USA > Massachusetts > Barnstable County > Cape Cod, the right arm of Massachusetts : an historical narrative > Part 26
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"But tempests of woe pass over the soul, Fierce winds of anguish we cannot control; And shock after shock we are called to bear, Till the lips are white with the heart's despair.
"O, the shores of time with wrecks are strown,
Unto the ear comes ever a moan, Wrecks of hopes that sail with glee, Wrecks of loves sinking silently !
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" Many are hidden from mortal eye, Only God knoweth how deep they lie; Only God heard when the cry went up;
'Help me! take from me this bitter cup!'
"' Into each life some rain must fall'- If this were all, O, if this were all!
Yet there is a Refuge from storm and blast,
We may hide in the Rock till the woe is past.
"Be strong! be strong! to my heart I cry, A pearl in the wounded shell doth lie; Days of sunshine are given to all, Though 'Into each life some rain must fall.'"
Prof. Alonzo Tripp, a native of Harwich, wrote in 1853 a book of European travels, entitled, Crests from the Ocean World, which had a sale of 60,000 copies. Afterward he wrote a local novel, entitled The Fisher Boy, which had a large sale, and many appreciative readers. He has since delivered lectures on European events, in almost every considerable place in the country, which have attracted audiences of culture and discrimination.
In fictitious narrative, Rev. N. H. Chamberlain, a native of Sandwich, has published, Autobiography of a New England Farm House, the scenes of which are laid in that part of Sandwich, now Bourne. It is a reproduction, in agreeable and picturesque style, of many local incidents and traditions. He has also written The Sphinx of Aubery Parish, and a volume entitled Samuel Sewell and the World He Lived In, a book of high reputation, also several polemic church pamphlets, book notices, lectures and historical discourses.
Some thirty years ago, Capt. Benjamin F. Bourne, who had been a prisoner in Southern South America, wrote and published a book entitled, The Captive in Patagonia. It was a volume of thrilling interest and had an enormous sale. Even at this day it is frequently called for at the book-
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stores, and is read with as much interest as when fresh from the press.
Charles F. Chamberlayne, Esq., of Bourne, has edited a law book entitled, Best's Principles of the Law of Evidence, which under the name of Chamberlayne's Best, has been adopted as the standard authority in most of the law schools of the country.
Sylvester Baxter, a native of Yarmouth, was for many years one of the staff writers of the Boston Herald. In 1883 and 1884 he went to Mexico, as editor of The Financier of that city, and also correspondent of the Herald. He has contributed considerably for the magazines in the way of essays, poetry, sketches of travel and short stories, and although his writings have not been collected, some of them have appeared in pamphlet form; among them an illustrated description of the Morse Collection of Japanese Pottery, and Berlin ; a Study of German Municipal Government; both of them published by the Essex Institute, Salem. Here is one of Mr. Baxter's short poems, from the Atlantic Monthly of October, 1875, entitled "October Days :"
"The maples in the forest glow, And on the lawn the fall-flowers blaze, The mild air has a purple haze ; My heart is filled with warmth and glow.
"Like living coals the red leaves burn; They fall-then turns the red to rust ; They crumble, like the coals, to dust. Warm heart, must thou to ashes burn?"
Other natives in professional and business life, but not devoted to literature as a pursnit, have contributed valuable writings to the press in their leisure and unengrossed hours. Of these it may be proper to name : Rev. Osborn Myrick of Provincetown, a prolific writer to the county newspapers ;
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Frederick W. Crocker of Barnstable, who wrote several witty poems of high literary merit for occasional meetings and public gatherings ; Frederick W. Crosby of Barnstable, a writer of political papers, sketches, essays and stories in the leading Boston and New York journals, whose career was prematurely cut short in the most useful period of his life ; Benjamin Dyer, Jr., of Truro, an officer in the volunteer navy, who evinced a high degree of descriptive talent ; and E. S. Whittemore, Esq., of Sandwich.
Hon. John B. D. Cogswell of Yarmouth, who touched no subject he did not elueidate and adorn, wrote as an introduc- tion to the Atlas of Barnstable County (1880) an outline of county history, which is a valuable and interesting epitome. He also delivered a number of well-considered, elegantly composed publie addresses and lectures, some of which have been published. Matthew Arnold said of him that he was the most gifted man he met in America, forming his judgment from Mr. Cogswell's accomplishment as a conversationalist.
Sidney Brooks, of Harwich, was also a writer of intelligence and great enthusiasm upon local history and topographical description. Rev. John W. Dodge, has composed hynms and discourses which are always of interest from their scholarship and literary finish. Capt. Thomas P. Howes, of Dennis, has produced sea sketches, historical portraitures, and vivid descriptions of travel and adventure, which if collected in a volume would meet with rapid and extensive appreciation. Mrs. Mary M. Bray, a native of Yarmouth, whose 250th anniversary poem there has met such universal admiration, wrote before and since some graceful poems and sketches of distant places, for the journals of the day. Miss Gertrude Alger, a young poet of merit, who early in life passed into the spiritual world, has produced some graceful and finished poems, one or two of
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which have found their place in the current collections of contemporancous poetry. Hon. Henry A. Scudder and Hon. George Marston, of Barnstable, better known as lawyers, also delivered addresses and orations which commanded attention from their style and treatment of important public questions. Philip H. Sears, Esq., a native of Dennis, has delivered several public addresses, one of the most important of which, on the celebration of the 250th anniversary of the settlement of Old Yarmouth, was a finished and thoughtful presentation of the subject. Azariah Eldridge, D. D., of Yarmouth, besides his pulpit discourses, wrote several public addresses which have commanded the attention of thoughtful readers and thinkers. A memorial volume, containing a brief memoir of Doctor Eldridge, by C. F. Swift, Rev. Mr. Dodge's sermon at his obsequies and various letters and notices by personal friends, was prepared for private circulation, under the direction of Mrs. Eldridge.
Two school books which had a high reputation in their day, were prepared by old-time Cape teachers. Rev. Jonathan Burr, of Sandwich, pastor of the First church and preceptor of Sandwich Academy, about the close of the last century was the author of a Compendium of English Grammar, which occupied a leading position in the schools in this portion of the state for many years. Capt. Zenas Weeks, of Marston's Mills, a prominent man in his day, a school teacher and music teacher, was the author of a text book on English grammar, issued about the year 1833.
In 1854, Mrs. A. M. Richards, a daughter of Capt. Benjamin Hallet of Osterville, wrote a volume of 140 pages, which was published by Gould & Lincoln, Boston, entitled Memoirs of a Grandmother; by a Lady of Massachusetts. It was an autobiography, and contained
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graphic sketehes of incidents and individuals, some of whom are well known to the public. Interspersed in the narrative are a number of metrical compositions of a high order of poetical merit.
In 1888, a volume entitled, Biographical Sketch of Sylvanus B. Phinney, was issued on the 80th anniversary of his birthday. The volume contains a sketch of his life, letters from Revs. Edward E. Hale and A. Nickerson, and public addresses and papers prepared by Mr. Phinney.
Joseph Story Fay, Esq., of Wood's Hole, published in 1878 a little monograph entitled, The Track of the Norsemen, in which he very ingeniously argues that these Scandinavian navigators visited the locality since known as Wood's Hole, and that the proper name of the locality is Wood's Holl (meaning hill), which name, through his efforts, it some time bore. Mr. Fay, who was an enthusiastic arborator, as well as a gentleman of literary tastes and pursuits, has delivered among others, addresses relating to his experiences in planting and rearing forest trees on his estate at Wood's Hole.
Rev. J. G. Gammons issued in 1888, a monograph of the Methodist Episcopal church of Bourne, which sketches the rise and growth of Methodism, and preserves many interesting reminiscences of the pioneers of this sect on Cape Cod and elsewhere, especially in the town of Bourne.
A Genealogy of the Burgess family, from Thomas Burgess, who settled in Sandwich in 1637, to the year 1865, was issued at that date, by E. Burgess of Dedham. It was a private edition, printed for the author, and contained 196 pages and has over 4,600 names of the family and branches, with several lithographie portraits.
George Eldridge, of Chatham, in 1880 published a work of Sailing Directions for Navigators, followed by other
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editions in 1884 and 1886. In 1889 he published Eldridge's Tide and Current Book. These publications, together with Mr. Eldridge's charts, are the most valuable works of the class extant, and are looked upon as standard authority by navigators, and adopted by the naval authorities of the country.
Mr. Gustavus A. Hinckley has reproduced for publication in the Barnstable Patriot, the inscriptions on the ancient grave-stones in the old Barnstable cemetery, engraving the blocks very neatly with his own hand, and compiling information to accompany the cuts. He has also compiled a manuscript History of Barnstable in the Civil War.
In 1866, Mrs. Caroline (Thacher) Perry, of Yarmouth, collected a volume of short stories which she had contributed to the New Church Magazine for Children, and they were published, with illustrations, by Nichols & Noyes, of Boston, under the title, Effie Gray and other Short Stories for Little Children. These stories possessed the rare merit in juvenile literature of interesting the class of readers for which they were designed.
Rev. Dr. William H. Ryder, a native of Provincetown, who deceased in Chicago, where he settled in 1888, was a pulpit orator of eloquence and power, and wrote some able articles for the Universalist Quarterly. His writings, however, have not appeared in a collected form.
Heman Doane, of Eastham, has written a number of metrical compositions, a few of which have been published, and which possess a good degree of poetic fancy and facility of versification. One of them, on the Ancient Pear Tree in Eastham, planted by Governor Prince, attracted the atten- tion of Thoreau, who quoted freely therefrom.
"Two hundred years have, on the wings of time,
Passer with their joys and woes, since thou, Old Tree!
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Put forth thy first leaves in this foreign clime, Transplanted from the soil beyond the sea. * * * *
"That exiled band long since have passed away, And still Old Tree thou standest in the place Where Prince's hand did plant thee, in his day, -- An undesigned memorial of his race
And time; of those our honored fathers, when They came from Plymouth o'er and settled here; Doane, Higgins, Snow and other worthy men, Whose names their sons remember to revere."
James Gifford, of Provincetown, has prepared and delivered public addresses which have attracted attention by their felicity of style and fullness of information. That delivered at the dedication of the Provincetown new town hall, in the fall of 1866, was published and read with interest and appreciation. Levi Atwood, of Chatham, has written considerably upon local matters. He published, in 1876, a condensed history of Chatham, occupying several columns of small newspaper type, written in an appreciative and discriminating spirit. Nathaniel Hinckley, of Marston's Mills, besides writing much and ably for the newspapers, and delivering public addresses, has published several political pamphlets, of considerable argumentative force.
Not only has Cape Cod furnished a considerable contri- bution of the best literature to the world, but it has been provocative of a good deal of interesting writing from others, in respect to its characteristics, both mental and physical. It is scarcely to be wondered at, that a community so peculiarly situated as this should attract attention and excite curiosity. In 1807, an Englishman named Kendall visited these parts and published a book, in which he devoted a liberal share of space to this county. Although it contained nothing very striking, it embodied some interesting and curious information respecting the Cape, at that day,
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when intercourse with the world was quite infrequent to the mass of the people.
About 1821, Dr. Timothy Dwight, former president of Yale College, published his Travels in New England, in four volumes, a liberal space being devoted to Cape Cod. His book was full of information, and appreciative in that part devoted to the Cape. At a later period, N. P. Willis wrote for a New York newspaper, and afterward embodied in a book, a series of lively, touch-and-go letters, dealing more particularly with the outward aspect of the Cape. Some of his strictures gave offence and others were more agreeable to the popular taste. Though not profound, this book was exceedingly suggestive and entertaining.
Of all the numerous publications of this nature ever issued from the press, Thoreau's Cape Cod is by far the best, as a literary production, and for genuine appreciation of the grand physical aspects of the Cape, and of the true qualities of its people. Thoreau had a keen relish for quaint and curious phases of character as well as of landscape, and his pictures of the "Wellfleet oystermen " and of other original people revealed the presence among us of striking person- alities. His admiration of the Cape is genuine, and his closing page records his conviction that "the time must come when this coast will be a place of resort for all those who wish to visit the seaside. What are springs and waterfalls? Here is the spring of springs and the waterfall of waterfalls. * * * A man may stand there and put all America behind him."
It only remains to remark that the paternal parent of John Howard Payne, the author of "Home, Sweet Home," was of Cape Cod origin, and that Harvey Birch, the prototype of Cooper's "Spy," originated in Harwich, his real name being Enoch Crosby, and his actual experience
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being matched by all the incidents recounted in this most characteristic of the author's works. Though not himself the creator of one of the most striking personalities in modern fiction, he was, what is still better, the original of this most prominent character.
The newspapers of the Cape have been many, and more ability has been embodied in their publication than has always found appreciation -of a pecuniary nature. The first newspaper published in the county was issued at Falmouth, November 21, 1823, by W. E. P. Rogers, under the name of The Nautical Intelligencer. It was issued weekly, at two dollars per year. In addition to the newspaper, the publishers issued, twice each week, extras containing the marine news and important arrivals at Holmes's Hole, for transmission to Boston. The paper also indulged in political speculations, being a strong adherent of Mr. Calhoun for President, for the reasons, among others, that he was "an enlightened friend of Internal Improvements and Domestic Manufactures." This eulogy sounds oddly enough in view of his subsequent course. The paper was printed on a sheet 18 by 25 inches, with four pages, containing four columns each, 16 inches in length. In its first issue there was not a single item of local news except deaths, marriages and ship-news, and it contained twelve advertisements. It did not continue in existence long -probably not more than a year and a half.
Removing his printing and material to Barnstable, Mr. Rogers, on April 13, 1825, commenced the publication of the Barnstable County Gazette. The Gazette had one more column on each page than its predecessor, and a rather larger advertising patronage. It paid more attention to local news; but that was not a newspaper reading age, and its
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publication was continued not over two years, so far as can now be ascertained.
In 1826, the Barnstable Journal was commenced by Nathaniel S. Simpkins. It was a six-column newspaper, containing a few paragraphs of local news, considerable shipping intelligence, and liberal extracts from the Boston and New York newspapers, also miscellany and moral readings. The Journal attained a good circulation. In 1832 Mr. Simpkins sold out the establishment to H. Underwood and C. C. P. Thompson, who published, for one year, also a semi-weekly paper called the Cape Cod Journal. In 1834 Mr. Underwood became the sole proprietor of the weekly, which in 1837 again passed into the hands of Mr. Simpkins, who removed the plant to Yarmouth, and established the Register.
The Barnstable Patriot was established by S. B. Phinney, in 1830, and was conducted by him until 1869, when he sold out to Franklin B. Goss and George H. Richards. Subsequently the whole establishment was acquired by Mr. Goss, who now conducts it, in connection with his son, F. Percy Goss. The Patriot, during Mr. Phinney's connection with it, was an active and aggressive democratic sheet. Some time after Mr. Goss's assumption of the management, it espoused the republican cause, in which it still maintains a lively interest. During Mr. Phinney's proprietorship of the newspaper, Hon. Henry Crocker was a frequent editorial contributor, mostly of political articles. The Patriot is now the oldest journal in the county. In 1851, the Sand- wich Mechanic was for one year issued at the Patriot office.
Dec. 15, 1836, the first number of the Yarmouth Register was issued by N. S. Simpkins, publisher. The plant had been purchased by Messrs. John Reed, Amos Otis, N. S. Simpkins, Ebenezer Bacon and Edward B. Hallet. Mr.
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Simpkins was assisted in the editorship by contributions from Messrs. Caleb S. Hunt and Amos Otis. The paper, besides being a local journal, was designed to champion the cause of Hon. John Reed, the member of congress from this district, and to oppose the Jackson and Van Buren dynasty, which was rather obnoxious in this county. The controversies with the Barnstable Patriot, which folllowed, were exceedingly bitter and personal, on both sides. In 1839, Mr. Simpkins retired from the management of the paper and was succeeded by William S. Fisher, who was a printer by profession, and who infused considerable vigor into its management. In 1846, the present proprietor, Charles F. Swift, became connected with the management of the Register, as co-partner with Mr. Fisher, and in 1849 became sole editor and publisher. During the last fifty years the conduct of the paper has been in his hands, with assistance successively by his four sons, Francis M., Frederick C., Theodore W., and Charles W. Swift. The Register, which was originally a whig journal, and supported Webster, Clay, Taylor and Scott for the presidency, had always been strongly anti-slavery in its proclivities, and, in 1857, warmly espoused the cause of the republicans, which it has ever since supported, with earnestness and without reservation. The Register has also paid much attention to questions of social reform and general and local history.
The Sandwich Observer was first issued in September, 1845, by George Phinney. It was a 24-column folio, 24 by 36 inches, and was devoted to general and local news. Dr. John Harper and C. B. H. Fessenden were special contributors to its columns. The Observer attained a fair patronage, being neutral in politics and having the support of all the political parties, but the field was at best a limited one, and in August, 1851, Mr. Phinney removed his
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establishment to North Bridgewater (now Brockton), where he founded the Gazette of that town.
A monthly newspaper, called the Cape Cod News, was issued in Provincetown, though printed elsewhere, the first number bearing date of June, 1856, A. S. Dudley and Rufus Conant, publishers. But few numbers were issued.
The Provincetown Banner was issued in 1855, by John W. Emery, editor and proprietor. It was a 24-column journal, republican in politics, somewhat radical in its tone. It was published until 1862, when it was discontinued and the material removed from town.
In August, 1857, the Atlantic Messenger was established at Hyannis, by Edwin Coombs. It was a 24-column journal, 21 by 20 inches, price $1.00 per year. It was devoted to anti-slavery, politics and social discussions. It was once or twice discontinued and started again. But the encourage- ment received by the proprietor was not sufficient to sustain the enterprise, and the concluding number was issued about the year 1863.
January 2, 1862, the first number of the Cape Cod Republican was issued at Harwich, by John W. Emery, formerly of the Provincetown Banner, the printing office of which journal had been removed for the purpose. It was in style and make-up similar to the Banner. In 1864, Mr. Emery returned to Harwich and started the Harwich Press, a paper similar to the Republican. In less than a year he abandoned the field, and removed to Minnesota. The list of the Press was sold to the proprietor of the Yarmouth Register.
The Provincetown Advocate was issued in 1869, by F. Percy Goss, publisher. Dr. J. M. Crocker was editor for about seven years, when Mr. Goss assumed the editorial charge, and conducted the paper for three years longer. In
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1879, H. H. Sylvester, recently of the Boston Record, pur- chased an interest in the paper and conducted it for a year, disposing of his interest to N. T. Freeman, who acquired Mr. Goss's interest also. In December, 1886, the estab- lishment was purchased by Howard F. Hopkins, who has since been its publisher. His brother, Judge James H. Hopkins, edited the sheet until his lamented death.
In November, 1870, the Provincetown News, a 32-column republican newspaper, was issued by J. HI. Barnard & Co., with J. Howard Barnard, editor. The price of the paper was $2.50 per year, in advance; $3.00 after three months. At the end of four months the enterprise was given up, and the list transferred to other newspapers.
The Chatham Monitor was first issued October 1, 1871, at the Patriot office, Dr. Benjamin D. Gifford being the editor. It was devoted to local and general news, and was republican in politics. In 1873, Levi Atwood assumed the editorship. Mr. Atwood had previously been a contributor to other county journals, and was well known as a writer of pith and vigor. The Monitor is still continued under his editorship.
The Cape Cod Bee was issued in 1880, at the Patriot office, F. Percy Goss, publisher. It is a local journal and is republican in its politics.
About 1872, Messrs. J. H. Nichols and William C. Spring started the Sandwich Gazette, which was afterwards merged with the Falmouth Chronicle, which Mr. Spring had started in 1872. Henry Jones was the Falmouth editor. Mr. Spring for some time continued the paper, under the style of Gazette and Chronicle. In October, 1873, F. S. Pope took the plant of the Chronicle, and established the Seaside Press, devoted to the local interests of Sandwich and Falmouth. J. H. Stevens was editor, and Mr. Jones
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continued in charge of the Falmouth department. In 1880, Mr. Pope sold his interest to F. H. Burgess, who changed the name to Weekly Review, with Benjamin Cook as editor for a time. In 1884, Mr. Burgess sold his interest to George Otis, and the list was merged with the Cape Cod Item.
The Harwich Independent was established in 1872, by Goss & Richards, of the Patriot, the paper being printed in Barnstable. The local department was put in type at a job office which the publishers had set up in Harwich. The editorial writing for the first few years was by Mr. Wilcox, Josiah Paine and Dr. Geo. N. Munsell. In 1880, Alton P. Goss purchased the establishment, added a press and other machinery, and put the paper on a prosperous basis. The leanings of the paper are towards republicanism, but the Independent is more especially a loeal journal, in which field it has achieved a good degree of success.
The Cape Cod Item was started July 11, 1878, at Yarmouthport, by George Otis. It was gradually enlarged to an 8-page journal, issuing a single or double supplement a portion of the year. It was at first devoted to local and general news. In 1889, William P. Reynolds, Esq., was associated with Mr. Otis in the editorship, and the paper, which was discontinued in the spring of 1893, after being issued a few weeks as a daily, has been revived, and is now published weekly at the Barnstable Patriot office.
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