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

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Gray Robert M. 1943-
Gray, Robert M.
1943
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11/13/2016
Robert M. Gray - Wikipedia
Robert M. Gray
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert M. Gray (born November 1, 1943[1] is an American
information theorist, and the Alcatel-Lucent Professor of
Robert M. Gray
Electrical Engineering at Stanford University in Palo Alto,
California. He is best known for his contributions to
quantization and compression, particularly the development of
vector quantization.
Contents
1 Awards
2 Early life
3 Books
4 Notable professional service
5 References
6 External links
Robert M. Gray (2008)
Awards
Born
November 1, 1943
Gray received the 2008 Claude E. Shannon Award from the
San Diego, California
IEEE Information Theory Society, for his fundamental
Nationality American
contributions to information theory, particularly in the area of
Fields
Electrical engineering
quantization theory. [2] He was also the recipient of the 2008
IEEE Jack S. Kilby Signal Processing Medal, [3][4]
Institutions Stanford University
the 1998
Golden Jubilee Award for Technological Innovation from the
Alma mater University of Southern California
IEEE Information Theory Society, [5] and the 1993 IEEE Signal
Doctoral
Robert A. Scholtz
Processing Society Award. [6]
advisor
Irwin M. Jacobs
Doctoral
Michelle Effros
Gray received the 2002 Presidential Award for Excellence in
students
Sheila Hemami
Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring. This award
reflects the impact he has had on engineering theory and practice
David Neuhoff
through his students; he has advised 50 Ph.D. students,
Pam Cosman
including 13 women Ph.D.'s.
Eve Riskin
Known for
Vector quantization
Amongst other honors, he was elected to the National Academy
of Engineering in 2007, and received the IEEE Third
Notable
Member of the National Academy of
Millennium Medal in 2000.
awards
Engineering (2007)
Claude E. Shannon Award (2008)
Early life
Born in 1943 in San Diego, Gray grew up in Coronado, California. He was a middle child in a family of five.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_M._Gray
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Robert M. Gray - Wikipedia
Gray followed his two older brothers to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He earned the B.S. and M.S. in
Electrical Engineering from MIT in 1966, where he was a classmate of Lawrence Rabiner. Gray earned the Ph.D.
in Electrical Engineering from University of Southern California in 1969; his Ph.D. advisor was Robert A. Scholtz.
During his graduate school years, he played guitar in the rock band "MCF".
He began his career at the US Naval Ordnance Laboratory, following a family naval tradition.
Books
Gray has written or co-authored a number of technical texts, including:
Toeplitz and Circulant Matrices (1971, revised 2006)
Probability, Random Processes and Ergodic Properties (1988, revised 2007)
Introduction to Statistical Signal Processing (1986, revised 2007)
Entropy and Information Theory (1991, revised 2007)
Source Coding Theory (1990)
Vector Quantization and Signal Compression (1992)
Gray is also an amateur historian and has collected together some historical letters from diplomats into books:
Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age (2005)
Max&Max (2005)
Notable professional service
Gray is currently Editor-in-Chief of Foundations and Trends in Signal Processing. He has also been Editor-in-
Chief of the IEEE Trans. on Information Theory (1981-1983), and served on the IEEE Information Theory Society
Board of Governors (1974-1980, 1984-1987) and IEEE Signal Processing Society Board of Governors (1999-
2001).
References
1. Gray, Robert M. "Short Bio". Retrieved 5 March 2013.
2. "Claude E. Shannon Award". IEEE Information Theory Society. Retrieved February 28, 2011.
3. "IEEE Jack S. Kilby Signal Processing Medal Recipients" (PDF). IEEE. Retrieved February 28, 2011.
4. "IEEE Jack S. Kilby Signal Processing Medal Recipients - 2008 - Robert M. Gray". IEEE. Retrieved February 28, 2011.
5. "Golden Jubilee Awards for Technological Innovation". IEEE Information Theory Society. Retrieved July 14, 2011.
6. "Society Award". IEEE Signal Processing Society. Retrieved February 28, 2011.
External links
Gray's webpage (http://www-ee.stanford.edu/~gray/)
IEEE History Center Interview with Gray (1998) (http://www.ieee.org/portal/cms_docs_iportals/iportals/abo
utus/history_center/oral_history/pdfs/Gray347.pdf)
Robert M. Gray (https://www.genealogy.math.ndsu.nodak.edu/id.php?id=59906) at the Mathematics
Genealogy Project
Retrieved from"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Robert_M._Gray&oldid=744530143
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_M._Gray
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Robert M. Gray - Wikipedia
Categories: 1943 births | Living people American information theorists
Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni I USC Viterbi School of Engineering alumni
Stanford University School of Engineering faculty
Members of the United States National Academy of Engineering
Guggenheim Fellows
This page was last modified on 15 October 2016, at 20:54.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.
By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark
of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_M._Gra
11/13/2016
ee.stanford.edu/~gray/shortbio.html
Robert M. Gray was born in North Island Naval Air Station, San Diego, Calif., on November 1, 1943. He
received the B.S. and M.S. degrees from M.I.T. in 1966 and the Ph.D. degree from U.S.C. in 1969, all in
Electrical Engineering. Since 1969 he has been with Stanford University, where he is currently the Lucent
Technologies Professor of Engineering, Emeritus, and Professor of Electrical Engineering, Emeritus. His
research interests are in information theory and signal processing, especially in the theory and practice of
quantization, compression, and classification. He is currently a Research Professor at Boston University.
He was a member of the Board of Governors of the IEEE Information Theory Group (1974-1980, 1985-1988)
and of the IEEE Signal Processing Society (1998-2001). He was Associate Editor for Source Coding (1977-
1980) and Editor-in-Chief (1980-1983) of the IEEE Transactions on Information Theory. He was founding
Editor-in-Chief of Foundations and Trends in Signal Processing and served through 2012. He was Co-Chair of
the 1993 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory and Program Co-Chair of the 1997 and 2004
IEEE International Conference on Image Processing.
He is a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics and the IEEE and has held fellowships from the Japan
Society for the Promotion of Science at the University of Osaka (1981), the John Simon Guggenheim
Foundation at the University of Paris XI (1982), and NATO/Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche at the
University of Naples (1990). During spring 1995 he was a Vinton Hayes Visiting Scholar at the Division of
Applied Sciences of Harvard University. He was a Faculty Affiliate of the Clayman Institute for Gender Studies
at Stanford University, where he was a Faculty Research Fellow during the 2008-2009 academic year.
He was corecipient of the 1976 IEEE Information Theory Group Paper Award and the 1983 IEEE ASSP Senior
Award. He was awarded an IEEE Centennial medal (1984) and an IEEE Third Millennium Medal (2000). He
received the 1993 Society Award, the 1998 Technical Achievement Award, the 2005 Meritorious Service Award,
and the 2009 Education Award from the IEEE Signal Processing Society. He received a Golden Jubilee Award
for Technological Innovation (1998) and the 2008 Shannon Award from the IEEE Information Theory Society.
He received the 2008 IEEE Jack S. Kilby Signal Processing Medal. He received a 2002 Presidential Award
for
Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring (PAESMEM) and the 2003 Distinguished
Alumni in Academia Award from the University of Southern California. In May 2013 he received a Stanford
University President's Award for Excellence Through Diversity. He is a member of the National Academy of
Engineering (2007). He holds an Advanced Class Amateur Radio License (KB6XQ). He is a member of the
August Derleth Society and the Praed Street Irregulars.
Revised 2 October 2014
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Amy Heard
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age
9 January 2005
This site provides the current version of the book Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age . The book is also available in an Adobe portable
document format (PDF) version.
Some additional related material will also be made available as I acquire it.
In 2004 a photo album was found in a Baltimore junkyard. Finding Amy Heard and Max Heard named on the back of some photos, the finders
tracked me down through the internet. These 1070s-1880s photos, which include pictures of Amy, Max, and Jane Heard along with several
unidentified people are viewable at :hhttp://ee.stanford.edu/~gray/Baltimore_Heard/.Some of the photographs are by the most famous photographers
of the time, including Mathew Brady.
The book consists primarily of letters written to Amy Heard during the last quarter of the nineteenth century, especially from her friend Victoria
Sackville-West, the mother of writer Vita Sackville-West, and her sisters. Extensive commentary places the letters in context and describes many of
the people mentioned.
Max & Max
Transcribing and translations of letters from Amy's Heard's sister Max and her parents from Seoul, Korea, to Amy during the period 1891-1893
during which Amy's father, Augustine Heard, was the U.S. Minister to Korea. The main story in the letters is the romance between Max and Max von
Brandt, the German minister to Peking. A second story is the difficult adjustment of an American family to life in Seoul. The letters are being
included in both the original French and in translation. I am slowly adding commentary and footnotes on the people mentioned in the letters and on
Korea of that period. A pdf is also available, but the photo quality is not good as my scanning talents are inadequate.
Jean Brown has kindly provided three pictures relating to Mrs. Greathouse, who is mentioned in Max & Max. These are A newspaper article
describing Mrs. Greathouse's adventures in Korea following her return, a short biography of Clarence Greathouse from the Dictionary of American
Biography, and Chapter X on Greathouse from the Fantastic City San Francisco historical Website.
Poisoning by Wholesale: A Reminiscence of China Life A manuscript by Albert Farley Heard written during the 1880s regarding the panic in China
in 1857.
Permission is hereby given to freely print and circulate copies of these items SO long as it is left intact, proper acknowledgement is given, and the
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age -- February
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order to call the architect or others involved with the project, each responding to a specified series of
blasts on the whistle. When told that the orchestra needed an audience to test the acoustics of the concert
hall before the opening concert, she was SO reluctant to let anyone see the hall before the official
opening that she invited the local school for the blind for the rehearsal. Unfortunately it was raining and
a well-meaning janitor carefully arranged all of the raincoats, umbrellas, and rubber shoes he found
randomly scattered in the entryway. It took hours for the children to locate their moved belongings.
Good biographies of her are Mrs Jack [24] and Isabella Stewart Gardner of Fenway Court[8].
Mrs Schlesinger is possibly the wife of Sebastian Schlesinger, who according to Mrs James G. Blaine
was a "foreign banker."
Robert M. Gray, September 23, 2005
February
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age - - October
Page 1 of 4
October
October 1881
Newport, R.I.
October 1st 1881
1st Sat.
Not out in daytime. Dined at Mrs. Marshall O. Roberts, no one but her 2 sisters, Misses Endicott
& a Miss McAllister? Afternoon to party at Ida's. Mrs Craig Wadsworth, Miss Dehones.
Marshall Owen Roberts (1814-1880) was a capitalist and politician who, among other things, managed
many government mail steamship service contracts. These businesses were severely damaged by
competition from Cornelius Vanderbilt. Roberts gained notoriety as a profiteer from his steamship
dealings during the Civil War. He was an anti-Seward Whig and a Republican. He was one of the group
that financed Cyrus Field's first cable venture. Mary Endicott was the daughter of the Secretary of the
Navy and a friend of Victoria's who married the British Diplomat Joseph Chamberlain after his
successful negotiation of the British-American Fisheries Treaty. Mrs. Craig Wharton Wadsworth is the
former Evelyn Willing Peters, 1845-1885. She would later be Amy's neighbor on Massachusetts Avenue
in Washington.
2nd Sun.
Not out. Mrs Calvert cd. Mrs. Sturgis & Rita & Susie tea with us.
The abbreviation "cd." stands for "called." The custom of calling is well described by Tehan in Henry
Adams in Love [23], p. 24:
The paying of calls was governed by iron-clad rules. Any lady who was or wanted to be in society must
first leave her printed calling card before making a visit. Her footman presented it to the servant of the
house, and if the corner was turned down it signified that the lady had come in person. The lady for
whom she left the card must, within seven to ten days, leave her card in return. This ritual use of the
engraved bits of pasteboard was a means of testing the social temperature before entering the water.
Next came the exchange of formal calls. One etiquette writer declared, "You cannot invite people to
your house (however often you may have met them elsewhere) until you first call on them in a formal
manner and they return your visit. It is a safeguard against undesirable aquantances. If you don't wish to
continue the friendship, you discontinue to call and no further advances are made. But it is bad manners
not to return a call in the first instance."
3rd Mon.
Arthur Carey, Mrs. Hopkins cd. Drove with Mr. Warren. Misses Endicott & McAllister.
4th Tues.
Dr. Brackett filled tooth up. left. Mr. Atherton Blight, Arthur Rives, Miss Dehones. To see R.
Sturgis, Mrs. Rob. Cushing.
5th Wed.
To see Mme Outrey. Dr. Brackett general polishing. Mrs Parkinson sent us her carriage. Cd. on
Phimneys, Wales, Perkins, Parkinson. Mrs. J. C. Gray, Miss Frick cd.
Mme Outrey was the "winsome" wife of the French Minister to Washington. Mrs. John Chipman Gray
was the wife of the brother of Russell Gray, later to become Amy's husband. John C. Gray was a
Professor of Law at Harvard and founding partner of the Boston Law Firm of Ropes and Gray. Another
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age --October
Page 2 of 4
brother (actually, a half brother) Horace was then a U.S. Supreme Court Justice. In her letter to her
father of 15 January 1882, Mrs. Henry Adams writes of Judge Gray that
Last Sunday Judge Gray to dine. Has not gained in charm of manner in the years since we last met.
6th Th.
To see Mrs. Roberts, Endicotts, Miss McAllister. Mrs. Edw. Potter cd.
Possibly Edward Potter is the sculptor (1857-1923) who created statues for the Chicago World's Fair in
1893, did several equestrian statues, and did the lions for the New York Public Library.
7th Fri.
Rita Sturgis, Mrs. A .A. Low, Miss Low, Mrs. H. Pierrepont Jr, cd. Dr. with Mr. Warren.
Abiel Abbot Low (1811-1893) of Salem was a merchant and the clerk and partner (837-1839) of Russell
& Co. in Canton China, the company founded by Samul Russell of Middletown, Conn., following his
arrival in China in 1824. Amy's father's uncle Augustine Heard had been a partner of Russell & Co.
(1831-1836) before founding his own company, Augustine Heard & Co. [16][26][10] Russell & Co. was
the largest and Augustine Heard & Co. the second largest American trading firms in China. A. A. Low
formed his own company A.A. Low & Brothers and eventually became the leading China and Japan
trader in silks and tea. He also shared in in financing the first Atlantic cable and in the building of the
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad through West Virginia. Rita Sturgis is possibly either the wife of Russell
Sturgis of Boston, who also was a partner in Russell & Co. (1842-1844) or of Robert Shaw Sturgis of
Boston, another partner (1850-1857).
8th Sat.
Papa came in the night. Mrs. Wetmore, Miss M. Whiting, Ida Decon, Mrs. Cunningham, Miss
Hurd cd. I on the Providence. Smith's, M. Griswold, Ida where several girls came to aft. tea. Maud
Legdard drove me home.
It is possibly coincidence, but there was also a partner of Russell & Company named John N. Alsop
Griswold, possibly a relation to Minnie Griswold.
Oct 9th
Ch. Papa to N.Y. by night boat.
10th Mon.
Revd Potter, Min. Griswold, Emily Upton, Miss Gray, Mrs Kenuce
Miss Gray is likely one of Harriet or Elizabeth (Bessie) Gray, (half) sisters of John Chipman and Russell
Gray.
11th Tues.
Large girl's lunch at the Russells. Cd on Whitings, Mrs Boit, Eyre, W. Wadsworth, Sands. The
misses Mason cd.
12th Wed.
Mamma to lunch at the Rodmans. Mrs Livingston, Woodsworth, Endicotts cd.
13th Th.
To see Mrs. W. Forbes at Mrs Pomeroys. out. Cd. on Mrs Dr. King, Mrs Rich. Willing here &
Mrs. Terry & Daisey! To see Mrs. J. C. Gray after dinner.
The name of Forbes also enters through Russell & Co., John Murray Forbes of Milton, Mass., was a
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age October
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partner (1834-1838) as were Robert Bennett Forbes of Milton (1839-1844), Paul Sieman Forbes of New
York (1844-1873), and William Howell Forbes of New York and Paris (1861-1880), Frank Blackwell
Forbes of New York (1863-1880), James Murray Forbes of Milton (1869-1872), John Murray Forbes,
Jr., of New York (1871-1880), and Henry De Courcy Forbes of New York (1872-1880). Russell & Co.
was clearly a family affair, as was Heard & Co. Many of these men made fortunes while still young and
some, like Amy's father, lost most of it during the recession of the 1870s. Mrs. J.C. Gray was Anna
Sophia Lyman "Nina" Gray. She became a close friend of Oliver Wendell Holmes.
14th Fri.
Mr. & Mrs. Forbes & Miss Pomeroy cd. Dr. with Mr. Warren. Cd on Miss Madeleine Mixter.
15th S.
Mrs. Griswold & Miss Derby cd. Boston Mr. & Mrs. Gray came today, J. C. after din. Papa &
Mama dined at the Pomeroys. I at the Griswolds. Afterwards to Commerce Party at Ida's.
16th S.
Ch. cd. on Mrs. & Miss Minot, dined 1.30 at the Pomeroys. Walked with Miss Erving. aft. tea. at
Miss Howard's. Papa left by night boat.
17th M.
Mamma to join Papa in N.Y. & go on to Washington & hunt houses with him. Mrs & Miss Minot
cd. I on Mrs. Rich Willing & the Russells.
18th Tues.
Drove to Paradise & Purgatory
19th Oct.
Mrs & Miss Phinney, Min. Griswold here. Drove with Miss Phinney.
20th Th.
Cd on Smiths & Mrs. Stanard.
21st Fri.
Mr. Crawford, Maud Ledyard, Mr. Morgand. Drove with Mr. Pomeroy (Tandem). Mamma back
fr. Washington. Aug. fr. Quincy to see Brachdt.
22nd Sat.
Drove with Mr Warren.
23rd Sun.
Not out. Mr Arthur Rives cd.
24th M.
Aug. back to Quincy. Began packing.
25th Tues.
Miss Ida Mason & Perkins Cd.& Mrs Russell Forsythe.
26th Wed.
Miss G. King. Mme de Vaugrigneuse cd.
27th Th.
Mrs Buchler & B. sailed for Havre in "Lessing." Mrs. Edw. Potter cd. Not out since Saturday nor
seen anyone. Hair washed.
The Lessing was a ship of 3,496 gross tons, length 375.1ft X beam 40ft, one funnel, two masts, iron hull,
single screw, speed 13 knots, with accommodation for 90-1st, 100-2nd and 800-3rd class passengers. It
was launched in 1874 by A. Stephen & Sons, Glasgow for the Adler Line, Hamburg. she started her
maiden voyage from Hamburg to New York on 28th May 1874. In 1875 she was purchased by Hamburg
America Line and continued Hamburg - Havre - New York sailings.
28th Fri.
29th Sat.
Papa home. Mrs and Misses Austin, Miss Smith cd.
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age February
Page 1 of 4
Year?
February
see pg.3
February 1882
W. 1 Feb.
Did not go out except for the evening to an "at home" at the Bancrofts to which Mrs Wadsworth
took me. The Blaines, Dodge, Upshurs, Miss Lee, Ogdens, Josie Taylor, Carters, Pattisons, Miss
Witherspoon came here.
Th. 2
To receive with the Pendletons. Mathilda and Miss Turnbull here, Ginny McL. and her niece
(???).
F.3
To see the Cutts, Logans, Porters, Ross Bays, Rathbones, Hooker, Grace, Miss and Mr L. and
Ginny. In the evening to the "Bachelor's German" where I danced with a Taft from Cincinatti, a
friend of Mrs Pendleton, who took me there.
Sa. 4
Snowed without stopping for a moment all day. Nevertheless I lunched with Mathilda de N. and
stayed with her until after 5, playing piano. Papa returned from N.Y.
Sun. 5
To the party (tertulia) at the Nogueiras_with Señora Martinez and Josefina.
M. 6
With Papa "to the House" where ??? Miss Lucy Frelinghuysen, Mrs Oliver and her sisters
Rathbones, Mrs McLane, Hale, Kasson, Lowndes, Belmont. We all lunched with Mr. Kasson.
Afterwords we went to see the machines underneath for heating, provisions, etc. Then I went with
Papa to see Mrs Basbouir (??) and Miss Dangerfield. Mrs Bancroft, Ogdens, Mrs Robeson and
Minnie Stout, Miss Levy, Peabodys, Crowninshields, Mr R. Rofles and Lowery here.
T. 7
Miss Hooker, Mrs Dr G. Loring, Mrs Boswell (??) Schuyler, Beale, Arth. Dester here (and Mrs
Ruth, Dr Gunnell). To see Mrs F. Adam, Rathbones, Duncans, Biddles, Peabodys,
Crowninshields. Mama left her room for the first time since the 27th, to go to dine with Mrs
Wadsworth. Later Papa returned from N.Y.
W. 8
To see Mathilda, Josefina, Peabodys, Browne, Aulick Palmer, Frelinghuysens, Hunts. Here Dr
James Palmer, Schericks, Ginny McL. Monday I received from Juan a precious little edition of
"Undine."
An undine is a water sprite, a nymph with the ability to assume human form. As with other spirits, they
lacked a human soul. According to Paracelsus, when an Undine married a mortal and bore a child, the
fusion of natural and supernatural resulted in her gaining a soul. "Edicionita" has been translated has
been translated as "small edition." My guess is that the item being referred to is a small volume of the
book Undine by Friedrich Heinrich Karl de la Motte Fouqué, the son of Huguenots who fled to Prussia
from Normandy after the revocation of the edict of Nantes. His book, which was inspired by the writings
of the Swiss physician Paracelsus, was extremely popular during the Victorian era, although it had been
written much earlier in 1811. It happens that in 1882 an English translation of the book was published
by Riverside Press, a subsidiary of Houghten Mifflen [18]. The book is indeed an "edicionita," being a
small volume in a green binding with attractive illustrations. In addition to the book, the story formed
the basis of musical scores, operas, the Hans Christian Anderson tale of the little mermaid, one of the
stories in Oscar Wilde's collection of fairy tales, and a modern Walt Disney Cartoon.
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age -- February
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This journal entry contains the only appearance of the name Juan in the journals. The only Juan I know
of in Amy's life is Juan Valera, who arrives in Washington in 1884 as the Minister from Madrid and
who is often mentioned in the later letters. This is the first evidence the two might have known each
other before 1884, but at this time he was Spanish Minister to Lisbon.
Wed. 9
It rained all day and I did not go out until the evening for a dance at the British Legation with
Mama. Mrs. Fanny Peabody who was here for several days at Mrs. Crowninshield's danced the
cotillion with Charon. Misses Aldis and Schutz here.
F. 10
Mrs Ashton Gordon-Cumming, Duncans & Mr Kasson here. To see Posie Mason, Miss Mercer,
McFreley, Outrey, Miller (Hopkins)_ For the evening at the Lorings (Commissioner).
Posie
Mason is mentioned in the letters of Mrs. Henry Adams. On 12 February 1882 she writes
regarding a tea party that there were
lots of pretty girls, Posey Mason looking as if the ball and chain were off her ankles; she was gay and
gracious -- she is paddling her own canoe as a guest of the Pendeletons.
George Loring was the Commissioner of Agriculture.
Sat. 11
To see the Hopkins, Ashtons, Gordon-Cummings, McCeney, tea-party at the "Wisery"_ Peabodys,
Biddles, Mrs L. Carter, Dr. Shirley Carter, Miss Lela Mercer, Mrs Bingham, Ricketts, P. Parker,
Miss Lee, Miss Stoughton, J. Kings, Lippetts, Dodge, Mr Ray, Rogers, Kasson here.
Sun. 12
Mr Arthur Dexter, Mrs Phillips, Misses Levy, ???, Stout, McLane, Mr Strong called. High tea at
the Shenks with the Hales and General Smith. And later at the Nogueiras'.
M. 13
Mrs Grace lunched with us. For the afternoon at the house of Mrs J. Davis. For the evening,
reception ??? (Rose Ray?), afterwards the wedding of his daughter with Mr Harrison, later to the
Markol musical and to the Pendleton's.
T. 14
To see Miss West, Mrs Gitting, Miss Mild, Mrs W. Moore, Prestons, Robeson, Knight. Baron de
Arinos, Mrs Peabody, Mr Blaine, W. Phillips & Mrs Hannah ? here_ For the evening the last
German of the "Tuesday Club."
W. 15
To play the piano with Mathilde from 10 to 12. Lunched with Ginny McL. (Misses West, Lela
Mercer, M. Pendelton, Posie Mason, Biddle, L. Williams. Mr & Mrs W. Moore, Mrs Davenport,
General Beale, Mrs Oldfield, Mrs Big. Lawrence, Misses Chapman & Mercer. For the evening, at
the Wadsworth's.
Th. 16
Lunched at the Lawrence's. Misses Chapman, Mercer, Biddle, L. Emory, J Pendleton, L. Williams
& Mrs Arth. Dexter. To see Mrs Robeson who was sick all the week. For the evening at the
Frelinghuysen's. Misses Waite, Bissel, Meigs here.
F. 17
To see Mrs Gittings, Outrey, final Bachelors German with Strong. Ida arrived from N.Y. and (???)
with us. Chacon, Boca, Ida, P. Mason, J. Pendleton here.
Sat. 18
Lunched at the Pendletons. To see Miss Turnbull of N.Y., Ida, Mrs Hopkins_Mr Sally McLane,
Mme and Mlle de Chambrun, Miss Miller (Justice), Mrs Story, Mr Paine, Aristarchi, Count
Lewenhaupt, Mrs Ferguson here. For the evening at the Bancroft Davis' (some twenty young
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age February
Page 3 of 4
people for dancing). Papa returned from N.Y.
The note "Justice" suggests that Miss Miller is the daughter of Samuel Freeman Miller (1816-1890), an
Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (appointed by Lincoln in 1862).
Sun. 19
It rained SO much that I did not go to church. In the afternoon to see Mrs Willie Emory and for the
evening at the Robesons with Papa and the Minots. Mrs Gitting and Ida and Maj Booth here.
Mon. 20
Dined at the Ogdens. The Minots took me to the dance at the British Legation.
Tues. 21
For the evening at the Bancroft Davis'. Lunched with Mrs Wadsworth. Tea at the Wisery. To see
Mrs Gittings, Ida, Miss Bénard. Papa returned from N.Y.
W. 22
Ash Wednesday_ At Church. Josef. Martinez, Ida, Dr Palmer, Lamb. Gittings, Mr. & Mrs
Hopkins here.
Th. 23
To see Dr Loring for the fourth time. He burned my eyes with silver nitrate which caused them
much pain all day, more than the alum. Also he reapplied electricity. Mr. G. Dorr and A. Rives
here. To see Mrs. D. King and her sister Miss Rives, Mrs Carter, Lawrence, Chapman, Mercer,
H. Adams, Meigs, Brewster, Blaine, Ogden, Markol, McLanes, Robeson.
Bucknam
G. Dorr is George Cabot Dorr, the son of Charles Hazen Dorr and Mary Gray Ward Dorr of Boston.
George would later gain fame as the founder of Acadia National Park. Mary Dorr was a distant cousin of
Russell Gray, whom Amy would later marry. Mary as a granddaughter of Samuel Gray of Salem, an
older brother of William "Old Billy" Gray of Salem. William was Russell Gray's grandfather. Charles
and Mary were married in 1850, the year of Russell's birth.[12]
F. 24
To play the piano and lunch with Mathilde. To see Mrs J. Davis, M. Storey, Bingham, Ida, the
Church. For the evening at the Wadworths'.
Sat. 25
To see J. Pendleton, Ida, Miss Stoughton, at Church. Dined at the Dav. Kings. Later at the
Hopkins, Mr. V. Drummond, W. Blair, Dr. Gunnel, Prestons (Haiti).
Sun 26
At Church. Ida lunched with us. For the evening at the Robesons.
Mon. 27
Did not go out. Mrs Gordon Cumming came.
Tues. 28
Did not go out. Mrs J. Morris and Miss Lee, Dr and Mrs Ch. Carter, Mr & Mrs H. Adams, Mr &
Mrs Ch. Dorr, Mr & Mrs L. Irving, Mrs J. Lodge, Mrs Schlesinger, Mrs Jack Gardner.
Isabella Stewart Gardner ("Mrs Jack") was the wonderfully eccentric and wonderfully rich art collector
who scandalized Boston for years and founded the Gardner museum. Possessor of two fortunes, that of
her father and that of her husband Jack Gardner (a cousin of Amy's future husband Russel Gray), she
roamed the world in general (and Italy in particular) in search of art treasures for her reconstructed
Italian villa in the Fenway, then the swamps on the border of Boston. The famous collector and critic,
Bernard Berenson, arranged for many of her purchases, which ranged from the sublime to the silly. The
stories about her have become legend. Some examples: Upon moving to Boston and discovering that
the
aristocracy all belonged to the Episcopalian Church, she announced her conversion to Buddhism. While
her villa was being built, she liked to watch while perched in a nearby tree. She kept a whistle handy in
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order to call the architect or others involved with the project, each responding to a specified series of
blasts on the whistle. When told that the orchestra needed an audience to test the acoustics of the concert
hall before the opening concert, she was SO reluctant to let anyone see the hall before the official
opening that she invited the local school for the blind for the rehearsal. Unfortunately it was raining and
a well-meaning janitor carefully arranged all of the raincoats, umbrellas, and rubber shoes he found
randomly scattered in the entryway. It took hours for the children to locate their moved belongings.
Good biographies of her are Mrs Jack [24] and Isabella Stewart Gardner of Fenway Court[8].
Mrs Schlesinger is possibly the wife of Sebastian Schlesinger, who according to Mrs James G. Blaine
was a "foreign banker."
Robert M. Gray, September 23, 2005
February
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February
February
W. 1 Feb.
Did not go out except for the evening to an "at home" at the Bancrofts to which Mrs Wadsworth
took me. The Blaines, Dodge, Upshurs, Miss Lee, Ogdens, Josie Taylor, Carters, Pattisons, Miss
Witherspoon came here.
Th. 2
To receive with the Pendletons. Mathilda and Miss Turnbull here, Ginny McL. and her niece
(???).
F.
To see the Cutts, Logans, Porters, Ross Bays, Rathbones, Hooker, Grace, Miss and Mr L. and
Ginny. In the evening to the "Bachelor's German" where I danced with a Taft from Cincinatti, a
friend of Mrs Pendleton, who took me there.
Sa. 4
Snowed without stopping for a moment all day. Nevertheless I lunched with Mathilda de N. and
stayed with her until after 5, playing piano. Papa returned from N.Y.
Sun. 5
To the party (tertulia) at the Nogueiras_with Señora Martinez and Josefina.
M. 6
With Papa "to the House" where ??? Miss Lucy Frelinghuysen, Mrs Oliver and her sisters
Rathbones, Mrs McLane, Hale, Kasson, Lowndes, Belmont. We all lunched with Mr. Kasson.
Afterwords we went to see the machines underneath for heating, provisions, etc. Then I went with
Papa to see Mrs Basbouir (??) and Miss Dangerfield. Mrs Bancroft, Ogdens, Mrs Robeson and
Minnie Stout, Miss Levy, Peabodys, Crowninshields, Mr R. Rofles and Lowery here.
T. 7
Miss Hooker, Mrs Dr G. Loring, Mrs Boswell (??) Schuyler, Beale, Arth. Dester here (and Mrs
Ruth, Dr Gunnell). To see Mrs F. Adam, Rathbones, Duncans, Biddles, Peabodys,
Crowninshields. Mama left her room for the first time since the 27th, to go to dine with Mrs
Wadsworth. Later Papa returned from N.Y.
W. 8
To see Mathilda, Josefina, Peabodys, Browne, Aulick Palmer, Frelinghuysens, Hunts. Here Dr
James Palmer, Schericks, Ginny McL. Monday I received from Juan a precious little edition of
"Undine."
An undine is a water sprite, a nymph with the ability to assume human form. As with other spirits, they
lacked a human soul. According to Paracelsus, when an Undine married a mortal and bore a child, the
fusion of natural and supernatural resulted in her gaining a soul. "Edicionita" has been translated has
been translated as "small edition." My guess is that the item being referred to is a small volume of the
book Undine by Friedrich Heinrich Karl de la Motte Fouqué, the son of Huguenots who fled to Prussia
from Normandy after the revocation of the edict of Nantes. His book, which was inspired by the writings
of the Swiss physician Paracelsus, was extremely popular during the Victorian era, although it had been
written much earlier in 1811. It happens that in 1882 an English translation of the book was published
by Riverside Press, a subsidiary of Houghten Mifflen [18]. The book is indeed an "edicionita," being
a
small volume in a green binding with attractive illustrations. In addition to the book, the story formed
the basis of musical scores, operas, the Hans Christian Anderson tale of the little mermaid, one of the
stories in Oscar Wilde's collection of fairy tales, and a modern Walt Disney Cartoon.
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This journal entry contains the only appearance of the name Juan in the journals. The only Juan I know
of in Amy's life is Juan Valera, who arrives in Washington in 1884 as the Minister from Madrid and
who is often mentioned in the later letters. This is the first evidence the two might have known each
other before 1884, but at this time he was Spanish Minister to Lisbon.
Wed. 9
It rained all day and I did not go out until the evening for a dance at the British Legation with
Mama. Mrs. Fanny Peabody who was here for several days at Mrs. Crowninshield's danced the
cotillion with Charon. Misses Aldis and Schutz here.
F. 10
Mrs Ashton Gordon-Cumming, Duncans & Mr Kasson here. To see Posie Mason, Miss Mercer,
McFreley, Outrey, Miller (Hopkins)_ For the evening at the Lorings (Commissioner).
Posie Mason is mentioned in the letters of Mrs. Henry Adams. On 12 February 1882 she writes
regarding a tea party that there were
lots of pretty girls, Posey Mason looking as if the ball and chain were off her ankles; she was gay and
gracious -- she is paddling her own canoe as a guest of the Pendeletons.
George Loring was the Commissioner of Agriculture.
Sat. 11
To see the Hopkins, Ashtons, Gordon-Cummings, McCeney, tea-party at the "Wisery"_Peabodys,
Biddles, Mrs L. Carter, Dr. Shirley Carter, Miss Lela Mercer, Mrs Bingham, Ricketts, P. Parker,
Miss Lee, Miss Stoughton, J. Kings, Lippetts, Dodge, Mr Ray, Rogers, Kasson here.
Sun. 12
Mr Arthur Dexter, Mrs Phillips, Misses Levy, ???, Stout, McLane, Mr Strong called. High tea at
the Shenks with the Hales and General Smith. And later at the Nogueiras'.
M. 13
Mrs Grace lunched with us. For the afternoon at the house of Mrs J. Davis. For the evening,
reception ??? (Rose Ray?), afterwards the wedding of his daughter with Mr Harrison, later to the
Markol musical and to the Pendleton's.
T. 14
To see Miss West, Mrs Gitting, Miss Mild, Mrs W. Moore, Prestons, Robeson, Knight. Baron de
Arinos, Mrs Peabody, Mr Blaine, W. Phillips & Mrs Hannah ? here_ For the evening the last
German of the "Tuesday Club."
W. 15
To play the piano with Mathilde from 10 to 12. Lunched with Ginny McL. (Misses West, Lela
Mercer, M. Pendelton, Posie Mason, Biddle, L. Williams. Mr & Mrs W. Moore, Mrs Davenport,
General Beale, Mrs Oldfield, Mrs Big. Lawrence, Misses Chapman & Mercer. For the evening, at
the Wadsworth's.
Th. 16
Lunched at the Lawrence's. Misses Chapman, Mercer, Biddle, L. Emory, J Pendleton, L. Williams
& Mrs Arth. Dexter. To see Mrs Robeson who was sick all the week. For the evening at the
Frelinghuysen's. Misses Waite, Bissel, Meigs here.
F. 17
To see Mrs Gittings, Outrey, final Bachelors German with Strong. Ida arrived from N.Y. and (???)
with us. Chacon, Boca, Ida, P. Mason, J. Pendleton here.
Sat. 18
Lunched at the Pendletons. To see Miss Turnbull of N.Y., Ida, Mrs Hopkins_Mr Sally McLane,
Mme and Mlle de Chambrun, Miss Miller (Justice), Mrs Story, Mr Paine, Aristarchi, Count
Lewenhaupt, Mrs Ferguson here. For the evening at the Bancroft Davis' (some twenty young
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people for dancing). Papa returned from N.Y.
The note "Justice" suggests that Miss Miller is the daughter of Samuel Freeman Miller (1816-1890), an
Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (appointed by Lincoln in 1862).
Sun. 19
It rained SO much that I did not go to church. In the afternoon to see Mrs Willie Emory and for the
evening at the Robesons with Papa and the Minots. Mrs Gitting and Ida and Maj Booth here.
Mon. 20
Dined at the Ogdens. The Minots took me to the dance at the British Legation.
Tues. 21
For the evening at the Bancroft Davis'. Lunched with Mrs Wadsworth. Tea at the Wisery. To see
Mrs Gittings, Ida, Miss _Bénard, Papa returned from N.Y.
W. 22
Ash Wednesday_ At Church. Josef. Martinez, Ida, Dr Palmer, Lamb. Gittings, Mr. & Mrs
Hopkins here.
Th. 23
To see Dr Loring for the fourth time. He burned my eyes with silver nitrate which caused them
much pain all day, more than the alum. Also he reapplied electricity. Mr. G. Dorr and A. Rives
here. To see Mrs. D. King and her sister Miss Rives, Mrs Carter, Lawrence, Chapman, Mercer,
H. Adams, Meigs, Brewster, Blaine, Ogden, Markol, McLanes, Robeson.
G. Dorr is George Cabot Dorr, the son of Charles Hazen Dorr and Mary Gray Ward Dorr of Boston.
George would later gain fame as the founder of Acadia National Park. Mary Dorr was a distant cousin of
Russell Gray, whom Amy would later marry. Mary as a granddaughter of Samuel Gray of Salem, an
older brother of William "Old Billy" Gray of Salem. William was Russell Gray's grandfather. Charles
and Mary were married in 1850, the year of Russell's birth. [12]
F. 24
To play the piano and lunch with Mathilde. To see Mrs J. Davis, M. Storey, Bingham, Ida, the
Church. For the evening at the Wadworths'.
Sat. 25
To see J. Pendleton, Ida, Miss Stoughton, at Church. Dined at the Dav. Kings. Later at the
Hopkins, Mr. V. Drummond, W. Blair, Dr. Gunnel, Prestons (Haiti).
Sun 26
At Church. Ida lunched with us. For the evening at the Robesons.
Mon. 27
Did not go out. Mrs Gordon Cumming came.
Tues. 28
Did not go out. Mrs J. Morris and Miss Lee, Dr and Mrs Ch. Carter, Mr & Mrs H. Adams, Mr &
Mrs Ch. Dorr, Mr & Mrs L. Irving, Mrs J. Lodge, Mrs Schlesinger, Mrs Jack Gardner.
Isabella Stewart Gardner ("Mrs Jack") was the wonderfully eccentric and wonderfully rich art collector
who scandalized Boston for years and founded the Gardner museum. Possessor of two fortunes, that of
her father and that of her husband Jack Gardner (a cousin of Amy's future husband Russel Gray), she
roamed the world in general (and Italy in particular) in search of art treasures for her reconstructed
Italian villa in the Fenway, then the swamps on the border of Boston. The famous collector and critic,
Bernard Berenson, arranged for many of her purchases, which ranged from the sublime to the silly. The
stories about her have become legend. Some examples: Upon moving to Boston and discovering that the
aristocracy all belonged to the Episcopalian Church, she announced her conversion to Buddhism. While
her villa was being built, she liked to watch while perched in a nearby tree. She kept a whistle handy in
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1884
Nint,
1884
This is the earliest letter in the collection from Victoria to Amy.
Letter to Miss A. Heard care of Mess. J.J. Cisco & Son
59 Wall Street, New York.
note en coin: Tout le monde se réjouissent de votre arrivée.
British Legation
Washington, D.C.
7 Mai /84
Ma chère Amy,
Enfin je suis bien contente de savoir que vous viendrez "pour sûr" demeurer avec nous.
J'aurais aimé que vous fussiez ici pour les courses; cela vous aurait amusé; mais je crains d'après votre
lettre que vous ne pourrez pas. Vous me demandez de vous fixer le jour qu'il me serait le plus agréable
de vous avoir. Le plus tôt sera le mieux.
Peut-être aurez-vous quelques commissions et emplettes à faire à New York; donc vous désirez
probablement avoir un peu de temps libre. C'est pour cela que je préférer que vous fixiez vous-même le
temps de votre arrivé.
Nous sommes encore ici pour une grande partie de l'été; ainsi donc VS pouvez venir quand bon vous
semble. Et surtout arrangerez-vous de ???? à rester aussi long-temps que possible; vous devez au moins
nous donner 19 jours ou 3 semaines, si cela vous est permis.
J'espère que Mount Desert ne VS attires pas trop; c'est pour cela que je veux VS. guarder. Je désire faire
d'avance un arrangement avec vous: que VS. soyez tout à fait libre de votre temps, comme si vous étiez
chez vous. Je sais qu'il y a des hôtes qui veulent toujours faires des programmes pour leurs invités, et de
cette manière, leur être fort désagréables. Mais comme je veux que vous ayez avec nous "a nice time",
j'éspère que VS accepterez cette condition et que VS vous distraierez autant que possible.
Il n'y a pas grand chose maintenant; on se repose. Mais on se voit dans l'intimité; nous sommes à la
maison une fois par semaine le soir pour le corps diplomatique seulement; nous commencerons
probablement mardi prochaine.
Nous ferons de longues promenades en voiture; Papa vient de nous acheter un petit "panier" que je
conduis moi-même, comme nous aurons alors le temps de bavarder!
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Au revoir, chère Ami, et à bientôt. Faites-moi savoir tout de suite quand VS venez.
Votre sincère amie,
Victoria
Les courses commencent le 14 et durent jusqu'au 17 moi. Etes-vous temptée?
Milles amitiés à votre maman.
note in the corner: Everyone is delighted with your arrival.
British Legation
Washington, D.C.
7 May /84
My dear Amy, Finally I am well pleased to know that you are coming to stay with us "for sure." I would
have liked for you to be here for the races; that would
have amused you; but I fear from your letter that you
will not be able to. You ask me to fix the day that would
be the best for me to have you. The sooner the better.
Perhaps you have some errands and purchases to make
in New York; then you will probably desire a little free
time. It's for that reason that I would prefer you to fix
yourself the time of your arrival. We are still here for a
large part of the summer; thus you can come when it
seems good for you. And above all arrange things SO as
to remain as long as possible, you must at least give us
19 days or three weeks, if that is permitted.
I hope that Mount Desert does not attract you too much;
it is for that reason that I want to keep you. I wish to
make in advance an arrangement with you: that your
time should be completely free, as if you were in your
own home. I know that there are hosts who always want
to make programs for their guests, and in this manner,
they are quite disagreeable. I want for you to have with
us "a nice time," I hope that you will accept this
condition and that you will amuse yourself as much as
possible.
Jackim SEVENOAKS kee
Nothing much is going on now; one rests. But we see
each other in private; we are at home one night each
Victoria
week for the diplomatic corps only; we will probably
begin next Tuesday.
We take long carriage trips; Papa just bought us a little "wagon" which I drive myself; how we will then
have the time to gossip!
Au revoir, dear Amy, and a bientot. Let me know soon when you are coming.
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Your sincere friend,
Victoria
The races begin the 14th and last until 17 May. Are you tempted?
Notes: Mount Desert Island is a summer resort off the coast of East central Maine which now forms part
of Acadia National Park. The resort first gained popularity with academics and artists who journeyed
their for summer vacations, but sadly the paintings produced by the artists popularized the resort which
began to draw the social and wealthy and rival Newport in its "cottages," if not in its hotels, which were
notoriously non-luxurious for the time. Amy apparently accepted Victoria's invitation as she received a
letter in January 1885 with "British Legation, Washington, D.C." as her address.
Letter from Victoria West at the British Legation in Washington
to Amy Heard at 262 Fourth Avenue, NY.
Dated 23 December 1884.
23 Décembre
Ma chère Amy,
J'ai juste une minute avant de sortir pour vous envoyer me meillieurs souhaits pour la Noël. Quant à
ceux pour la nouvelle année, je sais que j'aurai la plaisir de vous les dire verbalement.
Je vous attends la semaine prochaine, et je compte que VS me ferez savoir le jour et l'heure de votre
arrivée ici. Vos amis vous attend avec beaucoup d'impatience, et surtout celles qui habitent á la Légation
Britannique.
Monsieur Valera trépique de plaisir en pensant que VS serez ici bientôt.
Je crois que Madame la femme devrait en être avertie!
Papa donne un grand bal à Flora le 6 janvier. Et nous allons chez la Président le matin du er.
Au revoir, ma chérie, j'ai tellement à faire que je ne sais où donner de la tête.
Votre amie
Victoria
Mille bons souhaits à tous les vôtres.
23 December
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My Dear Amy,
I have just a minute before leaving to send you my best wishes for Christmas. As for those for the new
year, I know that I will have the pleasure to give you them orally. I await your arrival here next week,
and I trust that you will let me know the day and the hour. Your friends await you with great impatience,
espeicially those who inhabit the British Legation. Monsieur Valera jumps with pleasure thinking that
you will be here soon. I believe that Madame his wife should be warned of it! Papa is giving a grand ball
for Flora on 6 January. And we are going to the White House the morning of the first.
Au revoir, ma cherie, I have SO much to do that I don't know what to think.
Your friend,
Victoria
A thousand best wishes to all of yours.
Notes: don Juan Valera y Alcala Galiano, 1824-1915, was the minister of Spain to the United States
from January 1884 until 1886. Valera was also a poet and novelist as well as a diplomat. His novels
were not known as being particularly good, but he was a pioneer of what was to eventually develop into
a Spanish school of fiction. His best known novel was Pepita Jimenez. He had a reputation as a
womanizer. His wife, Dolores Delavat, was twenty years his junior and remained conveniently in Spain,
SO he was free to socialize extensively. One of his reputed mistresses was Katherine Lee Bayard, the
daughter of the secretary of state from 7 March 1885 through 6 March 1889, Thomas Francis Bayard,
and the sister of Amy's friend Mabel Bayard Warren. In January 1886, three days after Valera's transfer
orders, Katherine committed suicide. Valera was born on 18 October 1824, SO he was 59 when in 20
January 1884 he arrived in Washington DC and moved
into 14 Lafayette Square, close to the White House. He
wrote his friend Menéndez Pelayo "y hasta me llaman
handsome, que tengo heromosos ojos," observers
remarked he looked younger than 50.[7] He would serve
in the position until being named Minister to Brussels
on 25 January 1886, a position he would assume in 11
May. Katherine Bayard, the daughter of the Secretary of
State, committed suicide 16 January, apparently after
being informed by Valera of his imminent departure.
According to his biographer, Valera had fallen in love
with Catherine soon after his arrival in Washington.
Robert M. Gray, September 23, 2005
1884
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1886
1886
Letter to Miss Heard, 28 West 18th Street, NY,
from Amalia West. dated 28 February 1886.
A.W.
British Legation
Washington
28 Février 1886.
Quel gentil petit mot Jolaille, que celui que [vous] avez mis dans la lettre de Flora. Au premier abord,
elle ne l'avait ps vu, quand j'ai vu que vous lui écriviez une si longue lettre et que votre petite amie
n'avait rien je me suis mes en colère contre vous en disant, que vous ne m'aimiez plus. Mais comme j'ai
été vachée, lorsque Flora allait déchirérer son enveloppe y a regard\'e trouvé votre petit mot qui m'a fait
tant de bien. Pourquoi Jolaille avez vous souligné "sans y penser"? Aurais je, sans le savoir, conquis un
des ces coeurs masculins qui sont généralement si durs à vaincre?
S'il en est ainsi vous devriez m'avertir, j'aimerais savoir à qui ce coeur appartient! Mais comme je vous
l'ai dit je ne le croirai jamais. Pauvre Jolaille, je suis bien peinée d'apprendre que vous êtes inquiète de
votre Papa, Cuba lui fera du bien j'en suis sûre. La maison me parait si triste depuis que Papa et Victoria
sont partis ils me manquent beaucoup et serai bien contente quand ils reviendront. L'autre soir Flora et
moi sommes allées diner chez Mmme Reutershiöld en famille. C'etait bien gentil de sa part de nous
inviter. Après le diner nous avons chanté tous les airs de la Mascotte avec Monsiuer Pedroso et
Monsieur Reutershiöld. Malgré cela j'etais bien triste. Comme Victoria est heurese de vous avoir vu.
C'est moi qui aurait bien vouler être à ca place!.
Au revoir ma
Jolaille mille baisers
de votre petite amie
Amalia West
A.W.
British Legation
Washington
28 February 1886
What a nice little word, Jolaille, that which you put in the letter to Flora. At first she did not see it. When
I saw that you wrote her such a nice long letter and that your petite amie had nothing, I became angry
with you, saying that you no longer loved me. How mad I was. Then Flora was going to tear up the
envelope and found there your little word which made me all better. Why Jolaille have you underlined
"without thinking of it." Had I, without knowing it, conquered one of these masculine hearts which are
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generally SO hard to vanquish?
If it is SO you should warn me, I would love to know to whom this heart belongs! But as I told you I will
never believe it. Poor Jolaille, I am very pained to learn that you are worried about your Papa, Cuba will
do him good, I am sure of it. The house seems SO sad since Papa and Victoria left. I miss them a great
deal and would be well content when they return.
The other night Flora and I went to dine at the house of Mme Reutershiold. It was very nice on her part
to invite us. After the dinner we sang all of the airs of the Mascotte with Monsieur Pedroso and
Monsieur Reutershiold. In spite of that I was very sad. How happy Victoria is to have seen you. It is
I
who would have well wanted to be in her place!
Au revoir my Jolaille. A thousand kisses.
From your petite amie
Amalia West
Notes: "Jolaille" like "gentaille" does not exist in any dictionary I have. There is a suffix -aille which
adds a sense of multitude and a perjorative sense to words, e.g., mangeaille for a quantity of mediocre
food; but this does not seem to fit the affectionate use of these words. Victoria later refers to her father
as Jolaille. Perhaps these are home-made words based on "gentille" and "jolie." La Mascotte is Gilbert
and Sullivan's Sorcerer.
Letter to Miss Heard, 18 Commonwealth Ave., Boston,
from Amalia West, British Legation.
Dated 6 March 1886.
British Legation
Washington
6 Mars 1886
Vilaine Jolaille que ne me répond jamais!
Si je ne savais pas que vos yeux vous faisaient mal, je me facherais!
Victoria et Papa sont enfin arrivés at Ottawa, aprés avoir été arretés en route à cause de la neige, le train
ne pouvait plus avancer. D'après ses lettres elle a l'air de bien s'amuser.
C'est votre petite Malia qui voudrait être là bas!
C'est assomment d'être la troisième, mais d'un autre coté si je me l'étais, je ne servis pas votre preférée,
et cela ne ferait jamais.
Nous allons nous lancer la semaine prochaine tous les soirs, depuis mercredi jusqu'à Samedi nous irons
au théatre voir "Judic". Il faut aussi que nous ayons un peu d'amusement. J'aime tellement être en l'air.
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Cette jeunesse comme vous l'appelez est frivole quelquefois, mais elle vois aime bien. Tout le monde a
été très gentil à Boston pour Victoria je suppose qu'elle vous aura écrit toutes les nouvelles. Comment va
votre Papa? Et vous ma bonne Jolaille comment cela va? Vous ennuyez vous beaucoup? Se je vous avez
vous seriez bien gaie car je ne vous permettrais pas d'être triste, à quoi cela sert? à rien du tout.
Malgré ce raisonnement je le suis presque toujours. belle avance, je n'ai personne pour me consoler! Ma
Jolaille n'est pas là!
La vieille Endicott va bien, Flora est allée avec elle bien souvent aux bals et aux soirées. Mme Endicott
n'est pas bien elle a mal à la gorge.
Les yeux de Mme Boumy sont à peu près la même chose, elle ne peut pas s'en servir.
Mille baisers de votre petite amie que vous aime.
Amalia
British Legation
Washington
6 March 1886
Villainous Jolaille who never replies! If I did not know that your eyes were bad, I would become angry!
Victoria and Papa finally arrived in Ottawa, after having been stopped en route because of the snow, the
train could advance no farther. After her letters she has the air of having a good time. It is your little
Amalia who would like to be there! It is deathly boring to be the third, but on the other hand, if I were
not that, I would not be your favorite, and that would never do. We are going to throw ourselves into
every night next week, since Wednesday up to Saturday we are going to the theatre to see "Judic." It is
also necessary for us to have a little amusement. I SO love to be in the air. This youth as you call it is
frivolous sometimes, but it loves you well. Everyone was very nice in Boston to Victoria. I suppose that
she will have written you all the news. How is your Papa doing? And you my good Jolaille, how are you
doing? Are you very bored? If I had you I would not permit you to be sad. What does that serve!
Nothing at all. In spite of that reasoning, I am sad almost always. Good advance, I have no one to
console me! My Jolaille is not there!
The old Endicott is doing well, Flora went with her very often to balls and soirees. Mme Endicott is not
well, she has a sore throat. The eyes of Mme Boumy are about the same, she cannot use them.
A thousand kisses from your petite amie who loves you.
Amalia
Notes:
Mme Endicott is Mary Endicott, the daughter of William Endicott, the Secretary of War. She married a
British statesman Joseph Chamberlain who came in 1886-1887 to negotiate the fisheries treaty. There
are several letters from Mary Edicott to Amy. Judic was a popular actress who played with the Opéra-
Bouffe company, the "long established darling of the boulevards." In the Annals of the New York Stage
she is referred to as "perhaps the most artistic representative of the species ever seen in this country."
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She was "recognized by connoisseurs as a comedienne of the first rank. As the Herald repeatedly
pointed out, she depended, not, like previous performers of this school, on winks and kicks and flirting
of skirts, but on genuine comedy touches and sustained working out of character and situations." The
Annals goes on to say that "On October 6th [1885] the new star made a big hit (at least with the
discriminating) in La Femme á Papa
"
Mrs. Henry Adams refers to her in a letter also containing a diatribe against Sara Bernhardt. She
mentions Judic in "Femme á Papa" in a letter from Paris to her father on 28 December 1879. She
describes her as "very good," but says that she had never seen a "draggier, sillier, longer dose of
nonsense" than the play.
Madame Boumy is pictured with the West sisters in the photo shown earlier.
Letter to Miss Heard, 18 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, MA,
from Amalia West in the British Legation
British Legation
Washington
9 Mars 1886
Ma Jolaille,
Comme je suis gentaille, je vous écris bien souvent, bien souvent, et vous, vous ne m'écrivez plus du
tutout.
Nous avons reçu des nouvelles du Canada, où Victoria je vous assure s'amuse bien, elle est beaucoup
fetée et Lord et Lady Lansdowne sont très gentils pour elle.
Jolaille, est ce vrai que pauvre le perdre son père? J'ai lu cela dans les journaux d'aujourd'hui, Mon
Dieux j'éspere bien que ce n'est ps vrai!
Pauvre Dora Miller vient de perdre son pére, que c'est donc triste la mort. Ne nous en allez pas Jolaille!
Demain soir nous commençons notre semane de théatre, je me rejouis d'avance. Nous commençons bien
le Carême, mais vraiment il faut saisir l'occasion aux cheveux. Nous serons bonnes tout le reste du
Carème. Votre bébé va-t-il bien?
Au revoir Jolaille. Je vous embrasse bien fort.
Votre petite amie.
Amalia West
British Legation
Washington
9 March 1886
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My Jolaille,
How gentaille I am to write you SO often, and you, you no longer write me at all. We have received news
from Canada, where Victoria is having fun, I assure you, she is much feted and Lord and Lady
Lansdowne are very good for her. Jolaille, is it true that poor Greger lost his father? I read that in today's
paper, My God I hope that it is not true.
Poor Dora Miller just lost her father. How said death is. Don't you ever go away, Jolaille!
Tomorrow evening we begin our week of theatre, I am already rejoicing. We will begin Lent, but it is
truly necessary to seize the occasion. We will be good for all the rest of Lent. Is your bébé well?
Au Revoire, Jolaille. Je vous embrasse bien fort.
Your petite amie,
Amalia West
Notes: There was a Senator John Franklin Miller from California who died in 1886 (b. 1831); perhaps
the father of Dora. Greger was a rich young secretary of the Russian legation according to Mary Alsop.
Lord Lansdowne (Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice) had been Governor General of Canada since
1883, following long service in the British Government including the House of Lords, Lord of the
Treasury under William gladstone from 1869 to 1872, undersecretary of war from 1872 to 1874, and
undersecretary of state for India in 1880. His wife was the former Lady Maud Evelyn Hamilton.
Letter to Miss Heard, 18 Commonwealth Ave., Boston,
from Victoria West.
The date is probably 11 March 1886 since the letter is dated Thursday and it was found with the Sunday
14 March 1886 letter.
Government House
Ottowa
Jeudi
Ma bien chère Amy,
J'ai une minute à moi ce matin, aussi je me dépeche de vous envoyer un mot, écrit avec une plume à oie
car nous sommes dans une maison Anglaise. Les Lansdownes sont tout ce qu'il y a de plus aimables
pour nous; ils sont charmants. Les aides-de-camp aussi. Un d'eux a épuisé une nièce de Lady L., Lady
Florence Anson; elle est très jolie, mais très timide.
J'étais fameusement intimideée quand je suis arriveée; mais maintenant, je me sens plus "at home."
Nous avons eu un grand diner de 24 personnes hier au soir; nous aurons un grand bal ce soir un autre
diner demain, "a tobagganing and skating party" Samedi; et je ne me rappellé plus le liste. Vous voyez
qu'on rend bien soin de nous ici; c'est si distingué; le tout ensemble; cela VS ferait plaisir à vois, vous qui
aimez les choses grandioses!
Je ne sais pas jusqu'à quand nous resterons, je pense que nous partirons Mercredi ou Jeudi.
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Maintenant, j'ajouterai un mot sur ma visite à Boston. Tout la monde a été très amable; nous avons diné
avec Mr Guild et les Minot; j'ai rencontré une masse de monde dont je ne me rappellerai jamais les
noms; J'aurait bien aimé rester là plus long temps. Quel dommage que je n'ai pas pu voir votre frère; il
est venu quand j'étais sortie; Max et moi avons échangé deux mots et un baiser. She is such a fine girl, et
un tint ravissant. - Je ne sais pas si nous resterons plus d'une nuit à N.Y. à notre retour; je VS tiendrai au
courant. Dites à votre frère combien je regrette ne pas l'avoir vu, j'aurais bien voulu voir votre Maman
aussi.
Au revior ma chère; on m'appelle pour partir en vaisseau; je VS quitte à regret.
Votre amie
Victoria
Government House
Ottowa
Thursday
My very dear Amy,
I have a minute to myself this morning, SO I am hurrying to send you a word, writen with a goose plume
since we are in an English house. The Lansdownes are as friendly as could be for us; They are charming.
The aides-de-camps also. One of them married a niece of Lady L., Lady Florence Anson; she is very
pretty, but very timid.
I was famously intimidated when I arrived; but now I feel more "at home" We had a grand dinner with
24 people yesterday evening; we will have a grand ball this evening, another dinner tomorrow, "a
tobagganing and skating party" Saturday; and I forget the rest. You see how they take great care of you
here; everything is SO distinguished; you would be pleased to see it, you who love grandiose things!
I do not know how long we will stay, I think that we leave Wednesday or Thursday.
Now I will add a word on my visit to Boston: everyone was very friendly; we dined with Mr. Guild and
the Minots; I met a mass of people whose names I never remember; I would have well liked to stay there
longer. what I pity that I was unable to see your brother; he was busy when I left; Max and I exchanged
ten words and a kiss. She is such a fine girl and has ravishing color. I don't know if we will stay
more
than one night in N.Y. during our return; I will keep you current. Tell your brother how much I regret
not having seen him; I would have well liked to see your mother also.
Au revoir, my dear. I am being called to go. I leave you with regret.
Your friend,
Victoria
Notes:
Lord Lansdowne was the Governor General of Canada. Victoria went regularly in winters to visit them.
They were well known for their love of sledding and tobaganning. In Victoria's "Book of Reminisces,"
which she wrote in 1922, she remembers one of her favorite games which Lady Lansdowne had taught
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her-rubbing her bare feet in the thick rugs and then lighting a gas burner with her nose or shocking
others with her touch. The Minot family is mentioned in both Mrs. Henry Adams' letters and in
Cleveland Amory's The Proper Bostonians [4]. Max is Amy's sister, Helen Maxima Heard.
Letter to Amy Heard at 18 Commonwealth Ave., Boston,
from Amalia West at the British Legation.
Dated 14 March 1886.
A.W.
British Legation
Washington
14 Mars 1886
Ma Jolaille,
J'ai parfaitement compres ce que vous m'avez dit dans votre lettre à propos du genre masculin, mais cela
je crois ne me fera pas changer d'idée. Je suis entetée pour ce sujet là. C'est moi qui etais étonnée de voir
que vous étiez à Boston!
Voilà qui est ennuyeux d'être malade!
C'est comme la malheureuse Victoria qui a été aussi malade au Canada et là bas la maison est pleine de
jeunes gens le plus terrible de tout c'est qu'il y avait aussi Hardinge qui a toujours soin de lui dire quand
elle est malade "Je suppose que vous ne sortirez pas du tout aujourd'hu avec un air de garde malade.
Cela agace Victoria. Oh! Les femmes! Je suis bien contente que votre bébé ne sait pas ce que c'est d'être
triste c'est bien heureuse pour elle! La maman ne peut pas en dire autant! Nous nous sommes bien
amusées cette semaine. Judic est ci charmante et gracieuse. Toutes les pièces qu'elle a jouées sont très
jolies et ses rôles lui sont bien. C'est dommage que tout soit fini le seul plaisir que nous avons eu on est
de revoir Papa et Victoria et Monsieur Hardinge aussi, je l'aime bien, il est très gentil pour moi. Ils
reviennent tous Mercredi, jour que j'attends avec impatience.
Au revoir Jollaille. Mille baisers de votre petite amie.
Amalia West
p.s. Comment va votre père? S'est-il remis de ses fatigues?
British Legation
Washington
14 March 1886
My Jolaille,
I perfectly understood what you told me in your letter a propos the masculin gender, but I don't think
that that will make me change my mind. I am stubborn on that subject. It is I who was astonished to see
that you were in Boston! See who is said to be sick!
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It is like the unhappy Victoria who was SO sick in Canada and there the house is full of young men. The
most terrible of all is that there was also Hardinge who always takes care to tell her when she is sick "I
suppose that you will not leave at all today" with the air of a nurse. That irritates Victoria. Oh! Women!
I am well content that your bébé does not know what it is to be sad. It is very happy for her! Her mother
cannot tell her enough! We have had a good time this week. Judic is SO charming and gracious. All of
the plays that she has done are very pretty and her roles suit her well. It is a pity that all will be finished.
The only pleasure that we had known is to receive Papa and Victoria and Monsieur Hardinge also. I love
him well, he is SO nice for me. They all return Wednesday, a day I await with impatience.
Au revoire Jolaille. A thousand kisses from your petite amie.
Amalia West
How is your father? Has he recovered from his fatigue?
Notes:
Charles Hardinge was on Sackville-West's staff as a junior legation secretary in Washington and was
reputed to be madly in love with Victoria. He later became Lord Hardinge of Penshurst. His grandfather
was Governor General of India and Field Marshall, his father was a member of Parliament. Charles was
later the head of the Foreign Office during the reign of Edward VII.
Letter to Miss Heard, 18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Mass,
from Victoria West, Government House, Ottawa.
Dated 14 March 1886.
Government House
Ottowa
Dimanche 14 Mars
Ma bien chère Amy,
Quel dommage que nous n'allons pas nous rencontrer à New York à mon passage! Cependant ce qui me
console un peu est de penser que vous avez "a good time" à Boston. Je regrette tellement que nous ne
nous soyons pas renontrés dans nos visites là; je vous ai déja dis cela dans une lettre que j'ai envoyer à
New York et que, j'espère, vous aurez reçu.
Dans cette lettre, je vous ai parlé de mes premieères impressions qui ont été excellentes mais qui sont
encore meilleures, car Lady Landsdowne est la bonté même, et son mmari est charmant ainsi que le reste
du "household", comme on les appelle. Pendant notre visite, que nous terminons demain, cela n'a été
qu'une succession de fêtes et de diners; cependant nous sommes beacoup plus tranquils depuis le
Mercredi des Cindres, car les Canadiens sont très strictes pendant le Carème.
Nous serons à Washington Mercredi soir, nous arretons à New Yourk pour passer la nui de Mardi. Je
suis bien fachée d'avoir manque Judic à Wash. Monsieur Roustan m'avait gardé une place dans sa loge
pour chaque représentation; mes soeurs sont allées chaque soir; c'est du joli! Mai je n'ai rien dit, car les
pauvres petites m'ont écrit qu'elles s/ennuyaient tout sans nous; il leur faut bien quelque distraction.
Je serai vraiment bien contente de les revoir, quoique je termine notre visite avec beaucoup de regrets,
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car tout le monde a été si gentil pour nous.
Vous auriez beaucoup aimé la fête de ??? de Samedi le 13, c'était tout à fait féerique.
Dites mille choses très aimable de ma part à Miss Minot et a mes amis de Boston, j'aimerais tant
retourner parmi eux, et cela est vraiment sincère, car on a été si aimable pour moi pendant notre visite.
Est-ce qu'ils ont trouvé agreéable mon fidèle serviteur, Mr Hardinge? Il est aux anges ici, avec les vieux
amis de collège, les aides-de-camp! Mon Jolaille est de très-bonne humeur, car on a bien traité sa Vicky!
Au revoir, ma chère Amy, mille amities à votre frère; croyez toujours à ma bien sincère affection.
Votre amie
Victoria
Government House
Ottowa
Sunday 14 March
My very dear Amy,
What a pity that we did not meet in New York during my passage! Nevertheless what consoles me a
little is to think that you had "a good time" in Boston. I regret SO that we did not meet during our visits
there; I have already told you that in a letter that I sent to New York and that, I hope, you will have
received.
In this letter, I told you of my first impressions which were excellent, but which are still better, because
Lady Lansdowne is goodness itself, and her husband is charming as well as the rest of the "household"
as they are called. During our visit, which we end tomorrow, it has been nothing but a succession of
parties and dinners; nevertheless we are much more tranquil since Ash Wednesday because the
Canadians are very strict during Lent. We will be in Washington Wednesday night, we stop in New
York to spend Thursday night. I am quite angry to have missed Judic in Washington; Monsieur Roustan
had saved me a place in his loge for each performance. My sisters went every night; isn't that nice! But I
did not say anything, because the poor little ones wrote me that they were sad without us; they have to
have some distraction.
I will be truly well content to see them again, however I end our visit with many regrets, because
everyone has been SO nice to us.
You would have really loved the party of ?? of Saturday the 13th; it was truly a fantasy.
Give a thousand good wishes from me to Miss Minot and to my friends in Boston; I would like to return
among them; and that is truly sincere, because they were SO friendly to me during our visit. Did they find
agreeable my faithful serviteur, Mr. Hardinge? He is with the angels here, with his old college friends,
the aides-de-camp! My Jolaille is in very good humor, because everyone has well treated his Vicky!
Au Revoir, my dear Amy. A thousand good wishes to your brother; believe always in my very sincere
affection.
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Your friend,
Victoria
Letter to Miss Heard, Commonwealth Ave., Boston.
from Amalia
Dated 27 March 1886.
British Legation
Washington
Samedi Soir
(27)
Ma Jolaille,
Voilà bien longtemps que je n'ai pas causé avec vous, on dirait que je deviens paresseuse! Mais cela
n'est pas, j'attendais une lettre de vous tous ces jourc-ci qui n'est pas venue à mon grand regret. Quand je
vois votre écriture Jolaille, je suis bien heureuse, vos lettres sont toujours si gentilles.
Nous sommes de nouveelles tous ensemble, je suis joliment contente, je m'ennuyais à périr quand, tout
notre monde était au Canada. Aujourd'hui, je suis gaie comme un pinson je ne sais pas ce qui va
m'arriver mais c'est mauvais signe avec moi que cette gaité folle Tant pis j'en profite. Comment va votre
petite santé Jolaille? Vous étés vous amusée où vous restez?
Nous jouons tennis avec Bouton et Monsieur Hardinge toutes les fois que le temps nous le permet. Je
m'en donne avec mon partner qui est comme de juste Mr. H. Tout nouveau tout beau! Terrible femme
que je ferai si je continue!
Il est vrai qu'il est fort gentil pour moi et je ne sais pas pourquoi je ne lui rendrais pas la pareille. Ce soir
Miss Meigs donne une partie de théatre en l'honneur du Comte Leyden qui va partir pour Athens la
semaine prochaine. Ses jueunes gens payent les loges et les jeunes filles le souper. Toutes doivent sont
habillées soit en bleu ou en blanc les couleurs de la Bavieère je crois. Chaque jeune fille lui a travaillé
un petit ouvrage quelconque qui sera donné au souper. C'est assez gentil n'est-ce pas? Comte Sala s'est
embarqué ajourd'hui pour l'Amérique de sorte qu'il sera ici bientôt. Je serai contente de le revoir. Avez
vous lu dans les journaux que Secretary Manning est très malade et qu'on craint pour sa vie? Ne serait-
ce pas terrible s'il venait à mourir? Toutes ces morts m'effrayent térriblement.
Demain soir nous avons 4 Anglais à diner au grand ennui de Victoria je ne descendrai pas j'en suis pas
fachée!
Mme Boumy a été voir Dr Loring l'autre jour qui lui a dit que ses yeux allaient beaucoup mieux. Pauvre
femme, je suis contente pour elle car elle venait à ne plus voir que deviendrait elle? Elle a demandé de
vos nouvelles je lui en ai donné avec plaisr ça me faisait du bien d'entendre votre nom. Votre père est-il
remis de ses fatigues?
Jolaille, vous devez m'écrire maintenant et ne pas tardez à le faire. Flora Victoria vous envoyent un bon
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baiser et Mmme Boumy bien des choses. Le "Jolaille" qui est a coté de moi me charge to be
remembered to you. il est toujours le même et me demande bien souvent si je reçois de vos nouvelles.
Je vous embrasse bien fort.
Votre petite amie
Amalia West
British Legation
Washington
Saturday Night
(27)
My Jolaille,
Well, here it is a long time that I have not spoken with you, one might say that I am becoming lazy! but
that is not it, I was waiting for a letter from you all these days which did not come to my great regret.
When I see your handwriting, Jolaille, I am very happy, your letters are always SO nice.
We are all newly together, I am extremely content, I was bored to death when everyone was in Canada.
Today I am gay like a finch. I do not know what is going to happen to me, but this crazy gaity is a bad
sign with me. Too bad that I profit from it. How is your little health, Jolaille? Are you having fun or are
you resting? We play tennis with Bouton and Monsieur Hardinge every time that the weather permits. I
give myself some with my partner who is like the sharp Mr. H. Tout nouveau, tout beau! What a terrible
woman I would be if I continue!
It is true that he is very nice for me and I do not know why I am not the same to him. This evening Miss
Meigs is giving a theatre party in the honor of Count Leyden who is going to leave for Athens next
week. His young men paid for the seats and the young women for the dinner. All were dressed either in
blue or in white, the colors of Bavaria, I believe. Each young girl wrought some little work for him
which was given at the supper. That is nice enough, is it not? Count Sala embarked for America today SO
that he will be here soon. I will be happy to see him again. Have you read in the papers that Secretary
Manning is very sick and that they fear for his life? Won't it be terrible if he dies? All of these deaths
frighten me terribly.
Tomorrow night we will have 4 Englishmen to dinner to the great worry of Victoria. I will not descend.
I am not angry about it!
Madame Boumy saw Dr. Loring the other day who told her that her eyes were much better. Poor
woman, I am happy for her because she was beginning to no longer see. What was becoming of her?
She asked for news of you. I gave it to her with pleasure. It makes me feel good to hear your name. Has
your father recovered from his fatigue?
Jolaille, you must write me now and not wait to do it. Flora and Victoria send you a big kiss and
Madame Boumy good wishes. The "Jolaille" who is at my side charges me to be remembered to you. He
is always the same and asks me very often if I receive news of you.
Je vous embrasse bien fort.
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Your petite amie
Amalia West
Notes:
Miss Meigs may be a daughter of General Meigs of Washington. A daughter of General Meigs married
Archibald Forbes, an English war correspondent who knew the Blaines and Oscar Wilde. Count Casimir
von Leyden was a secretary in the German Legation who arrived in Washington in 1883. Daniel
Manning (1831-1887) was the successor of S. J. Tilden as leader of the NY Democrats in 1877 and was
instrumental in gaining Grover Cleveland the nomination for Governor of New York and U.S. President.
He was appointed secretary of the treasury in 1885 and resigned in 1887, supposedly because of ill
health. The real reason, however, was reputed to be Manning's continued friendship with Tilden, who
was trying to be the power behind the throne.
Letter to Miss Heard
from Victoria West, British Legation, Washington.
Dated 31 March 1886.
Washington
31 Mars 86
Ma bien chère Amy,
Je me hasarde à envoyer cette lettre chez Mrs Dorr, quoique j'ai bien peur que vous ne soyez plus chez
elle; mais enfin, je pense qu'on vo l'enverra.
J'ai été bien occupée depuis mon retour; je trouve toujours tant à faire à la maison. L socieété reste
beaucoup chez elle, mais je vois davantage nos amis; il y a encore pas mal de diners; on en a donné une
masse au Compte Leyden.. Vous avez peut-être entendu parler du souper Miegs; toute la ville en parle,
car la pauvre fille a eu la maladresse d'inviter 6 jeunes fills (dont une et Mme Cameron) et 6 Messieurs à
un souper chez elle pour le Cte Leyden en les priant de payer chacun leur part. C'est maladroit, petit et
commun, n'est-ce pas? J'etais de cette partie.
Le souper était très bon et très gai; au dessert, on a fait une distribution de cadeaux au Cte Leyden qui
est devenu très nervuex et a failli en renverser la table. Nous avions fait chacune une petite ouvrage
comme souvenir; le mien était une petite pélote en pluche rouge, avec ses initiales, sa couronne et la date
brodée dessus.
Une autre chose dont on a beaucoup parlé st le bal poudré de charité que Mrs Whitney devait donner
demain pour le Mi-Carème. Il parait qu'elle était dans tous ses états car personne de la bonne société ne
voulait y aller; bien des personnes ne voulaient pas avoir l'ennui de se poudrer; les 5 dollars qu'on devait
payer pour y aller passaient encore! Heureusement que la grand-mère de Mrs Whitney est morte hier, et
qu'alors le bal n'aura pas lieu. J'en suis joliment content.
Nous avons eu un diner d'Anglais dimanche; parmi eux, un très jeune Lord Russell que vous verrez
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probablement à Boston, car il y va plus tard. Il était Samedi chez Mrs Loring qui était dans la fou de
pouvoir le présenter à tout le monde, car vous connaissez sa manie.
Voil'a quelques-une des nouvelles; je suis bien contente de celles que vous m'avez données de vous, et
qu'on soit si gentil pour vous à Boston. Je sais par experience commen on peut y être aimable; vous
pouvez dire et redire pour moi à mes amis de Boston combien je leur suis reconnaissante de tout ce
qu'ils ont bien voulu faire pour vous. J'ai écrit à Miss Minot pour la féliciter; ce n'est pas le coutume en
Angleterre d'envoyer des fleurs comme à Boston; je vous le dis de la part de Mr Hardinge, avec ses
respectieux hommages.
Je viens de recevoir à l'instant un joli paravent que Lord Lansdowne vient de m'envoyer comme cadeau;
c'est bien aimable à lui, n'est-ce pas? On peut y mettre 3 douz. de photographies. J'aimerais tant en avoir
deux de vous, chère Amy.
Au revoir, ma chère et bonne amie; croyez toujours à ma trés serieux affection.
Victoria
Washington
31 March 86
My very dear Amy,
I am taking the chance of sending this letter to the house of Mrs. Dorr, however I fear that you will no
longer be staying with her; but I think that it will be sent to you.
I have been very occupied since my return; I find always everything to do at the house. Society remains
at the house, but I am seeing more of our friends; there are yet enough dinners; a mass of them were
given for Count Leyden. You have perhaps heard tell of the Meigs supper; the entire city is talking about
it, since the poor girl made the blunder of inviting 6 young girls (of which one was Miss Cameron) and 6
young men to a supper at her house for Count Leyden and asked them to each pay for their part. It is
maladroit, petty, and common, is it not? I was with this party. The supper was very good and very gay;
at dessert a distribution of gifts was made to Count Leyden, who became very nervous and knocked over
the table. We each made a little work as a souvenier; mine was a little red plush ball, with his initials, his
crown, and the date embroidered on the outside.
Another thing which has been much talked about is the charity powdered ball that Mrs. Whitney was
supposed to give tomorrow for mid-lent. It seems that she is beside herself because no one in good
Society wants to go; most people did not want the bother of powdering themselves; the 5 dollars that
one had to pay to go was even more! Happily the grandmother of Mrs. Whitney died yesterday, and
hence the ball will not take place. I am very content.
We had an English dinner Sunday; among them, a very young Lord Russell whom you will probably see
in Boston, because he goes there later on. It was Saturday at Mrs. Loring's who was in the madness of
power presenting him to everyone, because you know her mania.
There you have several bits of news; I am very content with those that you gave me, and that people are
SO nice to you in Boston. I know by experience how friendly they are there; you can say and resay for
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me to my friends in Boston how much I recognize all that they wanted to do for us. I wrote to Miss
Minot to thank her; it is not the custom in England to send flowers as in Boston; I tell it to you on behalf
of Mr. Hardinge, with his respectful compiments.
I just received this instant a lovely folding screen that Lord Lansdowne just sent me as a gift; it is very
friendly of him, isn't it? One can put 3 dozen photographs in it. I would SO love to have two of you, dear
Amy.
Au revoir, my dear and good friend, believe always in my very serious affection.
Victoria
Notes: Miss Mary Cameron was the daughter of Lizzie Cameron, , a niece of General Sherman and a
good friend of Victoria's.
Flora Paine Whitney was the wife of William C. Whitney, the Secretary of the Navy under Grover
Cleveland. He was on the cabinet with Secretary of State Thomas Francis Bayard and Secretary of War
William Endicott. The Whitneys were reputed to be the most fun-loving of an otherwise conservative
and sober administration. They were elegant and rich enough to entertain lavishly. She was supposed to
have entertained over 60,000 people during her stay in Washington. She, along with M. Roustan, was
later to be one of the few to see the Sackville-West's final departure from Washington following the
Murchison affair.
Letter to Miss Heard, 18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Mass,
from Victoria.
The envelope is marked "urgent."
Dated 13 April 1886.
British Legation
Washington
13 Avril 86
Ma bien chère Amy,
Juste un mot pour vous demander un rensengement: ce serait de me faire savoir quand Miss Minot va se
marier, si c'est vrai que ce sera la semaine de Pâques? Comme elle a été tout ce qu'il y a de plus aimable
pour nos à Boston, et que je voudrais lui montre d'une manière ou d'une autre combien j'ai apprécié sa
bonté, j'ai pensé lui faire venir une éventail simple, de Paris, comme "wedding present". Donnez-moi
votre avis là-dessus, chère amie; vous savez combien j'aime faire quelque chose d'aimable pour les gens
qui ont été gentils pour moi.
Continuez-vous bien vous amuser? Écrivez-moi ce que vous faites et quels sont vos projets.
Nous avons toujours l'idée d'aller en Europe au mois de Juillet; comme j'aimerais vous revoir avant notre
départ!
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Je viens de finir un livre qui peut-être vous amuserait: "nos grandes dames d'aujourd'hui"; cela parle des
plus grandes dames chiques de Paris, la manière dont elles vivent, etc.; le tout ensemble est très
distingué; cela va avec nos idées extravagantes; c'est si bon, le grand lux, n'est-ce pas? Nous nous
entendons si bien là-dessus.
On me dit que le mariage de Miss Minot est plutôt un mariage de raison que d'indiclination; est-ce vrai?
Vous et moi ne voudrions pas nous marier ainsi!
Et peut-être peut-être que nous le ferons un jour!
Au revoir, ma bonne Amie; dites-moi que je VS demande pour le mariage et le petit cadeau.
Toujours votre toute dévouée
Victoria
British Legation
Washington
13 April 86
My very dear Amy,
Just a word to ask you for some information; it is to let me know when Miss Minot is going to be
married, is it true that it is going to be Easter week? Since she has been as friendly as possible to us in
Boston, and since I would like to show her in one manner or another how much I appreciate her good
wishes, I thought to arrange for her to receive a simple fan, from Paris, as a "wedding present" Give me
your opinion on it, dear friend; you know how much I love to do something nice for people who are nice
to me.
Are you still having fun? Write me what you are doing and what are your projects. We still plan to go to
Europe in July; how I would like to see you again before we leave!
I just finished a book which perhaps would amuse you: Our Grand Ladies of Today, it speaks of the
grandest chic ladies of Paris, the manner in which they live, etc.; all together it is very distinguished; it
goes with our extravagant ideas; it is SO good, the grand luxury, isn't it? Underneath we understand it SO
well.
I am told that the marriage of Miss Minot is rather a marriage of reason than of inclination; is it true?
You and I would not like to marry so!
And perhaps perhaps we will do it one day!
Au revoir, my good friend; tell me what I ask for the marriage and the little gift.
Always your devoted friend,
Victoria
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The Misses West left Washington for England for the sumer with their companion, Mademoiselle Louet.
They returned to Washington in the early autumn.
Journal entries.
Bar Harbor
Juillet 1886
V. 16 Juillet
Quittai le Belmont aux instances de Mme Dorr, chez laquelle j'allai passer quelque temps. Mme
A.A. Low, sa mère, y est.
F. 16 July
Quit the Belmont at the insistence of Mrs Dorr, to whose house I went to spend some time. Mme
A.A. Low, her mother, was there.
H.
The Belmont was built in 1879 near the corner of Mount Desert and Kebo Streets. It burned down in the
great Bar Harbor fire of 1947. Mrs Dorr was Mary Gray Ward Dorr, the wife of Charles(F. Dorr of
Boston and the mother of George B. Dorr, who later founded Acadia National Park. The Dorr house was
called Old Farm, it was reputedly the first well-built house in Bar Harbor. The guest list of the house is
in the Bar Harbor Historical Society. In addition to Amy Heard and Russell Gray, the list includes
Chester Arthur, Julia Ward Howe, William James, and the elder Oliver Wendell Holmes, who wrote a
poem memorializing the house [13]. The house looked out over what is now Dorr's point and its
foundation is now Acadia Park land, a short work from the Nannau-Seaside Bed and Breakfast. The
house was torn down by the Park Service in 1951, ostensibly because the wiring was bad.
The Belmont Hotel in Bar Harbor
The Old Farm
Sam. 17
Arr. M. Russell Gray.
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Sat. 17
Russell Gray arrived.
L. ou M.
Arr. de M. Low qui emmène sa femme &
ses enfants ds un jour ou deux.
M. or T.
Arrival of Mr Low who brought his wife and children for a day or two.
According to the membership list for the
Mount Desert Reading Room kept in the
Bar Harbor Historical Society, Russell
Gray joined on 19 July for one week
with the sponsorship of G. B. Dorr. The
club had been formed in 1881 from the
old Oasis Club for the promotion of
"literary and social culture," but it was
best known for its providing a means for
the visitors to evade Maines prohibition
on alcoholic beverages[13]. Members
were reputed to sit around, sipping
highballs while discussing the stock
The Newport Hotel in Bar Harbor
market and gossip. Writing in the Boston
Transcript of 1896, Professor Barrett
Wendell of Harvard described Bar Harbor as having the "best conversation in America" 9] Russell
Gray's brother John C. Gray, a Harvard Professor of Law and cofounder of the Boston Law firm of
Ropes and Gray, also was a member for the summer. Amy Heard's father Augustine became a member
in August, giving the Belmont as his address. The final location of the Reading Room is now subsumed
by the Bar Harbor Motor Inn, and the restaurant of that establishment maintains the name.
Sam. 24
Ascension de "Newport" avec M. Gray.
Sat. 24
Went up to the "Newport" with Mr Gray.
The "select Newport was built in 1869 on site just south of the present-day Agamont Park, near the
parking area." [13] It was torn down in 1938.
Mar. 27
Dép. de M. Gray. Mon retour au Belmont.
Tues. 27
Departure of Mr Gray. My return to the Belmont.
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Jeu. 29
Tableaux vivants au Rodick pr l'église Catholique. Moi en Jeanne d'Arc au supplice. Souper Del
Monte après.
Thurs. 29
Tableaux vivants at the Rodick presented by the Catholic Church. I was Jeanne d'Arc, supplicant.
Dined at the Del Monte afterwards.
The Rodick House was the largest hotel
in Bar Harbor (and Maine), housing
some 600 guests at peak season. During
the peak of Bar Harbor in the Gilded
Age, reservations for high season were
typically made two years in advance.
The Rodick was particularly reknowned
for its lobby, called the "Fish Pond,"
where young people met members of the
opposite sex. Contemporary accounts
suggest that Bar Harbor gave young
people a far greater freedom from
chaperones than did Newport [13]. It
deteriorated into seediness in the 1890s
and was demolished in 1906.
The Rodick Hotel in Bar Harbor
Sam. 31
Dr Longstreth me fait commencer une cure de lait. 2 cuillerées a ??? par heure exclusivement. Ds
deux ???, double dose. Ds 8 hours, recommencer à manger nourriture simple & surtout très
régulierement. faiblesse extrême
Sat. 31
Dr Longstreth made me begin a milk cure. 2 spoonfuls per hour exclusively. After 2 ???, double
dose. After 8 hours, begin again to eat food that is simple and above all very regularly. Extremely
week.
Août
August
Sa. 14
Retour de M. Gray fiancelles.
S. 14
Return of Mr Gray engaged
M. 17
Dép. de Russell.
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T. 17
Russell's departure.
Letter from Henry Cabot Lodge, East Point, Nahant
to Russell Gray, Esq, Bar Harbor,
Mt. Desert Maine
congratulating him on his marriage to Amy Heard
Aug 17th
1886 -
East Point
Nahant
Dear Russell --
I cannot say I am surprised: Your extremely convivial manner when you were here awakened all my
worst suspicions.
But I am greatly delighted & congratulate you most heartily & without stint.
From all I hear & know I should say that you were one of the luckiest of men of course most deservedly
SO.
Please give my kindest regards & warmest congratulations to Miss Heard also for although I would not
flatter you I think she too is to be congratulated. I should also insist that without the tedious formalities
of acquantance Miss Heard at once place me among her oldest & most devoted of friends. That this will
be strictly logical your philosophical mind however beclouded now will readily discover.
We are hoping to see you both very soon.
Always affectionately & Sincerely
Yrs
H.C. Lodge
Letter of congratulations to Russell Gray
Barr Harbour, Mount Desert, Maine
from Justice Oliver Windell Holmes
Beverly Farms
Beverly Farms
Aigust 18 1886
Dear Gray
I am interestested not only in Miss Heard but in you and I am delighted at the news you SO kindly write
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me. If I could have played the matchmaker I would have done it and I congratulate you both on what I
hope and believe will prove the most fortunate as well as greatest steip in both your lives.
I look forward to the winter with greater happiness for what you tell her and congratulate myself as well.
????
OWHolmes
Russell Gray
P.S. As I do not trust "Bar Harbor" -- the only address you give -- I shall send this to Boston.
Later Mrs Holmes says trust it -- after my letter had been directed.
J. 26
A Nahant
Th. 26
To Nahant.
V. 27
Quitté Nahant rejoignant Papa & Mama à B.
& venant à N.Y. 28 W. 18th
F. 27
Left Nahant. Rejoined Papa & Mama at B. Left for N.Y. 28 W. 18th
Letters from Isabella Stewart Gardner
to Amy and Russell congratulating them on their engagement.
Letter addressed to Augustine Heard for Amy Heard
39 Nassau St, New York, from Vienna. Address crossed out and replaced by The Belmont, Bar Harbor,
Maine, which was in turn crossed out and replaced by the original address.
Vienna
August 30
Yours, I have just received, Amy, very dear & altogether delightful cousin (that is to be).
I want to write to you a few red hot & immediate words, althought in one moment they must go to the
post. I am SO glad, that I feel you must know it, & my brain is continually busy with fancies about the
future, in all of which I see great happiness for two people I care much for -- you & Russell -- &
in
which I hope I see that your liefe & mine will be much together. Please tell me your plans, everything.
Not one but will be of the greatest interest to
Affy yours
I.S. Gardner
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Eliza Glamlee entered as cook 12 AM at $5 a week.
1r ou 2 Déc.
Mary Endicott déj. avec moi.
1 or 2 Dec.
Mary Endicott lunched with me.
4 Sam.
Diner Powell Mason (M, Mme, Mlle), Mme Whitman, Mary End., Mess. Whister, Percy Lowell,
Johns, Whister me cond.
4 Sat.
Dinner Powell Mason (Mr, Mrs, Miss) Mrs Whitman, Mary End., Mr. Whister, Percy Lowell,
Johns, Whister took me to table.
8 Mer.
Diner John Gray avec les Jack Gardners., Amory G. & Swift.
8 Wed.
Dined at John Gray with the Jack Gardners, Amory G. & Swift.
The Jack Gardners were Jack, Russell's mother's nephew, and his wife, "Mrs Jack," Isabella Stewart
Gardner.
Fri. 10
Dined at the Dorrs. (Dr and Mamie Watson, the Barrett Wendells, Dr Wendell took me to table,
Geo. Dorr on the other side).
Sat. 11
Morton Prince dined. (Clara Bayson, Peabody.) Aunt Alice to lunch.
Tues 14
First time at the Sewing Circle "Centenniel" at Nora Lear's.
Thurs 16
Dined at Roger Wolcotts. So invited by the Lowells. Mmme Vaughn, her brother H. Parkman, Mr
and Mrs Cabot Lodge, Mr and Mrs Teddy Wharton.
Henry Cabot Lodge was the senator from Massachusetts and close friend of Teddy Roosevelt. As a
small boy, my father broke into the Lodge compound in Nahant. When caught by the Secret Service and
hauled before the Senator and President Roosevelt to be asked what he had come for, he replied that he
wished to attend the U.S. Naval Academy and he was seeking an appointment. An amused President
suggested he try again in a few years. He did, and was subsequently appointed to Annapolis by Lodge.
Mrs Teddy Wharton could be Edith Wharton, who married Edward Wharton of Boston in 1885. Often
referred to as "the female Henry James." I prefer to think of Henry James as the male Edith Wharton.
Fri. 17
Dined at the Cabot Lodges, Misses Mottey & Clara Payson, Miss Sargent & Hooper.
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Dec. 21
Dined at Madame Lowell's.
25 Sat.
Dined with the John Gray family.
26 Sun.
Lunch Frank Amory (the Cabot Lodges). Fanny Mason and Will Otis.
28 Tues.
Dined with Arth. Robet at the Somerset. (Mme. Wil. Fay, Annie Rotch, Dr Bigels.
30
Lunched with Miss Jack Elliott, Mrs Geo Lee, Higgenson, Arth. Cabot.
31
Dined at Frank Lowell's.
Robert M. Gray, September 23, 2005
1886
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age -- References
Page 1 of 2
>re
References
References
[1]
Henry Adams. Democracy. Farrar, Straus and Young, New York.
[2]
Mrs. Henry Adams. The Letters of Mrs. Henry Adams: 1865-1883. Little, Brown, Boston, Mass.,
1936.
[3]
Susan Mary Alsop. Lady Sackville. Doubleday, New York, 1978.
[4]
Cleaveland Amory. The Proper Bostonians. E.P. Hutton, New York, 1947.
[5]
Mrs. James G. Blaine. The Letters of Mrs. James G. Blaine. Duffield, New York, 1908.
[6]
Gamaliel Bradford. Wives. Harper Brothers, New YORK, 1925.
[7]
Carmen Bravo-Villasante. Biografia de Don Juan Valera. Biblioteca Biográfica. Editorial Aedos,
Barcelona, 1959.
[8]
Morris Carter. Isabella Stewart Gardner and Fenway Court. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum,
Boston, 1925.
[9]
Sargent F. Collier. Mt. Desert Island and Acadia National Park: An Informal History. Down East
Books, Cambden, Maine, 1978.
[10]
Robert B. Forbes. Personal Reminiscences. Litte, Brown, and Company, Boston, Mass., 1882.
Second Edition.
[11]
Otto Friedrich. Clover. Simon and Schuster, New York, 1979.
[12]
Edward Gray. William Gray of Lynn, Massachusetts, and Some of his Descendants. Essex
Institute, Salem, Massachusetts, 1916.
[13]
G. W.Helfrich and Gladys O'Neil. Lost Bar Harbor. Down East Books, Camden, Maine, 1982.
[14]
Helen Huntington Howe. Gentle Americans 1864-1960: Biography of a Breed. Harper and Row,
New York, 1965.
[15]
G.L. Lessen. Balance of Intrigue: International Rivalry in Korea and Manchuria, 1884-1899.
University Presses of Florida, 1982.
[16]
S.C. Lockwood. Augustine Heard and Company, 1858-1862. Harvard University Press,
Cambridge, Mass., 1971.
[17]
Joan M. Maloney. George bailey loring: A matter of trust-s. Essex Institute Historical Collections,
122(1):35-60, January 1986 1986.
[18]
http://www-ee.stanford.edu/~gray/html/amy/amy_27.html
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Amy Heard: Letters from the Gilded Age -- References
Page 2 of 2
Friedrich Heinrich Karl La Motte-Fouqué. Undine. Houghton-Mifflin: The Riverside Press,
Boston, Mass., 1882. Translation from the German of 1811.
[19]
Nigel Nicolson. Portrait of a Marriage. Atheneum, New York, 1966.
[20]
Nigel Nicolson. Lady Curzon. Harper & Row, New York, 1977.
[21]
Virginia Tatnall Peacock. Famous American Belles of the Nineteenth Century. J.B. Lippincott,
New York, 1901.
[22]
V. Sackville-West. Pepita. Hogarth Press, London, 1937.
[23]
Arline Boucher Tehan. Henry Adams in Love: The Pursuit of Elizabeth Sherman Cameron.
Universe Books, New York, 1983.
[24]
Louise Hall Tharp. Mrs. Jack: A Biography of Isabell Stuart Gardner. Little, Brown, Boston,
Mass., 1965.
[25]
Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner. The Gilded Age. American Publishing Co., Hartford,
Conn., 1873. Second Edition.
[26]
T.G. Waters. Augustine Heard and Friends. Newcomb and Gauss, Boston, Mass., 1916.
Robert M. Gray, September 23, 2005
References
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Page 1 of 2
Epp, Ronald
From:
Robert M. Gray [rmgray@stanford.edu]
Sent:
Wednesday, November 02, 2005 5:03 PM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Subject: Re: Amy Heard & Mr. Dorr
Dear Ronald,
It turns out we will be passing through NH this month and I thought I would check if it might be
mutually convenient to drop by for a chat. I will certainly understand if the notice is too late.
Anyway, our plans are:
On Sunday, 13 November, we will be driving from Connecticut to our daughter's house in Meredith NH
and on Wednesday 16 November we will be friving from Meredith to Boston. It looks like Merrimack
is pretty much on the route we will be taking. We would not have much time either way, SO we would
not be much of an imposition. Probably things will be more flexible on the Wednesday as our departure
time is not fixed, we do need to get to Boston in time for dinner with friends. So my guess is that early
afternoon would be a likely time. My best guess for the sunday pass by is late afternoon.
Regards,
Bob
On Oct 21, 2005, at 10:31 AM, Epp, Ronald wrote:
Dear Bob,
Again your web pages have resolved a long standing piece of uncertainty in my research on the
friends and family of George B. Dorr, son of Mary Gray Ward Dorr. Your information constituted an
unexpected birthday surprise for me as I now enter my 63rd year.
Let me explain. There is a common misconception in the secondary literature that Mr. Dorr was
overcome in the mid-1870's with the beauty of a Ms. Peters while at Lake Nemi, an ancient lake
located east of Rome in the Alban Hills where the temple of Diana once stood. She the widow of Craig
Wadsworth.
Dorr's "Memoirs" refer to her also as "Lina" which was unproductive until I googled "Peters" and "Craig
Wadsworth" and came to the Amy Heard website and your October 1 1881 Newport entry where her
correct name is identified. Do you have any additional information on her other than that she was Amy
Heard's S Massachusetts Avenue (Washington) neighbor? This is no small matter to me since Dorr's
memoirs reveal his infatuation with her likening her to "some Greek goddess," someone "whom men
delight to honor." She had married Craig Wadsworth of New York but had no children, nor should
have had for she, like the Greek goddesses again, seemed to stand out alone, the embodiment of
beauty." Others have extrapolated from this a tale of unrequited love, of disapproval of her by Dorr's
mother, of a smitten man who remained a lifelong bachelor because no one could ever live up to his
romantic standards for fMrs. Wadsworth. I'd like to respond to these conjectures and any insights or
11/3/2005
Page 1 of 1
Epp, Ronald
From:
Epp, Ronald
Sent:
Friday, October 21, 2005 1:31 PM
To:
rmgray@stanford.edu
Cc:
Epp, Ronald
Subject: Amy Heard & Mr. Dorr
Dear Bob,
Again your web pages have resolved a long standing piece of uncertainty in my research on the friends and
family of George B. Dorr, son of Mary Gray Ward Dorr. Your information constituted an unexpected birthday
surprise for me as I now enter my 63rd year.
Let me explain. There is a common misconception in the secondary literature that Mr. Dorr was overcome in the
mid-1870's with the beauty of a Ms. Peters while at Lake Nemi, an ancient lake located east of Rome in the Alban
Hills where the temple of Diana once stood. She the widow of Craig Wadsworth.
Dorr's "Memoirs" refer to her also as "Lina" which was unproductive until I googled "Peters" and "Craig
Wadsworth" and came to the Amy Heard website and your October 1881 Newport entry where her correct
name is identified. Do you have any additional information on her other than that she was Amy Heard's S
Massachusetts Avenue (Washington) neighbor? This is no small matter to me since Dorr's memoirs reveal his
infatuation with her likening her to "some Greek goddess," someone "whom men delight to honor." She had
married
Craig
Wadsworth of New York but had no children, nor should have had for she, like the Greek
goddesses again, seemed to stand out alone, the embodiment of beauty." Others have extrapolated from this a
tale of unrequited love, of disapproval of her by Dorr's mother, of a smitten man who remained a lifelong bachelor
because no one could ever live up to his romantic standards for fMrs. Wadsworth. I'd like to respond to these
conjectures and any insights or information you can provide would be most appreciated.
I'm completing some ancestry work on Mr. Dorr and his relationship to the Gray's and will send it along to you.
Hope to see you here in New Hampshire in the months ahead.
Ronald Epp
47 Pond View Dr.
Merrimack, NH 03054
603-424-6149
G Dorr visits Any, 1886
Mary Doll His distant cousin of Russell gray whom Any
would later Marry. MGWD grandocable of Someal gray
GRD sponsored Ressell Group for verberling in llt Descet 7/17/86
Stay at Oldform See guest book.
Ansy Heard is houseguest at 18 Commonwealth Ave. mid August
1896 at time when she is about to become spouseof
10/21/2005 Russell was sponsored by g.B. DORR for stay at Reading Mt. Desert Room:
Russell gray. Visited earlier in 1886, Earlier that year
Epp, Ronald
From:
Robert M. Gray [gray@eemail.stanford.edu]
Sent:
Sunday, July 31, 2005 5:06 PM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Cc:
Robert Gray
Subject:
Re: Two Versions of Heard Letter's Preface?
Dear Ron,
The two versions of the prefaces to the Heard letters should now be
the same. I have spent quite a few hours during our recent trip to
Canada and since our return in revising and updating the two books.
In particular, I have finally begun transcribing the original French
in all the Sackville-West letters and that has led to the discovery
of several translation errors.
I am not yet up to the Dorr material (I am still in 1886), but when I
get there I will add the material on his
wife's Gray connections, which I never noticed before you brought it
to my attention.
I also hope to start going though the non-Sackville-West letters of
the same period and to add those that
are relevant to the story.
Regards,
Bob
1
Message
Page 1 of 5
Epp, Ronald
From:
Epp, Ronald
Sent:
Tuesday, July 19, 2005 10:16 AM
To:
'Cornelia Nini Gilder'
Subject: RE: Acadia National Park
Dear Nini,
Just back in office after a trip to Pennsylvania with my wife to check up on my 88 and 94 year old in-laws. More than a bit
tired after 15 hours of driving.
I am so delighted that the guest book material was helpful. I also very muchg appreciate the name spelling corrections.
I'm sure you realized that there is only so much one can do with some handwriting. I have just written to the Curator of
the Bar Harbor Historical Society Museum to see whether she will make a rough photocopy of the Anna Ward photograph
and send it off to me so that I han forward it to you. All that I remember of it is that it is cameo-sized with dark hues of a
woman who appeared to be in her 40's.
I appreciate the background information on the Bowditch-Rockwell families. Recognizing that Rockwell died in 1888, five
years before Charles Hazen Dorr, what would be very useful is to know is the extent of his personal correspondence
to "Nellie" for the last five years of his life, but most especially during the 1887-1888 timeframe when the Bowditch's were
Old Farm guests. It seems reasonable to suppose that Charles Dorr's will may well have been written prior to Judge
Rockwell's death.
Could you briefly characterize what you know of Anna Ward since I've gathered quite a bit of manuscript material recently
on the Thomas Wren Ward family, both ancestors and descendents, at the Massachusetts Historical Society,
documentation received from the estate of Mr. Dorr.
Best wishes for a most pleasant summer. I've yet to visit Yale to look at the Edith Wharton Papers but hope to do it the
last two weeks of August. Perhaps I could "swing by" and say hello to you enroute back to New Hampshire?
Ron Epp
Original Message
From: Cornelia Nini Gilder [mailto:cbg@gilder.com]
Sent: Friday, July 15, 2005 9:41 AM
To: Epp, Ronald
Subject: Re: Acadia National Park
Dear Ron,
The guest book material is fascinating to me because of the many Berkshire names (pianist Frederick
Rackemann with a musical offering, Clemence (not Clarence) Haggerty Crafts and her husband, various
members of the Ward family, the Godkins, Emily Vanderbilt Sloane of Elm Court). Thank you SO much
for sharing this great document! You noted a picture of Anna Ward, can you remember that and describe
it to me? She is a big figure in all my Lenox talks and writings. One spelling correction I detected was
Anna Ward's grandson Ward Thoron
Now about the Bowditches and their link to the Dorrs. I am SO interested by that, and the answer to their
relationship could be found if someone had a year to dedicate to sifting through the HUGE collection of
Judge Julius Rockwell correspondence which is uncataloged in the Lenox Library. I was part of an
archiving session to begin the work but haven't been able to do any sustained cataloging. From what I
saw there are almost daily letters to his daughter "Nellie."
7/19/2005
Message
Page 2 of 5
I really would love to know more about this. But am currently in the process of getting photographs for
my Berkshire country House which Acanthus Book is publishing next spring. All the dullest work,
permissions, index, bibliography, scanning photos are on my plate.
Please do keep in touch though and if you had a particular date that might be pursued with the Rockwell
papers we might be able to work something out. Unfortunately Rockwell died in 1888 before Charles
Hazen Dorr died.
Best wishes and once again thanks for this great glimpse into the Old Farm guest book!, NINI
On Jul 13, 2005, at 3:45 PM, Epp, Ronald wrote:
Dear Nini,
I apologize for not communicating with you more regularly. I've been very busy these last few months
with the Spirit of Acadia planning, writing papers and presentations on Mr. Dorr (I'll send you the
most recent article on his horticultural interests), and trying to flesh out the personal and social
dimensions of his years prior to the establishment in 1901 of the Hancock CountyTrustees of Public
Reservations. Next week I'm off to examine the archives of the Massachusetts Trustees of
Reservations to compare their early years with the first three decades of their Maine offspring.
You may be able to assist me with a Lenox-based historical question. In 1893, wealthy
anthropologist Charles Pickering Bowditch (1842-1921) was the executor--and sole beneficiary--of
the will of Mr. Dorr's father, Charles Hazen Dorr. Yes, the will of Mr. Dorr's father does not direct his
property to his wife or his son but to his friend, Charles Bowditch. Mr. Bowditch was married to
Cornelia Livingston Rockwell (1841-1930) in Jamaica Plain (where George Dorr was born in 1853);
she was the daughter of the Lenox family of the Hon. Julius Rockwell and Lucy Forbes Rockwell,
according to my secondary sources. Could you determine whether there is additional information
available locally that would help me to more fully understand the Bowditch-Dorr dynamics. In trying
to "follow the money" I continue to be perplexed at the terms of Mr. Dorr's will and hope that by
understanding the Bowditch's (who were guests at Old Farm) better, I might account for this social
anomaly. A contemporary Harvard physician has suggested that during the Gilded Age such
arrangements were often intended to circuitously funnel resources back into the family but I remain
unconvinced.
By the way, to answer your query below, the Nurseries were profitable for many years but were
frequently mortgaged in the 1920's and they disappeared from property records in the 30's. In their
heyday the local papers report that upwards of 300 men were employed there in the summer
season.
Knowing of your interest in Old Farm, I've attached a listing of the guests who signed off in the Old
Farm guest book which is jealously guarded by the Bar Harbor Historical Soociety, whose curator
was most reluctant to have me page through since "that hasn't been done for decades."
Still hopeful that we can meet some time. I'm trying to arrange a couple of trips to Cambridge in
August. Any chance you'll be in the Boston area then?
With best wishes,
Ron Epp
Original Message
From: Nini Gilder [mailto:cbg@gilder.com]
Sent: Saturday, December 04, 2004 9:47 AM
7/19/2005
Epp, Ronald
From:
Robert M. Gray [gray@eemail.stanford.edu]
Sent:
Friday, July 15, 2005 12:59 PM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Subject:
Re: Amy Heard & Dorr's
I should have mentioned that I can copy the appropriate pages from
the Edward Gray book. Now that you mention it, I saw Mary Gray not
Mary Gray Ward - - but it did say she was the wife of Dorr. I will
take a closer look and check my other references over the weekend as
well as compare the other information you mention. I do have fairly
extensive Gray geneologies thanks to interested ancestors.
bob
1
Epp, Ronald
From:
Robert M. Gray [gray@eemail.stanford.edu]
Sent:
Tuesday, July 12, 2005 6:49 PM
To:
Epp, Ronald
Subject:
Re: Amy Heard & Dorr's
I am surprised SO few take advantage of such a priceless resource.
Windows into the past are hard to come by.
I have built up a fair collection of email correspondents of writers
and historians over the years who have also stumbled onto my stuff.
It has led to many mutually beneficial exchanges of informations,
documents, and occasionally photographs. I will check into the
Stanford library system, I would like it to be as available as
possible. It does well in many search engines on many of the names it
contains.
I will also try to check through some of my stuff during the next
week or so to see if I can find anything on the Dorr connection.
The main treasure trove of stuff relating to the Heard family is at
Harvard. It was in the Baker Library when I spent my sabbatical there
over a decade ago. There are many personal letters as well as
business records of Augustine Heard and Company.
I will be sure to let you know when next we are in the area. We
usually pass through once or twice each year. Our daughter was just
here, so it will not be before fall.
Regards,
bob
1
Epp, Ronald
From:
Epp, Ronald
Sent:
Tuesday, July 12, 2005 3:00 PM
To:
'Robert M. Gray'
Subject:
RE: Amy Heard & Dorr's
W
DorrGuest0705.doc
(29 KB)
Dear Robert,
Many thanks for your illuminating response. Your information will help make my biography
of Mr. Dorr a success, I am sure.
I've just completed a name-date list of everyone who signed the Old Farm Guest Book.
I've
attached it and sent a copy off to Deb Dyer, the Bar Harbor Historical Society Curator--to
enable other visitots to see what names are included. Ms. Dyer is extremely protective
of
this document--which she views as the heart of the museum--and I'm the only one to have
examined it since your last visit.
Are you aware that "Letters from the Gilded Age" is not indexed in the Online Computer
Library Center database of 50 million bibliographic records? You may wish to approach
Stanford's catalogers to see that they create an entry for it so that it becomes known and
searchable by the scholarly community. Fortunately, I googled it.
I'll do some spadework here to see if the Dorr "Gray family" and yours are related.
Please do let me know in advance of your travels to and through Manchester. I'd make every
effort to meet with you. I can be reached at home at: 47 Pond View Dr. , Merrimack, NH
03054 (603-424-6149).
Ron
Original Message
From: Robert M. Gray [mailto:gray@eemail.stanford.edu
Sent: Monday, July 11, 2005 4:16 PM
To: Epp, Ronald
Cc: Robert Gray
Subject: Re: Amy Heard & Dorr's
Many thanks for your email. I have not had much time for the Amy
letters in a while, but I hope to do some updating and revising
during my upcoming sabbatical. I do not have any information on Mr.
Dorr past what I mentioned in the Amy book, but I recall being very
impressed by what I found out about him and I hope your project is
successful. My wife and I visited the Bar Harbor Historical Society
and I went through the guestbook when we were visiting Maine for my
daughters wedding, about 15-16 years ago (our oldest grandson is
about to turn 14) I remember we tracked down the ruins of the Dorr
house in Acadia park and I was told how it became a ruin because the
park had no money to maintain it. As I recall, Russell Gray proposed
to Amy Heard on the grounds, so it was fascinating to be on the same
ground. I will go through my related stuff and notes during the
summer and see if I can dig up anything more. Our daughter lives in
Meredith so we drive through Manchester a few times every year,
perhaps we could get together some time for a chat.
I will check my geneological information since a Gray from Salem has
a good chance of being a relation, but there were several. Our most
1
famous ancestor was "Old Billy" Gray and I believe there were six
other William Grays living in Salem at the same time who were not
related to each other, they distinguished among them by numbering
them, Old Billy was called for a while William Gray Tertius, William
Gray Jr, and finally just William Gray.
Regards,
Bob Gray
2
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