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

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Memoirs of G.B. Dorr 1866-1882
Memoirs of G. B DOAR
1866-1882
The Memoirs of George B. Dorr
The writings contained in "The Memoirs of G.B.Dorr" files are copies of The Dorr
Papers held at The Jesup Memorial Library. An original hard copy is held by the
Bar Harbor Historical Society.
These fragmented essays were written during the last two decades (1925-1944)
of his life. Episodic blindness contributed to their unfinished state. Many are
undated and incomplete. None have been published and many are working
drafts.
Dorr does not appear to have intended that these were parts of an evolving
autobiography. They were based on recollections of events that were retold to
clerical assistants-often over a dictaphone-- for an unidentified audience. There
are several lists of topics to be developed and to be combined into
complementary essays.
Ultimately they remain fragments of a life gathered here for the first time by an
approximated timeframe based on their content. They share "historical
associations" with Dorr's published writings (e.g., The Sieur de Monts
Publications).
Additional memoirs are placed in the subject matter series. See memoirs in the
files "France & Frenchman Bay," "Old Farm," "Psychical Research," and "Travel.".
filemoirs821
R.H. Epp
1 F4
There were few boarding schools in my school-boy
days; Phillips Exeter and Saint Paul's were the only
ones I remember hearing spoken of or which were
represented at Harvard when I was there. Boys
lived at home and went either to the Boston Latin
School or to Dixwell's. Epes Dixwell, the son of
an old Boston merchant engaged, I think, in the
China trade, had been head master at the Latin
School and then, with reputation gained as a teacher,
had set up his own private school which quickly
took the lead in Boston, having practically all its
old families represented in it at one time or
another, relatively small though the school was for
it never had more than fifty odd boys, divided into
six classes, from the last of which they entered
Harvard.
The school had its football team -- playing the
old-fashioned open game; baseball as an organized
sport was just beginning and tennis and other sports
of the present day did not exist, save rowing, which
2.
one took up first at Harvard. The only teams
with whom Dixwell's played in set matches were
the Boston Latin School, or, more seldom, its
chief rival, the Roxbury Latin, also a big school
of high standing and sending boys to college.
Groton and the other schools which came so much
to the front in later years were not in existence.
School hours were from nine till two with a
recess of half an hour from half past eleven to
twelve, when, if it were spring or fall, we went
out and played football on the Common. There
was no choice of studies; all was definite and
fixed and the goal was Harvard.
When spring came, the parents of most of our
school-mates moved out to homes in the country,
whence both fathers and sons came in by train, the
boys returning in the early afternoon, giving
abundant leisure in the long spring days for play
at home. Many went to the North Shore where they
could go out to row or sail and lived much upon the
water, laying the foundation for yachting in later
years. It was there that Edward Burgess, the
3.
famous cup-designer, an older pupil still at
Dixwell in my time, got his first experience and
his love of sailing. Many, too, went is the
South Shore on Buzzards Bay where the winds were
steady and the water warm for bathing. There it
was that Charles Francis Adams, the younger, the
recent Secretary of the Navy, and a famous skipper
in the International Cup Series, got his experience.
Other families still went to Chestnut Hills or
Milton.
Our own home in spring and fall was the
town of Canton, beyond the Blue Hills, which we reached
by the Providence Railroad, where we went to be near
my grandmother. My grandfather Ward had bought an
old farm there on which to spend his summers, by
his doctor's advice, a few years before his death.
It was delightfully wild there at that time, with
a big pond to sail on and old roads and woods-roads
over which to ride with scarce a house upon them;
and it was a wonderful place for birds, whose eggs,
like all the boys of my time who had the chance,
collected.
But it was hot in summer and, school
closed, my mother and father would presently pack up
4.
and go off to the seashore, or to Lenox, real
county then, where my mother had stayed with my
uncle and, as a girl, ridden over the whole
region -- the most fearless horsewoman, Mr. Curtis
the old inn keeper at Lenox, told me in later years,
that he had ever known save Fanny Kemble. There
we spent delightful summers, driving about the country
or exploring it -- my brother and I -- on horseback
or on foot. This migratory habit of the family was
to prove important afterward in leading us to Bar
Harbor.
[G.B.Dore]
page 2 of the April 6 diotaphone transcription near the middle of
Cylinder 1, but a new subject.
Frenchmans Baj is the la st considerable opening on the
coast as one ROOS north which lies open freely to the ocean.
Beyond,all is one great bay of which the tide rolls with
sweeping force, that culimnates in the Bay of Fundy, the name
given by a Portuguese fisherman who came out upon the Banks
to fish in the lattor half of the 16th century, moting
there fishermon from Brittanyand f rom England ao a truly
Cosmopolitan gathering.
The Bay of Fundy is a corruption
early
of Baiou Fonda, the Deep Bay. The French called it
Baie Francoise, but the Portuguese is the one that hold,
handed down from one generation of fishermen to another, till
it came fixed with all.
For naval purposes Frenohmans Bay, a name which goes back to
the early 17th century when the French province of Acadia
stretched down to the Penobsoot and Frenchmans Bay was the
endesvous for #ronch vessels gathering for attack on the
New England coast or for sholter in attack. The preax
pleasantest
prexent and most fortile part of Nova Scotia , the best in soil
east
and exposure and the most free from fog, lies KB nearly matte
of Mount Desert
XXXXX
Island, though somewhat to the north. It is a
well sheltered coast, relatively free from fog,
page 3 April 6
and sheltered too, in case of war, from the attack of
enemies from overseas.
The famous Fishing Banks represent an ancient coast line,
that of its Continental Sholf beyond which the ocean bottom
descends rapidly into oceanic depths. This anoient coast
line extends far out northward and eastward from Nova Scotia
and from the fossil ovidence must have once been, in far off
times, the fortile and well-protected home or & rich, almost
sub-tropical flora, extending the- with 11 ttle change as far,
quite certainly, as the Potomao. Nova Scotia itself extends
southwart to meet Geroges Bank, ascending from the Cape Cod
repion, the waters of a great rivor draining once the Gulf
of Maine and carrying to the sea through a deep out north
of Georges Bank the drainage from a great forested valley; is
Juck is sunk now beneath now the ocean but was once a great
forested plain, dwelt in, the evidence show s,
by browsing horse", fooding on leaves of deciduous trees
and broad-footed to bear thom up in low-lying, marshy ground.
The mouttains of Mount Desert ATP of ignoous origin
once united in a vast diko of granite whose great crystale
geologio sense
show long cooling, even in the
under a super
incumbent mass thousneds of foot in t hickness as the
of oooling tells, which long donudation of the region has left
because of its superior hardness, standing above the sea which
has engulfed the rest. Later and relatively recantly, vast
ice sheet formed in the Labrador and Katahdin regions and
PAg® 4, April 6
moved slowly southward, a.. solid, dividing the ancient
granite mass into separate isolated peaks, the Island's
though
present mountain ohain. It is & great history, titt
but
dimly apprehended, That it covers the whole development of
life on land , vogetable and animal alike with we clearly know
from he rare evidence left behind. And that of life upon
land goes further ages back to life within the sea, which
receded the source of all its varied 11fo on land, plant
and animal.
Compass Harbor, to return to that, is the only
Bayb I know unon the Island, though there may be others,
bottomed with quarts sand, the delightful to see and for
children to play upon, that comes from the coast southward
Ogden's Point, the point from which
bounded on the
northern side to the vioinity of Schooner head, is the most
anoient on the Islnad, built up of hard old rock, and except
at Caompass Harbor is cliffed and bold, leaving no opportunity
for sand to gather.
Compass Harbor got its name from the early
settlers from the shores of Massachusetts Bayoff--
settlers who did nt como direct from overseas at the
end of the Acediamperiod, who named it from its plaeting
opening due north toward toward the Gouldsboro Hills,
which give that whole section of the coast its unrivalled
beauty,
It makes excent.t mally good mooring ground, where
I kept my boat, The Wrong
page 5, April 6
Cyl 3
built for me by the elder Burgess, Edward Burgess, who
safely
built some of the earlycup defenders,
for eighteen
nearly
years, though a great midsummer storm once wrecked
it as it strained upon the hook of inch thi ck iron by which
it was moored, till, when the e torm was over I found it had
just hold by chance, being all but straightened out.
Onnosito Compass Harbor and the Oldfare shore 11es6
a mile away but nearer, seemingly, the bold, rounded
mass of Bald Porcupine, a tox dense mass of ancient lava
rock poured out from some bench or crack probably in the earth's
surface, on top of its more ancient Cambrian rock which one
may see lying in strata beneath the lava at the eastern
its
foot of the great cl'ff, the sea gulls' nesting place.
This island now belongs to my friend and neighbor, on
northern
that
Ogden Point, which forms the eastern bound of the Harbor
as it does the southern bound of Cromwell's Harbor, a superb
sitro, but limited praotically to the single house site.
Mrs Browning bought the island because I told her of what
Congressman Crampton, who once stayed with me at Oldfarm with
his wife, on their way back fromCanada, told me XX that unless
we secured that island which we were then looking at from
my Oldfarm windo- porch, we would wake uo some day and find it
covered with huge advertisement, so conspiouous an opportunity
cyl 3 page 6, April 6
for them were its cliffed faces, west and south, past whi oh all
boats went by.
So,
when I had done, I thought, my share
I invited Mrs Browning to purchase it for our joint protection,
which she, repeating to her son, he bought it for her and
incidentally for me as well. But there is nothing to be
done with it but to hold it nd she would gladly give it to
the Park, I know, should tt be desired.
The Oldfarm property is one of the best and most
fortile pieces of farmland on the Island, long cultivated
when
which he did
for my father purchased it in the summer of 1868, the first
spent here and a dozen years before we built the Oldfarm house.
one of the
It was an early farm grant, the earliest on the island, dxtingx
stretching back with straight parallel sides onto the nor thern
front of the mountain once called Noport for no known reason and
now by its Government renoming! Champlain. that further
is now part of Acadia National Park, given to it by me,
when the Park was formed. The Mount Desert Nurseries occupies
the central portion which was-- constituted the 'Cousons'
country farm and our Oldfarm house , overlooking the Bay, rises,
built of red-tinged granite from the Gorge, rises from one of
the most beautiful house sites I know upon all the coast,
taken in oan junction with the beauty of the shore and gardens.
Cyl 4, page 7, April 6
For gardens, gardens of the hardy perennial plants , natural
to this- tjxxxx such northern regions the W orld around seem
almost a necessity in this northern land, and on our coast
especially with its wild sead
One needs the contact .
But the early settlers lived ful 1. as much upon the sea as upon
the land. It was their only highway and connection with the
world of men. Over the seas they traded their lumber and their
salted fish for the rude comforts of their life
But
it is all new country yet; another life Kas long as mine has
been in a oquaintance with these shores would take one back
close to the first beginnings of all things on the Island or
the neighboring coast and what such another will do, going
forward through the years to come, lies beyond all conjecture.-
the world is moving rapidly in change.
The great change lies in communicate When one
can hear, as has been lately done along our whole Atlantic
coast, a speech delivered by a man in Rome, the capital
of Italy, the world has shrunk in respect to / sound
at least to the dimensions of a room. The real
battleground of the future is the air that carries sppech
rather than the land we 11 ve upon, for as men may be moved
by speech to think and feel, they may be molded to the
speaker's will, the strength a nd indepenednce of the nation
may be sapped and yet no blow be struck.
Cyl 5, pahe 8TH April 6
That, as I see it, is the great danger for the future.
n As a man thinketh, so is he," but it is a poor tool that will
not out both ways men may be roused to right action as to
wrong if they have but the intealigence to think and the will
to choose. The wr ld henceforth may- must be the battlground
and prepare fo r it
of idease The sooner we recognize it in America, the better,
Ideas apart, the future of power lies in the world of chemistry,
which ismaking marvellous strides during the last year,
opening out to a new world and what it will bring to men,
knowledge nd the knowledge of its ignorance part, none can
vision.
The whole Island formed originally a single
township, the township of Mount Desert. The principal
settlements in it were Somesville and Southwest Harbor
but scattered groups were collected as new settlers came
around the various harbors where ooastal vessels could
put in, bring goods and load with lumber. One such
was Northeast Harbor, the site of an early Indian
settlement; others on the eastern side of the Island
were Salisbury Cove, Hulls Covo and Bar Harbor. After
the end of the French occupation in 1759, with the fall
of Louisburg in Cape Breton and Quobec in the following
year, sottlers from the Province of Massachusetts Bay
came gradually drifting down, approaching from the
west and when deeds were drawn it was the western side
of the Island facing toward Penobscot Bay that became,
in legal description, the Island's front.
As new settlers came, the towns were organized,
the Town of Eden was laid out, defined by a line drawn
from the head of Otter Creek straight by the compass
(
across the lakes and mountains to include the Island's
western side and the shore beyond it, nearly one half
of the Island.
2.
Town meetings then were held at Salisbury Cove,
as central to the Town and this was the state of things
when we first came in 1868-69, when Bar Harbor, growing
rapidly, the Town offices were established there, not
without opposition, and Town meetings held.
From the remainder of the original township the
fishing communities collected at Southwest Harbor, so
named from the shelter it afforded from southwest winds,
and Tremont were set off. And because of its prosperous
fishing industries and extensive harbor Southwest Harbor
became the chief settlement of the Island, at which,
when steamboat lines were organized, the steamer touched,
bringing freight and carrying away loads of salted fish.
That, too, was the state of things until 1868 when, with
the growing summer visitor business the Portland to
Eastport coasting steamers first included Bar Herbor in
their route.
By land Mount Desert Island was then reached by stage
from Bangor with stops upon the way at the tavern by
Phillips Lake and at Ellsworth, the county seat, which
at that time was a prosperous lumbering industry, the sea
reaching it for coastal schooners, mill power provided
by the falls above, and lumber available from the whole
Union River Basin.
3.
The Narrows, separating Mount Desert Island from
the mainland, first crossed on horseback only when the
tide was out, were crossed, from the early eighteenth
century on, by a rickety wooden bridge, with a draw
for sailing vessels and a toll taken, and this was not
replaced till after the World War when the stato took
it over and a free bridge, a memorial to those who
fell in the World War, was built, at the expense of
Town and County.
The road over this, starting from the State
capital at Augusta and passing along the Island's
northern shore through Salisbury Cove and Hulls Cove
to Bar Harbor where the Federal Government postoffice
and customs house for the Island are established, contin-
ues on thence as a state highway still through the Gorge
to Otter Creek, Seal Harbor and Northeast Harbor where
it ends, is the most important road upon the Island,
passing through its primcipal summer resident commun-
ities, well built for motor traffic and much used.
It has two sections of great beauty upon it - the one
where it crosses the Bluffs from Hulls Cove to Bar Harbor
and the other where it turns, with a bold sweep into the
gorge, at the outflow from the Tarn.
The site my mother, father and I, together with
our architect, Henry Richards, chose for the Oldfarm
house in the fall of 1878, was the broad, flat top of
an old sea-cliff, facing north to the Gouldsboro Hills
across the long reach of Upper Frenchmans Bay. This cliff
rose well back from the present shoreline, where the breaking
surf is now setting its makr on a new shore, thirty to
forty feet below the old one, carved evidently in a
stormier period. The gently sloping space over which the
surf rolled up to break against the cliff, was covered at
that time with dark evergreens, mingled with birch and pine.
Bald Porcupine rieses opposite, a mile away, dividing
eastern
with its mass the and northern skies, the dawn
long growing in this northern clime before the sun appears.
From the high-placed casement windows of the chamber
I chose for myself when the house was done, the Sea Room
as it as called, I used to see, day after day, this
wonderful, slow breaking of the dawn, with the bold rounded
mass of the Porcupine black a gainst the growing light reflected
in the Bay, then changing insensibly to green a s the light
grew stronger.
2.
To the west of the site we built on, cliffed also on
ed
that side, a long level line stretch lift away, making what
was at that time the cobblestone or sea-wall beach behind which
had lain a considerable mass, as I discovered once on
digging down for water, coming at nine feet depth on smooth.
glaciated rock with the characteristic fine blue clay
left everywhere by the over-riding ice-sheet of the last
glacial period. In this I found sheals of a shell-fish extinct
in the regional waters now, but extant Still in the arctic
still. I gave these shells, in which my father took great
interest too, to a friend of ours, Dr. Henry Chapman of
Philadelphia, who presanted them to the Philadelphia Natural
History Museum, where they were iden ified and placed.
theyric
Opposite Oldfarm, on The Way Road to the south,
the land rises into an upland which was the cultivated
ground of the early farmland, with the old farmhouse
at its midst, dating, they told us when my father
bought the property, to old colonial days, when set- -
tlers from Cape Cod came sailing down with their fam-
ilies and their goods and chattels, to take possession
of the best farm sites along the shore to lumber and
send off the standing wood of spruce and pine, or fish
and salt down their catch.
Oldfarm had, in Compass Harbor, the last safe
harborage upon the western shore of Frenchmans Bay
going seaward for the small craft of that period,
the lands beyond rising into cliffs and storm-lashed
rocks till Otter Creek upon the ocean-front was reached.
And it was the last land, too, for miles along that rocky
shore with opportunity for cultivation. The first settler
there was one Henry Higgins, from Cape Cod, the Higgins
and Higginson name being a common one in my earlier time,
Henry
both in Boston and along this shore, and prominent in
town affairs.
2.
becede
Beyond oldfarm, going seaward, great purchases
Berry
Davis
had been made for lumbering purposes in Colonial days
word
for one of the Baring family of England
who, coming
agent
out to view the land, married, contrary to his father's
advice upon his leaving home, an American girl; daughter
of one of the wealthiest citizens of the country in that
was
this
floming.
time, Mr. Bingham of Philadelphia, and, again against
his father's counsel, made extensive purchases of the
forest lands of that period in Eastern Maine and else-
where in New England, which, held onto, proved in the
Black Ellsworks,
end a sound investment.
The home of Squire Black of Ellsworth, with
ample woods about it along the banks of the Union
River, now belongs, with an endowment attached, to
the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations,
which was agent for these lands until Squire Black
died. And through him it was that the lands along
the shore above Oldfarm passed into summer resident
hands, recording in their titles a chapter from the
past of special interest to me, for my Grandfather Ward,
3.
my mother's father, was throughout his middle and
later life the sole agent in America of the great
London banking house of Baring Brothers, whose repre-
sentative in Parliament, Lord Ashburton, was entertained
by him in Boston in my mother's early time, when he came
out to settle a boundary dispute between the United States
and Canada, embodied in the famous Ashburton Treaty. This,
which was satisfactory to both sides, amicably settled a
dispute which had at one time threatened war. And this
treaty wrote his name for all time on the pages of his-
tory as a peacemaker.
The Way Road, which bounds Oldfarm on the south,
was given by my father, in a friendly spirit, to give
entrance to the first purchasers of the Bingham Heir
land, as it was called, and, the request for the right-
of-way coming to us in the later 1870's during a long
stay abroad, the land was laid out for us by Ernest
Bowäitch, landscape and civil engineer, descendant
of the famous 'Navigator', Nathaniel Bowditch, a
friend of my grandfather, who, himself a seaman in
early life, held him in high regard.
Chrmot. re Old farm Property history
4.
- III -
Detailed History of the Zacheus Eiggins Lot.
I shall consider first that part of the locus taken from
the Cousins lot, viz: The Dean Higgins and Zacheus Higgins
lot. The Zacheus Higgins lot lying farthest South, I shall
consider first.
1 -- Bartholemy and Maria Theresa DeGregoire by warranty
deed dated March 28th, 1792 and recorded September 1st, 1794 in
Vol. 2, Page 558, conveyed to Henry Higgins a lot containing
one hundred acres; being the same lot which is marked on the
old plans the John Cousins Lot.
2 -- As appears below the heirs of Henry Higgins conveyed
the Western half of the Cousins lot to Dean Higgins. No deed
appears of record however of the Eastern half which came to
be known as the Zacheus Higgins lot. It would seem probable
that one David Stanwood acquired title to it in some way and
by a series of deeds the heirs of David Stanwood conveyed this
Eastern half of the Cousins lot to different parties. One
of these heirs, William Stanwood, by special warranty deed
dated August 31st, 1834 and recorded June 27th, 1838 in Nol.
67, Page 178, conveyed his interest in the property to Dean
Higgins.
5.
3 -- Sallie Dodge and Roxalana S. Collier in 1846 gave
a deed of the whole of the Cousins lot to Martha Higgins,
wife of Zacheus Higgins. This deed is dated December 26th,
1846 and recorded September 3rd, 1866 in Vol. 127, Page 143.
These grantors were two of the heirs of David Stanwood.
Their
husbands joined in the deed as did also Eunice Higgins, widow
of David Stanwood.
4 -- In 1855, Deborah Rodick, another one of David
Stanwood's children and heirs, gave a deed to Martha Higgins.
This deed is dated November 16th, 1855 and recorded September
3rd, 1866 in Vol. 127, Page 144.
5
-- Martha Higgins herself was one of the children of
David Stanwood. By the above deeds she acquired the interest
of three of the other children. One other (William) had con-
veyed to Dean Higgins previously as above stated. Eunice
R. Foster another heir, did not convey her interest until
after Martha Higgins had parted with the property.
6 -- By quit claim deed dated July 15th, 1861 and recorded
July 23rd, 1861 in Vol. 114, Page 108, Martha Higgins conveyed
to the town of Eden, "Four-fifths of the lot of land a part of
which was deeded to the aforesaid Martha Higgins by the heirs
of David Stanwood."
6.
7 -- By quit-claim deed dated October 14th, 1865 and
recorded September 3rd, 1866 in Vol. 127, Page 145, Benjamin
H. Higgins, John M. McFarland and Henry Knowles, selecmen
of the town of Eden, reconveyed the same to Martha Higgins.
The selectmen do no appear to have been authorized by vote
of the town. For comment on this question see page 15.
8 -- By quit claim deed dated January 18th, 1866 and
recorded September 3rd, 1866, in Vol. 127, Page 146, Martha
Higgins, (her husband joining) conveyed the same to Henry
H. Clark.
9 -- By warranty deed dated August 25th, 1868 and recorded
September 4th, 1868, in Vol. 131, Page 315, Eunice R. Foster
conveyed to Henry H. Clark "A certain undivided fifth part
in
of a tract of land lying/the town of Eden at Bar Harbor in
said town, and known as the Zacheus Higgins place, and is
the same lot that Martha Higgins conveyed four-fifths of to
the said Henry H. Clark by her deed dated January 8th, 1866
and recorded in the Hancock County Registry of Deeds."
Eunice R. Foster's husband did not join in this deed. I have
not learned whether he is living or not.
7.
10 -- By warranty deed dated September 1st, 1868 and
recorded September 4th, 1868 in Vol. 131, page 314, Henry
H. Clark conveyed to Charles H. Dorr and Thornton K. Lothrop
a lot of land described as follows:
"A certain lot or parcel of land situated in the town of
Eden, County and State aforesaid, and bounded and described
as
follows, to wit; A lot of land lying in the neighborhood of
Bar Harbor and known as the Zacheus Higgins lot and bounded as
follows: Beginning at a stake and stone at the shore, running
South 150 West following the Conners line three hundred and
forty-seven rods; thence South seventy five degrees East
twenty-five rods; thence North fifteen degrees East to a stake
and thence to the shore; thence following the shore to the
first mentioned bounds, containing forty-six acres more or less.
Said lot is to be twenty-five rods wide and no more, measuring
Southeasterly from Conners line square across the lot; the stake
and stone at which the boundary of the premises begins, is
situated on the Northerly shore of the cove and the above
boundaries include the Southern side and landing of the cove."
11 -- By special warranty deed dated July 19th, 1875
and recorded November 12th, 1875, in Vol. 153, Page 268,
Thornton K. Lothrop conveyed his part of the same to Charles
H. Dorr.
- IV -
Detailed History of Dean Higgins lot.
1
As stated above the DeGregoires in 1792 conveyed to
Henry Higgins a hundred acre lot marked on the old plans John
Cousins lot.
8.
2 -- By Warranty deed dated March 11th, 1822 and
recorded March 19th, 1822 in Vol. 42, Page 311, Stephen
Higgins, Anna Googins and Mary Eaton, heirs of Henry
Higgins, conveyed to Dean Higgins a lot containing fifty
acres, being the Western half of the above lot.
3 -- By warranty deed dated May 16th, 1838 and recorded
June 27th, 1838 in Vol. 65, Page 445, Dean Higgins conveyed
the same property (same description) to Ambrose Higgins,
and by mortgage deed also dated May 16th, 1838 and recorded
June 27th, 1838 in Vol. 65, Page 446, Ambrose Higgins recon-
veyed the same property (same description) to Dean Higgins
and his wife Eunice Higgins to secure a bond for the main-
tenance of the mortgagee Dean Higgins and his wife. The
bond does not appear of record but is referred to by the
mortgage.
4 -- Ambrose Higgins appears to have deceased prior to
July 8th, 1843 for on that date his widow Phoebe Higgins by
quit claim deed re-conveyed the same property to Dean
Higgins.
Deed dated July 8th, 1843 and recorded
October 5th, 1846 in Vol. 81, Page 3. For comment
see conclusion.
of
Note given y Serenys Rodick, August 8, 1941.
9.
The Oldfarm property came out of a lot which
was marked on the Peters Plan as John Cousins. Mr.
Rodick does not believe there ever was a deed to
John Cousins. Probably the owner of the lot got
title by squatters rights. One-half (the eastern
half) was known as the Zacheus Higgins lot; the
western half was known as the Dean Eiggins lot.
Title to both lots eventually became vested in
Charles Hazen Dorr and came down to G. B. Dorr
through the will of Charles Hazen Dorr and Mary
Gray Ward Dorr, his wife.
flo
In the history of its land-titles, aldfarm goes
back to the first days of occupation of the Acadian coast
by settlers from the English colonies, sailing down from
western poarts to make new homes for themselves along the
shores of the former French Province of Acadin.
Mount Desert Island, situated on the constantly em-
battled coastal border between the French and English colonion
Acadia and Massaohmeetts Bay, was thrice conyeyed in gift,
once by the Province of Quebec, seat of Government of the
French Dominion in America, to Antoine do la Mothe Cadillao,
R gentleman of ancient lineage of Gascony in Southwestern
Frence, an officer then serving in Acadim, the grant from
the Province being confirmed to him soon after, on a temporary
return to Paris, by Louis the Fourteenth; again, after the fall
of the French dominion in America, to Sir Francis Bernard,
last Colonial Governor of English birth of the Province of
Massaohnsetts Bay, whose title was similarly confirmed by
Georgo the Thirdz and finally, after the Revolutionary War,
by the State of Massachusetts, now acting in its own sovereign
right, to the heirs of those two former grantees: To the
granddaughter of Cadillao and hor husband, H. and Hme. da
Gregoiro, refugees from Brance at the oommensement of the
-1-
8.
Fronoh Revolution, the General Court of Hassachmsotts
gave the eastern half; to John Bernard, son of Sir
Francis, the western half, sending down two surveyors -
Salem Towne and John Petors - to make division and except
from the grant such tracts as they might find alroady talesia
up and hold by 'squatters rights'. This division was
made up the deeply penetrating fiord of Somos Sound and
thence northward to the Narrows.
John Bernard mortgaged his portion and wont to England,
where later he appears as receiving from the Crow, in
acknowledgment or his father's services, the Governonship
of one of the lesser West Indies, where be thoreafter lived
and dieds the de Oregoires came down to Mount Desert and
lived upon their grant, building thomsolves a house a Hulls
Cove and selling off their lands, tract by tract, as sottlers
came down and sought them and the good title which they
carried,
Among the first tracts sold was that of the present
aldfarm and its continution southward up the stoop-foreated
side of Champlain Mountain, easternmost member now of the
National Park range, to one Henry Higgins, recorded as pur-
chasing it in 1792.
E.
Henry Higgins was born at Eastham on Cape Cod, the
son of Terael Higgins who had sailed down with his family
from South Truro, on Cape Cod, in 1771 and established
himself at Bulls Coves as it soon after became known.
But before its purchase by Henry Higgins, John Cousins,
son of Elisba Cousins, who had sailed down yet earlier
with his family, from Harpswell on Casoo Bay, casting about
as he grow up to see what be best could turn his hand to,
had sottled himself in true pionsering fashion, asking
no leave of any, where there was as yet no owner but the
State, on this same tract, with its tall pinos and spruces,
fit far masts and building, and its good harbor for shipping
them off to western markets. Into this work he throw him-
self with such energy and good result that for gonerations
after, though he never had or claimed a legal title to it,
the land remained known as the 'Cousins Lot'.
Henry Higgins died early and the tract acquired by him
from the de Orogoires passed by inheritance to others,
whose names and those of their successors it would be 1d1o
to recall; they are all on record.
In the summer of 1868, our first at Bar Harbor and the
first in which land was bought on Mount Desert Island for
summer residence, the eastern partion of the Henry Higgins
lot was purchased by my father, Charles Hazen Dorr, and
4.
his friend, Thornton K. Lothrop, who had come down
with us from Boston to see the new coastal landscape
of whose beauty and pleasantness we all had heard so
much.
The western portion of the Henry Higgins lotj as it
was then divided, had been purchased a few wooks previously
by Professor Mahan of West Point, father of Captain A. T.
Mahan, a boy then, who became famous a generation later
for his writings on the influence of sea power upon history
and the fate of nations. Three and a half years later,
early in the winter of 1871-172, Professor Mahan died and
his widow, on my father's writing her, sold him the land
she and her husband had earlier planned to build upon.
The land my father bought from Mrs. Mahan contained
in st the deep-soiled, cultivated land of the old farm and
two splendid house sites between which, when we came to
build, we hositated, but finally chose - wisely, I think -
the site the aldfarm house stands built upon.
Finally, in 1875, when we were making plans to build
at Oldfarm the following year, my father acquired from
Mr. Lothrop his share in the joint earlier purchase, uniting
once again the original one-hundred-aore Henry Higgins
lot.
5.
The site we chose when we came to build in the autumn
of 1878 was the broad, flat top of an ancient sea-cliff
whose base had been raised by coastal elevation some forty-
odd feet above the present level of the sea, where the waves
in their oeaseless activity are now at work on forming a new
and lower coast-line. From it one looked out due north
across the whole wide stretch of Upper Frenohmans Bay to
the Gouldsboro Hills, forming a picture which in the long,
slowly-deepening twilight of the northern sunmer is one of
surpassing beauty.
The oliff we built on markes the western termination
of a line of ancient rooks, hard and contorted and rising
beyond Oldfarm into yet higher cliffs, which, continuing
eastward to Schooner Head, is the oldest geologic formation
on the Island.
To the west the cliff we built on descends abruptly
to the level of a former sea beach, marked by the surf-piled
stones of a sea-wall, behind which lay, as in many another
spot along the present coast, a salt marsh, now become a
fertile moadow-land, across which our Oldfarm house looks
out, evening after evening, to the deep-red sunset glowp
while to the south the area drops gently away to rise again
6.
into the deep-soiled cultivated lands of the old farm,
which extend away, with no house in sight, framed in the
distance by the mountains of the National Park.
cyl 3 page 6, April 6
for them were its cliffed faces, west and south, past which all
boats went by.
So,
when I had done, I thought, my share
I invited Mrs Browning to purchase it for our joint protection,
which she, repeating to her son, he bought it for her and
incidentally for me as well. But there is nothing to be
done with it but to hold it and she would gladly give it to
the Park, I know, should st be desired.
The Old farm property is one of the best and most
fertile pieces of farmland on the Island, long cultivated
when
which he did
for mJ father purchased it in the summer of 1868, the first
spent here and a dozen years before we built the 01Afarm house.
one of the
It was an early farm grant, the earliest on the island, dxt
strotching back with straight parallel sides onto the no them
front of the mountain once called Noport for no known reason and
now by 1 to Government renomings: Champlain. that further
is now part of Acadia National Park, given to it by me,
when the Park was formed. The Mount Desert Nurseries occupies
the central portion which was-- constituted the 'Cousons'
country farm and our Oldfarm house , overlooking the Bay, rises,
built of red-tinged granite from the Gorgo, rises from one of
the most beautiful house sites I know upon all the coast,
taken in conjunction with the beauty of the share and gardens.
61714
C
1938
3. A Oldfarm as its name tells
broad feet plift
Oldfarm, the house, stands on a stage of the same
hard and amient rook that encloses Companas Harbor along
the coast on either side, against whose baso, whon the land
stood at lower level in relation to the sea during the last
glacial period, the WAVES must have broken with tromendous
force. To the north it faces across the whole length of the
Upper Bay to the Gouldsboro Hills; to the south the Oldfarm
lands and gardens merge unbrokonly into those of Aoadia
National Park which drew from them their early inspiration
for the origin of the Park.
X+ I
The house, fitting well the landscape, is built
story?
up to the second floor of warm-tomod, nativo granitog
above It is covered with shingles of the California
Redwood, similar in tone, which have never needed to be
renowed, save in portions of the roof, sinco the house was
built, now close onto sixty years. It is spaciously
designed, with ample out-door porches, soreened from the
driveway, fronting on the view, while broad stone stops, laid
in easy descent, lead from it to the lawns abovo the shore.
(then follows History, which is paged History- 1 etc.
LONDON TIMES as revised from Dictaphone article,
September 19, 1938.
Always when we were abroad and wherever we might
be, the London Times followed us, my father reading
it with constant interest. It was altogether the
best newspaper in the world at that time, broad in
its outlook, judicial in its tone and all-inclusive,
in the subjects it took up, whether of the sciences,
politics or literature, and reporting and commenting
upon interesting law cases. Generally my father
allowed me, partly that we might discuss what we
read together and partly because I still was limited
in the use I could make of my eyes, to read it with
him. To read it is this way was an education in
itself and since he died I have continued reading
daily the best newspapers I could get - generally,
in America, the New York Times and some Boston or
Maine newspaper as well.
Guestine
Tuesday evening Dec 13.
Returning from a brief trip to America, my father took
the train from Liverpool to London which ran through, expr 888,
with but a single stop upon the way, at Chester. My father
left Liverpool in an else empty coach. At Chester
another
gentleman got in and settled down to read his newspaper.
Pres ntly, that done, he entered into conversation with my
father and finding he had just come over from New York, asked
him some questions bearing on the political situation there.
My father always took great interest in such matters from
a broad standpoint, and they had a long and interesting
talk together on matters american and English which lasted till
they came to London. My father's fellow traveler it then
tunrned out, was Mr. Gladstone then at the height of his
political career
My father took much interest in this
chance meetng and opportunity for talk. He never had met
Gladstone before nor did he ever see him afterwarts, but he
bore him in high regard for his high humanity and broad, liberal
views, and looked back upon the meeting with great interest.
For his opponent Disraeli, he had slight regard, and I no more.
Now, 88 then, it is it is hard for mc to realize how a Jew
of his type could have been accepted by the English noblemen
a conservative party, as their leader, or how Queen Victoria
ocould have looked on him with favor and siven him her intimacy
and support.
2.
Wherever he went while we were abroad, then and later,
the London Times followed us in it S daily edition,
my father reading it always , even to its reports on law cases
tried in court, and its book reviews, letters from corre pondents
and reports of travelers.
It even followed us
to America after our last trip together, when we went up the
Nile, and I have still some unopened copies left of the last
issues that c2me out to us following his death.
Left-alene
After my father died, I read the Boston Herald
,
then ably editied by my friend, Robert Lincoln O'Brien,
but when he resigned his post on it, I subscribed to the New York
Times, which followed me in turn wherever I was or went.
These three newspapers have been to me a great political education,
the best the world could give, following daily its events and
their comments on them, but forming my own opinion from
occasionally their editorials.
Sucn newspapers CS these reflect
the movement of the world. and are better than books, such-
except histories if one must choose between them, but it is only
a few newspapers that one can read in such fashion and get value
from and they are not for the multitude.
Oha Slimp
I met in Rome an English laddy, a Mrs. Wynne Fingh
with whom I fell into very pleasant relation.
She
was twice & widow and her first husband had been the head
of the old LaStrange family in England.
Her son,
Harvey LeStrange had married one of the Wardsworth
family of Geneseo, New York. Hor daughter had
married Lawrence Oliphant, author of Piccadilly,
while ahe had & younger son
of near my own age, Guy LaStrango who won my admiration
by the gallant fight he was making to write the
history of the Caliphate.
Mrs. Wynn Fingh was notable in London for her
delightful little dinners of eight, nover more, to
which the Prince of Wales, King Edward VIIth afterward,
used not infrequently to come. She kindly asked
mo 88 I passed through London that spring to one
of those dinners along with James Russell Lowell,
then our minister to England, and others whom I
now forget but not the pleasantness of the occasion.
Her son, Harvey LaStrange inherited and was living
at the old family manor house and estate of Hystanton,
close beside the Wash, from whose shore we could see
2.
what KYLL they there called Boston Stump, the
tall tower of St. Botolph's church in English
Boston.
Hunstanton was a very interesting old Hanor
House of the Elisabethan period with a famous
garden and a wide moat with drawbridge.
It
WRS placed in a wide, grassy park with old oak-
trees Bcattered about, a true countryscene of the
lesser nobility, such as Jane Auston might have
described.
The same WRD was a good deal of
an antiquary in its way and had a muniment room
where he kept locked up family records and memoranda
going back for many generations.
He showed me
one of these which WAD quite delightful of an old
lord of the manor, a very simple lord he seemed
to have been, played cards with his neighbors at
the village inn, his wife noting down carefully the
small Bum he made or loat, the keeping the family
account. He was fond of playing the violin, which
she found annoying and built him hard by a grove
of old oaks in the Park
April 14, page 5
still Cyl 2
Separate paper.
The National Park had its origin at Oldfarm, the old
Cousens' farm grant, one of the earliest on the Island where
preceding its Bingham purchases Note for copyist
Please get and read to me Richard Hale's paper on
the Bingham purchases which he sent me lately, and which
I asked, I think to have copied.
The Bingham purchases which bordered it originally on
the south, extending from it along the shore to the
Sand Beach and beyond and extensively over the mountain.
Like the other early grants of that time it ran a mile back
from the shore and- at mean low tide for a measured mile,
the measurement
taking in whatever it encountered mountains, lakes or
in a
woodland and running definite course with two parallel
sides and an end perpendicular to them. This was the case a
O1dfarm which W as as defined by t he Cousens farm grant, a very
various piece of ground, extending from the-nerth-side from high
upp on the north side of Champlain Mt to the sea two brooks flowing
through it , Bear Brook next the mountain , rising in the wooded
Gorge between Picket Mountain and Champlain, and Compass Harbor
Brook draining the farmland to the north, and winding widely
through the Ogden Coles and other lands to come out finally
at the base of Ogden's point into Compass Harbor. It is not only
6 of April 14
2
but exceedingly interesting piece of land, CO taining also
sono of the best farmland on the Island, Fro the beginning
on it has been tied up inextricably wi th the Park,
It is
long before the Park was established that its real history
begins.
In writing my history of the Park beginning, I want
this clearly recognized and established.
Cyl 3
The present generation will pass as my own has done, but
the mountain S and the woods, the coasts and streams that have now
passed through the agency of the Park to the National Government
will continue as a national possession, a public possession,
as-a-national- henceforth for all time to come. It ne ver
will be given up to private ownership again. The men in
control will change, the Government itself will change, but
its possession by t he people will remain whatever new policies
or developments may come. The important thing now is to start
the Park
it right in its service to the public and for this tt is wonderfully
placed , looking out across the Atlantic to the coasts
of Europe from the Mediterranean to the British channel and
the Irish Sea. It is a part and a unique feature of the
eastern boundary of the c country, but a true international
boundary now to be guarded and defended. For the new developments of
3
page 7, April 14
science are bringing our country dangerously near what was SO
have
remote a nd distant a hundred years ago. The changes that back come
in my lifetime here, commencing in the eighteen sixties,
are are but the beginnings of others that we cannot in any way
foresee
That is the point that impresses itself now upon my
bounded past
human
mind the shortness of the
Paxics whose history we
80 largely know and the boundless future which we cannot read
but
yet
can
influence. And the story we now tell, the shaping
thit we give the present, will remain as a tale of origin and
as a shaping force through endless generations if man endure.
That is the point I want to emphasizes The brief past and
the immesasurable future which changes all- beyond all human
predication Which that brief past has already seena nd the
changes the future may bring yet greater than the past. For the
Park the main thing is to open it as widely as may be to the
people while yet keeping it from being a mere playground;
to make it a source of real reoreation- re-creation and save it
from vulgarization. To make it something that will uplift and
inspire its visitors, while giving them
new
health
and bigor. And to develop all the possibilities that it offered
for study along many fields for the giving out of ideas to a grea t
audience, for
in one of those spots that it and the
to
whole coast about it has which people always come in summer,
unique in i ts situation on sea and the yinxx facing that it has
across it to the lands of its parentage, beyond.
the source
A
page 8, Apri 14
perhaps of future danger, the source quite certainly of new ideas
whether for good or ill.
Note:
One of the things to be established is a
flying service across the entrance to the bay of Fundy to the
western ooast opposite, of Nova Scotia. It would make a m 08
t
interesting excursion to be done by flying boat from the Upper
Bay and you ld be reached at any point desired in an hour,
flying boat would limit it to the shore
in aeroplane provided on the NUva Scotia
and have the whole Maritime provinces
(end of record not good)
Monday, February 12, 1940.
It was my father's purchase of this old farm whi ch
Henry Higgins had sailed Himself down with his family
from Cape Cop to build a century before on the yet wild
shore of Frenchmans Bay with its mountain lands and wood-
lands, its safe little harbor facing north on Frenchmans
Bay, its pleasant site for building on and good land for
cultivation, that oddly enough became as the years went
by the foundation stone from which, as a starting point,
Acadia National Park has risen. And it is to tell of
how this came about step by step that I am writing this
today. All from the beginning flowed on consecutively
through various channels but with the end undreamt of
till the last to the establishment of a unique and striking
monument to a chapter, great in its consequences, in world
the
history: the struggle and its issue between great colonizing
powers of France and England for the control of North America.
fateful
The historian who has made that contest peculiarly his own,
Francis Parkman, came down for years with President Eliot
and his sons, sailing himself down with his boys aid, to
camp on Calf Island in Frenchmans Bay and Parkman took the
opportunity President Ellot offered to s al 1 down with them
and gather material for his work. One of the lesser but
boldest and most outstanding of the mountains in the Island
chain was named by the Government on its acceptance of the
Homans gift + CH.Dorr
Impt. Acadia N.P. origins rooted in
Anglo-Frozelf,
Crite / as
Sieur do Monta National Monument which preceded Acadia
National Park, in his honor at President Eliot's request.
Li Had the French after the death of Henry IV, Henry of
Navarre, their great warrior king, held on to what his
early enterprise had won, Acadia and the river of Canada
the St. Lawrence -- with the great lakes beyond and the
vast, fortile central region,
by the Mississippi.
from the lakes southward to the Gulf of Mexico, be retained
which
by them, / they might easily have done had they but devoted
& fraction of the wealth to it which they wasted in fruitler
wars upon the continent of Europe, the whole course of
history would have been altered and, barring a strip along
its eastern coast east of the Appalachian chain, might have
ruled and developed & land far greater than their own and
made themselves by means of it the greatest of world powers.
Such territory they did own in the time of Ladillac, first
owner of Mount Desert Island, by the gift of Louis XIV,
builder under Fontenac of the city that controlled the
states, Detroit, as the name relates, and later yet, during
his last years, governor of Louisiana, named for the king,
which included then the whole great valley of the Mississippi
So flow, checked and altored by what seemed to us afterward
small causes, obstacles that might with foresight have been
roadily overcomo, the streams of history. In this struggle,
whose issues were to be 80 great, neither side received but
little help from their home government. It was the greater
3.
energy of the English colonists strung along the Atlantic
coast and derived from their greater independence in religion
and self-government, which prevailed.
A historic of great moment to the future is that of
the causes which produce that greater energy, skown alike
by the English Puritans and the French Huguenots who, Ap had
they come in greater numbers to these shores, fleeing from
would
France on the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, have
made themselves assuredly one of the greatest forces in
America as what has been accomplished racially by those
who did come and develop their initiative in freedom
amply shows. And so too with the Dutch in constrast to
to the Belgians. They were the same stock originally,
the a virile race from the time of Caesar down, who had
trouble in their conquest, never completely achieved.
Freedom, religious and civil, giving scope to enterprise,
made the difference at the time when the Notherlands were
rulod by Spain, narrowest and most bigoted of mediaeval
and later powers. That the Moor8 in their higher civiligation
with
failed to hold their own in their contest Paragon and Castille
has ever seemed to me one of the tragedies of history.
It also shows that other than racial causes lie at the
root of the groat development men have made here and there
throughout the course of history and that the capacity of
man for development lies far ahead evon at the best of his
achiovements.
(Fobruary ar) 1940)
4.
with President Eliot, then at the beginning of his
long career at Harvard, came besides Parkman the Presi-
donts two sons, the older of whom, Charles Eliot, full
of public spirit, "was making himself what promised to be
a great career in his chosen profession of landscape art
when, still young, he died. And it was in memory of him
who had conceived and brought about The Tunstoos of Public
Reservations for the State of Massachusetts that President
Eliot proposed, ten years after his son's death, a similar
organization for Mount Desert Island, widened afterward to
Hancook County. And this in turn in which I had taken active
interest brought us our first gift, the Bowl and Beehive
at the southern end of what was then known as Newport Mountain
now Champlain, given us by Mrs. Charles D. Homans of Boston
in memory of her son. And it was this gift, as I have
elsewhere told, that made with me a starting point for
gathering the land that presently, seizing the opportunity
created by an attack in the Maine State Legislature, I made
the foundation for Acadia National Park.
That Mrs. Homans' came to Bar Harbor and purchased
the land she built her home upon and with it the land 8he
gave the Park was due to her brother's coming earlier with
my father at the time my father purchased Oldfarm, and it
was there that President Eliot came to tell me of Mrs.
Homans' gift. It all ties up together wonderfully, even
to the success I had in gathering lands for placing in
(February 12, 1940)
5.
reservation with our Corporation which caused the attack
tupon it in the State Legislature which resuated in my con-
ceiving the plan, opposed at first by President Eliot as
surrendering our control, to the National Government which
alone could in pointof fact hold them as it has done.
Notes on matters to tell about
Florida, ET mother and father's visit there to St.
Augustine in 1850'a; my father and EY brother in the
late 60's a with Henry Bowditch & companion; our own
visit in the early 1880's, to St. Augustine when the
railroad went no further.
The trip up the
river to the great spring in which it rose, clear to
the deep bottom;and the toroh lighted trip up at night
with dark forests on either side.
The St. John's
River with its orange plantations.
The old book
of the naturalist
which
Mr. Caldwalder of Philadelphia lent mo in first edition
when I was staying with Mr. Colos in Philadelphia;
and the trip across the southern Appalachians who
when only Indians inhabited them contained in the same
volume.
Canoeing in New England waters.
Ingraham.
X
Once talking with Judge George L. Ingraham he
told me of his early youth and of his father, a
Preebyterian of the old rigid type. When he and his
brother were ohildren they attended church twice on
Sunday and the services were long, the sermons inter-
minable. Nor were they allowed on Sundays to read
any book but oertain portions of the Bible. But when
they grew up, he and his brother, they went their own
way and it was a grief to their father.
When Judge Ingraham was grown up his father fell
ill and knew his hour had come. Judge Ingrham, a
young lawyer then, was with him and hie father ask ed him
to read him a chapter out of Jonathan Edwards. He
read it to him and his father said, "Do you see any flaw
in that, George!" "No father", said Judge Ingraham, "I
see no flaw in it, granted the premises." "You oannot
grant the premises", his father asked again, and he
replied, "No father, I cannot." His father was
silent for a time, then turning to Judge Ingraham said,
"George, I do not believe I shall be saved." Judge
Ingraham replied, "Why father you have been a good man
all your days. You have done kindness to others and your
duty as you have seen it." His father answered and said,
Ingraham -8
"Yes, that 18 true,but unless I am among the elect
I oannot be saved and I think if I were among the
elect I should have received some sign, And I have record
no sign.
grim dootrine but not different probably
from what many of our Puritan ancestors in England
and New England held.
3/21/2017
George Landon Ingraham - Wikipedia
George Landon Ingraham
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
George Landon Ingraham (August 1, 1847 - January 24, 1931) was a lawyer and
judge in New York City.
George Landon Ingraham
Biography
Ingraham was born in New York City in 1847 to Mary Landon Ingraham and Daniel P.
Ingraham, the presiding justice for the First District of the New York State Supreme
Court. He graduated from Columbia Law School in 1869, was admitted to the New York
City Bar Association the same year, and began a lucrative law practice. In 1882 he was
elected to a judgeship on the New York Superior Court. In 1891 he was appointed to the
New York State Supreme Court by New York Governor David B. Hill. He became one
of the first associate justices of the First Division of the Appellate Division of the New
York State Supreme Court at its formation in 1896. He became presiding justice in 1910,
and remained in that position until his retirement in 1915.
After leaving the bench, Justice Ingraham remained continued to serve as Director of
Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States president of the New York City
Bar Association (1917-1918), Chairman of the District Appeals Draft Board, official
referee of the 1st Judicial District of Supreme Court, and vice president of New York
Ingraham as Presiding Justice of New York
Law Institute.
Supreme Court, Appellate Division, 1910
Born
August 1, 1847
Sources
New York City, New York
Died
January 24, 1931 (aged 83)
Biography of George Landon Ingraham. Appellate Division First Department,
New York City, New York
New York State Court System. (https://www.nycourts.gov/courts/ad1/centennial/B
Education
ios/glingraham2.shtml)
Columbia University (1863)
"Gov. Hill Appoints Judges; George L. Ingraham and H.A. Gildersleeve the Lucky
Spouse(s)
Georgina Lent Ingraham
Men." The New York Times. April 17, 1891. (https://query.nytimes.com/mem/archi
Children
ve-free/pdf?res=9E0DE1DD163AE533A25754C1A9629C94609ED7CF)
Daniel Phoenix Ingraham
Retrievedfrom"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=George_Landon_Ingraham&oldid=765757303"
Categories: 1847 births
1931 deaths Columbia Law School alumni American judges American lawyers
Presidents of the New York City Bar Association
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Mental heiling
a
Illness in 1880.
Early in the 1880s I had a long illness with a complete
break-down of nervous rigor and energy. The cause was obscure.
Leading doctors, physicians of high standing, were unable to
help me, unable to understand it or get at its foundation.
It looked as if I might not live. Then I chanced upon a book
telling of some wonderful cures, well authenticated, that
had been effected by suggestion, people being put into mesmeric
tranees for the purpose of receiving the suggestion given
them. Much I found had been written about it during a number
of years past and remarkable experiments had been tried by
a doctor whose name I now forget, on patients in a hospital
in India maintained in charity for natives. The name Braid
comes back to me in this connection but I cannot be sure
of it now. This, the work done in this hospital, experimentally,
was at the time of the discovery of ether. The physician
in charge at the hospital who was trying the experiments
found that not everyone was capable of being put into a
memneric trance and that it was necessary, when he did suc-
ceed, to train the patient for a time to make him, or her,
subject to the influence. But when he did succeed he was
able to perform operations of the most serious nature without
causing pain or loss of consciousness to the patient.
Illness -2
The whole work was carried on on a high scientific
plane; there was no charalatanism about it or lack of
careful observation, nor lack of understanding by the
physician conducting the experimentsof their profound
importance. But on the publication of his experiments
in England he had been attacked in the leading English
medical and surgical journal, The Lancet, in the vilest
manner. An account of these attacks being given publica-
tion along with reports on the experiments themselves in
the book I chanced upon. It made me indignant and showed
me how little fair play or intelligence was to be counted
on in the medical profession when brought in contact with
new ideas. The result was a desire to make experiment
of this new force myself and see if it might help me.
At this time a remarkable new mo vement was taking
place in Boston as a center but spreading widely out,
making use of this same forde apparently but using no
mesmeric or other trance to render people suggestable to
its influence. A number of people had taken it up and
were practicing it under different names. 'Mental healing'
was that taken by one group, and it was a good descriptive
term for the mind was the instrument and one knew nothing
nothing more, nothing as to how the suggestion became effective
or the physical work was done, save that it operated plainly
Illness -3
through the all-readhing and controlling nervous system.
Another group, combining the new force with old religious
doctrines, called themselves Christian Scientists and took
up Mrs. Eddy as their leader. I had an open mind but was
not superstitious or ready to take up on faith doctrines I
could not understand or give rational credit to. But there
was no question in my mind that a profoundly interesting and
important force was there, and one which very probably might
explain many phenomena of which there was record in the past,
such as certain well-attested phenomena at Lourdes and else-
where, miracles of the Catholic church, well-attested apparently
but not to be explained along the lines of interpretation
given them by the Catholic church.
So my mother sought out for me a practitioner of the
'mental healing doctrine I first described and made an
appointment for me to go and see her --for it was a woman -- and
one, I found, of good intelligence and education whom I could
talk with frankly. I told her I wanted to try if their new,
to me, doctrine could help me, but frankly also that such
books as I had come acros8 upon the subject, other than Braid's,
and one or two besides, carried no conviction to me as to the
religious basis of the cures affected and that if I needed to
be convinced of this I feared it would be useless for me to try.
Illness 4
Mrs. D, to call her so, said that there was no need for this;
all that was necessary was to be quiescent in one's attitude
and have an open mind. The power lay deeper than words. I
might not be responsive to its influence but she would gladly
try.
And on that basis I went to her regularly at stated
times for two weeks or so without perceiving any marked
effects, but suddenly I realized a change and felt a new
power, a new energy rising within me and this cont inned for
some weeks more, working a real transformation in my state,
though no words had been exchanged carrying conviction
to me. Whatever the change was did not enter through the
gate-way of consciousness but through some influence of what
I can describe only as the unconscious mind.
It reached 8
certain point and there it stopped but it had given me the
lift I needed and the improvement continued on, gradually
bringing me new strength and vigor.
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Memoirs of G.B. Dorr 1866-1882
Details
1866 - 1882