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Ward Perkins Families
Ward-Perkins Families
COPY: Elizabeth H.ward
THOMAS WREN WARD OF BOSTON FAMILY TREE
(Compiled by Ronald H. Epp, August 2019)
William W. & Ruth Putnam
Of Salem
William W. (1761-1827) m. 1. Martha Proctor (1762-1788); 2. Joanna 'Nancy' Chipman (1761-
)
Thomas Wren Ward (1786-1858)
m. Lydia Gray W. (1788-1874), daughter of Samuel Gray (1760-1816) m.
Anna Orne (1767-1797)
Samuel Gray
George Cabot
Martha
Mary Gray
William
Mary Gray
John
Thomas Wm.
(1817-1907)
(1824-87)
(1812-53)
(1816-19) (1819-30) (1820-1901) (1822-56) (1831-59)
m. 1840
m. 1850
William Dorr
Anna Hazard Barker W.
daughter of Jacob & Eliza Barker
Charles Hazen Dorr
(1851-76)
(1813-1902)
(1821-1893)
George B. Dorr
(1853-1944)
Anna Barker Ward
Lydia Gray Ward
Elizabeth Barker Ward
Thomas Wren Ward
(1841-75)
(1843-1929)
(1850-1920)
(1844-1940)
m. 1862
m. 1870
m.
m. 1872
Joseph Thoron
Baron Richard F. Baron Ernst Schoenberg Sophia Read Howard
(1828-1901)
Von Hoffman
(1850- )
(1849-1918)
Maria Louisa
Lt. Col. George C.
Elizabeth Howard Ward
Howard Ridgely Ward
(1864-1950)
(1876-1936)
(1873-1954)
(1881-1946)
m.
m. 1901
m. 1896
m. 1905
T.W. Ward
Wm. Crowninshield
Justine Cutting
Charles Bruen Perkins*
Beatrice Kidder
Elizabeth
Endicott Jr.
(1860-1929)
Beatrice
(1860-1936)
Ward P.L.F.F.S. Thoron
Francis
Anna
Elinor
Mary
* son of Charles
(1867-1938)
Davenport 'Nancy' Perkins Perkins
Callahan Perkins &
Perkins
Perkins
Mansfield
Ryan
Frances D. Bruen
(1897-1970) (1899-1993) (1900-70) (1912-93)
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family Papers
Page 1 of 1
OAC
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Collection Guide
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4v19s0s
Collection Title:
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family Papers
Collection Number: Mss 129
Get Items:
No online items
Contact UC Santa Barbara::Special Collections
Description
Primarily correspondence relating to the Ward and Perkins families of Boston, New York and elsewhere. Other families who figure
prominently in the papers are the Barkers, the Howards, and the Bruens. Many letters from noteworthy individuals outside of the family
circles, such as James Russell Lowell, Amy Lowell, George Bancroft, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry and William James, George Santayana,
and Theodore Roosevelt.
Background
The Ward and Perkins families embodied the ideal of the upper class New England family in the 19th century. Both were very well educated,
with several generations of Harvard graduates, most of whom spent time studying and touring in Europe. Both were very wealthy, having
found success at international business and finance. Both felt a duty to be active in the social, political, and intellectual movements of their
time. The families were brought together by the marriage of Elizabeth Howard Ward and Charles Bruen Perkins in 1896. The collection
primarily covers three generations of these families, with extensive correspondence and personal papers of Elizabeth Ward Perkins, her father
Thomas Wren Ward, and her grandfather Samuel Gray Ward, as well as her husband's parents, Charles Callahan Perkins and Frances D.
Perkins. The papers feature correspondence with many noteworthy individuals outside the family circles, such as George Bancroft, Ralph
Waldo Emerson, Henry and William James, Amy Lowell, James Russell Lowell, Eleanor Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, and George
Santayana.
Extent
5.6 linear feet (15 boxes and 2 oversize boxes).
Restrictions
Copyright has not been assigned to the Department of Special Collections, UCSB. All requests for permission to publish or quote from
manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Head of Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the Department
of Special Collections as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which
also must be obtained.
http://www.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4v19s0sj/
8/23/2011
http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt4v19s0sj
No online items
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family Papers
Arrangement and description by T. Lewis; latest revision, D. Tambo
Department of Special Collections
Davidson Library
University of California, Santa Barbara
Santa Barbara, CA 93106
Phone: (805) 893-3062
Fax: (805) 893-5749
Email: special@library.ucsb.edu
URL: :http://www.library.ucsb.edu/speccoll/speccoll.html
© 2011
The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
1
Papers
Ward-Perkins Family Papers, ca. 1788-1954
Collection number: Mss 129
Department of Special Collections
Davidson Library
University of California, Santa Barbara
Processed by:
Arrangement and description by T. Lewis; latest revision, D. Tambo
Date Completed:
Apr. 26, 2011
Encoded by:
A. Demeter
© 2011 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
Descriptive Summary
Title: Ward-Perkins Family Papers
Dates: ca. 1788-1954
Collection number: Mss 129
Collection Size: 5.6 linear feet (15 boxes and 2 oversize boxes).
Repository: University of California, Santa Barbara. Library. Dept. of Special Collections
Santa Barbara, CA 93106
Abstract: Primarily correspondence relating to the Ward and Perkins families of Boston, New York and elsewhere. Other families who figure
prominently in the papers are the Barkers, the Howards, and the Bruens. Many letters from noteworthy individuals outside of the family
circles, such as James Russell Lowell, Amy Lowell, George Bancroft, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry and William James, George Santayana,
and Theodore Roosevelt.
Physical location: Vault.
Languages: English
Access Restrictions
None.
Publication Rights
Copyright has not been assigned to the Department of Special Collections, UCSB. All requests for permission to publish or quote from
manuscripts must be submitted in writing to the Head of Special Collections. Permission for publication is given on behalf of the Department
of Special Collections as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which
also must be obtained.
Preferred Citation
Ward-Perkins Family Papers. Mss 129. Department of Special Collections, Davidson Library, University of California, Santa Barbara.
Acquisition Information
Multiple gifts from family members, ca. 1984-2011.
Biography
The Ward and Perkins families embodied the ideal of the upper class New England family in the 19th century. Both were very well educated,
with several generations of Harvard graduates, most of whom spent time studying and touring in Europe. Both were very wealthy, having
found success at international business and finance. Both felt a duty to be active in the social, political, and intellectual movements of their
time. The families were brought together by the marriage of Elizabeth Howard Ward and Charles Bruen Perkins in 1896. The collection
primarily covers three generations of these families, with extensive correspondence and personal papers of Elizabeth Ward Perkins, her
father Thomas Wren Ward, and her grandfather Samuel Gray Ward, as well as her husband's parents, Charles Callahan Perkins and
Frances D. Perkins. The papers feature correspondence with many noteworthy individuals outside the family circles, such as George
Bancroft, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry and William James, Amy Lowell, James Russell Lowell, Eleanor Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt,
and George Santayana.
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
2
Papers
Samuel Gray Ward (1817-1907) grew up in Boston and graduated from Harvard University in 1836. His father, Thomas Wren Ward, was the
American agent for Baring Brothers & Co. of London, a credit corporation for owners of merchant ships, which would prove to be the family
firm for three generations. After graduation, Samuel Gray Ward went on the Grand Tour of Europe with the Harvard mathematician and
astronomer John Farrar and members of his family. Among the group was a young relative of Farrar's, Anna Hazard Barker. Sam and Anna
spent at least nine weeks of the trip traveling together. Although Anna was some years older and a much more experienced traveler than he,
Sam convinced her to marry him, and they were wed in 1840.
Anna Hazard Barker Ward (1813-1902) was the daughter of New York State Senator Jacob Barker, an extremely wealthy and successful
businessman who was related to Benjamin Franklin's mother. She was raised in Bloomingdale, New York, on the Hudson River, though
when she was a teen the family moved to New Orleans, where Jacob Barker increased both his reputation and his fortune. Following the
Grand Tour of Europe, she and Samuel Gray Ward became heavily involved with the Transcendentalist movement. In 1838 their mutual
friend Margaret Fuller, a noted Transcendentalist thinker and women's rights advocate, introduced them to Ralph Waldo Emerson, and they
soon became close personal friends. Fuller, who cultivated an air of intellectual superiority, nevertheless saw Anna Barker as her equal.
However, due to peculiarities of the Victorian mindset, Anna's involvement in the Transcendentalist circles waned following her marriage.
In 1845, after working at his father's firm for a few years, Samuel Gray Ward took his young family to live in the rural community of Lenox,
MA, where he worked as a farmer. They saw this "back to the land" experiment as a Transcendentalist quest of the spirit, and indeed, Sam,
who had always been of a delicate constitution, grew more robust and invigorated through his labors. Unfortunately, the death of his father
left a vacancy at Baring Bros. that Samuel Gray Ward was called upon to fill. His brother, George Cabot Ward, joined him as his partner, and
he began a 35-year career with the firm. In 1862, the family moved to New York.
Sam and Anna Ward had three daughters: Anna Barker Ward Thoron, born in 1841, who married a French merchant named Joseph Thoron,
but died shortly after the birth of her son Ward in 1875. Their second daughter was Lydia Gray Ward Von Hoffman, born in 1843, who
married a German Baron, Richard Von Hoffman, in 1870 and went to live with him in Rome, Italy. Known familiarly as Lily, she often signed
her letters with a variety of nicknames such as "Lilypad, "Padsy," and "Dill." The youngest was Elizabeth Barker Ward, who became
Baroness Schönberg when she married Baron Ernst Schönberg of Austria. She joined him in his castle, Schloss Pallaus, in South Tyrol,
where she died in 1920.
Thomas Wren Ward (1844-1940) was the only son of Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard Barker Ward, and he attended school in Vevey,
Switzerland in the 1850s, before going to Harvard. His roommate at Harvard was Ralph Waldo Emerson's son Edward. The two had been
friends previously and even went camping together before leaving for college. Although he was a sensitive, scholarly sort who dreamed of
being a geologist, Thomas Wren Ward was drawn into the family business like his father before him. He would go on to serve the company
for four decades. In 1872 he married Sophia Read Howard, and their eldest child was the aforementioned Elizabeth Howard Ward.
In 1896, a few years after her own Grand Tour of Europe, Elizabeth Howard Ward (1873-1954) married the much older Boston architect
Charles Bruen Perkins (1860-1929), also a Harvard graduate who had studied architecture at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He was the
son of the noted author, musician, and painter Charles Callahan Perkins, who had himself graduated from Harvard in 1843 and went on to
help establish the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. The Perkins family had been wealthy philanthropists and patrons of the arts for generations,
the earliest representative in this archive being Thomas Handasyd Perkins (1764-1854), who grew up amidst the turmoil of the American
Revolution and went on to travel the world, building a fortune through international trade. Although the war prevented him from attending
Harvard, as he was preparing to do, he nevertheless served 11 terms as a Massachusetts state legislator later in life. He and his wife, Sarah
Elliott Perkins, were close friends with George Washington. His brother, James Perkins, was his partner in business, and James'
great-great-grandson Francis Davenport Perkins (1897-1970) is also represented in the archive. Another Harvard man, Francis D. Perkins
was a respected New Yorkmusic critic who fought in theSecond WorldWar.Inall,five generations of the Perkins family can be found in this
collection.
Scope and Content Notes
The papers consist of approximately 2,000 related items (1,500 letters) relating to the Ward and Perkins families of Boston, New York, and
elsewhere. Other families who figure prominently in the papers are the Barkers, the Howards, and the Bruens.
The basic arrangement of the collection is based on Donald Fitch's article "The Ward-Perkins Papers," published in volume XVI of the UCSB
Library publication Soundings (1985), which was itself based on the initial inventory of the collection prepared by Jeffrey Akard of the Santa
Barbara firm A.B.I. Books. Citations are provided below, where available, for more detailed information of the items listed.
Indexing Terms
The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog.
Perkins, Elizabeth Ward
Ward, Thomas W. (Thomas Wren), 1786-1858
Ward, Samuel Gray
Perkins, Charles C. (Charles Callahan), 1823-1886
Perkins, Charles Callahan, Mrs., d. 1909
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
3
Papers
Boston (Mass.)
Related Materials
Papers of Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard (Barker) Ward, 1823-1908. Harvard University, Houghton Library. (bMS Am 1465).
Thomas Wren Ward Papers, 1717-1943. Massachusetts Historical Society. Refers to the elder Thomas Wren Ward, father of Samuel Gray
Ward.
Thomas Handasyd Perkins Papers, 1789-1892. Massachusetts Historical Society.
Biographical/Genealogical Information
Scope and Content Note
About the families, including notes and recent printed material
Box 1: 1
General - Fitch, Donald. "The Ward-Perkins Papers"
Box 1: 2
General - Early working inventory
Box 1: 3
General - Biographical documents (photocopies)
Box 1: 4-7
Barker
Box 1: 8
Coffyn
Box 1: 9
Davenport
Box 1: 10
Folger
Box 1: 11
Gardner
Box 1: 12-13
Gray
Box 1: 14-15
Perkins
Box 1: 16
Robinson
Box 1: 17
Rodman
Box 1: 18-19
Schönberg
Box 1: 20
Tilton, Eleanor M. - "The True Romance of Anna Hazard Barker and Samuel Gray Ward"
Box 1: 21
Von Hoffman
Box 1: 22-24
Ward
Prominent Figures - Politicians, Authors, and Social Figures and miscellany
Scope and Content Note
Mainly correspondence to, from, and about; also some documents, clippings, writings, and other material.
Bancroft, Elizabeth [Davis Bliss] (c.1803-1886) [wife of George Bancroft]
Box 2: 1
1 ALS to Fanny and Mary [Frances D. Bruen Perkins and Mary A. D. Bruen], (Fitch, 73), 1867
Box 2: 1
1 ALS to "friends" [Mr. and Mrs. Charles Callahan Perkins], (Fitch, 75), n.d.
Box 2: 1
1 ALS from Mary E. Perkins, (Fitch, 73), n.d.
Box 2: 1
30 ALS from Mary Lundie Bruen, (Fitch, 72), 1865-1879
Bancroft, George (1800-1891)
Box 2: 2
1 ALS to William Bancroft (his brother), (Fitch, 75), 1854
Box 2: 2
3 ALS to Mary A. D. Bruen, 1876-1886, (Fitch, 74), n.d.
Box 2: 2
5 ALS to Mary Lundie Bruen, (Fitch, 74), n.d.
Box 2: 2
9 ALS to Charles Callahan Perkins, (Fitch, 74), 1855-1883
Box 2: 2
9 ALS to Fanny [Frances D. Bruen Perkins], (Fitch, 73-74), 1853-1865, n.d.
Box 2: 2
4 ALS to friends and relatives, (Fitch, 74), 1875, 1882, n.d.
Box 2: 2
2 ALS from Charles Callahan Perkins, (Fitch, 68), 1867, 1868
Box 2: 2
1 Newspaper clipping re Bancroft biography, 1944
Baring, Thomas
Box 2: 3
Correspondence and clippings, ca. 1877-1923
Barker, Abraham (1821-1906) [brother of Anna Hazard Barker Ward]
Box 2: 4
2 ALS to "neice," 1883, 1896
Berensen, Mary
Box 2: 5
1 picture postcard to Mrs. [Elizabeth Ward] Perkins, 1928
Bridge, Ann (1889-1974) [pseudonym for Lady Mary Dolling O'Malley, English novelist.]
Box 2: 6
10 ALS to Elizabeth [Ward Perkins], (Fitch, 58), 1942-1951
Bruen, Matthias (1776-1846) [grandfather of Frances Davenport Bruen Perkins]
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
4
Papers
Prominent Figures - Politicians, Authors, and Social Figures and miscellany
Box 2: 7
1 ALS, with typescript copy, of a letter to his sister Mary, with a pencil sketch of Matthias included,
(Fitch, 71), 1817
Bryce, James (1838-1922)
Box 2: 8
1 ALS to Mrs. [Frances D. Bruen] Perkins, (Fitch, 72), 1886
Box 2: 8
1 ALS to Mr. [Samuel Gray] Ward, (Fitch, 26), 1898
Cabot, James Elliot (1821-1903) [Emerson's literary executor]
Box 2: 8
2 ALS from Samuel Gray Ward, (Fitch, 23), 1882, n.d.
Channing, William Ellery (1817-1901)
Box 2: 9
1 ALS (8 pages) to Thomas Wren Ward, re campground WEC and Henry D. Thoreau used while on
Mount Monadnock in New Hampshire, (Fitch, 46), 1861
Emerson, Edward W. (1844-1930)
Box 2: 10
8 ALS to Tom [Thomas Wren Ward], (Fitch, 46), 1861-1867
Box 2: 10
1 printed copy of address re opening of Emerson Hall in 1905 and 1 note re Samuel Gray Ward's
family letters, (Fitch, 31), 1914
Emerson, Ralph Waldo (1803-1882)
Box 2: 11
3 ALS to friends [Samuel G. Ward], (Fitch, 28), 1840, 1842
Box 2: 11
1 ALS to Thomas Wren Ward, (Fitch, 29), 1840, 1872
Box 2: 11
1 TL from F. P. Stearns to Sophie R. Howard Ward re deteriorating health of Emerson, 1882
Hecker, (Friar) Isaac (1819-1888) [founder of the Paulists]
Box 2: 12
2 ALS to "Friend" re Thomas Wren Ward, (Fitch, 48), 1862
Box 2: 12
2 ALS to Thomas Wren Ward, (Fitch, 48), 1864
James, Alice H. (c.1849-1922) [wife of William James]
Box 2: 13
1 ALS to Thomas Wren Ward, (Fitch, 30), 1878
James, Alice R. (d. 1957) [wife of Billy James]
Box 2: 14
1 ALS to "Bessie" [Elizabeth Ward Perkins], (Fitch, 30), 1929
James, Billy (1882-1961) [son of William James]
Box 2: 15
2 ALS to Elizabeth [Ward Perkins], (Fitch, 30), 1922-1929
James, Henry (1843-1916)
Box 2: 16
1 ALS to Anna Hazard Barker Ward, (Fitch, 30), n.d.
Box 2: 16
2 ALS to Samuel Gray Ward, 1869, (Fitch, 30), n.y.
Box 2: 16
1 TN, extract from "William Wetmore Story and his friends"
James, William (1842-1910)
Box 2: 17
1 ALS to Mrs. [Anna Hazard Barker] Ward, (Fitch, 30), [1884]
Lind, Jenny (1820-1887)
Box 2: 18
1 ALS to Baron [Richard Von] Hoffman, (Fitch, 40), n.d.
Lowell, Amy (1874-1925)
Box 2: 19
1 ALS to "Bessie" [Elizabeth Ward Perkins], (Fitch, 54), n.d.
Lowell, James Russell (1819-1891)
Box 2: 20
31 ALS to Samuel Gray Ward, (Fitch, 29), 1860-1891
O'Connell, (Cardinal) William Henry (1859-1944)
Box 2: 21
8 TLS and 1 ALS to Elizabeth Ward Perkins, (Fitch, 57), 1934-1940, n.d.
Powers, Hiram (1805-1873)
Box 2: 22
Typed copies of 3 letters to Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard Barker, 1837-1843
Roosevelt, Eleanor (1884-1962)
Box 2: 23
1 TLS to Elizabeth Ward Perkins, (Fitch, 57), 1933
Roosevelt, Theodore (1858-1919)
Box 2: 24
1 TLS to Samuel Gray Ward, (Fitch, 27), 1900
Saint-Gaudens, Homer (1880-1958)
Box 2: 25
1 TLS to Mrs. [Elizabeth Ward] Perkins, (Fitch, 54), 1923
Sanborn, F. B. (1831-1917)
Box 2: 26
2 TLS and 1 ALS to Samuel Gray Ward, (Fitch, 27), 1902
Santayana, George (1863-1952)
Box 2: 27
3 ALS to Mrs. [Elizabeth Ward] Perkins, (Fitch, 54), 1915, 1916, n.d.
Stephen, Sir Leslie (1832-1904)
Box 2: 28
1 ALS to Mr. [Samuel Gray] Ward, (Fitch, 27), 1902
Stite, R.
Box 2: 29
2 ALS to Martha Davenport, n.d.
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
5
Papers
Prominent Figures - Politicians, Authors, and Social Figures and miscellany
Ward, Joanna Chipman (c. 1761-1831) [second wife of William Ward, grandmother of Samuel Gray
Ward]
Box 2: 30
1 ALS to William Ward [brother of Samuel Gray Ward], (Fitch, 31), n.y.
Ward, Martha (1812-1853) [sister of Samuel Gray Ward]
Box 2: 31
1 TL (carbon copy transcript of earlier letter) to Thomas W. Ward [her father], 1836
[Ward, Martha Proctor (1763-1788)] [first wife of William Ward, grandmother of Samuel Gray Ward]
Box 2: 32
1 ADS - Eulogy, by unknown author, (Fitch, 31), 1788
Ward, Raymond L.
Box 2: 33
1 ALS to [William] Endicott, along with typed transcript, 1898
Ward, William (1761-1827) [grandfather of Samuel Gray Ward]
Box 2: 34
1 ALS to "grandson" [Samuel Gray Ward], (Fitch, 31), 1819
Miscellany
Box 2: 35
Various Documents, ca. 1867-1917
Box 2: 36
Vital Records - Births, marriages, and wills for various family members, ca. 1845-1954
Family
Ward, Samuel Gray (1817-1907)
Scope and Content Note
Oldest son of Thomas Wren Ward and Lydia Gray Ward. Businessman and Transcendentalist.
Correspondence to and from, as well as other materials, ca. 1841-1906.
Outgoing
Box 3: 1
1 ALS to brother-in-law Abraham Barker, (Fitch, 24), 1890
Box 3: 2
1 ALS to Eliza Callahan Cleveland, (Fitch, 24), 1896
Box 3: 3
1 TLS to Richard Watson Gilder, (Fitch, 24), 1902
Box 3: 4
1 ALS to Baron Osten-Sacken, (Fitch, 26), n.d.
Box 3: 5
5 ALS to daughter Elizabeth B. Ward Schönberg, (Fitch, 23), 1862-1872
Box 3: 6
13 ALS to daughter Lydia G. Ward Von Hoffman, (Fitch, 23), 1871-1893
Box 3: 7
2 ALS to son-in-law Richard Von Hoffman, (Fitch, 23), 1872-1878
Box 3: 8
2 ALS to father Thomas W. Ward, (Fitch, 22), 1844
Box 3: 9
8 ALS to son Thomas Wren Ward, (Fitch, 23), 1860-1901
Box 3: 10
1 ALS to William Collins Whitney, (Fitch, 23), 1887
Incoming
Box 3: 11
1 ALS from F.H. Baring, (Fitch, 26-27), 1899
Box 3: 12
2 ALS from brother-in-law Abraham Barker, (Fitch, 24), 1841-1842
Box 3: 13
1 ALS from Mary B. Bartlett, (Fitch, 25), 1870
Box 3: 14
3 ALS from Helen C. Bell, (Fitch, 25), n.d.
Box 3: 15
1 ALS from Jonathan Ingersoll Bowditch, (Fitch, 25-26), 1871
Box 3: 16
2 ALS from J. Elliot Cabot, (Fitch, 27), 1902
Box 3: 17
1 ALS from John Jay Chapman, (Fitch, 26), 1890
Box 3: 18
1 ALS from Francis James Child, (Fitch, 25), 1864
Box 3: 19
1 ALS from Joseph H. Choate, (Fitch, 27), 1906
Box 3: 20
Typed copies of letters from John Murray Forbes, (Fitch, 26), 1892-1897
Box 3: 21
5 ALS and 1 TLS from Edwin Lawrence Godkin, (Fitch, 26), n.d.
Box 3: 22
1 ALS from Claudius Edward Habicht, (Fitch, 42), 1841
Box 3: 23
1 ALS from William Hawes, (Fitch, 25), n.d.
Box 3: 24
1 ALS from Thomas Wentworth Higginson, (Fitch, 27), 1901
Box 3: 25
1 ALS from Alfred E. Hippesley, 1890
Box 3: 26
3 ALS from Nina Howard Hippesley, (Fitch, 27), 1877
Box 3: 27
5 ALS from Prudence Rebecca "Lily" Howard, (Fitch, 27), n.d.
Box 3: 28
4 ALS from Sarah Forbes Hughes, (Fitch, 27), 1899-1900
Box 3: 29
1 ALS from W.H. Hughes, (Fitch, 27), 1899
Box 3: 30
2 ALS from Richard Morris Hunt, (Fitch, 26), 1872
Box 3: 31
1 ALS from aunt Lucy Ann Ward Lawrence, (Fitch, 25), 1857
Box 3: 32
1 ALS from Josephine Lazarus, (Fitch, 26), n.d.
Box 3: 33
4 ALS from Col. Henry Lee, (Fitch, 26), 1894-1898
Box 3: 34
1 ALS from Charles McKim, (Fitch, 25), n.d.
Box 3: 35
2 ALS from Charles Eliot Norton, (Fitch, 25), 1869
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
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Papers
Family
Box 3: 36
2 ALS from C.R. Osten-Sacken, (Fitch, 26), 1894-1901
Box 3: 37
1 ALS from Pelatiah Perit, (Fitch, 25), 1858
Box 3: 38
2 ALS from Fritz W. Rackemann, (Fitch, 25), 1846
Box 3: 39
3 ALS from Anne Ritchie, (Fitch, 26), n.d.
Box 3: 40
1 ALS from Georgina Schuyler, (Fitch, 27), 1902
Box 3: 41
4 ALS from Charles D. Sedgwick, (Fitch, 25), 1847-1856
Box 3: 42
2 ALS from Goldwin Smith, (Fitch, 25), 1864-1865
Box 3: 43
1 ALS from son-in-law Richard Von Hoffman, (Fitch, 40), 1872
Box 3: 44
16 ALS from brother Thomas William Ward, (Fitch, 25), 1850-1859
Box 3: 45
1 ALS from [anonymous], n.d.
Miscellany
Box 3: 46
Miscellaneous correspondence
Box 3: 47
3 essays by SGW with typescript copies: "Idealism and Realism," n.d., "Positivism," n.d., and
recollections of poet Jones Very, 1896 (Fitch, 30-31)
Box 3: 48
"Poems and Translations of German Songs" by SGW, (Fitch, 30), 1880
Box 3: 49
Other materials (Fitch, 30-31)
Ward, Anna Hazard Barker (1813-1902)
Scope and Content Note
Daughter of Jacob Barker and Eliza Hazard Barker, wife of Samuel Gray Ward. Correspondence to
and from, as well as other materials, ca. 1828-1899.
Outgoing
Box 3: 50
5 ALS to brother Abraham Barker, (Fitch, 36), 1869-1894
Box 3: 51
Typed copies of letters to brother Thomas H. Barker, (Fitch, 36), 1837-1838
Box 3: 52
2 ALS to daughter Elizabeth B. Ward Schönberg, 1860
Box 3: 53
10 ALS to daughter Lydia G. Ward Von Hoffman, (Fitch, 36), 1851-1892
Box 3: 54
Typed copies of letters to father-in-law Thomas W. Ward, 1842-1855
Box 3: 55
11 ALS to son Thomas Wren Ward, 1861-1865
Incoming
Box 4: 1
4 ALS from brother Abraham Barker, (Fitch, 37), 1841-1846
Box 4: 2
2 ALS from mother Eliza H. Barker, (Fitch, 37), 1846-1856
Box 4: 3
9 ALS from brother Thomas H. Barker, (Fitch, 37), 1837-1849
Box 4: 4
1 ALS from J. Ingersoll Bowditch, (Fitch, 37), 1883
Box 4: 5
Typed copies of letters from George P.A. Healy, (Fitch, 37), 1870
Box 4: 6
4 ALS from Nina Howard Hippesley, (Fitch, 27), 1878-1884
Box 4: 7
1 ALS from E.A. Read, 1880
Box 4: 8
1 ALS from Jane M. Scriven, (Fitch, 37), 1828
Box 4: 9
1 ALS from Edward Sillig, (Fitch, 37), 1856
Box 4: 10
Extracts of letters from Miss Swain, (Fitch, 37), 1852
Box 4: 11
2 ALS from son-in-law Richard Von Hoffman, (Fitch 40), 1872-1873
Box 4: 12
2 ALS from mother-in-law Lydia Gray Ward, n.d.
Box 4: 13
1 ALS from "French governess," 1858
Miscellany
Box 4: 14
Handwritten copy of her diary, (Fitch, 37), 1845-1855
Box 4: 15
Journal extracts
Schönberg, Elizabeth Barker Ward (1847-1920)
Scope and Content Note
Daughter of Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard Barker Ward, wife of Baron Ernst Schönberg.
Correspondence to family members, ca. 1864-1919.
Outgoing
Box 4: 16
2 ALS to niece Elizabeth Ward Perkins, (Fitch, 39), 1897-1899
Box 4: 17
1 ALS to sister Lydia G. Ward Von Hoffman, n.d.
Box 4: 18
Numerous ALS to mother Anna H. Barker War, includes a typed excerpt from a letter from the
Convent of the Sacred Heart, Manhattanville, 1864-1897
Box 4: 19
12 ALS and 1 TL (36 pp.) to brother Thomas Wren Ward, (Fitch, 39), 1890-1919
Box 4: 20
1 ALS to "Cousin," (Fitch, 39), 1899
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
7
Papers
Family
Von Hoffman, Lydia Gray Ward (1843-?)
Scope and Content Note
Daughter of Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard Barker Ward, wife of Richard Von Hoffman.
Correspondence to and from family members, ca. 1852-1928.
Outgoing
Box 4: 21
1 ALS to sister Elizabeth B. Ward Schönberg, (Fitch, 40), 1870
Box 4: 22
113 ALS to mother Anna H. Barker Ward, (Fitch, 39), 1855-1876
Box 4: 23
26 ALS to father Samuel Gray Ward, (Fitch, 40), 1855-1876
Box 4: 24
1 ALS to sister-in-law Sophia R. Howard Ward, (Fitch, 40), 1875
Box 4: 25
56 ALS to brother Thomas Wren Ward, (Fitch, 40), 1859-1928
Box 4: 26
1 ALS to "Anna," n.d.
Box 4: 27
1 ALS to "Grandmother," 1870
Box 4: 28
1 ALS to [?], n.d.
Incoming
Box 4: 29
4 ALS from great-aunt Lucy Ann Ward Lawrence, (Fitch, 40), 1852-1855
Box 4: 30
2 ALS from "Grandmother," (Fitch, 40), 1853, n.d.
Box 4: 31
2 ALS from [?], 1858
Thoron, Anna Barker Ward (1841-1875)
Scope and Content Note
Daughter of Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard Barker Ward, wife of Joseph Thoron; died young,
soon after the birth of her son, Ward Thoron. Outgoing correspondence, ca. 1854-1856.
Box 5: 1
7 ALS to brother Thomas Wren Ward, (Fitch, 44), 1854-1856
Ward, George Cabot (1824-1887)
Scope and Content Note
Brother of Samuel Gray Ward and business partner with him as the American representatives of
Baring Bros., London. Outgoing correspondence, ca. 1846-1873.
Box 5: 2
2 ALS to John Murray Forbes, (Fitch, 42), 1865-1868
Box 5: 3
6 ALS to brother Samuel Gray Ward, (Fitch, 42), 1846-1873
Barker, Jacob (1779-1871)
Scope and Content Note
Father of Anna Hazard Barker Ward, husband of Eliza Hazard Barker; merchant and New York State
Senator. Outgoing correspondence to family members, ca. 1801-1869.
Box 5: 4
2 ALS to granddaughter Elizabeth B. Ward Schönberg, 1855-1858
Box 5: 5
4 ALS to granddaughter Lydia G. Ward Von Hoffman, (Fitch, 44), 1853-1868
Box 5: 6
4 ALS and 2 TLS to daughter Anna H. Barker Ward, (Fitch, 42), 1801-1869
Ward, Thomas Wren (1844-1940)
Scope and Content Note
Son of Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard Barker Ward. Correspondence to, from, and about; as
well as other materials, ca. 1857-1939.
Outgoing
Box 5: 7
1 ALS to uncle Abraham Barker, (Fitch, 45), 1900
Box 5: 8
2 ALS to sister Anna B. Ward Thoron, 1857-1859
Box 5: 9
192 ALS to sister Lydia G. Ward Von Hoffman, (Fitch, 45), 1864-1912
Box 5: 10
22 ALS to father Samuel Gray Ward, (Fitch, 45), 1857-1893
Box 5: 11
31 ALS to mother Anna Hazard Barker Ward, 1854-1875
Box 5: 12
22 ALS to "Parents" [SGW & AHBW], (Fitch, 45), 1856-1858
Box 5: 13
2 ALS to daughter Elizabeth Howard Ward Perkins, (Fitch, 58), 1938
Box 5: 14
5 ALS to son George Cabot Ward (1873-1936), (Fitch, 45), 1917-1934
Box 5: 15
1 ALS to "Mother" [probably mother-in-law], 1874
Box 5: 16
1 ALS to "Cecil," n.d.
Incoming
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
8
Papers
Family
Box 5: 17
8 ALS and 1 TLS from Baring Bros., (Fitch, 48), 1886-1923
Box 5: 18
1 ALS from Francis James Child, (Fitch, 48), n.d.
Box 5: 19
2 ALS from Charles De Kay, (Fitch, 48), 1880
Box 5: 20
1 TLS from cousin George B. Dorr, (Fitch, 48), 1934
Box 5: 21
1 ALS from Edith Emerson, (Fitch, 46), 1862
Box 5: 22
2 ALS from Ellen T. Emerson, (Fitch, 46), 1862-1867
Box 5: 23
1 ALS from William Endicott, (Fitch, 48), 1908
Box 5: 24
3 ALS from Robert Fulton, (Fitch, 48), n.d.
Box 5: 25
5 ALS from Storrow Higginson, (Fitch, 46), 1859-1863
Box 5: 26
1 ALS from Isabella Hutchinson, (Fitch, 46), 1855
Box 5: 27
1 TLS from Dickinson S. Miller, (Fitch, 48), 1902
Box 5: 28
3 ALS from Francis T. Roche, (Fitch, 49), 1929
Box 5: 29
1 ALS from Ernst Schönberg, (Fitch, 49), 1922
Box 5: 30
1 TLS from Charles M. Storey, (Fitch, 49), 1932
Box 5: 31
16 ALS from nephew Ward Thoron, (Fitch, 49), 1910-1935
Miscellany
Box 5: 32
School records and correspondence, (Fitch, 49), 1855-1858
Box 5: 33
Various materials honoring TWW as Harvard's "Oldest Living Graduate," (Fitch, 50)
Box 5: 34-35
Miscellaneous correspondence
Box 6: 1-4
Miscellaneous correspondence
Ward, Sophia Read Howard (1849-1918)
Scope and Content Note
Wife of Thomas Wren Ward, daughter-in-law of Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard Barker Ward.
Correspondence to/from, typescript of newspaper account of wedding, and estate information, ca.
1875-1920.
Outgoing
Box 6: 5
6 ALS to "Father," (Fitch, 50), 1876
Box 6: 6
12 ALS to "Mother," (Fitch, 50), 1876-1893
Box 6: 7
1 ALS to "Ward," n.d.
Incoming
Box 6: 8
1 ALS from W. Carvel Hall, 1896
Box 6: 9
1 ALS from James M. Howard, (Fitch, 50), 1899
Box 6: 10
1 ALS from [?] Lee, n.d.
Box 6: 11
2 ALS from [?] re the death of Josephine Lazarus, (Fitch, 50), 1910
Miscellany
Box 6: 12
Typescript newspaper account of her wedding to Thomas Wren Ward, n.d.
Box 6: 13
Estate information following the death of Sophie Ward (Fitch, 52)
Perkins, Elizabeth Howard Ward (1873-1954)
Scope and Content Note
Daughter of Thomas Wren Ward and Sophia Read Howard Ward, granddaughter of Samuel Gray
Ward and Anna Hazard Barker Ward, wife of Charles Bruen Perkins. Correspondence to/from and
about, accounts of wedding to Charles Bruen Perkins, and other materials, ca. 1870s-1953.
Outgoing
Box 6: 14
23 ALS to grandfather Samuel Gray Ward, (Fitch, 52), 1889-1900
Box 6: 15
1 ALS to [?], 1897
Incoming
Box 6: 16
2 ALS from Robert Amendola and his wife, Gerrie Amendola, (Fitch, 58), 1950-1953
Box 6: 17
1 TLS from John Taylor Arms, (Fitch, 59), 1952
Box 6: 18
1 ALS from Cecil B. Atwater, (Fitch, 58), 1951
Box 6: 19
1 ALS from Elizabeth B. Bliss, 1942
Box 6: 20
8 ALS from Otto T. Bannard, (Fitch, 56), ca. 1927-1929
Box 6: 21
1 ALS from Samuel H. Barker, (Fitch, 52), 1889
Box 6: 22
1 ANS from George Grey Barnard, (Fitch, 56), n.d.
Box 6: 23
4 ALS and 1 TLS from Daniel Berkeley-Updike, (Fitch, 56), 1928-1941
Box 6: 24
1 ALS from Paul Albert Besnard, (Fitch, 56), 1924
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
9
Papers
Family
Box 6: 25
1 ALS from Elizabeth Coatsworth Beston, (Fitch, 57), 1933
Box 6: 26
1 ALS from Laurence Binyon, (Fitch, 53), 1914
Box 6: 27
1 ALS from John Otway Percy Bland (Fitch, 56)
Box 6: 28
1 ALS from Montague E. Browning, (Fitch, 57), 1935
Box 6: 29
1 ALS from Arthur Graham Carey, (Fitch, 58), 1938
Box 6: 30
4 ALS and 1 TLS from Morris Carter, with a postcard from his wife, Beatrice, (Fitch, 57),
1937-1938
Box 6: 31
1 ALS from Robert Catterson-Smith, (Fitch, 56), 1923
Box 6: 32
1 ALS from Francis H.H. Clarke, (Fitch, 53), 1915
Box 6: 33
8 ALS from Charles T. Copeland, (Fitch, 53), 1910-1923
Box 6: 34
1 TLS from Ralph Adams Cram, (Fitch, 54), 1919
Box 6: 35
1 ALS from Charles C. Curran, (Fitch, 54), 1912
Box 6: 36
1 ALS from Margaret Duff, (Fitch, 57), 1935
Box 6: 37
2 TLS from Milton Ellis, 1941
Box 6: 38
1 ALS from Louise Endicott, 1940
Box 6: 39
Typed letters and other materials from Sen. Ralph E. Flanders and his wife, Helen Hartness
Flanders, (Fitch, 59), ca. 1940s-1950s
Box 6: 40
1 TLS from Edward W. Forbes, 1939
Box 6: 41
1 ALS from Helen C. Frick, (Fitch, 54), 1923
Box 6: 42
2 ALS from Isabella Stewart Gardner, (Fitch, 53), 1914
Box 6: 43
1 ALS from Matilda Gay, (Fitch, 56), 1929
Box 6: 44
1 ALS from Richard Watson Gilder, (Fitch, 53), 1896
Box 6: 45
1 ALS from John R. Gilman, (Fitch, 59), 1952
Box 7: 1
1 ALS from Constance Cary Harrison, (Fitch, 53), n.d.
Box 7: 2
1 ALS from Laura Hills, (Fitch, 56), 1926
Box 7: 3
2 ALS from Alfred Hippesley, with a typescript account of his wife Nina's death (Fitch, 57)
Box 7: 4
2 ALS from May Elliot Hobbs, (Fitch, 56), 1927
Box 7: 5
3 ALS and 6 TLS from Henry A. Hollond, with a typescript account of Cambridge University,
(Fitch, 53), 1915-1920
Box 7:6
1 TL from Marjorie Hollond, with newspaper clippings, (Fitch, 58), 1940
Box 7:1 7
1 TLS from Alice S. Howard, (Fitch, 58), 1937
Box 7: 8
2 TLS from M.A. Howe, (Fitch, 57), 1930
Box 7: 9
1 ALS from M.A. DeWolfe Howe, (Fitch, 58), 1940
Box 7: 10
1 ALS from Charles P. Howland, (Fitch, 56), n.d.
Box 7: 11
1 ALS from Joseph L. Hurley, (Fitch, 58), 1952
Box 7: 12
3 ALS and 4 TLS from Henry Festing Jones, (Fitch, 54), 1915-1922
Box 7: 13
16 ALS from Anatole Le Braz, (Fitch, 53), 1907-1927
Box 7: 14
1 ALS from Charles Martin Loeffler, (Fitch, 54), 1918
Box 7: 15
1 ALS from A. Lawrence Lowell, (Fitch, 54), 1915
Box 7: 16
1 ALS from Lincoln MacVeagh, (Fitch, 58), [1950]
Box 7: 17
3 ALS from Maria-Theresa, (Fitch, 56), 1928-1950
Box 7: 18
2 ALS from Albert Jay Nock, (Fitch, 54), 1916-1917
Box 7: 19
1 ALS from Robert L. O'Brien, (Fitch, 54), 1919
Box 7: 20
3 ALS from Christopher O'Malley, with biographical note, (Fitch, 59), 1952
Box 7: 21
1 ALS from Ralph Barton Perry, (Fitch, 56), 1929
Box 7: 22
1 AL from [Caroline Phillips], (Fitch, 57), 1938
Box 7: 23
2 ALS from William Phillips, (Fitch, 57), 1930-1938
Box 7: 24
1 ALS from A. Kingsley Porter, (Fitch, 56), n.d.
Box 7: 25
1 ALS from Sir William Haldane Porter, (Fitch, 53), 1914
Box 7: 26
1 ALS from Chandler R. Post, (Fitch, 57), 1934
Box 7: 27
1 ALS from Denman W. Ross, (Fitch, 54), 1922
Box 7: 28
7 ALS/TLS from Ellery Sedgwick, (Fitch, 53-54), 1913-1936
Box 7: 29
10 ALS from Anne Douglas Sedgwick de Sélincourt, (Fitch, 57), ca. 1932
Box 7: 30
1 ALS from Elizabeth Stevenson, (Fitch, 59), 1953
Box 7: 31
3 TLS from Hayden A. Vachon and his cousin Andrew Vachon, (Fitch 58), 1944-1949
Box 7: 32
1 ALS from Ferdinand Von Hoffman, ca. 1870s
Box 7: 33
2 TLS from sister-in-law Justine Bayard Cutting Ward, (Fitch, 59), 1953
Box 7: 34
1 ALS from Wilfred P. Ward, (Fitch, 53), n.d.
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
10
Papers
Family
Box 7: 35
1 ALS from Winslow Wilson, (Fitch, 58), 1951
Box 7: 36
1 ALS from Charles Herbert Woodbury, (Fitch, 54), 1922
Box 7: 37
1 ALS from Raymond Wyler, (Fitch, 54), 1919
Miscellany
Box 7: 38
Biographical information
Box 7: 39
Vatican correspondence, (Fitch, 60), 1950
Box 7: 40
"The Lenox Genius," (Fitch, 59), ca. 1885
Box 7: 41
Accounts of her wedding to Charles Bruen Perkins, 1896
Box 7: 42
Miscellaneous items
Box 7: 43
Scribner's Magazine articles by EWP, 1925-1927
Box 7: 44
Untitled short story ("Down Murray Hill..."), (Fitch, 60), n.d.
Box 7: 45-48
Miscellaneous correspondence
Perkins, Charles Bruen (1860-1929)
Scope and Content Note
Husband of Elizabeth Ward Perkins, son of Charles Callahan Perkins and Frances D. Bruen Perkins.
Architect.
Box 8: 1
Correspondence, documents, biographical sketch, and clipping, ca. 1891-1948
Perkins, Thomas Handasyd (1764-1854)
Scope and Content Note
Brother of Charles Bruen Perkins' great-grandfather, great-uncle of Charles Callahan Perkins.
Businessman and philanthropist.
Box 8: 2
Correspondence, (Fitch, 64), 1825-1842
Perkins, Charles Callahan (1823-1886)
Scope and Content Note
Father of Charles Bruen Perkins, husband of Frances Davenport Bruen Perkins. Musician, composer,
artist and author and patron of the arts. Correspondence to and from, diaries, and other materials, ca.
1842-1889.
Outgoing
Box 8: 3
1 ALS to William Bliss, (Fitch, 68), 1877
Incoming
Box 8: 4
7 ALS from "Mari," (Fitch, 68), 1842-1843
Box 8: 5
6 ALS from "Mother," (Fitch, 68), n.d.
Box 8: 6
10 ALS from sister "Saadi," (Fitch, 68), 1842-1843
Box 8: 7
6 ALS from Dorsey Read (Fitch, 68)
Box 8: 8
1 ALS from Ary Scheffer, n.d.
Box 8: 9
1 ALS from Fred R. Sears, (Fitch, 68), 1842
Miscellany
Box 8: 10
Miscellaneous correspondence (Fitch, 68)
Box 8: 11
Miscellaneous items, 1856-1889
Box 8: 12
Unbound diary, (Fitch, 68), 1847-1849
Box 8: 13
Bound diary, (Fitch, 68), n.d.
Box 8: 14
Memoir of Charles Callahan Perkins by Samuel Eliot (Fitch, 71)
Box 8: 15
Les Sculpteurs Italiens by Charles Callahan Perkins (Fitch, 70)
Perkins, Francis Davenport (1897-1970)
Scope and Content Note
Eldest son of Elizabeth Ward Perkins and Charles Bruen Perkins. Music critic for the New York
Herald-Tribune.
Box 9: 1
Correspondence to "Mother," article by FDP, and clipping, (Fitch, 58), ca. 1926-1947
Perkins, James (1761-1822)
Scope and Content Note
Grandfather of Charles Callahan Perkins, brother of Thomas Handasyd Perkins, his business partner.
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
11
Papers
Family
Box 9: 2
Obituary notices, 1822
Perkins, James (1791-1828)
Scope and Content Note
Father of Charles Callahan Perkins, nephew of Thomas Handasyd Perkins.
Box 9: 3
Probate documents, (Fitch, 64-65), 1824-1831
Perkins, Maxwell E. (1884-1947)
Scope and Content Note
Nephew of Elizabeth Ward Perkins and Charles Bruen Perkins. Editor and book publisher.
Box 9: 4
1 TLS to Elizabeth Ward Perkins, (Fitch, 57), 1930
Perkins, Sarah
Box 9: 5
1 ALS to James Perkins (1791-1828) in London, (Fitch, 65), n.d.
Bruen, Mary Anne Davenport (1793-1892)
Scope and Content Note
Mother-in-law of Charles Callahan Perkins, mother of Frances D. Bruen Perkins and Mary Lundie
Bruen. Outgoing correspondence and other materials, 1817-1884.
Box 9: 6
5 ALS to Elizabeth Bancroft, (Fitch, 71), 1859-1884
Box 9: 7
40 ALS/TLS to "Mr. Bliss," (Fitch, 71), 1858-1877
Box 9: 8
1 ALS to John Ward, (Fitch, 71), 1861
Box 9: 9
Passport, (Fitch, 71), 1835
Perkins, Frances Davenport Bruen (1825-1909)
Scope and Content Note
Wife of Charles Callahan Perkins, daughter of Mary Anne Davenport Bruen and Matthias Bruen
(1793-1829). Correspondence and other materials, ca. 1860s.
Outgoing
Box 9: 10
17 ALS to Elizabeth Bancroft, (Fitch, 72), ca. 1860s
Box 9: 11
9 ALS to "Mr. Bliss," (Fitch, 72), ca. 1859
Incoming
Box 9: 12
1 ALS from sister Mary Lundie Bruen, (Fitch, 72), n.d.
Box 9: 13
1 ALS from [J.W. Preston], (Fitch, 72), 1863
Miscellany
Box 9: 14
Obituary notice, (Fitch, 73), ca. 1909
Bliss, Alexander and Bliss, William Davis
Scope and Content Note
Members of Elizabeth Bancroft's family and close friends of the Bruen family. Correspondence, ca.
1854-1885.
Outgoing
Box 9: 15
1 ALS to Alexander Bliss from G. Borland, (Fitch, 72), 1862
Box 9: 16
1 ALS to Alexander Bliss from William D. Bliss, 1861
Box 9: 17
1 ALS to [?] from William D. Bliss, n.d.
Incoming
Box 9: 18
25 ALS from Mary Lundie Bruen, (Fitch, 72), 1854-1885
Box 9: 19
1 ALS from George Hardwick, 1862
Box 9: 20
1 ALS from F.L. Skinner, n.d.
Ward, George Cabot (1876-1936)
Scope and Content Note
Son of Thomas Wren Ward and Sophia Read Howard Ward, brother of Elizabeth Ward Perkins.
Box 9: 21
Correspondence from and about, condolences and obituaries, ca. 1901-1936
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
12
Papers
Family
Ward, Howard Ridgeley (1881-1946)
Scope and Content Note
Son of Thomas Wren Ward and Sophia Read Howard Ward, brother of Elizabeth Ward Perkins.
Box 9: 22
Biographical document with related letter to Elizabeth Ward Perkins, ca. 1948
Perkins, Anna Ward "Nancy" (1899-1993)
Scope and Content Note
Daughter of Elizabeth Ward Perkins and Charles Bruen Perkins, granddaughter of Thomas Wren
Ward and Sophia Read Howard Ward.
Box 9: 23
Correspondence from London, ca. 1914-1915
Howard Family
Scope and Content Note
Mainly genealogical notes, charts, and articles on the ancestors of Sophia Read Howard Ward, wife of
Thomas Wren Ward.
Box 10: 1
"A Memoir of the Late Colonel John Eager Howard," (Fitch, 63), 1863
Box 10: 2
"John Eager Howard: Colonel of Second Maryland Regiment - Continental Line," (Fitch, 63), 1863
Box 10: 3
"John Eager Howard: Record of This Gallant Marylander's Career," 1900
Box 10: 4
"Col. John Eager Howard of Maryland (1752-1827)," (Fitch, 63), n.d.
Box 10: 5
Documents related to Margaretta "Peggy" Chew Howard, wife of John Eager Howard, n.d.
Box 10: 6
"Memoranda" by Charles Howard, transcribed by his nephew Cornelius Howard, (Fitch, 62), 1876
Box 10: 7
"Howard Family Genealogy" bound booklet, (Fitch, 63), 1856
Box 10: 8
"The Howards of Maryland" typescript copy of 1879 article (Fitch, 63)
Box 10: 9
"Family Traditions" bound booklet, 1889
Box 10: 10
"Progenitors of the Howards of Maryland," (Fitch, 63), 1938
Box 10: 11
"Colonial Dames of America - Form of Application for Membership," (Fitch, 63), n.d.
Box 10: 12
"The Ridgely Family," (Fitch, 62), n.d.
Box 10: 13
Genealogical notes, charts, and ephemera, v.d.
Box 10: 14
Newspaper clippings and ephemera, v.d.
Ward Family Miscellany
Box 11: 1
"Early Life of William Ward," bound memoir, 1862
Box 11: 2
"Ward Family Papers" signature sheets, (Fitch, 31), 1900
Box 11: 3
Typescript Ward family history, (Fitch, 62), 1938
Box 11: 4
Appointment book pages, 1893
Box 11: 5
"Poems of Robert Barker," (Fitch, 62), n.d.
Box 11: 6
Postcards, n.d.
Box 11: 7
Miscellaneous correspondence
Box 11: 8
Handwritten copies of various correspondence
Box 11: 9
Unidentified correspondence and clippings
Box 12-13
Photocopies of correspondence from the collection (some with explanatory notes)
Oversize
Box 14
Scrapbook - Thomas Wren Ward
Box 15
Portfolio - Ward family genealogy
Box 15
Bound volume - Perkins and Ward family trees
John H. Mansfield Donation - Apr. 12, 2011
Scope and Content Note
Notes by JHM, about family members and contents, accompany many of the items.
Bruen, Mary Ann Davenport
Box 16
Letter (ALS), Jan. 19, 1822
Bruen, Mrs. [Fanny?]
Box 16
Letters from husband Charles C. Perkins and others, ca. 1860s-1880s
Doane, Elizabeth G. [grandmother of Charles C. Perkins]
Box 16
Letter announcing Edward's [?] engagement to Mary Spring
Lawrence, Lucy Ward [daughter of William Ward and Joanna Chipman]
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
13
Papers
Family
Box 16
Letters for Anna Hazard Barker, ca. 1844, 1850-1851
Longfellow, Henry W.
Box 16
Letter to Mrs. Cleveland re Charles C. Perkins' book, Mar. 31, 1865
Perkins, Anna Ward, M.D.
Box 16
Biographical sketch, diplomas, honors, awards, photographs, obituary, ca. 1970s-1993
Perkins, Charles Bruen
Box 16
Letter from Phillipps Brooks re confirmation, May 19, [1876?]
Box 16
Letter from Phillipps Brooks, Mar. 3, 1886
Box 16
Notices, in French, 1881, 1888
Perkins, Charles C.
Box 16
Admission to Harvard, Feb. 7, 1839
Box 16
Letter to cousin Emma Forbes, [Aug. 31, 1843]
Box 16
Note from M. Brimmer (?) to [Mr.?] Eliot, to write a memorial for CCP, and letter on same sheet,
from S.E. [Samuel Eliot?] to Sally, Oct. 14, 1886
Box 16
Translation of Leonardo da Vinci sonnet, n.d.
Perkins, Elizabeth Ward
Box 16
Letters to grandparents (Samuel Gray Ward and Anna Hazard Barker Ward), 1886-1898
Box 16
Handwritten diary from time in England, 1914-1915
Perkins Family
Box 16
Kirkland, John T. (President, Harvard University) - letter (ALS) to T. H. Perkins, S. G. Perkins
and James Perkins II, thanking them for gift under James Perkins will, Sept. 15, 1822
Box 17
The Perkins Family - A Private Proof: Printed in Order to Preserve Certain Matters Connected
with the Boston Branch of the Perkins Family. by Augustus T. Perkins (Boston: T. R. Marvin
& Son, Printers, 1890)
Perkins, James
Box 17
One letter (ALS) from Josiah Quincy, thanking him for gift, Dec. 28, 1821
Perkins, P. G. [?]
Box 17
Letter to her mother, n.d.
Ward, Anna Hazard Barker
Box 17
Timeline re family events, addressed to Lily Ward von Hoffman, 1875-1891
Ward, Elizabeth [Bessie]
Box 17
Death notice (6 July 1920), picture postcard and copy of photo depicting Schloss Pallaus, her
residence
Box 17
Handwritten note of Baron Ernst von Schönberg Roth Schönberg, 27 Oct. 1905
Ward, Lily
Box 17
Letters from Mother, ca. 1876-1891
Ward, Martha Ann [wife of William Ward]
Box 17
Poem, n.d.
Ward, Samuel Gray {S. G.]
Box 17
Notes on Samuel Gray Ward - typescript
Box 17
Photographs [b/w] of S. G. Ward's Watercolors - in leather album, incl. Santa Barbara
landscape, n.d.
Ward, Thomas W.
Box 17
Three letters to his sons, Samuel G. Ward and William Ward, 1825, 1826, 1828
Ward, Thomas Wren
Box 17
Handwritten notes possibly by TWW
Box 17
One letter (ALS) from Brooks Adams, Jan. 10, 1919; one letter (ALS) to Brooks Adams, not
sent, Jan. 13, 1920
Ward, Thomas Wren, II
Box 17
Letters from R. von Hoffman, 1879-1882
Box 17
Letter from Lily Ward, 1879
Box 17
Note from Mrs. Dill, n.d.
Unidentified
Box 17
Letter from Maria [?], July [21?], 1772
Box 17
Letter, p. 2, sending respects to Mr. Perkins, also your mother and Mary, n.d.
Guide to the Ward-Perkins Family
Mss 129
14
Papers
8/23/2019
Elizabeth Howard Ward Perkins (1873-1954) - Find A Grave Memorial
?
Find A GRaVE
Elizabeth Howard
Ward Perkins
BIRTH
7 Aug 1873
New York, New York County
(Manhattan), New York, USA
DEATH
30 Aug 1954 (aged 81)
BURIAL
Forest Hills Cemetery and
Crematory
Jamaica Plain, Suffolk
County, Massachusetts, USA
MEMORIAL ID
118199709 . View Source
Elizabeth was buried on September 2, 1954.
Photo added by Jim Stevens
Family Members
Parents
Spouse
?
Thomas
Charles
Wren Ward
Bruen
1844-1940
Perkins
1860-1929
Sophia
(m.
Read
Howard
(marriage)
Ward
1896)
1848-1918
Siblings
Children
Howard
?
Francis
Ridgely
Davenport
Ward
Perkins
1881-1946
1897-1970
8/23/2019
Elizabeth Howard Ward Perkins (1873-1954) - Find A Grave Memorial
?
Anna W
Perkins
1899-1993
Elinor
Clifford
Perkins
Mansfield
1900-1970
Mary
Elizabeth
Perkins
Ryan
1912-1993
Inscription
And
His Wife
Elizabeth Howard Ward
Born August 7, 1873
Died August 30, 1954
Gravesite Details On the same stone with her
husband
Created by: Jim Stevens
Added: 5 Oct 2013
Find A Grave Memorial 118199709
Find A Grave, database and images
(https://www.findagrave.com
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Charles H. Woodbury and Elizabeth Ward Perkins papers,
Charles H Woodbury; Elizabeth Ward Perkins
1878-1952
Archival Material 2.2 (partially microfilmed on 2 reels) linear ft.
Letters, writings, inventory of paintings, a scrapbook and original art work, some of it pertaining to or compiled by Elizabeth Ward
Perkins.
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Find Items About: Woodbury, Charles H. (max: 41)
Title: Charles H. Woodbury and Elizabeth Ward Perkins papers,
1878-1952.
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FirstSearch: WorldCat Detailed Record
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Author(s): Woodbury, Charles H. 1864-1940 (Charles Herbert),
Perkins, Elizabeth Ward, 1873-1954
Year: 1878-1952
Description: 2.2 linear ft. (partially microfilmed on 2 reels)
Language: Undetermined
Abstract: Letters, writings, inventory of paintings, a scrapbook and original art work, some of it pertaining to or compiled by Elizabeth
Ward Perkins. Twenty-three letters received by Perkins, 1940-1952, concerning the disposition of Woodbury's paintings;
notes and essays by Woodbury on the technique and philosophy of drawing, painting and etching, and a paper by Woodbury
and Perkins "The Modern School and Its Sources"; sixty-two drawings, one etching, and two paintings by Woodbury; lists of
art work; and miscellaneous items. A card file (ca. 900 cards) of watercolors and oils painted by Woodbury between 1886
and 1942. Information includes the title of the work, the date painted, the size, and the disposition of the work. Ca. 340
letters from Woodbury to Perkins, undated and 1914-1946, written from Maine, Massachusetts and various locales; ca. 40
letters from Woodbury to his mother, 1890-1894, mostly written from Holland. Included with the letters from Holland is a card
file containing notes on the letters. Other letters are to Woodbury from Edward Filene, 1895, John B. Paine, and Thomas
Allen, regarding the painting "Mid-Ocean," and a letter from Sam Houghton regarding his purchase of a watercolor. Also
included are a scrapbook of clippings relating to Woodbury and Perkins and the Woodbury Training School in Applied
Observation and their other art education endeavors; and a book, Descendants of Alexander Robinson and Angelica Peale
(c 1896), owned by Perkins.
SUBJECT(S)
Descriptor: Art schools -- Maine -- Ogunquit
Art -- Technique
Art teachers
Painters -- Massachusetts
Genre/Form: Scrapbooks
Works of art
Note(s): Bio/History: Woodbury was a marine painter, instructor, writer, etcher, illustrator; Ogunquit, Maine. Perkins was an art
patron and Woodbury's teaching collaborator.
General Info: Microfilmed portion must be consulted on microfilm. Use of unmicrofilmed material requires an appointment and is limited to
Washington, D.C. storage facility./ Many papers of Woodbury were in Perkins' possession at the time of his death. The card
file on reel 2788 was donated in 1957 from the American Art Research Council, Whitney Museum of American Art, which
had received it from Perkins' heirs. Material on reel 268 was owned jointly by Perkins' three sisters and brother, and donated
in 1957 with the assistance of Giovanni Castano (Castano Galleries, Boston, Mass.), along with Charles C.
Perkins' (Elizabeth Perkins' father-in-law) diary and art works, and Samuel Gray Ward's (her grandfather) art works and
photographs, each described and housed separately. The scrapbook (unmicrofilmed) probably came at the same time. The
remainder of the unmicrofilmed material was donated by Perkins' sisters, Anna W. Perkins and Mary Perkins Ryan, 1989./
(Additional Woodbury papers, described and housed separately, were donated by the Woodbury family.)
Entry: 19000000
http://0-firstsearch.oclc.org.library.colgate.edu/WebZ/FSQUERY?format=BI:next=html/records.html:bad=html/records.html:nu...
3/7/2007
Newspaper Abstracts - Finding our ancestors in the news! : The Washington Post
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Home > United States > District of Columbia > The Washington Post
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GIRLS AS HER GUESTS
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Among the interesting events of to-day are a luncheon given by
Miss Scott, in honor of Miss Woodward, and a tea from 4 to 7, by
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Mrs. J. Frank Aldrich, to meet Miss Esther Bogue, her guest from
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Chicago. Mrs. Aldrich will have with her to entertain her guests
Miss Stevenson, daughter of the Vice President; Miss Scott, Miss
Over 150,000 pedigree
Kitty Reed, daughter of Speaker Reed; Miss Boutelle, and Miss
files and family group
Campbell, of Baltimore.
sheets.
The Attorney General and Mrs. Harmon will give a dinner. Miss
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Helen Maud Smith, a musicale, and the crowning event of the day
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5/12/2008
Newspaper Abstracts - Finding our ancestors in the news! : The Washington Post
Page 2 of 4
Find Your Ancestors In
o'clock.
Family-Tree
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A very pretty dance, which was much enjoyed by guests and
"Family Tree Magazine
several friends, was given at the Hamilton Saturday evening.
is incredible! I've
Excellent music was furnished the dancers, for whom the large
learned more from it
dining hall was cleared. Many of the older people, who did not care
than anywhere else
to trip with the gay music, were present as spectators. Dainty
I've looked."
refreshments were served. Among those present were Senator and
Michele Strang
Mrs. Frye, Hon. and Mrs. Nelson Dingley, jr.; Miss Dingley, Hon.
Forest Grove, OR
and Mrs. C. A. Russell, Hon. C. A. Boutelle, Hon. and Mrs. J. P.
Dolliver, Judge and Mrs. Weldon, Mrs. Hanna, Hon. and Mrs. C. A.
Family
Tree
Chickering, Hon. and Mrs. C. W. Gillet, Mrs. C. M. Wales, Hon. and
Mrs. George D. Perkins, Hon. and Mrs. H. C. Van Voorhis, the
FAMILY HISTORY
Misses Van Voorhis, Hon. and Mrs. D. K. Watson, Miss Watson,
Hon. and Mrs. J. H. Southard, Hon. and Mrs. F. S. Black, Mr. C. L.
Click To Learn More
Corthell, Miss Corthell, Messrs. Robert and Percy Stickney, Mr. E.
Santibanez, Mr. C. W. Small, Mrs. J. H. Gower, Mrs. Lyon, Mr. and
Mrs. A. M. Lothrop, Col. and Mrs. R. I. Fleming, Mrs. F. G. Pollard,
Miss J. O. Ball, Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Cornwell, Mr. and Mrs. z. T.
Mullin, Mr. S. H. Giesy, Mr. and Mrs. J. Page Burwell, Mr.
Legacy
Worrington, and Mr. and Mrs. William H. Taylor.
Family Tree
The guests of the Fredonia Hotel enjoyed themselves Saturday
evening with their usual fortnight hop. Among those present were
the Hon. and Mrs. J. E. McCall, Hon. J. F. Stallings, Hon. and Mrs. J.
V. Graff, Hon. and Mrs. P. D. McCulloch, Hon. and Mrs. T. B.
Caltron, Hon. and Mrs. T. C. McRae and Miss McRae, Hon. and Mrs.
J. S. Little, Hon. Foster V. Brown, Dr. and Mrs. A. R. Shands, Dr.
and Mrs. J. H. Dockstader, Gen. John A. Halderman, Col. J. W.
Barlow, Mrs. Lillian Rozelle Messenger, Mrs. M. A. Canavan, Mr. and
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Mrs. William Mercer Harris, jr.; Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Taylor, New
York; Mrs. R. C. Collison and Miss Collison, Troy, N. Y.; Miss Jones
Clid
TheFamilvPost
and Miss Anna Jones, of Brooklyn; the Misses Mills, Wilkins,
Herel
Fletcher, Yost, Simpson, Colston, Hanson, Mower, Morgan, Cover,
Harrison, Cowlam, Mankin, Steuart, Husted, Brace, Mantz, Brown,
Prentiss, Walker, Ramsey, Harris, Oyster, Waggaman, Dester, and
Messrs. J. H. White, N. D. Baker, jr.; George C. Bushnell, McMaster,
Clark, Perley, O. E. McRae, Hunt, Madden, Bouscarens, Jones, Gott,
Hester, Steele, Mantz, Roome, Locke, Donaldson, Slaughter,
Knizer, Markey, and Edward Danenhower.
An engagement of Washingtonians was announced in New York a
week since, that of Miss Elizabeth Howard Ward, daughter of
Thomas Wren Ward, and Mr. Charles Bruen Perkins, of Boston.
Miss Ward is a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel G. Ward,
who after many years' residence in Washington Square, New York,
came to Washington to reside.
The return of Miss Frances Griffin from a visit to her former home in
Atlanta adds a typical young Southern beauty to the participants in
the present social season, in which she will assist her mother, Mrs.
R. J. Griffin, while dividing her time with attendance at a ladies'
seminary near the Capital. Miss Griffin is the daughter of Maj. R. J.
Griffin, formerly one of Atlanta's most prominent business men,
who has established his family in apartments at the National for the
winter.
Wimodaughsis will be at home Wednesday afternoon, from 3 to 6
o'clock, at 1328 I street northwest, to meet Rev. Anna H. Shaw and
Miss Emily Howland.
Mrs. C. M. Chester, of this city, was one of the patronesses of the
initial festivities of promenade week at Yale, which began Saturday
evening.
Mrs. Philip A. Darneille and the Misses Darneille will give a tea
Wednesday, January 22.
Mrs. Benjamin F. Leighton will receive Monday, January 20, from 3
to 5. Mr. and Mrs. Leighton will also be at home to their friends
Thursday evening from 7 to 9.
The ladies of the National Hotel will be at home to-day.
http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=9952
5/12/2008
Newspaper Abstracts - Finding our ancestors in the news! : The Washington Post
Page 3 of 4
The dance and reception of the Military Cyclists, to be given at the
Rifles' Armory this evening, promises to be an enjoyable affair. The
patronesses of the event are Mrs. Olney, Miss Herbert, Mrs. Wilson,
wife of the Postmaster General; Mrs. Davis, and Mrs. Henderson. A
first edition of the invitations was speedily exhausted on account of
the demand, and a new lot of them was printed several days ago.
Mrs. Romero will receive Tuesday from 3 to 6 o'clock, her last
reception this season.
Mrs. J. A. Pickler, of South Dakota, will not receive calls during
January, but will be at home Mondays in February at 120
Massachusetts avenue northeast.
Mrs. Trimble, of 1320 Rhode Island avenue, has issued cards for
January 28, to meet Miss Frances Marian Trimble. Dancing will be
enjoyed after 8:30 o'clock.
Mrs. Joseph C. Hutchinson, wife of Representative Hutchinson, of
Texas, and Miss Hutchinson will receive to-morrow afternoon after
3:30 o'clock at the Arlington Hotel.
Mrs. H. F. Thomas, wife of Congressman Thomas, will receive to-
day at 201 East Capitol street after 2 o'clock, assisted by Mrs. W. P.
Sutton, of Michigan.
Mrs. Louise Packer and Misses Florence and Ella Gammon left
Saturday for their home in Brooklyn, after a visit of two weeks with
their brother, Mr. Will Gammon. Mrs. Packer bade farewell to her
friends at a dance given in her honor Friday evening.
The marriage of Miss Sally Archer Bruce to the Rev. Arthur
Kinsolving, rector of Christ Church, Brooklyn, will be solemnized at
noon Wednesday, February 5, in St. Paul's Church, Richmond, Va.
The bride-elect is the eldest daughter of Mr. Yeddon Bruce and
granddaughter of the late Gen. Joseph R. Anderson, of Richmond.
She is ranked among the beauties of Virginia, and is universally
admired for her lovely face and charming manners. Her maternal
grandmother was the beautiful Sally Archer, of the Old Dominion,
who is well remembered by old Washingtonians as one of the belles
of her day, and whose marriage to the gallant young ensign, Mr.
Joseph R. Anderson, was an event long talked of in the social
circles.
Mrs. John Frederick Leech was the hostess at a very pretty dinner
Saturday evening to a number of friends of her daughter, Miss
Frederika Leech, on of the season's most charming debutantes.
The guests were Miss Hagner, Miss Clagett, Miss Swearingen, of
Pittsburg; Miss Norris, Miss Rockhill, Miss Leech, Mr. Walter
Andrews, Mr. Arthur Johns, Mr. Morton Otis, Lieut. McGill, Mr. John
F. Wilkins, and Dr. Frank Lieber.
Mrs. Alexander H. Smith, jr., has issued cards for a tea on
Thursday from 4 to 6 o'clock at 1713 P street.
Mrs. Charles M. Cooper will be at home at 1743 Q street on
Tuesdays, January 21 and February 4.
Mrs. Stephen A. Northway and daughter, Mrs. Northway Williams,
will be at home informally on Tuesday from 3 to 5 at the Bancroft.
Mrs. George W. Smith and Mrs. Sanders, daughter of
Representative Loud, of California, will be at home informally at
918 Fourteenth street Tuesdays, January 21 and 28, from 3 to 5
p.m.
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5/12/2008
AT 85, A BUSY COUNTRY DOCTOR - The New York Times
Page 1 of 3
The New York Times
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August 21, 1984
AT 85, A BUSY COUNTRY DOCTOR
By EDWARD A. GARGAN. Special to the New York Times
WESTERLO, N.Y.- - The blue spruce now soars 80 feet, its needled branches spreading
outward in thick layers. When Dr. Anna W. Perkins planted a three-inch spruce seedling in
1929, right next to her newly built white clapboard house, she had already been practicing
"country medicine" for one year here in the foothills of the Catskills.
For 56 years, Dr. Perkins has tended to the country people here, where gentle hills full with corn
seem draped in coverlets of green corduroy.
She watched the Depression ravish these hills. She has seen family farming yield to larger
farms. She has seen three generations of men she delivered as babies trudge off to fight in three
wars. She has seen generations of children, some gaunt and unwashed, give way to generations
healthy and well scrubbed.
'A Cow and a Pig'
"When I first came here, every household practically had a cow and a pig - they all just took care
of their needs," said Dr. Perkins, her 85 years betrayed somewhat by her snow-white hair but
belied by the firmness of her handshake. "Nowadays, there are just about a dozen large farms.
The other people don't have much of that anymore."
In 1925, she graduated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University.
She completed her internship at Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan and then went to practice
"where they needed doctors." 'I Built This House'
"Here I was, a woman, a doctor and a Catholic," Dr. Perkins said of her arrival. "There were no
Ca holics when I came.
"The next year I built this house in a field."
"It took quite a while before I was n't a city person," she said. She has never returned to New
York City.
No longer is her house surrounded by fields. Now Main Street is lined with simple wooden
houses set back on well-kept lawns. Grain silos and cow barns dot the valley below this village of
http://www.nytimes.com/1984/08/21/nyregion/at-85-a-busy-country-doctor.html?pagewan..
1/18/2012
AT 85, A BUSY COUNTRY DOCTOR - The New York Times
Page 2 of 3
450 people. Along the back roads, though, mobile homes and tired, tar paper-covered houses
clothes lines running from rickety porches - reveal some of the poverty that creeps through
these hills.
Nearly everyone around here comes to Dr. Perkins, to the office she has kept in her house since
it was first built. In most cases, their parents and grandparents also came to her.
"In one case," she said, "I've taken care of five generations, the last baby being the fifth."
The Helderbergs, as the foothills are known, and medicine have both changed much in the six
decades since she graduated from medical school, Dr. Perkins said. 'Sensible, Ordinary Things'
"It's very different," she said. "When I came here, there were little schoolhouses of a few
children. A lot of children weren't very clean, nits in their hair, scabies, their teeth bad. I
remember one long building of children with measles. You saw what you could do to make them
comfortable - sensible, ordinary things."
"When I first came," she recalled, "the only medicine was morphine, quinine and aspirin.
Roughly speaking, that was it."
Above all, Dr. Perkins is given to firm views on individual character and the self-discipline that
instills good health.
"In those days, people's trouble came from outside germs," she said. "Now the main trouble
comes inside themselves, drinking, smoking, things like that. I think it's wanting something
from the outside to come and help you."
Although she has been attending medical lectures, the weekly "grand rounds," at the Albany
Medical College for decades, she admits failing to understand every recent nuance in modern
medicine. "Some of it you just can't," she said. 'The Fundamentals'
"Some of it you absorb," she added. "A lot of chemistry is beyond me. But the fundamentals are
still there. You have the heart, the lungs. If you have the fundamentals, you know where your
knowledge stops. You know when to refer people."
Her first 10 or 15 years here, she said, babies were delivered at home, a practice that gave way to
hospital deliveries. She firmly disapproves of home deliveries today despite a revived interest in
the practice. "If you don't have to take the risk, you shouldn't," she said. "Delivering children at
home was anxious work for me. You never knew if there was going to be a problem."
While she still makes house calls, she sees patients more regularly at her office, its shelves filled,
not with fading magazines but with literature.
http://www.nytimes.com/1984/08/21/nyregion/at-85-a-busy-country-doctor.html?pagewan..
1/18/2012
AT 85, A BUSY COUNTRY DOCTOR - The New York Times
Page 3 of 3
Flannery O'Connor's "Habit of Being," Umberto Eco's "Name of the Rose" and "The Complete
Poems of Emily Dickinson" are standard fare. "You'd be surprised who is reading this when I
come out here," she said. A Family of Finches
When patients are not crowding her office or she is not dashing into the hinterlands in her four-
wheel-drive car to see a patient, Dr. Perkins retreats to a nearby marsh to watch birds, a passion
fueled in part by the disappearance of some species.
"I saw a young eagle about 20 years ago," she said, hoisting her field glasses to follow the flight
of a distant bird. "You can still see great blue herons. I have a family of about 50 finches around
the house now. I want to claim them as dependents on my income tax form."
Practicing country medicine, Dr. Perkins said, means more than placing a stethoscope to a
child's chest and listening. It means listening to people, hearing what they have to say, as well as
what their bodies have to say, she said.
In recent years, some medical schools have instituted programs in family practice. "It's very
funny," Dr. Perkins said. "They're trying to go back to the old things. But to get young doctors to
go into it, they have to make it into a specialty."
"It's getting to be much less of a human thing and much more of a scientific thing," she said.
"I'm in between the way it used to be and the way it's getting to be."
photo of Westerlo, N.Y.; photo of Dr. Anna W. Perkins
Copyright 2012 The New York Times Company Home Privacy Policy Search Corrections XML Help Contact
Us Back to Top
http://www.nytimes.com/1984/08/21/nyregion/at-85-a-busy-country-doctor.html?pagewan.
1/18/2012
, Anna W. - Albany Hilltowns
Page 1 of 3
kins, Anna W.
Ilbany Hilltowns
tents
Default
1 Birth
Image
2 Education
3 Occupation
Placeholder
4 Marriage & Children
5 Religion
6 Life
caption
7 Appearance
8 Personality
9 Death
10 Obituary
11 Postscript
12 Additional Media
1
a W. Perkins was born in Newport, Rhode Island in about 1899. She was raised in a wealthy
C family in Brookline, RI. She had a sister Mary P. Perkins.
ation
:
educated in private schools and even attended a school in an English convent. She graduated
dcliffe and later in 1925 from Columbia's College of Physicians and Surgeons. In 1974 she
I an Honorary degree of Doctor of Sciences from Union College in Schenectady and it was
In weather fair and foul, by day and by night, you have for fifty years brought medical care and
comfort to a rural region made fortunate by your dedication."
pation
her internship at Bellevue Hospital in Manhattan.
she left the city and moved to Westerlo to become a country doctor in the Helderbergs. Initially
irst decade or two she delivered babies at homes or at her office before hospital deliveries
common.
ww.albanyhilltowns.com/mediawiki/index.php?title=Perkins,_Anna W.
1/18/2012
Perkins, Anna W. - Albany Hilltowns
Page 2 of 3
Her fees were always reasonable, charging only $2.00 for a house call in 1959 and $5.00 in 1990.
During the depression she would accept payment in eggs, milk and chicken or even kept an account until
the families could pay. Her fee for delivering a baby was $25.00.
Her office, which was in her home in Westerlo, was filled not with old magazines but fine literature
books.
During her tenure as a rural doctor, she traveled by whatever means necessary to reach her patients. She
had used her feet, horses, sleigh and finally in 1984 a four wheel drive car to make her house calls. One
patient remembered that on a snowy day with the roads impassable, she got a ride from a snow plow and
when that could no longer take her where she was going she got out and put on her snowshoes.
Significant changes occurred in medicine over her career. She was pleased with the change to hospital
deliveries for babies as she thought you couldn't be too careful. She attended Medical lectures at Albany
Medical College as well as weekly grand rounds to keep up with advancements. But she thought that the
key to medicine was really listening to your patients.
She was interviewed by the New York Times in 1984. She continued to make house calls until 1991
when medical issues caused her to retire.
Marriage & Children
Religion
She was born and raised Catholic and when she arrived in the Hilltowns in 1928 Catholics were
unknown.
Life
In 1929 she built a small clapboard house in Westerlo that served as her home and office.
In her spare time, she enjoyed bird watching.
Appearance
She was a small woman.
Personality
She was a strong believer in character and self discipline
Death
Dr. Anna W. Perkins died in early May of 1993 at Albany Medical Center at the age of 93 of pneumonia
and heart failure. She was survived by her sister Mary P. Ryan of Goffstown, NH.
http://www.albanyhilltowns.com/mediawiki/index.php?title=Perkins,_Anna_W.
1/18/2012
Perkins, Anna W. - Albany Hilltowns
Page 3 of 3
Obituary
Postscript
Albany Medical College presents the "Anna Perkins Scholarship" to a student studying family medicine
in honor of her dedication.
Additional Media
Sources
Lange, Ed, "An unforgettable physician; The legendary Dr. Anna W. Perkins may be gone, but
she's not forgotten", Capital Region Living, October 2009, page 26.
Gargan, Edward A., "At 85, A Busy County Doctor", The New York Times, August 21, 1984.
Howe, Marvine, "Anna Perkins, 93, A Family Doctor in Rural New York", New York Times,
May 4, 1993.
Retrieved from "http://www.albanyhilltowns.com/mediawiki/index.php?title=Perkins,_Anna_W."
Categories: Biography Westerlo Biographies
This page was last modified on 3 January 2010, at 18:37.
http://www.albanyhilltowns.com/mediawiki/index.php?title=Perkins,_Anna_W.
1/18/2012
Charles C. Perkins papers, 1844-1868.
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Creator:
Perkins, Charles C. (Charles Callahan), 1823-1886
Title:
Charles C. Perkins papers, 1844-1868.
Phy. Description:
64 items (on 2 partial microfilm reels)
reels 268 and 4677
Additional forms:
35mm microfilm reels 268 and 4677 available at Archives of
American Art offices and through interlibrary loan.
Bio / His Notes:
Painter, etcher, author, art and music critic; Boston, Mass.
Perkins studied art in Rome and Paris and promoted art
education for the masses. He organized the Boston Art Club
and served as president, 1869-1879; was a founder and
honorary director of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and
was instrumental in instituting an art curriculum for
Massachusetts and the city of Boston. Perkins was the author
of ITALIAN SCULPTORS and TUSCAN SCULPTORS, both
illustrated by his own drawings.
Summary:
Sketches, watercolors, sketchbook, a photograph and an
illustrated journal.
REEL 268: 58 pencil and pen and ink studies of sculpture in
Italy; 3 watercolors; a photograph of Perkins; and a 27 page
journal kept while in Spain, July 2-18, 1854. Perkins writes
mainly about the countryside, museums, the Alhambra,
architecture, and military movements due to the insurrection in
Madrid. The journal is illustrated with 6 drawings.
REEL 4677: A sketchbook, April-June, 1844, of travel in Italy,
containing 20 pencil drawings of architecture, landscapes, and
portraits of local people.
Provenance:
Papers on reel 268 were received from heirs along with
papers of Elizabeth Ward Perkins and Samuel Gray Ward.
(Perkins was Elizabeth Ward Perkins' father-in-law.) The
sketchbook on reel was lent for filming in 1991 by Diana
Korzenik, who purchased it from a flea market in Nashua,
New Hampshire and was told that it came from a
Massachusetts house.
Location of Original:
Sketchbook, reel 4677: Original returned to lender, Diana
Korzenik, after microfilming.
Restrictions:
Patrons must use microfilm copy.
Subject-Topical:
Art critics
Etchers
Painters
Subject - Geographical: - Spain -- History -- 19th century
Italy -- Description and travel
Form / Genre:
Travel diaries
Works of art
Sketchbooks
Travel sketches
http://siris-archives.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?uri=full=3100001~!214720!0&term=
11/25/2007
Charles Callahan Perkins - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 1 of 3
Charles Callahan Perkins
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Charles Callahan Perkins (March 1, 1823 - August 25, 1886), art critic, author and organizer of
cultural activities, had from his parents, James and Eliza Greene (Callahan) Perkins, both the material
inheritance and the temperament that naturally made him an influential friend of the arts of design and
of music in Boston, his native city.
The father, descended from Edmund Perkins who emigrated to New England in 1650, was a wealthy and
philanthropic merchant; the mother was a gracious, cultivated woman. From the family home in Pearl
Street Charles attended several schools before entering Harvard College. The prescribed academic
course he found irksome, but he was graduated in 1843. He had previously drawn and painted and,
declining chances to enter business, he went abroad soon after graduation, determined to study art. At
Rome he became friendly with the sculptor Thomas Crawford, then struggling against poverty, and gave
him encouragement. In 1846 he took a studio at Paris, where he had instruction from Ary Scheffer. Later
he was at Leipzig, pursuing studies in the history of Christian art. During a second residence at Paris he
took up etching with Bracquemond and Lalanne. He made many etchings to illustrate his own books.
Circumstances led Perkins, a wealthy man, to devote his life to interpreting the art of others rather than
to creative art. His love of music competed with his enthusiasm for painting and sculpture. In 1850-51
and from 1875 until his death he was president of the Handel and Haydn Society, Boston, whose
concerts he sometimes conducted and for which he wrote meritorious music. He married, June 12, 1855,
Frances Davenport Bruen, daughter of the Rev. Matthias Bruen, of New York. At their home many
concerts and recitals were given. Perkins was the largest subscriber toward the Boston Music Hall, to
which he also contributed the great bronze statue of Beethoven, modeled by his friend Crawford--the
work which since 1902 has stood in the entrance hall of the New England Conservatory of Music,
Boston. An invitation extended to Perkins in 1857 to give some lectures at Trinity College, Hartford, on
"The Rise and Progress of Painting, started him as a lecturer. He possessed charm and magnetism on
the platform.
After a second period of European residence, ending in 1869, he lectured frequently on Greek and
Roman art before Boston school teachers, and at the Lowell Institute on sculpture and painting. Thirteen
years' service on the Boston school committee amplified his educational work. He brought to Boston the
South Kensington methods of teaching drawing and design to children, and he was instrumental in
founding the Massachusetts Normal Art School, now the Massachusetts School of Art. As a
committeeman he was also assigned the third division of the school system, comprising the North and
West Ends. He took pains to know personally all teachers of his division, often entertaining them at his
home.
Prior to 1850 Perkins had proposed an art museum for Boston but had found the plan premature. When
others twenty years later revived this project he supported it gladly. He was second among the
incorporaters of the present Museum of Fine Arts, securing for its opening a gift of Egyptian antiquities
and making valuable suggestions as to arrangement of exhibits. Among the directors he advocated
showing contemporary work as well as the arts of antiquity. He had, meantime, been elected to the
presidency of the Boston Art Club, which he held for ten years, and to which he gave much time. He
systematically devoted part of each day to writing. Tuscan Sculptors, published in London in 1864,
brought him a European reputation. It was followed in 1868 by Italian Sculptors, with illustrations
drawn and etched by the author. He edited, with notes, Charles Locke Eastlake's Hints on Household
Taste (1872), Art in Education (1870), Art in the House (1879) from the original of Jakob von Falke,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Callahan_Perkins
2/17/2010
Charles Callahan Perkins - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 2 of 3
and Sepulchral Monuments in Italy (1885).
In 1878 he brought out, with illustrative woodcuts which he had designed, Raphael and Michaelangelo,
dedicated to Henry W. Longfellow, whose previously unpublished translations of the sculptor's sonnets
were included in the book. His Historical Handbook of Italian Sculpture appeared in 1883, and in 1886,
in French, Ghiberti et Son École. At the time of his death he had nearly finished his closely documented
History of the Handel and Haydn Society of Boston, Massachusetts, which other hands completed. He
was also critical editor of the Cyclopedia of Painters and Paintings, edited by Champlin. [1] He liked
society and good fellowship.
He was the grandfather of Maxwell Perkins, the noted editor, and the great-grandfather of Archibald
Cox, whose mother Frances Bruen Perkins was the daughter of Edward Clifford Perkins and Elizabeth
Hoar Evarts. Elizabeth was the daughter of US Attorney General, Secretary of State and Senator
William Maxwell Evarts. Perkins died in Windsor, Vermont in a carriage accident which he driving
with
Senator Evarts.
He was the great nephew of Thomas Handasyd Perkins, who founded the Perkins shipping empire J. &
T.H Perkins with Charles' grandfather James.
Further reading
[There are tributes to Perkins by Robert C. Winthrop, Thomas W. Higginson and Samuel Eliot, with a
biography by the last-named, in the Proc. Massachusetts Historical Society, 2 ser. III (1888). See also:
Justin Winsor, The Memorial History of Boston, vol. IV (1881); A. F. Perkins, Perkins Family (1890);
Dwight's Journal of Music, March 1, 1856; and Boston Transcript, Aug. 26, 1886.]
Source Citations
"Charles Callahan Perkins. "Dictionary of American Biography Base Set. American Council of
Learned Societies, 1928-1936.
"Perkins, Charles Callahan". Encyclopcedia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopxdia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication
now in the public domain.
External links
Boston Art Club
Guide to the Cleveland - Perkins Family Papers
Charles Callahan Perkins - Ask Art
Later Years of the Saturday Club 1870 1920
Retrieved from 1"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Callahan_Perkins"
Categories: 1823 births | 1886 deaths People from Boston, Massachusetts | American art historians
Harvard University alumni American painters Baldwin, Evarts, Hoar & Sherman family
This page was last modified on 18 December 2009 at 17:04.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms
may apply. See Terms of Use for details.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Callahan_Perkins
2/17/2010
5/12/2018
Charles Callahan Perkins - Wikipedia
WIKIPEDIA
Charles Callahan Perkins
Charles Callahan Perkins (March 1, 1823 -
August 25, 1886) was an art critic, author,
organizer of cultural activities, and an
influential friend of design and of music in
Boston.
Contents
Biography
References
Sources
Further reading
Portrait of Charles C. Perkins, 19th
century
External links
Biography
Charles C. Perkins was born in Boston on March 1, 1823, to James and Eliza Greene
(Callahan) Perkins. His father. descended from Edmund Perkins who emigrated to New
England in 1650, was a wealthy and philanthropic merchant. His mother was a gracious,
cultivated woman. The family was wealthy. Perkins was the great nephew of Thomas
Handasyd Perkins, who founded the Perkins shipping empire J. & T.H Perkins with
Charles' grandfather James.
Perkins attended several schools before entering Harvard College, where he found the
prescribed academic course irksome. He graduated in 1843. He had previously drawn and
painted and went abroad soon after graduation to study art. In Rome he became friendly
with and encouraged the sculptor Thomas Crawford, then struggling economically. In
1846, Perkins took a studio at Paris, where he had instruction from Ary Scheffer. Later he
pursued studies in the history of Christian art in Leipzig. Returning to Paris he took up
etching with Bracquemond and Lalanne. He made many etchings to illustrate his own
51 and from 1875 until his death he was president of the Handel and Haydn Society,
Boston, and sometimes conducted their concerts and wrote music the ensemble
performed. (The German publisher Breitkopf and Härtel, the world's oldest music
publishing house, issued Perkins's Piano Trio and two string quartets in 1854 and 1855
respectively; Perkins's compositions were the first works by an American ever published
by that firm.) He married on June 12, 1855, Frances Davenport Bruen, daughter of the
Rev. Matthias Bruen, of New York. They gave many concerts and recitals at their home.
Perkins was the largest subscriber to the construction of the Boston Music Hall, forwhich
he also contributed the great bronze statue of Beethoven, modeled by his friend Crawford,
which since 1902 has stood in the entrance hall of the New England Conservatory of
Music, Boston. An invitation extended to Perkins in 1857 to give some lectures at Trinity
College, Hartford, on "The Rise and Progress of Painting," started him as a lecturer. He
possessed charm and magnetism on the platform.
After another European sojourn ended in 1869, he lectured frequently on Greek and
Roman art before Boston school teachers, and on sculpture and painting at the Lowell
Institute. he served for thirteen years on the Boston school committee. He brought to
Boston the South Kensington methods of teaching drawing and design to children, and he
was instrumental in founding the Massachusetts Normal Art School, now the
Massachusetts College of Art and Design. As a committeeman he was also assigned the
third division of the school system, comprising the North and West Ends. He took pains to
know personally all teachers of his division, often entertaining them at his home.
Prior to 1850, Perkins had proposed an art museum for Boston but had found the plan
premature. When others revived this project twenty years later he supported it. He was
second among the incorporaters of the Museum of Fine Arts, secured for its opening a gift
of Egyptian antiquities, and made valuable suggestions for arranging its exhibits. He
advocated showing contemporary work as well as the arts of antiquity. He was also elected
president of the Boston Art Club, a post he held for ten years. He systematically devoted
part of each day to writing Tuscan Sculptors, published in London in 1864, which brought
him a European reputation. It was followed in 1868 by Italian Sculptors, with illustrations
drawn and etched by the author. He edited, with notes, Charles Locke Eastlake's Hints on
Household Taste (1872), Art in Education (1870), Art in the House (1879) from the
original of Jakob von Falke, and Sepulchral Monuments in Italy (1885).
In 1878 he brought out, with illustrative woodcuts which he had designed, Raphael and
Michaelangelo, dedicated to Henry W. Longfellow, and included Longfellow's previously
unpublished translations of the sculptor's sonnets. His Historical Handbook of Italian
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Callahan_Perkin
2/4
5/12/2018
Charles Callahan Perkins - Wikipedia
Sculpture appeared in 1883, and in 1886, in French, Ghiberti et son École. At the time of
this death he had nearly finished his closely documented History of the Handel and Haydn
Society of Boston, Massachusetts, which others completed. He was also critical editor of
the Cyclopedia of Painters and Paintings, edited by Champlin. [1]
He was the grandfather of editor Maxwell Perkins and the great-grandfather of Archibald
Cox. Perkins died on August 25, 1886, in Windsor, Vermont in a carriage accident while he
was driving with U.S. Senator William M. Evarts of New York.
References
1. New International Encyclopedia
Sources
"Charles Callahan Perkins. "Dictionary of American Biography Base Set. American
Council of Learned Societies, 1928-1936.
Further reading
Johnson, Rossiter, ed. (1906). "Perkins, Charles Callahan" (https://archive.org/strea
m/biographicaldict08johnuoft#page/n293/mode/1up). Dictionary of American
Biography. 8. Boston: American Biographical Societies. p. 293.
Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Perkins, Charles Callahan". Encyclopxedia
Britannica. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 173.
There are tributes to Perkins by Robert C. Winthrop, Thomas W. Higginson and Samuel
Eliot, with a biography by Eliot, in the Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical
Society, 2 ser. III (1888). See also: Justin Winsor, The Memorial History of Boston, vol. IV
(1881);
A. F. Perkins, Perkins Family (1890); Dwight's Journal of Music, March 1, 1856;
and Boston Transcript, Aug. 26, 1886.
External links
Boston Art Club (http://www.bostonartclub.com)
Guide to the Cleveland - Perkins Family Papers (https://web.archive.org/web/2007061
1230745/http://www.nypl.org/research/chss/spe/rbk/faids/clevelandperkins.pdf
Charles Callahan Perkins - Ask Art t(http://www.askart.com/AskART/P/charles_callaha
n_perkins/charles_callahan_perkins.aspx)
Later Years of the Saturday Club 1870 1920 (https://books.google.com/books?id=5CZ
cVp6fQwC&pg=PA17&Ipg=PA17&)
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Charles_Callahan_Perkins&oldid=798753555"
This page was last edited on 3 September 2017, at 16:47.
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/Charles_Callahan_Perkins
4/4
The Perkins Brothers and Boston's Changing Taste
53 ]
increasingly diverse population. 4 In both views, however, the Brahmins are
with
a central role in building Boston's culture, even though their motives
erpreted differently.
many of the protagonists of our story-the founders and early supporters
came disproportionately from this group of elite Bostonians, many of
of fortunes established in the early part of the century. The familial, pro-
financial, educational, and institutional ties that bound them undoubtedly
their joint endeavor, and their shared experiences of institution building
smoother the complex process that eventually led to the museum's estab-
Box. as we will see, the Brahmin "institutional constellation" was not always
body. In fact, in the crucial winter of 1869-1870, divisions and tensions
the parties that converged to negotiate the idea of an art museum. At
of this convergence, one vital figure joined the fray: a Bostonian named
Perkins.
CEAZLES CALLAHAN PERKINS, AN INSPIRED ADVOCATE
or IS69, just as the Athenxum's Fine Arts Committee was working
of the Lawrence bequest and gift, Charles Callahan Perkins (fig. 21)
Boston after years of residence in Europe. Once back in Boston, he threw
the work of establishing an art museum in his native city.
Calahan Perkins was born on March I, 1823, on Pearl Street, within a year
of his paternal grandfather, James Perkins, whose mansion had become
is fourth home in 1822.5 Charles was the fourth of five children born
couple, James Perkins Jr. and Eliza Greene Callahan, niece of the
rich Gardiner Greene. 6 The Perkins children's home was next door to
and their great-uncle Thomas Handasyd Perkins lived nearby and
younger generations of his remarkably close-knit extended family.7 In
Perkins enclave in downtown Boston, where "all the appointments were
and
all the people kind," the Perkins children's lives began with all the
comfort that their family's background assured.8
their father died suddenly, and only a year later their mother remarried and
to New Jersey with her new husband, leaving the children in Boston.9
of these circumstances, Charles and his siblings, of whom only Sarah
Eved to see old age, remained extraordinarily close. 10 The Perkins chil-
endowed from birth not only with wealth but also with a vast social web
siblings, uncles, aunts, cousins, and family friends. Many of Charles's
would be benefactors of Boston's cultural and educational institutions,
the Athenxum and the museum: among his cousins were, for example,
H. Hirayama. 'with Eclat's The Boston Athenosum
and the Orig in of the Museum of Fire Arts,
Boston. Boston 2003.
[ 54 ]
CHAPTER TWO
FIG. 2I Charles Callahan Perkins, ca. 1875
Photograph, 19.7 x 14 cm (mount).
Collection of the Boston Athenxum,
Gift of the Estate of Miss Eliza Callahan
Cleveland, 1914
James Elliot Cabot (Athenxum and museum trustee), Edward Clarke Cabot
(Athenxum trustee and architect of its Beacon Street building), Thomas Greaves
Cary (Athenxum trustee and president), Samuel Eliot (Athenxum and museum
trustee, and, later, Athenxum president), and John Hubbard Sturgis (one of the two
architects of the museum's first building), to name but a few. Even before going to
Harvard, Charles knew several of Boston's future intellectual and cultural leaders
through his sister Sarah and her husband, Henry Russell Cleveland, a promising but
short-lived writer. A young Harvard professor named Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
was one of Cleveland's closest friends, as was an ambitious lawyer named Charles
Sumner, long before he became an influential United States senator.11 Although her
gender denied her many of the privileges that her brothers took for granted, Sarah
eventually developed a cultural presence of her own among accomplished Bostonians
and was an intimate friend of Catherine and Grace Norton (mother and sister,
respectively, of the Harvard art historian Charles Eliot Norton), the British actress
Fanny Kemble, and Louisa Crawford, wife of the sculptor Thomas Crawford, among
others.12
For Charles, who had always loved music and art, Harvard's academic rigor pro-
vided more challenge than pleasure. When he sailed to Europe in 1843, the year of his
college graduation, the continent's sights and sounds therefore brought him almost
constant rapture. Charles's grand tour-with his siblings, along the traditional routes-
The Perkins Brothers and Boston's Changing Taste
[ 55 ]
furnished him with a requisite familiarity with Europe but also changed his
experience awoke in him a lasting desire to succeed as an artist in his own
he began a period of intense study in both the visual and musical arts.
siblings sailed home in 1845, Charles stayed in Europe until 1849. This first
Europe was followed by two more, from 1851 to 1854 and from 1857 to 1869.
of the twenty-six years between Charles's Harvard graduation and his final
Boston in 1869, about two decades were spent in Europe.
where he first went in 1844, Charles plunged into an intensive course of
and music. Like his great-uncle Thomas Handasyd, Charles was capable
diable industry. He visited galleries, churches, and concert halls, sketched
25
.
painted, read, composed, and wrote, all the while keeping up a full and
social life. In 1844 Crawford praised Perkins's singular industry in a letter to
and patron Charles Sumner in Boston:
that I have never met with so young [a] person in whom I could find united
qualifications Mr. Perkins possesses to make existence the highly intellectual
should be. Mr. P has really been a hard worker this winter, not merely in sight-
which forms a part and portion of life in Rome, but also in music, drawing,
and-oh, patience inimitable!-the German language. What think you?
in each, and half a dozen lessons a day. 13
Charles Callahan Perkins, "Lady Louisa,"
FIG. 23 Charles Callahan Perkins, "Villa Borghese,"
See
from a sketchbook. Graphite draw-
April 27, 1844, from a sketchbook. Graphite draw-
paper.
26 x 22.4 cm (sheet). Collection of
ing on paper, 26 X 22.4 cm (sheet). Collection of
Athenxum, Purchase, 2006
the Boston Athenxum, Purchase, 2006
[ 56 ]
CHAPTER TWO
FIG. 24 Thomas Crawford, Hebe and
Ganymede, ca. 1851, modeled 1842. Marble
175-3 X 81.3 x 52.I cm. Museum of Fine
Arts, Boston, Gift of Charles Callahan
Perkins, 76.702. Photograph © 2013
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Perkins's diligence as well as "gentlemanly deportment and truly amiable charac-
ter"14 immediately charmed the sculptor, himself on the verge of success. That same
year, 1844, Crawford's Orpheus and Cerberus was unveiled at the Athenxum to great
acclaim, and his marriage to Luisa Ward, daughter of New York's leading bank
Samuel Ward and sister of Julia Ward Howe, solidified his position among Bosto
cultural elite. The two Americans became fast friends in Rome, the "city of cities.
A serious aspiring artist himself, Charles Perkins was also patron to many of
artist friends. From Crawford, for example, Perkins commissioned, in 1843, Hebe
Ganymede in marble (ca. 1851, modeled 1842; fig. 24) and, in 1853, a bronze statue
the German composer Ludwig van Beethoven, making Perkins the sculptor's second
most important patron after Sumner. 16 (Charles's sister Sarah Cleveland also
chased from Crawford, by 1850, a marble statuette, Christian Pilgrim, now in
Athenxum's collection 17) Perkins also offered opportunities for artistic cultivatie
and camaraderie to his friends, many of them ambitious expatriate American artists
at the many gatherings-private concerts, drawing sessions, and parties-he held
his home in Rome. Perkins's frequent guests included Crawford, the sculpto
APPENDIX
[ I7I ]
CHARLES CALLAHAN PERKINS
Boston, MA 1823-1886 Windsor, VT
Harvard University A.B. 1843, A.M. (no date)
Charles Callahan Perkins was a well-known critic, patron, and connoisseur of both the visual and musical
He was also a philanthropist active in establishing and supporting organizations dedicated to those arts.
He was a scion of a wealthy mercantile family known for its patronage of Boston's cultural institutions
in the first half of the nineteenth century. The family's involvement was particularly deep with the Boston
Arthenzum: his grandfather James Perkins and great-uncle Thomas Handasyd Perkins were two of the most
significant benefactors to the institution. In 1855 he married Frances Davenport Bruen of New York and
Sewport, Rhode Island.
After his graduation from Harvard, Perkins spent about two decades in Europe (in three installments)
before returning to Boston in 1869. Throughout his life, his chief interests remained the fine arts and music.
He initially studied those disciplines in various European capitals, but he never succeeded in establishing
famself as a professional painter or composer. Instead, his greatest distinction lay in his work as an art his-
torian: in the late 1860s he was awarded the Légion d'honneur by the French government and made the first
American member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts, both on the merit of his publications on the history of
Inalian sculpture. In addition, he made valuable contributions to his native city by organizing and support-
sig several institutions of art and music. A connoisseur as well as a reformer, he also took an active part, in
such official and private capacities, in the state's effort to reform art education during the 1870s and 188os.
A well-established art historian with European credentials, Perkins brought to the MFA's founding
Board his long-standing passion for establishing an institution of art in Boston, his extensive knowledge of
the history, and his considerable social standing and connections in both Boston and abroad, all of which
made him the leading visionary among the incorporators. Samuel Eliot, also an incorporator, was his cousin.
Perkins's life is discussed in greater detail in chapter 2.
BA: proprietor, 1845-1886
NFA: trustee, 1870-1886; honorary director, 1876-1886
OTHER INSTITUTIONAL AFFILIATIONS
Readémie des Beaux-Arts, Institut de France; American Academy of Arts and Sciences; American Social
Science Association; Boston Art Club (president); Handel and Haydn Society (president); Harvard Musical
Association (director, vice president); Harvard University (lecturer); Lowell Institute (lecturer); Massachusetts
estorical Society (member-at-large of the council); Trinity College, Hartford, CT (lecturer)
BIBLIC OFFICE HELD
Sisston School Committee (1872-1884)
ELECTED SOURCES
assuel Eliot, "Tribute to Charles C. Perkins," Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, 2nd ser., 3
October 1886): 59-61; Martin Brimmer, "Charles Callahan Perkins," Proceedings of the American Academy of
the and Sciences 22 (May-December 1886): 534-539; Samuel Eliot, "Memoir of Charles Callahan Perkins,
M." Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, 2nd ser., 3 (February 1888): 223-246; "Charles Callahan
Perkins," in Later Years Saturday Club, 1870-1920, ed. Mark Anthony DeWolfe Howe (Boston: Houghton
Wardlin Company, 1927), 17-20.
8/23/2019
Perkins and Storey Families - Jamaica Plain Historical Society
plain
Distorical
Q
AMERICA
1987
TCInIIS auy Savity
Families
People . Walter H. Marx
When China trade merchant brothers Thomas and James
Perkins headed south of Boston for summer country homes in
the early 1800's, the younger Thomas built a house (now
gone) near Jamaica Plain in Brookline, at Heath and Warren
Streets, while James chose the shores of Jamaica Pond,
building Pinebank I in 1802 Pinebank III pitifully stands
today on the site, the only residence spared in the Jamaica
Park Project of the 1890's. Here James died in 1822 with
Pinebank going to his grandchildren: Charles, Edward and
Sarah. Sarah continued to live there after she married Henry
Cleveland in 1838. Her letters, which are preserved in the
New York Public Library, tell of her early life at the house:
boating on the Pond starting at the Perkins Boathouse on the
Cove (which was filled in by the city by 1920), long horseback
rides, and the like.
After her husband's early death in 1843, Mrs. Cleveland
relinquished her share in Pinebank to Edward upon his
marriage. By 1848 he had torn down Pinebank I to build a
French-style mansion with mansard roof, which Sarah termed
Sarah
not to her liking. She described the first home's demolition to
8/23/2019
Perkins and Storey Families - Jamaica Plain Historical Society
plain
historical
Q
1987
bricks from England "the 11,000 Virgins of St. Ursula" and
gave her avid stamp of approval. She made her observation
from her home, Nutwood, built in 1866 on the ridge opposite
Pinebank on the tongue of high land on the Pond's north
shore next to the Quincy Shaw's. This land she shared with
Charles, now home from studies in Europe, in a house called
second
too,
Oakwood approached by the now leaf-covered stairway at
5.
Perkins and Chestnut Streets.
Both sides of Chestnut Street on the Boston side were Perkins
Heart
land until the area on the Ward's Pond side was sold to the
Jamaica Plain Aqueduct Company-to become parkland in the
1890's. Oakwood and Nutwood stood until the early 1970's
when they became part of the Cabot Estate Condominiums
and (unlike the Shaw House) were demolished.
As an art historian and author, Charles became the best-
known Perkins of his generation. The former school on St.
Botolph Street was named for him. Graduating from Harvard
Charles
in 1843, he studied art in Italy and France, before turning to
N
music. Some of his works survive. He specialized in
Renaissance Art, and several books that he authored became
basic texts in the field. Like his neighbors, he made time for
civic causes like the Boston Art Club, the Boston School
Board (1870-83), the Museum of Fine Arts, and the Handel &
Hayden Society. Charles gave the Beethoven statue that today
graces the New England Conservatory, and pushed for music
and art training in American schools. He also lectured before
the Lowell Institute.
8/23/2019
Perkins and Storey Families - Jamaica Plain Historical Society
plain
Distorical
Q
THE
EDEN
OF
AMERICA
1987
Into Nutwood moved
?
Charles Moorfield Storey
and his wife Susan. Son of
eminent jurist and author,
Moorfield Storey of
Roxbury (1845-1929),
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Charles graduated from
Harvard in 1912, and had garnered a law degree by 1915. He
entered a Boston law firm, but was in Washington on
government business during World War I. A hater of political
corruption like his father and endowed with a keen sense of
public duty like his neighbors, Storey soon was on boards that
watched over Boston City Hall. He was active in academic
institutions and various societies, while also sitting on the
boards of various companies.
Storey is remembered for his political collision with Governor
Curley, who in 1935 removed Storey from the watchdog
Finance Commission on a trumped-up charge to make room
for a gubernatorial crony. Storey, a tall, slim man with a high
sense of public duty, took it all in stride. The Governor's
Council later passed a resolution proclaiming belief in Storey's
integrity. He served the Commission again from 1939 to
1942.
Storey worked for the government once more in World War II
and lost a son in action. The family regretfully moved out of
229 Perkins Street in 1974 and six years later Charles Storey
8/23/2019
Perkins and Storey Families - Jamaica Plain Historical Society
plain Distorical
OF
THE
EDEN
AMERICA
OF
STATE
1987
Sources:
Dictionary of American Biography; National Cyclopedia of
American Biography; Obituary, Boston Globe, March 20,
1980; C. Everitt, The Tavern at 100, 1984; Cabot, Skating on
Jamaica Pond; S.P. Shaw, grandson.
Written by Walter H. Marx. Reprinted with permission from
the November 6, 1992 Jamaica Plain Gazette.
Copyright © Gazette Publications, Inc.
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Thomas Handasyd Perkins - Wikipedia
Page 1 of 3
Thomas Handasyd Perkins
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Colonel Thomas Handasyd Perkins, or T.H.
Perkins (December 15, 1764 - January 11, 1854),
Thomas Handasyd Perkins
was a wealthy Boston merchant and an archetypical
Boston Brahmin. Starting with bequests from his
grandfather and father-in-law, he amassed a huge
fortune. As a young man he was a slave trader in
Haiti, a Maritime Fur Trader, trading furs from the
American Northwest to China, and then a major
smuggler of Turkish opium into China. [2][3]
Contents
1 Life and career
2 References
Born
December 15, 1764
3 Footnotes
4 Further reading
Died
January 11, 1854 (aged 89)
5 External links
Brookline, Massachusetts
Nationality American
Occupation Shipping magnate
Life and career
Net
worth USD $3 million at the time of his
death (approximately 1/1116 of US
His parents, James Perkins and Elizabeth Peck, had
ten children in eighteen years. When Perkins was
GNP)¹
twelve, he was in the crowd which first heard the
Declaration of Independence read to the citizens of Boston. The family had planned to send Perkins to
Harvard College, but he had no interest in a college education. In 1779 he began working, and in 1785
when he turned 21 he became legally entitled to a small bequest that had been left to him by his
grandfather Thomas Handasyd Peck, a Boston merchant who dealt largely in furs and hats. Until 1793
Perkins engaged in the slave trade at Cap-Haitien Haiti.
In 1785, when China opened the port of Canton to foreign businesses, Perkins became one of the first
Boston merchants to engage in the China trade. He sailed on the Astrea to Canton in 1789 with a cargo
including ginseng, cheese, lard, wine, and iron. On the trip back it carried tea and silk cloth. In 1815
Perkins and his brother James opened a Mediterranean office to buy Turkish opium for resale in China.
Perkins was also a major industrial investor within Massachusetts. He owned the Granite Railway, the
first commercial American railroad, which was built to carry granite from Quincy quarries to
Charlestown for construction of the Bunker Hill Monument and other city buildings in Boston. He also
held significant holdings in the Elliot textile mills in Newton, the mills at Holyoke and Lowell, New
England canals and railroads, and lead and iron mines including the Monkton Iron Company in
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Handasyd_Perkins
5/27/2017
Thomas Handasyd Perkins - Wikipedia
Page 2 of 3
Vermont. In addition, Perkins was politically active in the Federalist Party, serving terms as state senator
and representative from 1805-1817. Additionally, he invested in many of the mills on Lowell, MA
including Appleton Mills. [4]
In later years Perkins became a philanthropist. In 1826, he and his brother James Perkins contributed
half the sum of $30,000 that was needed for an addition to the Boston Athenaeum, and the old Boston
Athenaeum Gallery of Art was moved to James Perkins's home. [5] The Perkins School for the Blind, still
in existence in Watertown, Massachusetts, was renamed in his honor after he donated his Boston
mansion to the financially troubled "Massachusetts Asylum for the Blind" in 1832. He was also a major
benefactor to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, McLean Hospital, and helped found the Massachusetts
General Hospital.
Upon retirement, Perkins built a summer home on Swan Island in the Kennebec River near Richmond,
Maine. He helped the island achieve independent municipal status by paying legal fees for its charter
and the town was renamed Perkins in gratitude. It is now Perkins Township, a ghost town. Colonel
Perkins died on January 11, 1854 in Brookline, Massachusetts, and is buried in the family plot at Mount
Auburn Cemetery.
Perkins married Sarah "Sally" Elliott (1768-February 25, 1852) on March 25, 1788, in Boston,
Massachusetts. They had three children: Colonel Thomas Handasyd Perkins, Jr. ("Short-arm Tom"),
whose daughter Louisa married the Boston painter William Morris Hunt; 6 Elizabeth Perkins Cabot
(1791-1885); and Caroline Perkins Gardiner (1800-1867). His nephew John Perkins Cushing was active
in Perkins' China business for 30 years; the town of Belmont, Massachusetts is named for his estate. His
great nephew Charles Callahan Perkins became a well known artist, author and philanthropist like his
grandfather James Perkins.
References
ck.
Thomas G. Cary (1856). Memoir of T. H. Perkins
(https://archive.org/stream/memthomashand00caryrich#page/n11/mode/2up).
Carl Seaburg and Stanley Paterson, Merchant Prince of Boston. Colonel T.H. Perkins, 1764-1854,
Its
1971.
Footnotes
1. Klepper, Michael; Gunther, Michael (1996), The Wealthy 100: From Benjamin Franklin to Bill Gates-A
Ranking of the Richest Americans, Past and Present, Secaucus, New Jersey: Carol Publishing Group, p. xiii,
ISBN 978-0-8065-1800-8, OCLC 33818143 (https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/33818143)
2. American Merchants and the China Opium Trade, 1800-1840. Jacques M. Downs. Business History Review,
Vol. 42, No. 4 (Winter, 1968)
3. American Trade in Opium to China, Prior to 1820. Charles C. Stelle. Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 9, No. 4
(Dec., 1940)
4. M., Rosenberg, Chaim. Legendary locals of Lowell, Massachusetts
(https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/854956846). ISBN 9781467100489. OCLC 854956846
(https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/854956846).
5. The Philanthropy Hall of Fame, Thomas Perkins
(http://www.philanthropyroundtable.org/almanac/hall_of_fame/thomas_perkins
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Handasyd_Perking
5/27/2017
Thomas Handasyd Perkins - Wikipedia
Page 3 of 3
6. The History of the Descendants of John Dwight of Dedham, Mass., Benjamin Woodbridge Dwight, J.F.
Trow & Co., New York, 1874(https://books.google.com/books?id=WLfMU4yd1FYC&pg=PA421)
Further reading
Hunt, Freeman (1858). "Thomas Handasyd Perkins". Lives of American Merchants
https://books.google.com/books?id=lygKAAAAIAAJ). 1.
Perkins and Company, Canton 1803-1827. Bulletin of the Business Historical Society, Vol. 6, No.
2 (Mar., 1932). Jstor 3110803.
External links
Massachusetts Historical Society Thomas Handasyd Perkins papers, 1783-1892
http://www.masshist.org/collection-guides/view/fa0268)guide
Portrait(http://www.bostonathenaeum.org/james-perkins-1822-gilbert-stuart) of James Perkins,
brother of T.H. Perkins
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Thomas_Handasyd_Perkins&oldid=776994778'
Categories: 19th-century American railroad executives
American philanthropists
Businesspeople from Boston | People from Brookline, Massachusetts 1764 births
1854 deaths
American expatriates in China People from Sagadahoc County, Maine
This page was last edited on 24 April 2017, at 16:33.
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/Thomas_Handasyd_Perkins
5/27/2017
8/26/2019
Perkins Estate - Wikipedia
Coordinates: 42°19'14"N 71°8'39"W
WIKIPEDIA
Perkins Estate
The Perkins Estate is a historic estate at
Perkins Estate
450
Warren Street in Brookline,
Massachusetts. The property was part of
U.S. National Register of Historic
the summer estate of the Cabot family,
Places
T.H.
originally belonging to Thomas Handasyd
Perkins; the present main mansion house
was built in the 1850s to a plan by Edward
C. Cabot for his sister-in-law, Elizabeth
Perkins Cabot. The grounds of the property
were originally designed by Perkins, and
subsequent generations maintained the
grounds to a high degree. In the 1980s it
was owned by Mitch Kapor, [2] founder of
Lotus Software.
The property was listed on the National
Register of Historic Places in 1985. [1]
See also
National Register of Historic Places
listings in Brookline, Massachusetts
Show map of Massachusetts
References
Show map of the United States
Show all
1. "National Register Information System"
Location
450 Warren St.,
(http://nrhp.focus.nps.gov/natreg/docs/
Brookline,
All_Data.html). National Register of
Historic Places. National Park Service.
Massachusetts
2008-04-15.
Coordinates
42°19'14"N
2. "MACRIS inventory record for Perkins
71°8'39"W
Estate" (http://mhc-macris.net/Details.
Area
22 acres (8.9 ha)
aspx?Mhcld=BKL.AF). Commonwealth
of Massachusetts. Retrieved
Architect
Cabot, Edward C.
2014-05-21
8/26/2019
Perkins Estate - Wikipedia
Picturesque
MPS
Brookline MRA
NRHP reference # 85003306 (https://
npgallery.nps.gov/
AssetDetail/NRIS/
85003306) [1]
Added to NRHP
October 17, 1985
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=PerkinsEstate&oldid=789962356
This page was last edited on 10 July 2017, at 18:40 (UTC).
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.
Biographical Note: Mary Perkins Ryan (1912-1993)
Mary Perkins Ryan was born in Boston, on April 10, 1912, the youngest of four children of Charles
Bruen and Elizabeth (Ward) Perkins. Ryan entered the Convent of the Sacred Heart in Connecticut at
the age of thirteen and graduated in 1927. After a year and a half traveling and learning in Europe, Ryan
returned to the United States. She entered the College of the Sacred Heart, Manhattanville in 1929.
During her four years at college, Ryan majored in English and edited the college magazine, The Essay.
Mary Perkins Ryan married John Ryan in 1942.
After graduating in 1932, Ryan worked in a variety of secretarial positions and with the publishing firm
Sheed and Ward. While at Sheed and Ward, Ryan met Leonard Feeney, S. J. She encountered him again
when she returned to New York City and he provided her with an idea for her first book, At Your Ease in
the Catholic Church (1938). At Your Ease was "believed to be the first book of etiquette for Catholics
ever published." Perkins also authored Speaking of How to Pray (1944); worked at the Liturgical
Institute at the University of Notre Dame starting in 1950; co-edited The Art of Teaching Christian
Doctrine (1957) with Austrian Jesuit Johnnes Hofinger; served as the founding editor of The Living
Light (1964-1972), a publication of the United States Catholic Conference; authored the controversial
Are Parochial Schools the Answer? (1964); edited Professional Approaches for Christian Education
(PACE) from 1973 to 1988; and continued to work as a freelance writer from the 1970s through the
1980s. Throughout her life, Ryan authored, edited, or translated over 25 works on the topics of theology,
philosophy, and liturgy.
Mary Perkins Ryan died on October 13, 1993.
Sources:
Bryce, M.C. "Mary Perkins Ryan." The Living Light 12 (Summer 1975): 276-281.
Hughes, Kathleen. How Firm a Foundation: Voices of the Early Liturgical Movement. Chicago, IL:
Liturgical Training Publications, 1990.
O'Hare, P. "Mary Perkins Ryan (1912-1993): Mulier Furtis." The Living Light (Spring 1994): 3-8.
Scope and Contents
The collection consists of the correspondence of Mary Perkins Ryan, writings by and about Ryan, notes
and other ephemera dating from 1932-1951. The materials reflect a small portion of Ryan's writing
career.
The correspondence primarily consists of letters to Ryan from religious men and women about her book
Speaking of How to Pray (1944). Notable correspondents include Leonard Feeney, John LaFarge, Gerald
Ellard, and Martin Hellriegel. The articles and essays by Mary Perkins Ryan deal with Catholic liturgy,
spiritual life, and religious education. Writings of note by Ryan include her thesis, "The Interests in
Mary Perkins Ryan Papers MS.2003.030
Page 5
Mary Perkins Ryan Papers
1932-1951
MS.2003.030
http://hdl.handle.net/2345/1114
EGIUM
COLL
FLAND
MDCCCI
Archives and Manuscripts Department
John J. Burns Library
Boston College
140 Commonwealth Avenue
Chestnut Hill 02467
library.bc.edu/burns/contact
URL: http://www.bc.edu/burns
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Ron Archives (19)
Dear Ms. Russell:
I am the recently retired library director at Southern New Hampshire University.
Search Shortcuts
For the past six years I have been engaged in researching the life of the
My Photos
founder of Acadia National Park, George Bucknam Dorr (1853-1944).
My Attachments
Mr. Dorr is the maternal son of Mary Gray Ward (1820-1901), the sister of
Samuel Gray Ward whose letters figure so prominently in the Ward-
Perkins Papers. Recently I have been volunteering at the Concord Free Public
Library, developing finding aids for the magnificent manuscript holdings they
have of the Concord Sages. By a rather circuitous route I've been led through
Emerson's manuscripts to the second Thomas Wren Ward (1844-1940), Mr.
Dorr's cousin.
I'm writing today with three purposes in mind. One, the excellent article by
Donald Fitch on "The Ward-Perkins Papers" refers (p. 50) to Margaret Snyder's
"The Other Side of the River" article on T.W. Ward. In that article Ms. Snyder
refers to a ten year correspondence during the 1930's with Mr. Ward following
their meeting in Jamaica Plain. Do you know whether this correspondence is
extant? If this is the same Margaret Irene Snyder that wrote The Chosen
Valley my efforts to find biographical information about her through the
Chatfield (MN) Historical Society has been of little value in tracking down the
correspondence on her end. My hope was that since T.W.Ward and Mr. Dorr
kept in touch with one another throughout their lives, that some additional
correpondence might help me better understand their relationship.
Second, it is difficult to determine from the the Fitch article or the finding aid
whether Ward-Perkins Papers scrapbooks might contain photographs of Mary
Gray Ward Dorr and her family members (husband and two sons). I have yet to
unearth any photograph of Mr. Dorr's father or brother and the image evidence
for both Mr. Dorr and his mother is very slight. Can you be of any assistance?
Fortunately, I do have rather broad evidence on the Ward family in its
transitioning from Salem to Boston in the generation of Thomas Wren Ward
(1786-1858).
http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?Search=&Idx=125&YY=334&y5beta=yes...
10/8/2007
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Finally, the Bar Harbor Historical Society on Mount Desert Island (ME) is in
possession of the Guest Book kept by Mary Gray Ward at the home that she
and her husband built in 1880 called Old Farm, what George B. Dorr calls the
inspiration for the development of Acadia National Park. After years of arm
twisting, trhe museum 'curator' permitted me to open, read, and compile for the
first time a list of Old Farm guests (1880-1937). The names include one
President, many European visitors, Boston Brahmins, Congressmen, etc.
Charles Bruen Perkins wrote a poem in this book when he visited in 1888,
returning in 1892; Elizabeth Ward Perkins visited in 1907; I also have an entry
for Edward Newton Perkins for 1888 but know nothing of his relationship to
C.B. Perkins. Anna H.B. Ward visited in 1886 (and left a photo behind), Sophia
Read Howard Ward visited in 1886 with her husband. Were you aware of this?
Fitch( p. 52) says that Elizabeth Howard Ward wrote to ":the family" from North
East Harbor (was there a family estate there?). I'm also curious whether the
"George Howard" ('Uncle George) who wrote to Elizabeth on May 9, 1901 may
have had any relationship to the English Howard family that owned Castle
Howard and Naworth Castle where the Dorr's were six-month houseguests in
1876 during their grieving period following the death of the Dorr's eldest son,
William.
I recognize that that I have presumed to set before you a formidable task. If you
could briefly acknowledge this email perhaps it is best if I call you at your
convenience so that we might discuss these points and what is and is not
known within your family about connections with the Dorr's. I have found in
the Ward manuscripts sufficient quality and range of experiences that makes
me wish that their roles in 19th-century America had received the scholarly
attention it deserves. But for now, I want to remain focused on the themes
shared by Samuel G. Ward and Mr. Dorr as they carved out their quite different
roles.
Thank goodness for Fitch's reference to Diana Mansfield Russell or I would
have not had the opportunity to follow up these issues.
With best wishes,
Ronald H. Epp, M.L.S., Ph.D.
47 Pond View Dr.
Merrimack, NH 03054
603-424-6129
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10/8/2007
MRS. C. B. PERKINS,: LECTURER, WRITER
Special to The New York Times.
New York Times (1857-Current file); Sep 1, 1954; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2003)
pg. 27
MRS. C. B. PERKINS,
LECTURER, WRITER
Art and Religion Her Subjects
-Widow of the Founder of
Institute for Blind Dies
Special to The New York Times.
BOSTON, Aug. 31-Mrs. Eliza-
beth Ward Perkins, a lecturer
and writer on art and religion
and the widow of Charles Bruen
Perkins, founder of the Perkins
Institute for the Blind here, died
here today after a long illness.
Her age was 81.
The daughter of Thomas Wren
Ward and Sophia Howard Ward,
she attended the Brearley School
in New York and studied music
for two years in Europe. She
worked out a theory of mental
training through drawing and
lectured on it at Boston Univer-
sity, schools and museums.
Mrs. Perkins also lectured on
religious subjects and presented
exhibitions of religious art. She
was the author of two books,
"Observation" and "The Art of
Seeing."
She was a member of the cor-
poration of the Perkins Institute,
president of the Boston Children's
Art Center and a trustee of the
Boston Children's Museum, She
was a Benedictine oblate and a
director of the National Liturgi-
cal Conference.
Among her organizations were
the American Federation of Ar-
tists, the Guild of Boston Artists,
the Paulist League of Boston, the
League of Catholic Women and
the Catholic Art Association.
Her husband died in 1929. Sur-
viving are a son, Francis Daven-
port Perkins, and three daugh-
ters, Dr. Anna Ward Perkins,
Mrs. Eleanor Perkins Mansfield
and Mrs. Mary Perkins Ryan.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.