a grand scale, although the architect's initial plans
were purportedly drawn on the back of an envelope.
20000
In homage to his wife, Paterson's concept was for no less than a castle of "feudal
architectural features," replete with turrets and gargoyles. The house was
modeled after his wife's ancestral home in Lanarkshire, Scotland and
construction began in 1901, at times employing over 300 people on the grounds
and buildings. In addition to the main house, there were seven outbuildings,
including an icehouse, stables for 16 horses, and a carriage house, as well as
extensive greenhouses.
fi
The main house was furnished in the English style with all the furniture being
brought in from England. Throughout, there were exquisite pieces from the
Paterson's extensive art collection. The featured painting in the Music Room
was a highly prized Bismarck by Lembach. Today the portrait has been
replaced by one of Henry Clive, painted by John Opie.
The Paterson family used the house every summer and entertained frequently,
as was the fashion in those days. There were garden parties with musicians
imported from New York and grand dinner-dances with each party becoming
more lavish than the one before, befitting the "Gilded Age."
When the end of the era came nearly 20 years later, hastened by the
introduction of the income tax, so, too, ended a lifestyle that was never to be
repeated. Over the next 60 years, Blantyre went through several transitions and
changes in ownership, including a particularly harsh and destructive period in
the 1970s.
Things began to change for the better in 1980 when Jack and Jane Fitzpatrick
bought the property. Also the highly respected owners of The Red Lion Inn in
Stockbridge, the Fitzpatricks were determined to restore Blantyre to its original
élegance.
After almost a year of extensive renovation, and the addition of many period
http://www.blantyre.com/history.htm
8/15/2003
home.gif
Page 1 of 1
Property Map of Blantyre
Blastere Road
Carriage House
to Route 20
Main Gate
Tennis Courts
Pool, Jacuzai,
888
and Sauna
&
Ice House
Main House
Cottage
Queen
Shuffle Board
J
Winter
Cottage by
I
Palace
the Path
Croquet Courts
Trails
30 Cianwell Golf Course
16 Blantyre Road * Lenox, MA 01240 * Telephone: (413) 637-3956 6 Fax: (3) 637-4282 + E-mail: welcome@himmyre.com
http://www.blantyre.com/property.htm
8/15/2003
Blantyre Castle
Page 1 of 1
BLANTYRE CASTLE
I received E-Mail that said:
There is a castle called Blantyre in Lenox, Massachusetts. Built in 1903 for Robert W. Patterson of
New York City. The architect was Robert W. Robertson of the firm Robertson and Potter, New
York.
The story goes that Robertson after viewing the location was asked to design something. He then
did a rough sketch on the back of an envelop which was then given to Mr. Patterson who agreed
on the design. It was built like this sketch on the 220 acre estate. The house was modeled after his
wife's (Livingston) ancestral home in Lanarkshire, Scotland in the town of Blantyre. Construction
began in 1901 at times employing 300 people on the grounds and buildings. In addition to the
main house, there was seven outbuildings, including an icehouse, stables for 16 horses, and a
carriage house, as well as extensive greenhouses.
The house was 165 X 50 feet with a 30 X 75 extension for servants quarters The main house was
furnished in English style with all the furniture being brought in from England. Patterson had an
extensive art collection in the mansion and the walls were adorned with trophy animal heads from
his hunts in the US. and Canada. In addition to their Lenox estate, the Pattersons had a New York
home, a Canadian fishing lodge, and a winter retreat in Georgia.
Visit the Blantyre homepage by clicking here.
To return to this page, click on the BACK button.
Does anyone have more information?
Back to Home Page
http://www.dupontcastle.com/castles/blantyre.htm
12/19/2005
: Rathbone then
: had been named
PINE CROFT. F. A. Schermerhorn's summer house was also a working farm. Although he and
is new property
the entire Schermerhorn family were known and respected during their day, history remembers
only one. Caroline Schermerhorn married William Blackhouse Astor. The combination of her
lineage and his money established her as the Mrs. Astor, grande dame of New York society.
(Courtesy of the Lee Library; photograph by E. A. Morley.)
ossom Farm house
e house during the
Rathbone's house
HIGHLAWN, 1842. George Dorr was credited "with the best lawns in Lenox." Highlawn
e's fine house was
much admired as a large and comfortable house, advantageously sited upon a hill. It was was not
of the Lee Library;
however, the going to serve the next wave of Berkshire visitors. The only perceived advantage was
(Courtesy of the Lee Library; photograph by E. A. Morley.)
land. I lighlawn became one of three parcels combined to create the great estate of Blantyre.
65
Reports of the presented 1 waver (871/1872-1893.
M.I.T. Hathi Treath Digital lobray.
STATEMENT OF THE TREASURER.
The Treasurer submits the annual statement of the
financial affairs of the Institute for the year ending Sept.
30, 1890.
During the year the executors of the estate of the late
1806-1876
George Bucknam Dorr have handed over to the Institute
the following securities at the valuation set against each :-
International & Great Northern R. R. Bond
$1,110 00
Milwaukee & St. Paul R. R. 71s, $3,000
3,510 00
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. 7s, $7,000
8,715 00
Cincinnati & Indiana R. R. 7s, $2,000
2,080 00
Union Pacific R. R. 1st Mortgage 6s
1,140 00
Chicago, Burlington & Northern R. R. 5s, $2,000
2,060 00
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé R. R. 4s, $2,000
1,687 50
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé, Incomes, $500
301 88
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy R. R. Stock, 14 shares
1,477 oo
Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago R. R. Stock, 20
shares
3,000 oo
Morris & Essex R. R. Stock, 82 shares
6,150 00
New York & Harlem R. R. Stock, 40 shares
5,000
Pennsylvania Coal Co. Stock, 75 shares
11,250 00
Consolidated Gas Co. of N. Y. Stock, 15 shares
1,447 50
Cash
644 59
$49,573 47
By the decease, Dec. 5, 1889, of Miss Susan C. Dorr.
the title of the Institute to two-thirds of the estate at
Lenox, Mass., known as "Highlawn," became absolute,
subject, however, to the provision named in the deed of
gift of Mrs. Martha Ann Edwards, dated Nov. 21, 1876.
Digitized by Google
Original from
UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
THE ANGLIWOOD CIRCLE
L
HAWTHORNE'S
"Anyone who loves the
Berkshires will love this book."
-Pulitzer Prize winner Debby Applegate,
author of The Famous Man in America:
The Biography of Henry Ward Beecher
CORNELLA BROOKE GILDER WITH JULIA CONKLIN PETERS
CONTENTS
9
13
and the Hive
15
and the Bullards at Highwood
23
and the Tappans
35
and the Red House
43
and Fanny Kemble
49
à and Sarah Starr Lee
55
Cock and the Dorrs at Highlawn
59
Hal
63
and Woolseys at Woodcliff
67
and Vent Fort
71
exembers and Pinecroft
77
Serigwicks and the Elms
81
CS and Mahkeenac Farm
87
and Nestledown
91
Touring Lenox's Hawthorne-era
Fifty Years Later with Henry James and Edith Wharton
97
Literary and Social Neighbors
Berkshires of Hawthorne's Day
103
109
119
123
the Authors
127
8/27/2018
Highlawn in winter - Digital Commonwealth
Lenox Library Association (/institutions/commonwealth:1c18dv406
Local History Photograph Collection
(/collections/commonwealth:1c18dv41g)
Highlawn in winter
Item Information
Title:
Highlawn in winter
Photographer:
Martin, Augustus E. 1872-1961 /search?f%5Bname_facet_ssim%5D%5B%5D=Martin%2C+Augustus+E.+1872-196
Date:
[ca. 1890-1904]
Format:
Photographs (/search?f%5Bgenre_basic_ssim%5D%5B%5D=Photographs)
Genre:
Glass negatives s(/search?f%5Bgenre_specific_ssim%5D%5B%5D=Glass+negatives)
Location:
Lenox Library Association /search?f%5Bphysical_location_ssim%5D%5B%5D=Lenox+Library+Association)
Special Collections
Collection (local):
Local History Photograph Collection (/search?
f%5Brelated_item_host_ssim%5D%5b%5D=Local+History+Photograph+Collection
Series:
3
Villay
power
REVEREND COOK AND
THE DORRS AT HIGHLAWN
Jost
T an appropriate setting for the baronial, brick mansion built there in 1904. But these
he grand copper beech and black walnut trees of today's Blantyre property make
impressive trees were actually planted half a century earlier to shelter another historic
and long-forgotten Lenox country house, Highlawn (a nineteenth-century estate not to
be confused with the twentieth-century farm and brick Georgian mansion of Lila Sloane
and William Bradhurst Osgood Field across Laurel Lake).
A celebrity preacher of the day, Reverend Russell Salmon Cook (1811-1864), built
the first Highlawn around 1850 during a brief hiatus between his third and fourth
marriages. A member of an established Berkshire family, Cook hailed from New
Marlborough and his first pastorate was at the Congregational Church in Lanesboro.
But Cook was bound for bigger things. In New York City, he built up a successful
nondenominational Protestant publishing house, the American Tract Society. An
ebullient entrepreneurial figure, Cook marketed the Tract Society's books, magazines
and pamphlets through his brainchild, the colportage system, hiring itinerant preachers
and seminary students on summer vacations to sell publications and subscriptions
door to door. Cook worked closely with many leading evangelicals: philanthropists
Lewis and Arthur Tappan, Reverend Lyman Beecher and his ascendant son Reverend
Henry Ward Beecher all served on the board of the Tract Society in Cook's day. Back
in the Berkshires in 1844, Cook organized the Berkshire Jubilee in Pittsfield, a reunion
of people like himself whose professional lives had taken them away to the city but
who yearned to reconnect with their Berkshire roots. For this event, he worked with
national luminaries with local ties-Catharine Sedgwick, Oliver Wendell Holmes and
Fanny Kemble.
In the 1840s and early 1850s, Reverend Cook was a regular Lenox visitor, sometimes
filling Mr. Neill's pulpit at the Church-on-the-Hill. Congregant George Walker, writing
his absent sister Sarah, could not resist remarking of Cook's pulpit performances,
5
Reverend Cook and the Dorrs at Highlawn
Thirty years earlier as a student, George B. Dorr (1806-1876) had been thrown
out of Harvard for youthful high jinks "playing cards, drinking spirituous liquors,
and making improper noise." Now in his fifties, the loyal widower and sober New
York businessman would become a benefactor of educational causes and promoter
of the fledgling Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. In Lenox, George and his brother
Francis were remembered by the younger generation as formal, perhaps pompous and
sometimes dull. In an unguarded diary entry from October 1869, Grace Sedgwick
Bristed described a festive lunch party on Mrs. Tappan's porch at Tanglewood with
Boston and New York friends. "Mr. Dorr [either George or Francis] was also there but
did not add much to the conversation-the rest of us were delightful."
The Dorr brothers of Highlawn had two more animated younger half-siblings-Susan
and Charles-who were closely linked to Lenox by friendship and marriage to Sam
and Anna Ward of Highwood. Susan Dorr was one of Anna's closest Boston friends.
Anna's diary depicts Susan as a ready companion for outings to concerts and lectures
as well as domestic sessions addressing party invitations. When Susan's brother Charles
became engaged to Sam's sister Mary in 1849, their families became allied. "It seemed
the happiest evening of our lives," wrote Anna when Sam brought the news from the
city to her at Highwood. In her early twenties, Mary Ward had already established a
reputation in Lenox as an intrepid horsewoman. Hotel owner William Curtis considered
her second only to the legendary Fanny Kemble.
Over the years, the Dorrs would enlarge and alter the house begun by Reverend
Cook. In 1876, a local newspaper reporter considered the Dorr house as comparable to
Highwood, only more "elaborate and symmetrical." The only surviving photograph of
Highlawn dates from 1886, by which time the house was far from symmetrical. Lenox
builders the Clifford Brothers had rendered it "virtually a new house" that year. Its
original board and batten façade had been shingled and clapboarded. The photograph
only offers a glimpse of what must have been a rambling Victorian summer house with
an eccentric roofline, random leaded windows, wide bracketed porches for entertaining
on the ground floor and little, inset, private porches at key corners on upper stories. By
the late 1880s, the house offered fourteen bedrooms and attracted tenants like Helen
and Anson Phelps Stokes, with their nine children. The Stokeses found the Dorr house
a bit confining for their household and in 1894 built Shadowbrook, the grandest of all
Gilded Age houses in the Berkshires.
George B. Dorr outlived his brother Francis and is credited with the landscape
planning for which Highlawn became known. As early as the summer of 1854, his
neighbor Henry Ward Beecher observed "the benevolent Mr. Dorr" at work planting
specimen trees.9 Twenty years later, a reporter making the rounds of Lenox estates called
Highlawn "a place almost too perfect," where "the views are complete the grounds in
perfect order, and not even a COW is allowed on the premises to soil the smoothly shaven
lawns of emerald green. "10 The Dorr brothers called their Washington Place town house
Hightown, a play on the name of their country home with its emerald lawns.
The horticultural passion of George Dorr transmitted to his young nephew and
namesake, George Bucknam Dorr Jr., son of Mary Ward Dorr. Born the year his uncles
61
HAWTHORNE'S LENOX
6
The Dorrs' Highlawn in 1886, as it looked when the large Anson Phelps Stokes family rented it. E.A.
Morley, photographer.
bought the place, young George Dorr escaped Boston city life each summer for Lenox,
where he learned about plants and explored the country on foot and horseback. In
years to come, as owner of Mount Desert Nurseries in Maine, this second George B.
Dorr would supply plant material to fashionable clients like Beatrix Farrand and Edith
Wharton and, as a pioneer in land preservation, become known as the father of Acadia
National Park. 11 Late in life he referred to the varied landscape around Highlawn in a
letter to John D. Rockefeller Jr. "Open grassy spaces, like wild sheep pastures, are often
better in contrast to continuous woods." Dorr wrote, "I used to be familiar with them,
wandering over the Berkshire country when I was a boy."12
62
"HIGHLAWN." MR. GEORGE DORR
8/27/2018
Highlawn in winter - Digital Commonwealth
Lenox Library Association (/institutions/commonwealth:1c18dv406)
Local History Photograph Collection
(/collections/commonwealth:1c18dv41g)
Highlawn in winter
Item Information
Title:
Highlawn in winter
Photographer:
Martin, Augustus E. 1872-1961(/search?f%5Bname_facet_ssim%5D%5B%5D=Martin%2C+Augustus+E.+1872-1961)
Date:
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2/3
Chapter draft by Cornelia golder. Courtesy of author. 9/24/18
HIGHLAWN
1/12/00 draft #1
C. 1849 - constructed
1886 - remodeled, Clifford and sons, builders.
1901- 2, moved for construction of Blantyre and demolished soon afterwards.
the Levers
For the past century the name "High Lawn" has been associated with the Wilde
family's renown Jersey farm and their magnificent Beaux Arts style house (Delano &
Aldrich, 1910) just over the Lee line. But in the 1850's, when Anna Ward of Highwood
was going to tea at "Highlawn", her destination was quite another place. It was her
their
relatives, the Dorrs, whose fine house stood on a Lenox hillside overlooking Laurel Lake.
Anyone familiar with the spectacular views at Blantyre, built 100 feet away from
its long forgotten predecessor, Highlawn, will understand the special qualities of the site.
In the hands of George B. Dorr, an avid horticulturist and landscape gardener, the 50 acre
estate was described in 1874 as a place almost too perfect" where the views are
complete the grounds in perfect order, and not even a cow is allowed on the premises to
soil the smoothly shaven lawns of emerald green".¹
Early History - Rev. Russell S. Cook
The George B. Dorr did not build the house, however. His family bought it, soon
after its construction, from one of New York's influential ecclesiastical figures of the day,
Rev. Russell Salmon Cook (1811-1864). Cook was the corresponding secretary2 of the
American Tract Society, an interdenominational Protestant publishing house in New York
City. In the Berkshires, he was a well-known public figure. He was the organizer of the
Berkshire Jubilee of 1844, a county centennial celebration in Pittsfield attended by not
only local residents but also over a thousand prominent "emigrant sons" who had moved
away, but still felt a strong attachment to their Berkshire roots.³
Russell Cook, himself, was a Berkshire native. He was born in the south county
town of New Marlboro, and his first and only pastorate was at the Congregational Church
in Lanesboro, after graduation from Auburn Theological Seminary. Difficulties with his
voice led him to resign, but during his one year pastorate in Lanesboro in 1837 he came to
appreciate the materials of the American Tract Society, the organization that he would
soon lead.
When he purchased the property in Lenox, the energetic Rev. Cook had been with
the Tract Society for 12 years, transforming its publications department. A buoyant
personality and a publishing genius, he conceived of a myriad of new publications with
circulations that quickly mounted into the hundreds of thousands. These included a
monthly called The American Messenger, a popular children's magazine The Child's
Paper, illustrated children's "toy" books and a stream of tracts such as Beware of Bad
Books (1847). Cook supervised their translation into scores of foreign languages and
their distribution through "colportage", a novel system of employing itinerant preachers
1 Gleaner & Advocate, September 15, 1874.
2 During Cook's tenure at the ATS in the 1840's and 1850's, the position of corresponding secreary
(today's equivalent of CEO) was shared by three men. letter fom Kristen Mitrisin, Archivist of ATS, Nov.
8, 1999)
3 Stuart Murray, A Time of War: A Northern Chronicle of the Civil War (Berkshire House Publishers, Lee,
MA: 2001) p. 1.
Gilder-2
and seminary students on summer vacation not only in rural areas of America, but also
among newly arrived urban immigrants and even abroad. 4 The religious publishing of
Tract Society of Cook's day permeated everyday American culture on a significant scale.5
Among Cook's board members were prominent clergymen, educators, politicians
and businessmen - some with links to the Berkshires. 6 The largest single contributor to
the early years of the Tract Society was a New York merchant named Arthur Tappan.7
His nephew William Aspinwall Tappan and bride Caroline Sturgis were building
Taplet
Tanglewood in Lenox in the early 1850's, overseeing the project from next door at
Highwood rented from the Wards & In New York the Tappan family were members of
Henry Ward Beecher's Plymouth Church in Brooklyn. Both the charismatic Henry Ward
Beecher and his influential father Rev. Lyman Beecher were on the board at the American
Tract Society, and Beecher followed Cook's example buying property next door to him in
Lenox in 1854.9
No pictures survive of the house Russell Cook built in 1849, but it seems to have
been a board and batten structure, judging by a description in Lenox Life written fifty
years later. The house was "of the old sloped-roof pattern, boarded up and down outside
and painted and sanded not unlike the primitive railroad stations often seen in small
towns" 10 In the course of his first year in Lenox, Cook purchased six separate parcels of
land creating a thirty acre estate.
Perhaps like Beecher a few years later, Rev. Cook found Lenox too far from New
York for a man with business pressures and increasingly uncertain health. 11 In 1853 after
spending six months abroad on Tract Society business, he sold his Lenox property to
Francis Fiske Dorr who had rented the place for the summer.
The Dorrs and Highlawn
The scion of a distinguished Boston family, Francis Fiske Dorr was a middle aged
bachelor and an established import merchant in New York City when he purchased the
property in Lenox Though the original title bears his name¹², Francis' two brothers,
George Bucknam and Charles Hazen and sisters Susan Elizabeth and PMartha Ann Dorr
Edwards all took a lifelong interest in Highlawn. They were the children of Samuel and
Lucy Fox Dorr of Boston and came to Lenox as friends of Charles Sedgwick 13
and
connections to Samuel Gray Ward.
4 American National Biography pp 386-7.
5 Edwin Scott Gausted Religious History of America, (NY Harper & Row, 1966) p. 170 as cited in Slocum
p. 95-6.
6
Stephen Elmer Slocum Jr. " American Tract Society: 1825-1975. An Evangelical Effort to Influence the
Religious and Moral Life of the United States" NYU phd thesis 1975, pp.61, 125, 127.
7 Dictionary of American Biography, Arthur Tappan, p.299.
8 May Callas, Profiles of Tanglewood Families, The Studley Press, 1995. pp11-13.
9 Blossom Farm, later Wyndhurst and now known as Cranwell. See Wyndhurst (4).
10 Lenox Life, June 1, 1901.
11
After serious lung infection in Switzerland in 1856, Cook resigned from the Tract Society. His last nine
years were afflicted by lung disease, but he continued to work when he could for the Committee for a Better
Observation of the Sabbath. He died in Pleasantville, NY in 1864. Cook married four times. During his
Lenox days, he was probably married to his third wife, Harriet Ellsworth of Hartford, CT.
12 Registry of Deeds. Book 139, p.299.
13 Gleaner and Advocate, Sept. 7, 1876.
golden-3
In 1850 the youngest Dorr brother, Charles, married Mary Ward, Samuel's
N
younger sister. Anna Ward described it "the happiest evening of our lives" when Sam
returned home from New York with the news of Mary's engagement to Charles Dorr. 14
N
Her diary of 1845-1852 is filled with entries describing the close associations between the
Sedgwicks, Wards, Hoopers, Tappans and Dorrs both in Lenox and Boston. Anna
records shopping in Boston for a silver knife, fork and spoon for Mary Ward Dorr's
Hooper Strigis
premature (or as she put it "eight month") baby William on February 4. 1851. 15 Another
entry for February 28, 1852 tells of Susan Dorr's valuable help to Anna addressing a
Sam
mound of party invitations. Not long before "Mr. Dorr" had taken Anna and her close
Hair,
friend the singer Jenny Lind to hear the notable Bostonian Edward Everett lecture at the
Mercantile Library Association. 16
Thus, when the Dorrs and Wards were in Lenox, the Highwood and Highlawn
households were closely connected. One, Highwood, overlooking the Stockbridge Bowl,
and the other, Highlawn, overlooking Laurel Lake were often compared, and it is
interesting to note that Highlawn was considered the "more elaborate and symmetrical" of
Heaper
the two grand houses. 17
In the 1850's when Francis bought the house in Lenox, he and his older brother
George lived together on Ninth Street in New York where they were both import
merchants. Although Francis made the initial investment, it is George who appears to
have dedicated his energy and time to Highlawn. By the 1870's George was undisputed
squire of Highlawn, having dedicated 24 summers to making the place "a seat of
unsurpassed beauty". 18
George B. Dorr (1806-1876) was the second of Samuel and Lucy Dorr's seven
children. His wild college career at Harvard must have caused a family crisis or two and
precipitated him early into the working world. On June 12, 1822, as a giddy sophomore
with spring fever he was formally "admonished for having several students at his room
yesterday, engaged in playing at cards, drinking spiritous liquors, and making improper
noise". 19 A year later the University cracked down on Dorr's revels and expelled him and
a friend named Gourgas for "deliberate and intended insult of a College Officer". The
last straw had been their "whistling loudly" from their dormitory windows at Professor
Channing20 who was earlier subjected to their "loud and insolent laughing". 21 Gourgas
was readmitted the following year, but it was not until 1866 that Harvard relented and
granted Dorr his bachelor of arts degree "out of course" along with another former
14 Diary of Anna B. Ward, May 31,1849. Houghton Library, Harvard. NEEDS PERMISSION TO
QUOTE.
15 This treasured present to the baby, William, who died as a young man in his midtwenties, survives in
the collection of the Bar Harbor Historical Society.
16 ABW diary Jan 28, 1852. Everett had recently been president of Harvard and was serving as Millard
Fillmore's Secretary of State.
17 Gleaner and Advocate, Sept 28, 1876.
18 Gleaner and Advocate, August 7, 1876.
19 Harvard University Archives Faculty Records 1814-1822 p.298.
20 Probably Edward Tyrrel Channing (1790-1856) brother of the great Unitarian preacher William Ellery
Channing.
21
Harvard University Archives Faculty Records 1822-1824 pp. .24-5.
gilder-4
miscreant from the Class of '08, Richard Henry Dana. 22 By this time Dorr was almost
in
his sixties and retired comfortably in Lenox after a successful business career, a
benefactor of educational causes and a patron of the arts.
After his erratic college career, George B. Dorr appears to have flourished in
business joining his brothers, Samuel and Francis, both importers in New York. At 31,
he married Joanna Howland, the seventeen year old daughter of the shipping magnate of
the era Samuel S. Howland23. George was devastated by her death five years later in
1842 and never remarried. In the early 1850's when he and his brother Francis began
expanding and improving their new Lenox place, Joanna's first cousins Emily and
Edward Woolsey were building their hilltop home Woodcliff just north of the village.
Highlawn gave George B. Dorr an outlet for his horticultural passion and skill.
During 1854, his first summer at Highlawn he was already transforming the open
landscape, and his neighbor, Henry Ward Beecher, at Blossom Farm delighted in the
shrubbery which "the benevolent Mr. Dorr was SO beautifully planting for my sake
blessings on him!" 24 After dividing their time between New York and Lenox in the mid-
fifties, the Dorr brothers retired "in possession of ample competence"25 to become
gentleman farmers in Lenox. The farm was managed by Thomas F. Graham and
Batholomew Lawton, but George Dorr took charge of the grounds around the house.
Highlawn became recognized as "for extent and variety of prospect, and the high culture
of the immediate surroundings, a seat of unsurpassed beauty" 26
While preferring the rural life, Dorr maintained his city connections. He became a
member of the Century Club in New York in 1864 and in Boston in the early 1870's he
was an early promoter of the Museum of Fine Arts. At the opening in July 1876 of the
museum's first building, the Greek rooms were dominated by Dorr's gift, a vast cast of the
caryatid porch of the Erechtheum on the Acropolis. 27
In Lenox, Dorr was a close friend of Col. Auchmuty, William R. Robeson,
Charles Kneeland and his two next door neighbors John Sargent and Gen. John
Rathbone28 As an integral member of the public spirited community of mid-century
Lenox, he was a ready contributor to village improvement projects, including
"embellishing" the Lee and Lenoxdale roads on either side of Highlawn.29
His nephew, namesake and heir was another George Bucknam Dorr (1853-1944
who inherited both Highlawn and his uncle
22 HU Archives Corporate Records, vol. 10 1857-1866 p. 447. This Richard Henry Dana (1787-1879) was
the father of the author of Two Years Before the Mast, and a recognized man of letters, himself.
23 Franklyn Howland: A Brief Genealogical and Biographical History of Arthur, Henry and John Howland
and their descendants of the US and Canada, New Bedford, MA 1885. p. 356. Joanna's younger sister
Catherine married the architect Richard M. Hunt in 1850?.
24 Henry Ward Beecher, The Star Papers. J.C.Derby: New York: 1855. p.268. This quote comes form an
essay dated "Lenox, August 10, 1854".
25 The Gleaner and Advocate, Sept. 7, 1876.
26 ibid.
27 Walter Muir Whitehead, The Museum of Fine Arts: A Centennial History. Belknap Press, Cambridge,
1970. Vol. 1, pp.33-34.
28 They all served as his pallbearers at his funeral in the old Trinity Church in September 1876. Gleaner
and Advocate, Sept 14, 1876.
29 Gleaner and Advocate, Oct. 22, 1874.
gilder-5
George's love of landscape architecture. The younger George B. Dorr, a son of Charles
and Mary Ward Dorr³0, was a frequent visitor to Highlawn in his youth where he must
have observed and learned from his horticulturist uncle. He and his brother William, who
died in his twenties, seem to have been the only children connected to Highlawn. The
fourteen bedroom house with its library, dining room and music room, where Frederick
Rackemann would play3 must have been a very adult world occupied by the quartet of
elderly, childless Dorr uncles and aunts, Francis, George, Susan and Martha Ann³³.
The second George B. Dorr and his parents seem to have initiated a substantial
remodeling of Highlawn in the Shingle Style in 1886. the year of Morley's photograph.
The sweeping gambrel roofs, asymmetrical fenestration, and inset upper floor porches
were all part of the remodeling by the Clifford Company rendering it "virtually a new
house" by the middle of the summer. 33
But the Dorrs were increasingly attached to their Mt Desert home, Oldfarm. This
NO
house, also in the Shingle Style, was designed by Alexander Oakey in 1878, the year he
lost his Lenox house by foreclosure. Charles, Mary and the young George B. Dorr seem
to have come to Lenox irregularly and for most seasons the house was rented often to
families who were looking for a place to buy. Robert and Adele Chapin rented it in 1885
before they bought Nowood, Anson and Helen Stokes and their eight children rented it in
1887 before buying The Homestead. 34 In the 1890s the Henry Crams and George Blisses
were tenants at High Lawn. Charles Haven Dorr died in 1893, and Mary Ward Dorr,
considered one of the grande dames of Bar Harbor, lived on at Oldfarm with her son
George. 35
The Oldfarm garden, begun in the 1870's by Charles and Mary Dorr, was said to
be "the earliest pleasure garden" of Bar Harbor.36 In 1896 George Dorr established here
the Mount Desert Nurseries which became famous for its range of old fashioned plants
and its knowlegeable staff. His friend and fellow garden enthusiast Edith Wharton sought
his advice on each phase of making the Mount as she once promised him it would be
"one of the most interesting places in the world in 1907". In a series of letters over a
period of years she discussed the planting of white pines between the house and the
30 Charles and Mary Dorr were described by Prof. Francis G. Peabody as "the first to discover the
possibilities of the shore for landscape gardening and to transform the wild beauty surrounding their
hospitable home into a well-ordered and unspoiled park". as quoted in George B. Dorr, The Story of
Acadia National Park, Acadia Press, Bar Harbor, Maine: 1997. p.59.
31 Diary of Charles Rackemann, August 19, 1874. The 17 year old describes driving over with "Papa" to
the Dorrs' in the afternoon.
32 The Dorrs are all buried at Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Cambrdge. Francis died in 1871, George in 1876,
Martha Ann in 1882 and Susan in 1889. Each one had a share in Highlawn. In 1876 Martha Ann and her
husband Henry Edwards left their share to MIT, reserving life estate for Martha Ann and Susan and a
provision for their nephew George B. Dorr's repurchase of their interestfrom MIT after their deaths. (In
November 1976, two weeks before the Edwards' agreement with MIT, William Dorr had died in his
twenties leaving young George B Dorr,a recent Harvard graduate, the sole survivor of the next generation.)
Registry of Deed book 275 p 262.
33 Valley Gleaner, May 18,1886, July 28,1886.
34 Stokes Records, vol iv, p.10 or 11 (Mary Waller)
35 Cleveland Amory recounts Mary Dorr's quip at a tea party when struggling with a lapse of memory about
some local point of interest. "We never answer questions here after four o'clock". The Last Resorts,
Harper and Row, 1952. p.315.
36 "Catalogue of the Mount Desert Nurseries", .1926 p.1.
Gilder-6
stables, siting farm buildings, digging up ferns, and stocking borders along a path he
designed. 37
"What you say of the phloxes makes my mouth water, for
I have tried to
get as many good varieties as possible,
and am keen for new colours. If there
is any really good
novelty, wd. you not ask your manager to send me the
name and the colour and won't you, by the way, come to
us sometime
next month in September, and see the
George Dorr path, the new pond, and
other
improvements?"38
Highlawn, the Lenox house with SO many Dorr family memories, had been
demolished, by the time Edith Wharton was urging George Dorr to visit the Mount. He
had sold the place in 1900 to Robert Warden Paterson, a Scottish born turpentine broker
duch
in his sixties and his third wife, Marie. As The Mount was constructed at one end of
Plunkett Street, the new baronial Blantyre (designed by Potter and Robertson of New
York) was in progress at the Dorr place. Amidst the Dorrs' towering elms, copper
beeches and black walnuts the extravagant new brick and half-timbered Tudor mansion
took form. 39 The old Dorr house was moved temporarily to provide housing for some of
the vast crew of craftsmen-masons, plasterers, wood-carvers- brought in by the great
Worcester building contractors, the Norcross Brothers40. Having completed the
ambitious Aspinwall Hotel site work, Charles Hale of Boston was awarded the grading
and road-building contract for both Blantyre and the Mount.
41
And what became of George B. Dorr, that striking, tall, athletic outdoors man
whose Bar Harbor barber described as resembling "a forest" ?42 Today conservationists
revere him as "the father of Acadia National Park". Within a year of the sale of Highlawn,
Dorr embarked on an historic effort to preserve the Bar Harbor landscape and create one
of the earliest National Parks in the U. S.43 With the single-minded zeal of a bachelor,
Dorr dedicated the next forty years of his life and most of his fortune - including probably
N
the proceeds of the sale of Highlawn - to a series of land purchases which form today's
park around his family house, Oldfarm. He became a local legend in Bar Harbor for his
ritual swims in icy waters until Christmastime and his lively interest in comparing Greek
translations of Homer until his eyesight faded in his nineties. In Boston he lived at the
Somerset Club and served on the Harvard University's Board of Overseers on the
philosophy committee, and lead the fund drive for the construction of Harvard's Emerson
Hall.
Visiting Blantyre today, the Dorr era is told only in a few nineteenth century
outbuildings - the shingled carriage house and a little board and batten hipped roof
structure - and some surviving ancient specimen trees planted 150 years ago by "the
benevolent Mr. Dorr".
37 Eleanor Dwight, Edith Wharton: An Extraordinary Life. Harry Abrams 1994. 116
38 EW to GBD the Mount July 24 [1906] as quoted in Dwight p. 116.
39 Lenox Life, June 1, 1901.
40 During the construction the Norcross foreman, Elmer Welch married the Lenoxdale librarian, Lucretia
Lawrence and they settled in Lenoxdale. Valley Gleaner, Jan 20, 1902.
41 Valley Gleaner , Jan. 1,1902.
42 Cleveland Amory, The Last Resorts, p.324.
43 Acadia was designated a National Park in 1916, the same year the Park Service was created. see George
B. Dorr. The Story of Acadia National Park.
Gilder-7.
Cornelia B. Gilder
Thanks to Kristen Mitrisin, archivist of the American Tract Society: Joan Kaufman,
archivist of Mt. Auburn Cemetery: Debbie Dyer of the Bar Harbor Historical Society: the
staff of Acadia National Park: Alan Emmet; Craig Thomas; Barbara Czelusniak of
Blantyre; and the continued collaboration of Julia Conklin Peters.
C.
Epp, Ronald
From:
Nini Gilder [cbg@gilder.com]
Sent:
Monday, July 07, 2003 12:15 PM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Subject:
Re: George Dorr's antecedants
Dear Ron,
Bood to hear from you and glad the Dorr material was helpful. My book is
still in progress and it should fill the gap you seek. David Wood's book
may help in a general way but, even there, the Dorrs aren't mentioned.
Highlawn was demolished when G.B. D. jr. sold it at the turn of the century, and a rather
baronial brick house was built on the beautiful site. It was called Blantyre and is the
most pricey place to stay and eat in the Berkshires (owned by the Red Lion Inn). The
Dorrs seem to have been more or less forgotten in local published works which made me look
to other sources to sort out the brothers and their professions. I have one nice 1874
clipping from a local paper and a poor picture of the house published in a now-rare book
of photographs by E.A. Morley entitled Lenox.
For my research on some 50 Lenox country houses (some like Highlawn long-gone, some
extant) I am constantly using the collections at the Lenox Library, Lenox Historical
Society, Berkshire Atheneaum and to a lesser extent the Berkshire Historical Society but
Dorrs just don't crop up.
Let me know if you do plan a trip this way as I would be glad to show you Blantyre and my
file on the Dorrs.
Since George B. Dorr was such a figure at the Somerset Club in Boston I wondered if there
was a published tribute by a fellow member after his death. (The Century Club in NY does
memorial tributes which are often very interesting and more personal than published
obits.)
Please do keep in touch, I am glad to share my research because without exception I learn
new things in the process!
E
Best Wishes, Cornelia Gilder
413-243-0161
> From: "Ronald Epp"
> Date: Fri, 4 Jul 2003 16:15:10 -0400
>
To: "Nini Gilder"
> Cc:
> Subject: Re: George Dorr's antecedants
>
> Dear Ms. Gilder:
>
> How kind of you to respond with such extensive information about
>
George B. Dorr and his relatives. You have provided me with key
> information that I did not have in my possession. I will acknowledge
> your contribution when my book is published.
>
> I've requested a couple of titles on Lenox history that may contain
> references to the Dorr cottagers (Palmer's History of Lenox and
> Richmond
> (MA) and David Wood's Lenox; Massachusetts shire town) but I was unable to
> find any publication data on your "book on Lenox country houses. Is it a
> work in progress?
>
> My wife and I frequent Lenox, less often since we moved to New
>
Hampshire from south of Hartford, CT. two years ago. As members of the
1
>
Trustees of Reservations we would frequently visit Bartholemew's
>
Cobble and other TOR properties in your area as well as Tanglewood, of
> course. Naumkeag was one of our favorites as well; we never visited
> Wharton's home which clearly now relates to my invesitigations of Mr.
> Dorr's relationship with landscape architect Beatrix Farrand, a close
> relative of Wharton
>
> I appreciate your references to the sources and repositories of
>
information for the Dorr ancestry. I have yet to delve into Harvard's
> archives except online and I will explore the Mount Auburn Cemetary
>
records since I have some of Mr. Dorr's correspondance with them when
>
he felt that the grave sites of his parents were not being propoerly
> tended.
>
>
George B. Dorr's life prior to his adulthood greatly interests me and
> appreciate your suspicion that he and brother William likely came
> often to Highlawn. Do you know of any local social histories that
> would capture the essence of life in this 1860's era?
>
> It would interest me to know whether you have found the Berkeshire
> Athenaeum Local History Room, the Berkshire Historical Society, or the
> Lenox Historical Society useful to your inquiries with special
> reference to Highlawn and the Dorr family. Your judgment might spare
> me an unproductive trip to these historical repositories.
>
>
If Elizabeth and I journey to western Massachusetts perhaps we could
> meet.
>
> Please call me "Ron".
>
> Very appreciatively,
>
> Ron Epp
> Home : 47 Pond View Dr., Merriumack, NH 03054 Phone: 603-424-6149
>
>
Original Message
> From: "Nini Gilder"
> To:
> Sent: Wednesday, July 02, 2003 9:41 AM
> Subject: George Dorr's antecedants
>
>
>> Dear Dr. Epp,
>> I have just returned from a two-week trip to Alaska - a place George
> B.
>> Dorr would have loved - and found your letter. I wish I could come
>> to
> hear
>> your talk to the Bar Harbor Historical Society.
>> My knowledge of the Dorrs comes through my research for a book on
> Lenox
>> country houses. Here in Lenox George B. Dorr's relatives on both
>> sides
> of
>> his family established substantial estates in the 1840s and 50s.
>> George's uncle Samuel Gray Ward is considered the pioneer Lenox
>> "cottager." He and Anna Barker Ward built the first big house of the
>> area called "Highwood" (now part of Tanglewood) in 1845. In 1853
>> Francis Fiske Dorr (1811-1870) bought a house he named "Highlawn"
>> which he had rented previously. Francis had two brothers George
>> Bucknam (1806-1876) and Charles Hazen (father of the second George
>> B.) and two sisters Susan Elizabeth and Martha Ann Dorr (later
>> Edwards) They
> were
>> the children of Samuel and lucy Fox Dorr of Boston. The second George
2
>>
was the lone descendant of these five brothers and sisters
>> (after the death of his older brother William in his twenties). . While
>> the Charles
> Dorrs
>> gravitated to Maine, all the others summered in Lenox. The first
>> George
> B.
>> and Francis were in business together in New York as import merchants
>> and lived together on Ninth Street in NYC. I have pieced together
>> this genealogical material from Harvard Alumni records (on the first
>> George B. who was the most active family member in Lenox), , the
>> Ancestry. com web site, Mt. Auburn Cemetery records, New York City
>> Directories . I am always interested in learning more and would be
> most
>> eager to know if you have run into any references to Highlawn in
>> Lenox
> where
>> I suspect George B. and his brother William came often as children.
>> I'd be very interested to have a copy of your paper when it is done.
>>
Please let
> me
>> know if you have further questions I might be able to answer.
>>
>> Best Wishes
>>
>>
Cornelia B. Gilder
>> 413-243-0161
>> P.O. Box 430
>> Tyringham, MA 01264
3
BLANTYRE. Robert Warden Paterson was listed in Notable New Yorkers 1896 to 1899. He lived
at 2 West 51st Street, across from the Vanderbilts. It was a 50-year journey to Fifth Avenue
from the poverty of Scotland. He immigrated to Canada with his family and struck out for New
York alone as a teenager. With his first wife, Emma Downing Paterson, he had two sons, Henry
A. and Robert Downing Paterson. Emma died, and in 1893, Paterson married Marie Louise
Fahys. The Fahys family traced its lineage to William "the Pilgrim" Brewster, who had led the
first religious service in the New World at Plymouth. In 1900, George B. Dorr (of Highlawn)
conveyed "to Marie Louise Paterson certain real estate in Lenox." Between 1900 and 1904, the
Patersons acquired six properties totaling more than 300 acres, retained architect Robert H.
Robertson, and built Blantyre. (Courtesy of the Providence Library.)
Carole Owers. The Backsheres Charleston,S.C dia, 2004.
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Beecher Hill I Lenox History
Lenox History
Tag Archives: Beecher Hill
PLACES
LENOXASA RESORT - EVOLUTION
OF BEECHER'S HILL
JANUARY 30, 2016
Henry Ward Beecher became minister of Plymouth
Congregational Church in Brooklyn (shown here
with his equally famous sister Harriet Beecher
Stowe) in 1847. He spent time in Lenox 1853-1857.
A progressive active in the anti-slavery movement,
he became part of the early Lenox intelligentsia.
His stopovers included visiting the Lenox Sedgwicks
and preaching at Church on the Hill. He and his fam-
ily stayed at a house they called Blossom Farm.
Blossom Farm
It was located on what is now Route 20/ Lee Road in
an area called, for awhile, Beecher Hill.
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her daughters, Ellen, married Richard Tylden Auchmuty. They would go on to build
The Dormers and play a very active role in the construction of the new Trinity
church.
Highlawn/Blantyre
The southeastern end of this clus-
ter of "cottages" began its story
with another adulterous clergy-
man. Another celebrity preacher,
Rev. Russell Salmon Cook (1811-
1864). In 1853 he purchased
property in Lenox that included a
ramshackle farm house. In a dust
up over money and the Reverend's
third (fourth?) marriage, he needed
to abandon his property.
Highlawn (Maybe) - 1870's?
It was taken over by two New York brothers (one a bachelor, the other a widower),
Francis and George Dorr. They expanded the house and planted the grounds - in-
cluding large specimen trees. Their property made up about half of the several
hundred acres acquired by Robert Paterson for what would become Blantyre.
Robert Paterson was introduced to
the Lenox area in the late 1890's by
his friend John Sloan (of W&J
Sloane).
Paterson tore down the modest
Dorr house, keeping the outbuild-
ings and started building a prop-
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Beecher Hill Lenox History
erty on a grand scale, He told his
architect, Robert Henderson
Robertson. that he wanted a castle
of "feudal architectural features,"
replete with towers, turrets and
gargoyles.
The house was modeled after his
mother's ancestral home in Blan-
tyre, Scotland. Construction began
in 1901, at times employing over
Blantyre - 1902
300 people on the grounds and buildings.
The main house was furnished in the Eng-
lish style with all the furniture being
brought in from England. The family used
the house for the summer and fall and there
were garden parties with musicians im-
ported from New York and grand dinner-
dances with each party becoming more and
more lavish.
In the 1920's the property evolved with its
neighbors Wyndhurst and Coldbrook.
Mr. and Mrs. Paterson at Their Large Organ
Blantyre deteriorated considerably in the
1970's. In the 1980's it was re-
stored by the late Ann Fitzpatrick
Brown and is now run as a luxury
hotel.
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Beecher Hill I Lenox History
Properties Rise and Fall Together
By 1928, the party was over. The
Gilded Age was ended, and the cot-
tages were relics of a bygone era.
On the hill, an ambitious plan for
aBerkshire Hunt and Country Club
combined four former estates -
Wyndhurst, Coldbrook, Pinecroft,
and Blantyre. Woodson R. Oglesby,
Blantyre - 1902
former New York Congressman,
started buying the estates at foreclosures.
On August 10, 1929 there was a full page spread about the second season of the
Club. On an adjacent page it was reported that a Williams College professor
warned, "Unemployment is a problem in need of an immediate solution." A column
on the financial page predicted, "The Stock Market will rally after a minor dip." The
Market crashed on Black Tuesday, October 29, 1929, two months and 19 days
later.
The country was in depression. For a moment it looked as if those Club members
would be untouched and the Club would continue. By 1933 the Club was as-
saulted by lawsuits and swamped in debt. In 1939, the land on the hill was sold for
(approximately) $9,000 in back taxes.
New Identities in the Twentieth Century
For that price, Edward Cranwell bought the hill with two Berkshire Cottages:
Wyndhurst and Coldbrook. In 1939, he gave it to the Jesuits to use as a sch
I
The Jesuits named the school in honor of the donor - Cranwell Preparato
School.
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Beecher Hill I Lenox History
The school closed in 1975. Coldbrook and Cranwell (Wyndhurst) are now oper-
ated as a condominium and resort complex, Pinecroft has been demolished, and
Blantyre is a luxury hotel.
For much more on the architecture of these houses and the people who lived in
them, see
Houses of the Berkshires, 1870-1930, by Richard S. Jackson Jr. and Cornelia
Brooke Gilder, Acanthus Press, 2006
The Tanglewood Circle, Hawthorne's Lenox, Cornelia Brooke Gilder with Julia
Conklin Peters, The History Press, 2008
The Berkshire Cottages, A Vanishing Era, by Carole Owens, Cottage Press, Inc.
1980
BEECHER HILL
BLANTYRE
BLOSSOM FARM
COLEBROOK
HIGHLAWN
PINECROFT
WYNDHURST
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THE LITTLE R1
morning in driv
of how far afield
doorstep. Hawth
Shanty. (Autho
HIGHWOOD, 1845. At Highwood, Sam Ward entertained Jenny Lind, Fanny Kemble,
Margaret Fuller, George Inness, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Catharine Sedgwick, but on this
day, he was waiting for the chimney man. "December 16, 1845, Richard, In a new house, at this
season of the vear. after sparing no pains or expense to he unable to half
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The Beginnings of Lenox As a Resort Community Lenox History
Lenox History
THE BIG PICTURE
THE BEGINNINGS OF LENOXASA
RESORT COMMUNITY
JANUARY 31, 2016 | LENOXHISTORY
Several authors count Samuel Gray Ward's (1817-
1907) purchase in 1844 of the original Highwood
as the beginning of Lenox as a resort community.
Ward certainly set the mold for others who would
follow shortly. He was the son of Thomas Ward
who sought out investment opportunities in the
burgeoning American economy for London based
Barings Bank.
Young Samuel was a member of Emerson's circle
(a Transcendentalist Groupie?) and he longed to
pursue the life of a country scholar.
Samuel Gray Ward (about 1860)
Time Was Right for an Early Summer Resort
But to understand how this act set off a bit of a ripple of grand summer ho
should probably consider how the stage was set as New England rolled int
new century.
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The economy was shifting from agricultural subsistence to a cash based econ-
omy with the emergence of wage labor, professional services and trade as in-
creasingly important - particularly in the Northeast. A mobil wealthy class
was emerging.
Other areas - particularly the Northwest Territories and Upstate New York of-
fered better agricultural opportunities than New England. Starting as early as
1790 with Major General John Paterson moving to upstate New York, the phe-
nomenon of investing in land for its economic potential was shifting away from
New England. The quality was better and there wasn't much open land left in
Massachusetts
Population density (in the 1830-1850 censes Massachusetts had one of the
highest densities per square mile) motivated those who were able to seek the
health and beauty of the countryside.
Transportation improvements were accelerating allowing more people to go
where they wanted to go and allowing economic specialization (i.e., wheat from
the midwest, dairy and fresh food from New England moved to cities). Roads
had improved steadily since the Revolution and even before rail service was es-
tablished, there was regular coach service stopping at what would become the
Curtis Hotel. Then several major developments occurred 1820-1850. The
completion of the Erie Canal in 1825 eased east west transport through the
Great Lakes. The railroad came to Berkshire County by 1841 providing rela-
tively easy access to the countryside for moyers and shakers from Boston and
New York.
America was just beginning to define its own art and culture and patronage and
discussion were eagerly sought by the elite. Between the courts, the Sedg-
wicks, and the schools there apparently was enough critical mass to attract a
steady flow of artists and literati such as Nathaniel Hawthorne, Herman
Melville and Thomas Cole.
Highwood
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Lenox History
Samuel Ward purchased land from
farmer Daniel Barnes' farm - se-
lected for its beautiful view of the
Stockbridge Bowl. Although their
home was famously chilly, the
Wards lived year round at High-
wood from 1845 to 1849 and
quickly merged with the Sedgwick
Berkshire about
cultural circle for teas, talks, recita-
Highroad now part of Boston Symphony Orchestra's Summer
tions and concerts. The original
Program; Much Altered from the Original Italianate Design
Highwood (the one shown above
had been considerably altered) was designed by Richard Upjohn who was, at the
time, also working on Trinity Church in New York. Although the country intellec-
tualism of the Wards and the Sedgwicks was much less pretentious than other
what would follow later in the century, the trend of out of town architects and
conscious design had begun.
The couple attracted other Boston
visitors and, when Sam was forced
to return to Boston to take over his
father's business he rented High-
wood to the Tappans who would
eventually take up residency on
what is now part of the grounds of
Tanglewood. In 1850 they rented
the little red house at the end of
Drawing of Cottage Rented to Hawthorne in 1850 (Re-cre-
the drive to Nathaniel Hawthorne
ation now on Hawthorne Rd. Across from Tanglewood)
and his family.
Afterward
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Eventually, Highwood was sold to another successful Boston businessman, Will-
iam S. Bullard. When the property was turned over to the Boston Symphony Or-
chestra mid twentieth century,
The Wards had never cut their ties
to Lenox and when Sam Ward re-
tired in the 1870's he purchased a
property near Highwood and had
Charles McKim build shingle style
Oakwood in 1876. In 1891, the
property was sold to Anson and
Helen Stokes who would build
Shadow Brook up the hill and con-
vert Oakwoods to a stable. It
burned in 1903.
Oakwood, Built in 1876 for Sam and Anna Ward by Charles
McKim, Burned 1903
So here was another pattern of
tearing down charming existing homes to put up bigger, grander "cottages."
For much more information on the early days of Lenox as a summer resort see, The Tan-
glewood Circle, Hawthorne's Lenox, by Cornelia Brooke Gilder with Julia Conklin Peters
HAWTHORNE'S LENOX
LENOX HISTORY
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The Cottager I Highwood Manor: Where Hawthorne dreamed up Tanglewood tales I Archives I berkshireeagle.com
Editor's note: This is the second of three columns about the Gilded
Age Cottages that make up the present day campus of
Tanglewood.
The history of Lenox and of Tanglewood might be slightly
different today had a young Samuel Gray Ward never met
Margaret Fuller while staying with his Harvard Professor John
Farrar in the late 1830s.
Fuller, a well-known intellectual of her own right and colleague of
Ralph Waldo Emerson, would be responsible for introducing Ward
not only to Emerson and the Transcendental movement, but also
to his wife, Anna Hazard Barker. Those introductions would both
be instrumental in shaping the future of Lenox as a society resort
sought out by the "Berkshire Cottagers."
When Ward met Fuller, he was a poet who wanted nothing to do
with his father's line of work. Fuller, then editor of Emerson's
"The Dial," would publish his poetry, while he taught her about the
world of art. Following in the footsteps of his father, Thomas
Wren Ward, the esteemed American representative of London's
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Baring Brothers bank, was the furthest thing from his mind. He
planned to remain a member of Emerson's Transcendentalist
Circle, writing poetry and analyses for "The Dial" until he met
Anna during the summer of 1836. In 1837, just home from his
European trek, Ward put aside his poetry and went to work as a
banker. He also courted Miss Barker for the next three years,
traveling often to her family home in New Orleans, before
marrying her in 1840.
"By 1843, he made up his mind that trade was not compatible with
his disposition, that country life would be more suitable to him, a
scholarly and intellectual man," May Callas writes in "Profiles of
Tanglewood Families" of Ward's decision to move his young family
to the Berkshires. If there was a place to become a gentleman
farmer at the time, it was in the Berkshires, where a 'hive' of
intellectuals was buzzing about the Sedgewick clan.
In "Hawthorne's Lenox: The Tanglewood Circle," author Cornelia
Brooke Gilder writes of the young family's Berkshire beginnings:
"It all began in 1844 on a dreary day in the third week of March,
when a handsome, well-heeled 27-year-old Samuel Gray Ward
(1817-1907) strode across Daniel Barnes' brown, tufted meadow
with a glorious view of Lake Mahkeenac and pronounced it 'very
good.'
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Wards's guide at the time was the esteemed Berkshire Clerk of
Courts Charles Sedgewick, who arranged for the family's lodging
while their three-story home was built. That October, the
couple's third child, Thomas, was born in Lenox.
The home, Highwood Manor, completed in 1845, is credited to
architect Richard Upjohn, known best for New York City's Trinity
Church, who was building a church for the Episcopal
congregation in Stockbridge at the time. Upjohn would later
design the Tappen house, which still sits within walking distance
of Highwood.
Whether or not Upjohn, whose signature was Gothic Revival
manses and churches, designed the house is somewhat
controversial, as the house's original design is more of an
Italianate country house. Of this Callas wrote, but there is
correspondence between Ward and his father, which mentions
construction of Highwood done by the firm of Upjohn. Since
Richard Michael Upjohn joined his father's firm the same year that
Highwood was completed, it may be the younger Upjohn,
assisting his father, added his own design incentives. There are
design details in the Tappan house that are similar to those at
Highwood, i.e., window soffits and apron benches."
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What is for certain about Highwood Manor are two things: It is
considered to be the first of the Gilded Age cottages and it, not
the Tappan house, was the inspiration for the porch in Nathaniel
Hawthorne's "Tanglewood Tales." We also know that despite
Ward's affection for his adoptive "Lenox valley," the house and its
220 acres sat on the Stockbridge side of the town line.
The Wards lived at Highwood year round and became part of
their adopted society, while keeping close ties with those in
Boston. Guests would stay at a little red house (later inhabited by
Nathaniel Hawthorne's family) at a nearby farm. Many of those
guests, including the Tappans and Higginsons, would become
inspired to build their own country cottages.
But the snow-filled winters and long spring thaws at Highwood
would not last long for the family, as Ward was soon recalled to
Boston to aid his father. Of Ward's recall to Boston, Edward Waldo
Emerson wrote in "The Early Years of the Saturday Club: 1855 to
1870": "As Samuel Ward was working in his Lenox garden, he saw,
like an apparition approaching, his father's factotum, and on the
moment foresaw his own doom."
Ward was to become a banker like his father after all. The Wards
didn't give up on returning to Lenox. They rented out Highwood
to their friends, William and Caroline Tappen, who were living in
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the Red House at the time, and boarded their three oldest
children with a clergyman and his wife. It was during the Tappens
occupation of Highwood that their friends, Nathaniel and Sophia
Hawthorne, took up residence in the Red House. The Tappans
now owned the house and the farm adjacent to Highwood. It was
on the long-gone porches of Highwood that Hawthorne would be
surrounded by children, a setting he reproduced in his children's
books, "A Wonder-Book," and "Tanglewood Tales."
"The house and situation are described with particulars that
identify it closely with the Tappans' Highwood In the summer
of 1851, Mrs. Hawthorne wrote to her mother: 'On Sunday, Mr.
Samuel G. Ward came to us. He gave me an excellent drawing of
Highwood Porch, for 'A Wonder-Book," which he said he asked
Burrill Curtis to draw. We have sent it to Mr. Fields," author M.A.
DeWolfe Howe wrote in "The Tale of Tanglewood: Scene of the
Berkshire Music Festivals."
It is Hawthorne who is given credit for coming up with the names
Tanglewood and Shadow Brook, which would become the name
of another nearby grand estate overlooking the Stockbridge Bowl.
In 1857, the Wards realized their time at Highwood had come to
an end and sold the beloved Highwood. A year later, following the
death of his father, Ward would be the sole agent for Barings.
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Nine years later he would orchestrate the financing of the United
State's $7.2 million purchase of Alaska from Russia. (The Wards
would later build a cottage in Newport, R.I., which they sold to
Edith Wharton, before building another cottage in Lenox. Ward's
second cottage would be the grand Oakwood, which he later sold
to Anson Phelps Stokes. Stokes turned the home into a stable for
his grand, 100-room estate, Shadow Brook.)
The Wards sold Highwood to another Boston couple, William
Story Bullard and his wife, Louisa Norton Bullard, who had rented
the house for two years. Bullard, a merchant who made his
fortune in the East India trade, sold his company when new
protective tariffs were introduced. A rich man, the couple who
had four sons and a daughter, settled into their new home, which
they were not afraid to alter.
"The Bullards appreciated and enjoyed the magnificent property
and they continued to develop and maintain it for more than 100
years it remained in the family. Inevitably changes were made to
the house, including, and most obviously, the removal of the
porches on the first and second floors and the removal of the
chimney pots. A more formal, smaller single-story porch was
added to the garden entrance," Callas wrote of the Bullards. A
driveway, which passed through a porte cochère on the house's
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south side, was installed along the lake side of the house
sometime after 1900 by Dr. Norton Bullard, a neurologist, who
inherited the property from his parents.
Upon his death in 1931, Dr. Bullard left part of his estate to
establish the salary for the Bullard Professor of Neuropathology
at Harvard.
An amateur botanist, he wanted to leave Highwood to Harvard as
a wildflower sanctuary. His wife, Mary Reynolds Bullard,
continued to live at the manor house, and in 1954 bequeathed the
estate's 70 acres along Lake Mahkeenac to the Stockbridge Bowl
Association. Upon her death in 1960, she honored her husband's
wishes and left Highwood to Harvard, which it in turn put the
property that it could not afford to maintain on the market.
The Boston Symphony Orchestra, which now owned the
Tanglewood estate, turned down the chance to acquire
Highwood and it was instead purchased in 1961 by a Harvard
alumnus, New York lawyer Mason Harding and his wife, Mary
Riker Harding. Harding, whose father maintained a second home
in Lenox, was deeply involved in the Berkshires and was trustee of
both the Lenox Library and the Hancock Shaker Village.
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The couple and their five children spent the summers and
holidays at the house in Lenox, while maintaining their
permanent residence in New York City.
"Idyllic summers did not last long. In the late 1970s, Tanglewood
and the BSO sponsored rock concerts at various times
throughout the season Mr. Harding complained that he didn't
expect to have Woodstock in his backyard and brought suit
against the BSO to limit the length and noise level of the concerts.
Adjustments were made and eventually the suit was withdrawn,"
Callas states of the Hardings.
The Hardings made the last alterations to Highwood in 1982,
when the kitchen was renovated among major interior
renovations. The back of the house was also extended at this
point.
In 1986, after requiring open heart surgery, the Hardings ended
their tenure at Highwood Manor, selling the estate to the Boston
Symphony Orchestra for $1.7 million.
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Cornell University Making of America
Page 1 of 1
1706
0
THE CENTURY MAGAZINE.
VOL. XXXII.
MAY, 1886,
No. I.
AMERICAN COUNTRY DWELLINGS. I.
branch is due in each and all to the fact that
we are repenting of this fundamental sin-
are beginning to feel the necessity for basing
all our work on rational foundations, for tak-
ing as our guide intelligent, cultivated thought,
not apathy or impulse, not mere vague artistic
aspirations nor a merely formal adherence to
the examples of some other age.
It is not strange that in building our country
homes we should have shown ourselves more
original, more " American " than elsewhere.
Here most of all have we been forced to meet
-or at least to deal with- new and diverse
requirements. Our climate and the habits of
life it engenders, our social conditions and
the variety of needs they create, our sites and
surroundings, as well as our main material,
wood - all have been most unlike those
of other nations. In no other architectural
LOCKIE or
CHAS, J. OSBORNE, ESQ,
branch have we been thrown so largely upon
MAMARONECK N. N
our own resources; therefore in none was the
PASSING from one
development of some kind of originality so
branch of our archi-
probable. And thus that native character
tecture to another, we realize
which gives more general signs of its existence
how many are the dangers which
than are commonly perceived - which some-
beset its path. Much of our ec-
what tinges all our work, however featureless
clesiastical work, as we have
or however imitative - nowhere else reveals
seen, has been fettered by the
itself so clearly as in our country homes, No-
wish to follow inappropriate prec-
where has its accent been so pronounced, and
edents very many of our buildings for com-
nowhere has its voice been broken by SO few
mercial use have been pauperized by com-
wholly alien notes. An inquiry into its vari-
plete indifference and for long our city
ous manifestations must begin with our very
dwellings were stereotyped and stunted in
earliest products.
dull reiteration of some unintelligent de-
Every one knows what were the first of all our
sign. And now, in considering the domestic
country dwellings- - those old farm-houses,
architecture of our smaller towns and our
built by Dutch or English settlers, which still
country places, we shall see still another
survive in many a quiet spot. Nothing could
tendency at work for evil-the tendency to-
be more simple, more utilitarian, more with-
ward ignorant, reckless originality." But the
outthought of architectural effectiveness. And
same fundamental sin has underlaid all these
yet such a farm-house is often extremely good
various superficial sins, and the reformation in its own humble way - good in its general
which now begins to show in each and every proportions, and especially in the agreeable
Copyright, 1886, by THE CENTURY Co. All rights reserved.
strop
to
P8.
http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/cgi-bin/moa/pageviewer?coll=moa&root=%2Fmoa%2Fcent...
11/14/2005
Cornell University Making of America
Page 1 of 1
AMERICAN COUNTRY DWELLINGS.
15
try homes of to-day are infinitely better than
future paths, and most especially those which
the best and the average of twenty or even of
dealt with the new necessities of iron. He
ten years ago. But it is just as little open to
was so enthusiastic and versatile that every
question that the professional architect "
branch of the art appealed to him - even the
now playsa much more important part in their
then despised branch which includes country
construction or, again, that this architect is
homes. All this did good, I repeat, not only as
becoming year by year more professional him-
influencing other workers, but as raising the
that is, more widely differentiated from
generally received opinion with regard to
the mere artisan in quantity of knowledge, in
the utility of an architect in architecture. But
thoroughness and quality of training, in refine-
in this last respect we are most of all indebted,
ment of intelligence, in width of artistic hori-
perhaps, to the force of character and witch-
zon, in processes and theories and ideals.
ingness of tongue that enabled Mr. Hunt to
LIBRARY
ID
HOUSE
OF
SAMUEL
GRAY
WARD,
HSQ.,
LINOX
MASS.
One name, I think, deserves to be men-
lay hold of the stolid, indifferent, obstinate,
tioned here with especial honor. It would be
or timid client, and lead him whither he would
difficult to overestimate the good influence
have him go. I do not feel that in saying this
Mr. Richard Hunt has had both upon the
1 overstep the line which dívides legitimate im-
profession itself and upon its status with the
personal from illegitimate personal commen-
public. When he began to practice such an
tary; for, let it be in the other arts as it may,
education and equipment as his were almost
in the architect's art personal force and per-
anomalous with us, while to-day (of course
suasiveness are essentially part and parcel of
not by any means solely, but yet, I think,
the required endowment. As I have said so
partly through his example) they are getting
often, this art depends upon direct, special,
to be thought essential and getting to be not
reiterated acts of patronage to a degree quite
quite exceptional. He was so industrious a
peculiar to itself; and as every new commis-
worker, moreover, that the sum of his results
sion differs from every other, an artist's past
formed a very large lump of leaven - a re-
record is not always taken - indeed, cannot
markably large lump, seeing that they were
always be taken / as a guarantee of future
not all, like the results of too many others,
success. Therefore he who has not a modicum
patterned upon one shallow, monotonous
of personal persuasive power runs a great risk
scheme. He was so full of ideas that he ex-
of being obliged to follow those whom he ought
perimented very widely and diversely, Not
to lead. I do not say how it might be in an
all of his experiments, we may grant, were
ideally artistic community there, perhaps,
successful. But as they were based on knowl-
all excellence would be self-evident to all in
edge, not ignorance, all were useful as sys-
anticipation as in fact, and no discussion or
tematizing future efforts and marking out
persuasion necessary. But as communities
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AMERICAN COUNTRY DWELLINGS.
I
LINING-ROOM
IN
MR. WARD'S HOUSE.
stand to-day, that architect will be most ser-
with it a sound much less of novelty and offense
viceable to his clients, as well as to his art
is largely due just to this one champion.
and to himself, who (other things being equal,
Of course Mr. Hunt was not the first to try
I mean, of course) can persuade them most
to improve upon the " vernacular" type of
convincingly that he knows best. When Mr.
country dwelling-to try to put architectural
Hunt began to practice this seemed a very
coherence and something which might truth-
strange proposition to the ears of the free
fully be called design in the place of the fantastic
and independent American citizen - espe-
and yet mechanical medley which prevailed.
cially when he was intent upon the structure
Doubtless he was not even the first to do this
of his own home. The fact that it now carries
with real ability and radically right ideas to
# How often do we still hear some 'house-father"
of the elder generation proclaim with child-like pride
of gratitude I feel to Mr. Howells for having set bc-
fore my readers so delicately trenchant a dramatic
*4 I had no architect : the builder and I did it all
or, more likely, "I and the builder." And how inva-
picture of the difference between the old régime and
riably does the fact reveal itself in a very different
the new in matters architectural. Silas Lapham
and his new house and his architect will, I am very
way from that which he supposes Perhaps this is as
good a time as any to acknowledge the personal debt
sure, advocate my conclusions far more persuasively
than all my own theoretic preachments.
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31
FIREPLACE IX STUDIO OF H. H. RICHARDSON, BSQ., BROOKLINE, MASS.
back the effort. But so far as I know he was
Coming now to speak of our current work
the first who perceptibly stemmed the popular
in this department, I find the task extremely
current, who started any conspicuous and
difficult. In no other branch do controlling
permanent stream of improvement. His work
needs, desires, and opportunities vary so widely
differs in many ways from that which is most
and perpetually nowhere else are possibil-
characteristic of to-day. And yet he should be
ities of excellence or failure so manifold in
ranked as the forerunner-as what the Ger-
themselves or so dependent upon the differing
mans call the "road-breaker"-of the younger
characters of different sites. And this makes
band who are doing such good service now.
it peculiarly hard, of course, to select exam-
In the matter of interior treatment- both
ples - these being necessarily few in number
as regards the nice provision for complicated
- so that they shall be in any sense typical
practical needs, and as regards variety and
examples. That is to say, a town hall which
beauty of architectural effect as well-his in-
is successful in one small town might have
novations were especially remarkable and
been just as successful in a hundred others
salutary. When speaking in a former chapter
the plan and façade which are good for
a
of the gradual growth in beauty our domestic
narrow city lot might be just as good in
interiors have undergone, I remarked that it
Chicago or St. Louis as in New York or Bos-
showed at first in the shape of mere extrinsic
ton but a country home that is admirable
charm - of upholsterer's decoration, so to say
at Newport, for example, could hardly be re-
-and that we were satisfied for a time with
peated at Mt. Desert or in the Catskills, not
this ere we bethought ourselves that intrinsic
even to meet the same owner's needs- often
architectural charm might be still better worth
could not be repeated on any other Newport
the having. But Mr. Hunt's houses should be
site. It is peculiarly difficult, moreover, to
noted as exceptions, His efforts after archi-
describe even the individual excellence of any
tectural beauty began long before the decora-
country home, for this excellence is not only
tive movement declared itself. For a long
individual to 50 exceptional a degree, but in
time the homes he built were much better in
this country is also, in the majority of cases,
their main constructive features than in their
of a comparatively modest, unaccented kind;
decoration or their furniture, though at a much
lies in the harmony of minor, detailed virtues;
later day the rule was the reverse of this,
is not to be explained by the citation of con-
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AMERICAN COUNTRY DWELLINGS.
spicuous features, or characterized by reference
teristic, much less those which we deem our
to anything very pronounced in the way of
most successful efforts.
"style." The architectural virtues of a palace
But why is not the Queen Anne cottage,
or a mansion are emphatic and describable,
which in its best state at home has charmed the
but the architectural virtues of a cottage
eye of many an American and thoroughly ful-
are retiring and elusive are very apt to
filled his conception of what a country home
evaporate entirely from the words in which
should is it notable, if transplanted to
one tries to write them down. I must there-
our own soil, to meet at least a certain class of
fore make it my chief aim to point out certain
needs Try to hive in one, and you will see. In
factors which, in spite of the endless diversity
the winter season you will havesnow where the
of our problems, nevertheless enter into almost
Englishman has rain, and will find his pictur-
all of them; and to note certain tendencies
esquely complex roof a snow-trap, not a snow-
which, in spite of the varied character of our
shed. You will have far greater cold than he,
efforts, nevertheless may be said to character-
and will need a plan that does not put too
ize those efforts as a whole. The examples I
many difficulties in the way of warming from
shall briefly note in illustration must not be a common center. Winter and summer you
accepted as being better than all others, but
will have sunshine of a strength he knows
merely as being most familiar to my eyes.
only in his dreams, and his house will very
Indeed, their illustrative value depends to no
likely give you more windows than you want.
small degree just upon the fact that I can say
And in summer you will have heat of a po-
they are not better than all others.
tency he would hate to know even in his
I have already hinted that when the Amer-
dreams, and his house will most certainly not
ican architect labors in this branch he can get
give you the thing you want most of all
a
an unusually small amount of help from his
piazza. And, again, you will very often wish
foreign brethren. Continental excellence can-
to make a much more extensive use of wood
not be very useful to him, for the fundamental
than he ever makes in these modern days. Of
ideas which prevail in continental lands with
course you may use your wood in place of his
regard to what country homes should be are
brick; you may modify his roofs, change his
radically different from those which prevail
plan, alter his openings, and add your own
with us. The fundamental ideas which prevail
piazza. If, however, you do this with the in-
in England, on the other hand, do strongly
tent to copy the effect of his house as nearly
resemble ours. But our social conditions are
as you can, you will utterly spoil his creation
so peculiar to ourselves, and our climate
and produce a bastard thing which will neither
and our consequent habits of life, that even
satisfy your eye nor wholly meet your needs.
English teachings must be vastly modified in
And this is just what has been done in a very
the application. Of course I do not mean to
great many cases. If, on the other hand, you
contradict everything I have written above-
make the necessary changes with intelligent
to say that we do not need to use all possible
thought and artistic feeling as your helpers,
learning, to incorporate many transmitted
instead of with imitative effort as your fetter,
ideas and many borrowed motives, here as
the result will not be the Englishman's house
elsewhere in our art. I merely mean that here
at all, but something essentially different,
even more than elsewhere we should not, can-
essentially your own. And this too, let us
not - should study the results of other
rejoice to note, is done more often and more
lands and ages 'only as one studies literature,
successfully year by year.
not as one studies grammar."
From current English fashions we have
This fact has clearly proved itself within
certainly learned a great deal besides the
the last few years. An effort has been made
mere fact that we cannot copy them; and
to copy the domestic style which now rules in
we should be peculiarly grateful that our in-
England,- that so-called Queen Anne,"
terest in them has led us to take an inter-
which our grandchildren will call Queen
est in genuine Queen Anne and Georgian
Victoria,"- it has proved the impossibility
work-that is, in the work so many exam-
of direct imitation as distinctly as the ver
ples of which are to be found upon our own
nacular" had already proved the futility of
soil, Our colonial homes have of late been
thoughtless, ignorant originality. Fortunately
the objects of much earnest attention, and
we have not been as long in learning the sec-
the fact is very fortunate.
und lesson as we were in learning the first. It
It would have been unfortunate, however,
is true that we cannot just yet say that it is
had not our architects approached them in
thoroughly learned cannot say that our im-
a more sensible spirit than that which has
itative Queen Anne is yet extinct. But it is
swayed some of the critics already quoted.
dying fast, I think, and to-day it does not in-
For, after saying much in a vague way with
clude those which we deem our most charac-
regard to what ought not to be done in Amer-
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AMERICAN COUNTRY DWELLINGS.
19
ica, these advisers have given at least one bit
live at their ease to-day or work at their best
of decided counsel with regard to what ought
in an unmodified colonial interior. If they
to be done- have declared that we ought to
happen to dwell in an old one, there are sen-
look back at our colonial examples and to
timental compensations which perhaps suffice.
reproduce" them as faithfully as we can,
But when a new home is in question the case
These examples, they assert, are the only ex-
seems wholly different. And the alterations
amples at once American" and good; and
in plan and arrangement which are necessary
they are so very good-so charming, so char-
to meet the change in main requirements, and
acteristic, and so appropriate to our wants-
to provide for a hundred subordinate new re-
that we need not try to improve on them. If,
quirements, must be of such a character that the
however, we throw aside a very natural
old exterior pattern cannot often be retained.
sentimentality which clings about the subject,
For this pattern is certainly not flexible, elas-
and if we then compare our colonial homes
tic, given to indefinite extension and the
not merely with their later rivals, the clap-
indefinite multiplication of minor constructive
boarded box and the "vernacular" villa, but
features. The effect of quiet dignity which
with a sensible ideal of what the homes of
is its greatest charm depends very largely just
to-day might be and should be-if we do
upon its simple, unbroken outlines, and its
this, we find that our critics' assertions hardly
broad, unbroken masses.
sustain themselves.
And in thus deciding with regard to its
We need not quarrel over the question practical sufficiency, have we not also decided
whether the colonial house is "American" or
with regard to the expressional and artistic
not. In any strict sense, of course, it does
sufficiency of the colonial home Our more
not deserve the name; nothing does save the
freely social, more lavish, more varied and
wigwam of the North and the pueblo of the
complex ways of living cannot find full and
South. Of course its patterns were all im-
truthful expression in any colonial pattern,
ported, and sometimes their treatment was
nor our growing love of art full and lawful
very strictly imitative strictly imita-
satisfaction, We still want to be dignified in
tive, I should say, than the treatment of any
our architectural voice, still to be refined, still
of our later products whatsoever. But certain
to be quiet; but the dignity, the refinement,
frequent features- for instance, one or
and the repose must be of a different char-
two sensible and charming modes of roofing-
acter from those which appropriately marked
may fairly be called original; and when the
the dwellings of our ancestors. The simpler
translation into wood occurred, that was cer-
types among these are extremely puritanical;
tainly American enough. Then our colonial
and I do not think the adjective fits ourselves,
work has stood longer than any other, and is
And the ornater types, even if they had not
identified with whatever historic associations
also much of the same accent, are the least
we can call our own; and it is all so analogous
well fitted for reproduction in our most usual
as to offer an instance of the flourishing on
material; for, excusable though the practice
our soil of something that may be called a co-
was a hundred years ago, it would be inex-
herent, comprehensible, all-pervading "style."
cusable to-day to build Doric porticoes or
All these facts, together with its undeniable
to frame Ionic pilasters out of pine boards
charm, certainly give it a strong hold upon
painted.
our affections, and a priority of claim among
In short, we may say of our colonial homes
the proper objects of our study. But the main
what we may say of the contemporary homes
question is not as to its Americanism, and is
of England: our architects should study
not as to its charm; the main question is, does
them, but cannot copy them. When to a cer-
it indeed wholly meet the needs of to-day,
tain degree their features and their general
practically, expressionally, and artistically
effect have been reproduced, the result seems
Practically it does not. Its air is indeed as
peculiarly pleasing and most appropriately
of a delightfully complete domesticity, but it
"American," (Atleast this true of the Eastern
by no means fulfills to the modern American
States. It would not be so true, I think, of
mind the promise it holds out to the eye. In
the Western-which may be taken as proof
relation to the habits we have acquired during
in passing of how desirabilities vary in this
more than a century of rapidly changing
department of our art.) But many extraneous
existence, it is not one-half so livable as it
features and many variations of old features
looks. It provides only for the simplest, most
and old modes of working must be introduced
unvaried and homogeneous domestic and so-
if the result is to be sensible and satisfactory.
cial customs, and only for housekeeping of
And for some of these the point of departure
what now seems a very primitive pattern.
must be found in the "vernacular." Incapable
Whatever the paterfamilias might feel about
of self-development into anything good, it yet
it, neither the mater nor her executives could
cannot be cut down root and branch it must
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AMERICAN COUNTRY DWELLINGS.
LODGE OF FREDERICK L AMISS, KSQ,, NORTH EASTON, MASS.
yield us certain buds of excellence for devel-
long chapter, and must postpone all further
opment along with other grafts. Its piazza,
comment to another. The illustrations here-
for example, absolutely imposes itself upon
with given reveal something in the mean while
the conscience of every American architect.
with regard to our current efforts. I would
To develop it into a beautiful and constructive
only say once more that the revelation is of
instead of an ugly, make-shift, superadded
necessity imperfect; that no such illustrations
feature, and to bring it into perfect harmony
can tell the whole truth as to form and pro-
with all his other features, many of which will
portion, much truth as to detail, or any truth
have come from very different sources-this
as to color; and, especially, cannot speak
is one of the most vital problems with which
distinctly as to that perfect adaptation of
a
he has to deal; and also one of the most diffi-
house to its surroundings which is one of the
cult, and the one of all others which most
most vital of all virtues. As our conditions
emphatically forbids him to imitate any pre-
run, it is sometimes a virtue very difficult of
vious product, most emphatically prescribes
attainment. Nevertheless it is one which we
that if he builds good country houses for the
are earnestly striving to attain, and already
Americans of to-day, they will be essentially
with a degree of success that goes far to prove
unlike all others.
there lie within us some latent sparks of true
But I have come to the utmost limits of a
artistic aptitude.
M. G. van Rensselaer.
The lodge on Mr. Osborne's place at Mamaroneck,
White: the studio and the lodge at North Easton by Mr.
Major Poore's house, and all the interiors except the
Richardson; Mrs. Hemenway's house by Mr. Emer-
studio were designed by Messra. McKim, Mead &
son, and the Newport farm-house by Mr. C. S. Lace.
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Carole Owens. The Beakshine Cottages:a Vanishing erc
100
Enflewood cliffs, NJ: Cottage Press, 1984
6
mily Thorn Vanderbilt's grandson muses, "I think,
that if you ran a house like that, you didn't have
time for anything else." He thinks a moment, try-
ing to express something more about the great
houses both in the town and country. In Lenox, he
THE
lived at the cottage named Highlawn House and
visited his grandmother at Elm Court. In the city, "We lived on Fifth
BUILDERS
Avenue, and I have always been embarrassed to describe where I
grew up." In the Berkshires, standing in one of the cottages, you
"My purpose was
can learn something of the age and the people from the propor-
tions alone.
to have a road
The beginning of the estate period in Lenox and Stockbridge is
the equal of
not easily pinpointed. Some mark it as early as the 1840s when
Samuel G. Ward bought Highwood, which commanded a spectac-
corresponding
ular view of Lake Mahkeenac and the mountains, and settled down
first class
to gentleman farming and entertaining the literati of the day.
Others identify the end of the Civil War, the amassed wealth and
places in Lenox;
lighter spirit, as the time when building began. If it was the end of
I ask for
the Civil War that loosed the pocketbook and the heart to build,
and the start of the First World War that changed the attitude and
nothing better and
I shall not willingly
Photograph by William Tague
accept poorer."
W. D. Sloane:
Letter to Messrs. Olmsted,
Olmsted and Eliot,
October 2, 1884
Aerial view of
Elm Court
101
Courtesy of The Essex Institute
Highwood,
first cottage of
Samuel G. Ward
ended the period, then the estate period would fit neatly between
two wars. However, neatness is not necessarily accuracy. The ma-
jority of estates in the villages were built in the 1880s and 1890s
spilling over into the twentieth century as late as 1911, and al-
though the Great War changed the mood, it was not until the
Depression that the great estates were given away for tax reasons
or auctioned off, razed, or deserted.
A local resident muses, "Giraud Foster died in 1945, and Mrs.
White died soon after - they were bridge partners, you know-
with those two gone, the period was really over, as far as I'm con-
cerned. They were the real generation of builders." They were not
Courtesy of the Providence Library
only the generation that built, but the generation that understood
the reason for the building and believed in it.
If the wealthy had an obligation, it was to amass and spend
money; to build for an assured future not just for the sake of show,
but to establish an American economic aristocracy. After the Civil
War, there was a confluence of events that created the right at-
mosphere for a display of wealth that was, if nothing else, very en-
tertaining. It was a time when the state of things for the moneyed
class seemed stable, and the only conceivable changes seemed
destined to be for the better. Perhaps the start of the era was the
Oakswood,
moment when the idea of an American aristocracy formed and ap-
second cottage of
peared to have mass approval, and the beginning of the end was
Samuel G. Ward
when there was a rent in the fabric of the mass approval.
110
Courtesy of The Berkshire Eagle
Blantyre,
Robert Warden Paterson's
cottage
Brook. It would take two years, five hundred skilled laborers, and
one and a half million dollars to build Ernest W. Bowditch a land-
scape architect, was retained after Mrs. Stokes rejected tentative
sketches made by Olmsted."
In his journal, Mr. Bowditch recalled the circumstances when
I met him [Mr. Stokes he had just purchased the old Ward estate
Oakswood, not Highwood] and adjoining land-in all some
500 acres; had started a gigantic stone house with a Pittsfield
architect and had just come to realizing that by no possibility
could he drive to his front door in safety, and furthermore, if he
succeeded in reaching that point, it was physically impossible to
(Right) Spring Lawn,
turn a vehicle around unless he had a mechanical turntable. In-
the cottage of
John Alexandre
cidentally, he had no water supply, no sewage disposal and the
(Below) Brookhurst,
cottage of
Newbold Morris
Courtesy of the Providence Library
Courtesy of the Providence Library
126
laid to rest alongside her father and grandfather and great-
grandfather She is laid in a cemetery with ceremony that has con-
tinued unchanged. The mourners walk back for a small lunch at
the coral house on Main Street.
We cannot expect that every aspect of our history will be pre-
served as scrupulously as Sedgwick tradition. We have a right,
however, to want some part of our heritage preserved and accessi-
ble. We have a responsibility too. It is unfortunate that the motiva-
tion often comes from mourning what is gone. Across the country,
the summer cottages have been abandoned, sacked, demolished,
and burned. The palatial homes that the rich built in the suburbs
are probably the greatest and most typical of the Gilded Age's con-
tribution to architecture. "By its country estates, the Gilded Age is
remembered. The present age will be remembered for tearing
them down."
The Field children at
Highlawn House, 1913
Courtesy of William O. Field
If we have the opportunity to visit one of the cottages, and if, as
we walk through it, we ask, what was it like to build such a place
and live in it, the answer to that question is the history of a period.
To answer it is to understand the economic growth of a country,
the philosophy, the religion, and the values of a country and a time.
The gilt of the Age of Elegance was run out of town by an auto-
mobile, tarnished by world war, and put beyond the reach of peo-
ple by the graduated income tax. In the over half century since it
has been safe to say that the Gilded Age is dead and gone, there
have been times when Tiffany lamps gathered dust on the back
tables of antique shops; the Victorian loveseat was considered ugly
and uncomfortable-though cheap; and the architecture of the
127
day impractical, nonfunctional, and peculiar looking at best.
During such times, it was thought that:
McKim, Mead and White and other classicists, were mere
copycats; worse, responsible for stifling and setting back for
Courtesy of Jane Foster Lorber
decades the development of a genuine vernacular, ingenious
and, above all, original American architecture More than five
decades after the systematic denigration of McKim, Mead
and
White their works have been destroyed, truncated and
vandalized.²
We were losing the architectural representation of our history
and heritage to the fire engine and the bulldozer. Perhaps the
architecture was criticized not only for itself, but because it sym-
bolized an age that was being attacked.
William Henry Vanderbilt made $10,300,000 per year. That's
$858,333 per month, $190,740 per week, $28,219 per day,
$1175.79 per hour. When he left each of his eight children
$10,000,000, there was still $17,000,000 left for his wife out of
holdings, not including income. The second coachman at Elm
Court, William Henry's daughter's estate, made $840 per year, $70
per month, $15 per week, $2 per day, 20-25$ per hour. Andrew
Carnegie said in the Gospel of Wealth that it was the responsibility
of the superior upper class to give to the less fortunate. An assistant
gardener left Carnegie's employ at Shadow Brook when he was
refused a raise from $60 to $70 per month. A case could probably
"Boy" Foster
at Bellefontaine,
be made that Carnegie and Vanderbilt had SO much because oth-
with his dog, Berry
ers had SO little. The anonymous Berkshire poet who wrote the
lines: "The golf course runs SO close by the mill, that the laboring
children can see the men at play," would probably have rejoiced
had he lived to see the cottages deteriorate.
Perhaps we think we have progressed past a former ignoble
economic system. Assume that is true, then why preserve the sym-
bols of a less than glorious past? If we do not, what we lose is the
ability to judge where we are and how we got there. Without his-
tory, it is possible to believe that things are as they have always
been and always will be. You lose the ability to look into a fine
old face and catch a glimpse of the girl she was. It becomes impos-
sible to tell if the way things are is progression, regression, or
oscillation.
Besides, the history of the Gilded Age is a whale of a story. The
scenes are full of the outrageous and splendid, the sordid and the
humorous. The dynastic dreams and ferocious deeds, the brilliant
accomplishments and the perfectly silly, the scale of the age is
easier to grasp standing in a preserved cottage of like dimensions.
The Countess Scherr Thoss said that this generation does not
care about history. The granddaughter of Ambassador Henry
White, she was a contemporary, a relative, a friend, and one of the
social and economic elite. Neither this generation nor that saved
history. For the forty years between 1880 and 1920, they struggled
to buy history and civilization. But even during that forty-year
span, the buying and selling was seen not as a preservation for pos-
terity or the common weal, but a trading back and forth between
To WEST MTN. ROAD
To Pittsfield
2
1.
Arrowhead
T
188
Scale for all maps
EAST
RD
0
1/2
Mile
2
+
Eastover
o
20
7A
Windy Side
3
7
(LENOX CLUB)
V
Homestead
Church on the Hill
L
e
x
PATERSON MON.
Sadgwick Hall (LIBRARY)
TOWN HALL (OLD P.O.SITE)
16
Groton Place
HOUSATONIC
ST.
(BOSTON U. SUMMER MUSIC SCH.)
ST.
Fralinghuysen
Cottager
Trinity Church
RICHMOND
183
WEST
RD.
LENOX
Ventfort
STOCK.
ST.
18
20
Site of The Perch
Brook Farm
19
8
ANNYKEMBLE MARKER)
(BERK. COUNTRY
6
DAY SCHOOL)
9
Coldbrooke
Lily
Pd.
22
Interlaken
11
10
Stockbridge
7A
PLUNKETT
ST.
- Shipton Court
12
(Northern
part of
Stockbridge)
13
(7HILLS)
Merrywood
Bowl
14
20
23
LENOX
RD.
LEE
Laurel Lake
15
183
CROSSROAD
INTERLAKEN
Interlaken
To Lee
PROSPECT HILL RD.
24
To W.Stockbridge
To Lenox
102
LENOX
90
1.
FERNBROOK/Avalon School
2.
ASPINWALL HOTEL
183
3.
BELVOIR TERRACE
,
Oronoque
24
4.
ORLETON / The Gateways Inn
(BOSTON U. SUMMER
5.
SPRING LAWN/Bible Speaks
MUSIC SCHOOL)
6.
ANANDA HALL
7.
WINTER PALACE
Stockbridge
To Lee
8.
ALLEN WINDEN/Berkshire Christian College
33
9.
BELLEFONTAINE
BUTLER
25
:
28
10.
ELM COURT
RD
I
Glendale
29
11.
WYNDHURST/'Cranwell'
34
HILL
12.
BLANTYRE
Church
YALE
13.
OVERLEIGH/Avalon School
RD.
MAIN
Casino
14.
THE MOUNT/Edith Wharton Restoration
GLENDALE
(BERK. THEATER
and Shakespeare & Co.
FESTIVAL)
183
(ORIGINAL CHILDREN'S
28A
15.
ERSKINE PARK/The Ponds at Fox Hollow
30
16. THE CURTIS
17.
BROOKHURST/Private Home
102
RR
7
STATION
STOCKBRIDGE
CHERRY HILL
31
RD.
18.
SHADOW BROOK/Kripalu Center
N.gray
19. THE LITTLE RED HOUSE
20. TANGLEWOOD
21. HIGHWOOD/Private Home
TOWN HALL!
22. WHEATLEIGH
23.
BONNIE BRIER FARM/The Desisto School
24.
CLOVER CROFT
36
25.
NAUMKEAG
26.
BONNIE BRAE/Private Home
27.
WINDERMERE/Private Home
28.
EDEN HILL/Congregation of Marians
Great
Barrington
of the Immaculate Conception
23
28A. LAUREL COTTAGE/Tennis Courts
29.
HEATON HALL
FAIR GROUNDS
30.
RED LION
31.
KONKAPUT BROOK/Riverbrook School
37
32.
STRAWBERRY HILL/Private Home
33.
LINWOOD/Norman Rockwell Museum
HILL
34. CHESTERWOOD
35. SOUTHMAYDS/Private Home
GREAT BARRINGTON
36.
SEARLES CASTLE/Barrington House/
Kellogg Terrace
37.
BROOKSIDE/Eisner Camp
THE COTTAGES
150 Fernbrook
176 The Curtis
209 The Red Lion
151 The Aspinwall
178 Brookhurst
210 Konkaput Brook
152 Belvoir Terrace
180
Shadow Brook
212 Strawberry Hill
154 Orleton
184
The Little Red House
213 Linwood
155 Spring Lawn
188 Tanglewood
215 Chesterwood
156 Ananda Hall
190 Highwood
216
The Southmayd Place
The Winter Palace
193 Wheatleigh
219 Searles Castle
158 Allen Winden
195 Bonnie Brier Farm
222 Brookside
160 Bellefontaine
197 Clover Croft
163 Elm Court
198 Naumkeag
166 Wyndhurst
200 Bonnie Brae
224 Afterword
168 Blantyre
201 Windermere
226 Appendix I
171
Overleigh
205 Eden Hill
232 Appendix II
173
The Mount
Laurel Cottage
235 Appendix III
175
Erskine Park
208 Heaton Hall
236 Index
THE GREAT TALLYHO AGE OF LENOX MASSACHUSETTS
HIGHHI
TAIS GOTAR CASTLA AMERICA'S
A SELECTION OF ESTATES FROM "THE INLAND NEWPORT"
The cover of this book is
"The Great TallyHo Age" by Robert DeLage.
Copyright: © 1980, Robert DeLage
180
Photograph by William Tague
18
SHADOW BROOK
(Stockbridge/Lenox)
Aerial view of Shadow Brook
B
uilt by Anson Phelps Stokes,
first floor were of marble. Since it
Shadow Brook has been
was quarried locally, it was almost
called the largest house in
an economy. The second and third
America. Completed in 1893 and
stories were of stucco and wood in
consisting of a reported one hun-
a style reminiscent of Tudor. The
dred rooms, it may have been the
tower was completely marble.
largest house in America for two
The 738 acres included a work-
years until George Washington
ing farm, Brook Farm, gardens and
Vanderbilt completed his 250-
riding trails. The stable was a con-
room mansion, Biltmore, in
verted Charles Follen McKim
Asheville, North Carolina.
house, Oakswood, built for
The Stokes chose a local archi-
Samuel G. Ward in 1878, Anson
tect, H. Neill Wilson, of the Wilson
Phelps Stokes' son, Isaac Newton
firm, Pittsfield, Massachusetts. The
Phelps Stokes wrote his mother
landscape architect was Ernest
February 5, 1893: "It does seem a
Bowditch. Mr. Wilson certainly de-
pity not to use the Ward house or
signed one of the largest homes of
to convert it into stables. Mrs.
a non-classical style in America. Al-
(Dorr) of Macao says Mr. McKim al-
though parts of Shadow Brook (the
ways regarded the house as one of
tower, for example) were reminis-
his best creations."
cent of a castle, the overall impres-
Shadow Brook rested on a slope
sion of Shadow Brook was of a
above Lake Mahkeenac. In The
country house. Regardless of its
Wonder Book, Nathaniel Haw-
size, it retained that air of hunting
thorne had named that slope
lodge or country dwelling that
Shadow Brook: "In the summer-
blends rather than contrasts with
time, the shadow of SO many clus-
the landscape. Like Elm Court's,
tering branches, meeting and
Shadow Brook's foundation and
intermingling across the rivulet,
190
Highwood
I
n 1841. Samuel Gray Ward
bought land from the widow of
Cyrus Huwlitt. and from Daniel
Barnes in 1844 to form Highwood.
Samuel G. Ward was from Boston.
He was a representative of the Lon-
don firm of Baring Brothers as his
father, Thomas Wren Ward, had
been before him. Ward started the
well-known Saturday Club, a liter-
ary gathering that included Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow.
Samuel Gray Ward is often con-
fused with Sam Ward, Julia Ward
21
Howe's brother and husband of
Emily Astor. Even contemporaries
confused the two Sams Henry
Wadsworth Longfellow separated
them by calling Samuel G. Ward of
Highwood and Boston: Good Sam.
"The G stands for good. he said.
It seems Samuel G. was the more
conventional of the two. To further
complicate the identities of the
men, they almost became
HIGHWOOD
brothers-in-law However, Henry
Ward died after becoming en-
(Stockbridge)
gaged but before marrying Samuel
We know from his wife's diary
G.'s sister Mary In fact. one of
that when Sam first purchased the
Lenny Lind's biographers. Gladys
land, he had intended it as a vear-
Denny Schulz. makes the mistake
round residence. After his father
in Jenny Lind: The Swedish Night-
died, Sam was persuaded to take
ingale She writes that Tenny mar-
his place at Baring Brothers, and
ried Otto Goldschmidt at Sam G.
Highwood became a summer resi-
Ward's house and then goes on to
dence. He has always been distin-
describe Sam Ward. Sam and Emily
guished as the "First of the Lenox
Astor Ward lived in New York City,
Cottagers." Never mind that his
Jenny was married at No. 20 Louis-
property was in Stockbridge. locals
berg Square, Boston, the home of
date the start of the Cottage period
Samuel G
at 1846- - the year Mr. Ward built
As a wedding present. Sam gave
Highwood. Yet it is not at all clear
her a locket containing two like-
that Mr. Ward actually built High-
nesses: one of Daniel Webster and
wood or when.
one of George Washington. She
In 1841 when Samuel G. Ward
called it her "good luck locket,"
purchased the first piece of land,
and thereafter, wore it at
the deed marks the property line
all her concerts. Others have re-
"beginning at the Southeast corner
ported that she was married at
of the house." Mr. Ward purchased
Highwood, confusing not the two
land five and two years before the
Sams, but Sam's two houses.
1846 date, and we know, from Mrs.
191
ters to his architect, Richard
Upjohn. 11 The letters are dated
1846 from Pittsfield. The fact is that
the letters were dated after Mrs.
Ward's letters to her father-in-law
Photograph by David Frank
postmarked Highwood. That cou-
pled with mention of an existing
house in the Huwlitt deed. causes
one to ask if Mr. Ward built
Highwood at all, or was he, with
the help of architect, Richard Up-
john, renovating the widow
Huwlitt's house? Perhaps there is
no way now to be certain about
the genesis of the "first cottage."
however. there is one piece of evi-
dence supporting the notion that
Highwood was not built but reno-
vated. It has to do with the archi-
tect, Richard Upjohn.
Richard Upjohn was born in
England in 1802. His first commis-
sion as an architect came after he
emigrated to America. Although he
made his reputation designing
churches, that first commission in
Photograph by David Frank
1833, was for a house. Since he was
the first president of the American
Highwood today
Ward's letters to her father-in-law
Institute of Architecture from 185
in Boston, that they occupied what
-6, his work has been docu-
she called "Highwood` as early as
mented. Not only was his work
1845. We also know that Ward had
distinctive, but he was credited
construction work done from let-
with favoring the gothic style and
Highwood,
architect's rendering
Courtesy of Boston Public Library Print Dept. Peabody & Stearns Collection
192
legitimatizing it in America. The
tion is not known, the landscaping
simple fact is, Highwood does not
was done by Copland and Cleve-
look like an Upjohn. It is in fact
land, the firm that lost the contract
more easily explained if the archi-
for Central Park to Frederick Law
tect were working within the con-
Olmsted.
straint of an existing house. It is
William's sister Kate Bullard
harder to believe that during the
lived with her brother summers at
very years that he was establishing
Highwood. In 1920, probably as a
his style, he changed that style to
result of her brother's marriage,
build one house, Highwood.
she built an "Italian Villa at a cost of
Those who believe Upjohn did
$300,000" on the Highwood prop-
build a house for Ward, say the dif-
erty to the left of the main house.
ference in style is the result of sub-
She died that winter in Boston.
sequent alterations. Although the
Never occupied, the villa was torn
house was altered by the next own-
down in 1923 by William. He didn't
ers, those who still believe Upjohn
want to live in it. and he didn't want
built, not renovated it, would have
to sell it and have strangers live SO
to decide why it does not look like
close. The Berkshire Eagle re-
other houses Upjohn built, but
ported that the Bullards preferred
does look almost exactly like Bon-
the history and charm of High-
nie Brae built by local craftsmen
wood to a $300,000 villa. The news-
for Henry Ivison less than six miles
paper commended them for
down the road.
sound values and something like
Ward sold the house to Dr and
"Yankee" good sense.
Mrs. William Bullard in 1855. The
Today Highwood is a private res-
Bullards altered it at least twice
idence. It has had only three
since Sam Ward wrote to Upjohn
owner-families in 137 years, if one
complaining that the workmen
begins, by tradition or force of
were too slow. In 1899. records
habit with Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
from the architectural firm of
Ward. From 1846-1855. the Wards
Peabody and Stearns show:
occupied the house. Bullards OC-
Bullard, William & Mrs.
Lenox
Alterations
General Contractor
Joseph Clifford's Sons2
2,540.49
Plumber
William A. Johnson
1,075.00
New Plumbing
1,297.00
Comm.
180.79
Transportation expense
19.23
Another entry, undated, shows
cupied the house 1855-1961 - Mr.
"Mrs. William S. (Louisa N.) Bullard
and Mrs. William S. Bullard, Louisa
building a stable for a cost of
N. after her husband's death. her
$6,040.00, [with a] $302 Commis-
son William H., and his wife after
sion and $38.68 Transportation"
his death. Since 1961. the present
paid to Peabody and Stearns. The
owner has lived at Highwood If
present owner believes there was a
Highwood is the renovated farm
second major renovation after Wil-
house of Cyrus Huwlitt. then only
liam N. Bullard, Jr.'s marriage dur-
four families occupied it in almost
ing the period 1917-20. Although
150 years.
the architect of the second renova-
201
nent residence for what the town-
1963. Today, in order for Henry Ivi-
folk call "year-round summer
son's great grandson to live there
people." The house was "de-
without spending uncounted dol-
Victorianized" in the 1920s when
lars on heat, he has insulated with
Aunt Hattie built "Wee Haus"
polyurethane-quite a twentieth
across the valley in Stockbridge
century intrusion into the old
leaving Bonnie Brae to the more
walls.
modern Mrs. J. Graham Parsons.
Walking out onto his front lawn,
The house went out of the family
Mr. Parsons says, echoing the senti-
in 1945 and became the summer
ments of the original cottage build-
cottage of Mr. Walter Hoving of
ers, "I wish more of the homes
Tiffany and Company: It was repur-
were still in the hands of original
chased by the Parsons family in
families."
A
rchitects and landscape archi-
year it was built can only be
tects were brave fellows forg-
guessed at as no one made note of
ing a new field at the time
it. Some even argue that it was not a
Windermere was built. This house
cottage at all (They say it was built
predated their assent. So that. pos-
too early, the 1860s, but Highwood,
sibly the most interesting of all the
reputed to be the first cottage, pre-
cottages in the Berkshires is nei-
dated Windermere They say it is
27
ther very large nor is it breathtak-
too unimposing; however, given
ing. Its architect is unknown and
the definition of a cottage, it almost
probably was not an architect at all
conforms: it was not a primary resi-
but a local builder. Even the exact
dence, the builders had a home in
WINDERMERE
(Stockbridge)
Windermere
Courtesy of the Stockbridge Library
LENOX.
E.A. Morley, Photographer.
East Lee, MA: 1886.
Sargent, John O. LAUREL LAKE COTTAGE
Dorr, George.
HIGHLAWN
Rathbone, John F. WYNDHURST
Barnes, John S. COLDBROOKE
Barlow, Francis C.
Schermerhorn, F. A. PINE CROFT
Rogers, Mrs. M.E.
LENOX CLUB
Haggerty, Mrs. Ogden. VENT FORT
Thomson, Mrs. E.L. THE PERCH
Sands, Philip J. GLAD HILL
Chapin, R.W.
Sloane, Wiolliam D. ELM COURT
Goddman, Richard. YOKUN
Lanier, Charles. ALLEN WINDEN
Gilmore, Alfred. LITHGOW COTTAGE
Devereux, Alfred. PLUMSTED COTTAGE
BURTON HARRISON COTTAGE
Bishop, H.W.
Kneeland, Mrs. Charles. FAIRLAWN
Parish, Helen. COSEY NOOK
Sloane, H.T. NESTLEDOWN
Robeson, William R. THE ELMS
Shattuck, W.B. BROOKEHURST
Higginson Jr., George
Barclay, H.A. BONNIE BRAE
Ward, S.G. OAKSWOOD (First impression reminds one of Old Farm!)
Bullard, W.S. HIGHWOOD
Furniss, Ms. C. EDGECOMBE
Carey, Ms. DeP. GUSTY GABLES
Parsons, John E. STONOVER
Braem, H.M. ETHELWYN
Greenleaf, R.C. WINDYSIDE
McKim, C.F.
Biddle, Mrs. J. William. BREEZY CORNER
Folsom, George W. SUNNY RIDGE
Tucker, May. CHESTNUT HILL
Newton, M.F.
Woolsey, Mrs. E.P. WOODCLIFF
Dana, Richard S.
Auchmuty, R.T. THE DORMERS
Source: State Historical Society of Wisconsin.
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Page 3 of 6
NINI
Houses of the Berkshires, 1870-1930 (The Architecture of
Leisure)
by Richard S. Jackson & Cornelia Brooke Gilder:
http://www.acanthuspress.com/ps-20-3-houses-of-the-
berkshires-1870-1930.aspx
On Oct 25, 2007, at 7:53 AM, ELIZABETH and RONALD
EPP wrote:
Dear Nini,
Delighted to hear from you ! I was
especially pleased to hear about your new
book contract and the inclusion of
Highlawn.
Progress on the Dorr biography has been
slower than usual this summer due in no
small part to some pro bono archival
consulting for the Massaschusetts Trustees
of Reservations, development of a Concord
Free Public Library (MA) finding aid of the
massive collection of Dorr's friend
landscape photographer Herbert Wendell
Gleason, and the frequest regional travel
that Liz and I took while the weather was
fair. I've filled in most of the gaps in Dorr's
academic career but have to flesh out the
final twenty years of his life brfore I start
polishing this rough draft.
I've gone through an extracted about seven
pages of references to the Dorr's
experiences in Lenox and will attach them
in a follow up message aloing with some
adsditional points to the one raised below.
Fore the time being, I wanted you to know
that I am working on these matters and will
send along more in a few days. I do not
expect that you will find much that is
relevant to the scope of your manuscript.
On the other hand you may find errors and
misinterpretations that would once
corrected would improve mine.
I've spent more than a little time on your
first footnote. While it is accurate, I found it
a bit misleading because of what I believe
that the reader will infer--that there were
only "five Dorr siblings." The omssion of
any reference to other children of Samuel
Dorr by his first marriage, third-born Albert
Henry (1807-
) and sixth-born James
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Page 4 of 6
Augustus Dorr
(1812-
) you might explain as the
consequence of their lack of "interest in the
Lenox place." But what exactly does this
mean?
I have relied heavily here on the Dorr
Papers in the NEHGS. They are
unprocessed, contain no less than
seventeen chronological essays beginning
with progenitor Edward Dorr's settlement in
Boston in 1677. There is no stated author
for most of these essays spanning two
centuries but several are by Charles Hazen
Dorr, some are credited to his son George
(written as late as 1938), and there is good
reason to attribute the remainder to George
as well. Complicating the matter is that
several essays are very rough drafts and
the pagination is sometimes irregular or
broken.
I have not found evidence of a legal
"interest" of Albert or James Augustus to
Highlawn. While the Dorr papers suggest
that Albert may have died after many years
abroad it is clear that James was alive and
active in the region during the first decade
of the ownership of the property; indeed,
the Dorr Papers essay on "Children of the
Hon. Samuel Dorr by his First Marriage,"
author George B. Dorr Jr. says that James
"died at my father's house in the country
[Canton] in 1869, my father tending him
with infinite kindness." Is there any reason
to suppose that they were not interested
in the family life in Lenox? What do you
think?
More to follow.
Ron
Cornelia Gilder
wrote:
Dear Ron,
I am wondering how you and
George B. Dorr are progressing
and have
thought of you particularly in the
last week while I have been
editing Highlawn.
I have finally found a publisher for
my next work which will
include the Dorr's house. I have a
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Page 5 of 6
contract with The History Press
for "Lenox Country Houses of the
Hawthorne Era" and the deadline
looms on Feb 1. I am working
within a word limit and have had to
compress the Highlawn essay into
1,000 wds. There are three
footnotes that relate to you. One is
a place where I'd like to cite
your forthcoming book and the
other two involve quotes from your
research in the Dorr Papers in the
New England Historical and
Genealogical Library.
Could you help me out with the
correct citations?
I attach the chapter and please let
me know if you catch any
embarrassing mistakes.i 1/4
Best wishes, NINI
Houses of the Berkshires, 1870-
1930 (The Architecture of Leisure)
by Richard S. Jackson & Cornelia
Brooke Gilder:
http://www.acanthuspress.com/ps-
20-3-houses-of-the-
berkshires-1870-1930.aspx
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LENOX
Massachusetts Shire Town
BY DAVID H. WOOD
17
67
Qill
DRAWINGS BY VAUGHN GRAY
Published by the Town . 1969 .
"Pleasures and Palaces"
73
Ward" to differentiate him from the Samuel Ward who was the lob-
byist, politician and playboy of his time), was the first "summer resi-
dent." A Boston banker and financier, he was of comfortable means
and was more attracted to the prospect of a farm in Berkshire than to a
banking office in State Street. A friend of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Ward was one of the founders of the famous Saturday Club, whose
membership comprised Longfellow, Agassiz, Lowell. Holmes, Mot-
ley, and whose purpose, as Ward once wrote was "only to dine
together once a month!" Ward also contributed to the Dial and knew
the inimitable Margaret Fuller well.
Samuel Ward was not successful in his farming venture and sold
"PLEASURES AND PALACES"
his Lenox holding within a few years. He had liked plowing on his
Berkshire acreage because it "required just enough attention and skill
to help and not to interrupt the flow of meditation, and my friends
the farmers were greatly edified and amused at my beginnings." We
can picture the gentleman farmer at work on his fields; he actually
sc.w.
N 1844 Charles Sumner, then residing in Pittsfield, wrote to Sam-
I
grew 100 bushels of potatoes his first year here. At the same time he
uel Howe: "Ward jolted us in his wagon to Lenox to view the
was working on a translation of Goethe's autobiography. He wrote
farms, one of which he covets." That year Samuel Gray Ward
850
that he had to leave Berkshire, "because I found a hole in my pocket
bought the farmland that he coveted in Lenox and set out to become
that could be mended in no other way.
a farmer.
He had founded the North Stockbridge Farmers Club and the
Almost IOO years later, on 22 September 1945, Giraud Foster. own-
esteem in which he was held by its membership can be gleaned from
er of Bellefontaine and virtually the last of the great estate owners,
the resolution the Club passed in 1850 upon his return to Boston:
died at the age of 94.
"Be it resolved that the Farmers Club deplore his loss as a member of
Between these two dates lies a period of a century, the century
the club, as a citizen and resident of Berkshire, as a public misfor-
which saw what many have called the "heyday of Lenox," and the
tune
" Ward was later to return to Lenox in the 1870's and to
period which is certainly most often called to mind when the town's
build a second estate, Oakswood. He shuttled between Boston and
name is mentioned
Berkshire, with occasional trips to Rome, until his death in 1907.
Sotoo
Cottagers
If Samuel Gray Ward was the first of the cottagers, and Giraud
Ward was typical of the early cottagers to settle in Berkshire, to
GBD-
Foster the last, then by the later date the designation of cottager" was
build comfortable but not pretentious country homes and to try to
no longer a very apt one or to be taken very seriously-not when the
but
become assimilated into the life of the community. The Tappans,
cottage had sixty or seventy rooms, or was designed by Carrere and
neighbors of Samuel Ward, were of the same kind; the Goodmans
concerded
Hastings to duplicate the Petit Trianon. The name as well as the con-
who exercised an influence of culture and learning on the life of
SGW.
cept of the cottagers had undergone a serious change in 100 years.
Lenox for many years were of this same group; the Higginsons, the
Samuel Gray Ward (called by his contemporaries "The good Sam
Danas, William Ellery Sedgwick
the list is a long one.
72
74
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
"Pleasures and Palaces"
75
American society, at least during the nineteenth century, tried to
Young men called for young women to walk in Woolsey Woods, whither they
emulate the society of Europe, and this movement to the country, the
were seen wending their way with a cashmere shawl on the gentleman's arm for
adoption of "rural seats," was grounded in the European tradition.
the lady to sit upon, and a blue-and-gold volume of some favorite poet in his hand,
But at mid-century the invasion of Berkshire by such families as
from which to read selected passages, under dropping nuts in an amber atmosphere.
People met at the post-office after church on Sunday, when the elm-shaded street
those named above brought a kind of transformation of this western
came alive with gay faces and graceful figures with attendant cavaliers. On Sunday
county into a watering place for the intellectuals. It brought to Lenox
afternoons we walked up to see Mr. Goodman's cows. In the rocking-chairs of the
and the surrounding country such figures as Hawthorne, Holmes,
Curtis piazzas were discussed all sorts of current subjects, from stocks to horses,
Longfellow, Lowell. The small town of Lenox, then the county seat
from domestic to foreign politics, resumed later by the male participants at the
and largely a farming town, was written about and its virtues ex-
Club in the village street.
tolled. All of this had the effect of making Lenox and its environs
I lived long enough there to see a mighty change. The rural hillsides and pastures,
seem a desirable place to live, and so a later and different generation
bought up at fabulous prices, were made the sites of modern villas, most of them
handsome and in good taste. The villas were succeeded by little palaces, some re-
of summer residents appeared on the scene.
peating the facades and gardens of royal dwellings abroad. Instead of the trim maid-
We must remember that following the Civil War there was a
servants appearing in caps and aprons to open doors, one was confronted by lackeys
period of great prosperity. It was the age when many of the great
in livery lounging in the halls. Caviare and mousse aux truffes supplanted muffins and
American fortunes were either made or confirmed. There was no
waffles. Worth and Callot gowns, cut low and worn with abundant jewels, took
restrictive tax structure; a man was able to keep whatever he was
the place of dainty muslins made by a little day dressmaker. Stables were filled with
costly horses, farmyards with stock bearing pedigrees sometimes longer than the
able to make. And most of the newly-rich looked about for fashion-
owners', the dinner hour moved on to eight o'clock, and lastly came house parties,
able ways to spend their money, fashionable places in which to be
'weekends', and the eternal honk and reek of the motor car. An early resident tells
seen, fashionable individuals with whom to associate. Newport, Bar
me mournfully that all the enchanting wood roads of my early memories are now
Harbor, Southampton, Saratoga: these were the centers. Lenox did
oiled for automobiles, the scent quite overpowering that of uncrumpling ferns and
not appeal to many of the devotees of these places, but attracted a
dewy moss as the smoke-breathing monsters tear through these haunts of ancient
group of its own, whose name and lustre shone brightly in Berkshire
peace.
through the nineteenth century and well into the twentieth.
Lenox, in a word, was becoming fashionable. Quiet country farms
The change from the more modest cottagers to those whose con-
were bought up for extraordinary prices: G. G. Haven in 1880 paid
cerns were with building lavish and ostentatious estates was a gradual
almost $3000 an acre for country farmland on the west side of Kem-
one, remarked by few, but notable nevertheless. One of the visitors,
ble Street. "The Gilded Age" Charles Dudley Warner called it, and
writing reflectively in 1911, saw the change quite clearly:
in Lenox it lived up to its name. Rolling hay fields were subdued to
When we first went to Lenox, the lovely hill village had not parted with all its
expansive (and expensive) landscaping, the "pipes of pagan Pan
old-time characteristics of unpretending hospitality. The people who met there,
played in woodland niches," summerhouses and playhouses, mock
summer after summer, were of the cultured and refined class of American society,
Italian villas and exotically cut and trimmed shrubbery all decorated
knowing each other intimately, and satisfied to exchange simple entertainments in
their pretty, picturesque homes. We had tea parties followed by games of twenty
the pastoral landscape of Berkshire. Pastureland yielded to the ex-
questions, by charades and dumb crambo, where fun and wit were the order of the
quisitely terraced and planted Mount; fields were hedged and foun-
hour. We walked to and from each other's houses, attended by maids with lanterns.
tains played at Bellefontaine; acres of greenhouses assured tropical
Every Saturday evening there was a gathering at Sedgwick Hall for dancing and
fruits and delicacies at Elm Court. What had started as a cultural exo-
reunion, to which the new-rich magnates of New York came as total strangers.
dus to the country in the 1840's became the lavish spectacle of a
76
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
"Pleasures and Palaces"
77
wealthysociety bent on proving itself the equal of anything in Europe.
Nowhere is the snobbery and condescension of the "Gilded Age"
It is very easy for us of the twentieth century to fault this way of
better shown than in a long and fascinating essay, written by one of
life. Indeed, the wealthy and sometimes eccentric "cottagers" have
the society reporters for a Springfield paper as late as 1915:3
taken much more than their just share of abuse and ridicule from those
Sunday morning when the guest in the villa goes down the following morning
who see in them only the decadence of a false American society,
in tweeds for a morning walk, he may breakfast alone. His hosts have not yet arisen;
overladen with wealth and sometimes lamentably lacking in taste.
some other guests have breakfasted and gone out. He breakfasts and then walks. He
American social structure of this era, as most historians have pointed
may go to the Club, stop in at the Curtis Hotel, the great social rendez vous, to read
out, was notoriously top-heavy. The rich did get richer; the poor re-
the register and there find some acquaintances. They are off for a motor run for the
day. Or he may, after breakfasting, take a short tramp and return to the country
mained at the bottom of the ladder, and we are as appalled to read of
house and dress to go to church. In Lenox the rich and famous go to church. Trin-
the shamefully low wages for which men worked as we are to read of
ity Church is the objective point, the place where the Congregationalist, the Bap-
the abnormally high profits reaped by the "robber barons" from
tist, the Presbyterian and various creeds all go when they visit in the hills. Although
some of their transactions.
there is a venerable Congregational church with an eloquent and learned pastor
in
Sociologists tell us that societies carry within them the germ of
its pulpit, Trinity Church with its beautiful appointments, its vested choir, and its
their own decay. It was so with the "palace er in Lenox. The two
popular rector, a favorite of society, is the one popular place of Sunday worship. In
season its congregation is always important. Famous men, beautiful women, wom-
decades from 1880-1900 saw the most pretentious of the Lenox sum-
en who wear the latest Parisian clothes, financiers, foreigners, titled noblemen, curi-
mer homes built. Ahead lay the first of two devastating world wars,
ous folks after pointers in dress or to look upon the great, fill the pews. The service
the enactment of an income tax law, anti-trust legislation: all foes of
in Trinity is noted for the excellence of its music and the appropriateness of the ser-
the way of life often called the Lenox golden age. Nineteen hundred
mon. The rector is a scholarly man. His short Sunday morning addresses are epit-
saw the height of the large estates and Lenox as a fashionable water-
omes of thought, such as are demanded by a most cultured congregation.
ing place. After that it was all downhill. The depression trimmed the
Gradually the estates were broken up and sold. After Andrew Car-
sails of some, the difficulty of obtaining servants finished others, and
negie's death, for instance (he had bought Shadowbrook in 1916), this
the outbreak of world conflict again in Europe in the 1930's admin-
largest of the Lenox estates passed into the hands of the Jesuit order
istered the coup de grâce.
and was converted into a novitiate. It, too, finally was lost to Berk-
These are all externals. The causes of the downfall of this way of
shire in a spectacular fire in March of 1956. Schools, camps, housing
life are also, as I have indicated above, from within. Social exclusion
developments gradually seized upon the vacant and crumbling villas
and snobbery, petty rivalries and frequent intermarriage, all helped
and palaces and converted them to more mundane use, or razed them
hasten the end of the era. The changes in American society which
and used the land. If Lenox real estate values had been high in the
were then taking place would not ultimately accommodate them-
1880's when the owners bought and built, the reverse was now true.
selves to the type of life led by the owners of Groton Place, Eastover,
Land was sold for the proverbial song, and houses and their contents,
Shadowbook or Clipston Grange. The days of the old Aspinwall Hotel
when sold, realized practically nothing. It seems hard for us to be-
were numbered as well, for the mode of American life was changing,
lieve, for example, that Bellefontaine, one of the most opulent, was
becoming more mobile, less formal, less socially fixed. As Mr. Good-
sold at public auction for $70,000 in 1946. It had reputedly cost over
man's COWS and the Curtis piazza were supplanted by fashionable
$1,000,000 to build and furnish in 1899. Its gold-decorated service
soirées and foreign cuisine, SO these in turn would yield to tourism,
plates commanded only $18 each at the sale; a seventeenth-century
motels and the cocktail party.
Veronese marble wellhead which had cost Mr. Foster $10,000 brought
78
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
"Pleasures and Palaces"
79
$125; a set of armorial "Lowestoft" dinner plates sold at twenty for
We'd play hide-and-seek and sometimes I'd get lost and have to telephone from
$65.
where I was and ask iny father to come and get me.
The era was fading. Early in the twentieth century Frank Crown-
I can remember the warm, sugar cookies that the cook used to give us when we
went to visit our father. I can remember the long walks through the woods and
inshield, the social arbiter, had been asked to rate the spas and water-
seeing the white statues standing about among the trees; we thought they were
ing places. Of Lenox he said, "Dull and dowdy, but full of genteel old
scary then. And I can see the ones who used to work there: In the main house there
families in reduced circumstances who are willing to unbend-if
was the cook and a kitchen maid, two laundresses, a parlor maid, two chamber-
properly propitiated!" But Lenox did not have much shabby gen-
maids, the Mrs.' personal maid, the master's valet, three people in the pantry, one
tility to fall back upon, and by the end of World War II, the palace
of them a second man, a butler and I don't know how many men in the green-
era in Lenox was dead.
houses or on the grounds. I can remember the farmer, the herdsman, the chauffeur
and the coachman. But then in summer they used to hire boys from town to work
"How did these people in their marble villas, and their retinues of
in the gardens and in the greenhouses and on the lawns.
servants, get on with the townspeople?" we may ask. It is a question
I can remember, too, being taken into the dining room one time just before a
I have asked many times, and a conversation I had with a Lenox man
dinner party and seeing the table all set with the gold plates and the silver center-
helped to answer it. This man's memory extends well back into the
piece and the bronze-colored chrysanthemums. It was beautiful. It was like another
"Gilded Era"; his father, in fact, came to Lenox to start a business
world.
largely dependent on the wealthy summer residents.
It is hard to envisage the aura of a departed age. The big houses
Well, I remember it all very well [he says]. I remember it, but I don't resent it.
that still stand, converted to guest houses or school dormitories or
Some did and some still do. It was the way things were here. You were either rich
music camps, catch our imagination. The brilliant world that peo-
and lived in one of the big houses, or you lived in town and waited on them. My
father got his living from them, and I helped him, helped him until I was grown.
pled them briefly passed quickly by, leaving little but memories.
Then I got a job in one of the stores and I met some of those people face to face.
It is a shame, parenthetically, that no one of the big places in Lenox
Some were pleasant. They'd speak and pass the time of day. Others would snub
has been kept, like the Newport Breakers, as a memento of its era. 4
you. But you never forgot that they had the money and that your living depended
We have fast lost touch with the Gilded Age and each year that goes
on them. No, I wouldn't want to go back to those days; things are better the way
by puts more firmly behind us the age when one woman employed
they are, even if we do have riots and strikes and all. I try to tell my children what
IOO servants on her estate, or when the gay tub parades and horse
things were like then, but they don't believe me. They just think I'm making it all
shows, the costume balls and the parties, the gala reception for a
up. They just don't understand what I'm talking about.
Some of them that came here did care about the people in the town. One family
President's wife5 were all part of the social season.
[he named it] saw to it that a local girl with talent was sent off to a first-rate college
The end of the era is nowhere better summarized, and more finally,
and they paid the bills. There were some like that. But mostly they were just there.
than in a terse newspaper item in the Berkshire Eagle in 1943: "Mr.
We'd see them in their cars go rushing by, or we'd hear that they were giving a
Giraud Foster, well-known owner of Bellefontaine, will celebrate his
big party, but they moved in a different world. They never came into ours and we
93rd birthday on November 8. The guests will partake of a buffet in
were never a part of theirs. Things are different now.
keeping with the war tempo. The gorgeous Louis XIV ballroom
Another said of her acquaintance with one of the big houses:
with its gold and white ornamentation will be closed on account of
I can remember going through that house [her father was the caretaker] as if it were
the fuel shortage."
yesterday. The great long hall that echoed so, the long marble stairway with the
velvet-covered handrail. The bedrooms with their French furniture and heavy
drapes. The closed-up musty smell when the house was empty during the winter.
80
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
NOTES
D Emerson, who called Ward "the American gentleman," wrote to him in
1840: "The reason I am curious about you is that with tastes which I also have you
have tastes and powers and corresponding circumstances which I have not, and per-
haps cannot divine, but certainly we will not quarrel with our companion, for he
has more root, subterranean or aerial, sent out into the great universe to draw his
nourishment withal. The secret of virtue is to know that, the richer another is, the
richer am I;-how much more if that other is my friend!"
"THE GENTLE QUEEN"
2. Mrs. Burton Harrison, Recollections Grave and Gay, 1911.
3. "Country Life Deluxe"; Springfield Republican, 28 June 1914. (The rather
petty religious snobbery which this passage reveals is peculiarly repugnant to us to-
day. To equate the Episcopal-or any-church with social prestige and acceptance
is indeed a millstone about its neck. Fashions change in this regard, also!)
UCH of the luster which Lenox attained in the middle of
4. Virtually the only estate still in its original condition, with most of its furnish-
ings and decorations intact, is Elm Court, presently owned by Col. and Mrs. H.
M
the nineteenth century was due to the bright light of one
George Wilde. As the Berkshire County Historical Society and private individuals
woman: Catharine Maria Sedgwick. Of Stockbridge birth,
seek out examples of Berkshire architecture and history worthy of preservation,
she moved to Lenox to be near her beloved brother, Charles Sedg-
thought should be given to preserving this, or some other of the estates that subse-
wick who was clerk of courts. The closeness of this family is shown
quent generations may not have to rely only on words or pictures to conjure up
by the many letters written among this group, full of devotion and
the era.
regard, as well as observations on friends, lectures they attended, books
5. A gala reception was held at Sedgwick Hall to welcome Mrs. Frances Folsom
Cleveland on 3 October 1889. It was the social event of its season.
they read. It must have been a singularly pleasant household in Lenox.
At first their house was on Walker Street, then Charles Sedgwick
had it moved to a larger lot on Kemble Street just beyond the junc-
tion with Walker. Catharine Sedgwick had her own "wing," and
with its broad piazzas, the rockery she speaks of in her letters, her
beloved rose bushes, strawberry beds, and the view off to the west,
it was a pleasing situation.
Fame, perhaps, never came to a more unsuspecting person than to
Catharine Sedgwick. Her first novel, A New England Tale, was ac-
tually intended to be a religious tract in the form of a short story.
But she became carried away with it; this book and the novels which
succeeded it sold well and brought the literary world to her door.
She was surprised. "I should be delighted to visit Boston in the
course of the summer," she writes Mrs. Channing in 1822, "but I
8I
ramy
yy
more satisfying one of marriage. Charles Kemble, her father, owned
Covent Garden Theatre, and its fortunes and misfortunes would
make a story in themselves.
Fanny's mother was a DeCamp, of French origin, which may ac-
count for some of the romantic side of her nature. She was Marie
III
Thérèse DeCamp, known as the "little French Fairy" who danced for
royalty and who wheedled favors at the knees of nobles and com-
moners alike. A generation later, her daughter was to act for royalty
and pack theatres with the magic of her personality and "that mar-
velous voice."
Fanny Kemble's first connection with Berkshire came on her very
first trip to America. British-born, she came to America with the
European nineteenth-century stereotype in her mind: America was
FANNY KEMBLE
to be the land of barbarous customs, savage peoples, inconveniences
and crudities beyond belief. Some of this she found. Always a shrewd
observer, her comments on this first trip are vivid, poignant and true.
New York she found dusty and hot and shabby. But there was color:
in the markets, at the assemblies, in the theatre.
UR DIVINE FANNY," Catharine Sedgwick called her. She
O
Fanny met Catharine Sedgwick and the liking was instantaneous
was Mrs. Pierce Butler, but by the time she settled in Lenox
and mutual. It was not long before the Sedgwicks invited Fanny
for an extended stay, she had been divorced by her husband
Kemble to Lenox. Meanwhile, Pierce Butler had come onto the
and had assumed the name of Mrs. Kemble, and as such was the
scene. A wealthy slaveholder and descendant from distinguishe South-
brilliant flame which drew about her a circle of admirers.
ern lines, Butler wooed Fanny Kemble over an extended period of
Lenox was the least likely place in mid-nineteenth century to find
time and, many thought, had worn down her defenses until she had
a famous actress, a divorcee, and an ardent horsewoman, all in one.
agreed to marry him. After the marriage, in June of I834, the Butlers
Such was Fanny Kemble. Her story seems almost like fiction and, as
went to live at Branchtown, near Philadelphia, in a house lent to
we read about her excursions into the Berkshire countryside and her
them by Pierce's aunt. The problems which were to haunt Fanny
contacts with the residents of Lenox as well as of its seasonal visitors,
Kemble through the short years of her marriage were already appar-
we almost have to pinch ourselves to believe she ever existed.
ent: Pierce had lost much of the glamor which he possessed during
Even her family background was unusual. On her father's side
their courtship. Fanny Kemble remarks that he is no longer interested
Frances Ann Kemble came from a family of British stage people; the
in things of the intellect as he appeared to be during their early days
Kembles owned theatres, acted in them, directed their plays, produced
together. The life at Branchtown was incredibly stifling to one of
actresses and singers for them. The great tragedienne Sarah Siddons
Fanny's wide interests and enthusiasms: "You ask of my society. I
was Fanny Kemble's aunt. Fanny's own sister Adelaide broke off a
have none whatever; we live six miles from town, on a road almost
promising career as an opera singer for the less glamorous but perhaps
impracticable in the fairest as well as the foulest weather, and though
98
IOO
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
Fanny Kemble
IOI
people occasionally drive out and visit me, and I occasionally drive in
The Butlers traveled extensively, going back to England to visit
and return their calls, and we occasionally at rare intervals go in to the
Fanny's mother and father the year following their visit to Berkshire;
theatre or a dance, I have no friends, no intimates, and no society.
the transatlantic voyage was rough and took thirty-seven days! She
Were I living in Philadelphia, I should be but little better off
they
returned to Lenox and this time stayed at the "Old Red Inn" (later to
have no time, and, it seems, but little taste for social enjoyment"
become the Berkshire Coffee House and, still later, the Curtis Hotel).
(letter from Fanny Kemble to Harriet St. Leger).
Fanny Kemble had additional griefs: she was increasingly oppressed
The first Cemble Butler's two children was born in the
by the issue of slavery and had found in England support for her be-
spring of 1835 and to restore his wife to health and to relieve her
lief that ownership of human property was insupportable in an en-
obvious monotony, Pierce accompanied her that summer on her visit
lightened society. During that autumn of 1838 she received the news
to the Sedgwicks. All went well. Fanny discovered in these people,
that her mother had died in England. She had consolation from Eliza-
buried in the country of western Massachusetts, the social life she had
beth Sedgwick, with whom she became more friendly and of whom
missed in Branchtown; the brilliance of conversation, the constant
she wrote: "Elizabeth is a great comfort. She has somewhat taken the
visiting, dinners and the expeditions into the country all restored
place of Adelaide [Fanny's sister]." Fanny's friendships with persons
Fanny's spirit. Catharine Sedgwick was to remain her constant friend
she met in Berkshire were becoming deeper: Mary and Fanny Apple-
and confidante for the rest of her life, and Fanny found Elizabeth
ton were her constant companions, and they drove and picnicked
Sedgwick (Mrs. Charles), Catharine's sister-in-law, a very solid spir-
and rode together. [Fanny Appleton was to become the second wife
it and someone who would, later on, understand Fanny's violent
of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in July of 1843 and to burn to
condemnation of slavery, the institution she said she could not live
death, tragically, almost eighteen years later.]
with in this new country. When Fanny returned to Branchtown at
At about this time, Fanny Kemble decided that she must visit her
the end of that summer, she had in her mind the fresh, green image of
husband and brother-in-law's plantations in the South. At first, they
Lenox in summer. She had ridden through the quiet lanes (astride, to
discouraged the idea, but then Pierce Butler gave in and Fanny made
the shocked surprise of many), had climbed some of the hills, and the
the first of several trips south. What she saw there affected her deeply.
picture she had of this idyllic spot in the Berkshires was to give her
She could not imagine that, in a country which prided itself on its
sustenance through the trying times ahead for her.
freedom, such things existed. The conditions under which the Butler
The marriage with Pierce Butler did not go well. It is not difficult
slaves lived were beyond her belief. Later, she was to incorporate her
for us, of a later time, to see why. Pierce was the Southern aristocrat
impressions in a book which had considerable impact: Journal of a
with fixed ideas as to the place of his women. He was a procrastinator
Residence on a Georgia Plantation (1863). Even in the quietness and
by nature, almost unbelievably careless with money. "The first fine
beauty of the Berkshires, a montage of scenes was to flash through
careless rapture" of his love for Fanny was soon spent, especially so
Fanny's mind and to disquiet her: Old Dorcas, a Negress, coming to
when he found that the "lofty, soaring spirit" he had admired in her
beg a pinch of sugar from Mrs. Butler, picked up Fanny's watch, then
did not tame well after marriage. For the duration of their married
put it down: "Ah, I need not look at this, I have almost done with
life together (the divorce came in late summer of 1849), tensions and
time." An old woman, almost at the point of death, wizened and
difficulties were to assail the pair, understanding became rarer, and,
shriveled, sighing contentedly that she had "gone on makin' little
at least from Fanny's point of view, Pierce Butler became more and
niggers for Massa."
more difficult to live with.
Fanny wrote to Elizabeth Sedgwick of one incident: "I found an
IO2
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
Fanny Kemble
I03
old negro named Friday lying on the floor of the damp, dark, filthy
attraction to it. In the latter years of her life she did readings only,
room; his glazed eyes and rattling breath told me that he was dying.
and it is for these, largely, that she is remembered in America. When
A
tattered shirt and trousers barely covered his poor body, he had
she first came to Lenox, she offered to do one of these readings, her
nothing under him, but a handful of straw that did not cover the
offer was taken up, and the details arranged. When she was asked
earth on which he lay and under his head, by way of a pillow, two
what group was to benefit from the performance, she remarked
or three rough sticks raised his skull from the ground. There he lay-
kindly, "Why, the poor of Lenox." "We have no poor in Lenox,"
the worn-out slave whose life had been spent in unrequited labor for
was the tart reply, and Fanny decided that the money should go to-
me and mine, without one physical alleviation, one Christian solace,
ward the fund for the public library in the town.
one human sympathy-panting out his last breath like some forsaken
This was not the only misunderstanding Fanny Kemble had with
beast of burden rotting where it falls. As I bent over him, blinded
the residents of Lenox. After buying her house, "The Perch," south
with tears of unavailing pity, there was a quivering of the eyelids and
of Lenox village, together with its small complement of acreage, she
falling of the jaw-a he was free. How I rejoiced for him; and
found it necessary to have her hay cut and engaged a local farmer to
how, as I turned to the wretches who were calling to me from the
do the job. Seeing the men and boys laboring in the hot June sun, she
inner room, I wished they were all gone away with him, freed by
sent to the tavern for a keg of cold beer which she intended giving to
death from bitter, bitter bondage." Needless to say, the visits to the
the men. Her friend Charles Sedgwick "expostulated with me (she
plantations quickened the dissolution of their marriage; Fanny in-
wrote) as introducing among the laborers of Lenox a mischievous
sisted that Pierce give up this inhuman way of supporting a family
need and deleterious habit till then utterly unknown there; in short,
and he, with a Southerner's immunity to its wrong, stubbornly up-
my poor barrel of beer was an offense to the manners and morals of
held his way of life.
the community I lived in, and my meadow was mowed upon cold
After another extended visit to England, Fanny Kemble Butler re-
water from the well."
turned to America in late summer of 1848, summoned here by the
Fanny Kemble's beauty shines from each of her portraits, yet we
news that Pierce Butler was suing her for divorce on the ground of
are told by those who knew her that no portrait ever caught the
desertion. Despite the able services of Rufus Choate on her behalf and
essence of her. Thomas Sully, who was a cousin of Pierce Butler,
her filing of a demurrer, the divorce was granted, allowing Pierce the
painted Fanny several times (one of these portraits illustrates this
custody of the children, Sally and Fanny (who had been born in 1838),
book), but he never felt that he was successful. "Her features," one
though they were to spend some time during each year with their
acquaintance wrote, "taken individually are not memorable. Togeth-
mother.
er they produce a unique beauty." Mrs. Fitzhugh put it even more
While she was in Europe Fanny Kemble had started doing read-
succinctly, "Fanny Kemble, you are the ugliest and the handsomest
ings, largely from Shakespeare's works. Fanny regarded the Bard as
girl in London." Undoubtedly Fanny had an air, and Julian Haw-
the greatest writer who had ever lived and had almost a sense of wor-
thorne, son of Nathaniel, remembered long years afterward the strik-
ship toward what he wrote. It is interesting to note that her first suc-
ing dark-haired lady who rode astride a fierce horse into the cottage-
cess upon the stage when she was not yet out of her teens was as
yard overlooking the Bowl, picked him up peremptorily from the
Juliet in Romeo and Juliet. Her attitude toward the stage and acting is
ground, swung him astride the saddle before her and galloped around
strange for one who came of a family so steeped in theatrical tradi-
the pastures and lanes with him shrieking in combined delight and
tions. She loathed anything about the profession, yet felt a strange
terror.
IO4
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
Fanny Kemble
IOS
At first, Fanny Kemble was slow in being accepted in Lenox and
One day, after a ride, she stopped with the Sedgwicks to look at
it is not difficult to see why. She loved the people she met; she always
the Church on the Hill. Trees had not then grown up, and from the
had a way with ordinary people, but she seemed difficult to know.
churchyard where they stood, the valley dropped before them and
Once, striding into the Berkshire Coffee House in Lenox she noticed
they could see for miles. Fanny said impulsively, "I want to lie here
a man standing next to her with his hat on. "A gentleman always
when I die, that upon the Resurrection morning I may awake with
removes his hat in my presence!" she announced. "I'm not a gentle-
this scene before me."
man. I'm the butcher," he remarked dourly, and Fanny delightedly
If she was impressed with Berkshire, many were impressed
told this story on herself to the Sedgwicks. On another occasion she
her. Charles Sumner, the Senator from Massachusetts who was later
rented a carriage for a drive around the town when some friends
to be the victim of Preston Brooks' assault in the Senate Chamber,
came to visit. She had contracted with the driver for an hour's drive
spent some time in Pittsfield in 1844 recuperating from an illness. He
for five dollars and they were punctual. She had kept up a running
wrote to his friend Howe on II September: "Tomorrow I move to
stream of conversation, questions, and banter with the driver during
Lenox where I sojourn with [Samuel] Ward and count much upon
the ride, and when she came to pay him, he announced that she owed
the readings of Shakespeare, the conversation and society of Fanny
him five-fifty. "Why the extra fifty cents?" she demanded. "You
Kemble, who has promised to ride with me and introduce me to the
said five dollars." "Extra fifty cents is for the 'sarse'," he said. And
beautiful lanes and wild paths of these mountains. She seems a noble
again she was delighted that he had got the best of her.
woman, peculiar, bold, masculine, and unaccommodating, but with
Fanny Kemble, however, came to be accepted by many of the resi-
a burning sympathy with all that is high, true, and humane."
dents of Lenox and she came to know them and, most of all, to love
But her children were now grown, Pierce Butler died in 1867
this part of her adopted country. When her daughters spent time
right after the Civil War (which Fanny knew was inevitable and the
with her, it was at "The Perch," that strange-looking Victorian house
Northern cause of which she spent hours in England defending and
with its three-story tower. In many of her letters written from Eu-
promoting), but Fanny had decided to leave Berkshire. She bought
rope she shows her longing for the familiar Berkshire scenes which
York Farm in Pennsylvania, and this necessitated her selling "The
she describes. Before she bought her house in Lenox she wrote (on
Perch," but she returned in the summer or early autumn for some
3 October 1843): "You do not know how earnestly I desire to live
years to enjoy her favorite part of America. Her friends were still
up there. I do believe mountains and hills are kindred of mine,-
many: With Henry James in her later years she enjoyed a close friend-
larger and smaller relations, taller and shorter cousins, for my heart
ship, started at least on his part many years before when, as a small
expands and rejoices and beats more freely among them, and doubt-
boy in a wagon on a country road, he had seen a beautiful woman, a
less in the day when I can hardly remember' I was a bear or a wolf, or
veritable Amazon, go speeding by on a dark horse. She was flattered
at the very least a wildcat with unlimited range of forest and moun-
by the attentions of younger men, but liked them: Henry James;
tain.
That cottage by the lakeside haunts me, and to be able to
James Leigh, her son-in-law; young Owen Wister. She had not
realize that day-dream is now certainly as near an approach to happi-
grown older in spirit and none of her fire had really been quenched.
ness as I can ever contemplate." She even liked the winters which
She thought of the Lenox hills in 1877 as, sadly, she returned to
had daunted the Hawthornes and writes of a day's expedition:
England for the last time. She must have contrasted the New York
journeyed to the little town of Pittsfield, the solid ice cracked like
she had first seen in 1832 with the New York of forty-five years
the breaking of the great bass strings of a harp, and the pitiless sky
later, as the Britannic started its cold January voyage eastward. She
seemed filled like an armory hung round with steel weapons."
was to have another sixteen years of life and it was to be filled with
700
EARLY BUILDINGS OF LENOX
S
we have seen in our discussion of the early settlement of the
A
town of Lenox, Jonathan Hinsdale and the other early settlers
quickly built shelters for themselves. It is doubtful, as I have
already pointed out, that these shelters were log cabins, but probably
were rough frame dwellings, soon to be supplanted by houses which
were plastered and glazed against the cruel Berkshire winters. There
seems to be virtually no discoverable material to be unearthed which
would tell us more of this period and we therefore have to proceed
largely on supposition and on what we know of settlers and their
building elsewhere.
Earlier, in Connecticut, settlers of English ancestry built timbered
and framed houses with huge center chimneys, the American equiva-
lents of their English counterparts. Since Lenox was not permanently
settled before the middle of the eighteenth century, such medieval
buildings as the Parson Capen house of Topsfield or the old stone
house in Guilford could not be expected to dot the Berkshire coun-
IIS
116
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
Early Buildings of Lenox
II7
tryside. Tucker, in his unpublished history of the town, speaks of the
It is necessary early in one's consideration of Lenox buildings to
old-time houses in Lenox as having been built with a
realize that the burst of prosperity which Lenox underwent, first as
winding stairway leading to an upper story, and back of this
the huge chimney
the shire town, later as the site of the "cottages" and the more pre-
twelve to fifteen feet square at its base. On each side of the hall a door opens into a
tentious "villas," dealt a severe, often fatal blow to the early struc-
large square room. The roof slopes toward the rear so that the distance from the
tures which the town must once have possessed. One can count on
eaves to the ground is not more than seven or eight feet. Across the whole house in
the fingers of both hands the early dwellings (dating from the eight-
the rear stretches the capacious kitchen, the common working room and living
eenth or early nineteenth centuries) still left standing in the town, and
room
of the whole family in each of the front rooms is a large deep fireplace and
many which still remain have been so altered as to escape detection.
in the kitchen is a huge one six or eight feet across, and in a recess at one end is a
There is, in the field of Berkshire architecture a wide-open field for
brick oven.¹
investigation, study and publication. It is a fact, however, that when
What Mr. Tucker describes here is the typical Massachusetts or Con-
the cottages were built in mid-nineteenth century, and later when the
necticut lean-to or "salt-box" house, built from the seventeenth cen-
lavish mansions were constructed, many early Lenox houses were
tury until late into the eighteenth. There are such houses extant in
razed or entirely altered. Thus the early house (built late in 1780 by
Berkshire, but I know of none presently in Lenox.
William Walker), later to be known as the Goodman house, on old
The "typical" Lenox house is quite different. It is, parenthetically,
Stockbridge Road, was razed in 1930 by Courtland Field Bishop. A
interesting to find, in a study of New England houses, how much
description of the house at the time of its demolition mentions "the
variation there was in design and structure from one section to an-
staircase, the rich paneling in several rooms, and the locks and hinges
other. Many localities developed a distinctive style or type of design
[which] were the originals." This house, a photograph of which ap-
peculiar to that region alone. The gambrel-roofed cottage of Cape
pears in this book, was a gambrel-roof structure, a type of building
Ann comes to mind, as does the peculiar "off-center" four-bay Nan-
which apparently never met with much favor in Berkshire. Recently
tucket house, or the distinctive Cape Cod, low-slung gabled house of
the "Palladian-type" window which was in this house (probably a
weathered shingles. At least of the surviving examples in Berkshire,
later addition) has come to light, along with some pilasters, locks and
the typical Lenox house is of the type represented by the Walker-
other architectural elements apparently saved at the time of its raz-
Rockwell house, the Paterson house and the house on Pittsfield road
ing; they show abundantly that it was a fine early house and it can be
now owned by Elise Farar. It is a two-story house, gable end at the
surmised that others like it must have existed in Lenox, but do no
side, or, in the case of the first two, a hipped-roof construction. It is a
longer.
frame house, five bays wide, with center doorway and hall and re-
Little here can be said of the "shingle-type" cottage built in large
strained but well-executed wood detailing on the exterior. Chimneys
numbers by the summer residents late in the nineteenth and early in
are located not in the center, but on the outer end walls, and the house
the twentieth century. This is a separate subject and, although some
sits closely to the ground. Such houses were built in Lenox from late
research has been done on this period of dwelling in Newport, Rhode
in the eighteenth century until sometime in the nineteenth (the
Island and elsewhere, it is elsewhere a largely neglected period of
Walker-Rockwell house was built in 1804). The interiors of Lenox
American architecture. There is still material in Lenox for such
a
houses seem to have been void of detailed woodwork, using instead
study.
simple fireplace mantels and raised panel doors, with sometimes a
If the dwellings of early Lenox did not escape destruction in large
paneled wainscoting but rarely a full or elaborate raised-paneled wall.
numbers, the public buildings did, and these deserve more detailed
118
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
Early Buildings of Lenox
119
attention. There is no town which has been more anxious to preserve
hipped roof, also found on the Paterson house. The Academy build-
its early public buildings and, in all cases, the noteworthy ones of
ing is surmounted by a cupola and vane, smaller in size than that pic-
Lenox have not only survived but have been put to constructive use,
tured on the original Town House, but similar in type. Many of the
not merely, Williamsburg-fashion, serving as decorative reminders
details such as the cornices and moldings are very much like those
of a palmy past.
found on the Elise Farar house on the Pittsfield road. A similar door-
The earliest of these structures is the original "Town House," as it
way and other details could also have been found at one time on the
is called on the Eldad Lewis map. It was, as we have seen in an earlier
Gilmore house (Lithgow) on Old Stockbridge Road before it was
chapter, built as the first court house to be used by the county when
razed by Lenox School, though at the time of its destruction it had
its seat was at Lenox. An illustration of this building as it originally
been so Victorianized as to be almost unrecognizable as an early
appeared also is printed in this book. It was a distinctive frame build-
house, probably built about 1790 by Thomas Landers.
ing built between 1788 and 1791. It is described by one writer:
The Academy building is a forthright New England interpretation
of the Federal style, clapboarded and almost austere in its exterior
It was 40 foot square and stood about its length west of the present town building
[west of the present Town Hall]. It was of wood, constructed for the courts only.
appearance (see photograph in this volume), but a well-proportioned
The entrance was from the west, through double doors around which was some
and functional building of great simplicity and beauty in its setting
carving, and over it a fanlight window. There were lobbies on either side of the
under the trees of the shaded main street. This building has been
door, IS feet in length and 8 feet in width, for jury rooms. The ceiling of the court-
twice threatened with destruction within the last few years: once it
room was arched, and it comprised what is now both stories of the building, and
was contemplated to demolish the structure as no longer of use (it is
the whole area, with the exception of the jury rooms
there
were
three
windows
presently used by veterans' organizations and the Girl Scouts), and
on the east side of the house, five on the west side, and four on each of the other
sides, in two tiers. In each of the windows there were 24 lights of glass, IOXI2. The
later a fire broke out but was fortunately discovered in time. It is
specifications called for a cupola with a spire and vane.2
buildings such as these which, in a village or town, make the differ-
ence between mediocrity and distinction in appearance. Where the
Early in the twentieth century, when the new Town Hall was to
eighteenth and nineteenth century structures have been razed and
be built, this structure was moved to a new location on the north side
have given way to gas stations and supermarkets, or jerry-built mod-
of Housatonic Street and converted into a business block. Its cupola
ern structures, the street then resembles every other street of its type
and vane, decayed because of weather, were removed and, unless one
up and down the land. Too many Berkshire buildings of distinction
knows the building, it is not recognizable as the interesting early
have fallen before the axe or the bulldozer blade: the Woodbridge
structure it is. An admirable project for our restoration-minded times
house in Stockbridge, the Peace Party house in Pittsfield, the "Bul-
would be to strip this structure of its later additions, move it to a
finch" church, the Goodman house, to name only a few. It is impor-
suitable site and restore it to its original appearance. It is, in fact, the
tant that the Academy buildings and churches and dwellings of the
only eighteenth-century building of note left standing in Lenox, and
eighteenth and nineteenth century stand for posterity.
would make a remarkably handsome structure, properly rejuvenated.
Probably the building which most dominates the Lenox landscape
The second structure, which occupies a site on the main street, is
and did so even more in the last century before trees and shrubbery
the old Academy building, the date of which is given as 1803. It is a
growth partly concealed it is the Congregational church, known usu-
plain frame structure of five bays, similar in feeling to the Walker-
ally as the "Church on the Hill." It is a fine building, sensitively pro-
Rockwell house on Walker Street, though larger. It has the same
portioned and perfectly sited. It is, in fact, such a totally satisfying
I20
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
Early Buildings of Lenox
I2I
building architecturally that its admirers have looked far and wide
The church was finished on schedule in October of 1805 and was
for its architect; one gasoline company in its advertising of trip tours
dedicated the following January. It has remained in use since, though
through Berkshire admonishes tourists to be sure to see this church,
for a time before heat was introduced, it was closed during the cold-
"attributed to Bulfinch"!
est months of winter. Its interior, to one who admires its external ap-
Again, as with the Academy building, its details are subtle but well
pearance, will come as a distinct disappointment. The early box pews
done. The cornice is restrained but effective, the use of the Palladian-
and the original pulpit and raised "front gallery" have disappeared
type window over the entrance is not overpowering, and the mass
and yielded to a Victorianization which is far from attractive. I would
and structure of the church building are well calculated. The tower is
hope that members of the congregation might, one day, restore the
not so elaborate as some, but is satisfying and lacks the fussy detail
church to its original appearance, much as was done in Old Benning-
which is found on several New England steeples.
ton, in order that the building show its distinctive beauty complete,
Several years ago the pastor of this church unearthed the original
not marred by inharmonious details.
agreement made between the church fathers and the builders of the
The final building in Lenox with claim to architectural distinction
structure. It sets at rest for all time the question of the identity of its
is the Lenox Library Association Building, known formerly as the
architect, and it also provides us a fascinating comment on the build-
"new court house." This was built, as we have seen, in 1816 when
ing habits and customs of early nineteenth-century New England.
the first court house proved too small for county use. A committee
The builder was Benjamin D. Goodrich of Richmond, a man who,
consisting of Joseph Woodbridge of Stockbridge, Caleb Hyde of
I suspect, was responsible for several buildings in Berkshire possessing
Lenox, John Whiting and Henry Brown, high sheriff of the county,
similarities of detail and construction. The specifications are explicitly
were responsible for the building of this structure as well as the jail,
set forth, and little is left to chance. It was Goodrich, however, who
the jailer's house and "all appurtenances thereto belonging."
would have been responsible for the touches like the mouldings and
The original plans for the court house are well preserved in the
the finish.
Lenox Library, which now makes maximum and effective use of the
Many students of architecture have remarked on the importance of
building. For a time, when the courts moved to Pittsfield, the future
the "Builder's Assistant" handbooks which were published both in
of the "new court house" was in doubt, but it was purchased from
this country and in England. It will be noted that the Meeting House
the county by Mrs. Adeline E. Schermerhorn and deeded to the
Committee in this case specifically refers to Plate No. 33 in Asher
Lenox Library Association. It is a fortuitous ending for such a fine
Benjamin's Country Builder's Assistant. A comparison between the
building. Its architect was the well-known designer and builder, Cap-
picture of the Church on the Hill tower with that reproduced from
tain Isaac Damon of Northampton, who was responsible for many
the Benjamin book (shown in this book) will quickly show that the
civic buildings and churches in Western Massachusetts at the turn of
design, with minor variations, is identical. The cost of building this
the nineteenth century.
outstanding church wsa $4,833.33, with some labor undoubtedly
The structure is a massive, but well-proportioned one of brick
furnished, as the agreement states, by "mechanics of the town of
with pilasters and pillars of Ionic design applied to the facing of what
"
Lenox, who are
Proprietors in said house
Curious as to the
is, in reality, a massive brick façade. The cornice and surmounting
relative cost of building, I asked a contractor friend what the identi-
details, including a well-designed belfry, the use of a pedimented
cal building would cost to build in 1968, 163 years later. His estimate:
cornice, and the recessing of the lower floor windows lend a grace
$250,000!
and lightness to the building. It was restored a few years ago, through
I22
Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town
Early Buildings of Lenox
I23
the generosity of Mr. Grenville L. Winthrop and, although the in-
portionable bigness, all well fixed with Patent Springs; to be a double door in the front of the
Tower, and a single door in each end of the same; the Roof and sides to be boarded with good
terior arrangement is quite different from that of the court house, it is
sound hemlock boards; all the inside work below and the front of the Galleries to be done
harmonious and useful. It is heartening to see a structure of the archi-
with good clear stuff; to be well painted inside and out with three coats, and to be plastered
with three coats; the shingles to be laid not more than five and one fourth inches out; the clap-
tectural importance of this one so well preserved and serving a com-
boards to be laid out not more than six inches and to lap at least two inches; the Bell to be
munity after more than a century and a half.4
hung and suitable apparatus provided for it; a lightning rod to be put up made of refined Iron
of suitable bigness; to be an elegant iron vane and brass ball properly gilt and ornamented; the
A thorough and detailed history and analysis of the architecture of
Steeple and the workmanship of it to be made comparable to the plan of a steeple laid down in
Berkshire has yet to be made. When it is, however, these buildings
Plate No. 33 in Benjamin's Country Builders assistant.
And the said Goodrich further covenants and agrees to procure and furnish all the materials
of Lenox will represent the best of their period. They all, even the
for completely finishing said house except the Stone Work and Bell, and that he will do
most unpretentious of the dwellings, represent the quiet restraint and
the same in all its parts in a good substantial, workmanlike and elegant manner, conformable
to the most approved modern architectural principles, and of good sound and suitable ma-
innate good taste of their builders and owners, and contribute much
terials, and that he will finish the outside of said house by the first day of November, A.D. 1804,
and complete the same by the aforesaid day of October 1805. And the said Goodrich further
to the unobtrusive but satisfying beauty of the town.
agrees that he will make such alterations as to the elevation of the steeple, and do all the other
works not particularly herein mentioned in such a manner as the said Committee upon con-
sultation with him shall from time to time advise and direct and that he will employ any of the
mechanics of said town of Lenox, who are or may be Proprietors in said house, who are able
and willing to perform any part of the work as well and upon as reasonable terms as he can
NOTES
procure it done by others.
And the said contracting parties of the second part in their said capacity in consideration of
the covenant and agreement of the said Goodrich on his part above specified, on their part
I. Quoted from Tucker galley #17, Life in Early Lenox.
covenant and agree to and with the said Goodrich that they will payhim the said Goodrich the
sum of four thousand eight hundred and thirty three dollars and thirty three cents, in the fol-
2. Quoted from Tucker galley 50, Courts and Courthouses.
lowing manner, to wit all the timber and materials for said house, and at the prices mentioned
3. The agreement is interesting enough to quote in full:
in the schedules hereunto annexed, amounting to the sum of two thousand one hundred fifty
three dollars and 66 cents. The timber for the frame to be delivered by the first day of March
ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT made and concluded this nineteenth day of October in the year of
next, rough hewed or sawed, the residue of the materials of wood by the first day of May
our Lord one thousand eight hundred and three by and between Benjamin D. Goodrich of
next, the Glass and Nails by the first day of June next, and the other materials, when wanted
Richmond in the County of Berkshire and Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Joiner, of the
upon said Goodrich giving one months previous notice, provided however if any parts of
one part, and William Walker, Caleb Hyde, Oliver Belding Junr., Joseph Goodwin, Josiah
Materials shall not be delivered by the time specified the said Goodrich shall have the money
Newell, Nathaniel Miller and Ebenezer Williams all of Lenox in said County, a Committee
in lieu thereof on demand and the sum of six hundred sixty nine dollars and ninety two cents-
appointed by the said town of Lenox to contract for the building a Meeting House in said
by the first day of May next and the sum of six hundred and sixty nine dollars and ninety two
Lenox, of the other part.
cents by the first day of November then next following and the sum of thirteen hundred and
The said Benjamin Goodrich for the consideration herein after mentioned and expressed,
thirty nine dollars and eighty four cents by the first day of October in the year of our Lord
doth covenant, promise and agree to and with the said parties of the second part in their said
1805 and also that they will have the foundation completed ready for the raising of said house
capacity as contracting Committee for said town of Lenox, that he the said Benjamin will, on
on or before the tenth day of July next-
or before the first day of October which will be in the year of our Lord one thousand eight
In testimony whereof the parties have hereunto interchangeably set their hands and seals the
hundred and five, erect, build and finish a Meeting House in said town of Lenox, and near
words "shall have" were interlined before signing
where the old one now stands, of the following description and dimension, and in the follow-
(Signatures)
ing form and manner. The body of the House to be sixty four feet long and fifty feet wide and
4. The total cost for the new court house, including the jail, jailer's house and
a projection of eight feet by twenty six at the south end for a Tower or Steeple, the Posts of the
house to be twenty seven feet high; to be forty six Pews on the lower floor conformable to the
enclosures was $26,059.11.
plan adopted by said town of Lenox; to be thirteen pews in the Gallery, besides two pews to
Wm. Rotch Ware in Colonial Architecture says of the building: "This is one of the
be
made and raised over the stairs; The upper Pillars to be of the Ionic order with Capitals of
very few buildings having any pretension to architectural design left to us
the same order, The Arch over the body of the House to be an elliptical arch; the flooring over
and under the Gallery to be horizontal; the front gallery to be made in a circular manner, with
Damon was a leading architect of Western Massachusetts from 1812 to 1840. He
four posts in the same, and two good strong posts in the side gallery. The Pulpit to be built
built at least I3 churches in this region and nearly all the town halls, court houses
upon a Post with a Corinthian Capital, with two flights of stairs the railing and banister of
and bridges." (A comparison of the brick church on the Main Street of Old
which to be of good cherry or mahogany wood; the Pews below to be built of stuff nine
eighths of an Inch thick when worked; the windows to be twenty-four squares each, the Glass
Deerfield and the 1816 Lenox court house, both Damon buildings, shows many
nine by eleven, except the Venetian and other ornamental windows which are to be of pro-
similarities of design, though with variations in detail.)
Tanglewood
I25
arming book: A young college student named Eustace Bright sur-
rounds himself with a company of young children improbably and
unconventionally named Periwinkle, Squash Blossom, Primrose. To
these youngsters, clustered about his feet at Tanglewood, he retells
stories of classic mythology: of Midas and his gold, of Mercury and
his fleetness, of the half-horse, half-human centaurs. As the shadows
creep down the side of the mountain, across the stream in the glen,1
and the sun sets behind the hills, the children are entranced by the
unfolding of these tales.
In the chapter on Hawthorne I have already detailed the acquaint-
anceship between the writer and Mr. Tappan (William Aspinwall
Tappan of Massachusetts, wealthy, philanthropic, friendly). The
Tappans had acquired "Highwood," the estate of Samuel Gray Ward
(1850), and were later to build their own house farther west on ad-
jacent land, and to name it "Tanglewood" after the story that had
enthralled them. It was this estate which was later to become the
home of the music festival.
It would be good to say that the Berkshire Symphonic Festival
TANGLEWOOD
was the first of its kind, either here or anywhere. But such is not the
case. The Norfolk Music Festival in Connecticut dates to 1899, start-
ed early by Mr. and Mrs. Carl Stoeckel. The Bethlehem Bach Festi-
val, in Pennsylvania, was established first in 1900, and the South
IVEN the combination of Berkshire's location, its physical
Mountain Music Festival in Pittsfield built its "Temple of Music" in
G
surroundings, its large number of culturally-inclined persons
1918, a full two decades before the permanent building at Tangle-
and the very American quality of liking gatherings, some
wood. The contributions of Elizabeth Sprague Coolidge of Boston
sort of festival was almost inevitable. Those who early had the vision
and Pittsfield are too numerous to detail here,2 but her benefactions
of a culture center in the Berkshire hills could not possibly have
to chamber music and her support of South Mountain laid the sup-
known the national and international repute which such a fete would
port for the establishment of a still more ambitious festival, which
bring to Lenox: some "outlanders" know Lenox only as the "Tangle-
was to become Tanglewood.
wood town," and letters come addressed, "Tanglewood, Massachu-
The mythical root of the music festival, now world famous, was
setts."
the remark of Henry Hadley, noted composer and conductor who,
The roots of this well-known summer phenomenon run deep in-
during a Stockbridge stay, confessed that he wanted most to conduct
deed. They run through three phases of Lenox growth: Hawthorne
a full symphony orchestra "under the stars." The idea was well re-
christened the locale when he wrote his fanciful, mystical and mytho-
ceived and Hadley called upon three energetic Berkshire women,
logical Tanglewood Tales. It is, in many ways, Hawthorne's most dis-
Mrs. Owen Johnson and Miss Gertrude Robinson Smith of Stock-
I24
I94
Appendix
Appendix
195
HAMPTON TERRACE, located on Walker Street, opposite Trinity
time prior to 1920 it was owned by Mrs. William Slater. Judge and
Church. Built in 1882 by Mr. John Struthers and named WYNN-
Mrs. Charles Bosworth conducted it as a farm and raised fine horses.
STAY. Later owned by Mr. Robert Bonner, whose daughter Miss
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard C. Feathers acquired it in 1936 and changed
Kate Bonner sold in 1936 to Carl Geise. Present owners Mr. and
the name to WATERFORD. They sold it in 1942 to Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Carl Bodendorf. (See also WYNNSTAY)
John L. Senior, who again changed the name to HIGHWICK FARM.
HIDDEN HOUSE, located on Greenwood Street, south side, oppo-
(See also WATERFORD and HIGHWICK)
site Cemetery on the Hill. This was established about 1870 by Mrs.
HOMESTEAD, located on the west side of Cliffwood Street at the
Grace Kuhn and was then known as HILLSIDE. Later purchased by
corner of Yokun Avenue. The original house was designed by
Mr. and Mrs. Ross W. Whistler, about I9II, who changed the name
McKim, Mead and White for the Misses Appleton in 1885. It was
to HIDDEN HOUSE. Sold in 1940's by the heirs to a family named
later owned by the Anson Phelps Stokes family prior to the building
Mears.
of SHADOWBROOK. For many years it was rented to the Dahlgren
HIGHLAWN, located on present site of BLANTYRE Original estate
family and was later destroyed by fire. Property was later divided
established early (1842) by Russell Cook of Boston; later owned by
and the property is now owned by Mrs. Hayden Channing and Mrs.
George Dorr, whose heirs sold to Robert Patterson. (See also BLAN-
Englebert Krichels. (See THREE ACRES and ANNE'S ACRES)
TYRE)
INTERLAKEN, located on the east side of Old Stockbridge Road
HIGHLAWN HOUSE, located on Lenox-Stockbridge Road. House
about three miles from the village. This estate was established in 1881
built about 1900 by Mr. and Mrs. W. B. O. Field. Now owned by
by D. W. Bishop. The house was demolished in 1922. At this site,
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Helm George Wilde.
approximately, the first jail was built and there is now a marker on
HIGHWOOD, located on south side of West Street, overlooking
the spot. Property is now part of the development known as Berk-
Lake Mahkeenac, extending through to Hawthorne Street. Original
shire Estates South.
estate was one of the first in Lenox, developed by Samuel Gray
LAKESIDE, located on the west side of Route 183 beyond SHADOW-
Ward (not to be confused with the politician, Samuel Ward) in 1846.
BROOK. This estate was established in 1885 by Charles Astor Bristed,
Sold in 1860 to William S. Bullard and it remained in the Bullard
and has been in the family since that time. It is now owned by M.
family until the 1960's when it was purchased by Mr. and Mrs. John
Symphrosa Bristed Livermore and Grace Bristed Jackson.
Mason Harding. It was on Highwood porch that the Tanglewood
Tales were supposedly sited.
LAUREL LAKE FARM, located on the Lee road at the corner of Lee
Road and Plunkett Street. This was established in 1880 by Mr. John
HILLSIDE (See HIDDEN HOUSE)
O. Sargent, later owned by his daughter Miss Georgiana Sargent.
HOLMWOOD, built in 1919 by Margaret Emerson Baker (Mrs.
Now owned by Mrs. Mary Nicholls.
Raymond T.), widow of Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, on the site of
LITHGOW, located on the west side of Old Stockbridge Road at the
the George Westinghouse home. Acquired by Foxhollow School
foot of Lanier's Hill. Estate was established in 1870 by Mr. Alfred
for Girls in 1939. (See ERSKINE PARK)
Gilmore, who bought it from Edward Pierrpont. The land was part
HOMEPARM, located on Under Mountain Road and adjoining the
of an early grant to the Landers family, and the house in part dated
Golf Course. Built late in 1880's by Dr. H. P. Jaques. For a short
to the late eighteenth century, though the Gilmores "modernized"
9/11/2018
John I. Kane - Historic Saranac Lake - LocalWiki
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John I. Kane
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Info
Courtesy of Chip Nagle
Winslow Kane, John I. Kane, Mrs. Simmons, Edith Seaman,
Marjorie Kane, Howard Seaman
Adios II
Born:
Died:
Only the Finest: Memorials by McKim, Mead & White at Green- Wood I Green-Wood
Page 6 of 21
reinforced concrete, etc." it notes that the "sacrophagus" would be completed
by the end of the month), is located in section 80, lot 1696, just to the right of
the entrance to the Egyptian Revival mausoleum of Peter Schermerhorn and
family (dated 1847 above its entranceway). The Kane Memorial, a sarcophagus
decorated on its top, ends and sides, has both extraordinary lettering and
elegant carving.
Kane, who died in 1913, was related to many of New York's leading families; his
grandfather was John Jacob Astor, his wife was Annie C. Schermerhorn (Peter
Schermerhorn's granddaughter). The Schermerhorn Mausoleum, just behind
Kane's memorial, was built in the midst of the 100 acres that the Schermerhorn
family sold to Green-Wood Cemetery in its earliest years-the knoll upon which
it sits had been the location of the Schermerhorn's barn. Kane was a great fan of
scientific explorations and funded many. It appears he lived off his inheritance;
as one obituary reported, "he never engaged in business." He was a member of
New York's leading clubs, including the New York Yacht, Knickerbocker, Union,
South Side Sportsmen, Automobile Club of America, and Metropolitan.
As per Roth, in 1904 Kane hired McKim, Mead & White to plan his residence at
610 Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. It was designed by Charles McKim and his
principal assistant, William Symmes Richardson, at a cost of $511,472
(approximately $13,759,000 in today's money). It has since been demolished
-Rockefeller Center stands there now.
https://www.green-wood.com/2018/only-the-finest-memorials-by-mckim-mead-white-at-g.
8/20/2018
Only the Finest: Memorials by McKim, Mead & White at Green-Wood I Green-Wood
Page 7 o
The John Innes Kane House, by McKim, Mead & White, under construction, circa
1905, at 49th Street and Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. Courtesy of the Museum of the
City of New York. Kane died here in 1913; as per his obituary in The New York Times,
"His Forty-ninth Street residence attracted immediate attention when completed in
1909, because of its attractive simplicity. It was built in the style of the Italian
renaissance, and its furnishings were bought from all parts of Europe."
M-KIP
or
on
The John Innes Kane House, completed. The Green-Wood Historic Fund Collections.
This McKim, Mead & White work-John Innes Kane's spectacular house-must
have pleased his heirs; they hired the same firm to design the beautifully-
detailed sarcophagus in front of his in-laws tomb. Roth mistakenly describes the
Kane Memorial as a "mausoleum." He further states that it dates from 1914, cost
$4842 (just over $120,000 in today's money), and that the original drawings for
it survive at the New-York Historical Society.
https://www.green-wood.com/2018/only-the-finest-memorials-by-mckim-mead-white-at-g...
8/20/20
How It All Began
The nation's land trust movement originated in the little town of Stockbridge.
by Thomas Conuel
S
tockbridge, Massachusetts, is a small, picture-per-
places had simply succumbed to brambles and bur-
fect, tourist town in the southern Berkshires, once
docks. The rest of the town was no better. Stockbridge,
home to Norman Rockwell and still on the 1960s
with its hollows and small hills and open vistas, was
nostalgia map for hosting Arlo Guthrie and Alice's
certainly the most beautiful spot in the Berkshires-
Restaurant. But the tourists, and even many locals, are
part of an enchanting countryside nestled near the
unaware of the fact that Stockbridge is also the site of
meandering Housatonic River. But to Mary Hopkins'
the creation of the first public land trust in the United
critical gaze, deterioration had set in. She believed that
States. It was here the idea originated that one could
the time had come to preserve and tend what nature
save lands in trust for all to enjoy solely for their esthet-
had bestowed on Stockbridge.
ic value.
On August 22, Hopkins went around the town and put
In the summer of 1853, according to author (and sculp-
up notices at the post office, on a large elm outside the
tor) Margaret French Cresson, a woman named Mary
building, and at several other places in the community,
Hopkins happened to ride her trusty white horse through
inviting the citizens of Stockbridge to a public meeting
the Stockbridge Burying Ground and was appalled at
on the 24th of August "to take measures for the regular
what she saw-fences "in such decrepit condition that all
improvement of the Burying Ground, the streets, the
the neighborhood COWS in the morning when they were
walks, the public grounds and Laurel Hill." At the meet-
turned out to pasture wandered in of their own volition,
ing, the citizens in attendance agreed to form a village
nibbled what sustenance they could find among the rank
improvement society, which they decided to call the
growth, knocked over tombstones in their excursions and
Laurel Hill Association. As part of their covenant, the
roamed about at their own sweet will."
association agreed to maintain the streets and cemetery,
And there was more. There were few trees, no paths,
and preserve and beautify Laurel Hill, a small oak-cov-
no driveway, and the grass needed mowing, or in many
ered hill with large rock formations on the east side of
town. The Sedgwick family had
given the town the land in 1834 as
a public park, but since then the
park had become a wild and tan-
gled place.
At age 38, Mary Hopkins was a
woman who "combined a very real
executive ability, an attention to
detail of a very high order and a
steam-roller energy description
included in the group's centennial
book, The Laurel Hill Association:
1853-1953. Her idea was that the
Laurel Hill Association would
assume responsibility for upkeep
and maintenance of the land in
trust for the general public. This
concept of public land was not new.
Practically every village and town
in New England had a town com-
mon-public land for public and
private use. But the notion that one
should preserve and maintain a
piece of land simply because it was
beautiful or inspiring was new.
Snow-laden white pine, Winchendon
Nowadays, search online for land
12 MASSACHUSETTS AUDUBON SOCIETY, Sanctuary magaz Winter 2007-2008
Whether it's partnering with a local outfitter to pro-
vide students with an educational experience on the
river, working with local school systems to integrate the
environment into the curriculum, or inviting experts to
the NRWA's resource center in Greenfield to discuss
river-related topics with adults, association members
know there will be a substantial payoff. "For many stu-
dents this could be a turning point in their lives," says
Campbell. "Frequently, we hear that it's a student's first
time on a river."
Partnering is another strategy both organizations
have used with great success. Campbell says that her
group has paired with local, state, regional, and federal
governmental agencies, environmental groups, recre-
ational groups, and industry on a variety of projects.
"You really need a partnership approach for all kinds of
issues," she says.
In order to gain a designation of American Heritage
River for the Connecticut, the CRWC has linked up with
museums, environmental groups, and a host of sporting
groups. And it is likely the council will be partnering on
a new campaign to raise an estimated $150,000 to cre-
The Davidsons, founders of the Connecticut River
ate a water quality testing lab at its Greenfield head-
Watershed Council, 1959
quarters.
Today, most of the state's thirty-seven major river basins
have watershed protection groups. The Connecticut and
the outer layer of pollution has been peeled away, it has
the Nashua run far cleaner than they did forty years ago.
revealed the broader, stealthier source of contamination
The goal of swimmable water that Marion Stoddart
beneath. River advocates no longer can point to a dis-
doggedly pursued for the Nashua River has been
charge pipe and say "Gotcha!" The problem is, instead,
achieved, and the Connecticut River is starting to have
one of pollution by a thousand cuts.
salmon once again travel upriver to spawn. But, in a way,
"It's every person who doesn't pick up after his dog, or
the hardest work remains to be done.
who washes the car in the driveway and lets the suds
On the Nashua, Stoddart again has turned her atten-
run into the street drains, or who uses chemicals on a
tion shoreward, striving to complete a walkable green-
lawn that runs down to the river," he says. "It's not any
way the length of the river-a challenging assignment
one of these things but the cumulative impact of them
where urban industrial buildings virtually abut the
all that's the challenge."
water. Connecticut River advocates are trying to elimi-
The good news is that various programs have sprung
nate barriers to spawning fish by removing dams where
up to raise public awareness of these issues. One such
possible and creating fish ladders in other locations.
program, GreenScapes, is a collaborative effort to
The CRWC is also waging a court battle to reverse a
encourage low-impact landscaping and responsible
decision granting Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Plant
stewardship of water resources. Another, Think Again,
its second temperature increase for the water it dis-
Think Blue, aims to get people to refrain from throwing
charges into the river. River advocates say that the deci-
cigarettes on the ground and overfertilizing their lawns,
sion, which is not the first one upping the temperature
and to pick up after their dogs.
of Yankee's discharge, was made without the benefit of
"It's hard to measure the success of these programs
scientific data on the effect on salmon and shad. Water
through demonstrated water quality," says Cohen, "but
temperature serves as a trigger for migrating fish. "We
I'd like to think that they're working."
have experts who have done the science and who can
Although she continues to work on behalf of the
document a dramatic decline in these two species since
Nashua River, Stoddart is cognizant of the enormous
the first temperature increases," says Campbell.
changes that have already been made. She recently
Now that the rivers have been mostly cleansed of
walked along the river's edge and marveled to see two
their point-source pollution-waste from identifiable
rope swings dangling from tree limbs out over the water.
single sources-river advocates are aiming for a more
"I thought it would take my whole life to achieve this,"
difficult target. Nonpoint source pollution, largely
she says. "I never dreamed we could make this kind of
runoff from roadways, parking lots, lawns, and farms, is
difference in thirty-eight years."
ubiquitous.
Cohen of the Riverways Program likens the process of
Gayle Goddard-Taylor is a field editor for Sanctuary
addressing river pollution to peeling an onion. Now that
magazine.
SANCTUARY WINTER 2007-2008 11
3.
trusts and you will find the after-
math of the movement that began
back in Stockbridge. There are more
than 120 land trust organizations
listed by the Massachusetts Land
Trust Coalition, although, ironically,
the Laurel Hill Association is not on
the list. The association still soldiers
on in Stockbridge but strictly as a
village beautification society, content
now to place flower boxes along the
town streets.
The oldest continuous land trust
in the nation is The Trustees of
Reservations. Its inception dates
back to 1891, when a nascent land-
scape architect and protégé of
Fredrick Law Olmsted named
Charles Eliot set out to purchase
and preserve wild and beautiful
places around the state. His idea, a
new one at the time, was to acquire
these lands, protect them, but open
them to the public for enjoyment-
just as a library or museum collects
and preserves books and paintings
Stone bridge in mist and snow, New Salem
for the edification of the public.
The concept of preservation and
stewardship of lands not privately held was not something
and a leader in land acquisition and stewardship.
the country's first settlers gave much thought to. The
As with the original idea of land trusts, Mount Grace start-
Pilgrims and the successive waves of settlers who followed
ed inauspiciously and grew slowly, propelled at first by a
put aside land for the common good almost from the
desire to keep a parcel of historic land away from the
moment they began building houses and churches and
encroachments of haphazard development and creeping
grouping themselves into towns and villages. But the com-
sprawl that were changing the very nature of the North
mon land was held for its utility. The flinty doctrine of
Quabbin region. Keith Ross, a professional forester in the
Calvinism that dominated parts of New England in those
North Quabbin region, gathered some like-minded citizens
early decades considered esthetics or pure enjoyment of
together in 1986 and incorporated the group as the Mount
almost anything as an affront to God.
Grace Land Conservation Trust (Mount Grace in Warwick is
Boston Common, the oldest public park in the country,
a 1,600-foot monadnock). With $12 in the bank, Ross and his
was purchased in 1634 when English settlers designat-
group borrowed money, prevailed on the town of Athol to sign
ed its lands a common pasture. But preservation of land
over its right of first refusal, and then purchased the 365-acre
(and water) solely as an enhancement to a community's
Lawton Tree Farm, a longtime supplier of Christmas trees to
esthetics was not even a remote thought for most resi-
the community but slated to become a 200-house-lot subdivi-
dents of the colonies and later the United States. Good
sion. A natural innovator, Ross and his fledging land trust
land and water were everywhere. The idea that some-
then resold the property to the Massachusetts Department of
day you might have to set aside and protect a parcel of
Environmental Management, which then designated the
land from the predations of your fellow citizens was
land the Lawton State Forest, which it remains today-a
incomprehensible.
parcel of fine land open to the public.
Leigh Youngblood, executive director of the Mount
It was a way of saving land and doing business that
Grace Land Conservation Trust (one of the biggest and
depended on a network of like-minded partners-an
most active regional land trusts in Massachusetts), is
idea that Leigh Youngblood embraced when Keith Ross
one of many activists who have steered their organi-
hired her as a part-time assistant in 1994. Six months
zations to become forces in local and regional land
after hiring Leigh, Keith Ross stepped aside-his work
management. The Mount Grace Land Conservation
as the founder of the land trust completed. Since then,
Trust-stretching from Ashburnham and Westminster
the Mount Grace Conservation Land Trust has grown.
in the east to Montague, Greenfield, and Leyden in the
It has played a lead role in preserving 20,000 areas in
west-covers a twenty-three-town region in north-
north-central Massachusetts, owns and manages nine-
central Massachusetts and serves as both a resource
teen conservation areas, and monitors conservation
SANCTUARY WINTER 2007-2008 13
Spruce swamp, Warwick
restrictions on some thirty-nine properties as well as
credited with preserving much of the Berkshire land-
promoting its message of protecting land and encourag-
scape with hundreds of land preservation agreements,
ing stewardship of the land throughout the region and
and in leading the land conservation movement in New
the state.
England.
"Today, it's pretty much impossible to do a land pro-
"It's almost a business today," he says. "When I was
tection project that doesn't involve a lot of partners,"
doing it, I'd think of myself as a bit like an art dealer,
says Bernie McHugh, president of the Massachusetts
going out appraising land and then trying to get people
Land Trust Coalition. The price of real estate and the
together to buy it and keep it for the public, like you
ever-expanding push of suburban sprawl call for more
would a great painting.
money and sometimes complex deals to protect favored
George Wislocki says that now we talk not just about
spots. "You can't blame it on the landowners," said
getting the land but also of managing it, and keeping it
McHugh. "Every square foot of land that goes on the
for other generations. "But it all started with the Laurel
market today is up for grabs."
Hill Association out there in Stockbridge," he says, "the
George Wislocki of Pittsfield is probably the dean of
oldest existing village improvement society in the
land trust managers in Massachusetts, perhaps New
United States."
England. He founded the Berkshire Natural Resources
Council along with Donald B. Miller, former publisher of
Thomas Conuel is a field editor for Sanctuary magazine.
The Berkshire Eagle, in 1967. Now retired, Wislocki is
14 MASSACHUSETTS AUDUBON SOCIETY
Want to learn more about Lenox history?
Bryan, Clark W. The Book of Berkshire: Describing and Illustrating its Hills and Homes. North Egremont,
MA : Past Perfect Books, 1993.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 917.441 Bryan
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 917.441 Bryan
Online edition at Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/bookofberkshired00brya
Chague, Jan. History of Lenox Furnace and Lenox Dale. Lenox MA: privately printed, 2015.
Available for sale at the Lenox Historical Society
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.412 Chague
Digital Commonwealth. Images from the Lenox Library archives and the Lenox Historical Society.
Accessible through https://lenoxlib.org/local-resources/digital-commonwealth/
Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration of Massachusetts. The Berkshire Hills.
New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1939.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 917.441 Federal
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 917.441 Federal
Online edition at Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/berkshirehills00fede
Field, David D. A History of the County of Berkshire, Massachusetts, in Two Parts. Pittsfield, MA: S. W.
Bush, 1829.
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.41 Field
Online edition at Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/historyofcountyo00fiel
Gilder, Cornelia Brooke, and Julia Conklin Peters. Hawthorne's Lenox: the Tanglewood Circle. Charleston,
SC: History Press, 2008.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.412 Gilder
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.412 Gilder
Jackson, Richard S., and Cornelia Brooke Gilder. Houses of the Berkshires: 1870-1930. New York:
Acanthus Press, 2011.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.41 Jackson
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 974.41 Jackson
Kennedy, Lucy. Lenox at 250: An Updated History. Kindle ebook, 2016.
Available for sale at Amazon.com
Lenox Library Association. Images of America: Lenox. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2016.
Available for sale at the Lenox Library and The Bookstore
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.412 Lenox
Mallary, R. DeWitt. Lenox and the Berkshire Highlands. New York: G.P. Putnam's sons, 1902.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 917.4412 Mallary
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 917.4412 Mallary
Online edition at Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/lenoxberkshirehi00mall
One Hundredth Anniversary of the Founding of Lenox Academy. Pittsfield, MA: Sun Printing Company,
1905.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.412 Lenox
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.412 Lenox
Online edition at Internet Archive: : https://archive.org/details/onehundredthanni00leno
Owens, Carole. The Berkshire Cottages: a Vanishing Era. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Cottage Press, 1984.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.41 Owens
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 974.41 Owens
Owens, Carole. The Berkshires: Coach Inns to Cottages. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2004.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.41 Owens
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.41 Owens
Seaman, Judy. Lenox Through the Years 1767-2017. DVD, color, 1 hour 56 mins.
Available for sale at The Bookstore
Tucker, George H. A History of Lenox. Lenox, MA: Lenox Library Association, 1992.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.412 Tucker
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 974.412 Tucker
Wood, David H. Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town. Lenox MA: Published by the Town, 1969.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.412 Wood
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 974.412 Wood
Yudkin, Jeremy. The Lenox School of Jazz: A Vital Chapter in the History of American Music and Race
Relations. South Egremont, MA: Fashaw, 2006.
Available for sale at the Lenox Library
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: MUSIC Nonfiction 781.65 Yudkin
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 781.65 Yudkin
12/1/2020
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On the road with Geral
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New post on On the road with Gerald Dickens
Lowell and The Berkshires.
by geralddickens
As we leave the Thanksgiving weekend behind us SO the memories of tours and
performances past are tumbling daily onto my phone and many are based firmly
in New England.
The first recollection is of the mill town at Lowell where Charles Dickens visited
during his first trip to the United States in 1842. The young, brash author had
enjoyed success after success following the publication of The Pickwick Papers
in 1836 and was riding a wave of popularity, a wave that he would surf right
across the Atlantic and into Boston harbour where he was greeted and feted
with huge banquets, or 'Boz Balls', thrown to celebrate his achievements.
But the young Charles Dickens' visit was not just travelling to greet his adoring
public and to play the celebrity role, he had a genuine enthusiasm to observe
aspects of American life and to see if there was anything that he, and ultimately
Britain, could learn from how a relatively young nation was dealing with issues
that the old one was failing with. At the top of his list was the conditions in the
mills that proliferated in and around Boston, and he had asked to be taken to
Lowell to observe a modern mill at first hand. He was astounded by what he
saw and wrote glowingly about his experience in his travelogue American Notes
commenting particularly on how well the workers were treated, noting that that
in their lodgings they had access to a piano and were allowed to publish their
own magazine, The Lowell Offering.
htps://connect.xfinity.com/appsuite/#!!&app=io.ox/mail&folder=default0/INBOX
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12/2/2020
Xfinity Connect Re_ New post] Lowell and The Berkshires Printout
I have returned to Lowell since then and one other particular
happy memory was when I performed Doctor Marigold, the
beautiful story of a cheerful cheapjack travelling the country and
selling his wares from the steps of his caravan. Marigold
addresses the audience directly and tells his life story which is
both tragic and wonderful. He explains how at a country fair he
discovered a little unwanted girl unable to hear or speak and felt
so drawn to her that he adopted her on the spot. The two learned
how to communicate by developing their own rudimentary sign
language. When I performed the piece in Lowell I was
accompanied on stage by an interpreter who not only signed the
entire show for a largely deaf audience, but also taught me a few
signs so that I could include them in my show: it was a
profoundly moving experience.
Another New England venue which has become part of my tour
more recently is the small town of Lenox in the Berkshires where
I perform in a beautiful historic home, the Ventfort Hall Mansion. I
have visited Lenox twice and on each occasion have been
greeted with thick snow which has made the experience even
more special. The mansion itself is tucked away from the road
and on when I first drove up the driveway my jaw dropped for I
had driven straight into the scene described by Charles Dickens
when Scrooge sees the vision of his old school: 'They left the
high-road, by a well-remembered lane, and soon approached a
mansion of dull red brick, with a little weathercock-surmounted
cupola, on the roof, and a bell hanging in it. It was a large house,
but one of broken fortunes'
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Ventfort doesn't have a bell, and is not of broken fortunes,
although it is undergoing a process of restoration and rescue,
giving one the impression that just a few years earlier it probably
had lived down to Dickens' description: 'The spacious offices
were little used, their walls were damp and mossy, their windows
broken, and their gates decayed. Fowls clucked and strutted in
the stables; and the coach-houses and sheds were over-run with
grass. Nor was it more retentive of its ancient state, within; for
entering the dreary hall, and glancing through the open doors of
many rooms, they found them poorly furnished, cold, and vast.
There was an earthy savour in the air, a chilly bareness in the
place, which associated itself somehow with too much getting up
by candle-light, and not too much to eat.'
Thank heavens there are people who care so passionately about
the past and wish to preserve it, for Ventfort Hall Mansion is now
a warm, welcoming home and a perfect venue for me to perform
in.
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With thoughts of my film very much in mind, it would have been
wonderful to use the house as a location, and the snow would
have added a perfect backdrop. The town centre of Lenox itself
also reminded me of a film location, this time not A Christmas
Carol but Frank Capra's fabulous 'It's a Wonderful Life'. With
street lights twinkling onto the thick snow it was easy to imagine
gawky James Stewart running through the streets shouting out
with joy.
When I drove away from Lenox I left the magic of the snow
behind me as if the whole experience had been a dream - a
series of visions to make me feel better about myself
To rent my version of A Christmas Carol use this link to my
website:
http://www.geralddickens.com/films.html
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BERKSHIRE COUNTY
Chapter 10. THE AMERICAN LAKE DISTRICT
AFTER a year on his sizable farm in Lenox, young Samuel
A Cultural History
Gray Ward was writing his father with enthusiastic satisfac-
tion: "I have harvested a hundred bushels of excellent pota-
toes
[and] am thinking of translating Goethe's auto-
biography this winter.
1
Within the twenty years to come,
many another celebrated man of letters was to discover in
Berkshire a similar opportunity for cultural and agricultural
accomplishment, and the land was to prove undeniably good
for both activities, The irrepressible Dr. Holmes would one
by RICHARD D. BIRDSALL
day take considerable pride in having planted 700 trees on
the rolling expanses of Canoe Meadows; Hawthorne would
spend serene hours with his dearly loved chickens behind the
little red cottage near Stockbridge Bowl; and Melville-the
only one to depend heavily on the land for sustenance-
would trudge home many nights exhausted from his work in
the fields at Arrowhead. And from Canoe Meadows would
come some of Holmes' finest odes; from the Rose Cottage,
The House of the Seven Gables; and from Arrowhead, Moby
Dick.
Impelled by his frail health and by his "unsatisfied passion
for the country and the land," 2 Samuel Gray Ward had led
the way to Berkshire, and living there from 1844 to 1850 he
remained the most loyal Berkshire supporter among the host
of distinguished visitors in the county. Indeed, so quickly
NEW HAVEN
did he become a part of Berkshire life that he himself never
seemed a visitor at all, and his closest Berkshire friend,
To Thomas Wren Ward, Oct. 20, 1845; TWW.
YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
2. Samuel Gray Ward, "A Long Letter to My Grandchildren," Ward
Family Papers, Collected and Written by Samuel Gray Ward (Boston,
privately printed in an edition of twelve copies, Norwood Press, 1900),
p. 88.
323
1959
324
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
325
Charles Sedgwick, could describe him, only three months
tion, and my friends the farmers were greatly edified and
after his arrival, as "very popular and more beloved than
amused at my beginnings. I got up a farmers' club to
some old settler."(8 Later he was to serve as the common de
meet at each other's houses at stated times in the eve-
nominator between Fanny Kemble and Charles Sumner and
nings, and to measure and compare crops etc. which
between Longfellow and the Sedgwicks, but even then he
brought me quite near to them. Then there was shooting
never sacrificed his place in the affections of the Lenox towns
enough to afford an excuse for long rambles with dog
people.
and gun
Ward's regard for Lenox went back to the boyish recollec
When his father's plan of retirement in 1850 obliged him to
tion of a carriage tour he had made with his mother through
abandon the pleasant environs of Lenox for the practical
western Massachusetts to the Lebanon Springs. Four years at
business world of New York City, the North Stockbridge
Harvard and two years in Europe had not dimmed the mem-
Farmers' Club saw him go with sincere regret and voted:
ory, and he at first regarded his second trip across the Barrier
"Resolved that the farmers' club deplore his loss as a member
as a romanticist's return to nature. Once settled, however, he
of the club, as a citizen and resident of Berkshire as a public
looked at his surroundings more realistically and soon wrote
misfortune."
to his father: "We seem to have made a happy selection in
Neither Dr. Holmes nor Melville was ever to become so
this part of the country, for we find simple and economical
completely a part of the rural scene as Ward was becoming
habits united with an excellent society." Because he en-
during these years of bucolic retreat. "I love farming," he
joyed a generous allowance from his family, his own habits
wrote to his father with candor. "There is such a variety and
never were and never needed to be economical, but his ap-
simplicity, such an adaption of means to ends, such room for
proach to his new life was nonetheless sincere and practical.
the exercise of ingenuity and contrivance, as well as for the
"City-bred people," he had realized from the outset, "never
cultivation of perseverance and patience that I find an end-
understand country-bred people, and are not admitted to the
less interest in it." Less than two weeks later he was writing
'freedom' of the country. This barrier I wanted to break
still another letter filled with the enjoyment of country life:
down, and succeeded SO effectually that I was accepted as one
"We have mid-winter weather and the most perfect sleighing.
of themselves." 5 In retrospect he was to write further:
Yesterday morning being a bright morning we went
Although I was not robust enough for hard labour, farm-
over to Lebanon, Anna and I in an open sleigh. We started
ing, under such circumstances, I had a great delight in.
after breakfast, and when we returned at noon the thermom-
I could do anything that was to be done with horses,
eter stood no higher than 7° and considerable wind; yet we
ploughing, harrowing, etc.; ploughing particularly, and
did not suffer and had a charming drive of twenty-two miles.
driving at the same time, required just enough attention
Think of that! Cold weather here is more bracing and less
and skill to help and not to interrupt the flow of medita-
chilling I think than on the coast.
6 Ibid., p. 181.
To Kate Minot, Sept. 2, 1844; MC.
7. C. M. Sedgwick to Samuel G. Ward, Mar. 5, 1850; SGW.
S. G. Ward to T. W. Ward, June 3, 1844; TWW.
8. S. G. Ward to T. W. Ward, Dec. 1, 1845; TWW.
Ward, Ward Family Papers, p. 180.
g
Idem, Dec. 12, 1845; TWW.
326
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
327
The very civilized Emerson never tired of commenting
Whatever Emerson might think of Berkshire isolation, the
with wry humor on his friend's strange attachment to the
fact remained that Lenox in the 1840's harbored a small but
comparatively rustic rural life, and on the occasion of Ward's
first winter trip to Boston, he wrote playfully:
growing corps of literati whose knowledge owed apologies to
no one and whose sophistication could rival any to be found
I hope the city looks friendly and domestic to her one-
in America. And if Ward's peculiar genius drew virtually
time son, and not reproachful and too mindful of his
nothing from the Berkshire tradition, still he discovered
wanderings. Tis a good goblin, and the most devout
among the isolated hills an unsurpassed workshop in which
lovers of nature will find the Exchange, the Tremont
to experiment upon and expand that genius. With adequate
House and the Concert Room tolerable in February. The
time for reading in his "warm and bright" winter library;
woods of Berkshire (a week ago all cased in diamond) the
with welcome occasions for thinking as he jogged easily along
frozen lakes and skies a little too pure must reckon them-
behind his plow in springtime; with pleasant opportunities
selves happy if a fortnight hence they preserve the least
for conversations with Fanny Kemble, the Reverend Henry
charm for your imagination. Indeed what a maceration
Neill, the Sedgwicks, and his sometime guests, Charles Sum-
and self-immolation in these children of art and civility
ner, Longfellow, and Judge Lemuel Shaw; and with the
to have lent their grace to those rocks and wilderness SO
prospering business of his father to assure him a comfortable
long! I praise and admire you, though would never see
subsistence, young Samuel Ward could hardly have asked for
the Saddleback mountains again. Well I long to hear the
more. Even the dubious Emerson could not resist a wistful
tale of your horrible sufferings in savage life, and shall
inquiry. "Do the muses speak in these sharp whistling
hurry to town before the charm of your escape is worn
winds?" he asked. "Are your Berkshire torrents chained up?
off. 10
I have always wished to know how hill countries look in win-
ter but I doubt I shall never have vigor enough to go and
Actually Ward's years in Berkshire were perhaps not SO "sav-
see them." 11
age as Emerson liked to think of them. The demands on the
WO years in Lenox saw the completion of the Goethe
time of a gentleman farmer never proved unreasonable, and
translation and the end of an intellectual phase in Ward's life
he could find ample leisure, especially in the winter months,
which went back to Margaret Fuller's dominating influence
not only for an extensive correspondence with Emerson but
for his proposed translation of Goethe and later for those re-
during his Cambridge years. Neither Berkshire nor America
markable essays of literary criticism one day to be published
played an active role in this ambitious undertaking, and
in the Aesthetic Papers and the Massachusetts Quarterly Re-
certainly it could scarcely have stood further from those in-
view.
digenous portraits of rural life which Catharine Sedgwick
had created only a few miles away. Yet impelled by a deter-
10. R. W. Emerson to S. G. Ward, Jan. 31, 1845; SGW. Though the
mination to educate Americans in an appreciation of the
bulk of the letters of Emerson to Ward appear in either Emerson's
Letters to a Friend, ed. Charles Eliot Norton (Boston, 1899) or Ralph L.
masterworks of western culture, Ward had made a significant
Rusk, The Letters of Ralph Waldo Emerson (6 vols. New York,
contribution of which both Berkshire and America might
of collation.
I have worked from the manuscripts in order to avoid the necessity 1939),
well be proud. After such a performance, Emerson perhaps
11. To S. G. Ward, Dec. 17, 1844; SGW.
329
328
The American Lake District
Berkshire County
and thorough knowledge of what already exists in the
felt that Ward might be profitably encouraged in his agricul
tural pursuits, and in April of 1845 he wrote without whimsy
world.
14
"Yesterday I was in town and saw at Munroe's the last proof
Ward's idea of a "creative criticism" that would always sup-
sheet of 'Goethe.' It seemed a good time to greet you on your
ply a regenerating force in a nation's literature found sym-
mountains, as you are regaining your freedom again, if with
pathetic response in the Lenox pastor Henry Neill:
regrets like Gibbon's. The reluctant spring has yielded us
your sketch of the history of literature among the
some golden days and I do not know any idleness SO delicious
nations beautifully and directly led to the announce-
as dilettantism in fruit trees. Grafting and pruning turn a
ment that there might be such a thing as creative criti-
day into pure dream
12
cism, ever new and advancing until every point of view
For three more years Ward continued to enjoy an existence
was exhausted and on until there were no more forms
nicely balanced between culture and agriculture, and his es-
in which the facts could arrange themselves, which might
say on criticism in the Aesthetic Papers 13 unmistakably estab-
never be, and thus criticism be endless and ever-increas-
lished him in his enviable role as Berkshire's literary gentle
I believe you might on this hint point out
man-farmer supreme. The sanity of Ward's views on the
ing. some of the lines and forms which criticism will take
problems facing the American critic is evident:
after the German phase is exhausted, just as you have
Our first misfortune is, that there is a reference to a
philosophically and satisfactorily pointed out and
remarked on the forms which it does take and has taken.
standard from without, viz., from England. As the spirit
You have assigned in your article many new causes for
that dictates this is, from many causes, unfair and de-
preciating, a natural consequence has been to cause all
existing facts not generally recognized as entering into
our own criticism to take the opposite ground, to over-
them. 15
praise that which we felt to be undervalued or invidi-
Berkshire's once stern and uncompromising orthodoxy
ously regarded.
although all original literature
indeed have been undergoing a radical change when a
comes from and refers to the heart of the people, it can-
must Congregational cleric could speak with such perception introduce on
not, except in a rude age, address itself to that people,
literary criticism, and Ward himself did much to
except through a class capable of receiving it. If great
cosmopolitan currents of thought into the county. Yet during charm
works do not find such a class in their own age, they wait
these same six years the genial glow of his personal
till time and their own influence create it.
We be-
perhaps contributing even more to "literary Berkshire" which
lieve a conscious greatness inseparable from a critical
was than was his critical work. For Ward, the isolation than
literature; and such, therefore, we look for in this coun-
Emerson so often mentioned never had anything more
try:-a literature and art based on thorough criticism,
geographical validity. He possessed a rare genius for dispens- during
ing warm hospitality and drew upon that genius freely
12. Idem, Apr. 30, 1845; SGW.
his Berkshire years.
13. This journal was edited by Elizabeth Peabody, but ceased publica-
S. G. Ward, "Essay on Criticism," Aesthetic Papers (1849), p. 24.
tion after the first issue. As a contributor, Ward was in the company of
Emerson, Thoreau, and Hawthorne.
14. 15. Henry Neill to S. G. Ward, June 26, 1849; SGW.
330
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
331
Hardly had he settled in Lenox before he issued an inv
tation to Charles Sumner and Dr. Samuel Gridley Howe an
was always to make a profound impression on everyone she
invitation which both men accepted with alacrity. Sumner
encountered among the hills. With no thought for the pro-
from who was then in Pittsfield with the Appletons recuperating
prieties of polite society, she lived with an unconsciousness of
self and with an unlimited self-confidence which were to add
ber an illness, traveled the seven miles to Lenox in Septem
to the already diversified literary society of the County some-
ble and there encountered again the beautiful Fanny Kem
Butler, with whom he had been SO much impressed in
thing of the flavor of the Elizabethan era which she intui-
Boston. With Ward, he watched while "in a field not far off,
tively experienced in her study of Shakespeare.
In fact, Berkshire itself, at least in the minds of outsiders,
the girls and others engaged in the sport of archery. Mrs
Butler hit the target in the golden middle." 17 If Mrs. Butler
eventually came to share with the unpredictable Mrs. Butler
did not, as later romanticists would have liked to think, hit
her reputation for freedom and for an open disregard of con-
vention; and Puritanical Berkshirites were sometimes scan-
the heart of this austere and handsome Boston bachelor "in
dalized by this emancipated new society prospering in their
the golden middle," at least she inspired in him a sincere
admiration and friendship, and probably Berkshire never
very midst. Thus when, one fine autumn, Fanny Kemble
joined Mary Channing, Fanny Wright, the Pomeroys, and a
bold, masculine, and unaccommodating" personality.18 "Your
again could be separable in his mind from her "peculiar,
group of Mrs. Sedgwick's girls for an omnibus outing to Bash
Bish Falls, such a demonstration of "eating, drinking, danc-
presence," he wrote to George Hillard from Lenox, "would
help me bear the weight of Fanny Kemble's conversation; for,
ing, singing, tearing, climbing, and screaming" ensued as had
never before been seen in southern Berkshire, and popular
of her superiority." 19
much as I admire her, I confess to a certain awe and a sense
indignation ran SO high that the spirited ladies soon found
themselves the target of a liberal deluge of rotten eggs. 20
During her many summers in Berkshire, Fanny Kemble
Berkshire literary circles could chuckle to themselves over
was to inspire in many this same awe she had inspired in
such an indication of prim disapproval, but they could not
Sumner, in some an even greater admiration, and in a few
and would not tolerate any serious expression of critical
reaction of shocked surprise. Living sometimes with the a
censure from outsiders. To the vicious and widespread rumor
Charles Sedgwicks and sometimes at the Curtis Hotel, she
that Fanny Kemble posted over the Berkshire hillsides seated
Butler 16. Fanny in Kemble had married the Philadelphia socialite Pierce
astride her capital horse-a rumor to which Scott's Weekly
Butler 1834 and they had two daughters. By 1844, however, she and
Paper of Philadelphia lent its sanction in an article disre-
had separated-partly over the slavery issue and partly a
spectfully entitled "Unwomanly Freaks"-Charles Sedgwick
hopeless difference of opinion regarding wifely obedience-and in over 1848
they were formally divorced.
took instant and angry exception. The story, he wrote curtly
17. Charles Sumner to George Hillard, Sept. 10, 1844, in Edward L.
to the editor of Scott's Weekly, "is utterly false. No one in
317. Pierce, Memoir and Letters of Charles Sumner (3 vols. Boston, 1877), 2,
Lenox has seen Mrs. Butler ride astride." 21
Perhaps unaware of her gallant defenders, Fanny Kemble
2, 319.
18. C. Sumner to Dr. Samuel G. Howe, Pittsfield, Sept. 11, 1844, ibid.,
blithely continued to neglect whatever proprieties did not
19. Ibid., 2, 319.
20. Fanny Kemble to Kate Sedgwick, Oct. 2, 1839; SP.
21. To W. Scott, no date; MC.
332
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
333
please her, and on occasion she managed to shock
polite society just as thoroughly as she shocked Berkshire's the
and 50's from degenerating into sheer bohemianism for its
recall people. with That eager celebrity-hunter Maunsell Field towns-
own sake and which allowed them instead to develop a
at Sedgwick house when:
the delight, in his reminiscences, a certain evening was to
healthy perspective toward the fine points of etiquette and a
refreshingly relaxed attitude toward the bourgeois niceties.
"You know the sort of life that is lived here," wrote Mrs.
Rev. Kemble, and sitting on either side of her was the
Fanny Seated in this window, with her back to the river,
Kemble approvingly to Mrs. Jameson: "the absence of all
form, ceremony, or inconvenient conventionality whatever.
men of Dr. Parker and the Rev. Justin Field, both were
We laugh, and we talk, sing, play, dance, and discuss; we ride,
drew the Protestant Episcopal Church. Thereupon clergy- I
drive, walk, run, scramble, and saunter, and amuse ourselves
partie up a chair, and, facing the lady, completed the
extremely with little materials (as the generality of people
her carrée. She was doing the talking just then, and
would suppose) wherewith to do SO
sionate subject was horses, for which animals she had
It might well have surprised and disappointed her to know
to fondness. From horses in general, she soon a pas-
that the Berkshire hostelers and shopkeepers in whose sturdy
war "this or cavalry horses. "By the bye," she went passed
independence and homely wisdom she SO often delighted at
I say, met Sir reminds me that the last time I was in England on to
first found her formidable and terrifying. 24 Even had she
tain of Harry Smith. He told me that he was a
known, however, she could hardly have changed in herself
called horse at Waterloo, but that his command cap-
that blunt outspokenness which had become SO much a part
Duke into action during the day. In the afternoon was not
of her personality, and in time the common people of the
where of Wellington, at the head of his staff, rode the
County with whom her active life brought her into contact
in he was, and called to him, 'Come, sir, up to
learned to be themselves with her and to meet her on her
troop motion-get your troop in motion!' Now get your Sir
own terms. She was probably seldom more thoroughly pleased
the Harry did not yet know any thing about the fortunes of
than when the little man in the lobby of the Curtis Hotel
asked, day; so, saluting his commander, he hesitatingly
whom she had abruptly reprimanded, "You should remove
she 'Which way, sir?' As she gave the Duke's
your hat. Gentlemen always do SO in my presence," quietly
clenched rose to her feet like a tragedy queen, and, reply, with
and firmly replied, "But I'm not a gentleman, ma'am, I'm a
her hand, shouted, "Forward, sir, by God!" At this
butcher." 25
immediate auditors started as if electrified; but
She was to encounter this same faculty for proud independ-
sation calmly resumed her chair, and went on with the she
ence many times during her stay in Berkshire, especially in
proprieties. as if unconscious that she had violated any conver- of the
the years after she had settled into "the Perch," her little cot-
tage on the edge of Stockbridge Bowl; and it would never fail
Perhaps it was this very unconsciousness which saved
to impress and delight her. Many years after she had left
Fanny Kemble and the Berkshire literary society of the 1840's both
Berkshire, she was to remember one summer afternoon when,
(New 1875), pp. 201-2.
22. York, Maunsell B. Field, Memories of Many Men and of Some Women
23. Kemble, Records of Later Life, p. 165.
24. Pittsfield Sun, Oct. 29, 1885.
25. The Berkshire Hills, Federal Writers Project, p. 126.
334
Berkshire Count
The American Lake District
335
mowing meadow, she heard herself sharply rebuked yeomen
having ordered her a barrel of beer for the group of
lating line of distance is overtopped by a considerable
an trying old to introduce such a deleterious habit; 26 and for
mountain with a fine jugged crest, and ever since early
he trip had the son of the village baker. "Now Mrs. Kemble,
with lady she could still recall a particular afternoon even fishing
morning, troops of clouds and wandering showers of
rain and the all-prevailing sunbeams have chased each
between asked, "I want to know what would be the difference
other over the wooded slopes, and down into the dark
stead all that we see here now if we were in England
hollow where the lake lies sleeping, making a pageant
England, of America." "Well, William," she had answered, "in in-
far finer than the one Prospero raised for Ferdinand and
all that we see here now would probably be the
Miranda on his desert island.
28
property "Oh, of one man." To which his only reply had been,
Like Bryant before her, she never tired of wandering over
Kemble, My! That's bad!" "This fellow," commented Mrs.
the hills, and like him, although far more wholeheartedly, she
"was as ignorant as it is possible for a Massachusetts
contributed her own talents with tireless generosity to the
man to be; but think of the intelligence evinced by both his
cultural life of the County. She could hold any Berkshire
question and answer." 27
audience, whether in the Lenox Court House or in Pittsfield's
Probably the Berkshire hills never played host to a guest
Burbank Hall, spellbound with her unequaled Shakespear-
charms. more appreciative of both their natives and their natural
ean deliveries, and no Sedgwick soirée, either in Lenox or in
Fanny Kemble filled her letters with highly colored
Stockbridge, was ever considered complete until she had read
and descriptions of the beauties she had come to know and
a scene from Macbeth or had sung a Scotch or German ballad
no prospect ever became more precious to her than love, the
to her own piano accompaniment. A born entertainer, she
one visible from her little cottage on a Lenox hilltop:
could feel equally at home acting on a New York stage or
Immediately the sloping before me, the green hillside,
delivering a poem for the Lenox Academy commencement.
Fanny Kemble was in short the personification of all that
sinks summit of which stands the house I am inhabiting, on
was brightest and most alive in Berkshire cultural life, and
softly down to a small valley, filled with thick, rich
in 1848 she enjoyed the rare distinction of emerging in Long-
wood, in the centre of which a little jewel-like lake lies
fellow's slow-moving diary as one of the few aspects of the
gleaming. Beyond this valley the hills rise one above
Berkshire summer that never lulled him to sleep. Longfellow
broken, irregular outline that the eye dwells on with a
another to the horizon, where they scoop the sky with
recorded a multitude of impressions of the County during his
two extended summers there-comments on the rivers and
ever new delight as its colors glow and vary with the
the factories, on the hillsides, on the Sedgwicks, on the moun-
cending or descending sunlight, and all the shadowy as--
tains and the woods-and he found inspiration there for a
procession of the clouds. In one direction this undu-
famous poem and for his only novel; but every entry seemed
26. Kemble, Records of Later Life, pp. 11-12.
wrenched from a drowsy mind and even the Housatonic,
and Fanny wrote a very readable novel of Berkshire life, Far Away life
27. Kemble, Kemble Further Records, pp. 192-93. Near the end of her
which Melville thought "sparkling," appeared to him as
nothing but a "shallow brown stream, not very clear." He
Long Ago, London, 1889.
28. Kemble, Records of Later Life, p. 164.
336
Berkshire Counts
The American Lake District
337
might, in fact, have been thus describing his own benumbed
sleep in summer is very great." 30 He never, in fact, managed
brain during those dreamy summer days in Pittsfield and
to finish Kavanagh during that summer in Berkshire and
Lenox, and try as he might to "be up and doing" in accord
was compelled at last to postpone the conclusion until he
situde. with his own cheerful philosophy, he could not conquer las
was back in the more invigorating air of Cambridge. Still,
most of the writing and much of the limited stimulus came
His wedding trip over the hills to Pittsfield had given him
from Berkshire; and if the resulting novel never rose above
no warning of his own inherent unsuitability for country
mediocrity, perhaps it was because, as Longfellow's Mr.
life. He had remained at Elm Knoll with the Appletons for
Churchill remarked, scenery cannot "create genius. At best
a few happy weeks in 1843, had seen there on the staircase the
it can only develop it." 31
soon-to-be-immortalized old clock, and had returned, full of
Longfellow himself admitted feeling "perplexed about
inspiration, to Cambridge to write:
Kavanagh," and certainly it is a perplexing book. Hardly a
5
Somewhat back from the village street
novel at all, it reflects in its strangely confused and episodic
Stands the old-fashioned country-seat.
progress the sluggish inattention of a sleepy brain driving
Across its antique portico
itself on to the unwelcome task of composition. The shallow
Tall poplar trees their shadows throw;
and conventional romanticism of the plot and the unimagina-
And from its station in the hall
tive descriptions of the countryside proved nothing but a thin
An ancient timepiece says to all-
excuse for a series of notebook epigrams painstakingly strung
"Forever-never! Never-forever!"
together with numerous obiter dicta on everything from na-
tional literature 32 to theological liberalism. The little New
And in the golden moments of dalliance at Cambridge in
England village of Fairmeadow was unmistakably patterned
1846, with his last classes over and the prospect of a long
after Lenox, although SO hopelessly romanticized as scarcely
summer vacation stretching before him, he could still reflect:
to retain any shreds of individuality; but the hero-"tall,
"I have a longing for Berkshire or the seaside. Both Nahant
very pale, with beautiful black eyes and hair"-was merely a
and Stockbridge beckon let if
brother to dozens of identical Byronic heroes of the early
my mind into more poetic mood by the sweet influences of
me see I cannot bring
nineteenth century. Stripped of his attractive poetic façade,
sun and air and open fields." 29
30. Ibid., 2, 120.
In reality the mood he at last settled into was to be neither
31. H. W. Longfellow, Kavanagh, pp. 114-15.
poetic nor inspired, and by 1848 he could only conclude: "I
32. In a conversation between the schoolteacher Mr. Churchill and
find it quite impossible to write in the country. The influ-
the editor Hathaway, Longfellow sets forth his view of national litera-
ences are soothing and slumberous. In coming here, I hoped
ture: "In a word," says Hathaway, "we want a national literature alto-
to work successfully on Kavanagh; and as yet I have written
gether shaggy and unshorn, that shall shake the earth, like a herd of
buffaloes thundering over the prairies!
Let us have our literature
scarcely a page.
The capacity of the human frame for
national. If it is not national, it is nothing." To which Churchill (speak-
ing for Longfellow) replies: "on the contrary, it may be a great deal.
(2 vols. Boston, 1886), 2, 49.
29. Life of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Samuel Longfellow
Nationality is a good thing to a certain extent, but universality is
better." Kavanagh, pp. 114-15.
338
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
339
sional Longfellow became surprisingly empty, with only? occa-
authentic touch to enliven his pedestrian efforts;
in the tradition of Berkshire novels which had begun with
Moreover, the Grand Junction Railroad was opened
A New England Tale and would end with Elsie Venner.
Young Kavanagh, Longfellow decided, must come to Fair-
and through the town, running in one direction to the city,
meadow to succeed the "painful preacher of the word," who
ing the white villages like pearls upon its black thread
in the other into unknown northern regions, string
had, for fifty years, been hardening the hearts of his parish-
ioners with Calvinist hellfire.36 In happy contrast, Kavanagh
By this, the town lost much of its rural quiet and seclu
himself "did not SO much denounce vice as inculcate virtue;
sion. The inhabitants became restless and ambitious,
They were in constant excitement and alarm, like chil.
he did not deny but affirm; he did not lacerate the hearts of
his hearers with doubt and disbelief, but consoled and com-
dren in story-books hidden away somewhere by an
forted and healed them with faith.
His words were
who visits them regularly every day and night, and occa ogre
sionally devours one of them for a meal.
always kindly; he brought no railing accusations against any
man." 37 Here was the keystone which Longfellow would add
Nevertheless, most of the inhabitants considered the
railroad a great advantage to the village. Several ladies
to his plot, and if not wholly effectual, it at least provided
one of the few unifying themes of the novel.
were heard to say that Fairmeadow had grown quite
Even late in the summer of 1848 Kavanagh remained un-
metropolitan; and Mrs. Wilmerdings, who suffered
under a chronic suspension of the mental faculties, had
finished, and Longfellow was still uttering lethargic com-
plaints. "It is impossible to do anything here in the way of
-
a vague notion, probably connected with the profession
of her son, that it was soon to become a seaport. 33
writing," he grumbled in his diary. "Such an empty house
one's head becomes in this 'land of drowsy-head.' Yet, in
Not entirely unaware of the book's shortcomings, Long
spite of himself, he was at last learning to enjoy the languid
title fellow had realized shortly before its publication that "The
Berkshire summer and could go on to recount: "We drove to
is better than the book, and suggests a different kind of
Stockbridge to dine with Mrs. Sedgwick; a pleasant dinner.
it. book. One It more long, spiritual chapter must be written for
Mr. Theodore from town. After dinner a drive along the Lee
must go into the book as the keystone into the
road by the meadow and the river.
The evening we
arch. An idea so very obvious, and yet coming SO late!" 34
passed at Sam Ward's. Rackmann played Chopin and Mendels-
found Berkshire, Longfellow discovered, as Catharine Sedgwick had In
sohn and Schubert. Mrs. Butler sang a ballad.
said that
and before him and as Holmes would find later, the fullest
everything seemed to be Sedgwick in this region; the very
strongest expression of Calvinism; 35 and by adding the
grasshoppers in the fields chirp, 'Sedgwick! Sedgwick!'' 38
contemplated "spiritual chapter" to Kavanagh, he placed it
Less than two weeks later Longfellow "left Pittsfield for
33. Longfellow, Kavanagh, pp. 100.
Cambridge. Farewell to Melvill Hall, the lake, the piny
34. Life of Longfellow, 2, 136.
mountain, the breezy orchard! Farewell Fayaway; and the
'Nay, "Dr. Todd preached. Among other things he said of the hard-hearted. recorded:
35. Ibid., 2, 54. In his diary for Aug. 16, 1846, Longfellow
36. In 1845 the Calvinist Reverend Samuel Shepard of Lenox died
will dropping not be from the Saviour's side upon the stones below, and yet they
they may go up Calvary so far that they can hear the blood
after a fifty-year pastorate and was replaced by the liberal Reverend
Henry Neill.
moved.' The parish consider it a great sermon."
37. Longfellow, Kavanagh, p. 101.
38. Life of Longfellow, 2, 121.
340
341
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
playful Major! Farewell the sleepy summer, and the lote
born extrovert he plunged at once into the midst of County he
drives!" 39
activities, and by the end of his first Pittsfield summer
The Berkshire hills were never again to welcome Long
was already serving conscientiously on the judging commit-
fellow for any extended stay, but only a year later they were
tee for the ploughing contest of the annual Berkshire Fair
to welcome a second and rather more adaptable Bostonian
and was mounting to the church pulpit to deliver an ode
Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes traveled to Pittsfield in 1849
composed especially for the occasion.
and there he built, on what remained of the old Wendell es
The Ploughman 42
tate, the impressive "Holmesdale," where he was to spend
seven delightful summers. Unlike Longfellow, he had felt
Clear the brown path, to meet his coulter's gleam!
drawn to Berkshire from the first, and is credited with hav
Lo! on he comes, behind his smoking team,
ing remarked: "The best of all tonics is the Housatonic."
With toil's bright dew-drops on his sunburnt brow,
Certainly the poems which Holmes composed during his
The lord of earth, the hero of the plough!
summers at Canoe Meadows drew much from rural life in
Berkshire-so much, in fact, that they prompted Longfel.
Still, where he treads, the stubborn clods divide,
low to observe: "Do you know, I see the Pittsfield farm in
The smooth, fresh furrow opens deep and wide;
your book,-not exactly 'hay in your hair,' but buckwheat
Matted and dense the tangled turf upheaves,
in your laurels, which I much delight to see. These blossoms
Mellow and dark the ridgy cornfield cleaves
from the roadside and odor of pennyroyal give a freshness
to poems which nothing else will. I hope one day to turn a
If her chained bandogs Faction shall unbind,
portion of the Housatonic-what runs over your dam above
These stately forms, that bending even now
-on to my mill wheels." 40
Bowed their strong manhood to the humble plough,
But Longfellow was never to carry out his intention of re-
Shall rise erect, the guardians of the land,
turning, and Holmes remained the reigning summer poet of
The same stern iron in the same right hand,
the Berkshire hills. "If you would be happy in Berkshire," he
Till o'er their hills the shouts of triumph run,
once wrote, "you must carry mountains in your brain," 41
The sword has rescued what the ploughshare won!
and he loved the mountains as he knew the sea-drawn Long-
fellow never could. With the characteristic enthusiasm of the
More homely. and local than Bryant's contributions, and it
proved the best-loved of all the odes written for the Fair;
39. Ibid., 2, 122. The Longfellows spent the summer of 1848 at Major
from that summer forward, neither Great Barrington's
Thomas Melvill's spacious summer resort Melvill Hall. It was later
Samuel B. Sumner 48 nor Pittsfield's William Pitt Palmer
renamed Broadhall and purchased by the Morewoods. Today the build-
ing serves as the nucleus of the clubhouse of the Pittsfield Country Club.
The Poetical Works of Oliver Wendell Holmes (Boston, 1900, have
40. Longfellow to Holmes, October 28, 1850, Final Memorials of
1st 42. ed. 1858), pp. 97-98. The inspiration for the ode appears to
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Samuel Longfellow (Boston, 1887),
been Herman Melville's uncle, Thomas Melvill.
p. 389.
During the 1850's Sumner delivered his poems on seven public for
41. Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table
occasions 43. in Berkshire, the most famous one being that composed
(Boston, 1895, 1st ed. 1858), p. 265.
the Stockbridge celebration to honor Cyrus Field in Aug. 1858. Sam-
343
342
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
was ever to challenge Holmes' position as Berkshire's OCC
For Holmes nearly every activity eventually had its turn
sional poet par excellence. With a generosity flowing from
during those unparalleled Berkshire summers. He rode most his
his boundless energy, he was to compose two poems for the
"little horse" on long pilgrimages through the hills,
ladies of St. Stephen's Episcopal church, another for the
often perhaps to Lenox to visit Dr. Neill or the Sedgwicks herself"
1850 dedication of the Pittsfield cemetery, and odes for the
and to admire Fanny Kemble-' "the tragedy queen those
Commencement of the Pittsfield Young Ladies' Institute
-and then he would return "once more up among
and for the Berkshire Horticultural Society 44_all this even
other hills that shut in the amber-flowing Housatonic-dark the
while his Autocrat and Elsie Venner 45 were in process of
but clear, like the lucid orbs that shine beneath
composition and while he was indulging his scientific facul
stream, of auburn-haired, sherry-wine-eyed demi-blondes
ties by working on electrical experiments. "I did not tell
lids This contemplation of Holmesdale and Canoe Meadows al-
you," he wrote to his mother in 1854, "that I had been at
most invariably stiffled all restraint, and he could write only
work with electricity as a part of my summer plan of in
in superlatives of:
structive amusements. The old machine is mounted on its
the home overlooking the winding stream and the
ancient footing, or rather, with new splendor, and gives
smooth, flat meadow; looked down upon by wild hills,
sparks an inch long.
I find that many of my old tastes
where the tracks of bears and catamounts may yet some-
return upon me whenever they get a chance; chemistry will
times be seen upon the winter snow; facing the twin
have its turn by and by, perhaps mineralogy and the rest of
summits which rise in the far north, the highest waves
them.' 46
of the great land-storm in all this billowy region,-sug-
gestive to mad fancies of the breasts of a half-buried and
uel B. and Charles A. Sumner, Poems by Samuel B. and Charles A.
Titaness, stretched out by a stray thunderbolt, forest
Sumner (New York, 1877), pp. 132, 134.
hastily hidden away beneath the leaves of the
Atlantic Cable Poem
that home where seven blessed summers were
Huzza! the magic cable's laid; and now, across the main,
passed, which stand in memory like the seven golden holy
Britannia hails her daughter fair, who answers back again:
candlesticks in the beatific vision of the
With lightning flash, through watery depths that roll and surge between,
47
Columbia's President responds to Britain's smiling Queen
dreamer
44. This latter ode, entitled "The New Eden," was first printed by
Henry Marsh in the Pittsfield newspaper-a concession granted by
his dark, unhappy portrait of Elsie Venner-a portrait and
Against this idyllic background Dr. Holmes was to draw
Holmes on condition that he be allowed corrections and be given one
hundred copies printed on note paper. After sixteen proofs had been
strangely in contrast with his own cheerful disposition Elsie
corrected, the poem finally appeared in the Berkshire County Eagle.
with the sun-drenched hillsides which he loved.48
Cf. J. E. A. Smith, The Poet among the Hills (Pittsfield, 1895), p. 146.
Venner, 49 in fact, came essentially from a grimly sober strain
45. The final contribution of the Holmes family to Berkshire culture
was to come many years later when Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., donated
47. 48. The town of Pigwacket Center in the novel would appear in
Holmes, Autocrat, pp. 244-45.
1,000 volumes from his father's library to the Berkshire Athenaeum.
several respects to be a fictionalized Pittsfield.
46. John T. Morse, Life and Letters of Oliver Wendell Holmes (2
49. Elsie Venner appeared serially in the Atlantic Monthly from Dec.
vols. Boston, 1896), 2, 280-81.
1859 through Apr. 1861.
344
Berkshire
The American Lake District
345
sion; in his nature which hated Calvinism with an instinctive
and not entirely by coincidence did it fall directly into pas
Holmes himself, clung in their anti-Calvinism to a solid com-
the main liberal theological stream of Berkshire fiction
mon sense and totally rejected such rampant enthusiasms
Mrs. "You see exactly what I wish to do," Holmes later wrote
as transcendentalism. "I am SO tired," Catharine had writ-
Stowe; "to write a story with enough of interest in it to
ten to Holmes in 1846, "of the little kernel of the transcen-
lar characters and incidents to attract a certain amount of
dentalists involved in a mass of elaborate shellwork-of the
of attention. Under cover of this to stir that mighty popu
glimmering of a few stars thro' a tangled thicket, of the
automatic agency in its relation to self-determination question 50
exaggeration of involvement, like wrapping a very small
Elsie Venner, as its author was the first to admit, was a
holiday gift in a series of hyeroglyphic papers, that it is a re-
for with a purpose. Dr. Holmes was proposing to slay once novel and
lief as well as a delight to have sound sense in sound plain
in all the despised dragon John Calvin and all his vestiges
English and graceful and poetic in the form in which it
nineteenth-century America. Profoundly convinced that
springs from the poet's head." 54
relations orthodox theology presented a hopelessly false view of the
Yet there was at least one writer in Berkshire in the early
of man to God, he set himself the task of
1850's whom the local Calvinistic theology neither depressed
with clinical matter-of-factness 51 into the unsympathetic probing
nor worried-a writer whose novels not only owed nothing
mad," doctrine of original sin. "Any decent person ought to
to Calvinism but who probably never recognized the ex-
maintained the Autocrat, "if he really holds such go
istence of theological questions. This was the astoundingly
opinions." 52
prolific historical romancer George Payne Rainsford James,
could Even in the 1850's the spiritual atmosphere of Berkshire
that gregarious and slightly eccentric Englishman who
Calvinism still do much to nourish in Holmes that strong anti-
lighted briefly in Stockbridge in 1851, wrote a few more of
Berkshire hills he discovered a Calvinism which far
he had brought with him from Boston. Among the
his best-selling novels there, and quite unconsciously con-
tributed to the Berkshire cultural tradition a little of the
from dead; and whether or not it actually provided the was
flamboyant romanticism of his indefatigable personality.
him tivation for Elsie Venner, it must, at least, have kept taut mo- in
He had first come to America in 1850, seeking a speedy re-
sented novel. Certainly Berkshire's religious atmosphere
of his that inborn indignation which was to be the mainspring
53. Like the Sedgwicks, the mass of Berkshirites opposed Emerson's
flight from orthodoxy. "They [the transcendentalists]," wrote Catharine,
a dramatic contrast to the enlightened theology pre- of
"seem to me a sort of darkling flight over earth, heaven and hell and
Cambridge which he knew. In Berkshire, too, he of
a
way
off
into
space.
It is not the first time a turbid stream has
been mistaken for a deep one" (C. Sedgwick to Jane Sedgwick, Mar. 6,
encountered the highly sympathetic Sedgwicks, who, course like
1842; Miscellaneous SP, Harvard). And Charles Sedgwick, who was
50. Sept. 13, 1860, in Morse, Life and Letters of Holmes, I, 263.
generally a good barometer of the Berkshire mind, and who was not
51. Throughout Holmes one of the summers in which he was working
at all unhappy in 1846 when the Fourieristic community Brook Farm
ing, book, he made kept in his home a caged rattlesnake; finding it fascinat- on the
was destroyed by fire, wrote to Sam Ward in March: "it is right that the
Morse, pains the writing to make the reptile vivid to the reader. spared Cf.
no in a careful study of its eyes, strikes, and habits, and
Lord should not smile on such an ill-devised Harem as that in the land
of the Pilgrims-that a house where men are 'to toil for heirs they know
Life and Letters of Holmes, I, 258.
not who should be burnt down" (Charles Sedgwick to Samuel G. Ward,
52. Holmes, Autocrat, p. 42.
Lenox, Mar. 16, 1846; SGW).
54. Nov. 14, 1846; Holmes Collection, Harvard Library.
347
346
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
covery from recent financial reverses through the expedient
contain. He had a large library of reference and other
of a whirlwind lecture tour and intending at the same time
works." 57
to fasten a wary eye on his American publisher. In June of
Hawthorne once loyally insisted that James' novels were
1851 he abruptly decided to rent the Ashburner house in
"admirable stories; admirably told," 58 and certainly Harper
Stockbridge, and after a year of healthy, outdoor life among
and Brothers had good reason to treat their endlessly produc- his
the hills, Evert Duyckinck could observe that "the American
tive novelist with anxious and kindly concern. During them
sun has much improved his countenance but he is still baggy
lifetime he produced ninety-one works,58 many of for an
and English in figure." 55
three-volume historical romances and many destined
Duyckinck might have remarked also that he was still in-
immediate ascent to high rank in the midcentury best-seller
curably English in his way of life; and with his box of snuff
list. "He turns out a novel every six months," observed James
5
and his indispensable red bandanna he presented a strangely
Harper to Thackeray, "and the success is always the same
incongruous appearance in the quiet village of Stockbridge.
and tremendous.
The main reason is that his romances
Insisting upon open grates and log fires in his sitting rooms,
always be safely placed upon the family table, with the the
he cultivated that peculiarly English talent for highly pro-
can certainty that no page will sully, or call 60 the blush to,
ductive activity concealed behind a façade of gentlemanly
cheek of any member of the household."
idleness. He would, according to his onetime friend and
Berkshirites, James might provoke amusement liked but
collaborator, Maunsell B. Field, spend every evening and
he Among never inspired either awe or withdrawal. They
morning "industriously pegging away at book-making, al-
him and accepted him with little hesitation, and he providen- serious
though to the casual observer he appeared to be the least
arrived in Stockbridge just in time to fill the Ward he
occupied man in the place. He never did any literary work
tially created by Sam Ward's departure. Like heartily
after eleven a.m. until evening. He was not accustomed to
vacancy a cheerful, social, outgoing man, possessed of a and
put his own hand to paper, when composing, but always em-
was convivial personality and bubbling over with anecdotes draw out
ployed an amanuensis. At this time he had in his service in
recollections; and like Ward, he could effortlessly Haw-
that capacity the brother of an Irish baronet, who spoke and
writers of shy or chilly natures-notably the reticent
wrote English, French, German, and Italian, and whom I
had procured for him at the modest stipend of five dollars a
57. T. Fields, Yesterdays with Authors (Boston, 1859), and p. a 63.
Ibid., pp. 203-4-
week." 56 And, recalled a later amanuensis, "He would walk
58. James Of these, seven were written in Berkshire in the year the Reign half
up and down in his library and dictate by sentences
59. was there: #75: Henry Smeaton, A Jacobite Story vols. of London,
he always kept a paper of snuff upon the table.
He had
James I, 3 vols. London, 1851; #76: The Fate, 3 Christian
a sketch of the plan and plot of the book in outline prepared
of George #77: in Graham's American Monthly Magazine (1851), Revenge,
before, and a very brief analysis of what each chapter would
1851; Justian and Theodora, A Sonnet to Jenny Lind; #78: The Clouds
Lacy, 1852; #79 (with Mauncell B. Field): Adrian, or London,
55. Luther S. Mansfield, "Glimpses of Melville's Life in Pittsfield,"
London, the Mind, 3 vols. London, 1852; #80: Pequinillo, 3 Landeck. vols.
American Literature, 9 (1937-38), 38. Letter of Evert Duycinck to his
of #81: in Harpers', June to Nov. 1852, The Bride of
wife, Aug. 7, 1851.
1852; 60. Stewart M. Ellis, The Solitary Horseman; or, The Life and Ad-
56. Field, Memories, p. 203.
ventures of G. P. R. James (Kensington, 1927), p. 134 n.
349
348
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
thorne, who so much needed and appreciated the healthy as
the Harriet Hosmer "in very tight yellow little
sociation of uncomplicated, sunny dispositions. In the gen
of breeches" young 65 delivering a comic lecture did seem a
tlemanly pursuit of agriculture, he never quite equaled
such events were readily offset by the eminently re-
Ward's vigorous activity, and his friend Maunsell Field had
bizarre, spectable presences of the "dear little Swedish 66 of spinster" Henry
to admit that "notwithstanding his long India rubber boots
Frederika Bremer summering with the Sedgwicks,6
and affectation of rustic attire, he was not a success as
a
Ward Beecher in Lenox for his annual pursuit of "cloud
farmer." 61 Still, he never tired of swamping on his damp
culture," and of Jenny Jerome, Ellen Emerson, school. Charlotte
little plot of land just to the north of Monument Mountain, 62
Cushman, and Lydia Saltonstall at Mrs. Sedgwick's and
Sam Ward, Fanny Kemble, and Catharine and Charles
unaware of this atmosphere of refinement gen-
Sedgwick, and James imparted to the midcentury villages
Not the rest of Berkshire was sometimes resentful and to some- his
of Lenox and Stockbridge an air of quiet distinction and a
tility, times only amused. Orville Dewey once extended us
brilliant if largely imported cultural life which set them off
a mildly satiric invitation to "descend upon wisdom,
even from the rest of Berkshire. The people of Lenox, com-
daughter the heights of Lenox-from the schools of comedy,
mented Lenox Academy's principal Mathew Buckham, were
from fiction and fine writing, from tragedy and
"elevated by education and refinement far above the rusticity
from mountain-mirrors reflecting all surrounding beauty,
SO characteristic of too much of our New England yeomanry,
from down to plain, prosaic still-life in Sheffield." 67 And ten years sar-
yet they do not aspire to the pomp of gay life, or the
afterward a correspondent in the Pittsfield Sun reported
pageantry of fashion." 63 Most of them, in fact, aspired only
that "the quagmire called Nigger Pond formerly crossed
to being themselves; and if the prospect of Fanny Kemble
donically in Great Barrington, has, according to the last survey,
dancing with Kossuth in the parlor of the Curtis Hotel 64 or
the line north into Stockbridge. It is now called few Agawam
61. Field, Memories, p. 203.
Lake." 68 Catharine Sedgwick had managed by a untactfully years
62. "Swamping" was a term applied to lumbering in swampy areas-
earlier to antagonize the citizenry of Pittsfield that "Pitts-
a practice then becoming widespread in those parts of New England
remarking in an article for Graham's Magazine the whole
being subjected to increased population pressure. This was probably
field is the metropolitan village of Berkshire and
the origin of the term "swamp Yankee"-hardly applicable to the aristo-
must yield to it in working day prosperities
cratic James.
County in refinement and rural beauty Pittsfield is inferior vil- we
63. Mathew Buckham, "Lenox as a Jungle for Literary Lions," Chap-
[but] think to some of our more secluded and unambitious Lenox
ter XI of Godfrey Greylock [J. E. A. Smith], Taghconic (Boston, 1852),
p. 95.
lages." 69 Thereafter, residents of Stockbridge and
64. J. T. Cutler, "The Literary Associations of Berkshire," New
England Magazine, new ser. 9 (1893), 3-22. Kossuth came to Berkshire
on that great war of opinion, which, I fear, will come only too soon"
in 1850 and caused a considerable stir, but a few Berkshirites, among
them Orville Dewey, feared that the new nationalism would eventually
(Dewey, Fanny Autobiography, Kemble to William pp. 226-27). Minot, Lenox, Dec. 22 (no year); MC.
cause general war. Dewey wrote to his enthusiastic daughter at Lenox
65. 66. H. D. Sedgwick, "Literary Berkshire," p. 566.
his belief that the United States must give Kossuth nothing more than
67. Dewey, Autobiography, p. 203.
favorable opinions: "Moral influence gradually changing the world, is
68. Pittsfield Sun, Aug. 18, 1859
what I want. But Kossuth and the Liberals of Europe want to bring
69. Reprinted in Pittsfield Sun, June 20, 1844-
351
350
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
learned to keep their feeling of conscious superiority to them
Parkhurst was never to forget his six-year pastorate in Lenox
selves, and Charles Sedgwick wisely restricted to his own, cor-
and the beauties of the Berkshire hills; and Gladden, after
respondence his pride in Lenox. "Please set it down to the
a in Williamstown, was to take precious time from his at-
credit of Lenox," he boasted privately "that it is the only
preaching year to write From the Hub to the Hudson-"an and
town in the county, and almost in the State, where a 'Know-
tempt to show people how and where they may cheaply
Nothing' representative was not elected; almost the only
pleasantly spend their few days of summer vacation.
town in the State, where a 'Know-Nothing' lodge has not
A book that helps anybody to see and enjoy the Connecticut
been formed." 70
Valley or the Berkshire Hills, will be likely to do less harm of
Perhaps, in reality, even the convivial Charles did not find
than a book about the Mode of Baptism or the Origin
the new refinement and busy cosmopolitanism of Lenox
Evil." 74
5
quite SO pleasantly restful as the old uninterrupted quiet
Pre-eminent among the rusticating clerics, however, had was
before the fame of Catharine and the conveniences of the
Beecher himself, who had come to Lenox in 1853, down
railroad had brought on the "press of population." "I have
bought John Hotchkin's farm there, 75 and had settled "The
become sadly hardened to the decencies of life," he confessed
comfortably for summers of leisurely contemplation.
to Sam Ward, "and have done little but dodge strangers
chief use of a farm, if it be well selected, and of a proper
when I could and breast myself to the shock when discerned
soil," he wrote, "is, to lie down upon. Mine is an excellent
in some lurking place 71 Yet when Fanny Kemble
farm for such uses, and I thus cultivate it every day. Large
returned from New York in 1858, she felt none of Charles'
are the consequence, of great delight and fancies more
reservations and rejoiced to "find both villages in a perfect
crops than the brain can hold. My industry is exemplary. Though
glory of dissipation-masquerades, private theatricals,--ba
but a week here, I have lain down more hours and in whole more
at the town hall and tea drinkings at the
72
than that hard-working brother of mine in the
And Catharine thought Lenox "at its culminating point of
places that he has dwelt here. Strange that industrious lying and
gaiety. Henry Ward Beecher begins the programme on Sun-
year down should come so naturally to me, and standing up
day with brilliant sermons and Rackemann closes the week
lazing about after the plow or behind his scythe, SO naturally and
with a 'successful soirée'
73
to him! My eyes against his feet!" 76 Like Parkhurst
No county ever found more enthusiastic publicists than
did Berkshire in Henry Ward Beecher and in those two
Washington Gladden, From the Hub to the Hudson did (Boston, his part
other distinguished clergymen Charles Parkhurst and Wash-
1869), publicist p. for the county by urging Bryant to "turn your of
74. iv. Berkshire's own cleric, Orville Dewey, also poetical
ington Gladden, who SO generously reported the charms of
as a to account by describing the beautiful ride up the valley the
Berkshire to the outside world. Even after settling in New
genius Housatonic and this our beautiful Berkshire" and to "request sum-
York to launch his famous crusade against Tammany, Dr.
the [Twenty-One] Club to meet at my house some day in the coming
mer" (Dewey, Autobiography, pp. 215-16).
70. Letters of Charles Sedgwick (New York, 1863), p. 147.
The $4,000 purchase price of the farm had been raised for Beecher 1853;
71. Sept. 6, 1853; SGW.
by 75. his Brooklyn parishioners. Lenox Church Records, Sept. 1,
72. To Kate Minot, 1858; MC.
typescript, p. 383.
73. To Anna Barker Ward, Aug. 14, 1854; SGW.
76. Beecher, "Dream-Culture," Star Papers, P 268.
353
352
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
Gladden, Beecher felt moved to spread his doctrine of the
Berkshire graveyards inspired not triumphant his contempt first trip but to
good life in Berkshire as far beyond the mountain barriers as
a grim fascination with Nathaniel death Hawthorne and decay. On had prowled curi-
he could, and it was with this thought in mind that he first
Berkshire into in the tomb of the Thomas Allen family in the the white Pitts-
1838
began work on his Star Papers. He intended, he said, "to urge
those who can command leisure in September or October
ously field cemetery and had noted with morbid interest discover
avoiding all beaten paths of pleasure, to make a tour
mold the coffins, and twelve years later he was to
through the mountain country of western Connecticut and
on preoccupation with the sight of an old decaying along
Massachusetts. If you are young, and not abundant in means,
a wood strange pile near his cottage. Much of what he saw, his
and can get a friend to accompany you, go afoot. If you are
whatever reflections those sights inspired during into his
able, go on horseback. If you wish to take your wife, your
with months in Lenox, eventually found its way and trans-
mother, or a sister, then a light, four-wheeled, covered buggy
eighteen notebooks, there to await a possible resurrection
is to be elected." 77
formation in the pages of some future story or romance.
Yet Beecher knew enough of the New England mind to
Always a restless wanderer, Hawthorne had because brought he knew his
realize that a mere prescription for summer loafing and day
family to Berkshire in June of 1850, partly in Salem as Sur-
dreaming was not enough unless it be justified for the
Puritan conscience, and to that conscience he spoke next
nowhere of the Port; Mrs. Caroline Tappan had 80 kindly nominal
else to go. He had lost his job offered
Rusticating, he wrote in words reminiscent of Bryant's ap-
veyor him the use of her little red cottage in Lenox.80 at a
preciation of nature, "if it gives great delight, if it keeps the
and perhaps he felt he owed to Sophia and to Una cents and
soul awake, sweet thoughts alive, and sordid thoughts dead
rate; Julian this temporary security. "We give only wrote three happily of a
Sophia
soon
if it be like a bath to the soul, in which it washes away
the grime of human contacts
it will have answered a
quart household for best economics, of milk "Butter is fourteen cents a pound, and at
purpose which is in vain sought among stupid convention-
the most superb buckwheat at half the price we gave
alities." 78 Even the thought of death became more endur-
the East." 81
able in Lenox with the comforting prospect of burial in the
Hawthorne himself found relative happiness in Lenox, had at
graveyard on the hill. "No dark and sickly fogs ever gather at
for the first few months. The Salem Customs House
evening about it. It lies nearer heaven than any place about.
least him physically tired, The Scarlet Letter had enervated and the
It is good to have our mortal remains go upward for their
left his spiritual resources, and he needed the relaxation With
burial, and catch the earliest sounds of that trumpet which
outdoor life which Berkshire could give him. his
shall raise the dead!" 79
vigorous Una and Julian he cultivated his fruit trees and corn
1841?
patch and observed the chickens in his "sumptuous" the hennery "self-
Three years before Beecher's arrival in Lenox, another
-especially the "laughably womanish" ways and
very different visitor had sojourned there-a visitor in whom
80. The cottage actually stood two hundred yards inside the Stock-
77. Idem, "A Country Ride," Star Papers, p. 175.
bridge border, but mail always came to Lenox.
78. Idem, Star Papers, p. 269.
79. Ibid., p. 180.
Nathaniel 81. Hawthorne and His Wife (2 vols. Boston, 1885), I,
Sophia to her mother, June 23, 1850, in Julian Hawthorne, 371.
355
354
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
important gait" of his favorite speckled hen. 82 "We are get-
months he almost never failed to walk every day to the Lenox
ting along very well," he wrote contentedly to his friend
post office and thus to make an acquaintance with the coun-
Bridge at summer's end. "Una and Julian grow apace, and
tryside nearly as intimate as Bryant's and Ward's. His note-
so do our chickens, of which we have two broods.
We
books for 1850 and 1851 are full of those walks on the Lenox
have become so intimately acquainted with every individual
roads. Among the finest testaments ever written to the
e
of them, that it really seems like cannibalism to think of eat-
beauty of the Berkshire hills, they rank with Bryant's poems
ing them. What is to be done?" 83
and with Melville's prose idylls. Yet for Hawthorne, the
The problem, however, did not weigh heavily on his mind,
feeling toward Berkshire was one of admiration rather than
and he gave himself over to the delights of outdoor life with
of that deep attachment felt by Ward and Holmes, and it
rare openheartedness and abandon. He climbed one of Berk-
was the majesty of the distant scene-of Monument Moun-
7
shire's miniature mountains with Sophia in "mellow au-
tain, Taconic Dome, and Rattlesnake Hill-which most often
tumnal sunshine"; he fished and boated with Julian in a
caught and held his eye. He might write occasionally in his
leaky punt; he went sledding with the children on crisp
notebook of a wasp or a chickadee or a clump of violets, but in
winter afternoons. And nearby "Tanglewood" glen lured
these were phenomena he could find quite as readily
him out to muse and ramble in every season-in midsum-
Salem or in Concord, and they could never excite in his won-
mer a dense, shadowy obscurity, in October "absolutely full
dering mind the same interest as the variations and seasonal
of sunshine." "The trees are sunshine, and many of their
changes of the distant hills.
golden leaves being freshly fallen, the glen is strewn with
Melville was to swear fealty to Greylock; Hawthorne, to
sunshine, amid which winds and gurgles the bright, dark
Monument Mountain. From the second-floor study of his
little brook." 84 No wonder Hawthorne could suddenly find
red cottage he could look across his lake in every season to
his soul SO full of sunlight that he composed the Wonder-
that remarkable expanse of greenery and crumbling marble
Book-admittedly not a major work but certainly among
rising 1,400 feet into the air-in August "in the early sun- in
the most relaxed and cheerful sketches he ever wrote.
shine; its base enveloped in mist," looking like an island
Whatever the weather, he would never miss the short
the sky; 86 in October "the foliage having its autumn hues
daily trip to Luther Butler's for milk, and in Butler he
like a headless sphinx, wrapt in a rich Persian shawl"; in
discovered, as Sam Ward had earlier, a man of striking in-
February "black and shaggy"; and in May responding 87 "with
tegrity and earthly wisdom-in short, the embodiment of
livelier effect to the shine and shade of the sky."
the noble Berkshire yeoman.85 And during those same
Yet most of these observations were destined to remain
82. Hawthorne, American Notebooks, p. 130.
buried in his notebooks-never to be resurrected anywhere
83. Hawthorne to Bridge, Aug. 7, 1850, in Horatio Bridge, Personal
in his creative works-and the atmosphere of Berkshire was
Recollections of Nathaniel Hawthorne (London, 1893), p. 138.
to prove, at last, not SO much an inspiration as a relaxation.
84. Hawthorne, American Notebooks, p. 133.
85. Both of the Hawthornes appreciated, though with a slight air
capable of appreciating you and him from a native honor and tone of
of condescension, Luther Butler. Sophia wrote Anna Ward: "I had
high feeling born with him" (Lenox, Mar. 23, 1851; SGW).
a good talk with Luther Butler today. What a noble nature he has. It
86. Hawthorne, American Notebooks, p. 131.
is delightful to hear him speak of you and Mr. Ward. He really seems
87. Ibid., pp. 132, 134, 138.
356
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
357
The long walks and the happy hours of leisure did bring a
two romances have met with there. She says they have made
genuine re-creation of his artistic powers; but unlike the
a greater sensation than any book since 'Jane Eyre'; but prob-
young and still uncertain Melville, Hawthorne had achieved
ably she is a little or a good deal too emphatic in her repre-
his ultimate creative potentiality before he came to Lenox
sentation of the matter.
I am going to begin to enjoy
and he was no longer groping for any answers that the Berk
the summer now, and to read foolish novels, if I can get any,
shire surroundings could provide: The idea for The House
and smoke cigars, and think of nothing at all; which is
of the Seven Gables had its roots, of course, in his native
equivalent to thinking of all manner of things." 91 Among
Salem, and he carried it with him to Lenox nearly formed
other things during that summer and fall he was to think
The first summer there gave him leisure for planning, but in
about The Blithedale Romance-and to "seize the skirts of
September, although he had begun to write, he felt obliged
ideas and pin them down for further investigation," 92 as
to warn publisher Fields: "I shan't have the new story ready
was his wont in summertime.
by November, for I am never good for anything in the
By fall the feeling of depression was again descending on
literary way till after the first autumnal frost, which has some
him--a feeling brought on partly by a climate he found in-
what such an effect on my imagination that it does on the
creasingly oppressive and partly by the growing difficulty
foliage here about me,-multiplying and brightening its
of securing solitude at the red cottage. He was not, by na-
hues; though they are likely to be sober and shabby enough
ture, a thoroughgoing recluse, but at Lenox, as at Salem
after all." 88 The autumnal frost of 1850 must have been a
and at Concord, he discovered only a few people whom he
particularly salutary one, for on January 26, 1851, he car-
sincerely enjoyed and multitudes who thrust themselves
ried the final pages of his manuscript to the Lenox post of-
upon him against his will. All too soon the Lenox cottage
fice.
became a kind of shrine to which "secret criminals" and
By the following summer he was beginning to tire, and
"spiritual invalids" 93 came in search of soul-massaging at
perhaps Berkshire had already begun to lose something of its
the hands of the now famous author of The Scarlet Letter
original fascination. "The truth is," he wrote to sister Louisa,
and on which a few intruded merely to catch a glimpse of the
"the pen is so constantly in my fingers that I abominate the
great man's face.
sight of it." 89 Still, he had almost completed in a little over
Occasionally, too, Hawthorne's inherent reticence de-
a month "a book of two or three hundred pages for children,
prived him of associations which he might well have come
and I think it stands a chance of a wide circulation
90
to enjoy. The Charles Sedgwicks made every effort to be
This was the Wonder-Book and brought an end to his Berk-
kind during the first summer; and Sophia, at least, felt a
shire productivity. It also brought to an end, at least tem-
deep gratitude for their generosity. "The truest friendliness
porarily, his depression of a few days earlier, and by July
is the great characteristic of the Sedgwick family in all its
15 he was writing contentedly to Fields: "Mrs. Kemble
branches," she had written her mother in August. "They
writes very good accounts from London of the reception my
91. Fields, Hawthorne, p. 34.
88. James T. Fields, Hawthorne (Boston, 1871), p. 28.
92. Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, Memories of Hawthorne (Boston,
89. Julian Hawthorne, Hawthorne and His Wife, I, 408.
1897), p. 130.
90. Horatio Bridge, Recollections of Hawthorne, p. 141.
93. Hawthorne, Hawthorne and His Wife, I, 358.
358
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
359
seem to delight to make happy, and they are as happy as
pile of history and romance. Longfellow, I believe, is
of my being comfortable." 94 But even four months later
summer days themselves. They really take the responsibility
not yet at the Ox-bow, else the winged horse would
Charles Sedgwick was writing to Sam Ward: "Of the Haw-
neigh at the sight of him. But, here in Lenox, I should
find our most truthful novelist, who has made the scen-
thornes we know nothing, I have made three or four calls
there, five or six- Hawthorne has never been here but once
ery and life of Berkshire all her own. On the hither side
of Pittsfield sits Herman Melville, shaping out the
wife when he was specially invited to spend the day. But my
is indefatigible." 95
gigantic conception of his 'White Whale,' while the
gigantic shape of Greylock looms upon him from his
willingly to only a very few. The James Russell Lowells andi
Hawthorne, in fact, opened the door of the red cottage
study-window. Another bound of my flying steed would
bring me to the door of Holmes, whom I mention
the biographer, Joel T. Headley, stopped to see him in Sep-
last, because Pegasus would certainly unseat me, the next
tember; Fanny Kemble would ride up whenever she was in
minute, and claim the poet as his rider.98
the Berkshire to converse "in heroic phrases with the inmates of
and red house" or to snatch up young Julian "the Apostate"
Whatever the uncertainties in Hawthorne's feeling toward
R. gallop away with him on her large black horse; and G.P
Melville, there is no reason to think his tribute to him any
James excellent man and his wife a plain, good
less sincere. The two men had met on August 5, 1850-per-
kind-hearted woman"--could offer just the kind of
haps the most fruitful and significant meeting in the history
cheerful, undemanding, uncomplicated friendship that Haw-
of American letters. In a railroad car rumbling up the
thorne most desired. But even with the jovial James he could
Housatonic from New York City, the distinguished attorney
not always conquer diffidence, and once even hid like
David Dudley Field, en route to his summer home in Stock-
"frightened schoolboy" when James and Maunsell Field a
bridge, encountered editor Evert Duyckinck, on his way to
presented themselves at the front door.97 Yet, like
visit Melville at Pittsfield, and together they arranged a
another shy man, he could become bolder on paper than many he
rendezvous. Duyckinck, a friend of both Melville and Haw-
of ever dared to be in reality, and he left it to Eustace Bright
thorne, agreed to bring Melville to Stockbridge on August
the Wonder-Book to pay his tribute to Berkshire writers:
5 for an all-day outing at Monument Mountain, and Field
I wish I had Pegasus here.
promised to take care of the rest. Invitations were quickly
forthwith, and gallop about the country, within a cir-
I would mount him
98. Nathaniel Hawthorne, A Wonder-Book for Girls and Boys (Bos-
cumference of a few miles, making literary calls on
ton and New York, 1883, 1st ed. 1851), p. 196. Pittsfield's poet, William
brother-authors. Dr. Dewey would be within my reach, my.
Pitt Palmer, called the Berkshire of the 1850's an idyllic era in Berk-
at the foot of Taconic. In Stockbridge, yonder, is Mr.
shire-in an interlude between the ruggedness of the "Stump Age"
James, conspicuous to all the world on his mountain-
and the bustle of the urban. In 1885, Holmes wrote a Pittsfield friend
lamenting the urbanization of the town: "such a beautiful, healthful,
94. Lathrop, Memories of Hawthorne, pp. 130-31.
central situation could not resist its destiny, and you must have a mayor,
95. Charles Sedgwick to S. G. Ward, Dec. 29, 1850; SGW.
I suppose, by and by, and a common council, and a lot of aldermen.
96. Hawthorne, American Notebooks, p. 232.
But you cannot lose the sight of Greylock, nor turn the course of the
97. Field, Memories, p. 205.
Housatonic" (J. T. Morse, Holmes, I, 201).
360
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
361
his Mathews and Joel T. Headley, to editor J. T. Fields and
issued-to Hawthorne and Dr. Holmes, to Cornelius
ant's Monument Mountain and a toast to "the dear old
nd
bride, and to Field's daughter Jenny and her enthusiastic
poet"; and then Hawthorne, in rare high spirits, was off
ut
again, lurking behind the dark edges of the Ice-Glen and
h's
and best-nearly every trace of shyness and moodiness
young escort Henry D. Sedgwick, Jr. Hawthorne was at his
shouting threats of certain destruction on the whole party. 101
ot
ro
Duyckinck reported delightedly to his wife on the gone- out-
Two days later, still full of enthusiasm, he was writing to
he
come of the plotted meeting:
Bridge: "Duyckinck, of the Literary World, and Herman
Melville are in Berkshire, and I expect them to call here
ns
As we scrambled over the rocks at the summit a black
this morning. I met Melville the other day, and liked him
uc
thunder cloud from the south dragged its ragged edges
SO much that I have asked him to spend a few days with me
al
talked toward us-the thunder rolling in the distance. They
before leaving these parts." 102 They came the next morn-
it of shelter and shelter there proved to be though
ing and found Hawthorne's little corner of Lenox "one of
75
looked unpromising; but these difficulties, like others,
the most purely beautiful spots in the region.
Haw-
vanish on trials and a few feet of rock with a damp un-
thorne gave us some Heidsieck which a literary friend had
lisher derground of mosses and decay actually sheltered pub-
presented to him, popping the corks in his nervous
"
Fields curled whiskers, his patent leathers and his
way
103 Thereafter, Melville came often to the red cot-
bride's delicate blue silk. Dr. Holmes cut three branches
tage, and Hawthorne opened his door hospitably to him as
for an umbrella and uncorked the champagne, which
he had done to few others among his Berkshire neighbors.
was drunk from a silver mug. The rain did not do its
Una and Julian adored "Mr. Omoo," rode on his big New-
worst and we scattered over the cliffs, Herman Melville
foundland dog, and listened wide-eyed to his fabulous stories
low to seat himself, the boldest of all astride a projecting
of the South Sea Islands; and Sophia, with keen penetration,
cliffs stick of rock while Dr. Holmes peeped about the
recognized in him "A man with a true, warm heart, and a
and protested it affected him like ipecac. Haw-
soul and an intellect,-with life to his finger-tips
and I
thorne looked wildly about for the great carbuncle.
am not sure that he is not a very great man." 104
Mathews read Bryant's poem. The exercise was glori-
Sophia was to think still more highly of Melville when she
ous.
discovered him to be that anonymous critic-"so fearless, SO
rich in heart, of such fine intuition"--who had written in the
Mathews was later to catch the "glorious" mood even bet-
Literary World high praise of Mosses from an Old Manse. 105
ter. "Higher, higher up we go," he exclaimed in retrospect,
Hawthorne, meanwhile, was just beginning to read Mel-
"stealing glances through the trees at the country under-
101. Fields, Yesterdays with Authors, p. 53.
At ing in every direction like sparks among the bushes." 100
neath; off rambling, scrambling, climbing, rhyming,-puns fly,
102. Hawthorne to Bridge, Aug. 7, 1850, in Bridge, Recollections of
Hawthorne, p. 137.
the top, they paused for a rest and for a reading of Bry-
103. Duyckinck to his wife, Aug. 9, 1850, in Mansfield, "Glimpses of
Melville's Life," p. 34.
99. 100. Aug. 6, 1850, in Mansfield, "Glimpses of Melville's Life,"
104. Sophia to her mother, Sept. 4, 1850, in Lathrop, Memories of
Cornelius Mathews, "Several Days in Berkshire," Literary World, p. 30.
Hawthorne, p. 135.
Aug. 24, 1850.
105. Sophia Hawthorne to E. Duyckinck, Aug. 29, 1850, in Jay Leyda,
The Melville Log (2 vols. New York, 1951), I, 391.
362
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
363
ville's works "with a progressive appreciation of the author
No writer ever put the reality before his reader more un
Melville continued to haunt the red cottage, and in March,
'Mardi' flinchingly than he does in 'Redburn,' and 'White Jacket
Hawthorne, who rarely visited anyone else in Berkshire,
a reader to swim for his life. It is SO good that one scarcely
is a rich book with depths here and there that compel
brought Una with him for two days at Arrowhead. The two
men sought out the barn both for seclusion and as a refuge
pardons the writer for not having brooded long over it, so
from the weather, and there they smoked and talked meta-
as to make it a great deal better." 106 Probably the
physics by the hour, Hawthorne seated on a carpenter's
ship
between
relation
bench and Melville sprawled in the hay. They must be sure,
complete Hawthorne and Melville represented the most
remarked Hawthorne, to commemorate the occasion by pub-
his meeting of minds that either experienced during
lifetime-a meeting leading not merely to philosophical
lishing "A Week on a Work-Bench in a Barn." The same
Perhaps the main basis for this profound rapport between
dialogue but to deep friendship and mutual understanding
carefree spirit evidently continued throughout the spring,
and in June Melville was insisting that "we-that is, you and
the two lay in their common concern for the darker human
I-must hit upon some little bit of vagabondism before au-
depths-depths which Melville had quickly recognized in
tumn comes. Greylock-we must go and vagabondize
self: Hawthorne and had thus unconsciously revealed also in him-
there." 108 Instead, they settled in August for a trip to Leba-
non with Evert and George Duyckinck to see the Shakers.
In that same month, Hawthorne, still tolerably cheerful,
There is a certain tragic phase of humanity [he wrote]
was recording in his notebook: "a cavalier on horseback
which, in our opinion, was never more powerfully em-
[came along the road, and] saluted me in Spanish; to which
bodied than by Hawthorne. We mean the tragicalness
I replied by touching my hat, and went on with the news-
of human thought in its own unbiassed, native, and pro-
paper. But the cavalier renewing his salutation, I regarded
founder workings. We think that into no recorded mind
him more attentively, and saw that it was Herman Mel-
has the intense feeling of the visible truth ever en-
ville!
After supper
Melville and I had a talk
tered more deeply than into this man's. By visible
about time and eternity, things of this world and of the
truth, we mean the apprehension of the absolute con-
next, and books, and publishers, and all possible and impos-
dition of present things as they strike the eye of the
sible matters, that lasted pretty deep into the night
109
to him.
man who fears them not, though they do their worst
It was such lengthy talks as these with Hawthorne that gave
There is the grand truth about Nathaniel
to Melville the spiritual reinforcement he SO much needed
Hawthorne. He says No! in thunder; but the Devil
for Moby Dick. "If ever, my dear Hawthorne," he wrote in
himself cannot make him say yes. For all men who
June, "in the eternal times that are to come, you and I shall
yes, lie; and all men who say no,-why, they are in the say
sit down in Paradise, in some little shady corner by our-
happy condition of judicious, unincumbered travellers
selves
then, O my dear fellow mortal, how shall we
in Europe; they cross the frontiers into Eternity with
pleasantly discourse of all the things manifold which now SO
nothing but a carpet-bag,-that is to say, the Ego. 107
106. To E. Duyckinck, Aug. 29, 1850, in Leyda, I, 391.
108. To Hawthorne, June 22, 1851, in Mansfield, "Glimpses of Mel-
107. Ibid., I, 410.
ville's Life," p. 46.
109. Hawthorne, American Notebooks, p. 220.
g
364
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
365
distress us,-when all the earth shall be but a reminiscence
mind like Melville's such companionship could come only
yea, its final dissolution an antiquity." 110
rarely, and in his eagerness to realize it fully, it seemed in-
ut
is
Yet by the fall, Hawthorne's feeling of depression had ex
evitable that he should ask too much. Himself willing to
ot
tended even to his relations with Melville. The powerful
[give everything to the relationship, his demands on the man
ro
intellect and the penetrating eyes suddenly only wearied
he idealized could only be excessive. He wanted both friend
he
and oppressed him, and the easy-going companionship of
and father-confessor, and Hawthorne, by nature a reserved
James came to seem infinitely preferable. Even in the late
and solitary figure, had already given all he could-more,
ns
spring, he had begun to show signs of restlessness, and un-
perhaps, than he had ever given to another man.
1C
der the seemingly inevitable monotony of too much rustica
In respect to length of residence, Melville was to be more
al
tion had written to Longfellow: "I mean to come to Boston
truly a Berkshirite than Ward or Holmes; yet each of them,
75
in a month or two. I need to smell the sea-breeze and dock
within the space of a few months, had managed to become a
mud, and to tread pavements. I am comfortable here, and as
more intimate part of the local scene than Melville ever
happy as mortal can be; but sometimes my soul gets into a
managed to become in all the years he lived there. The fail-
ferment, as it were, and becomes troublous and bubblous
ure to integrate, however, came not SO much from deliberate
with too much peace and rest." 111 By July his growing dis-
choice, as it had with Hawthorne, as from an eccentricity in
content was bubbling over unrestrainedly, at least in the
his personal outlook which grew more pronounced with
privacy of his notebook: "This is a horrible, horrible, most
every year of spiritual solitude. At first, that "promoter of
hor-ri-ble climate; one knows not, for ten minutes together
universal happiness," Mrs. Sarah Morewood, had welcomed
whether he is too cool or too warm; but he is always one or
him delightedly into her social orbit. In the one-time Melvill
the other; and the constant result is a miserable disturbance
Hall adjoining Arrowhead she and her husband gathered
of the system. I detest it! I detest it!! I detest it!!! I hate Berk-
around them as many of the local literary élite as they could
shire with my whole soul, and would joyfully see its moun-
muster-a perfect "maelstrom of hospitality" 113 Mel-
tains laid flat
here, where I hoped for perfect health,
ville played the part of bon vivant with a flourish. He loved
I have for the first time been made sensible that I cannot with
the picnics on Constitution Hill or at the edge of Lake
impunity encounter nature in all her moods." 112
Pontoosuc, the overnight outings on Greylock, the frequent
In November, unable to live with his own dissatisfac-
musicales; and he would spend long afternoons and evenings
tions any longer, Hawthorne abandoned the little red cot-
in the excellent Morewood library.
tage for good, and Melville was left spiritually alone. He
But the Melville who firmly refused to "believe in a Tem-
was to remain in Berkshire ten years longer and was never
perance Heaven," 114 who cheerily bade Hawthorne "have
again to find SO intimate and sympathetic a companion as
ready a bottle of brandy," 115 and who blatantly accused the
he had found in Hawthorne. For a brooding and restless
local clerics of peddling round "indulgences from divine or-
110. Eleanore Melville Metcalf, Herman Melville, Cycle and Epicycle
113. E. Duyckinck to his wife, Aug. 13, 1851, in Leyda, I, 425.
(Cambridge, 1953), p. 108.
114. Melville to Hawthorne, June 1, 1851, in Hawthorne, Hawthorne
111. May 18, 1851, in Life of Longfellow, 2, 208.
and His Wife, p. 403.
112. Hawthorne, American Notebooks, p. 215.
115. Idem, June 29, 1851, ibid., p. 400.
pg
367
366
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
dinations," 116 was not destined for lasting social success in
and with Smith, Melville took long cross-country tramps
puritanical Pittsfield. John Morewood would not tolerate
-to the Hopper, to Balanced Rock in Lanesboro, and to
impieties, and even as early as the fall of 1851 Mrs. More
tiny Ashley Pond high on Hoosac Mountain. Himself a
man of limited literary talents, Smith functioned admirably
ero
wood was writing to George Duyckinck: "It is a pity that
Mr. Melville SO often in conversation uses irreverent lan
(as the common denominator between local and imported
the
guage-he will not be popular in society here on that very
culture, and through his untiring intercessions Melville's
account-but this will not trouble him- I think he cares
works were assured ample publicity in the Berkshire press.
ins
Still, Mrs. Morewood was right in assuming that Melville
uc
very little as to what others may think of him or his books
cal
SO long as they sell well
I laughed at him somewhat
cared little for the opinions of the world; and eventually, he
and told him that the recluse life he was leading made hi
came to feel an attachment for the land in Berkshire sur-
75
city friends think that he was slightly insane-The replied
passing any personal attachment there, excepting only that
that long ago he came to the same conclusion himself but if
with Hawthorne. Paradoxically enough, neither Longfellow
he left home to look after Hungary the cause in hunger
nor Hawthorne-both born and bred on the land-could
would suffer." 117
ever feel SO deep a love for inland Berkshire as did Melville,
In reality, Melville was not quite the hopeless recluse that
the seaman who had sailed SO many months before the mast.
Mrs. Morewood thought him. Dr. Holmes at least neither
Both of them went hurrying back to the smell of the sea and
regarded him as insane nor was shocked by his heterodox
left it to Melville to discern with a sailor's eye the funda-
theology, and once engaged him in a discussion of East In-
mental unity of nature and her moods. 121 "I have a sort
of
dian religions and mythologies which, according to the
sea-feeling here in the country," he wrote to Duyckinck,
omnipresent Maunsell Field, "lasted for hours.
I never
"now that the ground is covered with snow. I look out of my
heard better talking in my life
we took no note of time
window in the morning when I rise as I would out of a port-
and the Doctor lost his dinner as we lost ours." 118 Nor
was
hole I
of a ship in the Atlantic. My room seems a ship's cabin,
Holmes the only Pittsfield resident whom Melville's theo+
and at nights when I wake up and hear the wind shrieking,
logical eccentricities could not alienate. Both the engineer
almost fancy there is too much sail on the house, and I had
is
and part-time littérateur John E. Hoadley 119 and the poet
better go on the roof and rig in the chimney." 122 And in
historian Joseph E. A. Smith 120 remained steadfast friends,
summertime, he could imagine his piazza a quarterdeck:
116. Herman Melville, "The Lightning Rod Man," The Complete
sitting here, one is often reminded of the sea. For not
Stories of Herman Melville, ed. Jay Leyda (New York, 1949), p. 221.
only do long ground-swells roll the slanting grain, and
117. Dec. 28, 1851, in Mansfield, "Glimpses of Melville's Life," P. 48;
little wavelets of the grass ripple over upon the low
118. Field, Memories, p. 202.
piazza, as their beach, and the blown down of dandelions
119. Hoadley was to marry Melville's sister, Catherine, in 1853.
120. Smith arranged concerts for Burbank Hall, was editor of the
121. Melville did escape from Berkshire for two long sea voyages, but
Berkshire County Eagle for a time, and under the pseudonym "God-
both times he returned to Arrowhead.
frey Greylock" wrote several books on Berkshire legends and Berkshire
122. Melville to Duyckinck, Dec. 12, 1850, in Meade Minnigerode,
literary society, and with his excellent History of Pittsfield emerged as
Some Personal Letters of Herman Melville and a Bibliography (New
one of the leading local historians of his time.
Haven, 1922), p. 71.
369
368
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
is wafted like the spray, and the purple of the mountain
fire-then spread my MSS. on the table-take P. one M.
is just the purple of the billows, and a still August noon
my business squint at it, and fall to with a will. At 2-1/2
broods upon the deep meadows, as a calm upon the
I hear a preconcerted knock at my door, which (by which re-
Line; but the vastness and the lonesomeness are SO oce
quest) seems to wean me effectively from my writing,
continues till I rise and go to the door, however
anic, and the silence and the sameness, too, that the first
peep of a strange house, rising beyond the trees, is for
interested I may be.
all the world like spying, on the Barbary coast, an un-
My friends the horse and cow demand their dinner-and
known sail. 123
I and give it them. My own dinner over, I rig for my the
sleigh go and with my mittens and rubbers start off is the
Farming, however, he would readily admit possessed its
village-and if it be a "Literary World" day, great
unromantic aspects, and "no man by that means accumulates
satisfaction thereof.
a fortune from this thin and rocky soil." 124 Indeed, in June
of 1851 he was already complaining to Hawthorne: "but see
Neither Catharine Sedgwick nor Dr. Holmes nor Sam or
my hand! four blisters on this palm, made by hoes and ham-
ever knew the Berkshire countryside SO intimately Melville.
mers within the last few days." 125 Yet he felt stifled by the
Ward expressed that knowledge SO eloquently as did he had pur-
city and probably more than once during his time in New
York "mounted [his] green jacket and strolled down to the
Within Field's History of Berkshire 128 for use as a guidebook three-
a fortnight of his arrival in Pittsfield,
Battery to study the stars"; 126 and bitterly though he might
chased with his brother Robert,129 had embarked on a he
complain of hardships and of persistent duns, he evidently
and, tour through southern Berkshire. Thereafter, country
found the regularity of his farm routine preferable to the un-
day wagon tired of taking long hikes into the hilly of the
certainties of the city life from which he had come:
never grew north or of admiring the autumn brilliance later
of the and he was to fill his letters to Duyckinck and "It
I rise at eight-thereabouts-and go to my barn-say
foliage, stories with sensitive descriptions of the countryside. wrote to
good morning to the horse and give him his breakfast.
his a most glowing and Byzantine day-" he hues of
(It goes to my heart to give him a cold one, but it can't
has Duyckinck been that first fall, "the heavens reflecting heavens the them-
be helped.) Then, pay a visit to my cow-cut up a pump-
October apples in the orchard-nay, the harvest-home
kin or two for her, and stand by to see her eat it-for it's
the looking SO ripe and ruddy, that it must be Saddle-
a pleasant sight to see a cow move her jaws-she does it
selves with the angels, and Charles' Wain be heaped high as
SO mildly and with such a sanctity.
My own breakfast over, I go to my workroom and light
127. Idem, Dec. 12, 1850, in Minnigerode, Some Personal Letters,
123. Melville, "The Piazza," Complete Short Stories of Melville, p.
pp.
70-71. in Chester Dewey's section on Berkshire Natural History Tree
440.
that 128. Melville It was found inspiration for his short story The Apple
124. Melville, Israel Potter, His Fifty Years of Exile (New York,
1855), p. 10.
Table or Robert Original was Spiritual chairman Manifestations. of the Viewing Committee of the Berkshire writer of
125. Melville to Hawthorne, June 1851, in Leyda, I, 412.
126. Melville to E. Duyckinck, Mar. 7, 1850; Duyckinck Collection,
Agricultural 129. Society, and Herman was later Gazette. to be the ghost
NYPL.
his report in the Berkshire Culturist and
371
370
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
back with Autumn's sheaves. You should see the maples
the silent grass-growing mood in which a man ought
you should see the young perennial. pines-the red blazing
ness, always to compose" 133_imparted no placid contentment to
of the one contrasting with the painted green of the others
feverish brain creating Captain Ahab. On the contrary, Melville
and the wide flushings of the autumn are harmonizing [both
the the book proceeded from a mind possessed; it was, as
I tell you that sunrises and sunsets grow side by side in these
said Hawthorne, "broiled in hellfire."
woods, and momentarily moult in the falling leaves. 180
Of to those Berkshirites who read Moby Dick, many no doubt
Three years later he was to christen the rounded hill two
agreed with critics who pronounced it either incomprehen- the one
miles southwest of Arrowhead October Mountain "on ac
sible or impossible. From Lenox, however-from letter
count of its bannered aspect in that month." 131
for whose opinion Melville really cared-came a is in
But deep though Melville's attachment to Berkshire was
man of appreciation. "A sense of unspeakable security "on
destined always to remain, his life among the hills hardly
me warm at this moment," he wrote gratefully to Hawthorne, would
touched Moby Dick at all. The hints of a rural existence were
account of your having understood the book.
I
later to reveal themselves at least superficially in Pierre and
down and dine with you and all the Gods in old Rome's Haw-
more than superficially in many of his stories, but Moby Dick
sit Pantheon." Had the meeting between Melville and
had progressed beyond the reach of passive external influ-
thorne in Berkshire never occurred, Moby Dick would On prob- the
ences before Melville reached his decision to settle in Pitts-
have been a different and less powerful book. in
field. As Hawthorne had brought with him to Lenox the
ably through the Berkshire hills and the long afternoons author
blueprint for The House of the Seven Gables, SO Melville
trips barn at Arrowhead, Melville had discovered in the 134
had brought the skeleton of Moby Dick, and neither book
the of The Scarlet Letter that "infinite fraternity of feeling"
ever really belonged to Berkshire. 132 At Arrowhead he did
which dignity to his own tumultuous uncertainties. bosoms
find a quietness and a regularity of routine highly favorable
Hawthorne's gave heart, Sophia once remarked, "opens the one-
for that delicate operation of "taking the book off his brain,"
of man audience, did much to encourage the creation of Moby
men," and certainly a sympathetic audience-even a
but the even tenor of life in Berkshire-"The calm, the cool-
130. Melville to Duyckinck, Oct. 6, 1850, in Minnigerode, Some Per-
sonal Letters, pp. 68-69.
Dick. Once the inmates of the red cottage had left Berkshire be-
131. Melville, "Cock-A-Doodle-Doo!" Complete Stories of Melville,
p. 138.
hind, could readily discover. "My Dear Lady," he assured water.
Melville turned to the only other creative inspiration Sophia
132. Melville did owe one of his symbols to Berkshire, and that was
he in 1852, "I shall not again send you a bowl of salt bowl of
Ahab's scar-inspired almost beyond a doubt, by the great Pittsfield
early The next chalice I shall commend, will be a rural
elm. Cf. Moby Dick (Modern Library, New York, 1926), p. 121: "Thread-
ing its way out from among his gray hairs, and continuing straight
milk." 135 The salt water had been dedicated to Hawthorne;
down on either side his face
you saw a slender
the milk was to be dedicated to "Greylock's Most Excellent
mark, lividly
whitish. It resembled that perpendicular seam sometimes made in the
Majesty":
straight, lofty trunk of a great tree, when the upper lightning tearingly
darts down it, and without wrenching a single twig, pulls and grooves
133. Hawthorne, Hawthorne and His Wife, p. 402.
out the bark, from top to bottom, ere running off into the soil, leaving
134. Metcalf, Herman Melville, pp. 128-29.
the tree still greenly alive, but branded."
135. To Sophia Hawthorne, Jan. 8, 1852, ibid., p. 131.
373
372
Berkshire County
[The American Lake District
of
running
handy
little
cross-road
through
a
In old times authors were proud of the privilege of ded
stacle
in
the
way
manor."
136
On
a
more
philosophical
icating their works to Majesty. A right noble custom
the
which we of Berkshire must revive. For whether we will
that level, wild it represents part of Melville's growing conviction of the pre-
or no, Majesty is all around us here in Berkshire, sitting
cariousness of human life and sanity:
as in a grand Congress of Vienna of majestical hilltops
had called it the Terror Stone. Few could be its
and eternally challenging our homage.
Pierre to climb its giddy height, and crawl out upon of one
But since the majestic mountain, Greylock-my own
bribed hovering end. It seemed as if the dropping would
more immediate sovereign lord and king-hath now
more seed from the beak of the smallest flying bird the trees. top-
for innumerable ages, been that one grand dedicatee of
the earliest rays of all the Berkshire mornings, I-know
ple the immense very familiar mass over, thing crashing to Pierre; against he had often
not how his Imperial Purple Majesty (royal-born: Por
phyrogenitus) will receive the dedication of my own
climbed to where it sloped in little crumbling stepping- beeches,
It was it, a by placing long poles against it, and SO creep-
poor solitary ray.
ing up or by climbing high up the neighboring forehead-like
Nevertheless, forasmuch as I, dwelling with my loyal
places; lowering himself down upon the he been
neighbors, the Maples and the Beeches, in the amphi-
and then the elastic branches. But never had be,
theater over which his central majesty presides, have
summit enough-or by rather foolhardy enough, it may of the
received his most bounteous and unstinted fertilization,
fearless crawl on the ground beneath the vacancy Stone
it is but meet, that I here devoutly kneel, and render up
-to higher end; that spot first menaced by the Terror
my gratitude, whether, thereto, The Most Excellent
should it ever really topple.11
Purple Majesty of Greylock, benignantly incline his
hoary crown or no.
wrote one Boston reviewer, "might be supposed the quiet to
Pierre, from a lunatic hospital rather than from those very
In its final conception Pierre proved to be not quite
so
emanate retreats of Berkshire." 138 Most probably, artistic however, undoing. Pitts-
"rural" a book as Melville might like to have thought it. The
retreats"
had
proved
Melville's
"quiet
to
interest
him,
the
novel-
setting is in part Berkshire-intermixed with certain aspects
field
society
had
apparently
ceased
best
offered
his
masterpiece
an
indif-
of Lansingburgh, New York-but it is a Berkshire so roman-
ticized and encumbered with unorthodox prose as scarcely to
reading public had and at Hawthorne had deserted Berkshire the Ma- for
be recognizable. The Balanced Rock of Lanesboro is there,
ferent With reception, no one left except his "loyal neighbors perspective on
but it is there for symbolic and not at all for realistic effect.
good. ples and the Beeches," Melville was the losing disillusioned his Pierre:
On one level it represents Melville striking out angrily at
himself "This day and I was will forsake the censuses of men, and seek the
exclaiming
with
those people, not only in Berkshire but everywhere, who
failed to understand his books-who, "in their hoodwinked
unappreciativeness," saw this wondrous "Memnon Stone"
136. Melville, Pierre, or The Ambiguities, ed. R. Forsythe (New York,
as no Memnon Stone at all, but as "nothing but a huge stum-
1930), p. 148.
137. 138. Ibid., Review in 149. the Boston Post, July 1852, in Leyda, I, 456.
p.
bling block, deeply to be regretted as a vast prospective ob-
g
375
374
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
suffrages of the god-like population of the trees, which now
the clergy, at times combined with highly descriptive letters scenic to
seems to me a nobler race than man. Their high foliage shall
which were reminiscent of his earlier gay stories-
drop heavenliness upon me; my feet in contact with their
passages Duyckinck. On another level many of these and
mighty roots, immortal vigor shall SO steal into me." 139 His
Evert "Cock-A-Doodle-Dool" "Poor Man's Pudding," of
objectivity with regard to his own philosophy was gone; he
notably "The Lightning-Rod Man"-were personal expressions
could not recognize his own excesses; and living in a self-
determination to adopt an attitude of resignation of
imposed spiritual solitude at Arrowhead, he had no one to
his his own disappointments and failures, to assure the triumph In
tell him that he had gone too far. 140
to cheerfulness over disillusionment, to cling to optimism. narrow
al
After Pierre, however, economic necessity forced Melville
"The Lightning-Rod Man," he was rejecting both Berkshire-"the the
to write more reasonably, and he set himself doggedly to the
of which he heard SO much in earth"-and
75
task of composing short novels and stories which might please
Calvinism will not of purpose, make war on man's his
the undiscriminating public. In these, he often turned to
Deity fearful sense of defeatism which he saw threatening I trod
daily life in Berkshire, perhaps for lack of any more accepta-
the own sanity: "I seized it; I snapped it; I dashed it; Man's
ble inspiration, and he found there ample materials for both
In that same year he had published "Poor
realism and symbolism. And if his outlook remained often
it Pudding" and a year earlier "Cock-A-Doodle-Dool"--two farmers
morose and almost always negative, at least he was again writ-
realistic portrayals of the poor but courageous first of
ing about the familiar scenes and normal people that the
grimly he discovered in the countryside around him. The the
reading public could readily accept. Among his Berkshire
went still farther and presented a savage satire on
stories there was only a single exception-the morbid "Tar-
these complacent attitudes of such books as Catharine "Of Sedgwick's all the
tarus of Maids," in which he transmuted a winter trip to
Carson's paper mill in Dalton into a darkly symbolic narra-
The assumptions of humanity over humanity," made
Poor Rich Man and the Rich Poor Man. he
tive. Borrowing a page from Poe and another from Haw-
preposterous angrily, "nothing exceeds most of the criticisms well-warmed,
thorne, he turned the mill into a dungeon of ghastly females
wrote on the habits of the poor by the well-housed,
and the quiet Housatonic into the weird Blood River.
and well-fed." 141
Yet, for the most part, he contented himself either with
Two later came "I and My Chimney" and "The was
embittered social commentary or half-humorous thrusts at
years and with them further indication that Melville
Piazza" objectivity. "I and My Chimney" still suggested resig-
139. Melville, Pierre, p. 120.
regaining and resentment and "The Piazza," unhappy
140. In Pierre, Melville makes an interesting inversion of Edwardsean
theology. Like Edwards, Melville was passionately concerned with find-
bitterness nation (illusions and aspirations, he concluded, must neces-
ing absolute and eternal foundations, but unlike the theologian, Mel-
ville failed. Speaking from this tortured doubt rather than Edwards'
Melville, "Poor Man's Pudding," Complete Stories Melville of Melville, entered
faith, but agreeing with Edwards fully that the distance between earth
141. In his copy of The History of Berkshire County, there no dan-
and heaven was very great, and that man's ways were not God's ways,
p. 177. note beside the author's reassurance that efforts was and Bible
Melville proceeded to advise men (through the philosopher, Plotinus
a marginal society's becoming impoverished by charitable "is very im-
Plinlimmon) to scale down their conduct to the relative morality which
ger societies. of "The danger," wrote Melville sardonically, not
will not lead them to destruction in this world.
minent."
376
pg
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
377
sarily takable collapse upon close scrutiny), but both
chuckle, hints of a new humor and geniality. gave He unmis-
the scene of the hero's birthplace to Berkshire. Himself a
poke his family harbored as to his sanity and either, he at
the doubts not heartily perhaps but not mirthlessly could
spiritual exile in the world, Melville discovered in Potter a
lonely figure toward whom he could feel a kind of embittered
which good-natured his fun at the grimly tolerant could
sympathy. Potter's Berkshire is the Berkshire hill country
hardy Berkshire neighbors regarded any eccentric spirit with
which Melville knew, altered only to agree with historical
ro
knew he as to build a piazza on the north side of his so fool-
fact, but it is a countryside seen more often through old and
he
or not: had sound reasons, whether they chose to sympathize house. He
disillusioned eyes and not with the wholehearted apprecia-
tiveness that Melville usually reserved for his hills. The final
ns
Well,
the
description indeed sounds rather like Hawthorne:
south
al
balmy morning, side. in the Apple-trees month of are there. Pleasant, of a
Ere long, on the mountain side, he passed into an ancient
October, that orchard, white-budded, as for May, a bridal; to sit and see
natural wood, which seemed some way familiar, and
75
shot. one green arsenal yard; such piles, of and, in
midway in it, paused to contemplate a strange, moldy
The Very fine, I grant; but to the north is Charlemagne: ruddy
pile, resting at one end against a sturdy beech. Though
wherever touched by his staff, however lightly, this pile
trace into maple wood at top. Sweet, in opening away
a west side, look. An upland pasture, alleying
would crumble, yet here and there, even in powder, it
trace, upon I the hill-side, otherwise gray and spring, bare-to to
preserved the exact look, each irregularly defined line,
of what it had originally been-namely, a half-cord of
say, the oldest paths by their streaks of
green. Charlemagne. Sweet, indeed, I can't deny; but, to the north earliest is
stout hemlock (one of the woods least affected by expo-
sure to the air), in a foregoing generation chopped and
So, Charlemagne, he carried it. It was not
stacked up on the spot, against sledging-time, but, as
world, 1848; and, somehow, about that time, all round long after
sometimes happens in such cases, by subsequent over-
for these kings, they had the casting vote, and voted the
sight, abandoned to oblivious decay-type now, as it
themselves.142
stood there, of forever arrested intentions, and a long life
still rotting in early mishap.143
perb "The Piazza" was, in fact, at least on this surface level, a su-
prose idyll in praise of the Berkshire hills.
Except for his two lengthy sea voyages and a series of un-
years During of the the intervals between short stories in these
happy lecture tours, Melville was to remain in Pittsfield until
a "saner" so ambitious nor SO original Potter,
novel neither 1850's, Melville had found time for Israel early
1863, becoming increasingly ingrown with the passing years.
The gay conversationalist and excursionist of 1850 and 1851
as he and far more acceptable to the public. He as Pierre, but
had disappeared, and in his place was a meditative hermit
raphy of a known legend-in this case, from a imaginative short
works, was from to do with so many of his later and less adapted it,
whom one Williams College student, Titus Coan, making a
5
pilgrimage to Arrowhead, found somewhat disappointing:
a Revolutionary exile-and skillfully transferred biog-
In vain I sought to hear of Typee and those Paradise
142. Melville, "The Piazza," Complete Stories of Melville, p. 439.
islands, but he preferred to pour forth his philosophy
143. Melville, Israel Potter, p. 274.
379
378
Berkshire County
The American Lake District
and his theories of life. The shade of Aristotle arose like
never rest until he gets hold of a definite belief. It is
a cold mist between myself and Fayaway. We have quite
strange how he persists-and has persisted ever since to I
enough of Greek philosophy at Williams College, and I
knew him, and probably long before-in wandering
confess I was disappointed in this trend of the talk, But
and fro over these deserts, as dismal and monotonous as
what a talk it was! Melville is transformed from a Mar
the sand hills amid which we were sitting. He can nei-
he
quesan to a gypsy student, the gypsy element still re
ther believe, nor be comfortable in his unbelief; and he
maining strong in him. And this contradiction gives him
is too honest and courageous not to try to do one or the
the air of one who has suffered from opposition, both
other. If he were a religious man, he would be one of the
literary and social. With his liberal views he is appar
most truly religious and reverential; he has a very high
ently considered by the good people of Pittsfield as little
and noble nature, and better worth immortality than
75
better than a cannibal or a "beach-comber." His attitude
most of us. 145
seemed to me something like that of an Ishmael; but per
In October of 1863 Melville sold Arrowhead to his brother
haps I judged hastily. I managed to draw him out very
freely on everything but the Marquesas Islands, and
Allan and went back once more to New York City. He was,
when I left him he was in full tide of discourse on all
in his own words, returning to "my native town, after a
things sacred and profane. But he seems to put away the
twelve years' visit in Berkshire." 146 In that same year, Cath-
objective side of life and to shut himself up in this cold
arine. Sedgwick left her native Berkshire for good and jour-
North as a cloistered thinker.
neyed down the Hudson to New York to live out the the re-
maining four years of a long and productive lifetime; and
During these later years in Berkshire, as Melville dissociated
1860's thus saw Berkshire's existence as a meaningful cultural
himself from society, he retreated into a ceaseless pursuit of
unit dissolving. The Berkshire Medical Institution expired; the
those frustrating metaphysical reflections which brought no
a wealthy summer resident from New York endowed
final answers. Preoccupied by doubts and always searching
Lenox Library; a Gothic edifice replaced the old Bulfinch
desperately for the certainties and absolutes which his spirit
church; and the century-old Pittsfield elm, symbol of Berk-
demanded, he had eventually come to care little for compan-
shire tradition, was cut down. No longer a state of mind, a
ionship and nothing for public opinion. In 1856 Hawthorne
Berkshire had become by the end of the decade merely
saw and
talked to him for the last time and exhibited his cus-
geographical location.
tomary sympathy and understanding:
145. Leyda, 2, 529.
Melville, as he always does, began to reason of Provi-
146. Melville to Miss Sophie Van Matre, Dec. 16, 1863, ibid., p. 664.
dence and futurity, and of everything that lies beyond
human ken, and informed me that he had "pretty much
made up his mind to be annihilated;" but still he does
not seem to rest in that anticipation; and, I think, will
144. Quoted in Raymond Weaver, Herman Melville: Mariner and
Mystic (New York, 1921), p. 351.