| 100LET US NOT BE VANDALS
Mrs. Peattie Asks That Historic
Buildings Be Preserved
for the Future.
Old Landmarks in the Life of the Republic
Which Deserve a Tender Care
in Their Day of Decay.
There used to be an idea that a republic
should not indulge in reminiscence.
It was supposed to be the duty of citizens
of a republic to look forward and
not back. But there never yet was an
arbitrary rule made for the regulation of
man's emotions, which was not speedily
broken. And thus it has come about in
200 years of hot history that we are as
fond and proud of old associations as
any other country.
In some ways we have a great advantage
over other countries when it comes
to dealing with historic persons. And
that is that our distinguished personages
are honest in their distinction. They
are not noticed because they are Stuarts,
Howards or Guelphs, but because they
have individually done something heroic,
or brilliant, or sacrificial. And the lives
of such are bound together in a bundle--
as David would have said--with the
history of this republic. In short, the
history of this republic is the history of
individuals, and little by little this intensely
interesting fact is coming to be
appreciated.
A number of gentlemen at the city of
Washington have been laboring recently
to promulgate this idea, and they have
formed themselves, or been formed, into
the Memorial Association of the District
of Columbia. This association has been
formed for a threefold purpose:
First-- of preserving the most noteworthy
houses at the capital of this
country, that have been made historic
by the residence of the nation's greatest
men.
Second--of suitably marking, by
tablets or otherwise, the houses and
places throughout the city of chief interest
to the multitudes of Americans
and foreigners who annually visit the
capital.
Third--Of thus cultivating that historic
spirit and that reverence for the
memories of the founders and leaders
of the republic upon which an intelligent
and abiding patriotism so largely
depends.
The membership of this association is
interesting. It is composed of Chief
Justice Melvill W. Fuller, General
John M. Schofield, ex-Secretary of
State John W. Foster, B. W. Warder,
S. P. Langley, the astronomer; A.
B. Hagner, J. O. Bancroft Davis, once
assistant secretary of state, and the
nephew of the historian Bancroft; Walter
S. Cox, a judge of the district court;
S. H. Kauffmann, A. R. Spofford, the
librarian of congress; John Hay, the
poet, J. W. Douglass, Myron M. Parker,
Gardiner G. Hubbard, W. D. Davidge,
S. R. Franklin, Charles C. Glover, and
the Rev. Tennis S. Halin of the Church
of the Covenant at Washington.
The little circular sent about the country
by the association contains the following:
"The rapid growth of the city of
Washington and the transformation of
residence streets into business conters
are already obliterating many of our
historic buildings. Few people know
that where even the very greatest of our
statesmen had their homes while they
were making, or interpreting, or executing
the laws of the republic. We have
names that the civilized world honors;
their chief work was done in this city,
yet the visitor here has no means of satisfying
his praiseworthy desire to look
upon the places they made memorable.
The vast work of building up
a young nation has left us little
time for cultivating the historic
spirit. But we have now reached a period
when we need no longer bend every
energy to subdue nature and to insure
material prosperity. We may pause a
little to secure the higher refinements of
a splendid civilization. And among
these refinements, none is more precious
than that worthy pride in our best national
traits and achievements which
cannot exist apart from some intimate
acquaintance with the life and work of
our greatest men.
"Moved by such considerations, we
have formed the Memorial Association of
the District of Columbia, and have secured
incorporation under the laws
of the district. Pursuant to a
joint resolution of the two houses
of congress, approved June 14, 1892, we
have been appointed, six each by the
president of the United States, the president
of the senate, and the speaker of
house of representatives, as members of
the association. The term of service is
three years, one-third of the members being
appointed annually. We have adopted
by-laws, elected officers, and chosen a
board of five directors to manage the details
of our work under the instruction
of our association. We are prohibited
by our charter from receiving any compensation
for our labors. We have recently
issued a small pamphlet of
twenty-seven pages, giving careful information
as to a few of the historic
houses and places within the district.
We desire as soon as may be, to mark
with suitable tablets the most notable
houses still standing, in which the
greatest men of our nation's earlier years
have lived and labored. And we especially
wish to purchase the house on
Tenth street in which President Lincoln
died. It is the only building at the
capital distinctly associated with him.
We wish to restore it to the condition it
was then, both externally and internally
to gather in it such mementos of Mr.
Lincoln as can be procured, and to make
it a perpetual shrine of patriotic pilgrimage
for the millions that venerate
his memory. The title to this
and to any other historic houses
or places preserved by the labors
of the association will, by our charter,
vest in the United States, and remain
under the control and management of
the association at the will of congress.
"We look to the congress to enable this
work to be speedily entered upon, and
these patriotic designs carried out,
which we believe will greatly inure to the
benefits of the whole nation, which takes
a worthy pride in its magnificent capital.
No time could be more appropriate
for the inception of such an undertaking
than this historic and memorial year."
This sets forth succinctly the plan
which this company of gentlemen,
with Justice Fuller as their president
have laid out. It is one
in which every American must feel
an interest, and which the romance
regards with affection. For he
knows that pressed like leaves in
books, the rich colors faded, but still
apparent, the histories of fascinating
men and women lie impressed in the
personality of these old places.
In the current number of Scribner's
Magazine is an article by the Rev. Tennis
S. Hamlin on the "Historic House
of Washinton." It is rich with the
stories of the men and women who
have made Washington the "Paris of
America," and one is perplexed at the
idea of making selections from it, for
its stories have suggested one another in
a way to form a happy sequence, which
isolated quotations cannot but destroy.
In the article are the descriptions of
famous houses--houses renowned for
hospitality, for brilliant company for
adroitest lobbying--and the article is
agreeably illustrated with views from
these historic mansions.
But if one would be glad to see the
home where the fascinating and benevolent
Mrs. Van Ness lived, and to walk
in the room where Decatur dined with
his guests, and see the room where
Colonel Taylore danced, it would still
very much more like to have reverently
preserved the house associated with
Lincoln, and to have it filled with all the
mementos of him which can be procured
and authenticated.
Apropos of mementos of Lincoln,
there is a little story told of Richard
Harding Davis, which it is not particularly
pleasant to associate with that
brilliant young writer. He was to be
presented to Edwin Booth at the Actor's
club, and wishing to impress the occasion
in some way upon the mind of the
venerable actor, and to give him some
token of his respect, Mr. Davis met him
with this speech:
"This is a very great pleasure, indeed,
Mr. Booth, and was of so much import
to me, that anticipating it, I looked
among my theatrical curios to select
some souvenir. Will you let me give
you the one I consider most interesting!
It is a copy of the program of the play
at Ford's theater the night that Abraham
Lincoln was shot."
Poor Davis! He had the pain of seeing
Booth reel and nearly full. Someone
hurried him away. And then, for the
first time, Mr. Davis learned how closely
associated with the assassin was Edwin
Booth. How he ever escaped acquiring
that knowledge before is one of those
things which no man can explain.
It is a fact as certain as that smoke
flies upward, that if there were a
museum of Lincoln souvenirs at
Washington, that not an American
or foreigner of intelligence
would visit Washington without
looking at these relics. For beloved as
Lincoln was in his life, it is only now,
with the focus that time gives, that the
true proportions of the man became apparent.
There is not, in history, a man
so revered. About him there is the
halo of martyrdom. And stronger than
that is the luster cast by a character
which stands for the American ideal.
He is what all Americans would like to
be, and in searching for a man who
seems the best result of our republican
institutions, we point to Lincoln.
Let his homely, familiar, restful face
but appear in the transformation of a
stereopticon display, or in the extravaganza
or in a play; and the audience
cannot get enough of it. They look
upon it as if it still had the power to
protect, guide and encourage. And the
flag itself cannot inspire them to equal
demonstrations.
Yes, decidedly, the house associated
with him, and many another mansion
of the beautiful capital, ought to
be preserved. How numerous the
associations are in connection with certain
of these houses, it needs an article
with the space and scope of the one referred
to in Scribner's to set forth. They
are filled with illustrious associations.
And we have reached another rung in
our evolution when we perceive the educating
influence that a preservation of
such memorial has.
ELIA W. PEATTIE | 100LET US NOT BE VANDALS
Mrs. Peattie Asks That Historic
Buildings Be Preserved
for the Future.
Old Landmarks in the Life of the Republic
Which Deserve a Tender Care
in Their Day of Decay.
There used to be an idea that a republic
should not indulge in reminiscence.
It was supposed to be the duty of citizens
of a republic to look forward and
not back. But there never yet was an
arbitrary rule made for the regulation of
man's emotions, which was not speedily
broken. And thus it has come about in
200 years of hot history that we are as
fond and proud of old associations as
any other country.
In some ways we have a great advantage
over other countries when it comes
to dealing with historic persons. And
that is that our distinguished personages
are honest in their distinction. They
are not noticed because they are Stuarts,
Howards or Guelphs, but because they
have individually done something heroic,
or brilliant, or sacrificial. And the lives
of such are bound together in a bundle--
as David would have said--with the
history of this republic. In short, the
history of this republic is the history of
individuals, and little by little this intensely
interesting fact is coming to be
appreciated.
A number of gentlemen at the city of
Washington have been laboring recently
to promulgate this idea, and they have
formed themselves, or been formed, into
the Memorial Association of the District
of Columbia. This association has been
formed for a threefold purpose:
First-- of preserving the most noteworthy
houses at the capital of this
country, that have been made historic
by the residence of the nation's greatest
men.
Second--of suitably marking, by
tablets or otherwise, the houses and
places throughout the city of chief interest
to the multitudes of Americans
and foreigners who annually visit the
capital.
Third--Of thus cultivating that historic
spirit and that reverence for the
memories of the founders and leaders
of the republic upon which an intelligent
and abiding patriotism so largely
depends.
The membership of this association is
interesting. It is composed of Chief
Justice Melvill W. Fuller, General
John M. Schofield, ex-Secretary of
State John W. Foster, B. W. Warder,
S. P. Langley, the astronomer; A.
B. Hagner, J. O. Bancroft Davis, once
assistant secretary of state, and the
nephew of the historian Bancroft; Walter
S. Cox, a judge of the district court;
S. H. Kauffmann, A. R. Spofford, the
librarian of congress; John Hay, the
poet, J. W. Douglass, Myron M. Parker,
Gardiner G. Hubbard, W. D. Davidge,
S. R. Franklin, Charles C. Glover, and
the Rev. Tennis S. Halin of the Church
of the Covenant at Washington.
The little circular sent about the country
by the association contains the following:
"The rapid growth of the city of
Washington and the transformation of
residence streets into business conters
are already obliterating many of our
historic buildings. Few people know
that where even the very greatest of our
statesmen had their homes while they
were making, or interpreting, or executing
the laws of the republic. We have
names that the civilized world honors;
their chief work was done in this city,
yet the visitor here has no means of satisfying
his praiseworthy desire to look
upon the places they made memorable.
The vast work of building up
a young nation has left us little
time for cultivating the historic
spirit. But we have now reached a period
when we need no longer bend every
energy to subdue nature and to insure
material prosperity. We may pause a
little to secure the higher refinements of
a splendid civilization. And among
these refinements, none is more precious
than that worthy pride in our best national
traits and achievements which
cannot exist apart from some intimate
acquaintance with the life and work of
our greatest men.
"Moved by such considerations, we
have formed the Memorial Association of
the District of Columbia, and have secured
incorporation under the laws
of the district. Pursuant to a
joint resolution of the two houses
of congress, approved June 14, 1892, we
have been appointed, six each by the
president of the United States, the president
of the senate, and the speaker of
house of representatives, as members of
the association. The term of service is
three years, one-third of the members being
appointed annually. We have adopted
by-laws, elected officers, and chosen a
board of five directors to manage the details
of our work under the instruction
of our association. We are prohibited
by our charter from receiving any compensation
for our labors. We have recently
issued a small pamphlet of
twenty-seven pages, giving careful information
as to a few of the historic
houses and places within the district.
We desire as soon as may be, to mark
with suitable tablets the most notable
houses still standing, in which the
greatest men of our nation's earlier years
have lived and labored. And we especially
wish to purchase the house on
Tenth street in which President Lincoln
died. It is the only building at the
capital distinctly associated with him.
We wish to restore it to the condition it
was then, both externally and internally
to gather in it such mementos of Mr.
Lincoln as can be procured, and to make
it a perpetual shrine of patriotic pilgrimage
for the millions that venerate
his memory. The title to this
and to any other historic houses
or places preserved by the labors
of the association will, by our charter,
vest in the United States, and remain
under the control and management of
the association at the will of congress.
"We look to the congress to enable this
work to be speedily entered upon, and
these patriotic designs carried out,
which we believe will greatly inure to the
benefits of the whole nation, which takes
a worthy pride in its magnificent capital.
No time could be more appropriate
for the inception of such an undertaking
than this historic and memorial year."
This sets forth succinctly the plan
which this company of gentlemen,
with Justice Fuller as their president
have laid out. It is one
in which every American must feel
an interest, and which the romance
regards with affection. For he
knows that pressed like leaves in
books, the rich colors faded, but still
apparent, the histories of fascinating
men and women lie impressed in the
personality of these old places.
In the current number of Scribner's
Magazine is an article by the Rev. Tennis
S. Hamlin on the "Historic House
of Washinton." It is rich with the
stories of the men and women who
have made Washington the "Paris of
America," and one is perplexed at the
idea of making selections from it, for
its stories have suggested one another in
a way to form a happy sequence, which
isolated quotations cannot but destroy.
In the article are the descriptions of
famous houses--houses renowned for
hospitality, for brilliant company for
adroitest lobbying--and the article is
agreeably illustrated with views from
these historic mansions.
But if one would be glad to see the
home where the fascinating and benevolent
Mrs. Van Ness lived, and to walk
in the room where Decatur dined with
his guests, and see the room where
Colonel Taylore danced, it would still
very much more like to have reverently
preserved the house associated with
Lincoln, and to have it filled with all the
mementos of him which can be procured
and authenticated.
Apropos of mementos of Lincoln,
there is a little story told of Richard
Harding Davis, which it is not particularly
pleasant to associate with that
brilliant young writer. He was to be
presented to Edwin Booth at the Actor's
club, and wishing to impress the occasion
in some way upon the mind of the
venerable actor, and to give him some
token of his respect, Mr. Davis met him
with this speech:
"This is a very great pleasure, indeed,
Mr. Booth, and was of so much import
to me, that anticipating it, I looked
among my theatrical curios to select
some souvenir. Will you let me give
you the one I consider most interesting!
It is a copy of the program of the play
at Ford's theater the night that Abraham
Lincoln was shot."
Poor Davis! He had the pain of seeing
Booth reel and nearly full. Someone
hurried him away. And then, for the
first time, Mr. Davis learned how closely
associated with the assassin was Edwin
Booth. How he ever escaped acquiring
that knowledge before is one of those
things which no man can explain.
It is a fact as certain as that smoke
flies upward, that if there were a
museum of Lincoln souvenirs at
Washington, that not an American
or foreigner of intelligence
would visit Washington without
looking at these relics. For beloved as
Lincoln was in his life, it is only now,
with the focus that time gives, that the
true proportions of the man became apparent.
There is not, in history, a man
so revered. About him there is the
halo of martyrdom. And stronger than
that is the luster cast by a character
which stands for the American ideal.
He is what all Americans would like to
be, and in searching for a man who
seems the best result of our republican
institutions, we point to Lincoln.
Let his homely, familiar, restful face
but appear in the transformation of a
stereopticon display, or in the extravaganza
or in a play; and the audience
cannot get enough of it. They look
upon it as if it still had the power to
protect, guide and encourage. And the
flag itself cannot inspire them to equal
demonstrations.
Yes, decidedly, the house associated
with him, and many another mansion
of the beautiful capital, ought to
be preserved. How numerous the
associations are in connection with certain
of these houses, it needs an article
with the space and scope of the one referred
to in Scribner's to set forth. They
are filled with illustrious associations.
And we have reached another rung in
our evolution when we perceive the educating
influence that a preservation of
such memorial has.
ELIA W. PEATTIE |