On Fellow Ous Ulletin

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

On Fellow Ous Ulletin on fellow ous L g ulletinH e Volume No. A Newsletter of the Friends of the Longfellow House and the National Park Service June New Study ExaminesThe Song of HiawathaB as Controversial Bestseller atthew Gartner’s recent work on noted in his journal: “Some of the MH.W. Longfellow’s most popular newspapers are fierce and furious about poem asserts that The Song of Hiawatha was Hiawatha,” and a few weeks later, he both a bestseller and a subject of contro- wrote, “There is the greatest pother versy as soon as it was published, and about Hiawatha. It is violently assailed, quickly became a cultural phenomenon. and warmly defended.” The historian Gartner, who is writing a book called The William Prescott, a friend of Longfel- Poet Longfellow: A Cultural Interpretation, will low’s, wrote the poet from New York of present his findings and analysis this July “the hubbub that Hiawatha has kicked up at the Society for the History of Author- in the literary community.” ship, Reading, and Publishing. At the heart of the controversy lay When Hiawatha was first published in Longfellow’s decision to use a poetic it sold rapidly. With an initial print- meter called “trochaic dimeter.” The ing of five thousand volumes, four thou- George H. Thomas illustration, The Song of Hiawatha, London, nineteenth century was an age of great sand were already sold as of its November nationwide by , making it not only sensitivity to the art of prosody, or poetic publication date. By mid-December Longfellow’s best-selling poem ever, but, meter, and Longfellow surely knew Hiawa- eleven thousand volumes were in print. arguably, the best-selling American poem tha’s success would, to a large extent, depend Longfellow’s publisher, James T. Fields, of the century. on how this seldom-used meter was received announced in January that they were sell- Controversy over the poem began and whether it was deemed suitable for his ing three hundred copies a day. Forty-three almost immediately. Less than two weeks book-length treatment of an Indian legend. thousand copies of Hiawatha had sold after Hiawatha’s publication, Longfellow (continued on page ) House Loans Bierstadt’s “Departure of Hiawatha” for Exhibitions lbert Bierstadt’s “Departure of Hia- Minister William Gladstone himself. which will bring together works of art de- Awatha,”which usually hangs in the din- From August to October , , the picting American heroes, heroines, and hero- ing room of the Longfellow House, can be painting will be on loan to the National ism, and the shaping of American myth. seen in two major museums this summer. Museum of Western Art, Tokyo, for their “American Heroism” was developed to A German-born American and Hudson exhibition entitled “American Heroism,” promote cultural exchanges between the River School painter, Bierstadt is United States and Japan. The idea famous for his large, panoramic for the exhibition originated during views of the American West. a conversation between the former Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Japanese Prime Minister Tomiichi received this small, brightly colored Murayama and President Clinton. oil painting as a gift from the artist From November until Feb- at a dinner party held in his honor ruary , “Departure of Hia- by the artist and his wife at the watha” will be part of “Primal Langham Hotel in London on the Visions: Albert Bierstadt ‘Discov- th of July . Longfellow was in ers’ America, -” at the England to receive an honorary Montclair Art Museum in New degree from Cambridge University. Jersey. Afterward, the exhibit will Among those attending the dinner travel to the Columbus Museum of were the poet Robert Browning, the Art in Columbus, Ohio, and the painter Edwin Landseer, members Crocker Art Museum in Sacra- of the British Parliament, and Prime Departure of Hiawatha by Albert Bierstadt, mento, California. ᳚ Hiawatha (continued from page ) The case against Hiawatha claimed that Wooing” was read to audiences at the ሖሗመ the meter was a poetical straitjacket, too Boston Theater as an encore. Hiawatha “has Friends of the Longfellow House stiff to allow the poetry to reflect modula- been recited (in part) before crowded audi- Board of Directors tions in the feeling and mood of its story. ences of our people,” noted Putnam’s later Barclay Henderson, President Putnam’s Magazine of December de- that year, and a gossip column in Harper’s Edith Hollmann Bowers, Vice President clared: “We do not believe that any man asked acidly, “Have we great things to boast Robert Mitchell, Clerk can read ten pages of The Song of Hiawatha, of in this good year of our Lord , if we Charlotte Cleveland, Treasurer in a natural, unforced manner, without lift- set aside the ad nauseam singings of Hia- Frances Ackerly ing his voice into a canter”—in other watha, and plenty of beef in the New York Peter Ambler words, the reader must clop through market?” The proliferation of Hiawatha- Hans-Peter Biemann Hiawatha like a horse with an unvaried gait. inspired performances, place names, and Gene A. Blumenreich The opposition argued that Hiawatha was paraphernalia of all sorts was just begin- Polly Bryson Dick Dober written in the best possible measure for ning. Already by , for instance, a Mis- Nancy Fryberger such a poem and deferred to Longfellow’s sissippi steamboat was named “The Hia- Victor Gulotta own explanation: watha” and another “The Minnehaha.” Abigail Housen Ye who love a nation’s legends, Not all the Hiawatha spin-offs were Diana der Hovanessian Love the ballads of a people, favorable. The poet Bayard Taylor, a few Carol Johnson That, like voices from afar off, weeks after the poem’s release, felt the need Marilyn Richardson Call to us to pause and listen, to reassure Longfellow in a letter, “It will Lynne Spencer Speak in tones so plain and childlike be parodied, perhaps ridiculed, in many Susan Wood Scarcely can the ear distinguish quarters, but it will live after the Indian race Advisory Board Whether they are sung or spoken; — has vanished from our Continent, and there Ruth Butler Listen to this Indian Legend, will be no parodies then.” By February LeRoy Cragwell To this Song of Hiawatha! Longfellow noted with equanimity in his Diana Korzenik The poet and translator Thomas W. Par- journal, “Hiawatha parodies come in from Richard Nylander sons agreed, finding that “[t]he measure is all quarters,—even from California.” Stephen D. Pratt monotonous,—admitted; but it is truly Hiawatha marked an important turning Marc Shell Indian. It is child-like, and suited to the point in Longfellow’s career—the begin- Charles Sullivan Lowell A. Warren, Jr. savage ear.” The North American Review, de- ning of a split in public opinion regarding Eileen Woodford claring that “[t]he essential characteristic his work. The New England literary estab- of Indian life, and so of Indian literature, lishment backed Longfellow’s message of Newsletter Committee is that it is childlike,” likewise approved of reassurance and refinement, as did many Marilyn Richardson, Editor Hiawatha’s controversial meter. Despite American readers across the social spec- Glenna Lang, Designer James M. Shea these stereotypes, Hiawatha was the first trum. But an increasing number of readers long American poem in which Native in a rapidly changing country on the eve of ᇶᇷᇸ American legends and heroes were given civil war no longer found Longfellow the center stage. innovative American poet he had been in National Park Service Longfellow’s meter had been attacked the late .With Hiawatha the debate over Myra Harrison, Superintendent previously in Evangeline, which adapted the Longfellow’s reputation began, and it con- James M. Shea, Site Manager Greek and Latin hexameter, but this time tinues to this day. Paul Blandford, Museum Educator his subject matter stirred up controversy as Liza Stearns, Education Specialist well. George William Curtis, Longfellow’s Janice Hodson, Museum Curator friend and supporter, defended the poem Anita Israel, Archives Specialist Peggy Clarke, Museum Technician against criticism that went beyond the met- Ed Bacigalupo, Chief of Maintenance rical and poetical. He summed up the Pat Laffey, Facility Manager charges: “It is adjudged pointless and unin- teresting. It is thought to be a hopeless attempt to invest Indian tradition with the Unless otherwise cited, all photos, art, and objects pictured in the Longfellow House Bulletin dignity and pathos of a true human ro- are from the Longfellow House collections. mance. It is voted an unfortunate subject, and the simplicity of the treatment is con- sidered to be too simple.” Printed by Newprint Offset, Waltham, Mass. Hiawatha, however, became an overnight cultural phenomenon, read and satirized extensively. In March , according to Longfellow’s journal, the actress Grace ማሜምሞ Darling was “reading Hiawatha to crowded houses in Philadelphia,” and “Hiawatha’s ᳚ Interview with a Friend…Meet Marilyn Richardson Marilyn Richardson is a member of the itself. Both North and South could hold material and publishing articles on the nine- Board of the Friends of the Longfellow this idea of the Indian as the Other. Hia- teenth-century Afro-Indian artist Edmonia House and also editor of this newsletter. watha was published only three years after Lewis. She was the first black American to Because of her scholarship in nineteenth- Uncle Tom’s Cabin. Longfellow was writing at gain an international reputation as a sculp- century American culture and her forth- the height of the fury over the Fugitive tor. She lived in Rome at the period of the coming book on Edmonia Lewis, we Slave Law of when blacks in the North ascendancy of an international group of thought it was time to turn the interiewer’s were at the mercy of bounty hunters and independent women artists, centered on the microphone towards her for this special could in no way be mythologized.
Recommended publications
  • Download NARM Member List
    Huntsville, The Huntsville Museum of Art, 256-535-4350 Los Angeles, Chinese American Museum, 213-485-8567 North American Reciprocal Mobile, Alabama Contemporary Art Center Los Angeles, Craft Contemporary, 323-937-4230 Museum (NARM) Mobile, Mobile Museum of Art, 251-208-5200 Los Angeles, GRAMMY Museum, 213-765-6800 Association® Members Montgomery, Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, 334-240-4333 Los Angeles, Holocaust Museum LA, 323-651-3704 Spring 2021 Northport, Kentuck Museum, 205-758-1257 Los Angeles, Japanese American National Museum*, 213-625-0414 Talladega, Jemison Carnegie Heritage Hall Museum and Arts Center, 256-761-1364 Los Angeles, LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes, 888-488-8083 Alaska Los Angeles, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, 323-957-1777 This list is updated quarterly in mid-December, mid-March, mid-June and Haines, Sheldon Museum and Cultural Center, 907-766-2366 Los Angeles, Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Los Angeles, 213-621-1794 mid-September even though updates to the roster of NARM member Kodiak, The Kodiak History Museum, 907-486-5920 Los Angeles, Skirball Cultural Center*, 310-440-4500 organizations occur more frequently. For the most current information Palmer, Palmer Museum of History and Art, 907-746-7668 Los Gatos, New Museum Los Gatos (NUMU), 408-354-2646 search the NARM map on our website at narmassociation.org Valdez, Valdez Museum & Historical Archive, 907-835-2764 McClellan, Aerospace Museum of California, 916-564-3437 Arizona Modesto, Great Valley Museum, 209-575-6196 Members from one of the North American
    [Show full text]
  • National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet COLBURN HOUSE STATE HISTORIC SITE KENNEBEC COUNTY
    rr r * { ' \ NPS Form 10-900 jv OMB No. 10024-0018 (Oct. 1990) United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Registration Form This form is for use in nominating or requesting determinations for individual properties and districts. See instructionsTrts£tow to Complete/the National Register of Historic Places Registration Form (National Register Bulletin 16A). Complete each item by marking VSn^he apj>ro0riate box or by entering the information requested. If an item does not apply to the property being documented, enter "N/A" for "not applicable^" Fgf functions, architectural classification, materials, and areas of significance, enter only categories and subcategories from the instructions. PlacxNfdditional entries and narrative items on continuation sheets (NPS Form 10-900a). Use a typewriter, word processor, or computer, to complete all items. 1. Name of Property historic name Colburn House State Historic Site other names/site number 2. Location street & number Arnold Road. Old Route 27(.1 mi. south of northern intersection with Rt. 27) N/A not for publication city or town.............Pittston... N/A vicinity state Maine__________ code ME county Kennebec____ code 011___ zip code 04435 3. State/Federal Agency Certification As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act, as amended, I hereby certify that this E nomination D request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In rny opinion, the property B meets Ddoes not meet the National Register criteria.
    [Show full text]
  • Curator of Native American Art DEPARTMENT: Curatorial SUPERVISOR: Chief Curator DIRECT REPORTS: None LAST REVISION DATE: August 2020
    POSITION DESCRIPTION POSITION TITLE: Curator of Native American Art DEPARTMENT: Curatorial SUPERVISOR: Chief Curator DIRECT REPORTS: none LAST REVISION DATE: August 2020 The Montclair Art Museum is conducting a search to fill a three-year position of Curator of Native American Art. Funded by the Luce Foundation, the position offers an exciting opportunity for the Curator to work with the Museum’s renowned collection of Native art of North America. Overview The Montclair Art Museum (MAM) is currently accepting applications for a three- year, grant funded position of Curator of Native American Art. The Museum’s goal is to engage in further fundraising to establish this position as permanent. The selected hire will have a unique opportunity to make a meaningful impact on the presentation of MAM’s renowned collection of Native art of North America in its dedicated Rand Gallery and throughout the Museum more broadly. The Curator will work to achieve key goals of engaging current, innovative ideas around the representation of Indigenous communities and art museum collections and exhibitions, via collaborative approaches. Throughout the three- year period, the Curator will have access to an eight member Advisory Board of leading Native and non-Native scholars and artists, as well as MAM’s Chief Curator, all of whom will offer ideas and perspectives for consideration in developing the Museum’s Native American programs. The Curator will oversee the presentation of the Fall 2021 incoming traveling exhibition, Color Riot!, from the Heard Museum, featuring Navajo textiles from c. 1860 to 2018. Additional projects will include curating a site-specific artistic intervention opening in early 2022, and will culminate in September 2023 with a new installation of the Museum’s Native American collections in the Rand Gallery.
    [Show full text]
  • MAM Annual Report July 1, 2010 – June 30, 2011 Contents
    2011 MAM ANNUAL REPORT JULy 1, 2010 – June 30, 2011 CONTENTS Mission, Vision and Values, and Diversity Statements 3 From the President 4 From the Director 5 Board of Trustees 7 Statement of Finances 8 MAM at a Glance 9 Exhibitions 11 Snapshots from Special Events 12 Gifts and Purchases 13 Gifts to the Education Handling Collection 17 Contributions Individual Support 18 Corporate, Foundation, and Government Support 21 Matching Gifts 22 Honor and Memorial Gifts 23 Heritage Society 24 Gifts in Kind 24 Volunteers 25 Staff 28 All Museum programs are made possible, in part, by the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, and by funds from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Vance Wall Foundation, the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, and Museum Members. 2 MISSION STATEMENT The Montclair Art Museum (MAM), along with its Yard School of Art, engages a diverse community through its distinctive collection of American and Native American art, exhibitions, and educational programs that link art to contemporary life in a global context. VISION AND vaLUES STATEMENT As the Montclair Art Museum approaches its Centennial in 2014, we seek to elevate our profile as a nationally recognized leader of mid-sized, regional art museums. Valuing diversity, innovation, and the importance of art to society, we will invigorate our curatorial presentations, expand our educational mission, promote greater connections to our community, engage in fruitful partnerships that reach deep into our region and beyond, embrace new media and technologies, pursue responsible facilities management and environmental impact, and secure our financial stability.
    [Show full text]
  • The Curatorial Intensive Teachers & Advisors Fall 2010
    INDEP INDEPENDENT CURATORS INTERNATIONAL THE CURATORIAL INTENSIVE TEACHERS & ADVISORS FALL 2010 ICI Key Personnel: Tracy Candido is the Program Administrator for The Curatorial Intensive at ICI. She is a cultural producer who organizes social practice projects and public programs in New York City and Brooklyn. Recent endeavors include Community Cooking Club, hosted by the Bruce High Quality Foundation University, which combines the concept of the potluck with the environment of the critical classroom, Sweet Tooth of the Tiger, a two-year experiment in baking with, eating, and selling sugar, and the Bake Sale Residency, a mico-granting project for artists. Tracy holds a Master's Degree from New York University in Visual Culture Theory. Kate Fowle is ICI’s Executive Director. She most recently worked as the International Curator at the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing. Prior to her time in Beijing, Fowle spent six years in San Francisco at the California College of the Arts, where she was the director of the MA Program in Curatorial Practice, which she founded in 2002 with Ralph Rugoff. This was the first graduate course of its kind on the West coast. During her tenure as program director Fowle built extensive international networks, bringing over 100 artists, curators and writers from places as diverse as Chiang Mai, Paris, São Paulo, Johannesburg, Copenhagen, Beijing, Vilnius, Frankfurt, Tokyo, London, and Mexico City, to share their knowledge and expertise through lectures, round-table discussions, symposia and an annual journal. Chelsea Haines is the Public Programs Manager at ICI. In addition to her position with the organization, she has worked on a range of independent projects and publications, most recently publishing a revised version of her thesis, A New State of the Arts: Developing the Biennial Model as Ethical Arts Practice, for the upcoming fall issue of Museum Management and Curatorship.
    [Show full text]
  • CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN PAINTING and SCULPTURE 1969 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Js'i----».--:R'f--=
    Arch, :'>f^- *."r7| M'i'^ •'^^ .'it'/^''^.:^*" ^' ;'.'>•'- c^. CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN PAINTING AND SCULPTURE 1969 University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign jS'i----».--:r'f--= 'ik':J^^^^ Contemporary American Painting and Sculpture 1969 Contemporary American Painting and Sculpture DAVID DODD5 HENRY President of the University JACK W. PELTASON Chancellor of the University of Illinois, Urbano-Champaign ALLEN S. WELLER Dean of the College of Fine and Applied Arts Director of Krannert Art Museum JURY OF SELECTION Allen S. Weller, Chairman Frank E. Gunter James R. Shipley MUSEUM STAFF Allen S. Weller, Director Muriel B. Christlson, Associate Director Lois S. Frazee, Registrar Marie M. Cenkner, Graduate Assistant Kenneth C. Garber, Graduate Assistant Deborah A. Jones, Graduate Assistant Suzanne S. Stromberg, Graduate Assistant James O. Sowers, Preparator James L. Ducey, Assistant Preparator Mary B. DeLong, Secretary Tamasine L. Wiley, Secretary Catalogue and cover design: Raymond Perlman © 1969 by tha Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois Library of Congress Catalog Card No. A48-340 Cloth: 252 00000 5 Paper: 252 00001 3 Acknowledgments h.r\ ^. f -r^Xo The College of Fine and Applied Arts and Esther-Robles Gallery, Los Angeles, Royal Marks Gallery, New York, New York California the Krannert Art Museum are grateful to Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, Inc., New those who have lent paintings and sculp- Fairweother Hardin Gallery, Chicago, York, New York ture to this exhibition and acknowledge Illinois Dr. Thomas A. Mathews, Washington, the of the artists, Richard Gallery, Illinois cooperation following Feigen Chicago, D.C. collectors, museums, and galleries: Richard Feigen Gallery, New York, Midtown Galleries, New York, New York New York ACA Golleries, New York, New York Mr.
    [Show full text]
  • Environment and Culture in the Northeastern Americas During the American Revolution Daniel S
    The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Electronic Theses and Dissertations Fogler Library Spring 5-11-2019 Navigating Wilderness and Borderland: Environment and Culture in the Northeastern Americas during the American Revolution Daniel S. Soucier University of Maine, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd Part of the Canadian History Commons, Environmental Studies Commons, Military History Commons, Nature and Society Relations Commons, Other History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Soucier, Daniel S., "Navigating Wilderness and Borderland: Environment and Culture in the Northeastern Americas during the American Revolution" (2019). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 2992. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/etd/2992 This Open-Access Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. NAVIGATING WILDERNESS AND BORDERLAND: ENVIRONMENT AND CULTURE IN THE NORTHEASTERN AMERICAS DURING THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION By Daniel S. Soucier B.A. University of Maine, 2011 M.A. University of Maine, 2013 C.A.S. University of Maine, 2016 A THESIS Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy (in History) The Graduate School University of Maine May, 2019 Advisory Committee: Richard Judd, Professor Emeritus of History, Co-Adviser Liam Riordan, Professor of History, Co-Adviser Stephen Miller, Professor of History Jacques Ferland, Associate Professor of History Stephen Hornsby, Professor of Anthropology and Canadian Studies DISSERTATION ACCEPTANCE STATEMENT On behalf of the Graduate Committee for Daniel S.
    [Show full text]
  • History of Maine - History Index - MHS Kathy Amoroso
    The University of Maine DigitalCommons@UMaine Maine History Documents Special Collections 2019 History of Maine - History Index - MHS Kathy Amoroso Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistory Part of the History Commons Repository Citation Amoroso, Kathy, "History of Maine - History Index - MHS" (2019). Maine History Documents. 220. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistory/220 This Other is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine History Documents by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Index to Maine History publication Vol. 9 - 12 Maine Historical Society Newsletter 13 - 33 Maine Historical Society Quarterly 34 – present Maine History Vol. 9 – 51.1 1969 - 2017 1 A a' Becket, Maria, J.C., landscape painter, 45:203–231 Abandonment of settlement Besse Farm, Kennebec County, 44:77–102 and reforestation on Long Island, Maine (case study), 44:50–76 Schoodic Point, 45:97–122 The Abenaki, by Calloway (rev.), 30:21–23 Abenakis. see under Native Americans Abolitionists/abolitionism in Maine, 17:188–194 antislavery movement, 1833-1855 (book review), 10:84–87 Liberty Party, 1840-1848, politics of antislavery, 19:135–176 Maine Antislavery Society, 9:33–38 view of the South, antislavery newspapers (1838-1855), 25:2–21 Abortion, in rural communities, 1904-1931, 51:5–28 Above the Gravel Bar: The Indian Canoe Routes of Maine, by Cook (rev.), 25:183–185 Academy for Educational development (AED), and development of UMaine system, 50(Summer 2016):32–41, 45–46 Acadia book reviews, 21:227–229, 30:11–13, 36:57–58, 41:183–185 farming in St.
    [Show full text]
  • Worthy of Their Own Aspiration : Minnesota's Literary Tradition in Sculpture / Moira F. Harris
    MN History Text 55/8 8/20/07 12:02 PM Page 364 WORTHYWORTHY OFOF THEIRTHEIR Minnesota’s Literary Tradition in Sculpture a chilly September afternoon in On 1996, a parade of authors crossed Rice Park in downtown St. Paul. Led by Garrison Keillor, the group headed to the new bronze sculpture of writer F. Scott Fitzgerald waiting to be dedicated on the centennial of his birth. Fitzgerald, hat in hand and coat over his arm, stands on a small base MOIRA F. HARRIS at the northeast corner of the park. As Keillor noted, it was the right spot: “The library is there, the St. Paul Hotel is there, the (Ordway) theater is there. These were three great, constant loves in Fitzgerald’s life. He loved books, bright lights, plays and parties, so he MH 55-8 Winter 97-98.pdf 34 8/20/07 12:31:40 PM MN History Text 55/8 8/20/07 12:02 PM Page 365 RR OWNOWN ASPIRATIONASPIRATION Amid banners and flags, a crowd gathered in Minneapolis’s Minnehaha Park for the unveiling of the statue of Swedish poet, composer, and statesman Gunnar Wennerberg, 1915 MH 55-8 Winter 97-98.pdf 35 8/20/07 12:31:42 PM MN History Text 55/8 8/20/07 12:02 PM Page 366 would be in his element.”1 The work by Michael B. Price, a professor of art at Hamline Univer- sity, is the most recent in a long tradition of lit- erary sculpture set outdoors in Minnesota. Over the span of a century, Minnesotans have determined that many works of art deserve a place of honor in parks, plazas, and public buildings.
    [Show full text]
  • The Influence of American Literature Upon Modern Musical Composition
    THE INFLUENCE OF AMERICAN LITERATURE UPON MODERN MUSICAL COMPOSITION BY FAY WOOD SWARTZ THESIS FOR THE DEGREE OF BACHELOR OF MUSIC IN MUSIC COLLEGE OF MUSIC UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS 1917 UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS June 1, 19(D7 THIS IS TO CERTIFY THAT THE THESIS PREPARED UNDER MY SUPERVISION BY _MISS FAY FOOr SWARTZ ENTITLED THE- .IK-FL-IJE.N.CE QF-AMERICl-I^. LI.TER1TIJE.E UP.OS :.1CDERK MUSICAL C,CMPCSITICN._.._.___ IS APPROVED BY ME AS FULFILLING THIS PART OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF. DACKELOR OF I^SIC Approved: INTRODUCTION Of all the arts, there are surely no two more closely re- late! and inter-dependent than literature and music. To becoir.e only partially acquainted with Milton, Browning or Goethe and to note their allusions to music is to realize that they were deeply in- terested in that art. On the other hand, we co-uld hardly have been blessed with great oratorios, masses, operas, cantatas, and songs but for the literary texts upon which they are based. It is certain- ly true that the musician am the literate have always gone hand in hana. As a result, composers have, from the beginning used texts rrom German, English, Italian, French and other literatures as the basis of their inspiration for many fine operas, oratorios, masses, and orchestral works. It m.ay seerr to sere as though American liter- ature has had little influence upon musical composition, that texts from that source have not been found sufficiently worthy for adap- tation to musical settings.
    [Show full text]
  • Accommodation in a Wilderness Borderland During the American Invasion of Quebec, 1775
    Maine History Volume 47 Number 1 The Maine Borderlands Article 4 1-1-2013 “News of Provisions Ahead”: Accommodation in a Wilderness Borderland during the American Invasion of Quebec, 1775 Daniel S. Soucier Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistoryjournal Part of the Geography Commons, Military History Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Soucier, Daniel S.. "“News of Provisions Ahead”: Accommodation in a Wilderness Borderland during the American Invasion of Quebec, 1775." Maine History 47, 1 (2013): 42-67. https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistoryjournal/vol47/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine History by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Benedict Arnold led an invasion of Quebec during the first year of the Revolu - tionary War. Arnold was an ardent Patriot in the early years of the war, but later became the most famous American turncoat of the era. Maine Historical Soci - ety Collections. “NEWS OF PROVISIONS AHEAD”: ACCOMMODATION IN A WILDERNESS BORDERLAND DURING THE AMERICAN INVASION OF QUEBEC, 1775 1 BY DANIEL S. S OUCIER Soon after the American Revolutionary War began, Colonel Benedict Arnold led an American invasion force from Maine into Quebec in an ef - fort to capture the British province. The trek through the wilderness of western Maine did not go smoothly. This territory was a unique border - land area that was not inhabited by colonists as a frontier society, but in - stead remained a largely unsettled region still under the control of the Wabanakis.
    [Show full text]
  • HIAWATHA GOLF COURSE AREA MASTER PLAN Aligning Water Management and Use
    HIAWATHA GOLF COURSE AREA MASTER PLAN Aligning Water Management and Use AMENDMENT TO THE NOKOMIS-HIAWATHA REGIONAL PARK MASTER PLAN FEBRUARY 17, 2021 HIAWATHA GOLF COURSE AREA MASTER PLAN EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Nokomis-Hiawatha Regional Park is named for the lakes it surrounds, Lake Nokomis and Lake Hiawatha. The park is a treasured gathering space in the heart of South Minneapolis and is located along the Grand Rounds National Scenic Byway and the banks of Minnehaha Creek. It provides a wide range of recreational opportunities, including a beloved 18-hole golf course on the west shore of Lake Hiawatha. The site was once the location of Rice Lake and a connected wetland complex. The lake was dredged and the wetlands filled in the 1920s, and the golf course was designed and constructed in the early 1930s over the dredge materials. The course has a classic feel with its tree-lined fairways and pushup greens. It is easily playable, but still challenging. And it is a course that is steeped in history and a tradition of welcoming all people. In June of 2014, over 11 inches of rain fell over a large area of the Minnehaha Advisory Committee (CAC) requested that the design team look at an 18-hole Creek watershed, causing a severe flood and subsequent closure of the Hiawatha option. Given the increase in the anticipated water footprint within the area and Golf Course for a significant period. The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board the directive from the Board of Commissioners to achieve a flood-resilient design, (MPRB) began a process of assessing damages and working with the Federal the engineers, landscape architects, and golf course architect determined that an Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to get the course up and running again.
    [Show full text]