Saturday, August 21, 2010

The Thomas W. Streeter Collection of Americana



Thomas Winthrop Streeter was born in 1883 in Concord, New Hampshire. He received a B.L. degree from Dartmouth College in 1904 and an LL.B. degree from Harvard Law School in 1907. He practiced law until 1917 when he moved to New York and began a career in business and finance. He retired in 1939. Although successful as a businessman, his claim to fame was in a different field altogether; something most people consider a hobby.
 

Thomas Streeter began collecting books on American history at an early age. He attended his first auction in 1920 and at that time became determined to collect books on "beginnings", books relating to first explorations of states and areas, first settlements, and cultural foundations in the form of significant issues in individual colonies and states. While serving as chairman of the board of a Texas based petroleum company from 1923-30, he began to acquire books, pamphlets, broadsides and maps relating to Texas history during the period of 1795-1845. This particular subset of his collection eventually became the largest private Texana collection ever compiled. His interest in Texana led him to compile and publish the authoritative three-part (five-volume) Bibliography of Texas, 1795-1845 in the years 1955-1960. After the work was published, he sold his Texana collection of nearly 2000 publications to Yale University where it became part of their Western Americana Collection. 

But, like I said, Texana was only a subset of his collection. Streeter's personal library of Americana eventually surpassed all other American private libraries. Upon his death in 1965 the library consisted of some 5,000 volumes ranging from discovery and exploration to first books in each of the American states. One of the earliest items in his collection was Cosmographi Geographia, a geographical study printed in Venice in 1482 which contained a rare map and greatly stimulated exploration. Early maps and atlases were an important part of the collection. There were also broadsides, pamphlets, treaties...anything that would shed light on the discovery, exploration and settlement of North America.

The Streeter Collection was not a collection of "high spots" of history, nor was it a collection of books that were bought on impulse. Streeter was very selective in the items he bought and each item in the collection had a definite purpose. He was well known to booksellers of important works across the country as well as libraries great and small. He made pilgrimages to libraries from coast to coast carefully jotting down titles that were new to him and combing over case after case of special collections. Decisions on what to add to his collection were not made hastily.

In accordance with his wishes, after his death, the collection was sold off in a series of seven auctions at Parke-Bernet Galleries in New York City from 1966 through 1969. The catalog for this auction was printed in a set of eight volumes including an index and has become an important bibliography and reference source in its own right. Over the course of three decades, Streeter had painstakingly cataloged his collection, making notes of provenance and significance and the descriptions of the auction items were prepared using a carbon copy of his catalog which was contained in eighty-seven loose-leaf notebooks. The total selling price for the 4,421 lots was $3,104,982.

In the introduction to volume I of the auction catalog, Lawrence C. Wroth wrote, "These books and broadsides, maps and pamphlets show us the whole panorama of a great nation in birth and growth, tell us the wonderful story of its birth through colonialism and of its own colonialism rampant across a continent, of good deeds and bad, of courage, of frustration. Here in these materials is the stuff not of a single epic but of a hundred epics." Thanks to men like Thomas Winthrop Streeter, our past has been preserved for future generations to study.
Presidential report on exploration of the west dated 1806


Illustrated map dated 1849

Pat Garrett's "Life of Billy the Kid" dated 1882

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Who Says You Can't Go Home?



Who says you can't go home?
There's only one place they call me one of their own
Just a hometown boy, born a rolling stone.
Who says you can't go home?

                            Bon Jovi


In June, my high school in Ruidoso, New Mexico held a combined reunion for the classes of 1973-1980. There were close to 300 people who attended, including spouses of classmates.

I've been to all my reunions over the years but this one was different. There were several people there who had never been to any of their class reunions in the past. Maybe it was because so many classes were combined or maybe it was because the event was so well planned, I don't know, but I saw a lot of people I hadn't seen in over 30 years. 

Jeff Elliott, Rick Mound, Me, Stan Cape
Over the course of 4 days, we talked about the past, laughed at our memories, told lies, met family members and drank beer....a lot of beer! We tried to hold back the tears when we looked at photos of our classmates who have passed away or learned of friends' parents who were no longer with us. You see, in a small town when you make friends in school, their parents and family become a big part of your life as well. We talked about people who weren't there, wondered whatever happened to what's-his/her-name, checked out ex-girlfriends and wondered "What if I'd have married her?" And then we drank some more beer.

 Me, Sean Mound, Jeff Elliott
 
Some of the class of '79

"It was always summer and the future called
We were ready for adventures 

and we wanted them all
And there was so much left to dream
And so much time to make it real"
                                                                Meat Loaf

 
 My friend Stan and I, 2010


...and in 1979

 Steve Cox, Jay Raulerson and Me

 Frosty Lathan at the Saturday picnic

Getting ready for the Saturday night banquet

Jeff Elliott, Lori Wright-Iannucci, Rick Mound, 
Cindy Mound-Yenson and me.

In the movie Stand By Me, the writer, voiced by Richard Dreyfuss, writes, "I never had any friends later on like the ones I had when I was twelve. Jesus, does anyone?" (In my case, it was 18 but you get the idea). It's funny that when you haven't seen a good friend for such a long time, when you finally do, you pick up right where you left off. That's what we did. It was a great weekend. We are planning on having another reunion in 2013...maybe we'll drink some more beer! In the words of Rod Stewart:


May good fortune be with you
May your guiding light be strong
build a stairway to heaven
with a prince or a vagabond
And may you never love in vain
And in my heart you'll always remain
Forever young, forever young.