From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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Tilden, Freeman-1883-1980
Tilden, Freeman
1883
to
1980
National Park Service: Biography (Freeman Tilden)
Page 1 of 2
National Park Service: The First 75 Years
Biographical Vignettes
Freeman Tilden
1883-1980
by George Robinson
Born in Malden. Massachusetts. Freeman Tilden first began writing
as a book reviewer for his father's newspaper. Later, he worked as a
reporter for newspapers in Boston, New York, and Charleston. As a
novelist and playwright. he traveled around the world. In the early
1940s. Freeman "tired" of writing fiction. and with the
encouragement of Director Newton B. Drury, began to write about
the national parks. The National Parks: What They Mean to You
and Me was published in 1951. Publisher Alfred Knopf called it ".
the best book ever written" on the parks. Other works included,
The State Parks, Following the Frontier, and The Fifth Essence.
At the age of 96, Freeman died on May 13. 1980.
All of us have heroes - people who, through their words or actions,
have enriched our lives: people whom we strive to emulate. To
countless National Park Service interpreters. Freeman was such a
person. To many. he was a fatherlike friend and confidant; to all, he
http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/sontag/tilden.htm
1/2/2003
National Park Service: Biography (Freeman Tilden)
Page 2 of 2
was advisor and mentor. With the publication. in 1957. of
Interpreting Our Heritage, he gave form and substance to the
profession of interpretation. In that slim volume, he articulated six
timeless principles that have guided and sustained the practitioners
of the art for more than three decades. In publishing jargon,
Freeman's "numbers" are good. They reveal the extent of his
influence - third edition. twelfth printing. 62,500 copies in print!
In one of Tilden's works, speaking about the national parks, he said:
"The early Greek philosophers looked at the world about them and
decided that there were four elements: fire, air, water, and earth.
But as they grew a little wiser, they perceived that there must be
something else. These tangible elements did not comprise a
principle; they merely revealed that somewhere else, if they could
not find it, there was a soul of things - a Fifth Essence, pure,
eternal, and inclusive.
With the dedication and love of a "happy amateur." Freeman has
enabled generations of interpreters to add the dimensions of
provocation. meaning, and relevance to the experience of millions
of park visitors. Through the art that he defined, he has helped them
to discover the "Fifth Essence." Freeman Tilden is the "soul" of
interpretation.
From National Park Service: The First 75 Years
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http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/sontag/tilden.htm
1/2/2003
Walt; Returnto me
F
Titlet.
Freeman Tilden.
ROAD TO YESTERDAY
The Rockefeller Carriage-Roads in Acadia National Park
Of the more than fifty miles of carriage-roads built by John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., and now lying within the boundaries of Acadia
National Park, the first statement that may be made is that they
are unique in this country and probably in the world. They tra-
verse some of the finest sylvan scenery to be found in our
national park system. No visitor to Acadia who has not beenson
some part of these roads, whether afoot, by bicycle or by some
other means, can have any conception of the rare beauty that lies
away from the heavily traveled automobile highways of the island.
In a country where we have destroyed so much of our natural
beauty; where we have abruptly become so much alarmed at the
pollution of air and water; where the expression "s sick country"
has been used with a high degree of justification--these roads,
so magnificently planned and engineered, are both an anachronism
and a challenge.
An anachronism because it is nearly inconceivable that this road
system would ever be used again to its full extent for the orig-
inal purpose--that is, for horse-and-carriage leisurely enjoyment
of scenic loveliness.
A challenge, to find ways and means to put them to public use in
permissible forms that are consonant with the basic purpose of
Mr. Rockefeller- a haven of serenity and quietude for jaded
and driven and technologically baffled human beings.
It is obvious that they can never be used by mechanized
vehicles. Both the purpose of the roads and the very roads
themselves would be annihilated.
This little paper is intended to invite and promote a defin-
itive study of the possible high cultural use and enjoyment of
the carriage-roads. I feel that we are here losing a grand
opportunity for the realization of environmental understanding.
True, there is some use of the roads now--by hikers, by bicycles,
by horseback riders and possibly a few cross-country ski and
snowshoe adventurers in snow-time. But they are really little
used, and their existence is hardly known by visitors to the
park. On the contrary, as we sadly find, our well-meant adver-
tising of the fine Anemone Cave, with its delicate intertidal
life, has brought people to that place in such numbers that it
is being destroyed.
I may say that it is entirely understandable to me that over
the years the use of the carriage roads has been a problem to
be dodged--fubbed off as something without solution. Who is
going to drive a carriage and pair of horses fifty-two miles
in these days? Where do you get the horses? Who builds carriages
now? Where is the possible concessioner for such a venture?
2
The answer to this last question is: "powhere"--if you are
compelled to think in terms of fifty-two miles. But are you
so obliged? If you think in terms of ten five-mile stretches
of road, or break down the distance in SOME similar manner,
the case becomes entirely different. One cannot believe that
Mr. Rockefeller and his friends were accustomed to go out on
a fifty-mile drive.
Naturally we are curious to know something of the history of
the creation of this unique carriage-road system, some of which
is not within the park boundaries, but on land still owned by
the Rockefeller family. No doubt the archivist of the Rockefeller
family has in store much that would be interesting, though not
to the present purpose. Locally, and even in the little park
library, it is hard to come by any information. John D.
Rockefeller, Jr., was not a man who courted publicity.
It is well-remembered on Mount Desert that the work afforded the
local people, by the building of the roads, helped to carry them
through some bitterly hard years. During my cruising of the
carriage roads recently I met at least two laborers working with
park trucks who, as young men, had been employed by Mr. Rockefeller
in the construction. It was pleasing to hear them talk about the
roads. Their roads, as their words and manner charmingly
suggested. "Too bad more people don't know about them, said one.
3
According to George B. Dorr, one of those island residents whose
efforts resulted in the creation of the park, the coming of the
automobile to the mainland--to the very door of the island--was
the primary cause of the building of these Rockefeller carriage-
roads. The wealthy summer residents had their stables of horses;
and to serve those other vacationers of lesser income, a consid-
erable livery business had grown up among the natives. They saw
the hated mechanical "contraptions" coming nearer their island
sanctuary, and fight it as they could, the invesion was inevitable.
By 1915 the monsters "were all over the town highways."
"At this juncture," says Dorr, in his Acadia National Park--Its
Growth and Development, "Mr. John D. Rocksfeller, a summer resi-
dent at Seal Harbor, conceived the idea of constructing, for his
own and his neighbors' use, a system of horse roads over his land,
where they could safely ride and drive as they had done upon the
public roads before."
One more word: Someone, in speaking of the carriage-roads, used
the word "spectacular." It seems to me that "spectacular" is just
what that scenery is not. It is soothing: it is positively medic-
inal; it provides a tranquility of spirit that is tragically vanishing
from America--perhaps from the world. It is Yesterday--We must try
to bring something of that unhurried Yesterday back to us.
Freeman Tilden
4
8/10/2020
Xfinity Connect RE Yard Tilden Printout
RONALD EPP
8/10/2020 4:37 PM
RE: R.S. Yard & F. Tilden
To steve@gsmassoc.org
Steve,
Glad you mentioned Freeman Tilden, one of my favorites as well. I
four
pulled my file and found three things which may interest you:
1. A 10/24/1974 letter on Rockefeller stationary from George D. Taylor
to Laurance Rockefeller stating that he had talked with H. Albright about
Tilden's ms. Taylor thinks the ms. is out of date and duplicative of
Fosdick. Laurance concurs. (RAC. OMR. III.2. Z. Box 60. folder 520 for
both 1. & 2.)
2. A lengthy Albright letter of 8/6/54 asking Laurance what he thinks of
the Tilden ms. that Albright and the publisheer (Knopf) think that some
chapters "need considerable revision and that the Acadia chapter is
too involved."
3. Essay "Road to Yesterday" by Tilden, a 4-page typescript at ANP
Archives on "The Rockefeller carriage-roads in ANP," an essay
"intended to invite and promote a definitive study of the possible high
cultural use and enjoyment of the carriage-roads." Bemoans lack of
information for "even the little park library" has not much to offer.
References GBD in print and a paragraph that reads like he had a
conversation with Dorr about this matter BUT since the essay is
undated, I am at a loss.
4. Partial typescript of "Friend of our National Heritage," from RAC.
OMR.III.2.Z. B. 60, f. 518. I had copied only those chapters--and pages-
- that I found germane to my interests, namely the relationship between
Dorr & JDRJr., roughly 60 pages of this ms. I do have a table of
contents identifying by name the 21 chapters in the two parts amounting
to 251 pages which back then would have cost me $62.75 to have
copied. I do see that I have underscored many telling paragraphs on
how the two differ in their "approach to the management of their private
affairs." I disagree with Tilden's assessment that Dorr was "as
unprecise in his personal management as a Bohemian of the art
colony," Tilden also recounts local lore without attribution favoring at
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8/10/2020
Xfinity Connect RE Tilden Printout
times --like Ken Burns--the telling of a "good story" at the expense of the
demonstrable facts. But Tilden is insightful and I appreciate his style and
energy but ultimately I left much of what he says out of the Dorr
biography because I could not get a grip on his methodology--that is his
means of secruring the evidence for his claims--be they first hand (when
and where?), oral, hearsay, written, or published. Frankly, I could not
determine whether Tilden ever met GBD or JDRJr. When he quotes
extensively landscape architect Thomas Vint, I revel in what I learn--yet
Tilden does not document the quote as is far too often the case. Could
he have had that documentation in a series of endnotes that were
separated from the ms., I cannot say. Regardless, this is essential
reading for you!
Ron
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
7 Peachtree Terrace
Farmington, CT 06032
603-491-1760
eppster2@comcast.net
On 08/10/2020 12:04 PM steve@gsmassoc.org wrote:
Thanks Ron. I am a big fan of Yard, whom, like us, used words to celebrate and
promote the parks we love. I am also a fan of Freeman Tilden, the father of
interpretation in parks, who took an interest in Acadia and Rockefeller. I know the
RAC has an unpublished ms of his that I hope to get my hands on in the not too
distant future.
Original Message
Subject: R.S. Yard
From: RONALD EPP < eppster2@comcast.net>
Date: Mon, August 10, 2020 11:16 am
To: steve@gsmassoc.org
Steve,
Do you recall reading about Robert Sterling Yard in my book (pp.
205-206)?
https://connect.xfinity.com/appsuite/v=7.10.3-6.20200722.054552/print.html?print_1597091900051
2/3
8/10/2020
Xfinity Connect RE RS Yard F Tilden Printout
I have just finished reading a most important work of his that
escaped my scrutiny earlier. Our Federal Lands: A Romance of
American Development (1928) is a largely unrecognized classic
in which there is but one JDRJr. reference in the Index, but worth
sending off to you. "To purchase the lands for Great Smoky
National Park (sic), ten million dollars are now provided, made up
of local private subscriptions plus legislative appropriations by the
states of North Carolina and Tennessee, balanced by a
Rockefeller gift of equal size. Saving for posterity so large an
area untouched of the finest original forest of the east is one of
the greatest achievements of the National Park System or of the
age we live in.' " (emphasis mine, pg. 258).
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
7 Peachtree Terrace
Farmington, CT 06032
603-491-1760
eppster2@comcast.net
On 08/09/2020 11:39 AM steve@gsmassoc.org wrote:
Howdy Ron,
I don't suppose you would know if the Rockefellers attended the August 22,
1916 celebration of attaining national monument status at the Building of the
Arts in Bar Harbor? It seems like something Junior would avoid, but I think
they would have been "on island" at that time. Might the historic society had
a guest book?
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Natural History Interpretation -- Thoughts on Tilden's Principles
Page 1 of 4
INTRODUCTION TO INTERPRETATION
Tilden's Principles from Interpreting Our Heritage by Freeman Tilden
Interpretation Introduction by Marcy Seavey
Thematic Interpretation by Lori Sindelar
Nonformal & Formal Education by Marcy Seavey
Tilden's Principles
Any interpretation that does not somehow relate what is being displayed or discribed to something within the
personality or experience of the visitor will be sterile.
Information. as such. is not Interpretation. Interpretation is revelation based upon information. But they are entirely
different things. However, all interpretation includes information.
Interpretation is an art. which combines many arts. whether the materials presented are scientific, historical, or
architectural. Any art is in some degree teachable.
The chief aim of Interpretation is not instruction. but provocation.
Interpretation should aim to present a whole rather than a part. and must address itself to the whole man rather than
any phase.
Interpretation addressed to children (say, up to the age of twelve) should not be a dilution of the presentation to
adults, but should follow a fundamentally different approach. To be at its best it will require a separate program.
Interpretation Introduction
Tilden introduced interpretation as a field and gave it early form. His six principles are a starting point for developing a
personal or institutional theory of interpretation. Sam Ham and others have added and molded the ideas Tilden
introduced giving rise to the profession as it stands today. Interpreters are found around the world and serve a similar
role whether working as park educator in a metropolitan area or naturalist for a rural community. if the language being
spoken is English. French or Portuguese. The interpreter translates the languages of science. history and the natural
world into the language of humanity. "Making the strange familiar and the framiliar strange" and giving citizens the
power to make informed decisions about environmental and economic issues. This is a daunting task and a heavy
responsibility. It is important that the interpreter be informative while allowing the receiver of his or her information to
decide "what's important" and "what to do about it".
The Interpreter is a scientist and a nonformal teacher and thus the wearer of two hats. If interpretation is also an art, as
Tilden states. then the interpreter is an artist as well. with a style of his or her own. Just as one artist's style may be
modern. the next classic; One interpreter may be comfortable only while in character as a ladybird beetle while another
may prefer teaching through storytelling and a third may feel at home giving guided tours explaining the relationships
of organisms in a saltwater marsh. Although the final products of each interpreter may be very different the tools used
are the same. This website shows some methods and ideas in interpretation from various sources including Parks
Canada and Cleveland Metro. Parks Naturalists. At the University of Northern Iowa our style is a thematic one, our
tools are a solid background in biology and the sciences. much and varied experience interpreting and a commitment to
excellence in our field. The remainder of this page will be dedicated to UNI Interpretation student thoughts and ideas
about interpretation as a profession. --Marcy M. Seavey (NHI Graduate, 1995)
http://www.uni.edu/~ninhi/tilden.html
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Natural History Interpretation Thoughts on Tilden's Principles
Page 2 of 4
Thematic Interpretation
Thematic interpretation is when information presented is all related to a key idea and gives a central message. This type
of presentation is easier to follow and people find it more meaningful than non-thematic presentations.
A theme is not the same as a topic. A topic is just a subject matter for a presentation, whereas a theme is a specific
message an interpreter wants to communicate to the audience.
Sam Ham has three easy steps for writing theme statements
1. Describe the topic in general terms.
2. State it in more specific terms.
3. The theme is then written in the form of complete sentences.
With a theme information is easy to organize. you know what you want your audience to leave with, so you present
the
information that allows them to understand your theme. The thematic interpretation formula is 7+2 main ideas. That
should be all the information needed to convey the theme. In most situations 5-9 ideas are all that can be absorbed at one
time. It is also important to state the theme in the beginning with a "WOW" statement and end with the theme stated in
the conclusion. Thematic interpretation is an important skill for interpreters because thematic presentations are easier
for people to understand and more interesting than presentations on topics.
Nonformal and Formal Education
Think back to a time when you were in a classroom sitting in a desk. A teacher presents information from the front of
the room. A pen or pencil is in your hand you copy down every word the teacher chalks on the board or inks on the
overhead. Twenty-seven other students sit in desks just like yours. One raises her hand and asks "Is this going to be on
the
test?" You sit a bit straighter when the teacher answers "yes". Then the bell rings and the students shuffle out of the
room. You pack up your notebook and writing utensil and follow. Tomorrow you will be back sitting in the desk
listening to the teacher in the front of the room.
Now imagine yourself on a prairie. It is late August SO the grass is honey yellow and almost as tall as you are. You are
wearing a baseball cap to keep the wind from tossing your hair about as it is doing to the grasses. Fifteen people came
into the prairie with you. but two lagged a bit behind the rest don't worry. they'll catch up. A man in a yellow suit is
leading this voyage. He stops at the bottom of a small hill. The wind doesn't really reach this side so you can hear his
words.
At first he just chats a bit about the walk and the weather. then as the two stragglers join the group he begins a story. It's
the story of this land you stand on. Once it was part of a vast `sca of grasses then it was a pasture and a field of corn
and 6 years ago it was seeded back into prairie. He explains the management practices that will bring this reconstruction
to some assemblage of its former grandeur. In doing so he explains his yellow suit is a material called nomex which is
worn for protection when the prairie is burned. He has other items for you to examine what looks like a
car
mud
flap
on a mop handle (a flapper). a pump connected to a metal back pack that holds 5 gallons of water, a gasoline drip torch,
and a portable radio. He introduces you to some of the more abundant plant species (and also one snake species that
happens to slither by near the end of his talk). When he is done speaking, he answers questions.
Some of the other participants wander off studying the mostly flowers that are out this time of the year. A boy who came
http://www.uni.edu/~ninhi/tilden.html
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Natural History Interpretation -- Thoughts on Tilden's Principles
Page 3 of 4
with his father and sister is teasing the sister with the water pump while the father grills your presenter with questions
about the different between reconstruction and restoration. You close your eyes and imagine what it would be like to
help burn this prairie. To hold the drip torch in your hand. hot gasoline flames falling from its mouth, landing onto dry
partially matted spring grasses the smoke A person behind you with the flapper, making sure the flames go only
where you want them to. You decide you'd feel proud at having helped to restore this small piece of land by burning out
non-native species and woody invaders. You interrupt the father to ask your guide for more information about helping
with next spring's burn. After a while everyone comes together as a group again. The speaker leads the group back to
the parking lot. There will be no test on what you learned today and you do not have to come back tomorrow at 8:00am.
As you drive off. you do know that come spring, you will be back.
You have just read the differences between formal and non-formal education. Formal education nearly always takes
place in a classroom (laboratory, lecture hall or some other room with four walls). Classrooms generally have many of
the same features: desks, bulletin boards, chalk or white boards, overheads and pull down screens, few windows and
doors, aisles/columns/rows. The students come for 50 minutes (or 45 or 60 or 75) a day on five (or three or two) days a
week for 16 (or 12 or 10 or 32) weeks in a row (except on holidays or when they are sick or pretending to be sick). The
same students share the same class each day (unless someone is sick or pretending to be sick). The teacher lectures from
the front of the class for most of the class time (although he or she may give the students time to work in class or to
work in small groups). The students do very little of the talking. When a student has an answer he or she raises a hand
and is 'called on' to speak. Raising a hand also works for questions and comments (it really does! Try it some time,
teachers love questions and comments, it means they don't have to do as much of the talking). The students take notes
(they expect to have to take notes) and the teacher makes a point of which items are most important to take notes on (the
items that will be on the test). And there WILL be a test (for which all `good' students will review their notes).
The benefit of this system is that both the teacher and the student know what to expect from each other. The student
expects the teacher to tell the class what is important and then quiz the class on how well they took in that information.
The teacher expects the students to listen and study the material to do well on the test. Each student is exposed to the
same information, so at least on this grounds the classroom is fair (I'm not going to go into the special needs of each
individual student). The four walls of the classroom create a stable environment, one without distraction. Non-formal
education is something completely different (or is it)?.
The non-formal classroom can be a classroom. a museum. a forest. a beach. the steps in front of a library, a prairie, even
a parking lot. Non-formal education can and does happen almost everywhere. That does not mean that where it happens
is not important. it is! The non-formal teacher (from here on out I will call this person the interpreter) chooses the
location best suited to the topic and theme of the presentation. I wouldn't take my group to the steps of a library to teach
about marsh birds if I had a marsh full of birds available to me. This can be a bit scary. because you never know for sure
what might happen outside the four wall classroom (Once during a camp out I woke up at 5am to the sound of a camper
asking in a shaky voice "wwwhhhhat isss thhat?" It was an adult turkey vulture perched on an oak limb not 10 ft above
us). The `good' interpreter can take those surprises and make them part of the presentation (We presented a play for the
parent's ceremony untitled "Vulture Adventures"). So location is one way formal and non-formal education differ. Very
rarely do the participants in a non-formal education experience sit in desks, look at overheads. or take notes (unless they
are freaks like me, I can take notes off my morning cereal box and be happy about it). Very few participants in non-
formal education consider themselves students at all. Students take tests, turn in assignments, and receive
grades/diplomas. Participants in museum tours. community historical field trips, and Earth Day festivals have none of
these expectations. If you ask them why they attend non-formal presentations the answer is usually:
"Because I wanted to."
"It sounded interesting."
"I thought it would be fun."
These participants expect to be given information in a way that is interesting to them. In return, they will continue to
participate. If the presentation becomes boring these learners have the option to walk away. This means they are not a
captive audience (classroom students are). To keep his or her students the interpreter must make a connection between
them and whatever is being taught in a way that will stick with the participant despite the absence of any test incentive.
At least part of most non-formal presentations include some lecture time (interpreters generally call this a `talk' but
that is semantics). The majority of time in non-formal learning is spent on participation. This can be through walks,
participatory demonstrations. activities. discussion, games. experiments. etc. This type of hands-on learning can and
often does happen in traditional classroom settings but it is a defining characteristic of the non-formal. Not all
participants in a non-formal presentation always get the same information. Sometimes the participant chooses (perhaps
there are 25 stations at an Earth Day celebration but only time to visit ten). Sometimes an event that happens during the
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Natural History Interpretation -- Thoughts on Tilden's Principles
Page 4 of 4
`lesson` steers the interpreter in a different direction (and that's ok. the interpreter doesn't have to worry about covering
all the material that will be on a test).
In this writing I have mostly been contrasting formal and non-formal education. However, they are more alike than
different. Both strive to communicate knowledge. Both involve people together in a place. Usually there is an
'expert' (the instructor) and the learners have some motivation for learning (internal or external). It is important to
recognize the similarities and differences of each approach. A choice of which best suits the needs of both learner and
educator must be made for each situation. We must acknowledge that both are important and an indispensable part of
our society.
The Getty Education Institute for the Arts has a wonderful timeline of events important to environmental education.
Coming soon: Interpretation Major's thoughts on Tilden and the theory of interpretation. Also a biography of Freeman
Tilden.
:
HOME
EMAil
Marcy M. Seavey
Page last updated August 18. 1997.
http://www.uni.edu/~ninhi/tilden.htm
1/2/2003
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