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American Heritage MagazineOctober 1973    Volume 24, Issue 6
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POSTSCRIPTS TO HISTORY


 

LOST NEW HAVEN


Everard H. Smith III, of Washington, D.C., has called our attention to an unhappy example of America’s vigorous efforts to destroy the remnants of her recent past. Mr. Smith writes:
Joan Paterson Kerr’s article in your April issue, “Gracious Record of a Connecticut Family,” struck a responsive chord in me as soon as I read it, for I spent my undergraduate career at Yale in Timothy Dwight College on Temple Street. Both of the fine old New Haven mansions shown in the photographs on page 77 were located less than half a block from the college. … The Trowbridge-Hotchkiss house, Nos. 310 and 312, served Yale for many years as a graduate art school dormitory. … It was copiously decorated with slogans of a populist nature during the Black Panther trial in May, 1970.

Mr. Smith sent us the photograph below, showing the house serving as an anachronistic billboard. Now both slogans and house have been replaced by the predictable parking lot. The picture at right shows the house shortly after the turn of the century. The handsome neoclassic building to the left has fared better than its neighbor and now houses the Yale University Press. The New Haven Library was soon to rise from the excavations in the foreground, where it stands today.


 

OLD HOUSE, NEW TENANTS


The destruction of the old Trowbridge-Hotchkiss house is not necessarily a harbinger of the fate of the later Hotchkiss house portrayed in the same article. George D. Vaill, Assistant Secretary of Yale University, who reported on the Nathan Hale Statue in our last issue, tells us of a situation where, it seems, the residents rather than the house are threatened:
The Henry Hotchkiss house, pictured on pages 74 and 75 (exterior) and pages 78 and 79 (interior), has recently been occupied, successively, by President Kingman Brewster, Jr., when he was Provost, and by Reuben A. Holden, who was Secretary of the University. It is presently the home of Horace D. Taft, Dean of Yale College, son of Senator Robert A. Taft and grandson of President William Howard Taft.
The capacious basement of the house, entered at a lower level from another street, has, from time to time, served as an annex to the Peabody Museum of Natural History. Several years ago, during the Holdens’ tenancy, a boa constrictor escaped from its cage in the cellar and apparently made its way into a partition—there seemed to be no other avenue of egress which it could have followed. The reptile was never thereafter seen again and may still be alive somewhere in the walls of the house. It is said that a boa constrictor can live for a very long time with little food, water, or human companionship.


 

THE “STAR-SPANGLED BANNER” MYSTERY


We have, unintentionally, baffled a number of our readers—and ourselves—with a picture that we ran in our August, 1972, issue. It appears on page 73 and shows a group of pa- triotic ladies diligently repairing the huge flag that Francis Scott Key watched flying over Fort McHenry while the words of our national anthem began to come together in his head. But this inspirational scene is marred by a grotesque apparition hanging in the air above the banner. Among others, Mr. John Hood, of Houston, Texas, wrote to ask us “What is that Thing soaring over their work table? Fifty people have looked at this picture and not offered a single sensible suggestion.” We had no idea and questioned the owners of the picture at the Smithsonian Institution. They looked into the mystery and came back with an answer. It is some sort of cactuslike plant in a pot that has been hauled up and braced with ropes to keep it out of the way of the restoration in progress. Too bad; we had hoped for a heathen idol.


 

WASHINGTON AND FLEXNER


We are happy to announce that James Thomas Flexner has just received the National Book Award for George Washington: Anguish and Farewell, the fourth and final volume of his biography of the great man, as well as a special PuIitzer Prize citation for the whole series. Over the years we have published no fewer than nine excerpts from this monumental work, and we are deeply pleased to see the author honored. Flexner’s acceptance speech, an eloquent personal statement of his feelings about Washington after more than a decade of tracing his career, appears below.


In the twelve years that I have worked on a biography of Washington, I have made various unexpected discoveries. Surely the most surprising was that George Washington is alive. Or, to put it more accurately, millions of George Washingtons are alive. Washingtons have been born and have died for some two centuries.

Almost every historical figure is regarded as a dead exemplar of a vanished epoch. But Washington exists within the minds of most Americans as an active force. He is a multitude of living ghosts, each shaped less by eighteenth-century reality than by the structure of the individual brain in which he dwells. An inhabitant of intimate spaces, Washington is for private reasons sought out or avoided, loved or admired, hated or despised. In my wanderings of a dozen years, I have come across almost no Americans who proved, when the subject was really broached, emotionally indifferent to George Washington.

The roles played by the mythological George Washingtons fall into two major categories: one Freudian, the other a procession of mirrors reflecting people’s attitudes toward the situation of the United States at their time.

In an essay that had no specific reference to Washington, Freud described how “infantile fantasies” concerning people’s own fathers can shape their conceptions of historical figures. “They obliterate,” Freud wrote, “the individual features of their subject’s physiognomy, they smooth over the traces of his life’s struggles with internal and external resistances, and they tolerate in him no vestiges of human weakness or imperfection. Thus, they present us with what is in fact a cold, strange, ideal figure instead of a human being to whom we might feel ourselves distantly related.”

Here is, of course, an exact description of the marble image of Washington which so many Americans harbor—and resent. I have been amazed by the infantile glee with which people I have met made fun of my writing a biography of Washington. Was I recording the clacking of wooden false teeth? Had I ever tried to envision how Washington would have looked in long winter underwear? These mockers often dance up and down with self-satisfaction, like a small child who has dared express an impious thought about his father.

Down the years, Washington’s second mythological role has been as a national symbol, an alternate to the American flag. In periods when Americans were happy with their society, they have thought of Washington with adulation. At times of resentment and self-distrust, the mythological Washingtons have been resented and distrusted. I have discovered, sometimes to my considerable embarrassment, that the current attitude toward Washington—and toward me as his biographer—is often hostile. Their denial of this prejudice makes me particularly grateful to the judges who are honoring my book today.

My twelve years’ effort has been to disentangle the Washington who actually lived from all the mythological Washingtons, and in so doing I have inevitably—for that was the fact —revealed a great and good man. There have been in all history few men who possessed unassailable power who used that power so gently and selfeffacingly for what their best instincts told them was the welfare of their neighbors and all mankind.

In being ourselves untrue to the highest teaching of the American tradition, we of this generation have tended to denigrate that tradition, to seek out all that was unworthy, to emphasize whatever justifies national distrust. In so doing, we have discarded an invaluable heritage. We are blinding our eyes to stars that lead to the very ideals many of us most admire: the sanctity of the individual, the equality of all men before the law, government responsive to the people, freedom for all means of communication, avoidance of what Washington denounced as international “ambition,” the self-determination of peoples everywhere.

To find again the American ideals we have lost, we may not return to our national beginnings with the blinded eyes of idolatry or chauvinism. Let us examine deeply every flaw, every area, such as slavery, where the founding fathers were untrue to what they professed. Let us examine Washington not as the spotless figure delineated by infantile fantasies or by selfseeking wavers of the flag. Let us determine without prejudice exactly what happened, exactly how men behaved. If we do this, we shall, so I am profoundly convinced, find, in the dark valley where we often stand, inspiration.


 
 
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