This Week @ MHS

By Jeremy Dibbell

Two seminars and a brown-bag lunch this week:

– On Tuesday, 12 October, at 5:15 p.m., as part of the Boston Environmental History seminar series, Matthew McKenzie of the University of Connecticut at Avery Point will discuss his paper “A History of Denial: Romanticization and Regulation in the New England Fisheries, 1893-1918.” Judith Layzer of MIT will give the comment. Please read the Seminar Series 2010 post for information on MHS Seminars.

– On Thursday, 14 October, also at 5:15 p.m., the Boston Early American History seminar series continues with a paper by Richard Ryerson, “The Discovery of the Republic, 1768-1772.” Robert Gross of UConn will give the comment. Please read the Seminar Series 2010 post for information on MHS Seminars.

– And on Friday, 15 October, at 12 noon, join us for a brown-bag lunch with Sheldon Cohen on his project “Commodore Whipple of the Continental Navy.”

Call for Papers: MHS Graduate Student Symposium

By Jeremy Dibbell

“Collecting History: The Massachusetts Historical Society Graduate Symposium”

“I must study Politicks and War that my Sons may have liberty to study Mathematicks and Philosophy. my Sons ought to study Mathematicks and Philosophy, Geography, natural History Naval Architecture, navigation, Commerce and Agriculture, in order to give their Children a right to study Painting Poetry Musick, Architecture, Statuary, Tapestry and Porcelaine.” – John Adams, Letter to Abigail Adams, post 12 May 1780.

Inspired by John Adams’ educational blueprint and continuing a long tradition of support for emerging scholars, the Massachusetts Historical Society will host “Collecting History: The Massachusetts Historical Society Graduate Symposium,” an interdisciplinary conference for graduate students, on Saturday, 4 June 2011. Researchers are encouraged to make use of the Historical Society’s extensive collections, which offer an unparalleled resource for the study of American history from the colonial period through the twentieth century. Focusing on American history and related aspects of world history, the program will consist of several themed panels and a keynote address from a distinguished scholar. Papers will be substantial, pre-circulated essays and will be accessible online for attendees. Conference registration is free. Proposals from various disciplines welcome. Please key proposals to one of these topics:

–The Personal Papers of Three Presidents (John Adams, John Quincy Adams, Thomas Jefferson)

–Politics & War & Philosophy

–History of Women and Gender

— Navigation, Commerce, & the Natural World

–Immigration and Urban History

–Painting, Poetry, & Architecture

Please email abstract (300-500 words) and biography (150-300 words) to conference coordinators Sara Georgini (sgeorgini@masshist.org) and Kathleen Barker (kbarker@masshist.org) by Tuesday, 18 January 2011. Presenters will be notified by Tuesday, 1 February 2011.

Holiday Closure Notice

By Jeremy Dibbell

Please note: the MHS library will be closed on Monday, 11 October in observance of the Columbus Day holiday. The building will be open from 11 a.m. through 2 p.m. for the Fenway Alliance’s “Opening Our Doors” open house (your last chance to see the current exhibit, “Precious Metals: From Au to Zn”). More info here.

New on our Bookshelves

By Jeremy Dibbell

Another new arrival to our display shelves is Midnight Ride, Industrial Dawn: Paul Revere and the Growth of American Enterprise (just published by Johns Hopkins University Press), written by Robert Martello, associate professor of history of science and technology at the Franklin W. Olin College of Engineering. Martello held two MHS research fellowships in the late 1990s, and his work draws heavily on the Revere Family papers.

More Bread in the Collections

By Jeremy Dibbell

After my post last week on a Revolutionary War biscuit, our Curator of Art reported that there were some other examples of baked goods in the MHS collections at various points.

In December 1920 the children of Massachusetts’ Civil War governor John A. Andrew gave the Society a large collection of “relics” presented to their father by returning soldiers. Among these were “two specimens of the ‘daily bread’ furnished to Union prisoners in Libby Prison, brought away by a paroled prisoner.” Unfortunately the two pieces of bread were accidentally thrown out in 1990 while on exhibit loan to an Iowa historical organization.

But we do have a piece of petrified bread said to be from the Siege of Paris, 1870-1871. This is among historian Francis Parkman’s assorted memorabilia removed from the study in his Jamaica Plain home, and came with other Parkman artifacts as a gift of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts, 16 January 1984. And here it is:

This Week @ MHS

By Jeremy Dibbell

Here’s what’s happening at the MHS this week:

– On Tuesday, 5 October we’ll host a brown-bag lunch talk at 12 noon with Beth Luey, Assistant Editor of the Adams Papers, on her recent book Expanding the American Mind: Books and the Popularization of Knowledge.

– Another brown-bag lunch on Wednesday, 6 October, also at 12 noon, with long-term research fellow Lin Fisher of Brown University. Lin will speak on his current project, “An Indian Great Awakening? Negotiating Colonialism in Eighteenth Century New England.”

– On Thursday, 7 October, the 2010 Boston Seminar on the History of Women and Gender series begins with a talk at 5:30 p.m. by Karen Hansen and Grey Osterud, “A Stake in the Land: Analyzing Women’s Land Ownership in African American, Dakota Indian, Immigrant Scandinavian, and European American Communities.” Claudia Goldin of Harvard University will comment on the paper. Please read the Seminar Series 2010 post for information on MHS Seminars. Please note that this event will be held at the Schlesinger Library.

A Biscuit’s Tale

By Jeremy Dibbell

Our Preservation Librarian, Kathy Griffin, is sorting through the pre-1900 MHS Archives, and has been coming across some really interesting pieces of correspondence, among which is this 1856 letter from Joseph Mills of Needham, MA:

I, Joseph Mills, was the Son of David Mills; Born in the Town of Needham Co of Norfolk, State of Mass, Sept. 7th, 1773.

At the Lexington Battle, my Father belonged to a company of Minute Men, when the alarm was given He repaired to the scene of action; the history of the day will tell what befell the Needham Minute-Men; He followed the British to their encampment that night in Charlestown, enlisting orders being out next day, He enlisted for three months came home to His Family got some clothes, & returned to the camp in Cambrige [sic]. (He was also at Bunker Hill Battle,) Ever ready to serve His Country, He went as a volunteer to Newport RI, to drive the British from there. When His Country again called for His services, He enlisted again & went to York State, was at the taking of Burgoyne the 17th of Oct, 1777, after Burgoyne’s army surrendered, He said the American soldiers were fed from the British stores, & when the American Army disbanded, & the American Soldiers were returning Home, they took British bread in their Napsacks to eat on their way, My Father thought He would fetch some of the Bread home to let People see what Soldiers had to eat.

When I was a Boy & Frequently used to see My Father show that Bread to strangers & old Soldiers who frequently visited Him, one in particular would say, why, Mills, have you got that Biscuit yet? In company with Him, while looking over His papers, in the year 1803, He took out that Biscuit, & said to me Joseph, here is a relic of the Revolution, bought with the price of Blood, You take & keep it, it may be of some consequence as a curiosity in future years.

From that time until the present, I have kept it, thinking to present it so some Soc who would present me a suitable reward.

The above facts as near as my memory serves me, I am ready to confirm by oath; & as I am now confined to a sick-bed, hope no one would dispute my statements.

Dictated by Myself, & written by my Daughter.

Needham Aug 30th 1856.

[signed] Joseph Mills

Samuel Abbott Green, the MHS Librarian from 1868 through 1918, has written on the back of the letter “This biscuit that came with this note was destroyed by worms, and the note itself barely escaped the same fate.”

So does Mills’ story check out? Could his father have indeed been at Lexington, Bunker Hill, Saratoga, and Newport? Turning to Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War, Volume X (Boston: 1902) we find five entries for David Mills (pp. 791-792), and it looks like they may all be referring to Joseph’s father. David Mills is listed as a private in Captain Robert Smith’s company at the time of the 19 April 1775 alarm (service 16 days); a private in Captain Moses Whiting’s company at Cambridge on 5 May 1775 (serving through the end of 1775 and again for four days at the time of the fortification of Dorchester Heights in March 1776); a private in Captain Aaron Smith’s company from 15 August – 29 November 1777 when the company “marched to reinforce Northern army” around Saratoga; a private in Captain Ebenezer Battles’ company from 23 March – 5 April 1778; and a private in Captain Ebenezer Everet’s company from 1 August – 14 September 1778 on the expedition to Rhode Island. Quite a record, that!

The vital records of Needham indicate that David was born 26 December 1743 to David and Jemima (Tolman) Mills. He married Elizabeth Hunting 30 August 1770, and lived until 12 January 1824. From the records it looks like at least a couple of David’s brothers (Ezra, Joseph) may also have enlisted during the Revolution.

Joseph Mills’ letter to the MHS was read at the 11 September 1856 meeting of the Society, according to the Proceedings (III:112), but alas, the biscuit did not withstand the ravages of time.

This Week @ MHS

By Jeremy Dibbell

– On Wednesday, 29 September we’ll host an author talk with Eric Jay Dolin on his new book Fur, Fortune, and Empire: The Epic History of the Fur Trade in America. Refreshments will be served at 5:30 p.m., with the talk starting at 6 p.m. Registration is required for this event; more info here.

– On Thursday, 30 September, the 2010 Boston Immigration and Urban History Seminar series begins with a talk at 5:15 p.m. by Erika Lee of the University of Minnesota, “Angel Island: Immigrant Gateway to America.” Mary Lui of Yale University will comment on the paper. Please read the Seminar Series 2010 post for information on MHS Seminars.

New on our Bookshelves

By Jeremy Dibbell

Another of the new publications featuring an MHS collection is Castorland Journal: An Account of the Exploration and Settlement of Northern New York State by French Émigrés in the Years 1793 to 1797, by Simon Desjardins and Pierre Pharoux. This edition, just published by Cornell University Press, was edited by John A Gallucci, Assistant Professor of French at Colgate University, and contains a very useful introduction, footnotes, and appendices.

Desjardins and Pharoux were agents of the French Compagnie de New York, sent to manage the company’s Castorland tract in what are today Lewis and Jefferson Counties. The journal recounts their travels, business meetings (with the likes of Philip Schuyler, Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, and Aaron Burr) and the many obstacles they faced.

The original Castorland journal was given to the Historical Society in September 1863 by William Appleton, after having been found and purchased in a Paris bookstall. Our Proceedings (Vol. VII, p. 145) record “The President [Robert C. Winthrop] presented, on behalf of William Appleton, Esq., a volume, chiefly in manuscript, entitled ‘Journal de Castorland, – Relation du Voyage et des Etablissements des Emigrés Français dans l’Amérique Septentrionale,’ &c., 1793-1796. Voted, That the thanks of the Society be presented to Mr. Appleton for this acceptable donation.”

Gallucci’s edition of Castorland Journal is currently on our display shelves in the library for easy access, and the original journal (catalog record) is here and available for use on microfilm.

MHS Members Gone Bad

By Jeremy Dibbell

I suspect every membership-based organization has some stories about the members that have warranted expulsion over the years. The MHS kicked out three members in its first two decades (but has used the practice very sparingly – if at all – ever since). What did those members do to warrant removal from our membership rolls?

The first two expelled members were booted at the same meeting, on 20 July 1797. The Proceedings (Vol. I, p. 106) record: “Whereas Edmund Randolph and William Blount, who have been elected Corresponding Members of this Society, are, in our opinion, unworthy of our confidence; therefore, Voted, That they be no longer considered as Corresponding Members.” The motion passed without dissent. Randolph, the the Attorney General of the United States, was nominated by Jeremy Belknap and elected to Corresponding Membership on 23 October 1792. Blount was at the time of his expulsion a fairly new member, having just been elected on 25 October 1796.

Why the boot? Randolph had resigned as Secretary of State in 1795 after a scandal involving intercepted messages from the French government that were reportedly embarrassing to the Washington Administration. Blount, a United States Senator representing the new state of Tennessee, had been caught up in a scheme to incite the Creek and Cherokee Indians to provide assistance to the British in an invasion of Spanish West Florida. He was impeached by the House of Representatives on 7 July 1797 (for “a high misdemeanor, entirely inconsistent with his public duty and trust as a Senator”), and expelled by the Senate the following day. Twelve days later, the Historical Society acted as well.

The third expulsion hit much closer to home. Samuel Turell of Boston, a watchmaker, was elected a Resident Member of the Society in 1793, and served as Cabinet-Keeper from 1793 until 1808. In 1802, Turell requested permission to borrow certain natural history specimens from the Society’s collections for a new museum, which was granted. Five years later, though, the Society got a little anxious about Turell’s Cabinet, and a committee was formed on 25 August 1807 “to demand of Mr. Turell, Cabinet-Keeper, the various articles belonging to the Society which have been in his possession, and to see that they are returned to the Cabinet.”

The committee’s demands went unheeded, and on 27 August 1811 the members of the Society voted to expel Turell from the MHS because he had not returned the articles borrowed from the collections, and had “otherwise acted unworthily as a member.”

In his bicentennial history of the Historical Society, former Director Len Tucker notes “It is not known if Turell ever returned the items he had borrowed.”