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

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Wild Gardens and Pathways at the Mt Edith Wharton and the American Garden Lenox 2009
The Mount." Edith Wharton and the
"Wild Gardens and Pa th Rways at
American Garden. Lenox: 2009.
WILD GARDENS AND
PATHWAYS AT THE MOUNT:
GEORGE B. DORR AND THE
MOUNT DESERT ISLAND INFLUENCE
RONALD H. Epp
T
he Beinecke Library at Yale University contains a handful of Edith Wharton letters to pioneer
conservationist and horticulturist George Bucknam Dorr (1853-1944). 1 This correspondence is
commonly passed over by scholars. 2 The ten Wharton letters written between 1902 and 1907 are
unremarkable when isolated from the richly diverse social context of the Gilded Age. They are
remarkable if attention is given to previously unrecognized interactions between the Dorr and Jones
families that began twenty years earlier in Bar Harbor, Maine, where Wharton's brother and sister-in-
law Frederic and Mary Jones summered. Furthermore, the connection of the Dorr family with Lenox,
Massachusetts-site of Wharton's own summer house-tracks back another fifty years to the era of
Catharine Sedgwick and Fanny Kemble. 3
The Wharton correspondence to Dorr ranges in length from a few sentences to several
hundred words. All but two letters were written during an eighteen-month period between September
1904 and February 1906. Some specialists might describe them as technical, narrowly focused
on Wharton's solicitations of Dorr's horticultural expertise. Yet this is not inconsequential, for
The Mount's garden historian, Betsy Anderson, indicated on a recent site inspection that there is
little evidence of Wharton's use of expert landscaping advice outside her family. Unfortunately, no
correspondence from Dorr to Wharton has survived.
There has been no inquiry into the connection between the location and naming of gardens
and paths at The Mount and Dorr's professional and cultural life on Mount Desert Island. What
character traits did he bring to the table in relating to Wharton that encouraged her to invite him
repeatedly to her home? What motivated her to involve this little-known Boston Brahmin in her wild
gardening? Wharton's letters to Dorr refer frequently to a path at The Mount named for him. Why
would she choose to honor him in this way? It is intriguing that Dorr left us no documentation of his
relationship with her, especially since his advice to Wharton is the only recorded case of his engaging in
a horticultural consultancy removed from Mount Desert Island. Many of these questions will never be
resolved since, following his death in 1944, the National Park Service disposed of most of the contents
of the Bar Harbor estate that he had gifted to the government.
However, in 2006 new primary evidence for the Dorr-Jones family relationship came to light.
Both families developed their Bar Harbor properties in the 1880s, and their social interactions are
75
RONALD H. EPP
recorded in a guest book kept by the Dorr family at their cottage called Oldfarm. For more than sixty
years the Bar Harbor Historical Society Museum displayed this document, yet preservation restrictions
prohibited scholarly access until 2004 when the entries were inventoried as part of my biographical
research on Dorr as the founder and first superintendent of Acadia National Park (1916-44).
The garden concepts of the park founder were framed by generations of family gardening
in Salem, Massachusetts, prior to the family's relocation to Boston following the Revolutionary
War. The importance of household gardens is repeatedly expressed in the surviving manuscripts
of Dorr's maternal grandfather, Harvard College treasurer and renowned banker Thomas Wren
Ward (1786-1858). His son Samuel Gray Ward (1817-1907), frequently identified as the first
Lenox cottager, "had a passion for gardening and manfully ploughed and planted in the beautiful
surroundings of Lenox."
The Maine coastline dominated Dorr's later life, Boston and the European continent were
the focus of his middle years, but the countryside in Lenox and outside Boston shaped his childhood.
While the family townhouse adjacent to Boston Common afforded little opportunity for extensive
gardening, young George spent summers in country homes in Jamaica Plain, Canton, Nahant, and
Lenox where his interests in gardening and birding were encouraged and the nearby woods afforded
him pathways for exploration.
At that time many Boston Brahmins looked beyond Newport and Nahant for scenic
stimulation and recreational opportunities. Mount Desert Island had been celebrated by Hudson River
School artists prior to the Civil War, and increasingly word spread about the beauty of Frenchman Bay,
Figure 1. Compass Harbor, Frenchman Bay, Mount Desert Island. Photograph courtesy
of the National Park Service, Acadia National Park's William Otis Sawtelle Collections
and Research Center.
76
WILD GARDENS AND PATHWAYS AT THE MOUNT
Figure 2. George B. Dorr, Harvard College, 1874. Photograph courtesy of the
National Park Service, Acadia National Park's William Otis Sawtelle Collections
and Research Center.
the uniquely colored mountains towering over the deepest fiord in North America, and the primeval
old-growth forests. The Dorrs were captivated and in 1868 purchased more than a hundred acres of Bar
Harbor woodland fronting the bay (figure 1). o
At Harvard College Dorr received no specialized instruction in botany. Like his elder stepcousin
Charles Sprague Sargent Dorr possessed exceptional botanical aptitude derived from an amalgam of
family values, wide reading, and extensive field experience-a not uncommon lineage at the time.7
He also acknowledged the "unsurpassed" influence of landscape designer Andrew Jackson Downing,
crediting to him the "foresight
[for] our present American system of broad free municipal parks"
incorporating picturesque precepts that Dorr eventually applied on Mount Desert Island.
After Dorr's graduation from Harvard College in 1874 (figure 2), he and his parents traveled
abroad for several years, where much of their activity centered on visits to a great variety of European
gardens. More than a dozen essays written by Dorr in his later life detail these visits to both modest and
grand European gardens; not content with a mere tourist's acquaintance, Dorr's scholarly curiosity led
him to pursue their historical origins and development. In those early years Dorr was most impressed
with the simple gardens surrounding English cottages. The reason he offers for this preference is
unambiguous and yet surprising for someone of his class: their modest efforts brought beauty into the
monotony of their lives.
Dorr describes the specific location that the family chose in 1878 for their new Mount Desert
home, "[a] broad, flat top of an old sea-cliff, facing north
to
the long reach of Upper Frenchman
Bay" (figure 3).° Few properties on the island offered such superb views, and the considerable water
77
11. LI
Figure 3. George B. Dorr on the Mount Desert Island mountain bearing his name. Photograph courtesy of the National Park
Service, Acadia National Park's William Otis Sawtelle Collections and Research Center.
78
WILD GARDENS AND PATHWAYS AT THE MOUNT
frontage was cloaked in dense woods. Dorr repeatedly insists that the gardens at Oldfarm, initially
developed by his mother, would not have come into being were it not for the effect on the family of
the beautiful old English gardens and the remnants of the old English homes they visited. It is Dorr's
sincerest conviction that the Oldfarm gardens, more than anything else, led him step by step to the
founding of Acadia National Park.
Mary Gray Ward Dorr (1820-1901) and her son modified the landscape, acquired local plant
stock, and transplanted their hardy Massachusetts flowering shrubs and herbaceous plants to Mount
Desert Island (figure 4). They were intent on experimenting to determine whether their relocated
garden would adapt to local conditions. In 1883 Edith Wharton's brother Frederic Jones and his wife,
Mary, purchased their original two-acre Bar Harbor property, Reef Point. The Jones family relationship
with the Dorrs likely dates to this time when Edith Newbold Jones (later Wharton) joined her brother,
sister-in-law, and niece, Beatrix, in Bar Harbor, rented a cottage, "mealed" at the Hotel des Isles, and
explored the coast and mountainous terrain. Teddy Wharton was also in Bar Harbor that summer; it is
probable that he and Dorr interacted since they had been Harvard College classmates ten years earlier.
Figure 4. Entrance to Oldfarm from the southwest drive, Bar Harbor, Maine.
Photograph courtesy of the National Park Service, Acadia National Park's William
Otis Sawtelle Collections and Research Center.
79
RONALD H. EPP
The Dorr and Jones family exercised leadership as charter members in the Bar Harbor Village
Improvement Association. 10 It is not until July 1891, however, that we have confirmation of a certain
level of "intimacy" between the families. That July Mary Cadwalader Jones pens a poem beside her
signature in the Oldfarm guest book; twenty-year-old daughter Beatrix is a guest-perhaps only for
dinner-the following September. Their most notable shared friends are the James brothers, Henry and
William. For weeks at a time William, the famed Harvard philosophy professor, and his wife, Alice, are
Oldfarm guests. 11
The social interaction between Oldfarm and Reef Point likely had an impact on the
professional development of young Beatrix Jones, who would become the eminent landscape architect
Beatrix Farrand. Although Dorr's influence on Farrand lies beyond the scope of this paper, the depth
of Farrand's appreciation of Dorr is reflected in the 1917 article she wrote for Scribner's Magazine on
"The National Park on Mount Desert Island." Here she refers to his decades of "unswerving and far-
sighted devotion to the ultimate usefulness of the island" and that every Mount Desert Island visitor
"owes a large share of his enjoyment to the clear vision, the wise development, and the self-sacrificing
enthusiasm of [George Dorr]. "12
GARDENS - PERSONAL AND PROFESSIONAL
We know that a rose garden lay to the northeast of Dorr's Oldfarm home screened by a rock
ridge to the east that ran down to Compass Harbor. Cedar hedges enclosed garden aths-bordered
by phlox, peonies, false Solomon's seal, gladioli, and golden lilies-that led visitors to huge vegetable
gardens intermingled with fruit trees, all maintained for at least half a century. The local paper
described the property as "one of the most attractive of the showplaces of the village," praising its
wood-encircled, old-fashioned flower gardens as sufficiently diversified to "fit the taste of any flower
lover." 13 What remains undocumented are the planting designs; the role of indigenous species; whether
plantings enhanced scenic views; which species were native to the property; or whether artificial devices
(for example, lighting or sculpture) were design elements-all matters that may have influenced his
advice to Wharton.
Dorr was not content to restrict himself to family gardening. The famous Boston flower shows,
the woody plant experimentation at the Arnold Arboretum, and Sargent's Garden and Forest motivated
him to start a business that reflected not only his values but those of his parents and grandparents. He
established the first island nursery in 1896, converting more than thirty acres of adjacent Oldfarm
property into the Mount Desert Nurseries. Although both Dorr and Sargent lacked formal instruction
in the botanical sciences, they combined the horticulturist's interest in cultivated species with the
botanist's research focus on wild plants, a "relatively rare combination" for the era. 14
By 1901 the Bar Harbor Record referred to the "immense scale on which this business is
conducted," with plant stock shipped to the West Coast as well as meeting the demands of the
burgeoning hotel and cottage communities. 15 Wharton surely heard about this expansion from her
niece since Farrand's Mount Desert commissions utilized Dorr's plant stock. In subsequent years,
greenhouse expansion and reconsideration of the purposes of a nursery anticipated what we today
refer to as a garden center. The plans included a forty-eight-foot-long nursery gallery showcasing
80
WILD GARDENS AND PATHWAYS AT THE MOUNT
Dorr's "unrivalled collection of photographs of the Wild National Parks of the West and a great many
photographs of flowers.' "16 Unfortunately, the catastrophic island forest fire of 1947 laid ruin to scores
of businesses-including Dorr's nurseries-and the cottage culture.
WHARTON'S LETTERS TO DORR
As we focus on the era of Wharton's letters to Dorr, the year 1901 proves particularly
significant. Both lost their mother that year; the Whartons purchased farmland in Lenox to experience
what she described as "the joys of six or seven months a year among fields and woods of my own";1
Wharton's early short story collection Crucial Instances was published; and Dorr became the central
figure in an organized effort to conserve Mount Desert Island. Harvard University President Charles W.
Eliot gathered together conservation-minded island residents to establish the Hancock County Trustees
of Public Reservations, a group that included George W. Vanderbilt. 18 Dorr was both the Trustees'
organizational executive and the field agent who was almost singularly responsible for the acquisition
of more than five thousand acres of land that would be accepted by the federal government in 1916, a
precedent-setting effort recounted in Dorr's The Story of Acadia National Park. 19
Dorr's involvement in the development of The Mount gardens may have had as much to
do with his Bar Harbor and Boston social interactions as with his horticultural reputation. When
the timeline of Dorr's and Wharton's lives are compared, we see that Wharton's first known visit to
George W. Vanderbilt's Biltmore estate in Asheville, North Carolina (November 26, 1902) is the day
before Dorr arrived. Vanderbilt was a fellow trustees incorporator whose Point d'Acadie estate was a
short walk from Oldfarm; he was also a friend of Dorr's who shared a command and appreciation of
languages and a serious interest in woodlands. Whether the Vanderbilts arranged these visits to overlap
we cannot say.
Less than a month after her departure from Asheville, Wharton writes to Dorr-the first of the
ten surviving letters to him in the Beinecke Library-expressing the hope that they might be able to
accept his dinner invitation in Boston. 21
In the summer of 1904 Dorr planned a backpacking trip to the largely unexplored Sierra
Nevada Mountains south of Yosemite. En route he stopped at The Mount, as indicated by a letter
Wharton wrote him on September 3 that begins the most fruitful period of their correspondence. She
has found one of his books on the terrace after his departure (which was forwarded to Boston), and
she thanks him for his help with landscape design problems. Wharton flatters him by stating that he
left behind "so many fruitful ideas that I often feel you are not really gone, and must be somewhere
about, ready to answer the new questions." Moreover, she informs him that "your path is finished,
and the task of planting its borders now confronts me; & we are just about to attack the laying out of
the path from the flower-garden to the little valley which is to be my future wild garden." Referring to
Dorr's trip West, she is hopeful that "you may be able to spare us a day or two on your return" when
the autumn work will be nearly over and future plans can be discussed unless "my pigmy planting will
quite vanish from your mind among the giant boles of the redwoods!"
In late 1904 Wharton writes Dorr (October 29) that she is delighted at the prospect of
another visit with him since she and Teddy both are "so interested to hear about your explorations."
81
RONALD H. EPP
A month later (November 29), she acknowledges his October letter but fears that her letter to him may
have gone astray, and regrets that a November visit seems unlikely since they are snowed under "and
therefore of no interest from the landscape gardener's standpoint." Nonetheless, she hopes for a visit in
1905 when "[you could] see how far I was able to carry out your advice, and tell me what to do next."
Dorr's final visit to Biltmore (October 18, 1905) precedes the Whartons' Christmas visit,
a festive occasion when jasmine, honeysuckle, and laurel set the tone for a seasonal fete for the 350
people who lived and worked on the estate. Two days after Christmas she writes Dorr from the
Biltmore house stating that she has "never received an invitation more comprehensively hospitable than
yours," regarding his proposal for a January 1906 visit to his Commonwealth Avenue home in Boston,
where she looks forward to "good talks on horticulture, free-will and predestination." That the later
two topics are mentioned should startle no one familiar with the Dorr and James family associations
with psychical research and philosophical inquiry. While Dorr was on Wharton's mind, however, he
was much occupied on the same day with the Harvard University dedication of Emerson Hall. Four
years earlier Dorr had been charged by the overseers with raising sufficient funds to erect a facility to
house Harvard's philosophy and psychology departments.
Two months later (February 17, 1906), Wharton informs Dorr of the postponement of her
departure for Europe until March 10, expressing hope that she and her husband may yet be permitted
"a little visit" to Dorr's home-and extending an open-ended invitation to Dorr once they return from
Europe in June to pay us "a longer visit than last summer," the only evidence we have of Dorr's visit in
1905. A week later she writes to a mutual friend of theirs, Justice Robert Grant, that "your letter makes
me still more regretful that we have had to give up our plan of going to Mr. Dorr for a few days this
month,"2 yet on the next day she writes to Dorr that she expects him within the week in New York.
On her return from France later that year, she writes Dorr on August 21 asking him to come
to The Mount since Teddy is eager to show him the property "improvements." The next to last letter
is problematic since it is undated though contextually fits this time frame; it simply asks Dorr to arrive
on another date when "the Edward Robinsons, the Grant LaFarges, and Roger Fry (our new curator of
paintings at the Museum)"2 will be present. Concluding these known exchanges, Wharton writes to
him on July 24 in response to another invitation from him; she regrets that she must stay at The Mount
and work, although Teddy is especially sorry that they can't now have another "Bar Harbor Revisited."
There is more talk of flowers and again encouragement that Dorr visit in August or September and see
"the George Dorr path, the new pond, and other improvements."
This one-way correspondence provides unique biographical details about both individuals
and demonstrates Wharton's persistence in developing a relationship with Dorr not restricted
to horticultural matters; although Beatrix Jones Farrand is nowhere mentioned, her role in this
relationship cannot be overlooked. Wharton's repeated invitations to Dorr should not be treated
casually, recognizing that the Whartons were very selective in their invitations to The Mount. These
letters also show Wharton's sincere appreciation of Dorr's gardening counsel, demonstrated by
repeated references to "the Dorr path." Since this was the only physical feature of the estate named
for a person, it is reasonable to conclude that she is acknowledging the value of his advice. Finally, the
correspondence shows that the Whartons relished their shared Bar Harbor experiences and that they
were sincerely disappointed at not being able to accept Dorr's repeated invitations to his Boston home.
However, if written discussion of common acquaintances, literature, and one's emotional landscape
are the measures of deeper levels of friendship, then we have little evidence that they were "intimate"
friends-a highly selective term of endearment in that era.
82
WILD GARDENS AND PATHWAYS AT THE MOUNT
WILD GARDENS
These letters lack specifics to flesh out the details of Dorr's path and the development of wild
gardens at The Mount and on Mount Desert Island. We do know that Dorr's indebtedness to the
pioneering work of William Robinson is documented in The Dorr Papers by the scores of references to
The Garden serial that Robinson launched shortly after the 1870 publication of The Wild Garden.
What is a "wild garden"? A logician might dismiss this conjugation as an oxymoron. But
sidestepping this rationalistic approach, it could be argued empirically that a wild garden is a grouping
of what is native to a region prior to any efforts to "naturalize." Harvard Botanist M. F. Fernald in
"The Acadian Plant Sanctuary" similarly advocates the conservation of environments "which by good
fortune still remain in their natural condition.' "24 Judith B. Tankard's recent introduction to a reprint
of The Wild Garden points out that William Robinson was not advocating wilderness but "landscapes
enhanced by the use of carefree hardy, native plants. "25 Robinson also proposes placing "perfectly hardy
exotic plants under conditions where they will thrive without further care" and situates these gardens
"on the outer fringes of the lawn, in grove, park, copse, or by woodland walks and drives.
One of Dorr's objectives was to foster interest in the preservation of the beauty of native plants
threatened by the progress of development. Dorr recognized that woodland plants require woodland
conditions and that experimentation in naturalizing such plants requires consideration of a host of
environmental considerations (for example, climate, rock texture, shade, and SO on). Indeed, wild
gardens were experiments, annual efforts to determine which new species would prosper and which
would not. Robin Karson could just as easily have been speaking of Dorr when she emphasized that in
the wild gardening of Warren H. Manning, "the failures were as interesting as the successes." "27"
Even after Wharton departed from The Mount, wild plant botany was still viewed as a
youthful enterprise. Commenting in print on Dorr's Acadian plant sanctuary proposal in 1914,
landscape architect C. Grant LaFarge emphasized that "to acquire this knowledge under present
conditions is well-nigh impossible. The country is too vast; its flora too scattered. Even the most superb
examples of wild growth are but stimulating suggestions
Your plan offers all of this. "28
The Wild Gardens of Acadia, established by Dorr in 1916, was described by Beatrix
Jones Farrand as "an offshoot corporation" of the Hancock County Trustees. 29 Its purpose was to
cooperate with the federal government in developing a seacoast national park that would not only
conserve Acadian flora and fauna but go beyond the National Park Service mandate and provide
"opportunities for observation to students of plant life, of gardening, forestry and landscape art"
of native plants in legally protected sanctuaries accessible to future generations, undiminished in
diversity of genera and species. 30
As an advocacy instrument, the Wild Gardens of Acadia published ten small but widely
circulated monographs (part of the Sieur de Monts Publications series, 1916-18) promoting public
understanding of Acadian flora and fauna, set within the cultural, historic, and scientific justifications
for conserving more of the available island. The corporation also acquired land-much of it donated
by Dorr-that was then turned to purposes consistent with its mission. The most enduring and visible
expression of Dorr's application of the Wild Gardens of Acadia corporation is the Mount Desert Island
Biological Laboratory, established in 1921; today this scientific enterprise is a world-famous center
for the study of epithelial transport, the physiology of marine vertebrates, and the toxic effects of
environmental pollutants. 31
83
RONALD H. EPP
As the Country Place Era unfolded, the "wild garden" concept continued to be open to
diverse interpretations. In his memoirs, written during the last decade of his life, Dorr presents a view
of wild gardens that I believe he proposed to Wharton nearly forty years earlier: namely, that they are
"permanent gardens of naturalization where the hardy flowering plants, herbaceous and woody, might
be planted in generous groups as though native to the region and become an outstanding exhibit of
what might be planted and grown permanently in it in favorable locations
that brings that beauty
out by proper placing and artistic background SO as to be in harmony with the landscape and a feature
of it."32 We are left to wonder whether there is any evidence that Wharton would have agreed with the
similarly expressive language of Mariana Van Rensselaer, who characterizes the naturalistic gardener
as one who produces "many effects which, under favoring conditions, Nature might have produced
without man's aid. Then, the better the results, the less likely it is to be recognized as an artificial and
artistic result; the more perfectly the artist attains his end, the more likely we are to forget that he has
been at work.
Even those who have walked only the most accessible parts of the current Mount property
realize that marble ledge outcrops are enduring landscape features. These natural objects were not
removed and were critical concerns in siting the drive, the house, and the formal gardens. The
effect of these rocky ledges is a matter of perspective, clearly softened when viewed from the upper
story windows. The Mount itself is deliberately nestled within unseen rocky ledges that define the
foundation, and it appears that Wharton deferred to the natural constraints of the rocky landscape.
Further evidence of the preference for natural landscape is the simple fact that of the 113
acres of the estate, only 10 percent was given over to the placement of physical structures and formal
Figure 5. Oldfarm estate, Bar Harbor, Maine. Photograph courtesy of the National Park Service, Acadia
National Park's William Otis Sawtelle Collections and Research Center.
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WILD GARDENS AND PATHWAYS AT THE MOUNT
gardens. But there are no further details about the selection, development, and use of the property.
Possibly the Whartons' real estate agents advised their clients to acquire sufficient woodland to broaden
and protect the outlook. It is unknown whether plans were developed for garden expansion into the
available woodland.
Wharton's resources may not have been the constraining factor; instead, she may have heeded
Gertrude Jeykll's advice that "the size of a garden has very little to do with its merit."35 Jekyll, creator of
the exceptional gardens at Munstead Wood, knew from experience that large gardens can enslave their
caretakers. Aside from the labor commitment, however, Jeykll's argument is clearly aesthetic: if one
has considerable acreage, "a great part had better be laid out in wood [for] woodland is always restful
and enduringly beautiful. More specifically, she cautions against the then-fashionable efforts at
placement of garden plants in wild places: "Wild gardening is a delightful, and in good hands, a most
desirable pursuit, but no kind of gardening is SO difficult to do well, or is SO full of pitfalls and of paths
of peril. "37 Dorr had the right "hands" for this task: wide travel and a scholarly disposition made him
well versed in European horticulture traditions, his family legacy was couched within the geographical
limitations of New England gardening, and as a nurseryman he was thoroughly familiar with what
could and could not be accomplished in the environment of the Maine coast or the Berkshire landscape
of his boyhood.
Did woodland paths wend their way throughout The Mount property? More than twenty
years ago, Harvard Graduate School of Design scholars affirmed that the flower garden "linked into
adjacent areas with sinuous curving paths emanating from both ends of the east-west axis
[and] the
other sinuous path, to the east, disappeared around the small mount into the meadow en route to the
lake." 38 Furthermore, David Bennett refers to "an extensive system of paths for walks and rides [that]
extended into the woodland, and linked the Mount's grounds to adjacent estates. "39
THE DORR PATH
We cannot be certain that Wharton involved Dorr in the design of his named path-or other
paths-but it is not unreasonable to infer that this path was named for him because of his dominating
influence on its character. His decades of experience as a Mount Desert Island trailbuilder might
suggest paths of roughly uniform width and rough surface. But this would surely have been considered
inappropriate-to impose paths designed for the unusually rugged Maine coast into the Berkshire
Hills. The graduated materials used as borders for Wharton's formal gardens might also have been
incorporated into pathways, becoming more rustic as one walked away from the house. Or she and
Dorr might have weighed the merits of paths of uniform character in order to make them inviting to
her more formally attired guests.
Arguments could be advanced to show that Dorr favored the rugged, forested terrain west of
the property entrance for path development because of his formidable trailbuilding experience with
the severe Mount Desert Island mountains (figure 5). On the other hand, the Dorr memoirs contain
frequent descriptions of path development on less severe topographies such as the Great Meadow
development and its garden paths into downtown Bar Harbor. Indeed, one of his earliest successes was
constructing and landscaping a nearly mile-long bicycle path through a marshy beaver pond in Bear
85
Brook Valley, developed in the mid- 1890s to allow his aging mother walks and gentle carriage rides.
40
In view of available evidence, it is most likely that Dorr advised Wharton on the suitability
of paths to access wild gardens and recommended that she consider linking paths with more formal
walkways. He may have proposed tying these paths to adjacent properties; he played a role in carrying
out a similar plan at that time for linking Mount Desert Island town paths.
Through the expertise of Beatrix Jones Farrand and George B. Dorr, an island off the coast of
Maine would leave its imprint on The Mount. Regrettably, we cannot speak with finality on Wharton's
garden design intentions for the last five years of her residency. Dorr's experience with paths and wild
gardens on Mount Desert Island may have been applied to the Lenox site, but the location of these
landscape features remains unknown. Finally, no property map bears the "Dorr path" name that
Wharton repeatedly claims as an established landscape feature. This omission leads me to conclude that
at one time the Dorr path wended its way through the property-until the woods reclaimed it.
NOTES
1
Edith Wharton's letters to George B. Dorr are contained in folder 753, box 24, in the Edith Wharton Collection, Yale Collection
of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (New Haven, CT).
2 The exception to this is Eleanor Dwight's Edith Wharton: An Extraordinary Life (New York: Abrams, 1994), 116.
3
Richard S. Jackson Jr. and Cornelia Brooke Gilder, Houses of the Berkshires, 1870-1930 (New York: Acanthus, 2006).
4
Thomas Wren Ward papers, Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston.
5
Edward Waldo Emerson, The Early Years of the Saturday Club: 1855-1870 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1918), 110. The Ward
family estate Highwood was located near Highlawn, which belonged to George B. Dorr's paternal aunts and uncles prior to Dorr's
acquisition of the property. Highlawn is the largely forgotten predecessor to Blantyre, an opulent Tudor-style cottage that is now
run as a country-house hotel.
6
The Bar Harbor Historical Society Museum holds the Dorr memoirs, The Dorr Papers. A Guide to 'The Dorr Papers' (2004) has
been prepared by this author and is available with microfilm copies of Dorr's memoirs at the Jesup Memorial Library, Bar Harbor,
ME, and the Sawtelle Research Center, Acadia National Park.
7
S. B. Sutton, Charles Sprague Sargent and the Arnold Arboretum (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1970), chap. 1.
8
Dorr Papers, B2.f.2.
9
Ibid., B1.f.14.
10 Minutes of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association, Bar Harbor Historical Society Museum (Bar Harbor, ME).
11 William James, The Correspondence of William James, vol. 2, ed. I. K. Skrupskelis and E. M. Berkeley (Charlottesville: University
of Virginia Press, 1993), 46, 272. In addition to entertaining James family members in 1886 and 1893, the Oldfarm guest book
documents visits in 1897 and 1907.
12 Beatrix Farrand, "The National Park on Mount Desert Island," Scribner's Magazine 61 (April 1917): 484-94. Farrand family
respect for George Dorr is also evident in Max Farrand's September 1932 correspondence with John D. Rockefeller Jr.,
Rockefeller Archive Center, III.2.I. B110. f.1093, Sleepy Hollow, NY.
WILD GARDENS AND PATHWAYS AT THE MOUNT
13 Bar Harbor Record, May 8, 1901; Bar Harbor Times, April 18, 1928.
14 Sutton, Charles Sprague Sargent, 18, 327.
15 Bar Harbor Record, May 8, 1901.
16 Ibid.
17 Edith Wharton quoted in Millicent Bell's Edith Wharton and Henry James (New York: Braziller, 1965), 78.
18 Minutes for the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations are archived at the Woodlawn Museum, Ellsworth, ME.
19 The Story of Acadia National Park, 3rd ed. (Bar Harbor, ME: Acadia Publishing, 1997).
20 House Guest Book 1895-1996, Biltmore Estate Archives, Asheville, NC.
21 Edith Wharton to George B. Dorr, December 28, 1902. Edith Wharton Collection, Yale Collection of American Literature,
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library (New Haven, CT).
22 Edith Wharton to Robert Grant. Edith Wharton Collection, Yale Collection of American Literature, Beinecke Rare Book and
Manuscript Library (New Haven, CT).
23 In 1906, English artist and critic Roger Fry (1866-1934) was appointed curator of paintings at the Metropolitan Museum of Art
in New York City.
24 Sieur de Monts Publications 5 (1916): 2-9.
25 Judith B. Tankard, introduction to The Wild Garden, by William Robinson, reprint (Portland, OR: Sagapress, 1994), xiii.
26 William Robinson, preface (1881) to The Wild Garden, reprint (Portland, OR: Sagapress, 1994), xvi.
27 Robin Karson, The Muses of Gwinn (Sagaponack, NY: Sagapress/Abrams, 1995), 131.
28 C. Grant LaFarge, in George B. Dorr, "Garden Approaches to the National Monument," Sieur de Monts Publications 17 (1919):
11. See also Ronald H. Epp, "George Dorr's Vision for 'Garden Approaches to Acadia National Park," Chebacco: The Magazine of
the Mount Desert Historical Society 4 (2004): 55-63.
29 Farrand, "The National Park," 494.
30 Wild Gardens of Acadia: By-Laws. Rockefeller Archive Center, III.2. I. B.85.f. 840. Sleepy Hollow, NY.
31 Franklin H. Epstein, ed., A Laboratory by the Sea (Rhinebeck, NY: River Press, 1998) discusses extensively the role of Dorr and
the Wild Gardens of Acadia in the establishment of the Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory.
32 Dorr Papers, B3.f.1.
33 Mariana Van Rensselaer, Art Out-of-Doors (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1893), 4. See her Accents as Well as Broad Effects,
ed. David Gebhard (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1999).
34 Wendy Baker, David Bennett, and Diane Dierkes, Landscape Architectural Analysis and Master Plan for The Mount (Lenox, MA:
Edith Wharton Restoration, Inc., 1982).
35 Gertrude Jeykll, Wood and Garden, reprint (Woodbridge, UK: Antique Collectors' Club, 1981) chap. 14.
36 Ibid., 249.
37 Ibid., 358.
38 Baker, Bennett, and Dierkes, Landscape Architectural Analysis, 58.
39 Eleanor Dwight, in Edith Wharton: An Extraordinary Life, 94, credits this claim to David Bennett.
40 Dorr Papers, B2.f. 6 and 7. See also Margaret Coffin Brown, Pathmakers: Cultural Landscape Report for the Historic Hiking Trail
System of Mount Desert Island (Boston: Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation/National Park Service, 2006), 55-59, 67-74.
87
EDITH WHARTON
AND THE
AMERICAN GARDEN
M
THE MOUNT PRESS
The Mount Press, 2009, Lenox, Massachusetts
CONTENTS
Foreword.
ix
Acknowledgments
x
Introduction
xi
A Genius for Place: American Landscapes of the Country Place Era
Robin Karson
3
Edith Wharton: An Encounter with the Berkshires
Honey Sharp
25
Sensations of the Unexpected: The Untamed Forms and Disciplined
Lines of Edith Wharton's American Villa
David H. Bennett
41
Opposites Attract: The Garden Art of Charles Platt, Maxfield
Parrish, and Edith Wharton
Rebecca Warren Davidson
61
Wild Gardens and Pathways at The Mount: George B. Dorr and the
Mount Desert Island Influence
Ronald H. Epp
75
Circles of Influence: Edith Wharton and the Gardens of the
Anglo-American Expatriate Community
Ethne Clarke
89
Edith Wharton's Plants: Her Influence on the Riviera and in
Southern California
Diane Kostial McGuire
97
The Romantic and the Practical: Edith Wharton and Beatrix
Farrand as Gardeners and Garden Writers
Eleanor Dwight
107
Edith Wharton's Literary Garden
Betsy Anderson
125
Edith Wharton and the Cultivation of Voice, Authority,
Passion, and Privilege
Paula Panich
141
Edith Wharton, The Mount, and the Future
Hugh Hardy
147
Contributors
161
THE MOUNT
Estate & Gardens
October 14, 2009
Mr. Ronald Epp
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
Dear Mr. Epp,
It is my great pleasure to send to you a copy of The Mount's publication, Edith Wharton
and the American Garden. We hope you are as satisfied with the result as we are.
Yours sincerely,
Aant Kgu
Sarah Kogan
www.Editthoharton.org
2 Plunkett Street Box 974 Lenox, MA 01240-0974
Phone: 413-551-5111 . Fax: 413-637-0619 Email: info@edithwharton.org
ROCKEFELLER ARCHIVE CENTER
POCANTICO HILLS
15 DAYTON AVENUE SLEEPY HOLLOW NEW YORK 10591-1598
TELEPHONE (914) 631-4505
FAX (914) 631 -6017
July 14, 2008
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
Dear Ron:
Thank you for your e-mail of July 3, 2008, regarding permission to cite from materials in
the
collections of the Rockefeller Archive Center for your paper that will be published by The
Mount in, Edith Wharton and the American Garden.
To the extent that it is legally entitled to do so, the Rockefeller Archive Center grants
permission to Ronald Epp and The Mount to quote from material in the Rockefeller Family
Archives. The Rockefeller Archive Center grants such permission provided that publication
shall conform to all relevant provisions of United States copyright law and provided that
such publication shall not constitute libel or an invasion of privacy. Such permission is
granted for one time use only, so that future editions or editions in other languages will
require additional permission.
As you may know, the staff of the Archive Center strives to maintain a complete
bibliography of published works that cite the collections housed at the Rockefeller Archive
Center. Each year our Newsletter includes a list of recent publications, and we find that the
bibliography of RAC citations, which now includes more that 1,200 entries is useful for both
researchers and our staff. Please notify us once the articles and/or book has been published
SO that we can include it in the appropriate edition of the Newsletter.
Please let us know if we can be of further assistance.
Sincerely yours,
Michele Hiltzik
Senior Archivist
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Dear Dr. Epp,
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Ron Archives
I have found the letter from the National Park Service granting permission for use of
(31)
the images for your contribution to Edith Wharton and the American Garden, so we do
not need to be concerned about permission for the images. I believe the material you
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quoted would fall under "reasonable use" in which case we are all set there as well.
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Thank you for your patience as I sort my way through this process.
Sincerely,
Janice
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To Watkins/Loomis Literary Agency, Inc.
Member
Information
I
request permission to publish quotations from Edith Wharton
Ron Archives
manuscripts that I was fortunate enough to have available at the
(31)
Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
The specific information regarding publication by the Edith Wharton
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Restoration Inc. follows below in the email correspondence with Yale
My Photos
University.
My Attachments
I would appreciate your prompt consideration of this matter.
Sincerely,
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
"Kuhl, Nancy" wrote:
Thanks for your note. The Beinecke Library does not own the copyright
to the letters you mention and so cannot grant you any permission
regarding publishing them. The copyright holder is: Watkins Loomis
Agency, Inc., 133 East 35th Street, Suite One, New York, NY, 10016,
1 - 212 - 532 0080.
Though we don't own the copyright, the library would be glad to have
our holdings cited as you suggest.
Nancy
Nancy Kuhl
Associate Curator, Yale Collection of American Literature
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The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Yale University
121 Wall Street, P.O. Box 208240
New Haven, CT 06520-8240
Phone: 203.432.2966
African American Studies at Beinecke Library:
http://beineckejwj.wordpress.com/
Poetry at Beinecke Library: http://beineckepoetry.wordpress.com/
Room 26 Cabinet of Curiosities: http://brblroom26.wordpress.com/
From: ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP [mailto:eppster2@verizon.net]
Sent: Thursday, July 03, 2008 11:44 AM
To: Kuhl, Nancy
Subject: Permission to Quote from Edith Wharton Mss
Dear Ms. Kuhl:
In March 2005 we corresponded regarding access to the Edith Wharton
Collection (Mss 42).
My presentation at The Mount in May 2006 discussed her ten surviving
letters to George B. Dorr. I have just learned that my paper citing this
correspondence will be published in Lenox later this year as part of an
anthology. Edith Wharton Restoration, Inc. will publish Edith Wharton
and the American Garden and will include my article, "Wild Gardens
and Pathways at The Mount: George B. Dorr and the Mount Desert
Influence."
Only two citations refer to your holdings and are of the following form:
Edith Wharton to George B. Dorr. December 28, 1902. Edith Wharton
Collection. Yale Collection of American Literature. Beinecke Rare
Book and Manuscript Library. New Haven, CT.
I formally request permission to cite these latters. If publication
verification is needed, please contact Ms. Janice Wilson, Edith
Whartoin Restoration, Inc. The Mount. 2 Plunkett Street, Box 974,
Lenox, MA 01240 (413-551-5111)
I look forward to hearing from you.
Ronald H. Epp
Ronald H. Epp , Ph.D.
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
(603) 424-6149
eppster2@verizon.net
http://us.f842.mail.yahoo.com/ym/ShowLetter?MsgId=2025_3474110_77484_721_2859_0.. 7/7/2008
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Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
47 Pond View Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
(603) 424-6149
eppster2@verizon.net
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Watkins Loomis
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SERVING WRITERS SINCE 1908
WATKINS/LOOMIS
THE
TEMPEST
TALES
WATERMONTY
literary agency, inc.
n
T.
Watkins/Loomis Agency was started by Ann Watkins
Permission requests
in 1908, and Gloria Loomis came to the company in 1975.
should be sent to
When Gloria became president and sole owner in 1980. she
"Actn: Permissions"
kept the Watkins name as a tribute to the founder.
via mail, e-mail or fax
Our agency specializes in literary fiction, biography,
memoir, essay, travel and political journalism. We represent a
Translation rights
wide range of over 150 writers - from the estates of Edith
represented by
The Marsh Agency:
Wharton, Dorothy L. Sayers and Kay Boyle, to modern
www.marsh-agency.co.uk
thinkers and authors such as Cornel West, Frederic Tuten, Bill
McKibben and Anna Deavere Smith.
UK rights
We also represent leading lights of contemporary fiction
THE
represented by
such as Maureen Howard, Walter Mosley, Matyse Condé and
BILL McKIBBEN
Abner Stein:
Ngugi wa Thiong'o New York Times and New Yorker journalists
READER
abner@abnerstein.co.uk
Alma Guillermoprieto, Raymond Bonner, Sara Rimer, Nina
Bernstein and Howard French also make up our client list.
We currently do not
accept unsolicited
We do represent a number of young fiction and nonfiction
manuscripts.
writers as well, including Ernesto Quiñonez, Ben Ehrenreich,
Mat Johnson, Victor LaValle and Nelly Rosario.
A complete list of clients can be viewed upon request.
133 East 35th, Ste. #1
NYC 10016
tel: 212.532.0080
fax: 212.889.0506
assistant@watkinsloomis.com
http://www.watkinsloomis.com/
7/7/2008
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