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CHAPTER
X TWO
FAMOUS OLD BUILDINGS N a February night in 1688,
a striking funeral pageant passed through the streets of Boston; the
funeral
procession of Lady Andros, the wife of Governor Andros.
And how far away that seems! 1688 – that was the far-away
year that marked the downfall of the second dames. That year seems far
away
even when one is over in England, and therefore it seems curiously far
away in
this New England. Yet in 1688 Boston had for decades been settled.
People had
already begun to think of it as a long-established place. People had
already
begun to look with interest at those who could rightfully claim the
title of "old inhabitants"!
That winter-night
funeral of
Lady Andros made a grimly striking scene. A hearse with six horses drew
the
body. Soldiers lined the way. Torches flickered and blazed to light the
snowy
streets. Candles and torches lighted the old church. Six "mourning
women," as they were called, walked behind the body until it was set
down
before the pulpit and then they seated themselves beside it like dismal
ghosts.
The church was crowded. The minister, with the grim directness of old
times,
preached frankly from the text, "All flesh is grass." And when the
ceremony was over the body was borne out of the little chapel, a
building
standing where now stands the Old South Church, on what is now
Washington
Street, and carried to the burying-ground now known as that of King's
Chapel,
on Tremont Street, King's Chapel itself having not then been built.
That winter
night funeral was dramatic indeed. What is supposed to
be the
grave of Lady Andros is still to be seen, here within this ancient
inclosure of
King's Chapel Burying-ground, and here too is many another of interest.
The
supposedly oldest remaining stone is that of a certain William Paddy,
who died
in 1658. Born in the year 1600, this man; born twenty years before the
sailing
of the Mayflower; born while Elizabeth
was still Queen; yet here in Boston is his grave, still marked. Here
rest the
remains of many a Leverett and Wendell and Mather and Cotton, and
especially is
it the last home of many a Winthrop, and in a Winthrop tomb lies that
Mary
Chilton Winthrop who not only was one of those who crossed in the first
voyage
of the Mayflower but who, so the
delightful old story has it, was the first woman to land in America
from that
immortal ship. I do not know how one can come to a more practical and
more vivid
appreciation of the American past, than by stepping aside, from the
busy,
rushing street, into the down-sloping bit of burial-ground, hemmed in
by street
and chapel and business blocks and city hall, and standing beside the
very tomb
– within which lie the remains of that Mayflower passenger,
the first woman to step upon the Rock. And modestly, very,
very
modestly, far over at one side of the graveyard, stands a stone which
marks the
resting-place of one Elizabeth Pain, and it simply records without any
of the
old-time reference to beauty of character or beauty of life or the
grief of the
remaining relatives, that she departed this life in 1704; and a sort of
chill
comes, a grim feeling of the severity of the past and of the present,
when you
know that this is understood to be the grave of the poor woman who gave
to
Hawthorne his idea of Hester Prynne: for it will, of course, be
remembered that
the scene of the "Scarlet Letter" was Boston and not Salem, although
it was in Salem that the book was written. The poor Elizabeth with the
suggestive surname was one of the earliest Americans to learn that the
fatted
calf is never killed for the prodigal daughter. Here in this really
ancient
graveyard is the tomb of Robert Keayne, who founded, half a century
before the
time of the Andros funeral, his Ancient and Honorable Artillery
Company, which
is still existent. Over at one side of the enclosure, I chanced upon
the name
of Tudor, a name mildly prominent in early New England history; and the
thought
comes of that New England Tudor – could this have been the very one! –
who,
when presented at the court of King George the Third, caused a look of
pleased
astonishment to come over the bored face of the monarch at the mention
of his
name: "Eh, eh, what! Tudor? One of us, eh, what?" The present King's
Chapel,
beside the old burying ground, is a pillar-fronted, rather low,
square-towered
building, a building rather dark and dusky in effect, built not on the
general
lines of most of our early churches, but following the design of some
of the
old-fashioned little churches of London. And the pillars are not of
stone, as
they seem to be, but of wood. Taken by itself it would seem to be a
veritable
bit out of London. The very first King's Chapel was built here in the
very year
in which Lady Andros died, and although that first building was wood
instead of
stone, and although it was a little smaller than the present chapel,
which is
itself quite small, it must have been a church with a great deal of
display and
impressiveness, for along its walls were hung the escutcheons of the
King of
England and of the various Royal Governors who had been sent out to
Massachusetts. Even in those early days it was looked upon as rather an
ostentatious building. The present chapel
was built
over a century and a half ago; services were first held here in 1754;
and the
interior is not without a certain richness of effect, simple though it
is. It
is really a cozily attractive little church, with its white walls and
galleries
and pillars and its square pews with dark mahogany top-rails and
linings of red
baize. The pairing of the pillars adds much to the excellent effect, as
do also
the Corinthian capitals. The ceiling is unusually low even for a small
church
and there is also the unusual feature, for America, that the floor is
made of
small square stones. The comfortable, square, enclosed pews seem
additionally
quaint and comfortable from their being fitted with stands for canes
and
umbrellas, and little shelves for prayer-books and Bibles, and even
with chairs
in addition to the fixed benches of the pews. Tradition has not
preserved
the precise location of the pew in which Washington sat when they gave
an
oratorio in this building to entertain him in 1789, but one may fairly
suppose
that it was the pew known as the Governor's Pew, which was in early
days
surmounted by a canopy and in which sat in succession a line of
pre-Revolutionary royal governors, beginning with Governor Shirley, who
laid
the cornerstone of the building. Here, too, sat General Gage and Sir
William
Howe, in the early part of the Revolutionary War. Familiar as
Washington was
with the churches and the architecture of the entire country he must
have
looked with much interest at the high-set pulpit, the very pulpit which
is
still in place and used, for it is believed to be the oldest in New
England and
possibly in the United States; it dates well back before the building
of this
present building, for it was transferred from the earlier church to
this, and
is said to be at least as old as 1717 and perhaps to have been in the
older
church from its very beginning in 1688. It is certainly interesting,
with its
twisting stair charmingly enclosed with panels and pilasters, and its
heavy
suspended sounding-board. King's Chapel has a
connection with what is often written about as one of the romances of
early
American days, for one of those who united to build the present
structure was
that Sir Henry Frankland who, up at Marblehead, fell in love with the
inn-keeper's pretty daughter, Agnes Surriage, and brought her to
Boston; his
pew is still remembered and is the one now numbered 20; but Frankland
played
anything but a manly man's part, and the masters and lovers of real
American
romance, Longfellow and Hawthorne, did nothing, I think, to give the
story its
amazing vogue. The present organ of
King's
Chapel was sent out from England in 1756, and has from time to time
been
rebuilt and enlarged, and it is said to have been the personal
selection of the
mighty Handel, who tested it and played upon it at the request of King
George
the Second, who counted him as a friend and asked this favor of him. There are various old
monuments, inside this church, of worthies of the past, including a
noticeable
one, in the most florid Westminster Abbey funeral style, to the memory
of
Samuel Vassall, who belied his name by being very independent indeed,
and who
won fame and wealth as a patriotic merchant in the old days when
loyalty meant
loyalty to the King. The funeral of
General
Warren, who was killed at Bunker Hill, was held in this chapel after
the city
came into the possession of the Americans. There, too, was held the
funeral of
Charles Sumner. And among the monuments within the building is one to
men who
were connected with this chapel and who died in the Civil War. Already
our
churches are coming to be like those of England, where there are
memorials to
the men of war after war in never-ending succession. A cheerful memory of
this
chapel is that it was the regular place of worship of Oliver Wendell
Holmes'
who, year after year, sat in pew 102 in the south gallery. One may
fancy what a
trial or what a reward it must often have been for the rector, after
some
argumentative or oratorical effort, to glance up and catch those keen
eyes
looking at him with appraisal in the glance; it must have kept a
succession of
rectors well up to the mark to know that such an autocratic critic was
watching
them. The King's Chapel
Burying-ground used to be known, long ago, as the Old South Church
Burying
Ground, although the Old South Church is a few blocks away, and on
Washington
Street. On the front of the
Old
South is an inscription which tells that the church gathered in 1669;
that the
first church building was put up in 1670; that the present church
building was
erected in 1729; and that it was desecrated by the British troops in
1775-6.
But this enumeration of facts and dates quite ignores an event which a
great
many people would deem the most interesting of all, and that is that
Benjamin
Franklin was baptised here in 1706. What a busy day that
was in
the house near by, now long since vanished, where the Franklins lived!
The
father Josiah, and Abiah his wife, attended service at the Old South
Church in
the morning. Little Benjamin was
born at
noon. And that very afternoon he was proudly carried to church to be
christened! One cannot but
remember
Benjamin's own summary of the lives of his parents. "Without any
estate,
or any gainful employment, by constant labor and industry, with God's
blessing,
they maintained a large family comfortably, and brought up thirteen
children
and seven grandchildren reputably." "He was a pious and prudent
man," records Benjamin of his father, Josiah ; and of Abiah, his
mother,
he faithfully records that she was "a discreet and virtuous woman." In the front of the
church,
beside the tablet of dates, is a placard which, although meant to
express the
standpoint of the old-time patriots as a lesson for future generations,
is
positively misleading, for it refers to winning victories for liberty
and the
people "under the law." But there could not be a greater
misapprehension. The whole standpoint of the patriots of the Revolution
is
missed. The Revolution stood for bravely acting against the law, for
not
heeding danger to life or estate when it seemed right to act against
the
constituted authorities. The tea ships, the fight at Lexington, the
stand on
Bunker Hill – what an absurdity to think of such things as "under the
law"! It is a solemn thing for a people to stand against the law, but
the
glory of the Revolution was that the patriots did stand against the
law. When
Joseph Warren made his entry through a window into the pulpit of this
very
church and there denounced in fiery words the British soldiers, the
very
officers and soldiers who crowded about the front of the pulpit while
he spoke,
he had no thought of acting under the law, nor did he dream of being
under the
law when, three months later, he bravely gave his life as the British
came
charging up the hill over in Charlestown. The Old South is a
neat and
attractive building of brick with a slender spire of wood. The spire is
graceful, but the tower that supports it, and which itself projects a
little
upon the busy sidewalk, is heavy in proportion. Entering the church
through
a vestibule beneath the tower we find that the interior has not been
treated in
the usual style of the Gothic nave, but is broader in proportion than
would be
expected in a church; it has its pulpit, not at one end, but in the
middle of
one side; and, unexpectedly for such a small building, there are two
galleries
facing it. The pulpit is only in part the original pulpit, but the
needful
restoration was made along the original lines; it is of admirable
shape, with
pillar supports and elaborate cornice, and it has a little rounding
projection
of mahogany on its front, a sort of pleasing bulge, for the standing
place of
the speaker. The window behind the pulpit is big and broad, a sort of
Palladian
window, flanked by reeded pillars; and as one stands here it is
impossible not
to picture the thrilling scene when Warren made his way through this
window,
opened for his entrance, stepped to the little bulge in front of the
pulpit, and with superb bravery
delivered his thrilling address to the people who packed the building
itself
and the very aisles and entrances. It was a brave day for America. The building long ago
won
the high-sounding name of the "Sanctuary of Freedom," because within
it were held some of the most momentous of the town-meetings that
preceded the
Revolution; and during the Revolutionary War it was singled out by the
British
for contemptuous treatment, and was turned into a riding-school for
cavalry,
and tons of earth were thrown upon the floor to give footing for the
horses;
and in addition the pews were burned to keep the soldiers warm. One may
regret
the burning of the old pews, but it would not be in the least a
regrettable act
if the present cheap-looking wooden chairs, with cheap perforated seats
and
backs, could be given to the British or anybody else, and burned. It
cost over
$400,000 to save this church from being torn down for the erection of a
big
office building, and Boston people gladly raised the huge sum, and it
does seem
a pity that a very little of that sum was not utilized to put in
fitting
benches, if not pews. A few relics of
Revolutionary days are shown in this building, and there are
photographs, to
suit the taste of such as care for such a thing, of the skull of
General
Warren, showing the fatal bullet-hole: an exhibition which perhaps
might have
been spared. Not only were the old
pews
burned by the British, but many valuable books and manuscripts
regarding early
New England, that had been stored in the tower of the old church, were
also
brought down and thrown in the fire to help keep the soldiers
comfortable in the
cold winter days of the siege. And the most
important
manuscript in the world, as a leading New Englander, Senator Hoar, in
his
formal speech on the final recovery of the manuscript, called it, was
seized
upon with others of the treasures of the Old South tower, and was
preserved by
some strange and never to be explained chance, and long afterwards was
discovered by another of the strangest of chances, over in England, and
at
length was returned to America. This was the absolutely invaluable
holograph
account of the Mayflower expedition, and of the early days in Holland
and in
Plymouth, by the great Governor William Bradford himself; and the story
of this
manuscript is the most extraordinary literary romance of the world. When the books and
manuscripts were dragged down from the tower this manuscript, which
afterwards
came to be known mistakenly as the "Log of the Mayflower,"
was spared, though no one knows by whom; no one
knows whether its value was even guessed at, but presumably it must
have been,
for it was carried to England, no one knows by whom, and when the
Americans
once more took possession of the city, it was not to be found and was
supposed
to have been burned and its records and data thus forever lost. More than half a
century
after its disappearance, an English bishop, the Bishop of Oxford, wrote
a book,
which attracted scarcely any attention, on the history of the church in
America, and, quite a number of years after its publication, an
American,
turning over the leaves of the bishop's history, was startled by some
references to a manuscript, undescribed except as being in the
possession of
the Bishop of London in the library of his palace at Fulham. The
American –
there is some question as to whether it was a man named Thornton or one
named
Barry – was fortunately one who knew early American history, and he
knew that
the facts quoted in that book on the church could have only one source,
and
that was the Bradford manuscript, which had been quoted to some extent
by early
American chroniclers and which everybody supposed had long ago been
lost. At
once definite inquiry was made, and it was learned that this was indeed
the
long lost work of Bradford, although neither the Bishop of Oxford nor
the
Bishop of London himself could throw light upon how or when it had come
into
English possession. Americans at once
began a
campaign to recover it, frankly taking the ground, when they met with
delay and
doubt, that the excuse of loot in war time had never been applied to
the
permanent retention of literary treasures. The English themselves were
inclined
to agree with this, but things moved slowly, and it took about half a
century
before negotiations were fortunately concluded. They might have been
going on
even yet had it not been for another of the strangely fortunate chances
in
regard to the history of this manuscript, and this was that a new
Bishop of
London was appointed who felt cordial toward the United States and said
frankly
that he, for his part, would hand over the manuscript if he were given
the authorization
of his superior, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and that soon after this
he was
himself appointed, by a whimsical chance, Archbishop of Canterbury!
Whereupon,
in 1897, the thing was done, and the invaluable manuscript came back to
Boston
and was welcomed with great ceremonies and public speeches after its
strange
absence of a century and a quarter. But it was not again deposited in the Old South steeple! Instead, as the prized possession of the State of Massachusetts, and not of Boston alone, it is kept in the library of the State House, up on Beacon Hill, and is there shown freely to any one who cares to see it. |