MySpace


Franklin

Franklin Parker


Last Updated: 7/5/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 88
Sign: Gemini

City: PLEASANT HILL
State: Tennessee
Country: US
Signup Date: 1/11/2006
Thursday, July 02, 2009 
Concluding 2 of 2 Parts: General Robert E. Lee (1807-70) and Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869) at White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, July 23-August 30, 1869.
By Franklin Parker and Betty J. Parker (see End: About the Authors)

Lee Sent His Photograph

On Sept. 25, 1869, at the request of Peabody Institute Librarian Fitch Poole (1803-73, Peabody, Massachusetts), Lee sent Poole a photograph of himself, adding that he would "feel honoured in its being placed among the 'friends' of Mr. Peabody, who can be numbered by the millions, yet all can appreciate the man who has [illumined] his age by his munificent charities during his life, and by his wise provisions for promoting the happiness of his fellow creatures."

Lee on Peabody's Death

Reading of Peabody's death in London (November 4, 1869), Robert E. Lee wrote (November 10, 1869) to Peabody's nephew George Peabody Russell, who had been with his uncle in White Sulphur Springs and there had met Lee: "The announcement of the death of your uncle, Mr. George Peabody, has been received with the deepest regret wherever his name and benevolence are known; and nowhere have his generous deeds--restricted to no country, section or sect--elicited more heartfelt admiration than at the South.  He stands alone in history for the benevolent and judicious distribution of his great wealth, and his memory has become entwined in the affections of millions of his fellow-citizens in both hemispheres."

"I beg, in my own behalf," Lee continued, "and in behalf of the Trustees and Faculty of Washington College, Virginia, which was not forgotten by him in his act of generosity, to tender the tribute of our unfeigned sorrow at his death.  With great respect, Your obedient servant R.E. Lee."

Concern Over Lee's Attending Peabody's Funeral

Lee had been invited to attend Peabody's final funeral service and eulogy, South Congregational Church, Peabody, Massachusetts, followed by burial in Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Massachusetts, February 8, 1870.

But Peabody's intimates feared that Lee's attendance might evoke an ugly incident.  After President Lincoln's assassination, Congressional radical Republicans, bent on revenge, crushed the defeated South with military rule.  This anger was also strong among New England abolitionists.

Robert Charles Winthrop, Peabody's philanthropic advisor and president of the PEF trustees, who was to deliver Peabody's funeral eulogy February 8, 1870, feared that Lee's attendance might bring on a demonstration.  On February 2, 1870, Winthrop wrote two private and confidential letters, the first to Baltimorean John Pendleton Kennedy (1795-1870):  "There is apprehension here, that if Lee should come to the funeral, something unpleasant might occur, which would be as painful to us as to him.  Would you contact friends to impart this to the General?  Please do not mention that the suggestion came from me."

Winthrop also wrote to Corcoran: "I write to you in absolute confidence.  Some friends of ours, whose motives cannot be mistaken, are very anxious that Genl. Lee should not come to the funeral next week.  They have also asked me to suggest that.  Still there is always apprehension that from an irresponsible crowd there might come some remarks which would be offensive to him and painful to us all.  I am sure he would be the last person to involve himself or us, needlessly, in a doubtful position on such an occasion."

Winthrop continued to Corcoran: "The newspapers at first said that he was not coming.  Now, there is an intimation that he is.  I know of no one who could [more] effectively give the right direction to his views than yourself.  Your relation to Mr. Peabody & to Mr. Lee would enable you to ascertain his purposes & shape his course wisely....  I know of no one else to rely on."

One of the two Washington College trustees who planned to attend Peabody's funeral had earlier written to Corcoran (January 26, 1870): "I first thought that General Lee should not go, but have now changed my mind.  Some of us believe that if you advise the General to attend he would do so.  Use your own discretion in this matter."

Lee Too Ill to Attend

Lee explained in a January 26, 1870, letter to William Wilson Corcoran: "I am sorry I cannot attend the funeral obsequies of Mr. Peabody.  It would be some relief to witness the respect paid to his remains, and to participate in commemorating his virtues; but I am unable to undertake the journey.  I have been sick all the winter, and am still under medical treatment.  I particularly regret that I shall not have the pleasure of seeing you.

 Two trustees of Washington College will attend the funeral.  I hope you can join them."
On the same day Winthrop wrote his letters (February 2, 1870), Lee wrote his daughter Mildred Childe Lee (1846-1904) that he was too ill to attend: "I am sorry that I could not attend Mr. Peabody's funeral, but I did not feel able to undertake the journey, especially at this season."

Corcoran too replied to Winthrop that Lee had no intention of coming.  Corcoran could not imagine, he wrote, that so good and great a man as Lee would receive anything but a kind reception.  Himself ill, Corcoran wrote to Lee his regret that he could not attend to pay his respects to "my valued old friend."  Peabody's intimates were relieved at confirmation that Lee's illness would definitely keep him from the funeral.

Trans-Atlantic Funeral Overview

Lee, Corcoran, and much of the English-speaking reading public, awed by Peabody's unusual 96-day transatlantic funeral, awaited its final scene: Robert Charles Winthrop's eulogy and Peabody's final burial (both February 8, 1870).

Peabody's funeral was unprecedented in length, pomp, and ceremony; was marked by cold stormy weather; involved the highest officials of England and the United States; was vastly publicized in the press of both countries; and was observed in person by many thousands of Britons and Americans.

That funeral included: 1-Westminster Abbey service (November 12, 1869) and temporary burial there for 30 days (November 12-December 11, 1869).  When Peabody's will became known requiring burial in Salem, Massachusetts, 2-the British cabinet decided (November 10, 1869), at Queen Victoria's suggestion, to return his remains for burial in the U. S. on Her Majesty's Ship HMS Monarch, Britain's newest and largest warship, repainted for this grim occasion slate gray above the water line, with a specially built mortuary chapel.
Next came a 3-U. S. government decision (made between November 12-15, 1869) to send the United States corvette USS Plymouth from Marseilles, France, to accompany HMS Monarch to the United States.

Then followed 4-transfer (December 11, 1869) of Peabody's remains from Westminster Abbey, London, on a special funeral train to Portsmouth, England, impressive ceremonies at the transfer of remains from Portsmouth dock to HMS Monarch, specially outfitted as a funeral vessel.

Next came the 5-transatlantic crossing of HMS Monarch and the USS Plymouth  (December 21, 1869 to January 25, 1870) from Spithead near Portsmouth, past Ushant, France, to Madeira Island off Portugal, to Bermuda, and north to Portland, Maine, chosen by the British Admiralty because of its deeper harbor.

A covert rivalry had early erupted between 6-Bostonians and New Yorkers about which city could provide the more solemn ceremony as receiving port.  Thinking themselves the center of northeast society and fashion, each was disappointed when the British Admiralty chose Portland, Maine, whose deeper harbor more safely accommodated HMS Monarch's large size.

A contemporary news account described the petty jealousy:  "When the mighty men of Boston knew that England's..."Monarch" was bringing the body of the great philanthropist to his last resting place, they called a meeting and decided with what fitting honors and glories it would be received.… but, when the telegraph flashed the astounding news that little Portland was to be the port...all was changed….[Bostonians were sure] that the Portlanders...would blunder.…"

On January 14, 1870, on President U. S Grant's approval, 7-U. S. Navy Secretary  George Maxwell Robeson (1829-97) ordered Admiral David Glasgow Farragut (1801-70), a PEF trustee, to command a U.S. naval flotilla to meet HMS Monarch and USS Plymouth in Portland harbor, Maine (January 25, 1870).

HMS Monarch's captain then requested, on behalf of Queen Victoria, 8-that the coffin remain aboard the Monarch in Portland harbor for two days (January 27-28, 1870).as a final mark of respect.  Thousands of visitors, drawn to the spectacle, viewed the coffin in the somberly decorated Monarch's mortuary chapel.

Peabody's remains then 9-lay in state in Portland City Hall (January 29-February 1, 1870), viewed by thousands.  10-A special funeral train from Portland, Maine, bore the remains to Peabody, Massachusetts (February 1, 1870).  11-Lying in state of Peabody's remains took place at the Peabody Institute Library (February 1-8, 1870).

The final ceremony, the press announced to an awed public, was to be 12-Robert Charles Winthrop's funeral eulogy at the South Congregational Church, Peabody, Massachusetts, attended by New England governors, mayors, Queen Victoria's son Prince Arthur, and other notables (February 8, 1870).  Final burial would then follow at 13-Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Massachusetts.

Why Such Unprecedented Funeral Honors?

Daily reports on Peabody's sinking condition in London had appeared in the British press.  After his death the London Daily News recorded (November 8, 1869):  "We have received a large number of letters, urging that the honours of a public funeral are due to the late Mr. Peabody's memory."

The Dean of Westminster Abbey, Arthur Penrhyn Stanley (1815-81), was in Naples, Italy, November 5, 1869, when he read of Peabody's death.  Years later he recorded: "I was in Naples, and saw in the public papers that George Peabody had died.  Being absent, considering that he was a foreigner, and at the same time, by reason of his benefactions to the City of London, entitled to a burial in Westminster Abbey, I telegraphed to express my wishes that his interment there should take place."

The Alabama Claims

Peabody died during tense, near warlike U. S.-British angers over two U. S. Civil War incidents, the Alabama Claims (1864-72) and the Trent Affair (September 8, 1861).  CSS Alabama was a notorious British-built Confederate raider which sank 64 northern cargo ships during 1862-64.

Without a navy, with its southern ports blockaded by the North, Confederate agents slipped secretly to England, bought British-built ships, armed them as Confederate raiders, renamed them Alabama, Florida, Shenandoah, and others, which sank northern ships and cost northern lives and treasure.

Officially neutral in the U. S. Civil War, British officials were continually reminded of their breach of neutrality by U. S. Minister to Britain Charles Francis Adams (1807-86).  Official U. S. demands for reparations for damages from British-built raiders (from1862) were resolved at a Geneva international tribunal (1871-72), requiring Britain to pay the United States $15.5 million indemnity.

At Peabody's death, November 4, 1869, this Alabama Claims controversy was unresolved and tense.  Americans were angry; Britons were resentful.  A desire to defuse angers over the Alabama Claims was one reason British officials first, and then United States officials to surpass them, outdid each other in unusual homage to Peabody's remains during his transatlantic funeral.

Trent Affair

There was also lingering resentment over the still rankling November 8, 1861 Trent Affair.  On the stormy night of October 11, 1861, four Confederate emissaries, seeking aid and arms from Britain and France, evaded the Union blockade at Charleston, South Carolina, went by ship to Havana, Cuba, and there boarded the British mail ship Trent, bound for Southampton, England. 

The Trent was illegally stopped in the Bahama Channel, West Indies (November 8, 1861) by USS San Jacinto's Captain Charles Wilkes (1798-1877).  Confederates James Murray Mason (1798-1871, from Virginia), John Slidell (1793-1871, from Louisiana), and their male secretaries were forcibly removed and imprisoned in Boston harbor's Fort Warren Prison.

Anticipating war with the U. S., Britain sent 8,000 troops to Canada.  But United States jingoism subsided.  President Abraham Lincoln reportedly told his cabinet, "one war at a time," gentlemen, got the cabinet on December 26, 1861, to disavow the illegal seizure, and released the Confederate prisoners on January 1, 1862.  But resentments lingered.

Besides softening near war U .S.-British tensions, another reason behind the Peabody funeral honors was British leaders' sincere appreciation for Peabody's gift of homes for London's working poor.  Many marveled that an American would give that kind of gift in that large amount to a city and country not his own.  Britons also valued Peabody's two decades of efforts to improve United States-British relations.

Prime Minister Gladstone

On November 9, 1869, in a major speech at the Lord Mayor's Day banquet, Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone (1808-98) referred to British-U.S. difficulties and then mentioned Peabody's death:  "You will know that I refer to the death of Mr. Peabody, a man whose splendid benefactions...taught us in this commercial age...the most noble and needful of all lessons--...how a man can be the master of his wealth instead of its slave [cheers]."

"And, my Lord Mayor," Gladstone continued, "most touching it is to know, as I have learnt, that while, perhaps, some might think he had been unhappy in dying in a foreign land, yet so were his affections divided between the land of his birth and the home of his early ancestors, that...his [wish] has been realized--that he might be buried in America, [and] that it might please God to ordain that he should die in England [cheers].  My Lord Mayor, with the country of Mr. Peabody we are not likely to quarrel [loud cheers]."

Prime Minister Gladstone's cabinet met at 2:00 P.M., November 10, 1869, and confirmed Queen Victoria's suggestion of a Royal Navy ship to return Peabody's remains.  Peabody funeral researcher Allen Howard Welch wrote: "The Queen, in fact, was personally grieved, and it was her own request that a man-of-war be employed to return Peabody to his homeland."

In the handing over ceremony of Peabody's remains from U .S. Minister to Britain John Lothrop Motley to HMS Monarch's Captain John Edmund Commerell (1829-1901), December 11, 1869, Portsmouth, England, U. S. Minister Motley explained: "The President of the United States, when informed of the death of George Peabody, the great philanthropist, at once ordered an American ship to convey his remains to America.  Simultaneously, the Queen appointed one of Her Majesty's ships to perform that office.  This double honor from the heads of two great nations to a simple American citizen is, like his gift to the poor, unprecedented.  The President yields cordially to the wish of the Queen."

Praise for the Peabody Homes of London, 1862

Peabody's housing gift for London's working poor was announced March 12, 1862, while the U. S. and Britain still raged over the September 1861 Trent Affair.  Peabody's gift evoked surprise and admiration in the British press, a sampling of which follows.

London Times, March 26, 1862: "Mr. George Peabody has placed £150,000 in the hands of a committee to relieve the condition of the poor of London.  It is seldom that good works are done on such a scale as this one by an American in a city where he is only a sojourner….  [He] gives while he lives to those who can make no return….  He does this in a country not his own, in a city he may leave any day for his native land.  Such an act is rare...."

London Daily Telegraph, March 27, 1862: "The noble gift of Mr. Peabody actually takes away the public breath...and sends a thrill through the public heart….  A man gives his fortune during his lifetime for an object going back to a resolution he had held more than a quarter of a century...to elevate the poor.  Party strife and national bickering have not changed this good American; wars and rumours of wars have not turned him...from his...purpose."

London Morning Herald, March 27, 1862: "One of the merchant princes of the world has just presented [London] with a gift for which thousands will bless his name….  Whilst his countrymen are warring...with each other, this generous American is working out...good-will among his adopted people."

London Sun, March 27, 1862: " How can England ever go to war with a nation whose leading man among us thus sympathizes with and blesses her poor?  Who of us will not set the deed of Mr. Peabody...against that of Captain Wilkes....?"

London Review, March 29, 1862: "From America of late has come war, desolation, and animosity.  The close ties of...friendships that linked Englishmen and Americans...seemed dissolved....  In the midst of this comes Mr. Peabody's gift to discard prejudices on both sides of the Atlantic.  We have had a desperate family quarrel, and almost come to blows; Mr. Peabody...by a well-timed act...awakens...better sentiments."

Leeds Mercury, March 27, 1862:  "An American citizen has now come forward to excite the wonder and admiration of the world."

When friend and sometime agent Horatio Gates Somerby (1805-72), a Vermont-born London resident genealogist, sent Peabody these London newspaper clippings, Peabody replied: "I had not the least conception that it would cause so much excitement over the country."

British Honors

British honors evoked by Peabody's gift to London included membership in the ancient guild of the Clothworkers' Company of London (July 2, 1862).  He was granted the Freedom of the City of London (July 10, 1862), the first of only five American so honored; others being President U. S. Grant, June 15, 1877; President Theodore Roosevelt, May 3, 1910; General John J. Pershing, July 18, 1919; and President Dwight D. Eisenhower, June 1, 1945.

Peabody had been denied membership I n London's Reform Club (1844) when Americans were disdained because nine U. S. states had stopped interest payments on their bonds sold abroad.  When payment was resumed retroactively Peabody, who had publicly urged this course, was admitted to the Parthenon Club (1848), the City of London Club (1850), and the most prestigious Athenaeum Club (March 12, 1862).

The Fishmongers' Company of London made Peabody an honorary member (April 18, 1866).  When Oxford University granted him an honorary Doctor of Laws degree (June 26, 1867), undergraduates cheered, waved their caps, and beat the arms of their chairs with the flat of their hands.  Jackson's Oxford Journal (June 29, 1867) recorded: "The lion of the day was beyond a doubt, Mr. Peabody."

Peabody's seated statue, sculptured and cast by Salem, Massachusetts-born William Wetmore Story (1819-95), paid for by public subscription, was unveiled July 23, 1869, on London's Threadneedle Street, near the Royal Exchange, by Queen Victoria's eldest son, the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII.  The only four statues of Americans in London include George Peabody (1869), Abraham Lincoln (1920), George Washington (1921), and Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1948).

Queen Victoria

Queen Victoria's advisors had informed Her Majesty that, when asked privately, Peabody had declined either a baronetcy  or the Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath.  To accept would be to lose his U. S. citizenship, which he felt he could not do.  Her Majesty's Foreign Secretary Lord John Russell (1792-1878) suggested instead a letter from the Queen and the gift of a miniature portrait of the Queen, such as was given to foreign ambassadors who signed a treaty with Britain.

The Queen's letter to Peabody, March 28, 1866, expressed thanks for his "noble act of more than princely munificence…to relieve the wants of her poor subjects residing in London.  It is an act…wholly without parallel….  "The Queen…understands Mr. Peabody to feel himself debarred from accepting [other] distinctions."  [She asks him instead] "to accept a miniature portrait of herself, which she will have painted for him, and which…can…be sent to him in America."

Peabody thanked the Queen by letter on  April 3, 1866.  He received Her Majesty's miniature portrait from British Ambassador Sir Frederick Bruce (1814-67) in Washington, D.C., March 1867.   It was 14" long by 10" wide, had been especially painted for him by British artist F. A. C. Tilt, baked on enamel, and set in a sold gold frame, said to have cost $70,000.  It was deposited in a specially built vault, with Peabody's other honors, in the Peabody Institute Library, Peabody, Massachusetts.

John Bright to the Queen on George Peabody

British statesman and Member of Parliament John Bright (1811-89), who had befriended Peabody from 1867 and had gone fishing with him on the Shannon River, Limerick, Ireland, dined with the Queen, December 30, 1868.  Bright recorded in his diary the conversation: "Some remarks were made about Mr. Peabody: it arose from something about Ireland, and my having been there on a visit to him.  [The Queen] remarked what a very rich man he must be, and how great his gifts."

[Bright recorded that Peabody] "told me how he valued the portrait [the Queen] had given him, that he made a sort of shrine for it, and that it was a thing of great interest in America.  Peabody then "said to me, 'The Americans are as fond of your Queen as the English are.'  To which she replied, 'Yes, the American people have also been kind to me.'"

Queen Victoria's Second Letter to Peabody

Leaving London suddenly on what he knew would be his last U. S. visit, Peabody was in Salem, Massachusetts, when he received Queen Victoria's second letter.  She wrote (June 20, 1869):  "The Queen is very sorry that Mr. Peabody's sudden departure has made it impossible for her to see him before he left England, and she is concerned to hear that he is gone in bad health."

The Queen continued:  "She now writes him a line to express her hope that he may return to this country quite recovered, and that she may then have the opportunity, of which she has now been deprived, of seeing him and offering him her personal thanks for all he has done for the people."

Publishing the Queen's letter, the New York Times added:  "Queen Victoria has paid our great countryman a delicate and graceful compliment.  Mr. Peabody left England unexpectedly, his departure known only to a few friends.  His feeble health became known to the Queen through London newspapers.  With her goodness of heart which Americans never fail to appreciate she sent him a personal letter."  On July 19, 1869, Peabody replied, assuring the Queen of his "heartfelt gratitude."

Queen Victoria's Last Contact

Learning of Peabody's hasty return to London (October 8, 1869), before she knew of his precarious condition, she asked her privy councilor Arthur Helps (1813-75) to invite Peabody to visit her at Windsor Castle.  Helps wrote to Sir Curtis Lampson in whose London home Peabody rested (Oct. 30, 1869):  "'Regarding Mr. Peabody, the Queen thinks the best way would be for her to ask him down to Windsor for one or two nights, where he could rest--and need not come to dinner, or any meals if he feels unequal to it; but where she could see him quietly at any time of the day most convenient to him."  But it was too late.  Largely unconscious his last days, Peabody died November 4, 1869.

U. S. Honors

Chief among Peabody's U. S. honors  was the U. S. Congressional Resolution of Thanks and Gold Medal for his PEF, passed in the U.S. Senate (March 8, 1867), in the U. S. House (March 9, 1867), and signed by President Andrew Johnson (March 16, 1867), who welcomed Peabody at the White House (April 25, 1867).  These, his Honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Harvard University (July 17, 1867), and his other honors received in the U. S. and England, are displayed in the Peabody Institute Library, Peabody, Massachusetts.

Winthrop's Eulogy, February 8, 1870

All was ready for the final act:  Winthrop's eulogy of George Peabody, February 8, 1870, a bitterly cold day.  Thousands poured into tiny Peabody, Massachusetts, by special morning trains which ran full from Boston.  Large crowds were quiet and respectful.  The 50 state troopers had little to do but give directions.

South Congregational Church filled quickly.  Queen Victoria's son, Prince Arthur (1850-1942), in the seventh pew from the pulpit, held all eyes.  His retinue, including British Minister to the U. S. Sir Edward Thornton, sat nearby.

Behind Prince Arthur sat HMS Monarch Captain John E. Commerell, USS Plymouth's Captain William H. Macomb, Admiral Farragut's staff, Massachusetts Governor William Claflin, Maine Governor Joshua L. Chamberlain, the mayors of eight New England cities, Harvard University President Charles William Eliot (1834-1926), and others.

On the first six rows sat Peabody's relatives, elderly citizens who knew him in youth, and the trustees of his institutes and funds.  Anthems were sung.  Scripture was read.  Robert Charles Winthrop rose to give the eulogy.

Robert Charles Winthrop was the descendant of an early governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, a Harvard University graduate, trained in Daniel Webster's law office, member and Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Peabody's philanthropic advisor, and the PEF board of trustees president.

Winthrop began: "What a career this has been whose final scene lies before us!  Who can contemplate his rise from lowly beginnings to these final royal honors without admiration?  His death, painless and peaceful, came after he completed his great dream and saw his old friends and loved ones."

Winthrop continued:  "He had ambition and wanted to do grand things in a grand way.  His public charity is too well known to bear repetition and I believe he also did much private good which remains unknown.  The trusts he established, the institutes he founded, the buildings he raised stand before all eyes."

"I have authority for saying," Winthrop continued, "that he planned these for many years, for in private talks he told me all he planned and when I expressed my amazement at the magnitude of his purpose, he said to me with guileless simplicity:  'Why Mr. Winthrop, this is no new idea to me.  From the earliest of my manhood, I have contemplated some such disposition of my property; and I have prayed my heavenly Father, day by day, that I might be enabled, before I died, to show my gratitude for the blessings which He has bestowed upon me by doing some great good to my fellow-men.'"

The words underlined above are engraved on Peabody's marker in Westminster Abbey, London, where his remains rested for 30 days, November 12-December 11, 1869.  That marker and the above words on it were refurbished for the February 12, 1995, bicentennial ceremony of Peabody's birth held in London's Westminster Abbey.
Winthrop further said: "To measure his gifts in dollars and pounds or in the number of people served is inadequate.  He did something more.  The successful way he arranged the machinery of world-wide philanthropy compels attention.  It is a lesson that cannot be lost to history.  It has inspired and will continue to inspire others to do likewise.  This was the greatness of his life."

"Now, all that is mortal of him," Winthrop said, "comes back, borne with honors that mark a conquering hero.  The battle he fought was the greed within him.  His conquest was the victory he achieved over the gaining, hoarding, saving instinct.  Such is the conqueror we make ready to bury in the earth this day.

Winthrop continued: "And so was fulfilled for him a prophecy he heard once as the subject of a sermon, on which by some force of reflection lingered in his mind and which he more than once mentioned to me:  'And it shall come to pass in that day, that the light shall not be clear nor dark; but it shall be one day which shall be known to the Lord, not day, or night:  but it shall come to pass that at evening time it shall be light.'"

Winthrop said that Peabody first heard this text, Zechariah 14: 6-7, in a sermon by the Reverend Dr. John Lothrop (1772-1820) of Brattle Street, Boston, date not known.
Winthrop concluded: "And so we bid thee farewell, noble friend.  The village of thy birth weeps.  The flower of Essex County stands at thy grave.  Massachusetts mourns her son.  Maine does honor to thee.  New England and Old England join hands because of thee.  The children of the South praise thy works.  Chiefs of the Republic stand with royalty at thy bier.  And so we bid thee farewell, friend of mankind."

Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Mass.

The New York Times described the final burial scene at Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Massachusetts, on February 8, 1870:  "There were about two hundred sleigh coaches in the procession.  The route was shortened somewhat in consequence of the prevalence of the storm.  On arriving at the Peabody tomb, there was no special service, the coffin being placed reverently therein, after which the procession returned to the Institute, and the great pageantry attending the obsequies of the great philanthropist was ended."

Harmony Grove Cemetery's 65 acres of avenues and walks, first laid out in 1840, had been a thick walnut grove when Peabody was a boy.  He could see it from the attic of the house where he was born.  On a knoll where he had once played he had chosen the family burial plot on Anemone Ave., lot number 51.  There, where he had brought together the remains of his mother, father, sisters, and brothers, he was laid to rest.

Ninety-six days of unprecedented funeral honors had ended.  His works remain.  Public memory of him has since grown dim, except at his institutes and among those who care to search the records.

Memory has also dimmed of those few days that summer of 1869 at White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, when two old men, one from Massachusetts, the other from Virginia, turned from Civil War strife to the healing power of education.  One, a lifelong soldier, had become president of a struggling college; the other, a volunteer for 14 days in the War of 1812, merchant, London-based banker, and creator of philanthropic institutions.  The two old men walked arm in arm, enjoyed each other, spoke of educating new generations, of reconciliation, of healing, and of better days to ahead.

Authors

The Parkers attended Berea College, near Lexington, Kentucky (1946-50), were married soon after; attended the University of Illinois, Urbana (1950); and what is now Peabody College of Vanderbilt University, Nashville (1950-56).  Franklin Parker taught at several universities including West Virginia University, Morgantown, where he was Benedum Professor of Education (1968-86), and was granted emeritus status in 1986.

Authors' Publications on George Peabody (1795-1869)

Dissertation:  Franklin Parker, Ed. D. Dissertation, "George Peabody, Founder of Modern Philanthropy," (Nashville: George Peabody College for Teachers, 1956), 3 vols., 1219 pp.   Abstracted in Dissertation Abstracts, XVII, No. 8 (Aug. 1957), pp. 1701-1702.

Books

Franklin Parker, George Peabody, A Biography.  Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press, 1971, 233 pp., reprinted in microfiche form in CORE [Collected Original Resources in Education], IX, 3 [Nov. 1985], Fiche 7 D10 (Note: CORE is a British miroform journal).  Microfilm & hard copy also sold by Books on Demand, University Microfilms, 300 N. Zeeb Rd., Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1346 [ask for LC79-15,7741, O-8357-3261-4,2039482]).  The 1971 version was recorded in 2 audio cassettes, read by narrator Bruce Bortz at the Maryland State Library for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Book Number Md-PH (MDC334), less Chap. 25  ‘GP’s Legacy’; ‘An Essay on Sources’; ‘Sources of Extant Portraits, Photographs, and Illustrations’; and Index.

 ¶Vanderbilt University Press reprinted a revised, updated, Franklin Parker, George Peabody, A Biography.  Nashville:, Feb. 1995, 278 pp, with 9 illustrations added.  The 1971 and rev. 1995 editions are both out of print.

Encyclopedia Articles

1-(With Betty J. Parker), "Peabody Education Fund in Tennessee (1867-1914)." Tennessee Encyclopedia of History & Culture (Nashville: Tennessee Historical Society, 1998), pp. 725-726.

2-Franklin Parker, "George Peabody (1795-1869), Merchant, Banker, Creator of the Peabody Education Fund, and a Founder of Modern Philanthropy," in Encyclopedia of Notable American Philanthropists.  Edited by Robert T. Grimm, Jr. (Greenwood Press and Oryx Press, for Indiana Univ. Center on Philanthropy, due in 2002).

3-Franklin Parker, "George Peabody (1795-1869)," Encyclopedia of Philanthropy in the United States.  Edited by Dwight Burlingame (Greenwood Press and Oryx Press, for Indiana Univ. Center on Philanthropy, due in 2002).

Journal Issue

Franklin Parker, "Legacy of George Peabody: Special Bicentenary Issue" [reprint of 21 articles], Peabody Journal of Education, LXX, No. l (Fall 1994), 210 pp., published as ISBN: 0805898956, by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, sold by Peabody Journal of Education, Peabody College of Vanderbilt University, 113 Payne Hall, Post Office Box 41, Nashville, Tenn. 37203, Phone: (615) 322-8963.
 
Pamphlet

Franklin Parker, George Peabody (1795-1869), Founder of Modern Philanthropy. Nashville, Tenn.: George Peabody College for Teachers of Vanderbilt University, 1956.

Chapter in Book

Franklin Parker, "George Peabody (1795-1869), Founder of Modern Educational Philanthropy: His Contributions to Higher Education," pp. 71-99 in Academic Profiles in Higher Education.  Edited by James J. Van Patten.  Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press, 1992.

Articles in Journals, 1955-98

1-"Founder Paid Debt to Education,"  Peabody Post, VIII, No. 8 (Feb. 10, 1955), p. 1.

2-"The Girl George Peabody Almost Married," Peabody Reflector, XXVII, No. 8 (Oct. 1955), pp. 215, 224-225.

3-"George Peabody and the Spirit of America,"  Peabody Reflector, XXIX, No. 2 (Feb. 1956), pp. 26-27.

4-"On the Trail of George Peabody," Berea Alumnus, XXVI, No. 8 (May 1956), p. 4.

5-(With Walter Merrill), "William Lloyd Garrison and George Peabody,"  Essex Institute Historical  Collections,  XCV, No. 1 (Jan. 1959),  pp. 1-20.

6-"George Peabody and Maryland," Peabody of Journal of Education, XXXVII, No. 3 (Nov. 1959), pp. 150-157.

7-"An Approach to Peabody's Gifts and Legacies," Essex Institute Historical Collections, XCVI, No. 4 (Oct. 1960), pp. 291-296.

8-"Robert E. Lee, George Peabody, and Sectional Reunion," Peabody Journal of Education, XXXVII, No. 4 (Jan. 1960), pp. 195-202.

9-"George Peabody and the Search for Sir John Franklin, 1852-1854,"  American Neptune, XX, No. 2 (April 1960), pp. 104-111.

10-"Influences on the Founder of the Johns Hopkins University and the Johns Hopkins Hospital," Bulletin of the History of Medicine, XXXIV, No. 2 (March-April 1960), pp. 148-153.

11-"George Peabody's Influence on Southern Educational Philanthropy,"  Tennessee Historical Quarterly, XX, No. 2 (March 1961), pp. 65-74.

12-"Maryland's Yankee Friend--George Peabody, Esq.," Maryland Teacher, XX, No. 5 (Jan. 1963), pp. 6-7, 24.  Reprinted in Peabody Notes (Spring 1963), pp. 4-7, 10.

13-"The Funeral of George Peabody," Essex Institute Historical Collection, XCIX, No. 2 (April 1963), pp. 67-87. Reprinted: Peabody Journal of Education, XLIV, No. 1 (July 1966), pp. 21-36.

14-"The Girl George Peabody Almost Married, Peabody Notes, XVII, No. 3 (Spring 1964), pp. 10-14.

15-"George Peabody, 1795-1869, Founder of Modern Philanthropy," Peabody Reflector, XXXVIII, No. I (Jan.-Feb. 1965), pp. 9-16.

16-"George Peabody and the Peabody Museum of Salem," Curator, X, No. 2 (June 1967), pp. 137-153.

17-"To Live Fulfilled:  George Peabody, 1795-1869, Founder of George Peabody College for Teachers," Peabody Reflector, XLIII, No. 2 (Spring 1970), pp. 50-53.

18-On the Trail of George Peabody," Peabody Reflector, XLIV, No. 4 (Fall 1971), pp. 100-103.

19-"George Peabody, 1795-1869: His Influence on Educational Philanthropy," Peabody Journal of Education, XLIX, No. 2 (Jan. 1972), pp. 138-145.

20-"Pantheon of Philanthropy:  George Peabody," National Society of Fund Raisers Journal, I, No. 1 (Dec. 1976), pp. 16-20.

21-"The Legacy of George Peabody: Special Bicentenary Issue" [reprints 22 article on George Peabody], Peabody Journal of Education, LXX, No. 1 (Fall 1994), 210 pp.

22-(With Betty J. Parker).  "A Forgotten Hero's Birthday [George Peabody]: Lion and the Lamb," Crossville (Tenn.) Chronicle, Feb. 22, 1995, p. 4A.

Electronic Journals

1-"In Praise of George Peabody, 1795-1869," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XV, No. 2 (June 1991), Fiche 5 AO2.  (CORE is published by the Carfax Publishing, Taylor & Francis Ltd, P. O. Box 25, Abingdon, Oxfordshire 0X14 30E, UK).

2-"George Peabody (1795-1869), Founder of Modern Educational Philanthropy: His Contributions to Higher Education," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XVI, No. 1 (March 1992), Fiche 11 D06.

3-"Education Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869), Founder of George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville, and the Peabody Library and Conservatory of Music, Baltimore (Brief History)." CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XVIII, No. 1 (March 1994),  Fiche ??  Abstract in Resources in Education.  (Resources in Education abstracts documents published in microform in ERIC (Educational Resources Information Center) since 1966 by the U.S. Department of Education).

4-(With Betty J. Parker), "George Peabody's (1795-1869) Educational Legacy," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XVIII, No. 1 (March 1994),  Fiche 1 C05.  Abstract in Resources in Education, XXIX, No. 9 (Sept. 1994), p. 147 (ERIC ED 369 720).

5-(With Betty J. Parker), "Educational Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869), George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville, and the Peabody Library and Conservatory of Music, Baltimore (Brief History)," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XVIII, No. 1 (March 1994), Fiche 3 A10.  Abstract in Resources in Education, XXX, No. 5 (May 1995), pp. 133-134 (ERIC ED 378 070).  Same in Journal of Educational Philosophy & History, XLIV (1994), pp. 69-93.

6-"Educational Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869): Photos and Related Illustrations in Printed Sources and Depositories," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XVIII, No. 2 (June 1994), Fiche 1 D1Z; also abstract in Resources in Education, XXX, No. 6 (June 1995), p. 149 (ERIC ED 397 179).

7-"Educational Philanthropist George Peabody and Peabody College of Vanderbilt University: Dialogue with Bibliography," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XVIII, No. 3 (Dec. 1994), Fiche 2 E06.

8-(With Betty J. Parker). "America's Forgotten Educational Philanthropist: A Bicentennial View," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XIX, No. 1 (March 1995), Fiche 7 A11.  Abstract in Resources in Education, XXXI, No. 12 (Dec. 1996), p. 161 (ERIC ED 398 126).

9-(With Betty J. Parker). "Educational Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869) and the Peabody Institute Library, Danvers, Massachusetts: Dialogue and Chronology," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XIX, No. 1 (March 1995), Fiche 7 B01.

10-(With Betty J. Parker). "George Peabody (1795-1869); Merchant, Banker, Philanthropist," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XX, No. 1 (March 1996), Fiche 9 B01.  Abstract in Resources in Education, XXXI, No. 3 (March 1996), p. 169 (ERIC ED 388 571).

11-(With Betty J. Parker). "On the Trail of Educational Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869): A Dialogue."  CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XX, No. 3 (Oct. 1996), Fiche 13 B07.

12-(With Betty J. Parker). "Educational Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869) and First U.S. Paleontology Prof. Othniel Charles Marsh (1831-1899) at Yale University." CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), XXII, No. 1 (March 1998), Fiche 7 A04.

13-(With Betty J. Parker). "Educational Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869) and U.S.-British Relations, 1850s-60s." Abstract in Resources in Education, XXXV, No. 5 (May 2000), p. 122 (ERIC ED 436 444).

14-(With Betty J. Parker).  "George Peabody A-Z," CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education), Vol. 23, No. 3 (Oct. 1999), Fiche 11  C10.

15-(With Betty J. Parker). "General Robert E. Lee (1807-70) and Philanthropist George Peabody (1795-1869) at White Sulphur  Springs, West Virginia, July 23-Aug. 30, 1869." Abstract in Resources in Education, XXXVI, No. 2 (Feb. 2001), p. 184 (ERIC ED 44917).

16-(With Betty J. Parker):  "Forgotten George Peabody (1795-1869); Massachusetts-born Merchant, London-based Banker, Philanthropist.  His Life, Influence, and Related People, Places, Events: A Handbook" (1200+ pp.).  Abstract in Resources in Education, Vol. XXXVI, No. 3 (March 2001), p. 156 (ERIC ED 445 998).

17-(With Betty J. Parker). "Educational Philanthropist George Peabody's (1795-1869) Death and Funeral."  CORE (Collected Original Resources in Education) and Abstract in Resources in Education (ERIC ED).  To appear in late 2002.

About Authors

The Parkers are graduates of Berea College near Lexington, Ky., where they met in 1946.  They were married in 1950; graduated from the University of Illinois, Urbana, 1950; and from what is now Peabody College of Vanderbilt University, Nashville, 1956. 

Franklin Parker taught at the Universities of Texas, Austin, 1957-64; Oklahoma, Norman, 1964-68; West Virginia University, Morgantown, 1968-86; Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, 1986-89; and Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, 1989-94. 

Betty Parker taught high school and college English, was secretary to Belmont University's first president (Nashville), taught Reading at the University of Texas, Austin; and was a researcher, writer, and co-editor with Franklin Parker of numerous education books and articles.  The did extensive research resulting in George Peabody, A Biography, Vanderbilt University, 1971, revised 1995.   E-mail: bfparker@frontiernet.net

End of Manuscript.