Mercy Warren. with Portrait
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The Planter Roots of Thomas Chandler Haliburton
Gonion MacKay Haliburton The Planter Roots of Thomas Chandler Haliburton Thomas Chandler Haliburton, the first Canadian writer to enjoy interna tional acclaim, was, like all of us, moulded by a combination of genetic inheritance and by the environment around him in his early formative years. What were these influences in his case? Scholars and writers have examined them and have given answers to illuminate the reality they perceive, a reality conforming to their particular interests or arguments. Some detect as the chief element in forming his "Tory" personality, the Loyalist legacy of suffering and sacrifice imbibed at his mother's breast (Chittick 16). Others argue that his more rebellious Scottish Border ancestry made an important contribution to his literary "genius" (Logan 5). It is surprising that no one has developed an argument founded on the premise that he was fundamentally what he was most likely to have been as a result of his ancestry and environment, a transplanted New Englander among a whole community of transplanted New Englanders, a Bluenose among Bluenoses! True it is that he could trace his ancestry to the Scottish Border Country: one-eighth of it, for through his father, born in Nova Scotia, and his grandfather, born in Boston, he had a great grandfather who migrated to Boston from Scotland as a teenager and died before his sons were old enough to even retain a memory of him. True too, that Haliburton's maternal grandparents were Loyalists; but these grandparents were dead long before he was born and his mother, in turn, had only two months to cherish her babe before she, too, was gone. -
The Financial Misadventures of Charles Bulfinch
✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦✧✦ The Financial Misadventures of Charles Bulfinch jay wickersham HIS is a story about money: how Boston architect Charles T Bulfinch (1763–1844) went bankrupt; how his leading client, Harrison Gray Otis (1765–1848), grew wealthy; and how the architect felt about the two men’s relative failures and suc- cesses. It is also a story that dramatizes the difficulties of archi- tectural practice in the early years of the United States, showing how the choice of career and the pursuit of status, riches, and influence could make or break a man. The relationship between Bulfinch and Otis is one of the foundation myths of American architecture, for rarely have two men collaborated to shape a city as Bulfinch and Otis shaped Boston between 1794 and 1817. Bulfinch, in his dual roles as first selectman and police superintendent, headed Boston’s municipal government and effectively served as its first town planner; acting as an architect, he designed most of the town’s major public and private buildings. Otis, a successful lawyer and politician, was a pioneer of large-scale real estate develop- ment; he built his fortune through the development of Beacon Hill, which would become Boston’s most expensive residen- tial enclave. Bulfinch planned and designed all of Otis’s major projects, including his three homes, each one larger than the last. Bulfinch’s architectural vision gave outward form to Otis’s ambitions, and Otis’s projects gave Bulfinch a canvas on which he could express his artistic talents. Yet Bulfinch and Otis were not close. Otis was a prolific correspondent, but there are almost no letters extant between the two men. -
Memorial Biographies of the New England Historic Genealogical
MEMO R IAL B I O G R A P H I E S OF [ .. THEEW N ENGLAND HISTORIC ) - GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY TOWNE M EMORIAL FUND VOLUME I 1845–1852 BN O S T O PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY 18 S oMERSET Street I88O ~ --- y” Copyright, 1 880, BY THE NEW ENGLAND HISTORIC GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY. UNIVERSITY P RESS: JoHN WILsoN AND SoN, CAMBRIDGE. MEMORIALS A ND AUTHORS PAGE INTRODUCTION. B y the Rev. HENRY A. HAzEN, A.M. .. 7 HoN. W ILLIAM DURKEE WILLIAMSON, A.M. By the Hon. Jose.PH W ILLIAMSON, A.M., of Belfast, Me. 13 BENJAMIN S HURTLEFF, M.D. By HIRAM S. SHURTLEFF, A.M., of B oston ....... ... .. 32 HoN.OB J DURFEE, LL.D. By the Hon. THOMAs DURFER, LL.D., C hief Justice of Rhode Island .. .. 37 LUTHER W AIT. By Mr. ABRAHAM D. WAIT, of Ipswich .. 60 SAMUEL J OHN CARR, M.D. By John WARD DEAN, A.M., of Bostoe ........ ... ... .. 6 3 HoN. J AMES KENT, LL.D. By Mr. JAMEs KENT, of Fishkill on Hudson,. N Y. .. .. .. .. 67 HoN. T IMOTIIY PITKIN, LL.D. By the Rev. THoMAs C. PITKIN, D.D.,f o Detroit, Mich. .. .. .. ... .. .. 76 HoN. S AMUEL HUBBARD, LL.D. By Mrs. ELIZABETH GREENE fBUCK, o Andover . 86 HoN, J OHN QUINCY ADAMS, LL.D. By the Hon. CHARLEs FRANCIS A DAMS, LL.D., of Quincy . .. ... 102 PROF. M ERRITT CALDWELL, A.M. By WILLIAM H. ALLEN, LL.D., P resident of Girard College, Philadelphia, Pa. 136 HoN. N ATHANIEL MORTON DAVIS, A.M. By CHARLEs DEANE, LL.D.,f o Cambridge . -
Revealing Women's History
REVEALING WOMEN’S HISTORY: Best Practices at Historic Sites Featuring Five Case Studies Edited by Heather A. Huyck & Peg Strobel REVEALING WOMEN’S HISTORY: Best Practices at Historic Sites Featuring Five Case Studies Edited by Heather Huyck & Peg Strobel Published by the National Collaborative for Women’s History Sites 1 ____________________________________________________________________________ ©2011 National Collaborative for Women‘s History Sites All rights reserved. ISBN 978-0-9770095-6-1 Library of Congress Control Number 2011928830 Published by the National Collaborative for Women‘s History Sites This project was supported by the National Park Service's Challenge Cost Share Program. Points of view are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the position of the Department of the Interior. Edited by Heather Huyck and Peg Strobel Designed and Produced by Robert P. J. Cooney, Jr. Printed by Community Printers, Santa Cruz, CA Available in print and in color on CD from the National Collaborative for Women‘s History Sites www.ncwhs.org NCWHS c/o Grace Hudson Museum 431 South Main Street Ukiah, CA 95482 [email protected] Front cover and title page credits (from top): The National Park Service, Sharlot Hall Museum, and The Hermitage: Home of President Andrew Jackson, Nashville, TN. Back cover credits (from top): The Hermitage: Home of President Andrew Jackson, Nashville, TN. (top and fourth down), Independence National Historical Park, Yosemite Research Library, and the Department of Interior. 2 ____________________________________________________________________________ Contents Introduction, by Heather Huyck 5 Independence National Historical Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, by Dawn C. Adiletta 7 Otis House, Boston, Massachusetts, by Ellen Cronin 21 The Hermitage, Nashville, Tennessee, by Tara Y. -
Otis : the Story of an Old House
/ A.^/ GiW', "t^i- oton-^L C3J- c^n oIA. printed for prirate citculation. j \ \, * + yo j /s THE STORY OF AN OLD HOUSE. <£>tc&. At 34 Chambers Street, Boston, June 23, 1891, Hannah Barker Otis, aged 75 years. At 34 Chambers Street, September 10, 1891, Mary Otis, aged 86 years. are many persons now J_ living "to whom "34 Chambers " Street has stood" for years as the House Beautiful ; and for their sakes, as well as because its story is unique in these days, and because the light ofthe dear old walls died out with Mary Otis, Iam going to write about it. This house was built in the year 1800, by George Wash ington Otis, of Scituate, who had come to Boston to seek his fortune. He was the son of Joshua Otis and Mary Thaxter. Mary Thaxter was the daughter of Major Thaxter of Hing ham, a woman* of remarkable energy and accomplishments, as strong a Tory as her father. She was a woman of great intellectual strength, and well known throughout the eastern part of the State for her charming conversation. 4 Such towns as Hingham, Plymouth, and Barnstable bore a very different relation to Boston in those days from that now recognized. Many of the wealthiest citizens of the State re sided in the farming towns and exercised a proportionate in fluence. The first Josiah Quincy was not a Boston but a Braintree man, and the Otises of Scituate as well as the Thaxters of Hingham were widely known. No need to tell a New England people that the Otises were strong patriots, sturdy indefence of their rights ;but Major Thaxter, who had been an officer in the royal army, gathered the draperies of his bed into a gilded crown and slept under it as long as he lived. -
The Life and Letters of Harrison Gray Otis, Federalist, 1765-1848
HARRISON GRAY OTIS By Samuel Eliot Morison 2 hH^. L I E) RAR.Y OF THL U N IVLR5ITY Of ILLINOIS B 0873m v.l cop,2 111. Hist, rr"survey THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF HARRISON GRAY OTIS 1765-1848 IN TWO VOLUMES VOLUME I THE MBRARY or THE UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF HARRISON GRAY OTIS FEDERALIST 1765-1848 BY SAMUEL ELIOT MORISON, Ph.D. (Harv.) WITH PORTRAITS AND OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS VOL. I BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY 1913 COPYRIGHT, I913, BY SAMUEL ELIOT MORISON ALL UIGHTS RESERVED Published November iqi^ V, 1 cop. Z. TO MY MOTHER 55;:;;2545 Tell me, ye learned, shall we for ever be adding so much to the bulk — so little to the stock ? Shall we for ever make new books, as apotheca- ries make new mixtures, by pouring only out of one vessel into another? Are we for ever to be twisting, and untwisting the same rope? for ever in the same track — for ever at the same pace? Shall we be destined to the days of eternity, . to be shewing the relicks of learning, as monks do the relicks of their saints — without working one — one single miracle with them? — Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman Vol. V, Chap. I. PREFACE In the following pages I have attempted to describe the life of a man of \ngorous and fascinating personality, who was born in Boston ten years before the Revolution com- menced, who entered national politics during Washing- ton's second administration, who was a leader in the in- teresting movement that culminated in the Hartford Convention of 1814, and who lived to take a part in the presidential campaign of 1848. -
Culture Club: the Curious History of the Boston Athenaeum
CULTURE CLUB Culture Club The Curious History of the Boston Athenaeum Katherine Wolff University of Massachusetts Press Amherst & boston Copyright © 2009 by Katherine Wolff All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America LC 2009017734 ISBN 978- 1- 55849- 714- 6 (paper); 713- 9 (library cloth) Designed by Jack Harrison Set in Monotype Dante Printed and bound by Thomson-Shore, Inc. Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Wolff , Katherine, 1963– Culture club : the curious history of the Boston Athenaeum / Katherine Wolff . p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 978-1-55849-713-9 (lib. bdg. : alk. paper) — isbn 978-1-55849-714-6 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Boston Athenaeum—History. 2. Subscription libraries—Massachusetts—Boston—History. 3. Boston (Mass.)—Intellectual life—19th century. I. Title. Z733.B74W65 2009 027'.274461—dc22 2009017734 British Library Cata loguing in Publication data are available. Portions of Chapter 6 also appear in Boston Athenaeum: Bicentennial Essays (edited by Richard Wendorf, 2009), by permission of the Boston Athenaeum. for my mother Mary Neave Wolff & in memory of my father Nikolaus Emanuel Wolff (1921– 2007) CONTENTS List of Illustrations ix Preface xi Chronology xvii Introduction: Boston’s Confl icted Elite 1 Part One: Enterprise Chapter One: The Collector 15 Chapter Two: Sweet Are the Fruits of Letters 35 Part Two: Identity Chapter Three: A Woman Framed 63 Chapter Four: Ornament for the City 81 Part Three: Conscience Chapter Five: The Color of Gentility 109 Chapter Six: