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Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Henry Louis Drummer


Henry Louis Drummer
By Rob't E. Yott
Copyright ©2005. All rights reserved by author.

www.unionblueenterprises.com

Author's note: "I nominated Mr. Drummer for admission to the Steuben County Wall of Fame. He was accepted in 2006."



I would like to take this opportunity to nominate to the Steuben County Hall of Fame, an unsung hero of Steuben County, Mr. Henry Louis Drummer. Only a handful of privileged individuals today know of his accomplishments of yesteryear; however, Mr. Drummer should be recognized for his work developing the Soldiers' Home ground and National Cemetery, initiating the Children’s Exhibit at the Steuben County Agricultural Fair, the annual Field-day and Basket-picnic at the Soldiers' Home and his most extravagant plan, one which never came to fruition, the Agricultural and Horticultural School to be located on the outskirts of Bath, N.Y.

His work at the Soldiers' Home was well-known during his time spent as the florist and later, Superintendent of Grounds. In 1890, Mr. Drummer’s efforts were lauded by General W.W. Averell, Inspector General of the National Home for the Disabled Volunteer Soldier. General Averell had toured the seven National Homes and 19 State Soldiers' Homes and the Bath Soldiers' Home ranked in the top three for beauty. In 1892, organizers of the World’s Fair asked for drawings, photos, and layouts of the beautiful grounds of the Soldiers' Home for exhibition.

His idea of the Children’s Exhibit at the Steuben County Agricultural Fair in 1900 was such a success that it spawned a course of nature study into the curriculum of the New York State schools. First introduced into the Steuben County school district as Class 90, Department of Nature Study Work of Steuben County on September 26, 1900, by 1901 the same course was introduced into the public school system of Rochester, N.Y. by John W. Spencer.

By 1902, Mr. Drummer had also arranged for lectures in the various churches of the town, talking of the beauties of nature as revealed in the Bible. Work was also underway to have the clergyman of other towns pick up the work as well. Another ten lectures would later be given the children over the winter of 1902-03 and on the evening of Arbor Day, May 1, 1903. The talks would be in the interest of nature study and would be held at the Casino-Opera House in Bath, N.Y.

Mr. Drummer was very patriotic also. On the passing of Major-General Henry W. Slocum, U. S. V. and President of the Board of Trustees in 1894, he created and sent a four-and-a-half foot column of roses, carnations, and lilies as a tribute on behalf of the Soldiers' Home. He also ensured that every deceased veteran had flowers provided at their funeral and hospital patients were supplied with fresh flowers in their wards.

Mr. Drummer also operated a floral shop on Liberty Street in the late 1880s, and it remained opened until at least 1910. Little is known as to the services he provided herewith.

Mr. Drummer was so respected by his peers that in a speech by Professor I.P. Roberts, Director of Cornell University, at the first annual Field Day and Basket-picnic, Roberts cited, “Steuben County had, under Mr. Drummer’s inspiration, done more in the line of Nature Study work than any other county in this state.”

Superintendent of Grounds

Born in Canandaigua, N.Y. on September 23, 1866, Henry Louis Drummer spent his boyhood in Elmira, N.Y. where he was engaged in floriculture and scenic gardening. At the age of 18 he took up residence at 10 or 12 Robie Street in Bath, N.Y. when he secured an appointment as florist at the New York State Soldiers’and Sailors’Home on November 27, 1884. Over the next 48 years, his work would bring joy and delight to the hearts and eyes of the old soldiers, officers, and visitors to the Soldiers' Home.

Mr. Drummer watched the Home grow from 240 acres of farmland to over 360 acres of sprawling gardens, flowerbeds, ponds, an apple orchard and an assortment of fountains and benches strategically placed. The peaceful, quiet solitude of the grounds was bisected by roads and walkways which he had lain out to achieve optimal effect. The Home Cemetery, which today is a National Plot, was also under his control and to which he took great pride in.

He watched the population of the Soldiers' Home steadily increase from 455 members at the time of his arrival to a peak population of over 2,000 members in 1907. By 1926, the population would dwindle to fewer than 250 veterans. Only when the Home was leased to the federal government and then absorbed into the Veterans Administration in 1930, did the population again increase to over 1,500. It was for these men that Mr. Drummer toiled so hard for.

Not much of his work was recorded at the Home or his name mentioned until May of 1887 when reporters from the Steuben Courier toured the grounds. They wrote that the 25’ x 125’ greenhouse which Mr. Drummer worked in contained 40,000 plants which were to be placed in the numerous flowerbeds artistically placed about the grounds. Mr. Drummer was also charged with setting out and maintaining the flower vases. Seventeen vases, eight of which would contain fountain attachments, would be added that summer to the dozen already in place. Other improvements noted were two rustic summerhouses built under his direction, along with fifty chairs which he built during the past winter.
By 1889, we learn more of Mr. Drummer’s skills. In early January, Mr. Drummer had published an album of photos of the Soldiers' Home, showing the various flower gardens and vases. This album made for a very nice souvenir booklet, and copies were made available to the public. More booklets would follow in succeeding years, showing different photos of the Home.
           
Over the course of the summer, a roadway, under Mr. Drummer’s guidance, was constructed along the river from the Main Entrance and intersecting with Longwell Lane behind the buildings. Today known as River Road, this byway was built up to contain the river during the spring months, when the river would flow over its bank and damage the gardens. A large quantity of rich loam had been excavated from the site of the new road and replaced with stone from the gravel pit. This was then topped with gravel, making a very sound roadway. Mr. Drummer knew that by depositing the excavated loam into depressions in the garden made by the flooding, it would enhance its yield.

Mr. Drummer also encouraged the inmates (members) of the Home in the botanical and gardening academics. During the Steuben County Fair in 1889, four cabbages from the Home were entered in the produce exhibit, the largest weighing in at 50 pounds. Mr. Drummer’s own display was a magnificent floral arrangement. Set up in the main building, the display consisted of two moss mounds, built up and covered with flowers. Situated between the two was a small pond adorned with aquatic birds. Several doves had been pinioned to the flowers.

Mr. Drummer also had charge of laying-out and surveying the ever-increasing Home Cemetery which was established in 1879. In 1891, under his supervision, the quartermaster, and 30 men were busy excavating a new pond in the 10-acre plot. The pond was strategically placed to collect the runoff due to heavy rain that destroyed the road below the cemetery.

Mr. Drummer’s dedication to his work is evident when, on September 7, 1893, a severe hailstorm had occurred causing considerable damage. Hailstones one inch in diameter broke a majority of the glass on the greenhouse. (As the Soldiers' Home grew, the greenhouse was expanded to meet the need. One thousand dollars had been procured from the Post Fund for such purpose, and the greenhouse was enlarged and would contain nearly 30,000 square feet of glass.) Nearly all the sashes on the windows suffered damage, as well as the crops and fruits. Surprisingly, General Rogers, Superintendent of the Home, submitted in his Annual Report that the farm and garden, under direction of the florist, Mr. Drummer, had produced a product better in quality and quantity than in previous years.

In 1897, a Buffalo newspaper mentioned crowds exceeding 10,000 visitors arriving at the Home on weekends during the summer. They came from as far as Buffalo, Rochester and even New York City to hear the Soldiers’Home band and to take in the beautiful grounds.

On May 12, 1904, Mr. Drummer received an increase in pay and was now earning $75 a month.

In his first Florist’s Report (an addendum to the Commandant’s Annual Report) in 1908, we can now experience and appreciate Mr. Drummer’s full realm of responsibility. Mr. Drummer submitted that the ornamental grounds now covered 55 acres, twenty of which was cemetery. The lawns and drives were all bordered with shade trees and shrubs. The seven-acre parade ground, or plaza, was laid out with walks and flowerbeds, and the American flag floated from a staff that rose 110 feet in the air. The plaza contained 150 lawn benches, all handmade on the grounds, on which the old veterans could rest under the shade trees.

Eighty-one flowerbeds decorated the grounds, and 31 large iron vases now graced the Home, four of which were connected with spray attachments, giving the double effect of vase and fountain. Four of the larger flowerbeds also had spray attachments that gave the affects of a fountain for the surrounding grounds.

Of the 70,000 plants grown annually in the greenhouse, sixty-five thousand were used for bedding and 5,000 for vases. Cut flowers were furnished for Chapel services and funerals and other occasions that required them.

The 4,066 ornamental trees were of the following: 31 varieties of deciduous trees, ten varieties of coniferous trees and 2,225 decorative shrubs of about 40 varieties. (Drummer had propagated a rare line of ferns, palms, shrubs, and flowers.) An apple orchard consisting of 405 trees was located southwest of the Home. The orchard had been pruned and sprayed, and Mr. Drummer mentioned that it formed a floral backdrop to the hill located behind it.

Around the twenty-acre cemetery, 1,500 evergreens formed a natural enclosure, giving the cemetery a cul de sac feature and made for a picturesque background to the Home grounds. There were now 2,420 graves as of October 1, 1908. Most were properly marked with headstones, while wooden markers were emplaced for those awaiting their markers. On Memorial Day, each grave received a flag.
The grounds now had 23,700 running feet of winding drives, 13,320 running feet of gravel walks, 7,740 feet of cement walks and 3,480 of stone walks. The grass throughout the grounds was kept short during the summer, and the drives and walks were properly trimmed.

By 1909, Henry L. Drummer was listed as Superintendent of Grounds. His work did not stop here ,however. Entertainment was another one of the many undertakings that he was charged with, and he oversaw this project with zeal. Ball games, Children’s Day, concerts and picnics (fourteen picnics from different churches and organizations) took place at the Soldiers' Home under his guidance that year. Also, four automobile parties took place at the Home throughout the year.

Mr. Drummer had also noted in his report that, with the aid of the quartermaster, one hundred 5” by 7” photographs had been taken, finished and mounted by his department. These were to be used as the New York State Soldiers’and Sailors’Home exhibit at the State Fair, which occupied a space in the new building erected for exhibits from State institutions. 

On November 1, 1909, he installed in the Assembly Hall a moving picture plant. Families and relatives of employees enjoyed the feature films free of charge, while non-employees paid the nominal fee of ten cents. From December 1909, to September 30, 1910, forty-one moving pictures were shown. By the end of September 1911, one hundred and four moving pictures were shown. The appeal of the moving picture plant was so great that it was necessary to rearrange the seating in the Amusement Hall, increasing accommodations from 1,200 members to 1,600.

  By September 10, 1910, he reported that daily concerts were given between four and five p.m. during the summer, totaling 109 band concerts. Six lectures, 29 concerts, and one minstrel show were given at the Amusement Hall. On Flag Day, Mr. Drummer procured 2,500 flags that were displayed upon the grounds, and a fine display of fireworks was offered.

In 1912, Mr. Drummer requested $500.00 to repair the three ponds in the cemetery. These ponds were used in times of heavy rain to prevent washing out the drives and grounds. They also helped prevent the hospital from flooding. He requested another $500.00 for re-grading the old section of the cemetery, which consisted of about four acres. The boxes in this area were giving way, and the graves and headstones were “scutting.” He also requested $1,000.00 to rebuild River Drive.

In the grounds department, Mr. Drummer reported that 10,000 tulip bulbs had been bedded about the grounds for spring flowering and 76,000 plants had been grown and used in bedding and in filling the numerous vases stationed on the grounds. 

As for funerals, Mr. Drummer wrote that civilian employees dug and filled all the graves. For the past year, he reported that “. . . 127 graves [had] been dug out and filled, at a cost of 150 days or $255.00.” Four citizen employees, clad in full khaki uniform, the same as the United States Army, acted as pallbearers at a cost of 120 days or $204.00 for the year. (It is unsure what is meant by his cost of so many days.)

The graves were then properly marked with a headstone bearing the name, company, and regiment of the soldier or sailor, or by a marker bearing the number of the cemetery record, which was kept in the cemetery office. (It appears that Mr. Drummer was responsible for ordering and replacing the grave markers as well.)

One of Mr. Drummer’s recommendations was the purchase of a twelve-ton steamroller at a cost of $3,000. He mentioned that many automobiles on the fine State roads allowed more visitors on State grounds. Due to the number of visitors at the Home, he believed that this purchase would be a wise investment. The cost of renting a steam roller was 7-10 dollars a day; an investment in such a piece of equipment would surely pay for itself, not to mention the cost of labor. He also pointed out that when repairs on roads were needed, it was hard to acquire this equipment on short notice.

In 1915, Mr. Drummer gave his usual report for the year, relating work done about the grounds. However, one item which stands out is that fifteen basketball games were played in the Assembly Hall during the year. This was the last report given by Mr. Drummer so we do not know much about other work or improvements he made. We do know that during the 1920s, appropriations for the Soldiers' Home was diminishing. There was talk of closing the Home or converting it for other uses, but the American Legion of Bath and the Chamber of Commerce fought to keep the lovely Home open for our veterans. In a concerted effort, they convinced the federal government that the Home, with its beautiful grounds, should be part of the National Home system. This finally came to be in 1930. Mr. Drummer should receive his share of the credit for this considering he labored long and tirelessly, laying out the grounds in such a manner as deemed practicable.


Children’s Exhibition

In 1900, the average population at the Soldiers' Home reached 1,500 men. The grounds now consisted of 365 acres, 40 of which were considered ornamental. Although Mr. Drummer continued to develop the grounds and cemetery, his love of nature, and the joy he received, knowing his work was being appreciated by both young and old, inspired him to further with his work.

In February of 1900, he attended the annual meeting of the Central New York Horticultural Society, of which he was a member, in Syracuse, N.Y. (Other records state he was a member of the Western New York Horticultural Society.) It was here that Mr. Drummer received “A Few Reminders” card from President S.T. Betts.
Two questions on the card read:
1. What are you doing for those around you?
2. What can you do for others?

In his writings, Mr. Drummer explains how he had pondered these questions. Question No. 1 was answered,  “. . . that after 20 plus years as landscaper, gardener and florist of the Home, he had plenty of opportunities to gladden the eyes and hearts of the officers, troops and visitors.” It then came to him that the answer to question No. 2 was to “Go into the public schools and there with the children of tender hearts and receptive minds work out the problem.”

Mr. Drummer not only wanted to teach the children the usefulness and feasibility of things belonging to the study of agriculture and horticulture, he also wanted to teach the children  “. . . the works of the Almighty, the beauties of nature and the provisions the laws of nature made for the continuance of the kind by generation or by successive production in annual plant life.” He wanted adults and children alike to appreciate all that nature had to offer. Mr. Drummer truly believed, according to his writings, that “we are but little better than plant life and no better than earth itself.” Mr. Drummer confessed in his writings that he had before only had a vague and uncertain understanding of the nature study work.

It was these thoughts that prompted Mr. Drummer to formulate plans to introduce the Children’s Exhibit at the Steuben County Agricultural Fair.


“The love of nature seems to be instinctive in most children.”

With this thought in mind, Mr. Drummer set a precedent that continues today. He first approached the Steuben County Agricultural Society on April 4, 1900 with a proposal. His plan was to encourage school-children to take up nature study during the spring and summer and the result of their work to be exhibited at a proposed Children’s Exhibit at the Steuben County Agricultural Fair on September 26 of that year. The committee, impressed with the notion, agreed to allow use of half the second floor of main building (Fair House) for such purpose. They also offered to absorb the cost of printing material out of the society funds.
Armed with this support, Mr. Drummer approached the businessmen of Bath seeking donations of goods or money to award the competitors. His call was answered with promises of prizes amounting to $216.65.

With his premium list made and ten rules to govern the entries, Mr. Drummer sent out a greeting to parents and children of Bath and its vicinity (county), inviting the children to participate in the program. Mr. Drummer provided, free of charge, valuable seeds of flowers and vegetables that the children were to sow and care for with their own hands. Each competitor was to keep an accurate, written record of their entry and know every detail of their exhibit.

Mr. Drummer did not stop with just floriculture and horticulture; he also offered premiums for best collections of insects, bugs, and butterflies as well. Because he believed in a well-rounded pupil and to ensure the imagination of all children were addressed, topics such as The Culture of Flowers or Insects and Their Use in Vegetation were provided for which students could write and enter essays on. Emphasis was placed on composition and penmanship.

Competitors could enter any one of the 113 classes offered. These classes were broken down into five sections: potted plants, cut flowers, vegetables, insects, and miscellaneous. The prize list ranged from a $15 silver-cup to a $2 bicycle tire to $1 cash.
On June 1, 1900, a greeting and premium list were sent out to local area schools including Hammondsport, Prattsburg, Cohocton, and a number of country schools in one Miss Ostrander’s School-Commissioner’s district. The result was 580 packets of seeds, 193 packets of flower and 387 packets of vegetable being distributed.

On September 26, 1900, the first Children’s Exhibit opened at the fair with Mayor Shannon giving the opening address. With music provided by the Soldiers' Home band, speeches were made by Professor W.T. Palmer, principal of Haverling High School and Professors S.H. Bailey and M.V. Shingerland, both of Cornell University; the two latter, along with C.E. Hunn, also of Cornell University would be the judges for the event.

There is no exact number of entrants for the first year given, but we do know that 46 prizes amounting to $89.50 were awarded to the students of Bath and vicinity. The judges and speakers were so impressed by the affair that they unanimously commended Mr. Drummer for his efforts. It was then decided to make the Children’s Day at the fair a permanent feature.

The popularity of the exhibit was such that by the next year, 1901, the exhibition occupied the entire second floor of the main building. Two thousands greetings had been sent out to boys and girls, inviting them from throughout the county. The prizes offered amounted to over $300. There were 405 entries in the 113 classes and 87 prizes, valuing at $272, was awarded, the judges paying a second place premium as well. (Another source states there were 600 more entries for 1901 and double that for 1902.)

By 1902, there would be approximately 1,000 entries. A new feature, “Grade Works” was now introduced. The students of Haverling-Union School submitted pen and pencil work, some consisting of artistic merit. Essays on a larger variety of topics were also entered. Awards in this category were payable to the Board of Education or Trustees of the School for improvement of the school or grounds. This enabled the student to give back to their school.

Because his writings end in 1902, we do not have more information for the following year. We do know that he was now known beyond the realms of Steuben County. The Honorable Charles W. Gillette, from the Committee on Expenditure in the Department of Agriculture, House of Representative in Washington D. C. wrote Mr. Drummer, promising to send an astounding 5,000 packets of seeds for the year 1903.

Mr. Drummer was now the Manager of the Department of Nature Study Work and in his report, he referred to the boys and girls as the Steuben Nature Study Workers. He noted that the children were now attempting to outdo one another which he expressed was most gratifying to him.


Field Day and Basket-picnic

To help promote the nature study program, Mr. Drummer also organized a Field Day and Basket-picnic for the entire community at the Soldiers' Home on July 17, 1901. A conservative estimation by the Steuben Courier put the number of visitors to the Home at 1,500. Counting the officers, veterans, and employees of the Home, there was over 3,000 in attendance. The itinerary was for two baseball games, basket lunches, lectures and music by the Soldiers' Home band. The day began at 10:30 a.m. when the Juniors of Bath took on and defeated the Juniors of Hammondsport 15-12. Lunch was at noon and small parties dined in the shady nooks or upon the riverbanks of the Home grounds. At one o’clock, acting commandant Azariah Brundage introduced the speakers, Dr. W.H. Jordan, Director of the Geneva Experiment Station and Professor I.P. Roberts, Director of Cornell University.

The gathering was another success for Mr. Drummer. It was decided to make the picnic an annual affair, the next one planned for July 16, 1902. Over 3,000 visitors converged upon the Home for the fete. Incoming trains brought carloads of visitors; 200 from Hornellsville and another 200 from Corning alone. Schools and Sunday schools had chosen this day for their annual picnics as well.
In 1903, unseasonable weather kept the out-of-town crowds at bay; however, the local young folk ventured to the Home. A crowd of approximately 1,000 had gathered for the annual event and the Steuben Courier reported that the affair at the Home was another success. It is unknown how many years this event continued, but it is known that other events, such as the 21st Annual Old Folks’Outing was held at the Soldiers’Home in 1921.


Agricultural and Horticultural School

In his writings and the correspondence therein, we learn that during the turn of the century, farming was becoming less of a lucrative business. It is unclear as to why this was, but it was during this time, in 1901, that Mr. Drummer announced plans for his greatest endeavor, an Agricultural and Horticultural School, to be located in Bath, N.Y. This idea was supported wholeheartedly by his friends -  Professors S.H. Bailey and J.E. Hunn of Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.

While expanding the minds of the children with nature studies, he found that the boys and girls of the towns and villages were eager for such work; however, their counterparts on the farm expressed indifference to the idea. School learning was also considered secondary on the farm, where life was a tremendous hardship. He was convinced that when a lad became of age, he would leave the farm to take on different vocation. What could be done to remedy this? Mr. Drummer believed that “a model school” would change the life of farming from an occupation of hard toil to one of contentment.

In his project outline, Mr. Drummer wrote that the purpose of the school was to “Embrace life on a farm as a noble and renumerative [sic] occupation.” And “To stimulate pupils to learn more.” He gave every detail, which included expenses and fees, course of study, number of staff members, Board of Managers, Constitution and By-Laws, and even what was expected of the student in social settings. An Endowment Fund would be established, and a student need only pay $5 to enroll; board, tuition, and books would be provided.

Mr. Drummer also submitted a detailed drawing of his plans which included over thirty buildings which would house, to name a few, the library, bakery chapel, chemical laboratory, veterinary building, dining hall, kitchen, lecture hall, repair shops, sheep barns, horse barns, poultry buildings, cow barn, dormitory, gymnasium, and many other buildings for other uses. This would all sit on a large plot between Lake Salubria and the Conhocton River.

The school would be open to boys and girls between the ages of 16-20 and would last 26 weeks; from October 15 until April 15. The plan of study would primarily be agriculture and horticulture, but a student would also need to be articulate in Basic English, Reading, Penmanship, Arithmetic, US History, and Physical Geography on an eighth grade level. Lectures would be given in the evenings, and the pupils would be required to attend church with their families on Sundays.

Upon success of the 26-week course, Mr. Drummer also proposed plans for a two-year course which offered a progressive course and a more elaborate curriculum. Here, he gave details on the Board of Control, made up of twelve males and five females, the US Secretary of Agriculture, the Governor of New York, the President of the College of Agriculture and the Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Mr. Drummer’s proposal was sent out among the most prominent of men in the agricultural and political community. Letters of endorsements were received by the Honorable Charles W. Gillette, Professors I.P. Roberts, S.H. Bailey, and John Craig of Cornell University; W.H. Jordan of the N.Y. Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, N.Y., James Wilson, Department of Agriculture, Ira Davenport, T.S. Peterson and Benjamin Gage of Peterson’s Nursery, Chicago, Ill., and Mr. D. Bander of the Pleasant Valley Wine Co. in Rheims, N.Y.

As of today, it is not known the exact reason why Mr. Drummer’s plan did not come about. It was certainly not due to lack of approval or support. According to the 1900-1903 Proceedings of the Western New York Horticultural Society, where Mr. Drummer's name appears in the list of members, there was great deal of talk about increasing the state's agricultural education and extension work. However, the talks were geared more towards bolstering Cornell's Ithaca campus facilities for agriculture. No mention of a proposed agricultural or horticultural school at Bath cropped up in these reports.

Sources from Cornell University believe that the need for improving agricultural education among the rural population was great at that time but that any allocated money was going into Cornell's Ithaca campus. The findings and publications would, from there, circulate among the state's farmers and thus raise the general knowledge level. This is very likely since there is a brief mention of the agricultural school at Ovid having been a failure.

As we can see, Mr. Henry Louis Drummer, a virtual unknown today, was at the turn of the century the epitome of nature study. He held the respect of acclaimed professors from the University of Cornell, the Geneva Experiment Station and the gratitude of the officers and members of the Soldiers' Home and the local community. His ideas and dreams reached as far as Washington, D. C. His obituary credited him with securing legislation in which the state paid premiums for flowers and vegetables grown by students.

Because of his work, the Board of Education of Haverling High School resolved on August 11, 1902, to “express their approbation and acknowledgement of the faith and disinterested work, our townsman Mr. H.L. Drummer has set before him as a task and a labor of love for the children, and that we hereby tender our thanks for the good work, heretofore done, hoping that Mr. Drummer may continue his work among the children, and that success may follow his deserving work in Nature Study.”

He was so much adored that, on a Saturday morning, June 30, 1932, his last day of service at the Soldiers' Home, a very touching and well-deserved tribute was paid him. As Mr. Drummer, accompanied by the officers of the Home, walked one last time down the road leading away from the Home and into retirement, nearly 1,000 veterans lined both sides of the avenue. As he passed, each man rendered him a salute. At the limit of the grounds, the Home Governor, Colonel Bringham, offered appreciation on behalf of the institution and the members for his long years of faithful service.

Today, the work Mr. Drummer is still evident as you stroll among the National Cemetery, which is considered one of the nicest in the country. Covering approximately 30 acres, it is well-kept and maintained; a most serene and fitting resting place for the heroes of our country. The grounds of the VA unfortunately, do not hold the splendor or magnificence it once had. Gone are the beautiful and extravagant gardens, the shady nooks, the large greenhouse, vases and handmade lawn furniture. Some blame mismanagement, misappropriation of funds, or cuts in funding. In any event, the sad fact of the matter is the Home has never been able to maintain or achieve the striking features it once had under the care of our Mr. Drummer. His dreams and contributions to nature study also abound today. Just go to any local county fair and there you will find the children’s exhibit, compliments of Mr. Drummer who wanted to instill among the youths of his day, the same love, and respect for Mother Nature as he felt.

About the author: Robert Yott, author of From Soldiers’ Home to Medical Center lives in Mitchellsville and is a carpenter by trade. He built his own cannon with limber and his unit represents Wheeler’s Battery at Civil War reenactment, parades and educational programs. A portion of his artifacts from the Civil War and Bath Soldiers’ Home collection will be on display beginning September 2012 at the New York State Museum in Albany as part of their exhibition commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. 



Saturday, February 7, 2015

First to Stand for Women’s Suffrage in St. Lawrence County:Helen M. Hinsdale Rich

By Bryan Thompson

Copyright @2015. All rights reserved by author.

Helen Hinsdale Rich with her daughter Mary.
Mary was born in 1857, photograph circa 1861.
Helen Rich’s biography in A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in all Walks of Life states, “She was the first woman of northern New York to embrace woman’s suffrage.” A letter detailing the Rich family history written to the Rev. Roger F. Williams in 1923 states, “Mrs. (Helen) Rich.at the age of 35, she was an advocate of woman’s sufferage- the first one in her county – St Lawrence Co. N.Y.” The Sacramento Daily Recorder described her as, “well known in the East as an earnest worker in the cause of woman’s rights and temperance.” While all these sources mention Helen Hinsdale Rich’s contributions to the woman’s suffrage movement there is almost no mention of her involvement in the 100’s of entries about her in the local press.

If Helen H. Rich was 35 when she became the first suffragette in St Lawrence County the year was 1862. The same year Helen Rich gained wide acclaim as a public speaker, as she campaigned, from Richville, around the North Country recruiting for the Union army.



St Lawrence Sons war calleth ye;
Go kneel where Wright laid down.
Like a hero flushed with victory
A great life’s stainless crown
And there where heavens free breezes wave
The stars and stripes above us,
Swear freedom’s sacred soul to save!
As freedom’s God shall love us.

And kiss the blade and kiss the duel
That shields his noble bosom-
That blade must never sheath or rust
While fadeth freedom’s blossom
But brothers rise and drain the cup
Of life to fame’s rich story!
Love waits to lift his praises up-
Who lives or dies for glory?

Lo angels linger on their way
And listen while ye send
A shout for home and liberty
That traitor hearts shall rend.
Then bravely turn from maidens fair
They bless you though they weep.
And woe to rebels if they dare
Death banquet with you keep.

For men who only war for right

Are panoplied by heaven.
And men who rush like fiends to fight
Gainst native land, are given
To ‘rid and to dire defeat,
Then onward to the fray,
Our martyr’s graves are ‘neath your feet
Our country lives to day!
Helen Rich (The Advance April 26, 1861)

Attitudes towards women were very different in the 1860’s when Helen Rich performed this poem. Until 1872 every state in the union allowed husbands to beat their wives and most women could not hold property. Women did not regularly speak in public.

The reaction of a male correspondent for the Ogdensburg Journal (Sep.27, 1869) following her appearance in Lawrenceville shows the power of her oratory and the prejudices she overcame:

 “Mrs. Rich treated her subject in a manner that gave pleasure and satisfaction to all who listened, not withstanding the prejudices that exist within the minds of most people respecting the public speaking of women. Had the same subject been treated in the same manner by a man, it would have been called a grand success. Mrs. Rich is destined to make her mark and stand high …in spite of the disadvantages of her sex.”

Helen Hinsdale was born in a log cabin near Oxbow in the town of Antwerp, June 18, 1827. She was the youngest of five children of Ira Hinsdale and Hannah Stephens. She began her formal education at the age of four when she ran away from home to follow her siblings to the local schoolhouse.

Although her home was rudimentary, her family valued knowledge. Helen gained a firm background in the social reform issues of the day by reading newspapers aloud to her father. She cut her political teeth on the speeches of Henry Clay and Daniel Webster. At the age of 12 she had her first poem published on the beauties of her Universalist faith.

After completing her common school education, Helen attended one term at the Gouverneur Wesleyan Seminary. Here she won top honors in her class but economic necessity forced her departure from the academy to teach in the common schools of her hometown, Antwerp.

 In 1847 a young Richville man came to Antwerp to teach in one of the local schools. Moses Rich was very impressed with fellow teacher Helen Hinsdale, who he met through their involvement in the Irish relief movement that spring. The couple was married, July 4, 1847 in Gouverneur by the Universalist Minister Rev. G. Swan.

The 1840’s were a period of great political and social ferment. Moses Rich had been taken under the wing of his very politically active Uncle, Harlow Godard following the death of his mother. Mr. Godard made sure that Moses completed a degree program at the Gouverneur Wesleyan Seminary.  Harlow Godard was elected to the NYS Assembly in 1848 as a Free Democrat (Antislavery). He brought his young nephew with him to all county political meetings, which he often chaired, first as a Free Democrat and later as a Republican. Soon Moses Rich was also standing, unsuccessfully, for office and leading sessions at countywide meetings.

About 1855 the couple left Richville and Moses purchased a business at Wegatchie. Since their marriage Helen was busy birthing and raising their 3 children. Yet she found time in the evenings to write. She began gaining a reputation in Richville and Wegatchie for her poetry. Some of her poetry expressed her profound sorrow at the loss of her son at nine months. Women easily related to Helen’s poetry of grief at the loss of a child.

In 1857 Moses Rich went through bankruptcy. He and Helen returned to Richville, where Moses worked for his uncle and continued in politics. Helen continued her writing. In 1861 the country was swept up in the Civil War. Perhaps because of her husband’s political connection Helen Rich was called upon to write a poem as part of a county wide Union recruitment campaign.

This campaign took Helen around the North Country and brought her work to the attention of people through out the area for the first time. It was during this campaign that Helen Rich first took her stand for women’s suffrage. She soon developed a speech, “The Rights and Wrongs of Woman” which she would continue to give for many years. How often she was called upon for the address is unclear as the topic was so controversial that notice of its presentation does not appear even once in the surviving local press.

In 1864 Helen accepted the invitation of Dr. John Stebbins Lee to study under him at St Lawrence University prep school, completing one term. She became a lifelong friend of the Lee family. By 1864 Helen Rich had become so well known locally that the Potsdam Courier and Freeman of April 6, 1864 reported, “Mr. Rich of Wegatchie, consort of Mrs. Helen Rich, has purchased the woolen factory in Brasher Falls.” At a time when most women were only referred to by their husbands name Helen Rich was better known than he was.

That fall, 1864, Moses Rich again stood for public office. This time he was successfully elected St. Lawrence County Clerk. Moses Rich held the office for three, one-year terms (1865-1867). During this time Helen and Moses lived in Canton and were very active in the local community

 Helen continued her writing and public speaking while she lived in Canton. She began speaking to the cause of temperance with her speech, “The Home and Its’ Guardians, the Good Templars”. Several other speeches she also developed at this time were: “The Wills Won’ts and Can’ts of History”, “Madame De Stael the Rival of Napoleon”, and  “Literature of the Rebellion”. Her reputation as a poet and public speaker continued to grow.

At the close of 1867 Moses Rich chose not to run for reelection as County Clerk. The Rich family moved to Brasher Falls where Helen Rich taught briefly at the academy. Moses Rich was elected deputy clerk of the NYS Assembly in 1864 and executive clerk in 1873. He also served as State Librarian. These position allowed Helen and Moses Rich to live in Albany during the winters when the legislature was in session.

Helen Rich’s reputation as a Temperance and Woman’s rights worker continued to grow in Albany. She began to be called upon to do lecture tours of Vermont, New England and the western states. She spoke at the Cooper Union in 1875. Her home base was always the Rich home in Brasher Falls. She wrote voluminous poems about her beloved home in the Adirondacks and became known as, “The Poet of the Adirondacks”.

In this time period Helen Rich developed what appears to have been her most popular local speech, “Grand Armies, A Memorial Day Address." The speech while steadfast and patriotic on the one hand, also dealt with the issues of Helen’s greatest concern, social reform and the elevation of womankind, in a manner readily accepted by most audiences. It was arguably one of her most shrewdly crafted works.

Her Grand Armies were (according to The Ogdensburg JournalMarch 27, 1886):

First the Infantry, the infant children who will refill societies ranks.

Second the Mothers with their assistants the primary school teachers on whom the training of the infantry depends. Here the subject of “Woman Suffrage” and the names of Stanton and Anthony were introduced and praised.

Third: the workingmen, corporations and the temperance societies. (Helen Rich believed in prohibition but not within the political process.)

The fourth and final army was the Grand Army of the Republic with a retrospective of the Civil War in well-chosen words. While speaking of the normally cited heroes of the war i.e. Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, and the martyr Lincoln she also mentioned the work of women in aid and comfort to the nation during the war. Grand Armies brought standing ovations from audiences across the North Country while raising the issue of women’s place in society.

By 1882 Helen Rich’s writing had appeared in: Rose of Sharon, Lily of the Valley, Ladies Repository, Overland Monthly, The New York Tribune, The Chicago Tribune, The Detroit Tribune, New Covenant, Star in the West, Springfield Republican, Burlington Hawkeye, Boston Transcript, Boston Commonwealth, Woman’s Journal, Universalist, Christian Leader. Helen was a regular correspondent for several newspapers. W. F. Sudds of Gouverneur had set one of her poems, “Other Times”, to music. The sheet music was marketed nationwide.

As reported in A Woman of the Century, Helen “carried out her ideas of woman’s ability and need of personal achievement, self support and self reliance in the rearing of her daughter”. The daughter, Mary C. Rich Lyon became a well-known professional musician in St Joseph’s Missouri. Her son, Pitt Rich, became a prosperous businessman in the Chicago area.

Things looked very bright for the Riches in the spring of 1882 when Helen planned a trip west to visit her two children. She and Moses had a snug home in Brasher Falls, his business interests and her lecture tours provided them with a tidy income. They were enjoying late middle age together. However while she was away Moses contracted pneumonia. After receiving repeated doses of morphine from his physician, Moses died.

Helen Rich and her son Pitt rushed back to Brasher Falls. The local Masonic Lodge and Helen’s old friend Rev. J.S. Lee put together a grand funeral for Moses carrying his remains back to his hometown, Richville, where he was laid to rest beside his son in the Baptist churchyard. A subsequent inquest did not find the doctor culpable in Moses Rich’s sudden demise.

In 1884 Helen Rich finally published a book of her poems, “A Dream of the Adirondacks”. The books received positive reviews around the country. One of the poems in the volume, “Justice in Leadville” would become a classic used in Prose and Poetry Books for the next 75 years.

By the time the book was published the “Poet of the Adirondacks”, was no longer living there. Helen moved west and spent the rest of her life living with her daughter in St Joseph’s Missouri or with her son in Chicago. She made frequent trips back to St Lawrence county on lecture tours and to visit her old friends.

Helen Rich continued to be active in her many reform causes. For a time she was the Missouri State president of the Women’s Relief Corp of the GAR. She spoke regularly at their national meetings with a firm clear voice and an imposing personal appearance.

She continued to work for woman’s suffrage on the national stage. She was a member of the National Woman’s Suffrage  Committee. In 1892 as part of the Columbian exposition in Chicago a Congress of Women was held. As part of the meeting Mrs. Effie Pitblado addressed the congress laying out the achievement of Woman’s ideas in the last century. In her speech Helen Hinsdale Rich’s work is held up beside that of Harriet Beecher Stowe and Louisa May Alcott.

In 1895 a gala birthday party was held in Chicago for Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Helen Rich was invited to present a poem to her at the event.

To Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton
On her Eightieth Birthday

Who through the soft and silver mist
Of thy bright hair,
That baby lips and Heaven have kis’t,
Has failed to share
The tender love of those dear eyes,
The brave intent,
Regnant and scorning all disguise,
On mercy bent?
Alas! To me the vision craved
Has been denied.
Yet life’s high aims by thee were saved
And  glorified.
Thy mother soul has lifted mine
As tides are drawn.
My spirit heard thy song divine
Of woman’s dawn.
The wondrous legend of the Nile
‘Twas thine to prove,
Thy voice aroused; thy gracious smile
Of hope and love,
Woke the dead pulse of joy supreme
In woman’s heart;
Dispelled the long delusive dream
Of duty’s part.
The Lotus isles of selfish ease
That lured to rest,
Felt the grand throb of western seas
That stirred thy breast:
Maid of a higher, holier cause
Than Orleans’ might
Defender of the eternal laws
Of truth and right.
Oh sweet as flowers the ruthless tread
Has crushed and rent
The fragrance thy white soul has shed,
Nay, freely spent
On famished, vain, despairing lives,
And dying sense,
Thy touch has freed from cruel graves!
Thy recompenses
Is measureless as night’s domain
When all her lamps illume the vast and silent plain
The peaceful camps
Where heroes keep the righteous post
For freedom yet,
And speed the tireless onward host
On justice set.
They have not died, the olden themes 
Of angels come
To mortals in their waking dreams,
For love and home.
Repeat the psalms by sages wrought
Through mythic phrase
Into the world’s responsive thought,
And deathless bays
Await our own Zenobia wise,
 Fair Stanton true,
Who felt the strain of human ties
Forever new
And from her high and blest estate
Threw open wide
The portals of that royal gate
To us denied.
Forego thy victor’s crown of stars
Oh, sister great,
Until thy mind redeeming wars,
To every state
Bring womanhood her conscious claim
To just emprise
And earth reveres the woman’s name
Who sanctifies.

Helen Hinsdale Rich (American Jewess Vol. 2 Issue 3 Dec 1895 p 138)

In 1895 Helen Rich also published her long running essay, “Madame de Stael, the Rival of Napoleon”. Her reasons for publishing this work featuring a strong female character from the pages of history were made clear in its introduction where she stated, “The reverent study of her (Madam de Stael’s) life work must inspire in every woman profound admiration”.

At the same time this essay was published Helen announced the forth-coming publication of “Murillo’s Slave and Other Poems”. Contemporary newspaper accounts said that the work would be a complete volume of all her works running over 700 pages. When the book was published by Rand McNally in 1897 it ran a much more modest 196 pages. It still managed to include odes to Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone and Lillian Whiting. The book was published on Helen Rich’s 70th birthday.

As Helen Rich aged and her North Country friends became fewer and fewer she appeared less often at local events. She wrote a centennial poem for Jefferson County’s centennial celebration in 1905 but did not attend.

After her son Pitt committed suicide in 1903. Helen moved in with her widowed daughter in St Joseph’s Missouri.  She died there in April 1915 at the age of 87. In the heated environment leading up to the eventual passage of national woman’s suffrage not one St Lawrence county newspaper carried an obituary of the first woman to stand for suffrage in the county.

Would Helen Hinsdale Rich have cared? Perhaps not, as she said in the introduction to Murillo’s slave, “If I have given fair expression to the measureless sympathy I have always felt for my sex, for the child, for my race. If anything I have written has helped others to bear their burdens and to elevate their life aims. If my poor work has any appreciable ethical value any spiritual significance I shall be compensated for all.“


About the author: Bryan Thompson is the Town of De Kalb [NY] Historian



Sources:

Andrews, Herbert C. & Sanford Charles Hinsdale (1906) Hinsdale Genealogy: Descendants of Robert Hinsdale of Dedham, Medfield, Hadley, and Deerfield, with an account of the French Family De Hinnisdal  Lombard, Illinois.

Durant, Samuel W. & Henry B. Pierce (1878) History of St. Lawrence County New York
L.H. Everts Philadelphia, PA

Hanson, E.R. (1882)   Our Woman Workers: Biographical Sketches of Women Eminent in the Universalist Church for Literary, Philanthropic and Christian Work Star and Covenant Office, G. E. Daniels Printers, Chicago, IL.

Library of Congress, Chronicling America, Historic American Newspapers:
The Scranton Tribune, The Suffragist, The Sacramento Daily Record-Union, The National Tribune.

Logan, Mrs. John A. (1912)   The Part Taken By Women In American History
The Perrry- Nalle Publishing Co. Wilmington, DEL.

Moffat, George J. (1971) Poet of the Adirondacks Helen Hinsdale Rich
The Quarterly SLCHA Canton, NY.

NYS Historic Newspapers, St Lawrence and Jefferson Counties 1845 to 1915 Various.

Pitblado, Effie (1894) Not Things, But Women Eagle  The Congress of Women: Held in the Woman’s Building World’s Columbian Exposition
Monarch Book Company Chicago, IL.

Rich, Helen Hinsdale (1884)   A Dream of the Adirondacks and other poems
G. P. Putman & Sons New York, NY.

Rich, Helen Hinsdale (1897)   Murillo’s Slave and other poems
Rand McNally, Chicago, IL.

Rich, Helen Hinsdale (1895)   Madame de Stael the Rival of Napoleon
Stone and Kimball Chicago, IL.

Willard, Francis Elizabeth & Mary Ashton Rice Livermore ed. (1893 )A Woman of the Century: Fourteen Hundred-seventy Biographical Sketches Accompanied by Portraits of Leading American Women in all Walks of Life
Charles Wells Moulton Buffalo, Chicago, New York.

Williams, Roger (1923) Letter to Roger Williams detailing the Rich family history (author unknown). De Kalb Town Historian archives, De Kalb NY.