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

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Berkshire Cottagers and the Father of ANP Lenox Library Association Lenox, MA 10-21-18
"Barteshine Cottagers and the
Father of A N.P." Lenox Library
Association henox, MA 10/21/2018.
10/11/21, 8:26 PM
Lenox Library (Massachusetts) - Wikipedia
Coordinates: 42°21'27"N 73°17'6"W
WIKIPEDIA
Lenox Library (Massachusetts)
The Lenox Library is the principal
public library of Lenox, Massachusetts. It
Lenox Library
is managed by the non-profit Lenox
U.S. National Register of Historic
Library Association, founded in 1856,
Places
and is located at 18 Main Street, in a
former county courthouse that is listed
on the National Register of Historic
Places.
Contents
Library History
Building architecture and history
Lenox Library
Notable library collections
Roche Reading Park
Other information about the Lenox
Library
See also
References
External links
Show map of Massachusetts
Library History
Show map of the United States
Show all
The library was incorporated in 1856[2][3]
Location
18 Main St.,
and in 1874 moved into its current home,
Lenox,
the former Berkshire County courthouse
Massachusetts
which was constructed in 1815-1816. In
1973, the building was added to the
Coordinates
42°21'27"N
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenox_Library_(Massachusetts)
1/5
10/11/21, 8:26 PM
Lenox Library (Massachusetts) - Wikipedia
National Register of Historic Places and
73°17'6"W
is one of nine such locations in Lenox. In
Area
less than one
the early 20th century, novelist Edith
acre
Wharton worked in the library and
befriended Kate Spencer, who served as
Built
1815
partial inspiration for her 1911 novel
Architect
Isaac Damon
Ethan Frome.
NRHP reference No.
73000291 (http
The Lenox Library Association belongs to
s://npgallery.nps.
the C/W MARS library consortium,
gov/AssetDetail/
which allows patrons to request books
NRIS/73000291).
and other materials from other libraries
Added to NRHP
April 3, 1973
located across the state. The Lenox
Library Association is also a member of the Massachusetts Library System which
is a State-supported collaborative that provides leadership and services to foster
cooperation, communication, and sharing among member libraries of all types.
In fiscal year 2008, the town of Lenox spent 1.56% ($241,452) of its budget on
its public library-some $47 per person.
[4]
Building architecture and history
The Lenox Library building occupies a prominent site in downtown Lenox, on
the east side of Main Street between Walker and Housatonic Streets. It is a 2-1/2
story masonry structure, built out of brick with stone and wooden trim. Its front
facade is dominated by monumental two-story pillars and pilasters, which
articulate the three bays. The main entrance is in the center bay, topped by a
segmented-arch transom window. The building cornice is studded with
modillion blocks, as is the gable supported by the pillars above the entrance. The
hip roof is encircled by a lower balustrade, and is crowned by an open belfry and
cupola. A substantially larger addition, made in 1889, extends to the rear of the
building; it is also topped by a hip roof with cupola.
[5]
The main block was built in 1815-16 to a design by Isaac Damon of
Northampton, and served as the Berkshire County Courthouse until 1869, when
that function was moved to Pittsfield. Although the library moved into the
building in 1874, it did not fully occupy the premises immediately. Additional
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenox_Library_(Massachusetts)
2/5
9/14/2018
The Distinguished Lecture Series - Lenox Library Association
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The Lenox Library
18 Main Street, Lenox Massachusetts 01240
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BERKSHIRE COURT-HOUSE.-Tans
historical place in the Lenox
community
The Lenox Library holds a very special
place in the intellectual, cultural and
historical life of its community. The stately
Greek Revival library building, with its
majestic lonic columns and elegant
cupola, was designed by Captain Isaac
Damon and built on Main Street in 1815-
1816. The building served as the county
courthouse until 1868 when the county
seat was moved to Pittsfield.
In 1871, Mrs. Adeline Schermerhorn, a
wealthy summer resident, purchased the
building for use as a "public library and
reading room free to all visitors and
inhabitants of Lenox." Mrs.
Schermerhorn's contribution marked the
beginning of the long and fruitful
relationship between the "cottagers" and
the Library. The Lenox Library
Association, incorporated in 1856, moved
4/9/2018
About the Library and Town - Lenox - Library Association
into the building in 1874, and the space
has been operating as a library since that
date. Even during these early years the
Library functioned as an important civic
Panel
center for the whole community.
Beginning in the 1890s, the building also
housed Lenox's only town doctor, the
town's first telephone switchboard and
fire alarm system. (Within its walls, it even
contained both a jail and the offices of
the Lenox National Bank.)
In 1940, in the same year that the
Berkshire Music Center began operations
at Tanglewood, the Lenox Library Music
Department assumed formal status at the
request of Maestro Serge Koussevitzky of
the Boston Symphony Orchestra. During
World War II, concerts at the Library
helped keep music alive while activities of
the Berkshire Symphonic Festival and
Music Center were suspended.
Added to
the
National
Historic
Register in
1973, the
building
was most
recently
renovated
to its original grandeur in 2002-2004. The
original court room, with its exquisite
9/14/2018
The Distinguished Lecture Series - Lenox Library Association
Programs
The
Panel
Distinguished
Lecture
Series
Writers
Round Table
Seed Library
Pre-Concert
Lectures
with Jeremy
Yudkin
Youth
Department
"My idea was to continue
the intellectual and artistic
stimulation that is so
powerful during the
summer months into the
winter, SO that we Berkshire
residents can enjoy
thinking, looking, and
listening even in the winter
months.. The
Distinguished Lecture
Series is designed to cover
the entire range of
cultural endeavors - art,
music, politics,
science, history, literature
- from a wide range of
perspectives and
experiences." -Jeremy
Yudkin
9/14/2018
The Distinguished Lecture Series - Lenox Library Association
Professor Jeremy Yudkin of Lenox
conceived the idea for the Distinguished
Lecture Series in 2006. The lectures take
place once a month, usually on the third
Panel
Sunday of the month and are held at 4
pm on Sunday afternoons in the elegant
and restful surroundings of the Sedgwick
Reading Room. Sunday afternoon was
chosen because it is a quiet time in most
people's weekends, the Library was not
being utilized, and it allows time for
audiences to attend the lectures and go
home (or out) for dinner.
All lectures are free and open to the
public thanks to the generosity of the
speakers and donations from the public.
No reservations are required.
The Twelfth Season, 2018-
19
September 23: Joachim Frank,
"Single-Particle Cryo-Electron
Microscopy: A Revolution in
Visualizing Biological Molecules"
October 21: Ronald Epp, "Berkshire
Cottagers and the Father of Acadia
National Park"
November 18: Michael Hammond,
"Shakespeare at the Moment"
January 20: Jennifer Browdy, "Writing
Your Memoirs: The Elemental
Journey"
February 17: Diane Barth, "The Joy
and Heartbreak of Women's
Friendships"
March 17: Fredric Rutberg, "Keeping
Newspapers Local"
Page 1
Berkshire Cottagers & the Father of Acadia National Park
Ronald H. Epp. October 21, 2018. Lenox Library Association Distinguished Lecture Series
I appreciate the invitation from Jeremy Yudkin to resolve a question left
unstated in a 2006 international garden conference talk I gave at The
Mount. Later published in Edith Wharton and the American Garden, I
focused on the coastal Maine horticulturist influences of George B. Dorr
on Edith Wharton's garden design at The Mount. This afternoon I will
turn the issue on its head and ask whether Dorr's broader Lenox
experiences -- spanning five decades -- influenced the creation of the
first national park east of the Mississippi? Were there Berkshire county
influences shaping not only park creation but other cultural institutions
on Mount Desert Island?
I have been attracted to Dorr's family, especially the maternal side,
because they are examples of the cultured and intellectually progressive
families that dominated American social history in the 19th-century. On
his mother's side, the several thousand Ward family papers-at the
MHS and UCSB-- provide behavioral clues about the personal and
professional development of the Father of Acadia. During the late 18th
and 19th-centuries, the Ward family "desired to involve themselves
culturally, politically, literarily, and philanthropically for the benefit of
all." Common to the five generations, was "family intimacy, harmony,
and love."
In pursuit of the paternal evidence, my inquiries led me to the New
England Historic Genealogical Society. To my great delight I discovered
that Dorr wrote hundreds of pages of biographical profiles of family
relatives spanning two hundred years. There is no record that these
documents were previously researched-and subsequently, none
published. [1]
When my wife and I began investigating the historic origins of Acadia
nothing in the published record tracked the Father of Acadia to his 17th_
century English ancestors -nor to the importance of both sides of his
Page 2
family to Berkshire county. The documentation in Maine was silent on
this connection though word of mouth suggested a connection. The
curator of the Bar Harbor Historical Society provided me with the name
of a recent visitor, Berkshire historian Cornelia Gilder. Long before she
published Hawthorn's Lenox, Nini invited me to this community, ferried
me from historic site to fabled literary location, and ended my tour with
a splendid lunch at Blantyre. More importantly, she continued her
enthusiasm for my research and over the last fifteen years shared her
findings with me.
Before the publication of my biography, Nini's book had superbly
covered the historical development of the paternal Dorr and maternal
Ward families that launched here the era of elegant country houses. [2]
Suffice it to say that Dorr's maternal uncle Samuel Gray Ward-a man
of marked literary accomplishments-- in March 1844 scouted
Stockbridge & Lenox with Charles Sedgwick, choosing a 150 acre vista
of Lake Mahkeenac for his Highwood farm, the forerunner of the Lenox
cottage industry. [3] This was not his first experience of Lenox for Sam
later recalled, at eighty-two years of age, the summer of 1838 when he
returned from several years traveling throughout Europe. In a carriage
journey from Pittsfield shared with his mother and ailing sister Martha,
"
we had a look into the Lenox valley, which SO charmed me that I said
to my mother then and here, 'if I ever go to live in the country, it will be
here," little thinking how prophetic were my words and what a space
Lenox would fill in my life and that of others" (Ward Family Papers,
148). [4] But what of the Wards at #3 Park Street across the street from
the Common? [5]
For Sam, relocation was a reaction against city life where "one cannot
make a profession of reading or book-making [whereas] the country
occupations strengthen the body and leave the mind clear." (12.2.43,
SGW to TWW, B.3.f.11.MHS). Sam's letters to his father provide the
fullest account the challenges of the Berkshire environment! [6] One of
Page 3
the blessings of Highwood was Anna Barker Hazard Ward's delivery in
1844 of Sam's only son, Thomas Wren Ward Jr. Nine years later at
Jamaica Plain, Tom welcomed his cousin, George B. Dorr, into the
world, beginning a friendship that would endure for 87 years.|
Ralph Waldo Emerson's son, Edward-the Harvard roommate of Sam's
son--later published an essay on Sam which detailed his "passion for
gardening. [one]who manfully ploughed and planted in
beautiful
Lenox." (Early Years of the Saturday Club). [8] Sam described his own
passion "for nature (credited to his mother) and landscape and art,"
despite the economic necessity of accepting subsidies from his father.
Despite family visits from his Boston family and "a large circle of
agreeable [local] people," in 1857 this Lenox champion of a 'back-to-
the-land' movement sold Highwood to William Storey Bullard where it
remained in family hands until 1951.
Sam's explanation was that he found a hole in his pocket that could not
be mended except by returning to Boston to relieve his infirm father of
his business responsibilities. [9] He wrote that "all of my family think of
the Lenox days with enthusiasm, [a golden age] to which, for good or ill,
we can never return." (Ward Family Papers, 178) As occasional guests
at the family estates, there must have been talk about the property
management challenges faced by their relatives; this likely made an
impression on George and his elder brother. Two decades later on
Sam's retirement from Baring's Brothers, the former owner of
Highwood returned to Lenox and built Oakwood close to Beecher's
Blossom Farm. [10] There his grandchildren "passed SO much of their
childhood," while Sam researched and published The Ward Family
Papers with the aid of Dorr's mother, Mary. In his mid-eighties, Sam
sold Oakwood after the turn of the century because "it was no longer
possible to have our family about us there." Oakwood was destroyed by
fire in 1903. Nonetheless, his actions afforded his nephew George, a
Page 4
model of land stewardship as both a sustained and exploratory process.
(J. Espy, "The Many Faces of Stewardship," Maine Heritage, Summer
2003) [11] Fortunately, Highwood was gifted to Harvard in 1960 and
then in 1986 the Boston Symphony Orchestra incorporated it into
Tanglewood.
Nearby, Dorr's New York City paternal step-uncles purchased several
weeks before Dorr's birth (in 1853), a Lenox residence named Highlawn
built by Reverend Cook three years earlier. [12] Uncle Frances Dorr was
a bachelor whom his nephew recalled "pruning trees [that] bordered the
beautiful great lawn while I stood beside him." After mid-day
dinner he would show me his wonderful cuckoo-clock, brought back
from Paris and give me a tiny sip of the famous green Chartreuse" (Dorr
Papers, children of S. Dorr, ver. 2). His brother George (yes, the
namesake for the Father of Acadia) was a widower, both living there for
the remainder of their lives during the summer months (frequently
joined there by their half-brother Charles, his sister Susan, and Martha
Ann Dorr. Friends of Charles Sedgwick, each appear to have treasured
Highlawn and in the early years Highlawn and Highwood households
intermingled.
The Father of Acadia later wrote that this "joint home [was] on a
beautiful hilltop looking north to Greylock up the Berkshire Valley,
south across sunlit pasture lands and orchards to Laurel Lake, and
eastward to the deep cut below the Housatonic River" (Dorr Papers,
children of S. Dorr, 8). In roughly 1890 George Dorr inherited this
enlarged estate-and perhaps his uncles landscaping and gardening
skills-leasing it for more than a decade. Sam Ward wrote twice to his
sister Mary in 1900 praising her "vigor" in going to Lenox "to put
[Highlawn] in order
in preparation for new tenants." (TWW Papers,
MHS, B3.f.29). Mary died in late October 1901 and her surviving son
sold the 14-bedroom structure to Robert Paterson who razed it; on the
Highlawn grounds in 1904 he built today's Blantyre. [13] As Nine
Page 5
points out, "proceeds from the sale" provided the funds for a series of
land purchases which form the park on Mount Desert Island.
Back in Boston, the death of Thomas Wren Ward prompted the start of
relocation of the Dorr family first to Park Street and then in 1863 to the
other side of the Common where a new five story townhouse on
impressive Commonwealth Avenue awaited them. [14] [15] Through
these repeated Berkshire sojourns, Dorr witnessed on both sides of his
family the changes that more than a half-century of Berkshire living had
wrought, what Richard Birdsall called a weakening of the insularity of
the early 19th-century "self-contained" culture (Berkshire County, 1959).
Fostered by isolation, Birdsall stressed that these hill towns scattered
among a thousand square miles lacked "any broad margin of wealth and
leisure." This would change over the next generation as families after
the Civil War were succeeded by even more affluent families than the
Wards and Dorrs with a heighted interest in displaying their wealth.
Immediately after the War, the Dorr's first journeyed Downeast to
coastal Maine. In 1868 Dorr's parents, Charles and Mary, purchased a
hundred acre parcel of undeveloped farmland on Frenchman Bay just a
mile from the Bar Harbor village green. College for both sons and an
extended four year stay in Europe following George's graduation from
Harvard, delayed construction of the Dorr Oldfarm mansion and
outbuildings until 1880. [16]
By the early 1890's, Dorr concluded that the heyday of the Lenox
cottagers was nearing its end and that Bar Harbor-pioneered two
decades later than Lenox-would follow course. [17] A novel idea was
born among the earliest families. [18] Drawing upon an idea published in
1889 in Garden and Forest, the landscape architect son of Harvard's
president and future partner to Frederick Law Olmsted, argued that this
Page I 6
tide in Maine of mid-coastal private estate development threatened the
very values that drew visitors and summer people to the island in the
first place. Charles Eliot proposed that parcels of land be acquired by a
corporate body, protected by legal constraints, and preserved in
perpetuity. Contrary to the American imperative of privatization, the
trustees of this organization intended its landscape holdings to be
publically accessible. [19] A movement began in metropolitan Boston as
well to create around the city center a contiguous system of public green
space (called today the Emerald Necklace). Eliot's articles also
advocated the establishment in 1891 of the Trustees of Reservations, the
world's first land trust. [20] On Mount Desert Island, [21] Eliot's father
in August 1901 brought together the village path committee chairmen in
[22] the Seal Harbor Music Room. Using the Massachusetts Trustees
model, [23] the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations was
incorporated.
In the only book authored by the park founder, [24] Dorr refers to the
1908 Trustee land acquisition of a deep island shoreline ravine and
mountain slope. [25] "For this I went to my friends of old New York and
Lenox days, Mr. and Mrs. John Innes Kane [a grandson of John Jacob
Astor], who had then recently, following the death of her father, William
Schermerhorn, became summer residents at Bar Harbor, as had Mrs.
Kane's older sister, Mrs. William Bridgham, and her husband
lovers
of our woodland walks and mountain climbs. [Their gift] is the finest
climb of such character on the Island." [Dorr, ANP, 12] [26] After
securing this 467-acre gorge and south slope of Kebo mountain
donation, the Kanes traveled to the Lenox home of Anne Kane's father,
sited next door to this library (Automobile Topics, 16, #4, 9/10/1908, pg.
1643). Kane was a HCTPR member and chairman of the BHVIA Path
Committee immediately prior to his death in 1913.[27] Here again, the
Page I 7
establishment of the several island village improvement societies had its
inspiration in the Stockbridge Laurel Hill Association.
In memory of her husband, Annie Kane further financed the first of six
island memorial trails established between 1913 and 1916 with funds
from summer residents. [28] This inaugural park memorial path was "an
important part of the projected system of paths
from the Village
through the Great Meadow and the Harden Farm district to the
mountains" (See M.C. Brown, Pathmakers, 67-68, 222). [29] Annie and
her sister later enlisted the help of Beatrix Farrand in the design of the
rustic Kane and Bridgham Memorial Bridge on another parcel of land
they donated. Dorr envisioned these memorials "as a part of a plan to
enhance the public reservation and improve its eligibility for designation
as a federal property" (Brown, 67). To illustrate the beauty of this
acquisition, Dorr presented photos of the nearly mile long Kane Path to
President Woodrow Wilson immediately before his establishment of the
Sieur de Monts National Monument.
Lenox relationships also came to the fore when Dorr's acquaintance
with the Morris K. Jesup family became an opportunity for island
cultural improvement. [30] Their Rotch & Tilden Belvoir Terrace
residence is well known beyond Lenox. While Edith Wharton supported
the Lenox Library Association, Dorr championed the idea of
establishing in Bar Harbor its first public library. Not only did the Jesups
own property in Bar Harbor, New York banker Jesup had been
"prominent" in the Bar Harbor YMCA and VIA. [31] Dorr approached
Mrs. Jesup and asked her to buy the Cottage Street land adjacent to the
village green as a first step in securing funds for a public library. Maria
Jesup not only agreed to cover the property expense but offered to build
the library in her husband's memory; later she provided-at Dorr's
insistence--an endowment to support it. [32] Trustee visionary Charles
W. Eliot later wrote that "Dorr imagined, engineered and [brought the
Page I 8
Jesup Memorial Library to fruition]" in 1911. [33] [34] Dorr was a
strong advocate of learning and later used his own funds to establish a
Jesup memorial path [35] which ran from downtown Bar Harbor to the
Tarn at the base of Dorr Mountain.
Another better known Berkshire-MDI connection revolved around the
family of George Washington Vanderbilt, most widely celebrated as the
creator of the Biltmore Estate. [36] Dorr and Edith Wharton accepted
his November 1902 holiday invitation to his Asheville estate in the
select company of 16 other formally attired guests feted with a ten
course meal in America's largest private home. [37] Vanderbilt had a
long standing Bar Harbor relationship with Dorr and-like John Kane--
was a member of the Hancock County land trust. [38] He too had an
estate on Mount Desert Island, Point d'Acadie, a short walk from both
Edith's [Jones] family property at Reef Point [39] and Dorr's Oldfarm
estate. [40] Vanderbilt hired Olmsted to develop the Biltmore gardens
according to principles that made Central Park such a success. [41] In
spite of the impoverished land, [42] Olmsted created a masterpiece that
would take years to fully mature. [43] [44]
Vanderbilt and Dorr shared a command and appreciation of languages
and a commitment to development of protecting publically accessible
reservations once they had been secured from private ownership. How
well Dorr knew Vanderbilt's sister, Florence Sloane, a Lenox resident at
Elm Court, I cannot say.[45] But that the daughter of the couple who
commissioned the building of Elm Court, Emily Vanderbilt Sloan, was a
Bar Harbor guest of Dorr is verified by an August 1895 signed poem
that Emily wrote in the Oldfarm guestbook. (On the Sloane family, see
chapter six of Nini Gilder's Edith Wharton's Lenox).
As Dorr wrote to Dr. Eliot, the trip to the estate also provided an
opportunity to use Biltmore as a home base for Dorr's ascent-with
FLO Jr. and Harvard geomorphology professor William Morris Davis-
of nearby 6,684-foot Mt. Mitchell. His motive? "To see something of the
Page 9
forest region" around the highest peak in eastern North America, well
recognizing that lessons learned could be applied to Mount Desert which
laid claim to the highest mountain on the Atlantic seacoast between
Nova Scotia and Brazil. [46]
Another Bar Harbor Dorr friend was U.S. Forest Service director
Gifford Pinchot who had been employed by Vanderbilt at Biltmore prior
to his elevation as a significant figure in Teddy Roosevelt's Tennis
Cabinet. [47] In 1892 he not only laid the foundations for the forest
service but was "enmeshed [at Biltmore] in a large-scale aesthetic
experiment intended to reconcile nature and culture, the wild and the
civilized" (Chad Miller, Gifford Pinchot and the Making of Modern
Environmentalism 2001, p. 102). [48] Dorr's frequent interactions in Bar
Harbor and at Pinchot's Grey Towers home, provided Dorr with
abundant evidence that Biltmore was a grand scheme for a new form of
land management. The United States was better "known for its rapid and
unrestrained exploitation of natural resources" than their sustainable
development, " a lesson Dorr adapted to the Acadian shoreline. [49]
Similarly, architect Guy Lowell worked on projects in three
communities where Dorr had strong attachments. Dorr chaired a
Harvard committee that influenced the hiring of Lowell to design a new
structure in the Harvard Yard.[50 Commemorating the 1903 centennial
of the birth of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Emerson Hall housed its
prestigious philosophers-James, Palmer, Munsterberg, Santayana, and
Royce.; the first academic building ever dedicated to the discipline of
philosophy. Back in Lenox, the John Alexandre Kemble Street cottage,
Spring Lawn, was designed by Lowell in 1904. And a year later, Dorr
hired Lowell to construct in Bar Harbor a Parthenon-like performance
structure called in the Building of the Arts. [51] George Vanderbilt and
John Innes Kane joined Dorr in financing this cultural institution, the
site in 1916 for addresses celebrating the establishment of the park.
Page I 10
In this intermingling of Bar Harbor and Lenox families, it is also notable
that Dorr also directed foreign visitors to his Lenox acquaintances. [52]
In October of 1906, Yorkshire artist George Howard (the ninth Earl of
Carlisle) visited Dorr in Boston with his Cambridge-educated twenty-
five year old daughter, Dorothy-- their first visit to America. [53] Three
decades earlier, the Howards opened their homes to the Dorrs for an
extended stay when tragedy befell Dorr's only sibling. [54] After
several days in Boston at Dorr's residence with luncheons arranged with
Harvard president Eliot and other friends in the literary community, Dorr
put together an itinerary for the two which included a stay with the
Tappan & Dixey family members. On Tanglewood letterhead stationary,
Dorothy Howard wrote of how delightful had been their stay with the
Dixeys in this "very beautiful country." Dorothy's remarks emphasized
that "the Dixey's have been kindness itself. [and] I don't wish to move
on from here any more than I did from Boston, [for] the country has
looked beautiful, especially after a night of snow"(10/30/06). [55]
One week later the Earl; of Carlisle wrote to Dorr from New York City
"that we have prospered, very much, owing to your introductions I told
you, I think, how much we enjoyed Lenox and liked the Dixey family,"
before thanking Dorr for his Washington DC introductions to art
historian Leigh Harrison Hunt as well as the Pinchot and Holmes
families (11/8/06).[56] I mention this not only because his unpublished
correspondence with this family over nearly forty years best reveals the
inner life of the Dorr family than any other source-but because with all
of America available as travel destinations, Dorr directed the recently
elevated 9th Earl of Carlisle to Lenox, revealing again Dorr's affection
for its beauty, historic associations, and abiding family relationships.
Yet the largest clutch of correspondence related to Dorr's Lenox friends
and acquaintances is held by Yale University. Of course, this is the Edith
Wharton Collection at the Beinecke which includes only her replies to
Dorr and not his correspondence to her-which is not extant. After
Page I 11
Wharton's departure from Biltmore she wrote to Dorr-the first of ten
surviving Lenox letters-expressing hope that she and Teddy might be
able to accept Dorr's dinner invitation at his Boston home.[58]
We know that Dorr and Wharton were endlessly fascinated by garden
design; here we see children enjoying the gardens at the newly
established Sieur de Monts National Monument. Both were well attuned
to the rich Berkshire literary history in which Emerson, Oliver Wendell
Holmes, Melville, James Russell Lowell, Hawthorne, Catharine
Sedgwick and others had their creativity nurtured by the Berkshire hills
(
Bernard A. Drew, Literary Luminaries of the Berkshires, 2915).
Wharton wrote that The Mount "stimulating my creative zeal" providing
"the joys of six or seven months a year among fields and woods of my
own...and the childhood ecstasy
of that deep communion with the
earth." (B.G., 124f.) One can only wonder whether their conversations
reached such sophisticated heights.
The fullest account of literary views of the Berkshire physical landscape
is found in Mallery's Lenox and the Berkshire Highlands (1902). After
considerable research, the significance of the Berkshire environment to
the personal and professional life of Dorr and Wharton remains opaque.
What is clear, is that Mount Desert Island offers nothing comparable to
the Berkshire literary pantheon.
Following the first Biltmore visit, the Wharton-Dorr correspondence was
renewed in the summer of 1904 when Dorr stopped at The Mount
enroute to a the largely unexplored eastern Sierra Nevada Mountains,
south of Yosemite. [59] We are fortunate to have Dorr's 10,000-word
typescript account of this exceptional journey at a time when the Sierra
Club had just begun its explorations of the 14,000 foot Mt. Whitney
region where Dorr's horticultural explorations were concentrated. Later
he would pass through national parks on the Continental Divide enroute
to mountaineering the Canadian Rockies. These travels provided him
Page I 12
with park building models for the challenges to be faced on the Maine
coast. [60]
After his departure, Wharton wrote to him at his Boston residence that
he had left behind one of his books on her terrace. She thanked him for
"so many fruitful ideas that I often feel you are not really gone, and must
be somewhere about ready to answer the new questions." [61] She wrote
enthusiastically that her gardener was about to lay out "my future wild
garden," and that she had named a new garden path for Mr. Dorr, the
only named path at The Mount. Her admiration for Dorr's adventurous
spirit is conspicuously evident when she trivializes her endeavors by
comparing her "pigmy planting" against Dorr's current "explorations" of
"the giant boles of the redwoods." (See my article in Edith Wharton and
the American Garden, 2009). Later that year she expressed delight at the
prospect of another visit with him for she is "so interested to hear about
[your] explorations." Both were guests at Biltmore again in late 1905 but
their visits did not overlap.
Lest it seem that their relationship is narrowly circumscribed by
gardening, Wharton writes in January 1906 that she looks forward to
"good talks on horticulture, free-will and predestination," topics that
bound both of them to the James family. [62] There are additional
unfulfilled invitations where Teddy Wharton expresses earnest interest is
revisiting with Dorr the Bar Harbor of past and present. [63] William
James and his family had been frequent guests for extended periods at
Oldfarm. Dorr's visit to the Mount is the last to that site I have been
able to document and if there was correspondence after 1907, it is no
longer extant.
Wharton's reaction to Dorr's advice at the Mount about flora appropriate
for a wild garden was applied in coastal Maine park landscape
Page
13
development, in the layering of wild garden species far more likely to
prosper in a coastal habitat. [64] On the issue of horticultural alliances
between Dorr and her niece-- after Beatrix received title in 1917 to Reef
Point-this is unfortunately a topic poorly documented, unlike the
extensive field notes kept by Farrand in her carriage road consultations
with John D. Rockefeller Jr. Similarly we have no evidence that Farrand
and Dorr interacted at The Mount. [65] Both were influenced by Dorr's
cousin, Arnold Arboretum director Charles Sprague Sargent. What is not
subject to conjecture is Farrand's esteem for Dorr's achievements, as
documented at length in her 1917 National Geographic article on Mount
Desert.
Despite their common horticultural, family, and travel interests, Dorr's
relationship to his environment is strikingly different from that of Mrs.
Wharton. She fancies garden walks and entertaining automobile rides
while Dorr is an outdoorsman, a hiker, a mountaineer who ventures
throughout his life into the wilds in ways alien to-and with motives
different from-- his host at the Mount. Admittedly, the Berkshires were
not as grand or elevated as what Dorr encountered in Wales, Europe,
Canada, California, and North Carolina.[66] These western
Massachusetts hills, however, were topographically comparable to
Mount Desert-though in extent Berkshire county is nearly ten times the
size of MDI. The most striking difference is that its "noble masses [in
Maine] look down on the vast ocean plain, the ceaseless breaking of the
surf upon its rocky shores, the vegetation clothing it with a wealth of
species to the water's edge [in] its sea-girt isolation" ("Acadia, the
Seacoast Park," Home Geographic Monthly, July 1932). [67]
In the final decade of his life, Dorr listed "Newport in the early days"
and "Lenox and the Berkshires in the early days" as topics to be drafted.
Unfortunately, neither essay was undertaken. Yet as he neared his
eightieth birthday he composed a ten page essay on his childhood years
Page I 14
in Canton, just west of Boston and near his Jamaica Plain birthplace. [68]
It was my good fortunate that I pursued scattered references to his close
relationship with Mr. & Mrs. William C. Endicott Jr. I requested the
MHS archivists to bring me the Endicott Family Papers where I
uncovered therein a 2,500 word unattributed essay on "Country Home at
Canton." Not only did the Endicott's not own a home there, the stylistic
and biographical evidence that I presented to the Society convinced
them to credit the essay to the Father of Acadia. When we digest the
content, new insights emerge.
Shortly after the Highwood sale, Sam Ward acquired twenty acres in
Canton on Pleasant Street next to a larger estate that his father had
purchased in 1854. After his father's death in 1858, Sam purchased that
lot and his brother in law-Charles H. Dorr-- acquired Sam's Canton
property (now a community center called Pequitside Farm). [69] Nearly
six decades after the 83 acres was sold. Dorr visited the former Ward
compound in May 1938 with his second cousin, Louisa Thoron Endicott
(1864-1958). She had been married to William C. Endicott Jr. in 1889
here at Oakwood, her grandfather Sam's estate) (see Philadelphia
Inquirer, 10/3/1889).
Canton was more often a retreat for the family following trips to Lenox
where "my Dorr relations use to [also] grow [Bosque, Bartlett, and
Sickle pears] equally well" [as my grandmother Ward in Canton]. The
Canton wildflowers he reports were "less numerous in variety and
species than at Lenox," revealing again Dorr's tendency to associate one
location with the other. Dorr speaks extensively about the origin of his
fascination with bird behavior, reflecting that their avian activities "were
a greater influence than any [formal]schooling in the development of the
mind and character [of my brother and me]." Relevant to Lenox is his
claim that "these spring[times] at Canton
were a great education,
Page 15
teaching us to love the country and the wilderness about us without the
need of company."
Dorr authored many published essays on the significance of developing
national parks. When one studies these essays for indications of
Berkshire influences on the national park in Maine, one is impressed by
evidence to the contrary. That is, the identification of one natural
characteristic not present here. It is the seascape distinction mentioned
earlier: "[Mount Desert] is the only national park land
offering to its
visitor the refreshment, the ever-varying interest and beauty and the
limitless expanses of the ocean." Its seaward-facing granite hills,
"extraordinarily mountainous in character and wonderful in variety,"
afford visitors the highest view of the eastern seaboard north of Brazil,
"a sight few places in the world can parallel." At the time of its
founding, it was the only sanctuary "lying along the ocean highway that
gave rise to the first settlement of the country."
Beyond geographical, topographical, and aesthetic distinctiveness, the
shore environment abounds in life rich with interest to the marine
biologist as well as those who seek to optimize our sea-food resources.
Dorr further made the case that island vegetation gave it a botanical
distinctiveness not duplicated elsewhere-and who knew what further
scientific exploration of the marine life might disclose-and here he
surely underestimated the cumulative biological and medical benefits
developed in the MDIBL [70] and the Jackson Laboratory [71], both
scientific institutions derived from Dorr's philanthropy.
Dorr repeatedly emphasized that despite its remoteness, "the sheer
beauty" of MDI caused visitation and settlement to increase "by leaps
and bounds." As was true of Lenox, on the Maine coast "life was gay
and free and wholly out of doors-boating, climbing, picnicking, buck-
boarding, and sitting on the rocks with book or friend
the summer
visitor possessed the Island." ("Our Seacoast National Park,"
Page
16
Appalachia, 1920). This context was "the impulse [from which] the
movement for public reservations and the national park arose, springing
from memory of its pleasantness and the desire to preserve in largest
measure possible, the beauty and freedom of the Island for the people's
need." Given this context, why did the Berkshires not generate a
movement for federally protected public land? A worthy topic.
To conclude. Certain human achievements are conspicuous because we
can clearly trace their causes; most, however, have influences that are
not clearly discernable. The Berkshire county contribution to Dorr's
efforts on MDI are of the latter sort. No evidence has been found of a
dominant influence without which the park building experiment would
have failed. Instead, the evidence supports the importance of the Kane,
Jesup, Vanderbilt, and Wharton families in providing Dorr with
unanticipated opportunities. Similarly, the generation of relatives that
preceded Dorr to the Berkshires could not foresee that their pioneering
of the Lenox cottage industry would provide Dorr with stewardship
models that would be applied to what Wharton might have characterized
as a one hundred square mile coastal Maine "watering hole."
Inspired by his Berkshire sojourns, Dorr's actions were risky in a way
we can little imagine today. Conservation was still in its infancy. Teddy
Roosevelt was just becoming known as a conservation pioneer. Securing
congressional approval for the establishment of a national park was
rarely successful-and had never been achieved for landscape east of the
Mississippi. Even with the liberating authority of the 1906 Antiquities
Act, the federal government had not established the management
apparatus for its conservation policies. No one in the Department of the
Interior had the national parks as their responsibility-there was no
National Park Service. Legal standards for the sale, exchange, or
disposal of public lands were not yet formed. When faced with Dorr's
gift of 5,000 acres of land in 1915, congressmen were at wits end about
the sanity of this prospective donor.
Page I 17
We must credit the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the Trustees of
Reservations with providing George Dorr and Charles W. Eliot with a
model that could be coupled with the special coastal Maine conditions-
and taken in new directions. At the turn of the century, Dorr's risky park
building project was coupled to a community four hundred miles distant.
Lenox whispered to him about the days when this community was
coming of age and opportunities seemed endless. The hills of western
Massachusetts should take a bow for helping to define Dorr's character
as well as the institutions and protected landscapes of Mount Desert
Island. [72]
Thank you. I look forward to your comments and questions.
:
Letox Talk Oct. 21, 2018
SLIDE LIST
1. Bar Harbor map
2. S. G.Ward.
3. Highwood plan by Upjohn.
4. Park Street from State House to #3
5. Boston Common
6. Anna Barker Hozard Wood
7. Jamaica Pond and Dorr residence
8. R.W. Eversoi's son, Edward.
9. Thomas Wien Ward
10. Oakwood
11. Highwood-Taralewood Vigitor Center.
12. Highlawn
13. Beacon Hill viceo of Back Bay, 1857.
14. Commonwealth Avenue, 1872.
15. 18 commonwealth. Dorr residence.
16. Oldform
17. Resticator plenic
18. Charles Eliot
19. Emerald Necklace
20. Harvard president Charles William Eliot (1869-1909)
21. Path Commetter at Eagle Lake
22 Music Room, Real Harbor site of first HCTPR meet.
23- HCTPR, 2nd ed.
24 G.B. DORR
25. Kane famely at Saranac have
Talk
Slide List
2.
A6. Kane estate on Shore Path, Bar Herbor
27 Kane pleque: "A man of kindness who foundhis happiness
28. Mrs.Kane + 6BD in giving others pleasure 1913.
29. Kane Path at Tarn
30 Belvoir Terrace, herrox honce of M. Jeseep.
32. 6-B Dorr and cuarles W.Eliot, Jordan Pand.
31. lloors K. Jeoup
33. Jeseep Democial Library
34. Interior of Jesup M.L
35. Jesup Path.
36. Illustration of George W.Vandubilt and Edith V.
37. Edith Jones, 19 years.
38. Point d' headie Barttarber residence & Vansubilte.
34. Reef Point
40. F.L. Olnsted and C. Vary
41. Central Park illestration-
42. Ashville imporclighed Biltnore landscape.
43. F.L.O. at Biltwore
44. Biltmore gardens.
45. W.D.and Enily Sloan [Vandebilt].
46. Gifford Pinishot
47. Pinchot quote
48. Grey Towers, Milford, PA.
49. Guy hawell, architect.
50. Everson Hall, Harvard University, 1905.
sk Talk
Slide List.
3.
A
Building of the Arts.
51.
George and Roselind Howard,
C.
1875.
1
2
52. E3 A George Howard, 9th Eal of Carlisle, daughter Dorothy. (900
53 Nowoorth Castle
55 A Housed Cadle, Youtzhere Brideshead Revisiled)
54. Dixey family-hosts of Lord Howard & daughter, 1906
56.
7
57. Edith Wharton
58. Streer be Mosts Spring gathering of children @ 1915.
59. Eastern SierraNevada lts. - lt. Whitney
60. Maine gov. P. Baxter and GBDorr climbing elt. Katahdin (2
61. The loreat and gaidees
62. William aid Henoy James
63. William Javes by Sarah Whitnea Wypear.
64 Beatrix Forrand
65. Chails Sprape Sayent, Accord Airoretun director.
Cole. G.B.Daron Dar let.
67. G.B.Dorr at overlook of Jackson Laboratory
68. Carton map.
69. Louis a Thoron Endicott
70. MDIBL.
71. Jackson Labortary
72 Eyes
CANP
Want to learn more about Lenox history?
Bryan, Clark W. The Book of Berkshire: Describing and Illustrating its Hills and Homes. North Egremont,
MA : Past Perfect Books, 1993.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 917.441 Bryan
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 917.441 Bryan
Online edition at Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/bookofberkshired00brya
Chague, Jan. History of Lenox Furnace and Lenox Dale. Lenox MA: privately printed, 2015.
Available for sale at the Lenox Historical Society
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.412 Chague
Digital Commonwealth. Images from the Lenox Library archives and the Lenox Historical Society.
Accessible through https://lenoxlib.org/local-resources/digital-commonwealth/
Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration of Massachusetts. The Berkshire Hills.
New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce, 1939.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 917.441 Federal
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 917.441 Federal
Online edition at Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/berkshirehills00fede,
Field, David D. A History of the County of Berkshire, Massachusetts, in Two Parts. Pittsfield, MA: S. .W.
Bush, 1829.
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.41 Field
Online edition at Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/historyofcountyo00fiel
Gilder, Cornelia Brooke, and Julia Conklin Peters. Hawthorne's Lenox: the Tanglewood Circle. Charleston,
SC: History Press, 2008.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.412 Gilder
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.412 Gilder
Jackson, Richard S., and Cornelia Brooke Gilder. Houses of the Berkshires: 1870-1930. New York:
Acanthus Press, 2011.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.41 Jackson
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 974.41 Jackson
Kennedy, Lucy. Lenox at 250: An Updated History. Kindle ebook, 2016.
Available for sale at Amazon.com
Lenox Library Association. Images of America: Lenox. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2016.
Available for sale at the Lenox Library and The Bookstore
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.412 Lenox
Mallary, R. DeWitt. Lenox and the Berkshire Highlands. New York: G.P. Putnam's sons, 1902.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 917.4412 Mallary
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 917.4412 Mallary
Online edition at Internet Archive: https://archive.org/details/lenoxberkshirehi00mall
One Hundredth Anniversary of the Founding of Lenox Academy. Pittsfield, MA: Sun Printing Company,
1905.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.412 Lenox
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.412 Lenox
Online edition at Internet Archive:https://archive.org/details/onehundredthanni00leno
Owens, Carole. The Berkshire Cottages: a Vanishing Era. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Cottage Press, 1984.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.41 Owens
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 974.41 Owens
Owens, Carole. The Berkshires: Coach Inns to Cottages. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2004.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.41 Owens
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 974.41 Owens
Seaman, Judy. Lenox Through the Years 1767-2017. DVD, color, 1 hour 56 mins.
Available for sale at The Bookstore
Tucker, George H. A History of Lenox. Lenox, MA: Lenox Library Association, 1992.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.412 Tucker
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 974.412 Tucker
Wood, David H. Lenox: Massachusetts Shire Town. Lenox MA: Published by the Town, 1969.
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: Nonfiction 974.412 Wood
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Desk 974.412 Wood
Yudkin, Jeremy. The Lenox School of Jazz: A Vital Chapter in the History of American Music and Race
Relations. South Egremont, MA: Fashaw, 2006.
Available for sale at the Lenox Library
Circulating copy at the Lenox Library: MUSIC Nonfiction 781.65 Yudkin
Reference copy at the Lenox Library: Reference Office Nonfiction 781.65 Yudkin
9/26/2018
Xfinity Connect Inbox
RE: Lenox Library Lecture Series
Amy Lafave
2:44 PM
To Jeremy Yudkin, Ronald Epp Copy Christy Cordova
Dear Dr. Epp:
I understand that you emailed my information librarian for reassurance that you would
have technical support for your Distinguished Lecture powerpoint, and were dismayed
at my inattentiveness to your inital query to me.
Here is my response to you below, which I am embarrassed to say was in my Drafts,
and not sent, as I believed to be the case. My apologies.
Dear Ron:
I
am looking forward to your talk! I waitressed at Blantyre to put myself through
undergrad many years ago, so the Dorr property is a familiar one.
Our laptop is a Window 7 vintage; it will take your flash drive. There is a remote for the
projector, but I have not been always successful in getting it to talk to the laptop. So
Jeremy's suggestion of coming a little early is a good idea. I have operated the laptop,
taking cues from the presenter, as a last resort.
The [corded] microphone is plugged into a podium, but it has its own stand, and can be
taken off the holder if you wish to walk a bit.
Glad to hear you don't want to "cross your fingers and hope for the best" when it
comes to technology.
Amy Lafave
The Jim Chervenak Library Director
Lenox Library
18 Main St., Lenox MA 01240
413-637-2630 x121
All email messages and attached content sent from and to this email account are public
records unless qualified as an exemption under the Massachusetts Public Records Law.
From: Jeremy Yudkin [mailto:yudkinjaf@gmail.com]
Sent: 2018 8:48 AM
8/28/2018
Xfinity Connect Inbox
Re: Mr. Dorr & A.F. Oakey
Cornelia Gilder
9:10 PM
To Ronald & Elizabeth Epp
1 attachment View Open in browser Download
Aha Alexander Forbes Oakey! I have quite a fat file on him because I have been
interested in the Lenox connection. He was born in 1851 and died in San Francisco in
1916. He seems to have a very colorful life and I really wish I knew more.
In his mid-twenties he bought the lot on the corner of Sunset and Yokun Ave in Sept 1875
and went into debt building a house (preumsably on speculation). The Deputy Sheriff
threatened him in 1877 and 1878 with jail time in Pittsfield, but he seems to have
managed to elude that. The house he began was later reworked by McKim for another
client. One house in Lenox he designed for Ellen Shaw and General Francis Channing
Barlow in 1876 survives today opposite Ventfort Hall. (1885 picture attached)
In the 1880s he was practicing in New York City but there are indications of some
scandalous affair. Emma Lazarus gossiped with Henry James in a letter in 1885 that
"Aleck" Oakey claims to be in Venice but is actually living in Newark, NJ. Anyway, his
family seems to have frequented Lenox. I have a letter from an S. Oakey (possibly mother
or sister both were Sarahs) to John Sargent (next door neighbor of the Dorrs)
congratulating him of his 80th Birthday at this time.
Anyway Oakey moved to California in 1889 and by the time he died in 1916 was
described as an upholder of "one of the finest traditions of his profession with a dignity and
distinction in striking contrast to the rough and ready methods so generally prevalent
heretofore in the West." It also says he designed the Villa Mattei near Rome and a
mansion in Santiago, Chile. He seems to have gotten around!
Nini
On Tue, Aug 28, 2018 at 5:21 PM Ronald Epp < eppster2@comcast.net> wrote:
Hi Nini,
I have been scrutinizing online Lenox historic maps, specifically the
1876 Berkshire County map which shows an A.F. Oakey property on
Sunset Street. His residence?
8/22/2018
Xfinity Connect Re_Mr_Dorr in Lenox Printout
Cornelia Gilder
8/21/2018 9:06 AM
Re: Mr. Dorr in Lenox
To Ronald & Elizabeth Epp
Hello Ron, Good to hear from you, and I will put my mind to transferring the images
you'sd like to use. The Edith Wharton's Lenox ones are well organized on my
Dropbox, but I am not sure about the Hawthorne's Lenox one. I'll spend a little time on
this.
Meanwhile here are a few ones I can send directly including several from the
wonderful Jay family album from 1898-9 I was lent by William Patten. It includes a
picture of the Schermerhorn house in Newport (quite modest and similar to Pinecroft).
Also attached is a picture from the Lenox Library I nearly used in EWL of the 50th
Anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. William Schermerhorn at Hillside in Lenox (a house they
were renting from Grace Kuhn). I have tried to work out who everyone is because
Nannie Wharton was at the party as are both the Kanes.
I'd be glad to have lunch with you before your talk on Oct 21. To be continued on the
photos Nini
On Mon, Aug 20, 2018 at 11:56 AM Ronald Epp < eppster2@comcast.net> wrote:
Hi Nini,
In case you have wondered about the status of my talk to the
Lenox Library Association, I have completed several drafts for my
October 21st talk and now need to whittle away at the length.
Your offer to share images for my presentation is most generous.
The images from Hawthorne's Lenox that would be useful are
from pages 24, 26, 28, 62, 78, and 79. Similarly, from Edith
Wharton's Lenox the images from pages 13, 35, 55, 56, and 83.
I
wonder whether you have any images not used in your books
relating to Charles Sedgwick, John Innes Kane and other
Schermerhorn relatives (especially Annie Cottenet Schermerhorn
Kane), Morris and Maria Jesup, Richard and Ellen Tappan Dixey,
and Florence or Emily Vanderbilt Sloane,
XFINITY Connect Sent
Re: G.B. Dorr & Distinquished Lecture Series, Lenox Library
Association
Ronald Epp
12:50 PM
To Cornelia Gilder
Hi Nini,
I just placed an order for your most recent book since I cannot proceed to
prepare for my talk until I have read it.
Over the past six weeks I have been deeply engaged in research for my
talk, neglecting duties--without regret--of getting settled here in my new
home. I have traveled back to the 1840's and Samuel and Anna Ward's
bold move, to the Dorr purchase in 1853 of Highlawn, and eventually
ending with the Dorr-Wharton letters prior to her sale of the Mount. I've
re-read our correspondance over the last fifteen years.
My talk a decade ago focused on what influence Dorr brought from
Mount Desert island to Lenox, whereas now I've turned this on its head
and asked whether Lenox influenced Dorr's career as a park developer.
I
am thinking of titling the talk: "Edith Wharton's Path to Acadia National
Park" or "Lenox Influences on the Father of Acadia National Park". The
first strikes me as too specific; the second allows me to pull in six
decades of scant information on his Berkshire visits, including Ward and
Dorr family residences that you cover so well in Hawthorne's Lenox. Still
working on the title and the scope of the talk. Your thoughts would be
much appreciated. Whether I do a slide presentation is up in the air since
I have very few suitable images for the content.
I will delay my May 22 visit to Lenox until I have worked through your
book and made arrangements to look at documentation at the Lenox
Library ( do you suggest that Amy Lefave is the best point of contact?)
Library.
Best,
Ron
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
7 Peachtree Terrace
Farmington, CT 06032
603-491-1760
eppster2@comcast.net
On April 11, 2018 at 9:57 AM Cornelia Gilder wrote:
Dear Ron,
So glad to here about the prospect of you speaking about George B. Dorr at the Lenox
Library! I have pencilled that in for Sunday October 21, and also May 22 would be
great for lunch together. We could talk about images then. You don't need any
permission to use any of the images I might have from Hawthorne's Lenox for a
powerpoint program (only for publication) so no worry about that.
Nice to think of you settled in Farmington! Keep in touch as your May plan becomes
firmer. Nini
On Mon, Apr 9, 2018 at 5:01 PM, Ronald Epp wrote:
Hi Nini,
I hope you and yours are faring well. I passed along a suggestion
you made to me several years ago about the Lenox Library Lecture
Series and received an invitation today from professor Yudkin (see
below). I will accept the first date, my 76th birthday. I would be so
very pleased if you could attend.
https://connect.xfinity.com/appsuite/#!!&app=io.ox/mail&folder=default0//qj%7Bo5Xlp%7D
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Berkshire Cottagers and the Father of ANP Lenox Library Association Lenox, MA 10-21-18
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10/21/2018