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

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Travel-Biltmore Estate, N Carolina-1900, 1902 & 1905
TRAVEL : Biltmore Estate,
N. Carolina. 1900, 1902, 1905.
Epp, Ronald
From:
Epp, Ronald
Sent:
Monday, October 31, 2005 10:41 AM
To:
Suzanne Durham
Cc:
Epp, Ronald
Subject:
RE: George Dorr
Dear Suzanne,
I left a message for you before departing for Boston and will try again by phone on
Thursday.
First off, the Biltmore "guest book" may contain information about others who visits
coincided with Mr. Dorr. Could those names be provided?
Does the Guest Book indicate the length of the stay? Does it include any personal
notations as is characteristics of many guestbooks?
At Yale's Beinecke Library last week I was investigating the Edith Wharton Papers and she
mentions to Mr. Dorr and others her requests from G.W. Vanderbilt and his wife to visit
Biltmore. Can these dates be identified?
The Harvard Philosopher William James also visited and I have indications that his visits
coincided with those of Mr. Dorr. Can you verify?
Is there any indication of the itineraries of these individuals regarding traveling around
the estate, camping out, seeking forestry advice, etc?
Do any documents survive that refer to the Vanderbilt's Bar Harbor estate and the social
activities that took place therein?
Quite a tall order, I know. I look forward to speaking with you later this week.
With best regards!
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
University Library Director
Southern New Hampshire University
Manchester, NH 03106
603-668-2211 ext. 2164
Original Message
From: Suzanne Durham [mailto: sdurham@biltmore.com]
Sent: Tuesday, October 25, 2005 1:09 PM
To: Epp, Ronald
Subject: George Dorr
Hi Dr. Epp,
We received your application for research material and you're "cleared for takeoff. " I
checked the Biltmore guest book and found George Dorr listed as visiting three times: 21
Dec 1900 27 Nov 1902 and 18 Oct 1905. It's been some time since we talked so please give
me a call or send an email and review what kinds of documentation you're looking for.
Suzanne
Suzanne K Durham CA
*Conflicting reports from
Special Collections Manager
1900 02 1901 visit
The Biltmore Company
One North Pack Square
Asheville NC 28801
1
R. Stanton Avery
Special Collections Dept.
New England Historic
Genealogical Society
101 Newbury Street
Boston, MA 02116
COPY
1871 - GBD & WWD go to London- then join parents at Baden-Baden
(Good copy - to be read for typographical errors)
Trace noute on map
Italy.
1872-1874 - C.H.D. to Paris for winter, going to Riviera and
&WWW
to Rome; ChD. returned home in spring; GBD & WWD going
again, the same spring to England, Scotland and Wales,
with Mr. Dana as a companion on the trip; in the fall
of 1873 WWD returned home, & CHD joined GBD for a
winter in Paris and on Riviera, returning home in the
spring of 1874. (Good copy, but change has to be made,
as it is written incorrectly.)
1874 - 1878 -- Abroad - Rome, etc. (unfinished)
1878 - trip to Brittany ; trip to Spain, winter of 1877 to be
added to the story.
1882 - Trip to Central Italy & Sicily - Rough Copy
1891-1892 - Trip to Palestine & Up Nile - Good
Canoeing Trip to Moosehead Lake with Sam Warren - 1895
1902 - Trip with Geologists - Good
1903 - GBD & Vanderbilts - Good
1904 - To Sierras - Good
1907 - Last Trip Abroad Rough
A trip through Virginia
Staying at Biltmore
Estes Park - (Col. Fordyce
I
643
Millseitle - Va
Nov 18-1902
Dear Mu Elist.
I am down in
North Carolina
h
Virginia as it Chanen,
tought
On athon
hif which Ref Wavis
rd are making together
which I tell you he Order
to Ethlan Mr, dela in
as get any definite
statement from item men
who have lake change
of the New York Sub-
scriptions, but I
believe I am lafe in
saying that not less
than $ $33000 or $4,000
have How been vained
We all and I feel
that to this Case the
Clink
'make a Whert hil together We
Mut Mictchell White Shuelting
the fact regin mind about if
Sincerely your
George B. Doe
President Charl. W. Eliot
Dorr irsits Biltmore "in old days
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
COLONIAL NATIONAL MONUMENT
YORKTOWN, VIRGINIA
Dec 12-1921
You the Don
Today I I of a copy of a letter but you
by No Halives relatur to the by ing kip that I
made to 4 nk from last summer I turned your
personal check over to the clerk here, and it was
subsequently last somebow. They are vow asking for
only a re-issue of the same check I am essay
that you are being troubled So much about the matter
a week ago I took the little pencl shelet
of Old farm to a fuctive Ramers, and you will
get it toon.
Last Saturday thiss Gurue writed we to lunch
with lee in also present were the (pinunt)
and this John Parll of Richmond it was very
pleasant
Last month I insted the Betwee Estate at
Asherille and was greatly impressed by the
magnificance of the house and the beauty of the
landicabing the Beadle (ap? ) shaved us through
the place He numembers your insiting Biltinors in the
old days. what pleased me as much as anything
else was to see the two brick and budge from
Cleursteals' Hice.
we had a good tup in the Smokes The
weather was lovely But the visiblity very poor
Lots of work in the office - loger we will
always be lusy.
Best regards to you and your administrative
finity
Charles Returns
12/11/2017
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Object Title: Mt Mitchell History
Created/Edited: Jan 8, 2006 / Nov 14, 2007
Object ID: 170761
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ARTICLES
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and stories
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ARTICLES
100 Years on the
Timpanogos Glacier
Janosik, Carpathian
Robin Hood
Cherokee
Table of Contents
Tone Pogacnik A ski
flight into Triglav north
wall
The mounatain region of North Carolina was inhabited by the
Cherokee
Legend of the Grand
Cherokee Indians. Beginning inthe early 1700's the white
Andre' Michaux
Mesa Thunderbirds
man slowly pushed westward, first into present day
Elisha Mitchell and Thomas Clingman
The Tale Of Goldhorn
Tennessee and Kentucky then into western North Carolina.
The 20th Century
The Legend of Anton
Tozbar Spik
Through a series of treaties the Cherokee were slowly
Images
Mt Mitchell History
pushed westward. In 1839 the Cherokee nation was forcibly
removed from the mountains on the infamous "Trail of
Tears".
Andre' Michaux
One of the first white men to climb the Black Mountains was Andre' Michaux, a French Botanist. Arriving
on the east coast in 1794, Michaux explored Pennsylvania, New Jersy, and Maryland to collect examples
of American flkore for shipment back to France. In 1787 he moved to Charleston, SC and in 1789 he
made his first trip to the NC mountains. He made 2 trips, one in 1789 and returning in 1794. He left the
US in 1796. He climbed on and around the Blacks, Roans and Grandfather mountains. Interestingly, when
he climbed Grandfather Mountain in 1794 and he proclaimed it the "most elevated of these (mountains)
which form the chain of the Alleghenies and Appalachian."
Elisha Mitchell and Thomas Clingman
Elisha Mitchell was a minister and one of the first professors at the University of North Carolina (UNC),
appointed in 1818. During his 39 year tenure he taught mathematics, botany, zoology, chemistry,
mineralology, and geology at one time or another. Encharged with the North Carolina Geological Survey,
he made multiple trips west of the Blue Ridge, where he became interested in the Black Mountains. Over
the next 20 years Mitchell returned to the Black mountains to determine their elevations with a
barometer.
Thomas Clingman had bee a former student of Dr Mitchell at UNC. Trained as a lawyer, Clingman had
been a state represanative, Congressman, and US Seantor. In the mid 1850's Clingman also became
interested in the Black Mountains and their elevations. (Here the story can be confusing as almost all the
peaks had different names than today. See the accompanying map) Suffice it to say Clingman was
steadfast that he was the first to measure the high peaks height, in 1855 (Mitchell had claimed to
measure it in 1844.) The convoluted story tragically ended on June 27, 1857 when Dr Mitchell hoped
to
climb the Blacks to inverstigate and clear up the controversy. When he did not return after 3 days, local
inhabitants of the Cane(y) River valley began a search. Regretably, Elisha Mitchell was found dead,
drowned, at the base of the modern day Mitchell Falls. He was found by Big Tom Wilson, a renowned
guide and bear hunter (see plaque). Mitchells body was taken to Asheville, where it was buried (The
body was reinterred on the summit of Mt Mitchell in 1858.) The Civil War brought a virtual halt to activity
in the Blacks. These high peaks remained a wilderness. In the late 1800's expliotation came to the area,
first in the form of mining. NC has been a large producer of Mica and the first mine opened in 1869. The
environmental damage caused by mining was small compared to its greatest threat, logging.
The 20th Century
The mountain was very heavily logged in the early 1900's by the logging companies; the Brown Bothers,
Carolina Spruce, Dickey + Campbell, and Perley + Crockett (the largest). The slopes of the Blacks were
cleared of most trees as they were transported by RR to the towns Pensacola (west of the Blacks) and
Black Mt (south of the Blacks). A narrow gauge RR line had been built up the mountain from both places.
The mountain was burned fairly extensively from the sparks emitted by the train engines.
In 1909 John Silcox Holmes (for whom Holmes State Forest SW of Asheville is named); the newly
means on
N.C. M 1102- 4902
Note: These Pitmen-variant
Shorthand notes describe
Dorr's Biltmore trip in 1902.
I have been unable to
locate historical shorthand
specialists who can decipher
this record, despite
repeated contacts over a decade
2.
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GRAY HEREPRIUM
ARCH VES
For study only.
Written author must be
Commonwealth Avenue.
obtait ed for cil other uses.
April 24th, 1905.
Dear Mr Robinson,
Please excuse an invitation by typewriter, but I
have got to go down to Bar Harbor tonight to look after the
spring planting at my Nurseries.
I am going to have some colored lantern slides of the
Canadian Rocky wild-flowers, shown at the Tavern Club on Monday
evening, May first, after its annual meeting. And I am
allowed to ask in a few guests of my own to see them. If you
will be one of these and will come at quarter past nine to
the Club house in Boylston Place, it will give me great pleasure
to welcome you there. The coloring of the flowers has been
unusually well done, from notes taken when the flowers them-
selves were photographed, and the slides, which are not my own,
of course, give one a really good idea, I think, of the flowers
and plants themselves as one sees them growing in the mountains.
Hoping you may come, I am
Dea the Robinson
Sincerely yours,
The Slides an the bleader's
p, my Seen
have diew interest Goy B. Wast
when you and think if their Height should also he like any Where The them the will f Department not
I think they would in
you
Benjamin L. Robinson, Esq.
him also thi, him will you GBW- 2
please efficial My W
Mount Mitchell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 1 of 4
Mount Mitchell
Coordinates:35°45'53"N 82°15'54"W
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mount Mitchell is the highest peak of the
Mount Mitchell
Appalachian Mountains and the highest peak in
eastern North America, excluding island summits. It
was the highest point in any state of the United
Mount
States until Texas joined the union in 1845. The
Mitchell
nearest higher point east of the Rocky Mountains is
Harney Peak in the Black Hills of South Dakota.
Mount Mitchell is located near Burnsville in Yancey
County, North Carolina, in the Black Mountain
subrange of the Appalachians, and about
Elevation
6,684 feet (2,037 m) [1]
32 kilometres (20 mi) northeast of Asheville. It is
Location
Yancey County, North Carolina,
protected by Mount Mitchell State Park and
USA
surrounded by the Pisgah National Forest.
Range
Appalachian Mountains
The mountain was named after Elisha Mitchell, a
professor at the University of North Carolina, who
Prominence
6,089 feet (1,856 m) [2]
determined its height in 1835 and fell to his death at
nearby Mitchell Falls in 1857, having returned to
Coordinates
35°45'53"N 82°15'54"W [1]
verify his earlier measurements.
Topo map
USGS Mount Mitchell 35082-G3
The ascent of Mount Mitchell is now rather easy,
Easiest
Hike
since a road off the historic and scenic Blue Ridge
route
Parkway runs nearby, and a 980 feet (300 m) trail
leads through a conifer forest to the summit. The 40-
Listing
Ultra
foot (12 m) stone observation tower on the summit
U.S. state high point
was torn down in late 2006. A new observation deck
was constructed and opened to visitors in January
2009. [3] Also on the summit is the tomb of Dr. Mitchell.
The weather on Mount Mitchell is very mild in the summer and very harsh in the winter, more like
Maine or southeastern Canada than the southeastern U.S. The coldest temperature ever recorded in the
state occurred there on January 21, 1985 when it fell to -34 °F (-37 °C), during a severe cold spell that
brought freezing temperatures as far south as Miami. It is also the coldest average reporting station in
the state at 43.8 °F (6.6 which is well below any other station. [4] Unlike the lower elevations in the
surrounding regions, heavy snows often fall from December to March, with 50 inches (127 cm)
accumulating in the Great Blizzard of 1993. [4] Snow flurries have been reported on the summit even in
the summer months of June, July, and August. The summit is often windy, with the record being
178 miles per hour (286 km/h). [5]
The high elevations also expose plant life to high levels of pollution, including acid precipitation in the
form of rain, snow, and fog. These acids damage the spruce and fir trees are particularly, in part by
releasing natural metals from the soil like aluminum, and by leaching important minerals. This stress
also reduces the trees' resistance and immunity to insects, especially to non-native introduced pests like
the Balsam woolly adelgid.
While the mountain is still mostly lush and green in the summer, many dead trunks can be seen due to
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Mitchell
6/17/2009
Mount Mitchell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 2 of 4
these serious problems. Repairing the damage is a difficult issue, as the pollutants are often carried in
from long distances. Sources can be local or hundreds of miles or kilometers away, requiring
cooperation from as far away as the Midwest.
Still, hundreds of tourists visit the peak each spring through autumn, for its incredible views and sunsets.
Wildflowers are abundant all summer long. Young fir and spruce trees do well in the subalpine climate,
and their pine cones feed the birds along with wild blueberry and blackberry shrubs.
The second highest point in eastern North America, Mount Craig at 6,647 feet (2,026 m) is roughly a
mile to the north of Mount Mitchell.
Contents
1 Gallery
2 See also
3 References
4 External links
Gallery
A view from the
Looking west from the
Black Mountain Range
Looking west at
observation tower.
parking lot atop the
as seen from Blue
southernmost Black
summit.
Ridge Parkway.
Mountains from Blue
Ridge Parkway. Mount
Mitchell is out of frame
to the right.
Southern view of Black
Forest on Mount
View northeast from
Mount Craig as seen
Mountains from Blue
Mitchell from hiking
Mount Mitchell.
from Mount Mitchell.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Mitchell
6/17/2009
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Travel-Biltmore Estate, N Carolina-1900, 1902 & 1905
Details
1900 - 1905