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                                        News & Events, March 2011  
Dear Friend,
The Friends of Mount Auburn is pleased to present the March 2011 edition of our
electronic
newsletter. We invite you to join our email list to receive this mailing on a monthly basis.  To
ensure that you continue to receive emails from us, add friends@mountauburn.org to your
address book today.
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In this issue
March Recital: The Canoro Quartet
Friends of Mount Auburn March Programs
Tree & Shrub Pruning Workshop CANCELLED
Wildlife at Mount Auburn Cemetery: The American Woodcock
Spotlight on George Parkman
Horticultural Highlight: Pinus strobus
Person of the Month: Fannie Farmer
New Docent Training Class
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Canora Quartet March Recital: The Canoro Quartet

Sunday, March 27, 5:00 PM

 

There has been a last-minute addition to our March calendar of events! Please mark your calendars and plan to join us at 5PM on Sunday, 3/27 in Story Chapel for a free recital by the Canoro Quartet.   

 

The Canoro Quartet, an honors string quartet at the New England Conservatory, will perform works by Ravel, Schubert, and Piazzolla during this special event.

 

This event is free and open to the public, though seating is limited. Please reserve your seat in advance.

 

Mount Auburn is the final resting place for many of the notable musicians and composers important in shaping Boston's rich musical heritage. Some of these individuals have been significant in the history of the New England Conservatory.  

*photo of the Canoro Quartet by Susan Wilson. 

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Winter WalkFriends of Mount Auburn March Programs    

 

Join us in March for one of our Friends walks or lectures - from history to horticulture to notable figures, our schedule of programs offer's something for everyone.

 View our entire schedule online and register upcoming programs!  

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January Blizzard

Tree & Shrub Pruning Workshop CANCELLED


Due to an extremely harsh winter, the Tree & Shrub Pruning Workshop has been canceled.  Every year our gardening and arboriculture staff look forward to leading a hands-on demonstration about pruning ornamental trees and shrubs.  However our horticulture staff have been hit hard with a tremendous amount of post-storm damaged tree clean-up. 

 

To date, Mount Auburn staff has had to remove 33 trees and plans to remove 10 more as they continue the long process of repair and cleanup (grounds crew have logged over 750 hours on this work and we anticipate another three weeks of cleanup).

 

We are making a special appeal asking our donors and friends to consider a gift which will help to defray the costs of both the removal of the damaged trees as well as greatly aid in the replanting efforts here at Mount Auburn.  We sincerely appreciate your support in helping to preserve Mount Auburn for our future generations.

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WoodcockWildlife at Mount Auburn Cemetery: 

The American Woodcock 

By Robert H. Stymeist

It's hard to believe the American Woodcock is a member of the shorebird family, this plump shorebird is rarely found near the shore instead it prefers the forest and open fields.  Although Mount Auburn seems like a very unlikely spot to find one - every year in March and early April the visiting birder or the occasional visitor out walking in the Cemetery may encounter this unique bird.

The American Woodcock is an extremely distinctive bird both in its appearance and in its beh
avior. It has a long straight bill which almost looks like a pencil jutting out of its head. Woodcocks have large eyes located high in the head so they can see all around including what may be behind them and very short pink legs. Its plumage is a complex pattern of cinnamon brown which helps in making this bird blend in to its natural surroundings; both males and females look alike.

The Woodcock arrives sometimes as early as late February and way before the first official day of spring risking snowstorms and frigid weather that is not unusual here in the northeast. It is the mating behavior that many birders can't wait to experience each late winter evening. The sky dance of the woodcock is one of the best avian displays we can witness from the cold evenings of early March right up to the end of May.

Mount Auburn is not the place to watch the show though I have seen the aerial flight show from the Catholic Cemetery adjacent to Mount Auburn which provides an open display area. Some of the areas nearby Mount Auburn to see this free show include Rock Meadow in Belmont, Great Meadows in Arlington, and Nahanton Park in Newton.

As the sun sets listen for a nasal sounding "peent," the bird will repeat this sound several times and then the real show begins. The woodcock rockets upward, the wings produce a twittering sound, the bird makes loops and arcs going so high you will lose sight of it until you hear the descent: a series of almost flute-like calls as the bird literally plummets to the ground and begins another series of " peents" before the next flight; this will go on for several minutes.

Though you may never experience the sky dance of the "Timberdoodle" at Mount Auburn you have a chance to find him anywhere on the grounds before the first crocus appears.

... 

Join us at 6PM on Thursday, 3/24 for A Passion for Birds with wildlife photographer, documentary filmmaker, and co-founder of Migration Productions, Shawn Carey.  $5 members, $10 non-members.

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Parkman Lot

Spotlight on George Parkman and a Murder at Harvard

 
Visitors to Mount Auburn walking along Sumac Path will come upon the tomb of the Parkman family (pictured).  It was here that George Parkman was laid to rest in 1850. The son of a wealthy merchant, Parkman was a landlord, moneylender, and one of the richest men in Boston.

Parkman's disturbing disappearance on November 23, 1849, the gruesome discovery of a body in the bowels of the Harvard Medical School a week later, and the notorious trial of Harvard Professor John Webster for Parkman's murder the following March sent shock waves through Boston.  How could members of the city's social and cultural elite have been caught up in so heinous a crime?
"The great city itself, the birthplace of America, the hub of the New Republic . . . was shaken to the core by an event which turned upside-down what it had always thought was the right order of things," historian Simon Schama notes.
 

Murder at Harvard, a PBS documentary film, follows Schama as he sets out to discover the "truth" behind a case with many lingering uncertainties to this day-and as he probes the larger philosophical questions historians face in trying to reconstruct the past. Like a time-traveling detective, Schama places himself in the mindset of the different characters and imagines how the story might have unfolded from multiple points of view.

 

On Thursday, March 17th, the film's writers and producers Melissa Banta and Eric Stange will present a special screening of the documentary at Mount Auburn Cemetery at 5:30 PM in Story Chapel.  Since its initial release on the PBS series American Experience, the film has been used by college professors teaching the study and writing of history, and the documentary is also the basis of an intriguing iPhone app Walking Cinema: Murder on Beacon Hill


The Mount Auburn Book Club selection for the month of March is Simon Schama's Dead Certainties: Unwarranted Speculations, which inspired the making of the documentary. The book club will meet at 10AM on Thursday, 3/10 in Story Chapel.  

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StrobusHorticultural Highlight: Strobus 

Wood is the stiff heart of the living

tree, the corpse left after its death.

We walk through our homes, our external

skeletons made of the bones of trees.

Some wood bends and some breaks....

                                                         -Marge Piercy


We write this with a touch of sadness due to the loss by storm breakage of numerous trees and shrubs from this winter's heavy snowstorms.  It will be awhile until we record a final accounting of the total damage but we have lost several large Eastern white pines, Pinus strobus.   Perhaps no other tree has played so great a role in the early life and history of the United States. The first European settlers marveled at four-hundred-year-old groves of Pinus strobus reaching 150 feet tall and up to five feet in diameter and its harvesting began almost immediately. Some were recorded with heights up to 220 feet but today few reach half that height and age.

 

Mount Auburn's visionary founder, Jacob Bigelow (1787-1879), gave a description in his classic text Florula Bostoniensis that is still instructive, "This noble and very useful tree rises with a straight trunk to uncommon height.... The branches are given off in whorls or circles. The leaves... grow in fascicles of five together, with hardly any sheath. The cones are very long, cylindrical, curved, and pendulous; composed of large, smooth loose scales." He continued, "No tree is more extensively employed in building or for the ordinary purposes of carpenters' and joiners' work. The large trees are particularly in request for the masts of ships, and vast quantities of the wood have been annually exported from the eastern coast in the form of timber and boards." An example of the latter is found in an account book of the Commissioners of Customs in America for the year 1771 reporting 2.5 million feet of pine exported from North American ports.

 

Any discussion of the Eastern white pine for its use as ships masts should include the legacy of it once being selected as the so-called "King's Pine". As early as 1691 the English monarchy acted to take control of this valuable domestic as well as export resource by including a clause in the revised Massachusetts Bay Charter that reserved them for its naval use. Colonial flouting of this and other succeeding laws restricting harvesting resulted in Parliament in 1729 passing a stronger, more  specific law stating "no white pine trees are to be cut without license." It further reserved for the Royal Navy "All the masts ... exceeding twenty-four inches in diameter, all trees that exceed fifty-four feet in length in the stem, all young pine trees that seem promising to grow to masts."  This law remained in effect until 1775, the beginning of our American Revolution, and helped to stoke hostility between the northern colonies and the crown that later exacerbated over stamp duties, tea taxes and military presence in towns.

 

It is hard today to imagine our Eastern white pines as objects of national security necessitating external national laws controlling their fate. The famed nineteenth-century landscape designer Andrew Jackson Downing (1815-1852) in his 1841 The Theory and Practice of Landscape Gardening gave a less political and more inspired view along with high praise: "From its pleasing growth and color, we consider it by far the most desirable kind of planting in proximity of buildings...". Today we more frequently see Pinus strobus as an evergreen backdrop in our landscapes, a lovely shade tree, a perch for the interesting bird we are focusing on through our binoculars or perhaps the muse of poetic couplets such as these by Donald Everett Axin:

 

Graceful pines perform pirouettes with hemlocks

And look like green pipers parading down the trail ...

 

While we regret this winter's loss of a few of our mature Eastern white pines there remain several hundred more throughout our landscape. On your next visit to Mount Auburn we encourage you to seek one out and reflect a bit on this specie's momentous history as well as natural beauty.

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Join Visitor Services Assistant Jim Gorman at 1PM on Sunday, 3/6 for Mount Auburn's Big Trees - a walking tour to view some of Mount Auburn's biggest trees or Mount Auburn President & CEO David Barnett at 1PM on Saturday, 3/19 for Winter Tree & Shrub Identification and Signs of Spring - a walking tour to observe the early signs of spring's arrival and learn how to identify some of the most interesting trees and shrubs by their buds and bark characteristics.  Both programs are $5 members, $10 non-members.

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Fannie Farmer MonumentPerson of the Month: Fannie Farmer  

 

March is not only Women's History Month, but also the month when we celebrate the birthday of cooking instructor and cookbook author Fannie Farmer, born on March 23, 1857. 

 

 In 1896 Farmer published The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book - an immediate favorite that was translated into several languages and reprinted in new editions numerous times.  The cookbook reflected the late 19th-century trend in "home economics" that emphasized rational, scientific approaches to all aspects of managing the home.

 

Though the cookbook was written in a conversational, friendly manner, it was nonetheless filled with scientific data - everything from the chemical composition of starch (C6H10O5) to the chemical reaction that occurs when a match is struck.  Farmer explained in the introduction that "during the last decade much time has been given by scientists to the study of foods and their dietetic value, and it is a subject which rightfully should demand much consideration from all."  

 

Given her emphasis on nutrition and science, it is not surprising that Farmer insisted upon a uniform approach to measurements, rather than specifying a "dash" of baking soda or a "handful" of flour as had been common.   

 

The Dictionary of American Biography notes that "the achievement of which she was most proud was the introduction of accurate measurements in cooking; and she was sometimes called, 'The mother of level measurements.'"

 

In 1902, Farmer opened Miss Farmer's School of Cookery.  Her lectures and courses were widely attended by housewives during the day and by professional cooks in the evenings.  She was particularly interested in the dietary needs of those who were ill, and in 1904 published Food and Cookery for the Sick and Convalescent.

 

Farmer was in high demand for lectures throughout the country and even gave a series of lectures at the Harvard Medical School.

 

Her last lecture was delivered 10 days before her death on January 15, 1915.  Four years after her death, businessman Frank O'Connor asked for permission to name his new Rochester, NY, candy shop after Farmer.  Her estate agreed, provided he spell the name "Fanny" instead of "Fannie."  In 2001, a new children's book Fannie in the Kitchen, written by Deborah Hopkinson and illustrated by Nancy Carpenter, portrayed what Fannie's life as a cook might have been like.

 

Fannie Farmer is buried in Lot 206 on Central Avenue at Mount Auburn Cemetery (photo above).

... 

Join us between 9AM - 12PM on Saturday, 3/12 for  Happy Birthday, Fannie Farmer! - a free drop-in program for families.  During this program, we will have a fun hands-on activity using measuring cups and spoons to celebrate Farmer's important contribution to the art and science of cooking and baking.

 

* Mount Auburn's drop-in family programs are designed to allow children and their parents, grandparents, or other favorite adult to develop a greater appreciation for Mount Auburn in a fun yet educational manner. Activities are ongoing in Story Chapel during the hours specified. 

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volunteer

New Docent Training Class: 

5:30 - 8PM, Tuesday, 3/29 - Thursday, 3/31


Would you like to be an ambassador of Mount Auburn Cemetery? Consider being a Mount Auburn Docent! Docents help to interpret the Cemetery's many facets to visitors by staffing our Visitors Center and leading tours of the Cemetery. We are seeking individuals with interests in history, horticulture, art, architecture, and birding. Most importantly, we are looking for people who wish to share their own love of Mount Auburn with visitors. 

 

This three-day New Docent Training Course will provide a solid overview of Mount Auburn's many facets, and prepare you for sharing these with the public. Please feel free to email the Friends (friends@mountauburn.org) with any questions about the docent program. A packet of materials will be sent out to registrants prior to the first class, with a complete syllabus and class location details. Pre-registration is required.  Free.  
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email: friends@mountauburn.org
phone: 617-547-7105
web: http://www.mountauburn.org
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