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Vanderbilt, George W-1862-1914
1862
Vanderbult, George WI
1914
3/30/2020
Century Archives - The Century Association Archives Foundation
THE CENTURY ASSOCIATION
ARCHIVES UNDATION
EST.1997
About the CAAF
CENTURY ASSOCIATION BIOGRAPHICAL ARCHIVE
Important Materials
Earliest Members of the Century Association
Publications
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Collection Access
GEORGE W. VANDERBILT
Board of Trustees
How to Donate
Gentleman/Art Collector
Centurion, 1889-1914
Century Association
Biographical Archive
Full Name George Washington Vanderbilt
Born 14 November 1862 in Staten Island (New Dorp), New York
Finding Aid to the
Collection
Died 6 March 1914 in Washington, District of Columbia *
Finding Aid to the Platt
Buried Vanderbilt Family Cemetery and Mausoleum , New
Library
Dorp, New York
Centurions on Stamps
FDR: A Man of the
Proposed by Henry Codman Potter and Brayton Ives
Century (Audio File)
Elected 2 February 1889 at age twenty-six
Hot Buttons:
Presidential Campaigns
and the Century
Archivist's Note: Brother of Cornelius Vanderbilt II; uncle of Cornelius Vanderbilt III
Association
Century Association
Century Memorial
Nobelists
When the Clubhouse
Was New (Photo
George Washington Vanderbilt, of studious tastes and a munificent patron of the fine arts: the
Gallery)
Vanderbilt Gallery in the American Fine Arts Society building was his gift. He was the owner of
the estate of Biltmore, North Carolina, which his inherited wealth enabled him to assemble and
his constructive perseverance enabled him to complete.
Henry Osborn Taylor
1915 Century Association Yearbook
Questions, comments, corrections: email caba@centuryarchives.org
C
2012-2020 Century Association Archives Foundation
Following an appendectomy, Myocardial
infarction resulted due to a pulmonary
enholism following surgery.
3/23/2019
Vanderbilt houses - Wikipedia
WIKIPEDIA
Vanderbilt houses
From the late 1870S to the 1920s,
the Vanderbilt family employed
some of the United States's best
Beaux-Arts
architects
and
decorators to build
an
unequalled string of New York
townhouses and East Coast
palaces in the United States.
Biltmore
Many of the Vanderbilt
houses are now National
Historic Landmarks. Some photographs of Vanderbilt's residences in New York are included in the
Photographic series of American Architecture by Albert Levy (1870s).
The list of architects employed by the Vanderbilts is a "who's who" of the New York-based firms
that embodied the syncretic (often dismissed as "eclectic") styles of the American Renaissance:
Richard Morris Hunt; George B. Post; McKim, Mead, and White; Charles B. Atwood; Carrère and
Hastings; Warren and Wetmore; Horace Trumbauer; John Russell Pope and Addison Mizner were
all employed by the descendants of Cornelius Vanderbilt, who built only very modestly himself.
Contents
Houses
Gallery
References
External links
Houses
Cornelius Vanderbilt II (1843-1899)
Townhouse, the "Cornelius Vanderbilt II House" (1883) at 1 West 57th Street, New York by
George B. Post. Enlargements by George B. Post and Richard Morris Hunt. This mansion
was, and remains, the largest private residence ever built in Manhattan. Demolished.
"The Breakers" in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1892-95, which was also designed by
Richard Morris Hunt. [1]
"Oakland Farm" (1893), mansion and stables on 150 acres in Portsmouth, Rhode Island
Demolished
Townhouse (1882), part of the Triple Palace at 2 West 52nd Street, provided to them by
her father and shared with her sister Emily Thorn Vanderbilt and their families.
Demolished.
Woodlea (1892-95), a Stanford White (of the firm McKim, Mead & White) designed
country estate in Scarborough, New York, now the Sleepy Hollow Country Club.
William Kissam Vanderbilt (1849-1920) had three houses designed by Richard Morris Hunt.
"Petit Chateau", the New York City townhouse at 660 Fifth Avenue, built in 1882 with
details drawn in part from the late-Gothic Hôtel de Cluny, Paris. Proved an influential
example for other Gilded Age mansions, but was demolished in 1926.
"Idle Hour" country estate in Oakdale, Long Island, New York was built in 1878-79 and
destroyed by fire in 1899. A new "Idle Hour", designed by Hunt's son Richard Howland
Hunt, was built on the same property from 1900-01 of brick and marble in the English
Country Style and is now part of the Dowling College Campus. [2]
"Marble House" summer home in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1888-92.
[3]
"Château Vanderbilt", a Louis XIII style manor house built in 1907 along with three
thoroughbred race tracks in Carrières-sous-Poissy, France. Designed by M. Henri
Guillaume.
Emily Thorn Vanderbilt (1852-1946), (Wife of William Douglas Sloane)
Townhouse (1882), 642 Fifth Avenue, part of the Vanderbilt Triple Palace, provided to
them by her father. Demolished.
"Elm Court" in Lenox, Massachusetts, in 1887. It is the largest shingle-style house in the
United States. The 1919 "Elm Court Talks," held at Elm Court, led to the creation of The
League of Nations and The Treaty of Versailles.
Florence Adele Vanderbilt Twombly (Mrs. Hamilton Twombly) (1854-1952)
Townhouse at 684 Fifth Avenue, New York (1883). Designed by John B. Snook, who also
designed her sister Lila Webb's townhouse next door. Demolished. [4]
"Florham" in Convent Station, New Jersey, in 1894-97. Designed by McKim, Mead and
White as a summer estate, it is now used for classrooms, faculty offices, and
administration at Fairleigh Dickinson University [1] (http://view.fdu.edu/?id=196)
"Vinland" in Newport, Rhode Island. Renovated by Ogden Codman, Jr.. Now part of the
Salve Regina University
Townhouse, her second, a 70-room house at 1 East 71st Street, New York. Designed by
Whitney Warren. Demolished.
Frederick William Vanderbilt (1856-1938)
"Hyde Park" in Hyde Park, New York. Designed by McKim, Mead and White and built in
1896-99, it is now the Vanderbilt Mansion National Historic Site.
"Rough Point" in Newport, Rhode Island designed by Peabody and Stearns built in 1892.
[2] (http://www.nps.gov/vama/vamahome.html)
"Pine Tree Point", Adirondack Great Camp on Upper St. Regis Lake in 1901
"Sonogee" (1903) in Bar Harbor, Maine purchased and renovated in 1915.
Eliza Osgood Vanderbilt Webb, a.k.a. Lila Vanderbilt Webb (1860-1936)
"Shelburne Farms" in Shelburne, Vermont built in 1899.
Townhouse (1883) at 680 Fifth Avenue, New York. The house was a wedding gift from
William H. Vanderbilt to his daughter. Demolished. [4]
"NaHaSaNe" (1893), the 115,000 acre Great Camp located on Lake Lila in the
Adirondacks.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vanderbilt_houses
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2.24.11 I VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES I New York Social Diary
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Mr. & Mrs. William Henry Vanderbilt at center on the porch at Devilstone on their 1884 trip, with
Consuelo and George on step to Mrs. Vanderbilt's left. Alva is on the step at Mr. Vanderbilt's right.
VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES
by Brad Emerson, The Downeast Dilettante
Special to the New York Social Diary
One forever associates the Vanderbilts with Newport and the opulence they
created there. However, many of the family preferred the (relatively) simple
pleasures of Bar Harbor, the Maine resort once considered second only to
Newport.
Patriarch William Henry Vanderbilt first took the family up to Maine in the
early 1880s. He leased Devilstone, the George Bowler cottage on the Shore
Path (Bar Harbor's equivalent of the Cliff Walk at Newport). In a photograph of
the family assembled on the porch at Devilstone that summer, one can spot
Alva, the most socially ambitious of the family, with a determined set to her
face - - as if to say, 'Get me out of this nature-infested hell hole and get me
back to civilization and Newport.'
However, her brother-in-law George was smitten with Bar Harbor and leased
1935
a small cottage there the next season. Mountains obviously agreed with
George Vanderbilt, as would be seen in his subsequent purchase of several
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Devilstone, the Robert Bowler cottage on the Shore Path in Bar Harbor, leased by William Henry
Vanderbilt.
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Another view of Devilstone.
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2.24.11 I VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES New York Social Diary
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An early postcard of Devilstone, C. 1900.
He happily roughed it, making do with a chef and waiters sent up from
Delmonico's to ensure that he didn't starve, and even invited his father up for
Howard manages
a visit - 'to the elder Mr. Vanderbilt's surprised delight' wrote The New York
to be wise and
Times. It was the last summer before William Henry Vanderbilt died and
outrageous at the
unleashed his fortune on his eight children and their architects.
same time - a trick
that few people,
aside from Oscar
For the then extravagant sum of $200,000, George Vanderbilt purchased the
Gouverneur Morris Ogden cottage, designed by Charles Coolidge Haight.
Wilde, manage to
pull off. And
George Vanderbilt immediately doubled the size of the house, which he
she knows how
renamed Pointe d'Acadie. He commissioned Frederick Law Olmstead to
to tell a
landscape the grounds, which included Bar Harbor's first private swimming
whopping good
pool, naturalistic in style, ocean fed, with Adirondack style log cabanas.
story.
The two men were to continue the collaboration started in Bar Harbor at
- Rebecca Goldstein,
Biltmore house a few years later, and even through that larger project, George
author of Plato
and Olmstead continued to make expensive improvements at Pointe d'Acadie.
at the Googleplex
For the rest of her life, his mother, Mrs. William Henry Vanderbilt summered
with him at Bar Harbor.
CLICK TO BUY
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2.24.11 VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES I New York Social Diary
SHOP THE TRENDS
ONLINE AND
IN STORES
SPRING 2015
Il HE NM
LIST
The estate built in 1868-69 for Gouverneur Morris Ogden, which was designed by Charles Coolidge
Haight. George Vanderbilt bought it in 1889, immediately doubled its size, and renamed it Pointe
d'Acadie. It was torn down in 1956. Courtesy of Maine Historical Society.
After George's marriage to Edith Stuyvesant Dresser, he was not as often at
Bar Harbor - Mrs. Vanderbilt liked Bar Harbor, but also liked being near her
family, including her sister Mrs. John Nicholas Brown, in Newport. During
their absences, Pointe d'Acadie was leased to appropriate tenants, including
the Andrew Carnegies and the Otto Kahns.
Kahn shipped his horses up to Bar Harbor by private railroad car to compete
in the horse show, one of the major events of the social season. As for
George and Edith, their prestigious presence was sorely missed during their
ALSO IN NYSD HOUSE
absences and social columnists in The New York Times as well as the local
NYSD HOUSE
papers cheered whenever they returned, predicting the liveliest summers
7.28.01: NYSD House
ever.
DECORATOR SERIES
1.16.15: Katie Ridder
A generous supporter of cultural activities, George Vanderbilt was a moving
force behind the Building for the Arts, a Greek temple designed by Guy
10.31.14 Shawn
Henderson
Lowell at the edge of the Kebo Valley Golf course. A bold venture, the only of
its sort in the major resorts, it was not a financial success, despite
10.24.14 Robert Couturier
performances by such stellar artists as Galli-Curci and Padrewski - the golf
10.10.14 Peter Stamberg
course outside was a greater draw on summer afternoons. When George
and Paul Aferiat
Vanderbilt died, his estate still contained promissory notes for the Building of
8.15.14: Patrick Gerard
Arts, appraised as worthless.
Carmody
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The Marquesa de Who?
2.27.15: Malene Barnett
2.24.15 Big Old Houses:
Persia on the Mountaintop
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Park Avenue Story
2.10.15: Big Old Houses:
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Sophistication
More NYSD House >>
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2.24.11 I VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES I New York Social Diary
Malvern Hotel
Bar Harbor ME.
The 1903 season found Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt and daughter Gladys away from the Breakers,
staying at the Malvern Hotel on Kebo St.
Ray Bratlation Mr, 103.
Building of Arts at Bar Harbor, funded in part by George Vanderbilt.
Older brother William Kissam Vanderbilt, smarting from his divorce from
Alva, who by now had her palace and had married her daughter to the Duke
of Marlborough, mostly avoided Newport that 1895 season, and sailed up to
Bar Harbor on his yacht Valiant, at the time the largest in the world, spending
much of the summer moored off Pointe d'Acadie, avoiding the press and
returning to Newport only for the yacht trials and races.
The rest of the family came too - Emily Vanderbilt Sloane and family before
going to the Berkshires for the fall, the young widow Florence Twombly
Burden, whose son would later build an iconic modern house at Northeast
Harbor, even her mother, the stately Florence Vanderbilt Twombly would
occasionally venture that far north - and the social columns duly took notice.
Margaret Vanderbilt Shepard was also devoted to Bar Harbor, as were her
three daughters. In the mid-1890s the Eliot Fitch Shepards leased Mossley
Hall, one of the resort's most admired houses, owned by railroad executive
W.B. Howard. Designed by William Ralph Emerson in 1887, and loosely
based on English architect Norman Shaw's Cragside in Northumberland,
Mossley Hall was considered one of the finest designs of the shingle style
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2.24.11 I VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES I New York Social Diary
Mossley Hall, built for W.B. Howard of Chicago. Designed by William Ralph Emerson, leased variously
in the 1890s by both W.C. Whitney and Eliot and Margaret Vanderbilt Shepard.
More views of Mossley Hall.
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2.24.11 I VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES I New York Social Diary
Margaret Shepard's daughters followed their mother to Bar Harbor, and in
1902, Uncle George had A.W. Longfellow (nephew of the poet), design
Islecote house on the Pointe D'Acadie estate for his niece Mrs. William Jay
Schieffelin (Louisa Shepard).
One of Bar Harbor's favorite sights was the entire Schiefflin family riding out
the gate on horseback, each young Schiefflin on a successively smaller horse,
with the youngest bringing up the rear on a pony.
Mrs. Shepard's daughter Alice married Ambassador Dave Hennan Morris,
son of the Louisiana lottery King, and built Bogue Chitto, a rambling shingled
affair on the cliffs on fashionable Eden Street, between Hull's Cove and Bar
Harbor.
Left: Mrs. Fabbri's brother
in-law Egisto. Right: Mrs.
Fabbri with Mrs. William
Ordway Partidge (mother-
in-law of another
Vanderbilt descendant,
Wm. A.M. Burden). Below.
Ernesto Fabbri and Edith
Vanderbilt Shepard.
Closer to town on Eden Street, Grosvenor Atterbury designed Buonriposo
for the third sister, Edith Vanderbilt Shepard, married to Morgan Partner
Ernesto Fabbri. When that house burned a few years later, it was replaced
with a more elegant version designed by Mrs. Fabbri's aesthete brother-in-law
Egisto (rumored also to be the very proper Mrs. Fabbri's lover), who also
collaborated with Atterbury on the Fabbri's new town house on 94th St., which
replaced her previous Beaux Arts mansion on East 62nd Street.
By 1916, brother Frederick of Hyde Park, who had given up his Newport
cottage, Rough Point, several years earlier, arrived in Bar Harbor. He first
leased Seven Acres, the estate of Pennsylvania Railroad president A.J.
Cassatt (later purchased by E.T. Stotesbury), then bought Sonogee, the
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2.24.11 I VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES I New York Social Diary
former Lyman Kendall estate, with its lavish renaissance interiors and marble
staircase. Sonogee adjoined his niece Edith Fabbri's Buonriposo to the North,
and the two properties shared a most elegant Italianate garden wall.
Buonriposo, designed by Grosvenor Atterbury, the summer home of Mrs. Ernesto Fabbri (Edith
Vanderbilt Shepard), known after her divorce as Mrs. Shepard Fabbri. From the August 1951 issue of
Holiday Magazine.
Buonriposo burned a few years after construction, and its replacement was designed by brother-in-law
Egisto Fabbri, who also collaborated with Atterbury in the Fabbri townhouse on 94th Street.
p://www.newyorksocialdiary.com/the-way-they-live/2011/vanderbilts-under-the-pines
8/13
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2.24.11 I VANDERBILTS UNDER THE PINES I New York Social Diary
Seven Acres was the estate of A.J. Cassatt, president of the Pennsylvania Railroad (and brother of
Mary). It was the first house leased in Bar Harbor by Frederick Vanderbilt before eventually purchasing
Sonogee.
It was designed by Chapman and Frazer of Boston (who were also the architects of what is now the
Bush estate in Kennebunkport).
The severe and earnest decor of the arts and crafts den at Seven Acres must have seemed very hair
shirt to the Frederick Vanderbilts.
Clockwise from top: Sonogee, built for Amos Eno and later owned by Frederick Vanderbilt, who later
sold it to Atwater Kent; Sonogee hall; Sonogee gate.
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Sonogee in 1974.
Marble staircase at Sonogee.
3/4/2015
THE DOWNEAST DILETTANTE: July 2011
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This gate is a footnote in landscape history. Subtle, deceptively simple, it is only as one examines it that one
realizes how good it really is. It is the main entrance to Pointe d'Acadie, the long demolished George Vanderbilt
estate at Bar Harbor. Like all of his family, Vanderbilt was an inveterate builder, and in 1889, even as he was
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acquring the 146,000 acres of North Carolina that would become the Biltmore estate, he had Frederick Law
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Olmsted at work landscaping this smaller (by Vanderbilt standards) project at Bar Harbor. Olmsted's work at Pointe
d'Acadie, a prelude to his final great work at Biltmore, would include new roads, carefully composed clearing and
tree plantings, a new stone terrace and stairs that would enhance the transition of the large shingled house to the
landscape, and the damming of a small cove to be used as a naturalistic swimming pool, Bar Harbor's first,
complete with rustic Adirondack style cabanas. All this even as George Vanderbilt was embarking on the largest
private building project of the era at Biltmore. The site of 'Pointe d'Acadie', which Vanderbilt had purchased for the
then large sum of $200,000 (Approximately $7,000,000 in today's dollars) is a spectacular little Peninsula jutting
1889
into Frenchman's Bay, views of water and mountains on all sides.
A VERY SOCIAL DILETTANTE
New York Social Diary is
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favorite guilty reads, and
now he can be read there
too.
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kind invitation to his Swell
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This Week in New York Social
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Vanderbilts at Bar Harbor
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Later highway construction has partially submerged the gate, but it is nevertheless a classic example of Olmsted's
Summer
of 13
approach to designed elements in the landscape, subtle, with materials and shapes carefully considered in relation
to
the landscape. The sweep is broad and gentle, the granite coping carefully rounded and shaped. It is almost in
rebuke to the massive Beaux Arts gate of Vanderbilt's neighbor, railroad tycoon John Stewart Kennedy of Kenarden
Lodge (below).
ArchiTalk
Dracula's Denizen
architect design TM
Renaissance palace of
Charles V, Alhambra,
Granada
BIG OLD HOUSES
Persia
on the
The driveways at Pointe d'Acadie, carefully constructed to Olmsted's exacting specifications, although today not
maintained to the manicured, daily raked, standards of the Vanderbilt era, have rarely needed major work since.
Mountaintop
Chairs and Buildings
Hi
There! I
hoopla
moved
CHAIRS and
BUILDINGS
Assembling House
Church
Cinema Style
And the
Oscar
Goes
To..
867
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THE DOWNEAST DILETTANTE: July 2011
Corbu's Cave
REARSTRANCH
Meanwhile Back At The
Ranch
Daytonian in
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Zucker's
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12
Waverly
Place
Decor Arts Now
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Design Matters
Shop Geometry that
won't make your eyes
bleed
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a Girl:
Marais
The terraces of Pointe d'Acadie with their broad shallow stairs to the lawns, with stonework and coping matching
that of the gate, were similar to other examples by Olmsted, and typify his approach to integrating house and
landscape. The terraces survived for many years after demolition of the house---| regret never having photographed
them.
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After the house was demolished, the lawns, seen above in the 1920's looking across to the Kennedy estate on the
next point, were left to meadow, which probably would have pleased Olmstead, and the effect of nature, as
enhanced by Olmsted, was gorgeous.
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Lost
Vanderbilt's naturalistic swimming pool started something of a trend at Bar Harbor, and several other estates
featured them. Above is are early spring views from the ruined cove side pool (nature reclaims her own) at Old
Farm, the George Dorr estate, looking across to Pointe d'Acadie.
Mansions of the Gilded
In recent years a new house was built on the Pointe d'Acadie site, which is private property. Old Farm is now part
Age: Lindenhurst,
of Acadia National Park, which was founded by Dorr.
Jenkintown,
Pennsylvania
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Mr.Michael Henry
Adams' Style & Taste
Mrs. Blandings
Time to
Waiting for
MONEY USED TO
Faulkner Farm
Summer--Follies in
GO FURTHER, # 3:
Medicate
New England
Bar Harbor
http://thedowneastdilettante.blogspot.com/2011_07_01_archive.htm
5/10
Untitled Document
Page 1 of 10
Biltmore Estate Pathfinder
Biltmore Estate, aerial view, Asheville, North Carolina and Biltmore Estate, interior: Tapestry
Gallery, Asheville, North Carolina
Photos courtesy of the Frances Loeb Library, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University
Table of Contents
Introduction
Subject
Browsing
Scope
Headings
Areas
The Estate
--
Books,
Vanderbilt
F.L. Olmsted
R.M. Hunt
Articles,
Family and
and
and
Cookbooks,
Social
Architecture
Landscape
and Other
History
Architecture
Media
http://www.unc.edu/~ferrr/
2/7/2005
Jerry. E. Patterson. The Vanderbilts
N.Y. : Harry N. Abrams, 1989.
VI
A Barony
in North Carolina
GEORGE, VANDERBILT was the first intellectual produced by
his family. His three older brothers, Cornelius II, William K., and
Frederick, were businessmen, much involved in finance and man-
agement and sitting on the boards of numerous corporations;
George was a shy scholar. Yet in combination with a serious
interest in art and literature, he had more than a dash of the
hereditary financial acumen. Frederick Law Olmsted, the land-
scape architect, who knew him well and often adopted a paternal
attitude toward him, called him "a delicate, refined, and bookish
man with considerable humor, and shrewd, sharp, exacting, and
resolute in matters of business."
He was born in 1862 on Staten Island, where his parents
were still farming. He was educated privately and from very early
in his life was absorbed in books and the study of languages.
When visitors were first allowed to inspect 640 Fifth Avenue in
1882, when George was twenty, it was noticed that his suite of
rooms was the only one, including the library, that was lined with
books. "The effect of the whole is sober and serious," wrote an
awed reporter on seeing George's quarters. He eventually read
eight languages and accumulated a library of 20,000 volumes.
162
George was only in his twenties and
a bachelor when he began to build
Biltmore. Gifford Pinchot, his young
forester, described him thus: "George
was a lover of art and of the great
outdoors, a slim, simple, and rather shy
rich, unmarried, but without racing
sheltered by female relatives, enormously
young man, too much and too long
stables or chorus girls in his cosmos.
Biltmore was his heart's delight. To his
very great credit, considering his
associations and his bringing up, he had
a real sense of social responsibility and
on his money."
was eager to do more than merely live
George was twenty-six when his father died. Under
to terms the of the will, he inherited $6,250,000, a pittance the
Louisa's legacies of Cornelius II and William K. After compared
"the lots death, he was to inherit for his life 640 Fifth Avenue Maria
well "all and stables on Madison Avenue and 52nd and
of as my [William Henry's] pictures, statuary, Street," and as
bequeath to my son Cornelius."
art, except the portrait and marble bust of my father which works I
George was philanthropic, and with this inheritance
influence
was able to make gifts to his favorite causes. He gave the land for he
EBD.
163
the campus of Teachers College, the site between Broadway and
Amsterdam Avenue, West 120th and 121st streets. Richard
Morris Hunt built for him a small public library building at 251
West 13th Street, called the Jackson Square Branch, which he
gave to the city, books and all. Opened in 1888, it became a
branch of the New York Free Circulating Library, later absorbed
into the New York Public Library. No longer a library and re-
modeled in 1971, the building, one of the few by Hunt remaining
in New York City, still exists.
Like most of his generation of Vanderbilts, George was
fascinated by architecture. While still a young man, he began to
commission work from Hunt. In 1886, Hunt remodeled for him a
house at 9 West 53rd Street, although George was still living with
his mother at 640 Fifth Avenue. He had inherited under the terms
of his father's will the old Vanderbilt homestead at New Dorp,
Staten Island, where he had been born. He kept it as a working
farm mainly to supply produce and flowers for 640. In 1887-
1889, Hunt designed some new farm buildings there.
Supported by his inheritance, George decided to build
a house outside New York City and the fashionable watering
places of the East Coast where his relatives congregated. Al-
though he had a house at Bar Harbor, Maine, which he had
bought in 1889 from Mrs. Gouverneur Ogden and had the thirty
acres of grounds landscaped by Frederick Law Olmsted, he deter-
mined to go farther afield for his principal country seat. In the
mid-1880s he and his mother visited Asheville, North Carolina,
then a new winter resort because of its relatively mild mountain
climate. The region was remote - it did not have passenger rail-
way service until 1880-and George was much struck by the
beauty of the heavily forested region. Using agents SO that the
price would not go up on the rumor that a Vanderbilt was the
purchaser, he began buying land near the town; by 1888 he had
acquired about 2,000 acres. That was only a tentative beginning.
In 1895 he bought the entire Pisgah Forest, comprising about
80,000 acres. By the turn of the century, he owned some 100,000
acres in the North Carolina mountains.
The land was cheap because it lay in a poor and backward
part of the country. Ideas of land ownership were primitive: the
deed for one of the farms that George bought gave as a boundary
"the mud hole in the road." Roads were terrible, mere tracks in
RETURN TO
most cases. Although it had an extraordinary range of species of
In 1889 Richard Morris Hunt began
trees, the forest was in a deplorable state, "burned, slashed, and
drawing plans for Biltmore, such as the
west elevation from which the house
overgrazed," in the words of Gifford Pinchot, George's chief
overlooked the North Carolina
forester.
mountains. He also had constructed a
wood-and-plaster model 5 feet long and
Having accumulated a vast tract of land far from any large
3 feet wide. When it was completed, it
town, George now decided to build the largest private house in
was brought by wagon to Hunt's offices
on Nassau Street in New York. Crowds
America, establish a model dairy farm, revive the forest, and
along the way gaped as the model of the
establish a forestry school and an arboretum. It was an as-
huge house passed. It is still at Biltmore.
tonishing decision for a young man only twenty-eight years old, a
During the building of Biltmore and
bachelor, and without ties to the region, even though as a member
the laying out of its grounds, Richard
of one of the richest families in the world he was able to do pretty
Morris Hunt, Frederick Law Olmsted,
and Gifford Pinchot lived off and on
much what he pleased. He called his new estate Biltmore, loosely
with George in modest circumstances at
deriving the name from Bildt, the town in Holland where his
a farm called The Brick House, opposite
above left. There they were cared for by
ancestors lived, and from an old English word, more, meaning
a small staff and spent daylight hours in
rolling, upland country.
the saddle inspecting the property and
the works and evening hours discussing
To help him in his immense project, he chose three re-
plans.
markable men: Richard Morris Hunt, then age sixty-two, as
While Biltmore was under construction,
architect; Frederick Law Olmsted, sixty-seven, as landscape de-
its creators were photographed on the
signer; and Gifford Pinchot as forester. Hunt he had known from
grounds, opposite above right: second
from left is Richard Morris Hunt, sitting
childhood since he was practically the official family architect.
is Frederick Law Olmsted, and standing
Olmsted was the head of his profession in the United States, with
beside him is George.
the triumph of Central Park behind him; Biltmore was his last
major work. Pinchot was close to George's age, having been born
in 1865. He was a well-connected New Yorker, his maternal
170
The architecture of the early French
Renaissance inspired Richard Morris
Hunt at Biltmore. The grand staircase to
the left of the entrance to the house was
modeled on that at the Château de Blois,
although the spiral is in the opposite
direction. Paul R. Baker, the leading
authority on Hunt, says of Biltmore, "It
is a highly romantic building evoking
much beyond what immediately strikes
the eye."
dreds of workmen labored on the house. Labor was very cheap:
The entrance tower at Biltmore shows
wages were from fifty cents to a dollar a day; and a mule could be
how Hunt skillfully adapted the
hired for about the same price!
architectural forms of the early French
Renaissance.
A little town called Biltmore Village was built at the front
gates to accommodate some of the workers. In addition to houses
for the staff, it held offices, a railroad station, shops, sawmills,
and a brick factory capable of turning out 32,000 bricks a day.
In the Billiard Room was exhibited part
of George's vast collection of prints. He
All Souls Episcopal Church, designed by Richard Morris Hunt's
began collecting when he was in his
son, Richard Howland, who worked alongside his father at
twenties, and by 1892, when the
collection was first exhibited at the
Biltmore, was built for the workers.
American Fine Art Society in New
Biltmore House, although a pretty faithful reconstruction
York, it already included 251 etchings
by Rembrandt, 175 woodcuts by
of an early French Renaissance château, in particular the Château
Albrecht Dürer, and 122 mezzotints
de Blois, was up-to-date with internal conveniences: it had cen-
after Sir Joshua Reynolds. In the Billiard
tral heating, plumbing, refrigeration, elevator and dumbwaiter
Room he hung some of his sporting and
theatrical prints.
166
grandfather, Amos R. Eno, having made a fortune in New York
City real estate. His family and the Vanderbilts moved in the same
circles. Educated at Yale, he had gone to Europe to study forestry,
then unknown as a science in America. He never had to work for
a living and was delighted to join George in 1891 as chief forester
of Biltmore.
On the broad acres he had acquired George thought at
first that he would build a large frame house along the lines of
those in the Berkshire Mountains, such as sister Emily Sloane's at
Lenox, Massachusetts. But he was soon converted to other, more
grandiose plans by his friend Hunt. In May 1889, when Hunt was
already sketching plans for Biltmore, he and his wife went to
Europe with George. They visited stately homes in Britain, having
lunch, for example, at Knole, one of the largest houses in Great
Britain. In Paris, they found William K. and Alva Vanderbilt in
residence and ready to take them to the races. At the great château
of Chantilly, they were entertained by the Duc d'Aumale, son of
King Louis Philippe. He had rebuilt Chantilly in the 1870s along
its original sixteenth-century lines and then donated it and its
incomparable collection of medieval and Renaissance art to the
Institut de France in 1886. George developed under the influence
of Hunt the same preference for French art and design that his
relatives showed in New York and Newport. Biltmore, as com-
pleted, was little influenced by the great houses of Britain. Every-
where he went George bought furnishings for Biltmore; in Lon-
don he astonished a rug dealer by purchasing at one time three
hundred Oriental rugs for his new house.
Having decided on a French château, Hunt went to work
with a vengeance. This was the first Vanderbilt assignment in
which he was able to work within a large space: previously he had
had to build on either a cramped New York City lot or within the
narrow confines of oceanfront property in Newport, on little
Aquidneck Island. Biltmore is enormous: it has about 255 rooms.
The Banquet Hall, the largest room in the house, is 72 feet long,
42 feet wide, and 75 feet high.
The work was planned and carried out like a military
operation. A private railway spur nearly three miles long and
costing $77,500 was constructed to carry building materials
from the main railroad line to the house site. The principal
material was limestone, brought 600 miles from Indiana. Hun-
Most of the meals for the family and
guests were prepared in the main
kitchen. The large cook stove was
heated by coal or wood. Beside it stands
a silver-plated server on wheels. The
copper cookware shown is all original.
Nearby are a pastry kitchen, a rotisserie
kitchen, a canning pantry, and walk-in
refrigerators.
Biltmore was furnished throughout
with a mixture of antiques and later
reproductions. The Chippendale Room is
furnished with a mahogany full tester
bed in the Chippendale style but made
in the 19th century. The seating
furniture is both 18th and 19th century.
equipment, and it was lighted by electricity. Even with all mod-
The South Bedroom was George's,
decorated in deep reds and dark woods.
ern conveniences, the house and the stables, which had stalls for
The dressing table, also used as a
forty horses, required a staff of eighty servants. Several hundred
writing desk, is believed to have been
more worked on the grounds.
designed by Richard Morris Hunt in the
17th-century Italian style. The walls are
The interiors of the house were a combination of antique
hung with old Northern European
and reproduction furniture, some of it made for the house. Hunt
engravings. From the windows at right
is an extraordinary view of Mount
himself designed the table in the Banquet Hall and a pair of throne
Pisgah.
chairs, which were carved by the Vanderbilts' preferred sculptor,
Karl Bitter. Other furniture and decorations were in various
"revival" styles, Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, Louis XV, Sher-
aton, and SO on. Scattered throughout the rooms were nineteenth-
century paintings and sculpture, many of them depicting family
members, and Oriental objects of art, souvenirs of George's
travels in the Far East. Unity of period, even in a single room,
does not seem to have entered into the planning of the decor, with
the exception of a "Chippendale Room" and a "Sheraton Room,"
and even in those, most of the furnishings were nineteenth-
century reproductions. For all Hunt's faithfulness in recreating
the Renaissance past in the exterior of his houses, he seems to have
179
The Old English Room's seating
furniture is based on pieces found at
Knole, in England. On the floor are
Persian carpets from George's vast
collection. On the wall at left hangs
Federico Zuccaro's portrait of William
and Frances Cecil, ancestors of John
Francis Amherst Cecil, who married
Cornelia Vanderbilt, heiress of Biltmore,
in 1924.
George owned a few Impressionist
paintings: Renoir's Child with an
Orange hangs in the Chippendale
Room over the fireplace.
been undisturbed by the mingling of styles in the interiors. In that
respect, Biltmore is a very Victorian house. The Billiard Room- -
all large houses of the time had one, not SO much because billiards
was popular as because the gentlemen were allowed to smoke
there - for example, has leather settees and chairs made by Mor-
ant & Co., London, in 1895, copies of a famous set at Knole. But
it also has Flemish, American colonial, Italian, and even
seventeenth-century Portuguese furniture.
The most important artist to work on the Biltmore inte-
riors was Karl Bitter, a protégé of Richard Morris Hunt, who was
born in Vienna in 1867. He came to the United States when he
was twenty-one in order to escape Austrian military service. He
had almost immediate success as a sculptor, due in part to his
commissions from the Vanderbilt family. His work was to be
found at Oakdale, Cornelius II's New York house, Marble House,
The Library at Biltmore was designed
and The Breakers. From his studio on East 53rd Street, in the
for George's vast collection of more than
midst of Vanderbilt New York houses, he poured out a stream of
20,000 volumes concentrating on art,
architecture, and landscape gardening.
decorative objects for the family.
Karl Bitter carved the vast fireplace. The
At Biltmore, Karl Bitter was responsible for carving fig-
furniture is Italian and English. The pair
of two-tiered tables holding lamps is
ures of Joan of Arc and St. Louis on the exterior of the spiral
believed to have been made in about
staircase; copies were placed in the Banquet Hall. He made iron-
1910 by Biltmore Industries, the
furniture workshops set up by George to
and-steel andirons representing Venus and Vulcan and figures of
train local North Carolina craftsmen.
Hestia, goddess of the hearth, and Demeter, goddess of the earth,
On the ceiling of the Library is a
above the fireplace in the library. But his masterwork at Biltmore
classical allegory entitled The Chariot of
was the carving of a scene from Richard Wagner's opera Tan-
Aurora, painted by Giovanni Antonio
Pellegrini and bought by George from
nhäuser on the panel of the organ gallery in the Banquet Hall.
the Pisani Palace in Venice.
Above the mantel of the triple fireplace in the hall, he carved a
limestone frieze approximately twenty-five feet long, The Return
from the Chase. The Biltmore sculpture was among the last of
Karl Bitter's private commissions; after that, he devoted himself
to public monuments, of which the Pulitzer Fountain at the Plaza
in New York (1914-1915) is perhaps the best known. He was
killed in an automobile accident on Fifth Avenue in 1915.
183
The Oak Sitting Room is paneled in
the Jacobean style and has an elaborate
strapwork ceiling. The portrait is Mrs.
Walter R. Bacon (a cousin of George's
on the Kissam side) by John Singer
Sargent. The pair of brass and copper
objects with lions' masks and feet are
19th-century reproductions of 17th-
century wine coolers. The bronzes on
the center tables are all by the French
19th-century artists Antoine-Louis
Barye, Constantin-Emile Meunier, and
Pierre Jules Mène, known as Les
Animaliers because they specialized in
sculpting wild and domestic animals.
The Winter Garden near the entrance
was filled at all seasons with flowers,
palms, and ferns from the gardens and
greenhouses. A trapdoor in the floor was
used to bring plants up from the
basement. Karl Bitter made the marble
and bronze fountain with a statue of a
boy struggling with geese.
With the house under construction, George began plan-
ning with Frederick Olmsted the landscaping of his vast tract.
Olmsted wrote of "the exacting, yet frank, trustful, confiding,
and cordially friendly disposition toward all of us which Mr. V.
manifests." When Olmsted arrived at Biltmore, he found to his
astonishment that George wanted him to make the entire place
into a park surrounding the house. Olmsted's realistic advice,
which George followed, was "to make a small park into which to
look from your house, make a small pleasure ground and garden,
farm your river bottom chiefly to keep and fatten livestock with a
view to manure, and make the rest a forest
"
Olmsted had difficulties with the terrain, but he met the
The Swedish artist Anders Zorn was at
the height of his popularity as a painter
challenge beautifully. The house site was open to the northwest,
of fashionable life when he showed The
from which a bleak wind often blew down from the mountains.
Waltz at the World's Columbian
Olmsted suggested that a terrace be built on the southeast and
Exposition in Chicago in 1893. The
dancer in the forefront is a self-portrait
provision made below it for a sheltered ramble for outdoor exer-
of the artist. George saw the painting in
cise in blustery weather. The entrance court on the west side could
Chicago and bought it for Biltmore.
be protected from the wind by extending the range of offices and
stables eastward and partially concealing them by a walled court.
For the entrance to the house and grounds he designed a new road
to follow along the ravines through the natural forest without
distant outlooks or open spaces. As one does today, the visitor
would suddenly come into an open space in front of the house and
would be struck by both the grandeur of the house and the beauty
of the surrounding mountains.
When, in December 1891, young Gifford Pinchot took
charge of Biltmore Forest at an annual salary of $2,500 and
subsistence, he was anxious to put into practice the theory of
forestry that he had learned in Europe. He wanted "to prove that
trees could be cut and the forest preserved at one and the same
time." He made Biltmore the first piece of woodland in the United
States to be put under a regular system of forest management
whose object was to pay the owner while improving the forest.
Pinchot entered into his, task with great enthusiasm, at
ease with his employer and enjoying the social life of the family.
He was handsome and eligible and attracted the interest of Adele
Sloane, George's niece, the daughter of Emily Vanderbilt Sloane,
who made frequent trips to Biltmore. Her crush on him is charm-
ingly chronicled in her diary, but it came to nothing. Pinchot's
devotion to his work did not prevent his taking a clear-eyed view
of the Biltmore enterprise. It was, he wrote:
a magnificent château
its setting was superb, the view
from it breath-taking, and as a feudal castle it would have
been beyond criticism and perhaps beyond praise. But in
the U.S. of the nineteenth century and among the one-
room cabins of the Appalachian mountaineers, it did not
belong. The contrast was a devastating commentary on
the injustice of concentrated wealth. Even in the early
nineties I had sense to see that.
The first public knowledge of Biltmore's forestry program
came at the Chicago Columbian Exposition of 1893. Pinchot
showed greatly enlarged photographs of what the forest was like
and what had already been done to improve it while making it
pay. Pinchot said this was "the first exhibition of practical for-
estry ever made in the U.S." George also visited the Chicago
exposition and while there bought The Waltz, a painting ex-
hibited by the Swedish artist Anders Zorn. Pinchot also planned
an arboretum to gather plants from all over the United States and
most of the temperate world. A nursery for the arboretum was
begun, but it was washed away during a major flood in 1902.
Work on the arboretum was never resumed. However, a Biltmore
Forest School to train foresters operated between 1897 and 1913.
In the meantime, George's model farm was also winning ac-
colades: he held sales of pedigreed hogs, and his Jersey COWS were
well known for their record-breaking milk production.
In 1895, the house was completed. The architect did not
live to see it finished; Richard Morris Hunt died early that year.
George had John Singer Sargent come to Biltmore and paint
portraits of Hunt and Olmsted. Hunt's son Richard Howland,
who had worked with his father from the beginning, supervised
the completion. The housewarming began on December 26,
In limitation of medieval architects,
Richard Morris Hunt embellished the
1895. Only members of the Vanderbilt family were invited, in-
outer walls and roofscape of Biltmore
cluding Maria Louisa, Frederick and Louise, Florence and
with gargoyles and human figures,
Hamilton Twombly, and Lila and Seward Webb. The party trav-
including miniature workmen with the
tools of their trades, musicians, and
eled down to Asheville by private railroad car attended by, as a
scholars.
newspaper put it, "armies of servants." The guests were as-
tonished that from the terrace of Biltmore House they could see
fifty mountain peaks with summits over 5,000 feet. Between 300
and 500 employees on the estate were entertained at a party of
their own, with a Christmas tree, gifts, and a dinner.
Even when the house was opened, work continued on the
grounds. Olmsted, who was growing old and cranky-he was
soon to retire-now - had some complaints about his employer. He
said it took "constant vigilance" to keep George in line. His
The conservatory was designed by
disinclination to methodical planning was matched by a hap-
Richard Morris Hunt and rebuilt in
hazard method of financing the work. He was spending about
1957 consistent with his original plans.
In the foreground is the rose garden,
$250,000 a year for improvements and maintenance, but he
which now has over 3,000 varieties.
rarely made a specific appropriation for a specific operation; he
George, anxious to honor the two men
who had done the most to create
Biltmore, asked John Singer Sargent to
paint portraits of Hunt and Olmsted. In
May 1895, Hunt and his wife, George,
and Sargent traveled to Biltmore from
New York in George's private railroad
car. Sargent depicted Hunt standing
outside in the front court of the house,
but the weather was chilly and the
posing was actually done indoors by the
fire. The portrait shows Hunt frail and
tired; he died two months later in
Newport near some of his greatest
buildings.
ordered it done and then paid whatever expense the department
heads incurred in doing it. Olmsted said, "The worst feature of
this casual and informal fiscal control was that inevitably much
that was done proved to be wasteful and disappointing in the long
run, when Vanderbilt found himself unable to maintain in a really
satisfactory manner, indefinitely, what had been accomplished."
In fact, George was spending too much money on Bilt-
more. Hamilton Twombly, who kept an eye on the business
c 11 l 111
Sargent wasn't too happy during the
month he spent at Biltmore painting the
portraits of Hunt and Olmsted, largely
because Mrs. Hunt and Mrs. Olmsted
insisted that he show their elderly and
ailing husbands as they had been in
their prime. Nor did he much like the
settings: he referred to the forest
background for the Olmsted portrait
as "red earth stuck with specimen
vegetables." Both portraits are still
at Biltmore.
over his head. "The trouble with you landscape architects,"
wrote Twombly, "is that you don't protect your clients from their
own ignorant impulsiveness about matters in which they rely on
your experienced judgement." Olmsted wrote back sarcastically
that he had never anticipated that a Vanderbilt could run out of
money. But soon after the turn of the century, maintenance at
Biltmore was reduced from $250,000 a year to $70,000.
George made Biltmore his principal residence and enter-
tained a succession of distinguished acquaintances: the guest
book shows that the American novelist Paul Leicester Ford came
in 1899, Edith Wharton in 1902, and the ubiquitous Chauncey
Frederick Law Olmsted and Gifford
Pinchot created between them a
Depew in 1903. Vanderbilts, Sloanes, Webbs, Twomblys,
remarkably varied landscape at Biltmo
Kissams, and other relatives and their friends visited. They lived
using both formal and informal
elements. The stone bridges, opposite,
as they would have in an English Edwardian country house.
on the grounds resemble those Olmste
Gertrude Vanderbilt, soon to become Mrs. Harry Payne
designed for New York's Central Park
The azalea garden, above, today
Whitney, wrote from the opening festivities to her friend Esther
contains the world's most complete
Hunt, "We have walked and ridden and when we were at home sat
largely many collection hybrid azaleas of Chauncy azaleas. well Delos It
of native as as
Asiatic and wa
about together and fooled and I have seldom enjoyed anything as
the creation
much." In the evenings they were entertained by "darkey musi-
Beadle, who came to work at Biltmore
cians." In truth, it was necessary for Biltmore guests to find all
under Olmsted in 1890 and remained
for 60 years as superintendent of the
their amusement in the house and grounds; there were no neigh-
estate.
bors to call on or invite in return. The extreme isolation of the
house meant that it had to be self-contained.
Not all visitors were pleased with George's creation. John
Singer Sargent, when he came to paint the Hunt and Olmsted por-
traits, found it lonesome and cold. The most discontented guest
was the easily fussed Henry James, an old friend of George's, who
arrived in February 1905 in a snowstorm, suffering from gout.
His highly critical letters from Biltmore are often cited because of
the eminence of their writer and their irresistible quotability. He
wrote to his nephew of
vast sequestered remoteness
huge
freezing spaces and fantastic immensities of scale
that have
been based on a fundamental ignorance of comfort and wondrous
deludedness
as to what can be the application of a colossal
French château to life in this irretrievable niggery wilderness
And he told Edith Wharton that " the climate is well nigh all
the company in the showy colossal heartbreaking house and the
desolation and discomfort of the whole thing-whole - scene-as
192
in spite of the mitigating millions everywhere expressed [is]
indescribable
" Calling the house "a gorgeous practical joke,"
he soon fled to Palm Beach.
George also maintained his house at Bar Harbor. He
inherited 640 Fifth Avenue after his mother's death in 1896.
Across the avenue at 645 and 647 Fifth Avenue, he had Richard
Howland Hunt build for him the "Marble Twins," two Beaux-
Arts town houses that he apparently never intended to live in but
built in order to prevent something less desirable from facing 640.
Number 647 survives and is a New York City landmark. Since he
was seldom in residence at 640, George leased it in 1904 to Henry
Clay Frick, who lived there for ten years until he built his own
mansion at 70th Street.
In 1898, he married in Paris at the age of thirty-six. His
bride was an American living in Paris, Edith Stuyvesant Dresser.
George and Edith had met in Paris while he was on a trip around
the world with his friend Osgood Field, who a few years later
would marry Lila Sloane, George's niece. The civil ceremony was
held on June 1, 1898 at the town hall of the 8th arrondissement,
with Cornelius II and Hamilton Twombly as witnesses. At the
religious ceremony the following day at the American (Episcopal)
Church, various Vanderbilts were present, including Consuelo,
Duchess of Marlborough. The only child of the marriage, Cor-
nelia Stuyvesant Vanderbilt, was born in 1900.
George and Edith bought a house at 1612 K Street, Wash-
ington, D.C. from the estate of Senator Matthew S. Quay of
Pennsylvania in 1912, and for a short time they became leading
Edith Stuyvesant Dresser, who married
hosts in the capital. But George died in 1914, at the age of only
George in 1898, was the daughter of a
general and a direct descendant of Peter
fifty-two, after an emergency appendectomy.
Stuyvesant. Two years after her marriage
Edith entered into the life of Biltmore, where she made her
she was painted by Giovanni Boldini,
home. She continued George's work with an industrial school for
one of the most fashionable portraitists
of the time. After George's death she
boy and girl weavers. She was president of the North Carolina
married Peter Goelet Gerry, senator
Agricultural Society and State Fair and won glowing encomiums.
from Rhode Island.
One newspaper wrote, "The action of Mrs. Vanderbilt in exclud-
During his long sojourns in Paris
ing all gambling outfits and doubtful shows from the State Fair is
George became acquainted with many
prominent artists. In 1897, his portrait
receiving general approval. North Carolinians who love decency
was painted by the expatriate James A.
will have additional reason to be proud of the Lady of Biltmore."
McNeill Whistler.
But the period of expansion at Biltmore was over: in 1917
J. A. M. Whistler. Portrait of George W.
Vanderbilt. C. 1897-1903. Oil on canvas,
Edith sold Biltmore Industries, and in 1920 Biltmore Village and
82 1/8 X 357/8". National Gallery of Art,
Washington, D.C. Gift of Edith Stuyvesant
230 acres were sold for a residential park for $1 million. Edith
Gerry
deeded about 100,000 acres of the estate to the federal govern-
In 1926, when the house was occupied
ment, and it became the Pisgah National Forest. Later, portions
by Cornelia and her husband, the
Halloween Room was painted by
were sold for the Blue Ridge Parkway and some acreage developed
houseguests, each assigned a section of
into the town of Biltmore Forest. Eventually, the estate shrank to
wall to decorate; the decoration took
three weeks to complete. Nearby are th
about 8,000 acres around Biltmore House.
bowling alley, the swimming pool-with
In 1924, Cornelia, heiress of Biltmore, married John Am-
17 dressing rooms on separate hallways
herst Cecil, son of Lord William Cecil and Baroness Amherst of
for ladies and gentlemen - and the fully
equipped gymnasium.
Hackney and a descendant of Lord Burghley, Queen Elizabeth I's
Lord Treasurer. The bridegroom was First Secretary of the British
Legation in Washington. The wedding took place in the church at
Biltmore Village.
In 1930 Biltmore opened its doors to the public, and today
it is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the southeastern
United States. During the Second World War Biltmore sheltered
the art treasures removed from the National Gallery of Art in
Washington, D.C., SO as to escape possible enemy action.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Soon after the death of William Henry Vanderbilt, W. A.
a sincere and engaging autobiography. Cornelius IV wrote
Croffut published The Vanderbilts and the Story of Their
frankly - too frankly, according to his relatives- of himself
Fortune (Chicago: Belford, Clarke & Co., 1886), the first
and his family in Farewell to Fifth Avenue (New York: Simon
book entirely devoted to the Commodore and his children.
and Schuster, 1935). He wrote an equally frank and absorb-
Although generally eulogistic, it was not entirely uncritical.
ing biography of his mother, Queen of the Golden Age: The
All later writers on the Vanderbilts draw on its wealth of first-
Fabulous Story of Grace Wilson Vanderbilt (New York:
hand facts. Another view by a contemporary is Henry
McGraw-Hill, 1956). Gloria Vanderbilt has written two vol-
Clews's Fifty Years in Wall Street (New York: Irving Pub-
umes of memoirs, Once Upon a Time: A True Story (New
lishers, 1908). The Commodore's best biographer is
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1985) and Black Knight, White
Wheaton J. Lane, who wrote Commodore Vanderbilt: An
Knight (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1987). Shirley Burden's
Epic of the Steam Age (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1942).
The Vanderbilts in My Life: A Personal Memoir (New Haven
The origins and history of the Vanderbilt fortune are
and New York: Ticknor & Fields, 1981) is a book of photo-
chronicled, not always fairly, by Gustavus Myers in his His-
graphs with a brief text. In On Record: An Autobiography
tory of the Great American Fortunes (New York: The Mod-
(New York: Summit Books, 1977) John Hammond gives
ern Library, 1964) and The Ending of the Hereditary
glimpses of his Vanderbilt relations.
American Fortunes (New York: Julian Messner, 1939); by
B. H. Friedman's massive biography, Gertrude Vanderbilt
Ferdinand Lundberg in America's 60 Families (New York:
Whitney (Garden City: Doubleday & Co., 1978), is not easy
The Citadel Press, 1946); and by Frederick Lewis Allen in
reading- - it is inexplicably written entirely in the present
The Lords of Creation (New York: Harper & Brothers,
tense- but it contains valuable extracts from Gertrude's di-
1935).
aries and letters. The story of the custody trial of Gloria has
The best histories of the New York Central Railroad are
been told with skill and verve in Barbara Goldsmith's Little
Alvin F. Harlow's The Road of the Century: The Story of the
Gloria
Happy at Last (New York: Alfred A. Knopf,
New York Central (New York: Creative Age Press, Inc.,
1980), which is well researched and compulsively readable.
1947) and Edward Hungerford's Men and Iron: The History
The important sources for William Henry's art collecting
of the New York Central (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell,
are Samuel P. Avery, The Diaries, 1871-1882, edited by
1938). For the history of the Vanderbilt railroads and Grand
Madeleine F. Beaufort et al. (New York: Arno Press, 1979),
Central Terminal, I have also relied on Carl Condit's un-
and George A. Lucas, The Diary
An American Art Agent
rivaled two-volume History of the Port of New York (Chi-
in Paris, 1857-1909 edited by Lillian M. C. Randall (Prince-
cago: University of Chicago Press, 1980-1981). For the
ton: Princeton University Press, 1979).
decline and bankruptcy of the New York Central a good
Some of the Vanderbilt houses have been well chronicled,
source is Peter Lyon, To Hell in a Day Coach: An Exas-
others have had little written about them. Undoubtedly the
perated Look at American Railroads (Philadelphia: J. B.
most complete study ever made of a Vanderbilt house, its
Lippincott, 1968).
interior, and objects was commissioned by William Henry
Quite a few Vanderbilts have spoken for themselves. The
from Edward Strahan, who wrote under the name Earl Shinn.
youthful diary of Florence Adele Sloane was edited, with a
He prepared a four-volume study of the house at 640 Fifth
charming commentary, by Louis Auchincloss as Maverick in
Avenue entitled Mr. Vanderbilt's House and Collection (New
Mauve: The Diary of a Romantic Age (Garden City: Double-
York: privately printed, 1883-1884). Wayne Andrews's Ar-
day & Co., 1983). Consuelo Vanderbilt Balsan's The Glitter
chitecture, Ambitions and Americans (New York: The Free
and the Gold (New York: Harper Brothers, 1952) is one of
Press, 1978) is a good overview. Paul R. Baker's Richard
the best firsthand accounts of life in the Gilded Age as well as
Morris Hunt (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1980) is the definitive
298
study of the architect who built SO much for the Vanderbilts.
Frederick Law Olmsted (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Uni-
The Architecture of Richard Morris Hunt (Chicago: Univer-
versity Press, 1973).
sity of Chicago Press, 1986), edited by Susan R. Stein, is also
On the social activities of the Vanderbilts in this century
useful. The work of the Vanderbilts' favorite sculptor is de-
Eve Brown, in her Champagne Cholly: The Life and Times of
scribed by James M. Dennis in Karl Bitter: Architectural
Maury Paul (New York: E. P. Dutton, 1947), is lively and
Sculptor, 1867-1915 (Madison: University of Wisconsin
knowledgeable. For the Vanderbilt interest in horse racing, I
Press, 1967).
have used Bernard Livingston's Their Turf: America's Horsey
Contemporary photographs accompanied by a detailed
Set & Its Princely Dynasties (New York: Arbor House,
and extremely well-written text are found in Arnold Lewis,
1973). And all students of American society must rely on
American Country Houses of the Gilded Age (New York:
Dixon Wecter's superb The Saga of American Society: A
Dover Publications, 1982), and Arnold Lewis et al., The
Record of Social Aspiration, 1607-1937 (New York:
Opulent Interiors of the Gilded Age (New York: Dover Pub-
Charles Scribner's Sons, 1937).
lications, 1987). Two books on an architectural firm that did
The American press has been fascinated by the doings of
much work for the Vanderbilts are Leland M. Roth's McKim,
the Vanderbilts for over a century. Hundreds of articles have
Mead and White, Architects (New York: Harper & Row,
appeared, but they must be used judiciously. I found the best
1983) and Richard Guy Wilson's McKim, Mead & White,
to be those in the New York Times, Life, and Vogue.
Architects (New York: Rizzoli, 1983). Thomas Gannon's
By far the best of the older books on the dynasty is Wayne
Newport Mansions: The Gilded Age (Dublin, N.H.: Fore-
Andrews's The Vanderbilt Legend: The Story of the Vander-
most Publishers, 1982) has been useful. Joe Sherman's The
bilt Family, 1794-1940 (New York: Harcourt, Brace and
House at Shelburne Farms: The Story of One of America's
Co., 1941), and I have relied heavily on that scholarly and
Great Country Estates (Middlebury, Vt.: Paul S. Erikson,
entertaining work.
1986) is one of the few books devoted to a single Vanderbilt
The most complete genealogy of the family to have ap-
house. Gifford Pinchot described his work at Biltmore in his
peared was compiled by Verley Archer: Commodore Cor-
autobiography, Breaking New Ground (New York: Har-
nelius Vanderbilt, Sophia Johnson Vanderbilt and Their
court, Brace and Co., 1947), and Olmsted's work there is
Descendants (Nashville: Vanderbilt University, 1972).
described by Laura Wood Roper in FLO: A Biography of
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many descendants of Commodore Vanderbilt have talked to
Arnold Ehrlich, John Cantrell, and Lois Taylor.
me about the history of their family. They include William
My editor at Abrams, Mark Greenberg, and my picture
A. V. Cecil, Iris Smith Christ, Serena Van Ingen McCallum,
editor, John Crowley, have been everything editors should be,
Alexander F. Milliken, Consuelo (Mimi) Russell, Timothy P.
and the book is better for their help. Also at Abrams I have to
Schieffelin, Alexander S. Webb, and J. Watson Webb. The
thank Dirk Luykx, who designed the book, and Margaret
interpretations of family history and personalities are, of
Kaplan, Paul Gottlieb, and Elizabeth Robbins.
course, my own.
My agent, Susan Zeckendorf, possesses the best of all
At the Vanderbilt houses I am indebted to Craig Jessup,
agent's qualities, enthusiasm, and I am grateful to her for
Vanderbilt Mansion, Hyde Park; G. Carroll Lindsay, Vander-
support since the book was first proposed.
bilt Museum, Centerport; Susan Ward, Michael K. Smith,
Thanks also to Terry Ariano, Museum of the City of New
and Travis Ledford at Biltmore; and John A. Cherol and
York; Susan E. Linder, New York Public Library; Waldo
Monique Panaggio at the Preservation Society of Newport
Maffei, Robert Nikirk, Thomas E. Norton, Elizabeth Sims,
County.
Karen Sinapi, Mr. and Mrs. James Van Alen, Mr. and Mrs.
I am most grateful to James F. Carr for locating rare books
William Van Alen, and Professor Barbara Welter, Hunter
and periodicals dealing with the Vanderbilts.
College.
Mary Louise Norton of Town & Country aided the
Most of my research was done at the New York Society
project from the beginning and I am most appreciative.
Library, and I am appreciative, as I have been for years, of the
Also at Town & Country I want to thank Frank Zachary,
staff of that great New York institution.
A Brief History of Biltmore Estate
Biltmore Estate was the country
to build Biltmore House. A three-
Biltmore&state
home of George Washington
mile railway spur from the Biltmore
Vanderbilt (1862-1914), youngest
station was constructed to transport
HOUSE + GARDENS + WINERY
son of William H. Vanderbilt and
materials to the site, including
grandson of "Commodore" Cornelius
limestone shipped from Indiana.
Vanderbilt, one of the wealthiest
A brick factory turning out 32,000
men of the 19th century. In 1888,
bricks daily and a woodworking
George Vanderbilt and his mother
shop were built nearby to meet the
Student Resource Guide
visited Asheville, N.C. to enjoy the
demand for materials.
healthful mountain climate. He was
As the house was being built,
captivated by the natural
Vanderbilt issued a
beauty of the Blue Ridge
challenge to landscape
Mountains and decided
architect Frederick Law
to build a grand country
Olmsted (1822-1903):
estate in the area.
transform bare, over-
George Vanderbilt
worked farmland into
bought 125,000 acres of
beautiful gardens and
land, stretching all the
parks befitting the grand
way to Mount Pisgah,
house. Olmsted, the
and hired the prominent
designer of Central Park
architect Richard Morris
in New York City, and
Hunt (1828-95), who
the campuses of Cornell,
had designed homes for
Amherst, and Stanford
other Vanderbilt family
universities, advised
members, to create his
Vanderbilt not to create a
home. It was modeled after three
huge park around Biltmore, arguing
C. The Biltnere Company
16th-century French Renaissance
that the land near the house should
châteaux in the Loire Valley.
be farmed and the extensive wood-
Vanderbilt and Hunt travelled
lands scientifically managed to sup-
throughout Europe to collect furni-
port the estate.
ture, artwork, and architectural
Biltmore House was a modern
pieces for the property, which
interpretation of a classic château-
Vanderbilt named "Biltmore"-
it featured central plumbing with
from Bildt, the Dutch town where
hot water on demand, central
his ancestors originated, and
heating, mechanical refrigeration, a
"more," an old English word for
sophisticated electrical system
open, rolling land.
powering Edison & Co. light bulbs,
Beginning in 1889, hundreds of
and the first electric passenger
artisans worked more than six years
elevator in the state.
2
BY THE NUMBERS
also very much a family home. In
Biltmore House:
1898, Vanderbilt married Edith
375 feet long by 192 feet wide
Stuyvesant Dresser (1873-1958);
(not including terraces, stables)
after honeymooning in Italy, the
250 rooms, including:
couple came to live at Biltmore.
35 family and guest bedrooms
Two years later, their only child
43 bathrooms
Cornelia (1900-76) was born; she
65 fireplaces
grew up on the estate.
3 kitchens
Biltmore Estate was an economic
1 indoor swimming pool
blessing for the Asheville area. In
Estate Grounds in 1895:
1898, Vanderbilt purchased the
100,000 acres of forest
nearby town of Best, renaming it
250-acre wooded park
Biltmore Village, which grew to
5 pleasure gardens
include cottages for estate employees,
Currently owned:
a school, church, hospital, and
8,000 acres
shops. He introduced innovative
The Vanderbilt's employed
farming methods to the rural
emergency appendectomy in
In 1925, Edith Vanderbilt mar-
150-200 people at the turn
region, and championed the
Washington, D.C. Following his
ried Senator Peter G. Gerry, divid-
of the century;
founding of the Biltmore Forest
burial in the family's New York mau-
ing her time between Rhode Island,
Biltmore Estate currently employs
School in 1898-the first institute
soleum, Mrs. Vanderbilt returned to
Washington, D.C., and Asheville.
more than 1,000
for scientific forestry in America.
the estate and to community
A year earlier, at All Souls Church
In 1901, the Vanderbilts started
involvement. Management of the
in Biltmore Village, her daughter
Biltmore Estate Industries, an
large property became overwhelming;
Cornelia Vanderbilt married the
On Christmas Eve 1895, George
apprenticeship program to teach
in keeping with her late husband's
Honorable John Francis Amherst
Vanderbilt welcomed family and
woodworking, weaving, and other
wishes to preserve Pisgah Forest for
Cecil (1890-1954). Their sons,
friends to his new home. It was the
traditional crafts. Two years
the public, she sold nearly 87,000
George Henry Vanderbilt Cecil
first of many parties held at the
later, Mrs. Vanderbilt set up the
acres to the federal government in
(1925-) and William Amherst
estate, which hosted a number of
School for Domestic Science,
1915, creating the core of Pisgah
Vanderbilt Cecil (1928-) were both
famous people, including President
which trained young women in
National Forest. In 1917, she sold
born on Biltmore Estate.
William McKinley and writers
housekeeping skills.
Biltmore Estate Industries and
The estate opened to the public
Henry James and Edith Wharton.
George Vanderbilt was active in
Biltmore Village in 1921; by the
in March 1930 at the request of
While Biltmore proved to be an
the estate's operations until his
late 1920s, the estate covered
Asheville's leaders, who hoped such
ideal place for entertaining, it was
unexpected death in 1914, after an
11,000 acres.
an attraction would increase
Biltmore Estate Timeline
Biltmore Estate Timeline
1888
1889
1895
1898
1900
1901
1914
1915
1924
1928
1930
1942
1945
1960
1976
1985
1995
1997
1999
2001
George
Construc-
Bilcmore
Vanderbild
Comelia
Bilamore
Vanderbilt
Bilcmore's
Comelia
William
Bilemore
WWII
Bilemore
William
Music
Winery
Bilamore
Conservatory
Artists'
Innon
Vanderbild
tion of
House
marries
Vanderbild
Estate
dies in
land sold
Vanderbilt
Cecili is
House
closes
House
Cecil
Room
opens
Estate's
restoration
Suite
Biltmore
visits
Bilemore
officially
Edith
is born
Industries
Washington,
to U.S.
marries
born
opens to
Biltmore
reopens
returns to
completed
Centennial
begins
opens
Estate
Asheville,
House
opens
Dresser
opens
D.C.
Forest
John
public
House,
Bilemore
N.C.
opens
begins
Service
Francis
estate
Amherst
stores
Cecil
3
4
tourism during the Depression.
Estate Winery, which has become
Gardens of Biltmore
During World War II, the estate
the most-visited winery in America.
was closed and priceless artworks
In the past three decades,
from the National Gallery of Art
additions and related ventures have
The beautiful gardens and woods of
Walled Garden-a classic
in Washington, D.C. were stored
maintained Biltmore Estate's
Biltmore Estate did not always exist.
English garden with patterned
in Biltmore House for safekeeping.
success. In keeping with George
When Frederick Law Olmsted was
flower beds that are in bloom from
During this time, the Biltmore
Vanderbilt's vision of a self-
hired as the estate's landscape
early spring's daffodils and tulips to
Dairy enterprise grew into a
sufficient, working estate, there are
architect, much of the 125,000 acres
fall's bright chrysanthemums.
thriving business.
agricultural enterprises producing
was bare farmland. He transformed
Rose Garden-the lower half
In 1960, William Cecil left a
beef, lamb, vegetables, and herbs
the site to complement the magnifi-
of the Walled Garden is planted
banking career in New York City
for the estate's restaurants.
cent house, take advantage of the
with about 2,300 roses in more
and Washington, D.C. to join
Selective timber harvests keep
native plants and rolling
than 200 varieties.
his brother, George, in managing
forests healthy while providing
terrain, and provide for
Conservatory-
the family property. Biltmore
economic support. Vineyards
recreational activities.
Richard Morris Hunt
Dairy became a separate business
produce more than 300 tons of
Beginning with formal
designed this glass
in 1979 under George Cecil's
grapes each year for the winery. In
lawns and manicured
and steel building,
direction. Under William Cecil's
2001, the estate opened its first
gardens around the house,
which was restored in
leadership, renovations to
hotel the 213-room Inn on
the grounds become
1997-99. It provides
Biltmore House have opened
Biltmore Estate. Retail and
increasingly natural-
flowers and plants for
more than 90 rooms to the public.
restaurant sales, in addition to
looking, spreading out
Biltmore House.
The estate's original calving barn
the sale of more than 900,000
to forests that look
Spring Garden-
was renovated into Deerpark
admission tickets annually, keep
untouched by the hands of
named for two small
Restaurant, and the dairy barn was
America's largest home operating
man. The gardens include:
springs (now under-
remodeled for use as the Biltmore
without any government funding.
The Approach Road-
ground) and features a variety of
this three-mile road begins at the
spring-blooming shrubs.
Lodge Gate and ends near the
Azalea Garden-acres of native
Front Lawn of Biltmore House.
and hybrid azaleas, assembled by
Esplanade-the forecourt of
Chauncey Beadle, Biltmore Estate's
Biltmore House, including the
first superintendent, make up one
Front Lawn, the Rampe Douce
of the nation's largest collections of
("gentle incline"), and the Vista.
native azaleas.
Terraces-the Library Terrace
Deer Park-250 acres of wooded
and the South Terrace.
areas designed as a game preserve.
Italian Garden-with three
Bass Pond & Lagoon-
symmetrical pools and classic
created for both beauty and
statuary, this garden was designed
recreation, these water features
as an outdoor "room" used often
reflect the beauty of the
for recreation.
surrounding land.
Shrub Garden-the four-acre
Farmland-devoted to crops
garden, also known as the Ramble, is
and grazing.
filled with year-round color from na-
Forest-hundreds of acres of
tive and imported shrubs and trees.
woodlands have been replanted.
5
6
Biltmore Estate Winery
Seasons of Splendor
Opened in 1985, Biltmore Estate
Morris Hunt as part of the estate's
Winter
Michaelmas
Winery has become the most
dairy operations. The 96,500
The year begins at Biltmore Estate
As the mountain breeze hints of
visited winery in America and one
square-foot structure opened in
with appreciation of the treasures
cool days and nights, it's time for
of the most honored, earning more
1985 after a three-year renovation,
found within the house. Biltmore
Michaelmas: An English Harvest Fair.
than 200 awards for its wines.
and now houses visitor areas, a
House's staff continues to work on
Interpreted in late-19th-century
wine tasting room, and production
the conservation and preservation
style, this festival commemorates the
Vineyards
facilities. Cellars that once stored
of paintings, tapestries, books,
abundance of the land and its people
Biltmore's first vines were planted in
ice for the dairy now keep wines
sculptures and other objects within
with traditional music, arts and crafts,
1971 near the Conservatory, with
constantly cool during aging.
the house.
lively entertainment, and Biltmore's
the first wines produced in 1977. In
Production begins when crushed
own harvest. Fall foliage and thou-
1978, approximately one acre was
grapes and their juices are placed
Festival of Flowers
sands of chrysanthemums draw guests
planted of Vitis vinifera, the European
in giant fermentation tanks, each
Spring brings the powerful color of
to scenic trails and breathtaking
grape species from which all world-
holding 3,000 to 5,000 gallons.
flowers celebrated with Festival of
vistas around every turn.
class wines are made. These vine-
Depending upon the type of wine
Flowers. From early spring into fall,
yards are no longer in production.
desired, fermentation may take up to
Biltmore's gardens are filled with
Christmas
By 1984, Biltmore cultivated 160
a month. Then, white wines are aged
blooms. During Festival of Flowers,
Christmas at Biltmore Estate brings
acres along the estate's west side. In
in the tanks and red wines are aged
Biltmore House is elaborately dec-
splendor like that of Christmas Eve
January 1985, the Southeastern
in oak casks in the Barrel Room.
orated with turn-of-the-century floral
1895, when George Vanderbilt
U.S. experienced a record cold
Biltmore's wines are bottled on
arrangements, and the
opened the doors of
snap; the-20°F degree temperature
site, with sparkling wines made
gardens feature week-
his new home.
killed 50-80% of the vines and the
by methode champenoise-the
end entertainment.
Adorning the house
vineyards had to be replanted.
traditional French method of
are dozens of trees,
Currently, more than 72 acres
making champagne-and bottled
Summer
including a towering
support nearly 51,500 vines, with
by hand.
Ever-changing colors
35-foot Fraser fir in
an annual harvest nearing 300 tons.
mark the gardens'
the Banquet Hall,
Among the varieties grown in
summer displays, while
hundreds of wreaths
Biltmore's vineyards are Chardonnay,
Biltmore Estate
and poinsettias, and
Cabernet Sauvignon, Riesling,
Winery offers music
evergreen roping
Pinot Noir, Cabernet Franc,
and fun on holiday weekends. In
measured by the mile.
Merlot, and Viognier.
June, Roaring 20s at Biltmore Estate,
Holidays also bring Candlelight
focuses on the Jazz Age, when the
Christmas Evenings-available by
Wine Production
1924 wedding at Biltmore Estate of
reservation only-with unique views
The winery produces about 85,000
Cornelia Vanderbilt and John Cecil
of Biltmore House's elaborate deco-
cases of wine each year, combining
set the stage for parties and lively
rations, rare art, and medieval tapes-
state-of-the-art technology and Old
entertainment. Saturdays and
tries lit by the gentle glow of can-
World techniques. The production
Sundays in June offer 1920s music
dles and firelight. Choirs, ensem-
takes place in the renovated winery
and dance, with modern jazz
bles, and the Banquet Hall's 1916
building, designed by Richard
enlivening the winery.
pipe organ add to the holiday spirit.
7
8
Visiting Biltmore Estate
School Programs
Biltmore Estate is open to the
includes a self-guided visit to
Escorted school programs are available Monday-Friday
public from 8:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
Biltmore House, Gardens, and
by reservation only, and require a minimum of 20 students.
every day except Thanksgiving and
Winery. Hosts are stationed
Christmas Days (January-March,
throughout Biltmore House to
Each program lasts approximately 1.5-2 hours.
the estate opens at 9:00 A.M.). The
answer questions.
admission price varies depending
Specialty guided tours are avail-
Christmas at Biltmore Estate
upon the season-call 800-543-2961
able at additional cost by reservation.
The holiday warmth and charm of Christmas Eve 1895, when
or check www.biltmore.com for
The Behind-the-Scenes Tour
George Vanderbilt formally opened Biltmore House, is re-created with
more information.
includes unrestored areas of the
spectacular turn-of-the-century Christmas decorations, holiday music,
Groups of 20 or more, including
house, with emphasis on the ser-
and more than 35 Christmas trees throughout the House. School
student groups, receive discounted
vants' lives and on the advanced
groups receive an escorted tour of Biltmore House.
admission with advance reservations.
technology that eased life for the
Reservations are required at least
Vanderbilts, their guests, and
two weeks in advance; during
employees. The Rooftop Tour offers
Biltmore Stories
peak seasons in spring, fall, and
dramatic views of Biltmore's grounds
During winter months, Biltmore Estate's student program focuses on
Christmas, early reservations are rec-
and surrounding mountains. The
the young people who once lived and worked in Biltmore House.
ommended as group reservations fill
Legacy of the Land motor coach
This escorted tour features talks drawn from estate archives illustrating
up on a first-come, first-serve basis.
tour covers history of the land,
what life what like for young people on the estate who helped build
Special activities are offered to
structures, and former residents.
Biltmore House, cared for the Vanderbilts and their guests, and worked
adult groups at additional cost,
on the farm and in the stables. Presentations are given in the
including guided candlelight tours
School Groups
Halloween Room.
of Biltmore House, dining options,
Biltmore Estate conducts several
special wine tastings, and other
programs for students (see School
events. Call the Group Sales office
Programs). Each student group is
Festival of Flowers
at 828-274-6230 for details.
greeted by a Biltmore Estate host,
Biltmore Estate welcomes spring with this annual celebration, featuring
who provides a brief overview of
elaborate turn-of-the-century floral arrangements in Biltmore House,
Planning Visit
Vanderbilt family history, Biltmore
and gardens filled with springtime color and scents. School groups
It takes nearly a full day to make
House construction, major points
receive an escorted tour of Biltmore House.
the most of a self-guided visit to
of interest, and the estate Code of
Biltmore House, Gardens, and
Behavior. The escorted visit lasts
Winery. When planning a visit,
approximately 1.5 hours. One adult
School Group Reservations
please keep in mind that driving
chaperone per 10 students is
distances on the estate are signifi-
required. Boxed lunches, by
828-274-6230
cant; a minimum of 15 minutes is
advance reservation only, are avail-
e-mail: groupsales@biltmore.com
necessary to get from location to
able for groups of 15 or more.
location. Peak seasons may add
For more information and to
30-45 minutes to driving times.
make reservations, call the Group
Biltmore Estate admission
Sales office at 828-274-6230.
9
10
Fast Facts about Biltmore Estate
Notes
Completed in 1895 by George
Specialty guided tours (Behind-
Vanderbilt, Biltmore House is a
the-Scenes Tour, Rooftop Tour,
250-room French Renaissance
Legacy of the the Land Tour and
château. It is the largest private
Guided House Tour) are
residence in the United States and
available at additional cost.
a National Historic Landmark.
Daytime visits include a self-
More than 900,000 people visit
guided visit of the Biltmore Estate
Biltmore Estate each year.
Winery, the most visited winery in
America, where Biltmore's award-
Richard Morris Hunt designed
winning wines are made.
Biltmore House and surrounding
structures. Frederick Law Olmsted,
The estate is open daily 8:30
landscape architect of New York's
A.M.-5:00 P.M. (opens at 9:00 A.M.
Central Park, landscaped the origi-
January-March). Biltmore Estate
nal 125,000 acres. Approximately
is closed Thanksgiving and
8,000 acres remain.
Christmas Days.
For information on admission
The estate remains family owned.
prices and special events, visit
Vanderbilt's grandson, William
our Web site at www.biltmore.com
A.V. Cecil, is the owner. His son,
or call 828-274-6333 or
William Cecil, Jr., serves as chief
800-543-2961.
executive officer of The Biltmore
Company.
The self-guided visit to Biltmore
House features thousands of
priceless antiques and art objects,
de
including original works by Pierre
Auguste Renoir, John Singer
Sargent, James McNeill Whistler,
and Albrecht Dürer, collected by
Vanderbilt during his many travels.
Outside, guests enjoy more
than 250 acres of gardens and
formal grounds surrounding
Biltmore House.
11
12
Selected Bibliography of Biltmore-related
Subjects
Auchincloss, Louis. The Vanderbilt Era: Profiles of a Gilded Age.
Huggett, Frank E. Life Below Stairs. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons,
New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1989.
1977 (Victorian domestic servants).
Auchincloss, Louis. The Vanderbilts and the Gilded Age. New York:
King, Robert B. The Vanderbilt Homes. New York: Rizzoli Press, 1989.
St. Martin's Press, 1989.
Lane, Wheaton J. Commodore Vanderbilt: An Epic of the Steam Age. New
Andrews, Wayne. The Vanderbilt Legend. New York:
York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1942.
Harcourt, Brace & Co., 1941.
Patterson, Jerry. The Vanderbilts. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1989.
Baker, Paul. Richard Morris Hunt. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1980.
Pinchot, Gifford. Breaking New Ground. Seattle: University of Washington
Balsan, Consuelso Vanderbilt. The Glitter and the Gold. Maidston, County
Press, 1947.
of Kent, Great Britain: George Mann Books, 1953.
Rector, Mary H. Alva, That Vanderbilt-Belmont Woman. Maine: Dutch
Brendel-Pandich, Suzanne and Dodds, Dennis R. "George W. Vanderbilt's
Island Press, 1992.
Collection of Oriental Rugs at Biltmore Estate." HALI: International
Journal of Oriental Carpets and Rugs. Vol. 3, no. 4, 1981.
Roper, Laura Wood. FLO: A Biography of Frederick Law Olmsted.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1973.
Bryan, John M. Biltmore Estate: The Most Distinguished Private Place.
New York: Rizzoli Press, 1994.
Schenck, Carl A. The Birth of Forestry in America: Biltmore Forest School,
1898-1913. Santa Cruz, CA: Forest History Society and Appalachian
Dennis, James M. Karl Bitter, Architectural Sculptor. University of
Consortium, 1974.
Wisconsin Press, 1967.
Sloan, Florence A. Maverick in Mauve. New York: Doubleday & Co., 1983.
Friedman, B.H. Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney. New York:
Doubleday & Co., 1978.
Stasz, Clarice. The Vanderbilt Women. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1991.
Girouard, Mark. The Victorian Country House. New Haven:
Stein, Susan R., ed. The Architecture of Richard Morris Hunt.
Yale University Press, 1979.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986.
Gray, Christopher and Boswell, John. Twenty-Six Extraordinary Structures.
Stevenson, Elizabeth. Park Maker: A Life of Frederick Law Olmsted.
New York: Simon and Schuster, 1981.
New York: MacMillan & Co., 1977.
Hoyt, Edwin P. The Vanderbilts and Their Fortunes. New York:
Doubleday and Co., 1982.
13
14
Order More Materials about Biltmore Estate
Visit our online store at www.biltmore.com or call 800-968-0558 to order
these Biltmore Estate items. Sales tax and shipping not included in prices.
Item
Order #
Price
A Guide to Biltmore Estate
000027
$18.87 hardcover
Comprehensive guide book with
000026
$11.97 softcover
extensive photography of Biltmore
House, Gardens, and Winery
Young Person's Guide to Biltmore Estate
000023
$ 6.57
Entertaining and informative guide
for children ages 7-12
Biltmore Estate Video
046590
$21.95
A 30-minute tour of Biltmore House,
its history, and the Vanderbilt family
Biltmore Garden Video
011898
$19.95
Showcasing the gardens in bloom
Biltmore at Christmas Video
011445
$19.95
America's largest home magnificently
decorated for the holidays
Posters
Biltmore House front view
000030
$ 3.00
Vanderbilt Homes
000179
$ 4.50
Biltmore House at Sunset
000391
$ 3.95
Published by The Biltmore Company
Postcards
Mailing Address:
General set of 12 cards
000043
$ 3.95
One North Pack Square
Gardens set of 12 cards
000044
$ 3.95
Asheville, North Carolina 28801
Christmas set of 12 cards
000045
$ 3.95
Telephone: 800-543-2961
Bounty of Biltmore
036356
$22.95
Web site:
Biltmore Estate cookbook,
www.biltmore.com
including recipes, seasonal
menus, and wine information
Biltmore Estate is a registered trademark of The Biltmore Company.
15
16
DECEMBER 5, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
35-54.
THREE DAYS' FOREST FESTIVAL ON THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
Extraordinary Outing of Representatives of All Concerned With Timber From the Tree to the Trade-Biltmore
Estate, the Property of George W. Vanderbilt, Used Educationally in a Unique Celebration Under
the Direction of C. Schenck, Ph. D. - Authorities Invade the Woods for Lectures by
the Master Forester-Openhanded, Open Air Hospitality-A
saries Signalized in an Unprecedented Beauti=
ful Biltmore in Story and Verse.
known as the Biltmore estate. The invitations, eagerly
milling operations and surveying. They enter practically
BILTMORE
accepted, brought to Asheville, N.C., of which Biltmoreisa
into the various methods of timber estimating, including
suburb, many of the country's best known to professional
the strip method, the "forty" method and Schenck's
We are but borrowers of God's good soil,
and business life as directly or indirectly interested in any
method, and for ten continuous days they estimate on
phase of timber growth, from its inauguration and
some tract to be cut for an estate mill. Here they endure
Free tenants of His field and vale and hill;
preservation to its commercial utilization. These and the
all he hardships of a timber estimator's life: working
We are but workmen mid his vines to toil
multitude of others who will be interested in these
eight hours a day, cooking their own meals and sleeping
To serve his purpose and obey His will.
chronicles of the recent forest festival will be glad to learn
in the open rolled up in blankets. Logging operations
something of the Biltmore estate and, prefatorily, of the
are part of the curriculum, and the students are taught
How shall we use His bounty unto men?
Biltmore Forest School. The story of the Biltmore estate
the manipulation of logs on the deck and on the
For private aims alone, His spreading lands?
will occupy the greater part of these pages; a story of the
carriage in all theoretical and practical ways, the latter
Or shall we render service back again
Biltmore Forest School follows:
including the piling of the lumber and the arrangement
For wealth he places in our eager hands?
of the piles, study of the machines in the mills and the
CHAPTER II THE BILTMORE FOREST SCHOOL
placing of them in new positions.
Road engineering is a part of the instruction afforded
Biltmore, the answer ringeth from thy slopes;
The Biltmore Forest School was established in the
the Biltmore students. They survey and lay out the
Biltmore, they forest voices answer raise-
summer of 1898 by its present head, Dr. C. A. Schenck,
roads and build bridges and tram roads, make log
The public good the first of private hopes;
who was inspired by his devotion to the science of practical
chutes, run compass lines, establish boundaries and
A future race the ward of present days.
forestry and his desire to push it along and by a knowledge
plane table surveys. Many of the wood roads now on
that the demand for practical foresters was increasing and
the Biltmore estate, all of which have been constructed
Here use and future use have equal thought.
would still further increase with the passage of the years.
under the supervision of Dr. Schenck, are the work of his
For time that is and time that is to be,
Its faculty consists of seventeen lecturers, headed by Dr.
students.
Schenck, all in the van of the best known authorities on
In a sense the Biltmore Forest School is a finishing
Here Nature's grandest handiwork is wrought
subjects with embrace forestry, botany, forest policy,
school, for the candidate must have some practical
In this, the planted and the guarded tree.
timber preservation, prairie planting, geology, economics,
knowledge of lumbering and be well grounded in the
law, fungus diseases of trees, zoology, forest insects,
higher mathematics and surveying. Pupils must be at
Biltmore, thy name shall stand for many a year-
sylvicultural problems, lumber inspection, farming and
least 20 years of age and graduates of a high school ora
Not for the wealth that you perpetuate,
stock raising a nicely adjusted combination of the
relatively similar institution in good standing, and must
But for the lesson that is written here
theoretical and the practical.
have a knowledge of algebra to quadratic equations, the
For individual and for the state.
The school is located on the Biltmore estate from
first five books of plane geometry and plane
November to April of each year, when the working field is
trigonometry. Good health, of course, is an absolute
the Biltmore forest, a tract of 8,000 acres managed for the
requisite, as hard physical labor faces the students, and
To him, possessor of these ample miles,
production of firewood for the markets of Asheville and
he must understand that he will devote all of his time
Shall come an equal and undying fame
neighboring towns. In this timber the students are taught
and all of his energy to study in the class room, in the
And other woods shall echo with his name
practical forestry in every aspect afforded by their
field and in his own room. One year is the full course in
Wherever forests rise and Nature smiles.
environment. On the abandoned fields, of which the
the Biltmore Forest School and the number of students
Biltmore estate holds nearly 2,000, the students are taught
to be admitted is limited to twenty-five. Dr. Schenck
reforestation from the making of seed beds to the planting
would prefer a larger number were it possible to give
CHAPTER THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
of the seeds, the care of the seedlings and the preservation
personal attention to more than twenty-five, but upon
of the maturing growth. They are taught at the Pisgah
this point he is insistent, as he desires to confer upon
From any one of the many picturesque eminences of
forest station and at the planing mill on the estate sawing,
each pupil some of the advantages of his own
Asheville, western North Carolina, the eye can encompass a
manufacturing, inspecting and the general phases
personality. In lecturing he would prefer a much larger
generally western area approximately twenty miles north and
necessary to the education of practical lumbermen.
class, but believes that in actual instruction he could not
twenty miles south within which, due to an extraordinary
Early in April of each year the school is moved to the
do far justice to more than the number designated as the
range of altitude in mountainous country, are to be found in
mountains, with headquarters at the edge of Pisgah forest,
limit of the school force.
great numbers, specimens of every known variety of tree
an 80,000-acre tract of virgin timberland. Field work is
Diligence and gentlemanly conduct are about the only
growth native to the sweep of country from Nova Scotia on
pursued here for six weeks, particularly in tan bark
phases of discipline upon which the school insists. All
the north to the Carolina-Georgia state line on the south.
operations, from which the estate supplies 1,000 cords of
lectures and field work must be attended and no
Obviously, a region so rich in sylviculture is extraordinarily
chestnut oak bark to neighboring tannic acid factories. The
vacations are given during the year. The school
attractive to lumbermen generally and to those interested in
students are taught all phases of the disposition of wood
graduates are awarded diplomas, grating the degrees of
forestry particularly, affording within comparatively compact
used in the production of tannic acid.
Bachelor of Forestry and Forest Engineer.
area object lessons in variety and scope rarely if ever
A region in Pisgah forest is known as the "pink beds," so
Quoting from a publication issued by the Biltmore
elsewhere to b encountered in so restricted a territory.
called from the prevailing color furnished by
Forest School:
Approximately twenty years ago this region was
rhododendron and laurel, which grow in profusion in that
The instruction is limited to those subjects closely associated
vicinity, and, in fact, throughout the estate. To this point in
with technical forestry. Horticulture and landscape gardening
abandoned by timber cutters as one practically denuded of
the resources which they sought. A wealthy new Yorker of
May the students are moved and enter into field work in
are not included in the curriculum. The instruction in the aux-
aesthetic taste and fondness for outdoor life found this a
the estimating of standing timber, logging operations,
wonderfully opulent section in all that appeals to the lover of
the beautiful scenically, in all that satisfies a nicely
appreciative appetite for the beautiful in nature, in all that
caters to healthful outdoor life. This man, George W.
Vanderbilt, bought the section, a principality in size, in larger
or smaller tracts until he was owner of a domain of 200
square miles. Then he transformed it into the most beautiful
single estate in America
Contemporaneously with his ownership of this magnificent
domain Mr. Vanderbilt was impressed with the necessity for
its preservation and perpetuation as a region of natural
beauty and as a game preserve, and incidentally with the
possibilities of its development as a commercial proposition
without interference with its aesthetic value. He brought to
his aid the most noted foresters of their day and finally, ten
years ago, secured the services of possibly the best known
and concededly one of the most thorough exponents,
technically, artistically and practically, of conservative
forestry- Alwin Schenck, Ph.D., formerly an officer, on
leave, of the Prussian army and its forest service.
Dr. Schenck, forester of the Biltmore estate, established
upon it in 1898 a school of forestry which has a worldwide
reputation for efficiency, whose graduates are reputed to be,
and are sought, as the most thoroughly grounded in their
profession of any in the lumber world. In the last week of
November last, to signalize the twentieth anniversary of the
inauguration of practical forestry on the Biltmore estate and
the tenth anniversary of the Biltmore Forest School, was
inaugurated a celebration the like of which has not occurred
before in forest history and will not be repeated, it is safe to
say, before the lapse of another decade.
Within recent weeks a favored few received invitations to
Biltmore forests
Biltmore village.
Biltmore house.
attend at Biltmore, N.C., a "forest festival." to be held
THE BEAUTIFUL VILLAGE BILTMORE, N.C., ON THE FAMOUS BILTMORE ESTATE, ASUBURB OF ASHEVILLE
November 26, 27 and 28, the scene of the festival that most
AND ONE OF THE MOST PICTURESQUE HAMLETS IN THE "LAND OF THESKY."
beautiful exposition of wood, mountain, valley and stream
DECEMBER 5, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
36
tion in the auxiliary sciences as far as possible to topics pertaining to
'I have had a year's experience in the woods down here
H. Harrington, Agricultural and Mechanical College,
practical forestry
and now I am ready to 'tackle' anything I can get hold of.
College Station Tex.
The botanical laboratory is equipped with compound microscopes
Charles L. Tarbert, C A Smith Teimber Co., Minneapolis,
The doctor has put us through quite a course of sprouts
and with collections of woods. So far as possible, however, the usual
Minn.
laboratory work and experimental studies are conducted out of doors
down here, in the woods, at the mill, on the yard and in
Richard Wood Wood Iron & Steel Co., Conshohocken, Pa.
The famous Biltmore herbarium and its library are open to the
inspecting.
Charles A. Keffer, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn
students
"Last spring the doctor wanted to make an experiment in
Prof. John G. Jack, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass
Divisions of the general science of forestry upon which
planting hardwoods in the primeval forests, comparing the
Otto Armleder, O. Armleder Co., Cincinnati, O.
instruction is given at the Biltmore Forest School include
results with other woods. He set a lot of us at work in
A K. Orr, Southern Railway, Asheville N.C.
sylviculture, forest mensuration, forest surveying, forest
Pisgah forest. We had to take the plants out of the nursery,
T. E Defebaugh, editor AMERIC AN LUMBERMEN, Chicago.
packing them for shipment; then they were sent to the
Judge J.W. Judd, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
working plans, lumbering and technology, forest finance,
Carl Jentz, Champion Fiber Co., Canton, N.C.
forest protection, forest policy, forest work of the federal
forest and we planted them through the woods. That was
E. D. Broadhurst faculty Biltmore School Greensboro, N.C.
government, forest planting in the prairie states, which are
a rough experience; not hard work but it taxed our
E. M. Moffett, Moffett Lumber Co., Canton, N.C.
supplemented by instructions in the auxiliary sciences,
engineering skill or common sense to figure where this and
W F. Decker, Brevard Tannin Co., Brevard, N.C.
including seventeen general subjects, all closely related to
that little tree should be put to get all the overhead light it
Gen. T. F. Davidson, Davidson Bourne & parker, Asheville,
forestry.
needed, to determine the situation etc. Wehad to make the
N.C.
The tuition fee required by the school is $200, payable in
holes, plant the trees 350 a day, and it was no fun to use an
W. M. Johnston, Jr., Asheville, N.C.
advance. Students are held responsible for breakage of
old grub hoe in tough ground and several played out at it,
Clinton Crane, Crane & Co., Cincinnati, Ohio.
S. P. Ravanel Biltmore, N.C.
instruments and are supplied at nominal cost with the
but others of us got our plants in in good shape and I put
Charles E. Waddell, faculty Biltmore School, Biltmore, N.C.
requisite text books. Eachstudent is required to keep a horse,
in 1,000 and have 990 left. Some of those little pines, not
M. Burns, William Brownell PL Co., Biltmore, N.C.
a sound animal suitable for the work, which may be obtained
over six inches high, are now three feet high and in fine
W. Griswold Biltmore, N.C.
at a price ranging from $100 to $150. The students pay their
condition. We put in on that all the time we considered
Collier Cobb, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill N.C.
own board and lodging, which are obtainable in Biltmore or
necessary and where we thought the plantation needed
nearby Asheville at prices ranging from $6 a week upward.
weeding we weeded: I weeded my plantation five times
In addition to the above listed as connected with the
They conduct a club of their own in club house at Biltmore,
last summer and then, in September, the doctor went over
Biltmore Forest School, the following, graduates or
the cost of which is borne by the students solely and amounts
all the plantations to judge which was the best of the lot.
pupils, were in attendance:
to approximately $10 annually for each student. Exclusive of
He gave a set of Schlich's works for the best plantation."
J. McDonald, Biltmore.
W. Armstrong Biltmore.
Young Amadon's observations are quoted at length as
S. C. Eaton, Biltmore.
V. Rhodes, Biltmore
the cost of his horse, which the student usually sells on
leff Richardson, Biltmore.
G. A. Schulze, La Crosse,
leaving the school, the approximate net cost for one year's
illustrative of the spirit of the students of the Biltmore
H. Amadon, North Adams,
Wis.
enrollment at the Biltmore Forest School is $1,000 as a
school. These young men impressed the visitors as
Mass.
R. Nash, Buffalo, N.Y.
maximum, and it may be obtained without too rigid economy
without exception a fine lot of enthusiastic, wideawake,
A H King, Montclair, N.J.
H. C. Johnston, Washington,
for $750.
intelligent, cleancut, embryotic foresters, superb horsemen
A. C. Silvius, Sunbury, Pa
D.C.
The above is but an outline of the main features of the
well grounded and practical woodsmen, well equipped as
Louis Bolderweck, Chicago, III.
W. H Dunn, Weston, Mass.
Biltmore Forest School. It graduates annually robust,
surveyors, engineers, inspectors, mentally and physically
H Voge, Jr., Oconomowoc, Fla.
P. H. Gearhart Buffalo N.Y.
L.F. Pratt Buffalo, N.Y.
E. W Meeker, East Orange,
thoroughly well equipped, practical young lumbermen and
fit, technically and practically, to enter tirelessly and
R Mount Halesite N.Y.
N.J.
foresters who are naturally regarded as the pick of their kind
intelligently into the handling of wooded estates the
W. H. Euchner, Lime Lake, N.Y.
H. Potts, Sheperdstown,
for those desiring efficient services of this character.
finished product of a thoroughly practical course of
E. B. Dunning Buffalo, N.Y.
W. Va.
comprehensive instruction and experience.
Hughes Lindsay, Richmond, Va
C.W. Dunning Buffalo N.Y.
Practical Aspects as Seen by a Student.
T.J Weatherbee, Painesville,
R.W. Orr, Michigan City,
Supplementing the record of conditions imposed upon
CHAPTER III THOSE WHO PARTICIPATED.
Ohio.
Ind.
students of this school, hear the testimony, given
H. G. Black, Houston, Tex.
G. T. Withington, Painesville,
In this kind of atmosphere, in environment superbly
C. T. Rankin, Biltmore.
Ohio.
conversationally, by a prospective graduate, C.H. Amadon,
fitted for the occasion, hosts and guests included the
L. N Palmer, Stonington, Conn.
the president of his class in the school and whose term of
instruction will cease with the present year:
following:
CHAPTER IV THE START FOR THREE DAYS'
"It is Dr. Schenck's idea primarily to give the young fellows
ENJOYMENT.
a working knowledge of forestry. He does not pretend to be
Barre, botanist, Clemson College, S.C.
at variance with Pinchot or Graves, though upon the one
Ralph G. Burton, forest engineer, Pittsfield, Mass.
Robert S. Conklin, commissioner of forestry, Harrisburg, Pa.
An aggregation more in direct sympathy with the
hand Mr. Graves says that he wants his foresters to be
W.N Cooper, Asheville Lumber Co., Asheville, N.C.
purposes of the festival would have been hard to select.
scientific men, but Dr. Schenck wants them to be practical
H. C. Crawford, Lidgerwood Manufacturing Co., New York,
It will be noted that the list included the names of
lumbermen from start to finish and he regards other things
N.Y.
members of the faculties of various agricultural and
than that as side issues. So while we get everything practical
J. Elwood Cox, lumber manufacturer, High Point, N.C.
forest schools and those connected with related
of any use in the scientific line, for instance in allied sciences
Harry L. Eichelberger, H L. Eichelberger Lumber Co., Staunton,
institutions, of officers of state and national forest
like botany, he gives us practical instruction in conservative
Va
but not destructive lumbering. He teaches us to put in a tree
J.L. English, English Lumber Co., Asheville, N.C.
reservations, engineers, lumbermen and others directly
John Foley, first assistant forester Pennsylvania railroad,
interested. The Battery Park Hotel had been made
where one has been torn out. he does not indorse the idea
Philadelphia, Pa
headquarters for the visitors and here Dr. Schenck had
that forestry is mere planting where timber has been cut off or
Miles A Goodyear, secretary C. A. Goodyear Lumber Co.,
thoughtfully arranged in advance for comfort and
where it never has grown, but desires to get the public to
Tomah, Wis.
convenience. Aside from attending carefully to their
understand that forestry in this county is conservation and
L. Harris, Harris & Cole Bros. Inc., Cedar Falls, Iowa
material needs, he had formulated, had printed in neat
not new forestry or new planting; and that is one of the
Rutherford P. Hayes, vice president American Forestry
form and distributed to all of the appreciative a program
objects, as I have gained it in my talks with him of the
Association Asheville, N.C.
of the three days' festival, which was exhaustively
present celebration. He wants the public, particularly those
C. H. Hechler, manager Harbor Hill Farms, Roslyn, L.I.
Homer D. House, faculty Biltmore Forest School, Biltmore, N.C.
explanatory and incidentally was characteristic of its
in influence, to have a chance to grasp this intelligently; to
B.F. Keith, B. F Keith Lumber Wilmington, N.C.
compiler. Prior to the inauguration of the festival,
have the celebration written about and published so that the
John W. Logan, Wood Iron & Steel Co., Coshohocken, Pa
otherwise designated the Biltmore Forest Fair, a fair
idea of conservative forestry as he understands it can be
J. R. Manson, Jr. Petersburg, Va.
wherein the exhibits were the wares that Nature had
circulated.
W. B. McEwan, McEwan Lumber Co., Asheville, N.C.
produced in exquisite form amid scenic beauty
"Dr. Schenck requires ordinarily some knowledge by new
M W. Otis, Clear Lake, N.Y.
unrivalled on the American continent, Dr. Schenck had
students of lumbering. He required me to work in the woods
C.R Pettis, State Forester, Albany, N.Y.
caused to be marked various stations on the vast
and on the yard before he would entertain my application. I
Dr M. Ray Powers, state veterinarian, Clemson College, S. C.
F. W Rane, Massachusetts sta forester, Boston, Mass.
Biltmore estate, denominating these "tips' and
found a job in New York state and worked six months for
Charles A. Scott, professor of forestry, Ames, Iowa.
numbering then from 1 to 63, the stations encompassing
hardwood manufactures there but handling spruce. My first
Edmund Secrest, Ohio department of forestry, Wooster, Ohio.
the greater part of the estate and of the features likely to
work was on the yard. I tallied lumber as it went into the car
Hon. James H. Stout, president Stout-Green Lumber Co.,
be of educational interest to the visitors. The program
and then went into the woods as clerk, and after two months
Menomonie, Wis.
was clearly explanatory of each.
of that I went into the woods with an ax. I built corduroy
Frederick N Tate, Continental Furniture Co., High Point, N.C.
In the bright sunshine and perfect weather which
roads in the swamps in the coldest weather, when my clothes
W. B. Townsend Little River Lumber Co., Townsend, Tenn.
froze to me.
Lamont Rowlands, vice president C. A. Goodyear Lumber Co.,
prevailed without interruption throughout the entire
Tomah, Wis.
three days, with eager anticipation of enlightenment on
"After that work was over I went to a relative who ran a
J.W. Allen, M Betts & Co., Philadelphia, Pa
conservative forestry procurable in no other way, a gay
little portable saw mill in Massachusetts and did everything
Charles F. Whiting Boston, Mass.
procession started from the Battery Park hotel at 8
but run the saw, and think I could do that. I even skidded
Elwood Wilson, Laurentide Paper Co., Grand Mere, P. O.
'clock on the morning of November 27. It consisted of
lumber, supplying the mill with logs from peeled hemlock
George Cahoon, Laurentide Paper Co., Grand Mere, P.Q.
fifteen open carriages, horses and equipage decorated
timber. I stayed six months in that work and then came
L.D. Small Laurentide Paper Co., Grand Mere, Q.
with the Biltmore Forest School colors, green and white,
down here.
CHARACTERISTIC SCENERY ON THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
BILTMORE HOUSE, NORTH CAROLINA HOME OF GEORGEW. VANDERBILT.
DECEMBER 5, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
37
and several more on horseback, the latter mostly students of
bushels of nuts and acorns. The plants began to come up
"The best Douglas fir I have ever seen was in Germany
the Biltmore Forest School who had been appointed couriers
fairly well and I would have succeeded in raising what I
and it comes from Washington. They out-grow the
and outriders for the visitors and who throughout the three
wanted, a hardwood forest, had it not been for a little devil
spruce in rapid development, yet at Biltmore when 16
days of unalloyed enjoyment and educational plentitude
in the shape of rabbits, and they are still here. My attempt
years old they are only of very small size. The treekind
were constantly and courteously attentive to every need of
here to raise hardwoods has been frustrated entirely by
is like mankind; some boys do not develop well in their
the party. Arrived at beautiful Biltmore village, a replica of
rabbits. We have been battling with them continually, but
first sixteen years, but afterward one may develop into a
thigh class English rural life, a half hour was spent in
it seems impossible to oust them. The weeds also covered
president of the United States. If a species does poorly
arranging the procession and at 9 o'clock it started on its first
the hill and choked out the walnuts and the oaks,
locally to begin with it is wrong to assume that it will do
day's outing.
depriving them of their foods. There were here many
badly all its life. Frequently after they get a fairly good
millions of sprouts of sage grass.
start, particularly if they have plenty of good water, they
CHAPTER LECTURES BY A FOREST EXPERT.
thought it was easy to raise hardwoods here because
start up well. I gave these the best slopes that I could
nature told me that on the adjoining slope there must have
fine northern slopes are the best for the trees yet they
Dr. Schenck's main purpose in this forest fair was the
been a hardwood forest originally. I looked up to nature
have not done well at all. Some of them are only a foot
delivery of a series of lectures upon conservative forestry
and determined to plant hardwoods. But it would not
high now; the highest is about seven feet.
appropriate to and as illustrated at each of the individual
work. If had had more sense I would have looked to
"What we are doing here is experimental. I have no
"tips. Through the handsome eastern gateway of the
nature on the abandoned fields and found out that there is
patterns by which I can work, and the experiment is
Biltmore estate, their host in the lead. the party drove overthe
no regeneration of hardwoods. Yellow pine everywhere
somewhat expensive. From the investor's standpoint it
first of the hundreds of macadamized roads winding
takes possession of the abandoned fields and I should have
is somewhat unwise to be the first experimenter.
throughout the estate, past Dr. Schenck's office and school
planted pine to begin with.
planted here white pine with black cherries and the
building and the estate's truck farm to a point about two
"One thing proved very interesting to me right here:
trees have done remarkably well. After the pines catch
miles from Biltmore, on a steep hillside. Here all dismounted
when the hardwood plantation proved a failure I doctored
up am sure the black cherries will be safe.
and Dr. Schenck delivered his first of many lectures.
it up with pine and that made a good growth from their
"Here are sugar maples planted in 1898 when 3 years
It is to be regretted that under the circumstances
fourth year and then the hardwoods took a spurt and their
old. The sugar maples in the bottom of the cover, where
accompanying the delivery of these lectures as exactly faithful
life has been made easier apparently by the admixture with
there is more moisture, have done best, showing their
stenographic report of the lectures and of the innumerable
the pines. We know very little of the life in the soil. We
dependence on moisture in the soil. It is a pure
questions and answers with which they were punctured was
need a genius like Burbank or Edison to tell us of the
plantation in sugar maple and it does well in pure
not obtainable. This was made a mechanical impossibility by
biology of the soil, because on this soil depends the life of
stands.
Dr. Schenck's rapid movements over hillsides and narrow
the trees. Someone has counted the bacteria in a gramme
"Here is where I planted bushels of chestnuts on top of
mountain trails, the rustling of innumerable fallen leaves, the
of soil, estimating them at 200,000 to the gramme. Of this
the hill, and they are all gone. I was induced to plant
crowding of eager listeners and other causes, but the report
life we know nothing except that it is interwoven with the
chestnut there because the original stand was chestnut.
which will follow is a fairly faithful reproduction of the
life of the trees.
Professor Sargent induced me to make that experiment
lecturer's discourses.
at considerable expense, but it is the worst kind of
Dr. Schenck's activity in the field is discouraging to the
Interdependence of Different Species.
experiment on abandoned fields. Of chestnut wood we
tenderfoot, as it must have been in their earlier days on the
"In my opinion the pines are influenced favorably in
sell by retail 3,000 cords annually.
Biltmore estate to his students, who now, however, reflect the
growth by the ushering in of the hardwoods. I began to
"I planted here white pine, ash, magnolia, leaving them
tirelessness of their leader. Up and down mountain trails,
plant the hardwoods in 1898 and doctored the woods up
entirely to nature. This is experimental, to show that we
over heartrending barriers, brushing aside apparently
from that time until 1900. The work has been done from
need not endure the wholesale destruction of the
impassable thickets, with unwaried mountaineer's stride, Dr.
time to time and hence you find a great irregularity, and
forests."
Schenck was always in the van of the party. At Tip no. 1,ona
the expense bill has been much greater than if had started
With his Dr. Schenck led his party to Tip No. 4, passing
stiff hillside, he said to the eagerly attentive listeners crowded
with the pines, which could have been done at $10 an acre
Tip No. 3, which was a demonstration in "thinning."
about him:
Several of the "tips" were passed in this way as
"This is an old cattle pasture of about twenty-twoacres. The
relatively unimportant, especially in view of the time at
whole tract was very badly eroded and there was not a blade
the command of Dr. Schenck and his party.
of grass on the place. The erosion was frightful and
something had to be done. I did not think at that time that I
could plant it successfully with a few white pines; I was quite
sure that it would be eroded out, but I drove stakes and
Further installments of this report will tell of additional
interwove the ground at considerable expense, the little white
lectures by Dr. Schenck, of luncheons eaten with zest in the open
pines took hold quickly and the erosion was stopped
air, of the climbing of stiff mountain sides, of the fording of
absolutely. We planted the little pines in spade made holes
rivers, of enlightenment for the most erudite foresters, botanists
and there was no cultivation of the tract. The pines planted
and lumbermen in this well informed party, of numerous other
then were four years old, sturdy plants. They were planted
features of a picturesque, educational outing the like of which is
unprecedented in American forestall and lumbering history.
close to prevent the formation of lower branches.
sure that here in time lumber will be more high priced
(To Be Continued Next Week.)
than anywhere else in the world. We are figuring now for
white pine plantations like this at $15 an acre, under normal
conditions. On poor ground, stony and the like, the expense
might be $20. The growth in a plantation like this will
average about 500 feet board measure. When the plantation
is twenty years old will have the investment back, without
interest. I do not want to wait a thousand years but want
early returns.
"We handle the forest tree which pays best. and at Biltmore
ONE METHOD OF HAULING LOGS IN THE NORTHCAROLINA
intensive forestry pays best. The fixed charges are the same
MOUNT AIN COUNTRY.
and our investment is actually only $15 and our loss of
interest is from 4 to 6 percent. This plantation is, I would say,
as good as the best that I know of in this or in foreign
but the expense has been more than $25 an acre. If get 30
countries. From eighty to ninety years will be the longest
percent of hardwoods and 70 percent of pine I shall be
glad.'
period when any of the trees will stand.
"The trees are the greatest water consumers in the world.
Dr. Schenck here led his pupils farther up the hill, to an
They drink more water than a North Carolina lumberjack
obviously different growth of trees, and said:
drinks whiskey."
"This is a black cherry plantation. Some of the first
planting which I did here was trees four feet high. The
Human Foes of the Forest.
pine has a splendid effect on the black cherry. I find very
The speaker called attention to the thick layer of humus
often that black cherry, after the pine has had a start of
underfoot, a blessing to the forest and coppice "until
about ten feet, begins to shoot up. In the old plantations
fool comes along with a match and destroys everything. You
that is wonderfully well demonstrated. I have never seen
pure forests of black cherry; it requires apparently the
can not prevent fires absolutely, because there is always sure
to be some fool in the south, especially the pot hunter. These
companionship of other species. believe in a scattering of
set fires right and left to prevent my rangers reaching them,
the pine and oak and a good proportion of black cherry.
keeping the rangers busy fighting the fire. Though I am not a
Black cherry goes very well also with hard maple."
southerner by birth it hurts me to hear so much of the
At a nearby point, illustrating by uncovering some of the
lawlessness of the south, yet as illustrated here it is lawless.
lower part of the trees, the lecturer said:
"We do not clear off the lower branches on the little trees,
"We have lost fully 50 percent of our locust plants by
finding that the close planting will clear them up of itself.
mice chewing below the ground. The seeding of locust is
Yellow pine is more persistent in this respect than white pine.
about the cheapest that we have We want here a variety of
"Being close to the market have conditions here which you
species."
do not find anywhere else except in Europe, and the system
Moving farther and stopping to apologize for what he
you see here is very largely German especially in the matter
called his "oratorical barrel organ," in which denomination
of transportation.
of his educational efforts he was in a lonesome minority.
Dr. Schenck continued:
"The best idea in pruning would be to prune off a branch
immediately after it dies; otherwise you get a dead knot in the
"These little oaks were planted when about one year old
and about two feet high. They have done much better
timber, and if you want to prevent that you should go into
the woods every year and prune off every branch as it dies,
because the slope is better. It costs us practically nothing
for oak seed."
which is impossible financially. I would prune the best
After which Dr. Schenck illustrated the method of
trees the trees of the ure-expending 3 cents on each tree
for, say, 200 trees to the acre. On the others it would not be
planting small oaks and proceeded to another point on Tip
2.
worth the while."
Western Woods in the East.
Lessons for the Lecturer.
At this point the lecturer urged his audience on to higher
"This," said Dr. Schenck, "is Douglas fir from Colorado,
ground, at Tip No. 2, overlooking the fertile truck farm of the
the Rocky mountain variety. The fir from the state of
Biltmore estate, to the east. Here he said:
Washington does well, but Douglas fir from Colorado has
"This plantation is in hardwoods of white oak, chestnut
not done as well. This is the yellow variety and was
oak, of ash, of white walnut, butternut and black walnut,
planted in 1896 when 4 years old, so it is 16 years old from
black cherry and maple. I planted on this slip to grow ten
the seed, and none of it is higher than six feet.
DECEMBER 12, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
43
THREE DAYS' FOREST FESTIVAL ON THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
Representatives of American Business Life Attend a Practical Demonstration of Work for the Encouragement
of the Forestry Idea-Splendid Estate of George W. Vanderbilt Thrown Open for Their
Inspection Under the Guidance of C. A. Schenck, Ph. D., Forester in Charge, and
His Assistants-Attractions of Asheville, in Whose Neighborhood Biltmore
Lies Educative Explanations by Forester Schenck.
CHAPTER -ASHEVILLE IN THE LAND OF THE SKY.
tangible and intangible form have been reared; who was
public benefactions were a public park and handsome
great as a lumberman and greater as a man, was George
library building and grounds, a club house for a golf
"The Good Old Mountain Dew."
Willis Pack, a sketch of whose life immediately following
course and the erection at his expense of a monument to
his death August 31, 1906, it was the melancholy duty of
the Hon Zebulon B. Vance, formerly a popular governor
Down under the hill there is a little still
the AMERICAN LUMBERMAN to publish
and United States senator. He established and
And the smoke goes curling to the sky.
George W. Pack was identified with steadily increasing
maintained a free kindergarten and provided generously
You can easily tell by the sniffle and the smell
prominence with the lumber business from 1854. Michigan
for the maintenance of a successful charity known as the
was the scene of his early operations. At Sand Beach, that
There's good liquor in the air close by.
Mission hospital. Of a tithe of his private charities the
state, he was a member of the firm of Carrington, Pack &
public never will know.
Co., which continued nine years. Other concerns with
Public life had little charm for Mr. Pack, but when it
It fills the air with a perfume so rare
which he was identified and their respective periods of
was evident that in office he might serve his fellows to
That's only known to a few:
activity were Pack, Jenks & Co., Rock Falls, Mich., eleven
advantage he accepted the call readily. He was regent of
So wrinkle up your lip and take a little sip
the University of Michigan in 1856. In 1864 he was a
Of the good old mountain dew.
presidential elector and assisted in casting the vote of
Michigan for Abraham Lincoln. While a member of
So sang the students of the Biltmore Forest School at many
prominent clubs of Cleveland and Asheville, Mr. Pack
times and amid many scenes, reflecting their buoyant
spent the larger part of his leisure time among the, to
physical spirits but not their spirituous inclinations. And
him, greater attractions of his home.
these and other rollicking songs haunted their visitors
Pack Square, the center of business activity of
throughout their waking and even their sleeping hours and
Asheville was named in honor of George W. pack and
follow many of them yet, as they will for many a day. Amid
the expense of its establishment was borne by him.
such good cheer the preceding installment of this report left
Indicative of the general esteem in which Mr. Pack was
Dr. C. A. Schenck and his party in the beautiful woods of the
held, his death and the subsequent memorial services
Biltmore estate, where in thoroughly congenial environment,
were made the occasion of extraordinary public
this installment may leave them fro the present while some
demonstrations. Asheville and Cleveland, by civic
reference is made to Asheville, the immediate point from
bodies and as communities, paid him and his memory
which the pilgrimages to the Biltmore forests started and
tributes of respect in which he entire populace of both
which is entitled to special mention. Little reference need be
cities joined. The name of George Willis Pack will be
held in affectionate reverence in Asheville and
made here to the commercial or political aspects of Asheville;
this article is concerned with those phases of the little city
Cleveland as long as the cities shall endure.
directly complementing the forest festival held in its vicinity
CHAPTERIX-INOAK, PINE AND POPLAR
three days of the last week of November, 1908. In its
significance to the lumber trade and, secondly, to the tourist,
the artist and the health seeker, Asheville is more
Rejoining those enjoying the forest fair, upon reaching
immediately of interest to those who participated in the ever
Tip No. 4 Dr. Schenck called attention to the marking by
memorable forest fair.
different colored labels of the various growths of timber,
Stating briefly that Asheville is a well governed little city
a scheme which was followed throughout the estate
with metropolitan airs and metropolitan accessories in
wherever visited in order that the party determine
compact form a community of energetic, uptodate citizenry
at a glance the character of the respective growths. Here
Dr. Schenck said:
living in an altitude of approximately 2,350 feet above sea
level, and that it is the capital of the "Land of the Sky," its
THE LATE GEORGE WILLIS PACK.
"This hollow, in my opinion, is particularly fertile. It
more apposite relation to this story commands present
was stocked in 1905 with poles and trees of little
attention.
prospective value. The proof of the pudding is seen in
years; Woods, Pack & Cos., Alpens, Mich., ten years;
the yellow poplar wherever they regenerate as these did,
CHAPTER VII SUMMER RESORT PRE-EMINENT.
Woods, Perry & Co., Cleveland, Ohio, twenty-three years;
and where the white oaks are as big as those that are
Pack, Woods & Co., Cleveland, over fifty years, and last
shown here it is very good soil. The 10,000 acres were
Asheville is located in what was once one of the most
but lately out of existence Pack, Gray & Co., Cleveland.
regenerated pine forests and the pines were cut be the
densely wooded sections of the southeast and yet indirectly
His companies were in their day among the largest timber
railroads to help in the building up of Asheville. It was
tributary to it are large and active lumbering operations. In it
cutters and lumber manufacturers of their respective
a yellow pine forest, towering yellow pine--North
and through it much lumber history has been made; it has
localities, owners and operators of great mills, trams,
Carolina pine- which some relics are left over there
been the home of some of the largest lumber interests of
docks, lake craft, etc., and of all these usually he was the
yet. In these hollows hardwoods were growing with
earlier days, as it is now of some relatively but little less
dominating spirit.
great fertility, notably those with northern aspect. This
important. As a point for the exploitation and study of
After along residence in the more western cities Mr. Pack
cover had a heavy growth of poor hardwoods among
forestry Asheville presents indisputable claims to
moved, in 1885, to Asheville, influenced by consideration
good ones and these had taken out, misshapen woods
consideration. As a summer resort, for those seeking health,
for his wife's health. His public spirit and effective energy
of no particular value, and I made them into money,
the study of nature or mere pleasure, it is known to far too
were at once recognized and from the early days of his
getting over $47 an acre. This was largely due to the fact
few in proportion to its superb attractions.
residence in it he was a foremost citizen of the North
we are but a step from the road and I had good
Within a region immediately tributary to Asheville are to be
Carolina city. Among other evidences of his high character
transportation by wagon. We get for our hardwoods
found specimens of the timber growth of this continent in
frankly and spontaneously given by his fellows was the
$5.60 a cord and consequently I made good money out
greater number than can be found in any other section within
bestowal upon him of the rare distinction of placing his
of it, and it seemed to be a pity at the same time to allot
a similar area. Its sweep of mountain, valley and stream and
portrait in the county building in Asheville among those of
this good soil to an inferior group.
its famous sunsets and cloud effects, are unrivaled. Its
governors of the state and other dignitaries.
"Where we get one of the restricted areas nature
equable, bracing atmosphere is a continual blessing to the
Mr. Pack was ever among the foremost in practical efforts
reafforests the best, particularly where we cut clean,
strong as well as to the weak and its climate is unsurpassed,
for the general advancement of his city. The site of its
though not as quickly as I can through the aid of the
the last fact one that Asheville, for some occult reason, has
county building was a gift from him, and among his other
nurseries. Here I have clean
succeeded too well in hiding under a bushel. The average
cutting doctored up by planting
northerner, and even those within easy reach of the city
hardwoods, a few chestnuts, oaks
territorially, have visions of annoying and debilitating heat
and yellow poplar, to get results
when reference is made to a southern point as a summer
quicker and a larger variety of
resort. As a matter of fact, Asheville enjoys one of the mildest
growth in the reestablishment.
climates of any point in the United States. During the
The tendency of nature to
summer and fall months it revels in cool temperature when
reestablish itself is shown in these
such cities as St. Louis, Chicago, New York, those along the
yellow poplars and no tree do I
lakes and even far northern St. Paul are numbering by scores
hold more dear than the yellow
their victims of sunstroke. Accessible to Asheville, within
poplar. In the primeval forests it
easy riding and walking distance, are hundreds of the most
is the prettiest tree by far and the
beautiful spots of the scenically most attractive section the
most valuable where the
country east of the Rocky mountains.
conditions are much better for a
The more pretentious hotels of Asheville, of which the city
fine second growth of yellow
has a number evidently out of proportion to its size, are large
poplar. I love to cut the big
roomy, admirably equipped and admirably managed
poplars, but I love also to have
Perhaps the most picturesquely situated is the Battery Park
them replaced by thousands of
hotel, on a historic hight which commands on all sides
seedlings.
magnificent views extending to the Smoky mountains tc
"In this hollow we have
Mount Pisgah, with altitude of 5,757 feet to Mount Mitchell,
approximately per acre 6,000
the loftiest peak in America east of the Rocky mountains
specimens of poplar. Some of
6,717 feet high; and to lesser but impressive eminences, and
you boy students go in and shake
the intervening vistas of valley and stream the latter
them." The attentive students
including the famous French Broad and Swannanoa rivers
fled at the master forester's
and numerous other streams.
command and executed his
orders, after which Dr. Schenck
CHAPTER VIII HONOR TO HIS COUNTRY.
continued:
Of those who have made famous this section of the
"The straight saplings with
yellow bark were numerous here.
southeast, one whose name will be there revered for all time,
SQUARE, BUSINESS CENTER OF ASHEVILLE, N.C.
Yellow poplar has few foes. The
for his sterling personal character, his benefactions public
rabbits do not chew it, and insects
and private, his extraordinarily beneficial impress upon the
institutions of the section; to whom lasting monuments in
and birds and fungi do not inter-
DECEMBER 12, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
44
fere with it, but it has to have the best soil, which I give it
party were on keen edge. Dr. Schenck had made ample
with pleasure.
provision for this fact, timing nicely a short tide from Tip
"Here were a few groups of white pine, my first planting,
No. 6 to the Schenck home.
and I hid them away in the woods because I was afraid I
Here was afforded an illustration of hospitality such as
would make a mess of it. There were 2,500 of them two years
was repeated on several occasions on all the three days'
old.
outing. It was a combination illustrative of the best
"If you come back in ten years, as I hope you will, I shall
traditions of open handed German hospitality and
show you a splendid growth here of spontaneous yellow
American hospitable customs. A lunch was provided of
poplar. Here is one of the typical groups of yellow poplar of
substantials and delicacies, sandwiches, meats, dessert,
spontaneous growth entirely from seedlings that cost nothing
coffee, in almost embarrassing profusion, and was eaten in
and better than I could plant it."
and around Dr. Schenck's home without regard to
ceremony.
CHAPTERX-COAXING TIMBER GROWTH
If envy ever may be justifiable, the attitude of the visitors
toward the Schenck home was well warranted. It is one of
In movements from tip to tip, or plantation to plantation,
the handsomest frame buildings on the Biltmore estate; big,
the carriage were utilized mostly, but Dr. Schenck's
roomy, built with an idea to comfort and apparently
indifference to the exertion of high climbing induced him on
equipped with every modern appliance devoted to that
several occasions to ignore the other means of locomotion
end. Its situation is admirable and from it from all sides
provided and to lead his sometimes winded party rapidly to
one can get views of some of the most entrancing scenery
the next point of interest. It was so in this case when he
on the beautiful Biltmore estate.
reached Tip No. 5, where with eager audience around him he
Dr. Schenck was assisted in serving his guests by friends
said:
of her sex of Mrs. Schenck, and prominently by Mrs.
"Here we have North Carolina pine and opposite some
Schenck, a lady to whom his guests, never perfunctorily
groups of North Carolina pine spontaneous growths. When
but always spontaneously and with deepest respect, doffed
knew them first they were about half as high as they are now
their caps. For this lady, a transplanted, most attractive
and were badly suppressed by other growths of poor timber
product of the Fatherland is one of those of her sex to
trees of no prospective value. I came in here with my little ax
whom the thoughtless and the thoughtful alike pay
to free the pines from the poor timber and incidentally to
homage instinctively. Mrs. Schenck is a worthy helpmate,
NATURAL REPRODUCTION OF YELLOW POPLAR
make revenue, because we get for fire wood here as much as
in physique and mental attainments, of her husband. Her
$5.60 cord.
SHOWING HOW TTAKES POSSESSION OF
attractive personality, her thorough but never obtrusive
"I recollect very well how the hardwoods kept back the
hospitality, her graceful tact, made for her a stanch friend
THE GROUND AND FORMS STRAIGHT, CLEAN BODIES.
yellow pine, how misshapen the pines looked under the
of every member of the forest fair contingent, as long ago it
superstructure that deprived them of light. Since the poor
did of the pupils of the Biltmore Forest School, all of whom
sunlight. What it needs is water, moisture and sunlight.
timber has been thinned out the others have done remarkably
swear by and would gladly fight for the master forester's
Suppose we have an acre covered with a certain amount
well. We kept some poor stuff growing in here because it is
wife.
of growth; is it not best to feed it all so as to get the
beneficial to the better timber. It keeps the soil moist and
helps to make a supply of humus and helps to keep these
CHAPTER XII SOME GENERAL AND VALUABLE
timber quickly and of the best character?
pines free from limbs rubbing against them and brushing off
OBSERVATIONS
"What is the use of feeding 10,000 trees when we can
get just as good results from feeding 1,000, getting as a
the dead branches and so the understuff is very welcome.
consequence timber of logable size more rapidly? We
From the standpoint of the sylviculturist I think it is far better
After luncheon Tip No. 7, on what is known as the
reduce the number of messmates, providing thereby
to preserve them. At the time of the first thinning we reduced
"Ridge road." was visited. Commenting upon this Dr.
better environment and opportunity for the remaining
the number of plants to give the individual more to eat-food
Schenck said:
good messmates, and at the same time obtaining, as we
and moisture and soil and light and in the next three or four
"If you will look about you will find on the ground a
do here, a good deal of revenue, making here about $12
years we will make another thinning, taking out half the pine,
number of yellow pine stumps, the remnants of trees six to
an acre because of the firewood market thereby made
and then the under forest will be found to be doubly
ten inches in diameter. We made here a very heavy
available by a good system of transportation, enabling
valuable."
thinning. We were cutting about ten cords to the acre here,
me to practice sylviculture and make money by so
According to the printed program referred to in the
which is very heavy. Of course, we have to experiment in
doing.
previous issue of the LUMBERMAN, the primeval forest at Tip
the line of thinning as well as in the line of planting. I car
"In the mountains thinning is out of the question
no. 5 consisted of oaks, hickories, chestnuts, sourwoods, and
because there is no market for the wood. The mountain
blackgums, which grew up in profusion up to the first
timber is too far from the consumer and inadequate
thinning in 1898.
transportation makes its marketing a commercial
At Tip No. 6 the lecturer said:
impossibility. Do not offer to the market more than the
"This little lot in front of us always interests me particularly.
market can digest but less than it desires and you get a
It had been cut over apparently preparatory to farming in
better price. The firewood price here in 1895 was $2.50 a
1890 and was burned over the last time in 1894, when I came
cord: it is now $5.60 delivered. All the delivering is
to America. Then I looked it over and found it apparently
done by our own teams. It is all retail business and very
hopeless and bare, and I recall very well that when the
intricate and a lot of trouble, but have no other choice.
American Forestry Association paid me the honor of a visit
I would rather somebody else would attend to that
here I told them of the destruction of the forest by ax,
stunt, but I have to do it in order to practice
unintelligent cutting and burning. I thought it was hopeless
sylviculture."
and that it never would amount to anything. I have changed
Here Dr. Schenck turned to one of the party and said,
my mind, because one of the best wood lots we have is here.
"If Mr. J.M. English (indicating the gentleman), the chief
Here are yellow pine saplings kept free from brush. Fire
lumberman of Asheville, will take the retail business out
running over the ground will hurt the yellow pine the worst.
of my hands I will be very glad, and will sell you Mr.
They will not sprout even from the stumps, as hardwoods
English, the firewood at 50 cents a cord, if you will offer
will. Smoke will not hurt them, however, and sulphur fumes
me that and assume all the trouble."
will hurt them but little. It is particularly interesting to know
that yellow poplar suffers less from sulphur fumes than
(To be continued next week.)
practically all other species. It is practically immune. Spring
fires are the worst because in the spring the bark is loose and
the effect of the fires is really an entire girdling of the trees all
SERVING LUNCH DR. SCHENCK'S HOUSE.
around, their life veins being destroyed.
"The tops of the yellow poplar are absolutely free. The
not foretell the results; do not know whether insects will
poplar cleans itself of lower branches better than any other
attack the trees which I have left after thinning, depriving
tree that I know of. The small lower branches more easily
me of all the pines, so it is all experimental. What have
adapt themselves to good growth than those of any other
tried to do is to leave all of the most promising pines, those
species. Where the lower little branches are removed the spot
which promise to develop into valuable timber, by which I
is healed almost immediately.
mean the trees particularly free from limbs and which form
"By the time these poplars are fitted for thinning we will
a good bole. The most prominent of the trees, the
possibly get $8 a cord for the woods for fiber."
aristocrats of these, have left. What the result will be can
not say. This thinning was made only three years ago and
CHAPTERXI-LUNCHEON AT THE FORESTER'S HOME.
so far has grown to my entire satisfaction.
"On an acre of ground there is a certain amount of food
At this juncture, after long tramps in the open air and
to be found in the soil and in the air. An acre of ground
considerable strenuous climbing. the appetites of the entire
obtains a certain amount of sunlight. Timber is formed out
of moisture in the soil, moisture in the air and out of
GROUP OF VISITORS AT DR. SCHENCK'S HOUSE.
DECEMBER 19, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
43
THREE DAYS' FOREST FESTIVAL ON THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
Continuation of the Story of the Unique Forest -Object Lessons in Conservative Forestry - A Radical Idea
in Tree Pruning Costs of Starting Young Plantations Amateur Foresters at
Work -Inspection of the Grounds of Biltmore House Sketch
of the Career of Forester C. A. Schenck.
CHAPTER XII INSECT FOES AND TRANSPORTATION
are cleaned about to log lengths I give the most promising
doned farm land and secured the earliest planting under
of the trees the advantage of room and at the same time I
Mr. Vanderbilt's personal direction. The hemlock,
The preceding two issues of the AMERICAN LUMBERMAN
get money by cutting the trees into firewood. This is a
Douglas fir and black cherry were planted at the same
published installments of a report of a three days' "forest
thinning in progress. We are taking out per acre about five
time. No trimming had been done at this point in five
fair" held in the last week of November last on the Biltmore
cords of pine and leaving about, say, fifteen of pine and
years. The Douglas fir were found to be of poor
estate of George W. Vanderbilt, near Asheville, N. C., under
making a net revenue of about $6 by the sale of this little
character, the only value of the timber on this tract being
the initiative and guidance of Dr. C. A. Schenck forester of
firewood stuff. The idea is to give each of the pines full
its influence on the soil and the protective
the estate. It related the eager following of Dr. Schenck by
ground space so that when swaying in the wind they do
companionship which it afforded the admixture of
foresters and professional and business men as he lectured
not rub each other and they get room to develop. After ten
yellow poplar.
upon the object lessons in conservative forestry afforded by
years we repeat the thinning taking out the least
"This," said Dr. Schenck, "was a washed out gulley
his work on the estate.
promising to the extent perhaps of about one-fourth.
some time ago, but after my pines quieted the gulley
The last previous installment of the great forest festival on
"The hardwood undergrowth ] do not touch because
down, stopping the erosion, the yellow poplars found
the Biltmore estate left the participants eager listeners to the
these hardwoods are subservient to the pines and
their way in and formed a regular row."
lectures of Dr. Carl A. Schenck at tip No. 7. The report is
contribute to their food supply. The hardwoods contribute
A walk mostly up hill of about one mile brought the
resumed here at that point.
to their food supply. The hardwoods contribute to the
party to Tip No. 14, where was afforded an object lesson
"This shows how a wood lot looks after heavy thinning. Let
fertility of the soil, but the pines are dominant because they
in the prevention or arrest of erosion by a growth of
us go on a little farther. Here you see another thinning, a
are prospectively of more value. I leave the slash for
poplar and yellow pine, the latter about 25 to 35 years
very heavy thinning, of the pines, all of the pines having been
fertility."
old. Some black cherry found at this point was planted
taken off. Why? The pines were all dead. [Laughter.]
during the last seven years.
"The stand was a poor stand, but a wretched little bark
CHAPTER WORK OF THE BARK BEETLE.
beetle, millions of them capable of chewing down half as acre
CHAPTER RETROSPECT.
at a time of yellow pine, invaded this group. Our fight
Arriving at Tip No. 8, Dr. Schenck said:
against these beetles is continuous. Were it not for my good
"This is a tract killed by insects. The stumpage value of
Although passed over in rapid succession above, Tips
this crippled tree is $3 for firewood; for lumber it would
Nos. 10 to 14 inclusive are entitled to further comment in
have been $10. It is more difficult to find out the workings
line with the pamphlet descriptive of them.
of these beetles than you imagine. They kill only those
In the spring of 1900 at Tip no. 10 twenty-two acres of
trees in which they are breeding. They invade them only
fairly good farm land were planted with white pines 3
for breeding purposes. They attack the butt apparently ten
years old a yellow pines 1 year old. The seedlings were
feet above the ground. This beetle breeds in the yellow
pine almost entirely. In the mountains we have 3,000 acres
which have been destroyed by this beetle."
In answer to a question Dr. Schenck said:
"It costs to get firewood 60 cents a cord for the cutting
only. My crews make three loads a day to Asheville.
Every tree is marked before being cut.
"The woodpeckers feed on the larvae of these beetles,
and if we had watched the woodpeckers we might have
done better with these trees than we have. What we lose is
the difference between the prospective value of the tree
and the present market value."
CHAPTER IN RAPID REVIEW.
Here Dr. Schenck called to his aid Capt. Cyrus T. Rankin,
superintendent of the saw mill plant at Pisgah forest
station, who has been an employee of the estate for nearly
twenty years and who is one of its most expert woodsmen.
He gave a demonstration in the practical work of marking
SHOWING DR. SCHENCK'S METHOD OF PRUNING
trees for felling. Dr. Schenck darted ahead from tree to
HARDWOODS ON THE BILTMORE EST ATE.
tree, designating the doomed individuals so rapidly as
almost to deceive the eye, and in his footsteps followed
YOUNG WHITE ASH THE BROWNTOWN PLANTATION
Captain Rankin with a forester's huge clasp knife blazing
ON TMORE ESTATE.
transportation I could not make such stuff into money, but as
the trees designated.
it is wherever the beetle worked I made the pines into money
The lectures last recorded included in effect the object
at once.
lessons afforded at Tip No. 9, where was passed an
planted 21/2 feet apart in rows 41/2 feet apart. Theexpense
The Importance of Good Roads.
admixture of pines and oaks in which a number of
was: For plants $332; for planting, $180.79.
"One of the best, one of the most vital, means of resource
improvement cutting had been made; Tip no. 10, a
Quoting the pamphlet further, it says, in the language
that we have is competent transportation with a steady
plantation of white pines planted 4,000 to the acre in 1900
of Dr. Schenck:
market. I told Mr. Defebaugh yesterday that it is my
on farm land covering twenty-two acres and on which
In the planting expense are included two items spent
conviction that the difference between German forestry
stood a small saw mill now in disuse; Tip No. 11, a
(that is my present opinion) unnecessarily, to with:
conditions and American forestry conditions lies in the
plantation of 20-year-old white pines declared to be
I have spent $51.16 putting a few handfuls of forest soil
absence of sylviculture here and the presence of it there and
objectionable on the ground that they are allowed too
into each planting hole:
the presence of good means of transportation in Germany
much growing space to their individual specimens and
I have spent $17 putting a stone over each hole when
and its absence in America Here on the Biltmore estate we
that early returns could not be obtained before thinning;
the act of planting was finished.
have these German conditions because we have spent a few
Tip No. 12, at which was illustrated a feature of the
At Tip no. 11 were found plantations of white pine
thousand dollars to build these roads. Where the general
character of the Biltmore estate which prevails throughout
which, while attractive from an aesthetical point of view,
conditions are like those here I am sure you would do the
its extent: Dr. Schenck's department is allowed full sway
Forester Schenck objected to on the grounds, first, that
same thing because it pays the best.
over the forestal growth of the entire estate except upon the
the growing space of the individual specimen has been
"In the last fourteen years the hardwoods have developed
improved portion, where macadamized roads have been
and still is too large; second, that early returns cannot be
well here. I want to reestablish on this plateau the equivalent
built, to the extent of 100 feet each side of the roads, which
obtained through thinning. The plantations were made
of what was the original forest. I think by imitating nature
are under the care and command of the landscape
on contract in 1890 by northern nurserymen and the
we are safest in our investments. We do not want only a high
gardeners of the estate. This point affords views of some of
estate contains several hundred acres of this type of
rate of interest of our investments but safe investments at the
the most beautiful scenery on the estate. At Tip No. 13 was
white pine forest.
same time, and these are obtainable by profiting by the
found a plantation of 20-year-old white pines which had
Quoting the pamphlet again, in Dr. Schenck's
lessons of nature.
been planted at two years of age from seed, standing about
language, the following is noted:
"Here is a thinning that has just been made. After the trees
170 trees to the acre on average.
Tip No. 12: Along the macadamized roads the
Dr. Schenck advised his hearers that the land was aban
landscape department of the estate rules supreme. Thus,
for two miles of road, you may enjoy the landscapes, the
sweeping views over the mountains; and you may take a
nap, also, preparatory for a walk of one mile beginning
at station No. 13.
Tip No. 13: Another white pine plantation twenty years
old, with a few hemlocks, Douglas firs (poor) and black
cherries. The soil is covered with humus. If this
plantation were denser I would like it better.
By this tie you long to see some fine chestnut trees, or
poplars of white oaks.
There are none left, near Biltmore; they were removed
before you were born; can show you the stumps only
of big trees along our route; and I show you, in this
booklet, some trees standing in my forest some fifteen
miles from here. We shall actually see them on Saturday
next; here is one of the finest and a fine girl, standing at
its base on a log, holds her hat on a stick, so as to give
you a chance to measure the size of the tree.
The illustration shows a typical scene in the woods.
EIGHTY-EIGHT PARTICIPANTS ARTING FROM BILTMORE VILLAGE FOR THE FIRST DAY'S INSPECTION
The tall tree is a "yellow poplar," worth about $120
OF THE ESTATE.
when converted into lumber. I shall cut it and saw it up
within less than five years. If you want it saved shall
save it upon receipt from you of $120.
DECEMBER 19, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
44
Of Tip No. 15 the pamphlet says:
was such that he could not see his milch cow one-half mile
CHAPTER - BILTMORE HOUSE.
This grove is produced by nature alone, absolutely without
distant: today he could not see her fifty yards distant.
help, on an abandoned field. It is yellow pine, some 25 to 35
have done nothing here but make money by cutting
Biltmore house itself was closed and in charge of a
years old. Within twenty years we shall obtain, by way of
away the undesirable, low grade, misshapen, decayed
caretaker, but the party inspected the immediate
thinning, as much money from it as we have paid for the land
hardwood in the last fifteen years. We have made here
grounds for about an hour, the formal gardens, tennis
originally.
from cuttings per acre $20 and are making more now. I
and croquet grounds, the magnificent lawn reaching
A slope of this character should not be cleared and used
could not plant as densely or as well as nature has planted
perhaps 500 feet to the top of steep hill to the east, the
this one was agriculturally. Look at these frightful gullies.
yellow pine here. We have about 1,000 acres of this type,
arbor, the beautiful, smooth driveways, the large,
Erosion was rank in this lot prior to the time at which the
all cut in 1886 at the same time, and by improvement the
handsome stables, the artistically placed statuary,
slope was left alone-left unburned, unpastured, unused!
timber has been transformed into North Carolina pine,
importations from European centers; the whole forming,
We want conservatism, and we want conservation!
with an undergrowth of hardwoods instead of an
perhaps, by nature and by artistic adaptation, the
overgrowth. We have cut here about twelve cords per
handsomest home east of the Rocky mountains.
CHAPTER XVII BROWNTOWN PLANTATION.
acre."
The view to the west was what captured most of the
According to the records, at Tip No. 23 a field that had
party. From the level of the ground floor of Biltmore
Tip No. 15 was entered in the afternoon and dominated the
been used for farm land up to 1894 had been planted in the
house is a sheer descent into a valley perhaps 100 to 120
Browntown plantation, which was planted in 1905 at the
winter of 1895 and 1896 at an expense of $43.34-
feet, built of solid masonry, brought from Indiana
following expense for work per acre:
4bushels red oaks;
quarries. The prospect from this point was so
4 bushels white oaks;
entrancing that none left the spot willingly. To the
Lifting plants to nursery
$1.50
10 bushels chestnut oaks;
distance in the left was the French Broad river, which
Hauling plants to plantation
1.00
4 bushels black walnuts;
Healing in
.25
5 bushels white walnuts;
landscape artist had made more picturesque by the
Demarkation of rows
.15
8 bushels chestnuts;
addition of a mirror-like lagoon dotted with miniature
Making holes and planting
5.90
In March 1897, were planted in the middle section near
islands, this giving the effect of a broader river. In the
the old cabin, in rows three feet apart
far west rose hill after hill, 65,000 acres of which consti-
Total
$8.80
5.8 bushels red oak;
4.5 bushels white oak.
Prior to planting in order to stop erosion $66.98 was spent.
The entire area was subdivided into lots lettered A, B, Cetc.
CHAPTER XIX - EXPERIMENTAL PRUNING.
and, eliminating lot D, the details of planting are shown by
the following table:
In a fairly well thinned growth at about this section Dr.
Lot. Acres
Kind.
Age.
No
Kind.
Age
No.
Kind.
Age
No.
A
10.8
2
30,000
P. strobus
4
14,000
B
5.5
P. strobus
2
8,000
Sugar maple
1
16,000
Cherry
1 8,000
C
0.8
P. strobus
2
1,400
Tulip tree
1
2,000
E
0.9
P. strobus
2
2,000
Tulip tree
1
2,150
Oregon ash
1
1,000
Oregon maple
1
500
THE AMERICAN LUMBERMAN" CARRIAGE IN
F
1.5
P. strobus
2
2,300
Cherry
1
2,000
Cucumber
1 2,000
FRONT OF BILTMORE HOUSE.
G
3.3
White ash
5
4,000
H
&5
P. echinata
2
38,000
P. strobus
4
3,000
I
6.3
P. echinata
2
19,000
Sugar maple
1
19,000
P. strobus
4 2,000
tute a deer preserve. Farther to the west rose the Smoky
J
3
P. echinata
2
13,000
P. strobus
4
1,500
mountains in a deep purple haze, the whole effect with
K
4.2
P. strobus
2
10,000
Sugar maple
1
10,000
Chestnut
1 10,000
the setting sun being gorgeous.
L
5.8
P. strobus
2
13,000
P. echinata
2
13,000
A land of vision it would
M
3.9
White ash
5
20,000
A still, an everlasting dream
o
1.5
P. strobus
2
3,400
P. echinata
2
3,400
The visit to Biltmore house concluded the outdoor
Na
3
Coccinea
1
2,200
Prinus
1
4,500
P. echinata
2 9,000
enjoyment of the day and the party returned to
Nb
5
P. strobus
2
7,500
P. echinata
2
7,500
Hard maple
1 15,000
Asheville in their conveyances and on horseback to
At this point, among other things, Dr. Schenck said:
Schenck said: "Here I have done a little experimental
await the Thanksgiving dinner scheduled for the
"In the springtime ash was planted in these boundaries. A
pruning. Ihad here, the other day, the pleasure of a visit of
evening.
little higher up the ash has done remarkably poor. In the
three of our good foresters, some of the best in the whole
CHAPTERXXIL THE FORESTER OF THE BILT-
same ground with the same species but as soon as the ash has
country, and they were taken over this identical route, and
MORE ESTATE.
reached 11/2 to 2 inches in the ground it will strike the soil that
when they returned to my office they said: 'You may
will put it on a parity with the better growing ash. The
know one thing or two but you do not know just one
rabbits do not bother the ash.
particular thing, because, how can a man prune
Before proceeding with the story of the Thanksgiving
can not state now definitely whether forty to fifty years
successfully the trees and leave the stumps eleven inches
feast at the Battery Park hotel it will be appropriate to
introduce a sketch of the host of the occasion host
from this time the white pine or the yellow pine will be the
long? What is the use of it? will tell you. We prune out
more valuable. If there should be a difference then
of the entire forest fair and whose personality and
in this way so as to avoid the little scars, resulting from the
commercially between knotty trees and those without knots
pruning, appearing in the bole. When the heavy branch
accomplishments made that unique festival a notable
the yellow pine will be worth the more. White pine contains
event in the history of conservative forestry.
breaks off it tears knots in the stem unless you leavea
more resin than any other and it may be that North Carolina
Few if any influences of an immaterial character are so
I have come to the conclusion that it is best to prune the
pine will in time be worth more that the other growths."
conducive to accomplishment as enthusiasm in pursuit.
dead limbs out about to that length from the stem so as to
Pushing on across a little valley from this point the tired
prevent affecting the tree bole itself, and after two years I
It may be hazarded that no other immaterial influence is
and thirsty party found a living spring, where all refreshed
can come back and clean up right here- at the bole and
as great a factor in accomplishment as pent-up
themselves gratefully.
enthusiasm for a desired purpose. Such enthusiasm,
then we have a smooth scar, which in time will heal over.
Tips Nos. 16 and 17 were passed with slight mention the
released, augmented by thorough ability, is a force
"The expense of pruning has been 3 cents a tree. To take
former a thicket of yellow pine ground on what had been an
irresistible.
the stumps off here will make cents and by the time all of
abandoned field in 1880 and which obviously needed thin-
it is done the expense will be about 20 cents a tree. Where
The history of notable commercial, professional and
artistic accomplishments is replete with examples
we plant close together the pruning is done mostly by
illustrative of this force. Even the superficial observer
nature. That is one of the reasons why I plant close
together, our hard maples or black gum or something of
can upon reflection cite the names of many whose
that kind with white pine acting as a natural pruner. Very
forebears or early misguidance had destined them for
vocations in which, had they not made marked failures,
large scars indicate diseases. That explains these fresh
stumps, and I think if we do prune it is the way to do it. It
as more probably would have been the result, would at
is expensive, but whether it is better to spend that money
least have lived and died in obscurity but who,
and get $20 back do not know. I am in favor of pruning
following their own inclinations or forced into their
judiciously. What the future will show about it do not
proper spheres by accident, achieved success that has
know. We are blind as to that, and may make mistakes
made history. Given the antitheses of these
here, but I try to avoid them. I leave the brush on the
antecedents-enthusiasn for a given pursuit and with
ground because it makes good humus."
complementary, well grounded ability -- and the subject
is destined for unqualified success.
At this point the party returned to their carriages and
horses and journeyed to the south. En route a diversion
In an important German city, back in the early '70s was
born an heir to a distinguished name who by parental
was caused by the tempting sight of a full grown rabbit
resting familiarly in an old stump by the wayside. A halt
purpose was destined to bear arms in the Kaiser's
service, following the traditional occupation of sons of
was made and about eighty able bodied men endeavored
REPAIRING A BROKEN BRIDGE, RPASSAGE OF
to catch one rabbit, led by the colored driver of one of the
the house of Schenck. The parental purpose was
successful but in part, for while Carl Alewyn Schenck
PART OF THE CAVALCADE ON THE FIRST DAY OF THE FAIR.
teams armed with a whip, but against this mighty force
became in time an officer in a distinguished German
bunnie was too active and when he seemed within grasp of
ning, for which purpose the "wolves," as objectional growth
army corps and yet retains, in enforced submission but
the foremost there was a sudden crack in the atmosphere,
is denominated by Dr. Schenck, were blazed for destruction.
the phenomenon of one-half mile stretch of brown rabbit,
not in lessened vigor, the martial impulses of his
No. 17 was a plantation of white pine 20 years old and
forebears, an absorbing love of nature and masterful
and he was gone from sight. A further diversion was
considered a remarkably fine exhibit. With it were mixed
scientific bent checked his career in the army whose
caused just before reaching the next tip by the breaking of a
some alder trees of doubtful value.
purpose is destruction and transformed him into a
bridge over a gulley, but this damage was overcome
Tip No. 18 was the remnants of an oak nursery abandoned
promptly and the cavalcade moved on.
military leader in that army whose purpose is
in 1905.
production, later giving to America one whose impress
Tip No. 19 was also an abandoned nursery, its value lying
CHAPTER AMATEUR FORESTERS.
upon the conservation of one of its greatest, and
chiefly in the fact that it afforded a lane of protection against
At Tip No. 25, by prearrangement, a large number of
aesthetically and hygienically its greatest, natural
fires.
resources has already made his efforts famous and
young pines had been laid upon the ground and each
Tip No. 20 was a stand of yellow pine of about pole size,
whose future influence is incalculable.
present were invited by Dr. Schenck to plant one tree.
with an admixture of hardwoods which had been recklessly
Most of the party took advantage of the offer, a larger part
For many successive generations numbering will back
logged as far back as 1880.
to the days of medieval Germany the house of Schenck
of them showing more or less familiarity with the proper
CHAPTER XVIII - IMPROVEMENT CUTTINGS AND THE OAKS.
way in which to do it. The trees were young pines, one
has been an important one in the grand duchy of Hesse
Darmstadt, one of the twenty-six states which the
year transplants, now 4 years old. The tallest of them was
about fifteen inches.
German empire, or what should be known as the
At tip No. 21 Dr. Schenck showed the effects of three
German federation of states. Here Carl Alewyn Schenck
In response to a question from one of the party, repeated
improvement cuttings; one on the right and two on the left.
was born, one of a family of five brothers and two
by Dr. Schenck to one of the laborers who had been
Here the forester said:
sisters. To the dim and distant days to which the family
assembled at this point, the latter stated that an active man
"All of this here is natural regeneration of North Carolina
traditions hark back all of his ancestors were
doing all of the work in connection with it could plant from
pine; all is planted by nature, free of charge. The primeval
500 to 600 trees in a day.
government officials. His great grandfather was a
forest was cut here in 1886 and you will notice a number of
framer of national constitution and is denominated
Leaving Tip No. 25 the party rode for many minutes
American flags that mark the stumps of the North Carolina
beside the beautiful French broad river, and at the
today the Hesse-Darmstadt Washington, a notably
pine cut at that time. The man who owns the land has told
conclusion of the ride drove up on to the level of Biltmore
wealthy man in his day, one of those who financed his
me that prior to that cutting the stand of pine and hardwoods
house and all dismounted and viewed what could be seen
country in its war with the first Napoleon and who was
the father of a large family. One of his sons was a state
of the magnificent immediate surroundings.
official, minister of forests in Hesse-Darmstadt, which
DECEMBER 19, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
45
accounts for early strains of forestry lore and love in his
the English speaking nations, the founder of forestry and
out of one hundred foresters in Germany could not tell
grandson. The father of Carl A. Schenck was born in 1931, a
the noblest of men," a man at 70 years of age who "walked
how lumber is sold, by the cubic foot, the meter, or how,
contemporary of Bismarck, and was secretary of war until
through the forests like a deer and was an inspiration to
though that condition is now changing for the better.
1866. in the German civil wars the southern states, including
all." Sir Dietrich Brandis had been inspector general of
The big mill proved a failure, through the fault of local
Hesse Darmstadt, lost against the northern states, led by
forests in India, and guided through the German forests
conditions, as did the use of splash dams and other
Prussia, and Hesse Darmstadt with other troubles, lost its
young German students passing to and from India. Young
experiments unsuited to conservative lumbering on the
right of maintaining an independent army, which forced the
Schenck knew little English at the time bet a strong
Biltmore estate, by all of which failures, under Dr.
elder Schenck back on to his own resources, a not altogether
friendship grew up between him and Sir Dietrich Brandis
Schenck's wise methods, the estate has profited vastly.
unmixed evil, as among other not altogether negatively good
which was a big factor in the student's later career. In this
Dr. Schenck has had to contend with much that would
results it enabled him to raise a large family. He took up the
association he was assistant forester for several years,
have thoroughly discouraged the average man of even
practice of law and incidentally was president or vice
having acquired governmental appointment, without
the more vigorous in hi management of the Biltmore
president of a number of commercial concerns, notably
salary, after graduation from Geissen, after a previous
estate, from local conditions, native unwisdom and
chemical companies, which flourished well.
rejection due to fear of physical incapacity. As previously
prejudice, disheartening geographical and commercial
Like his brothers, Dr. Schenck attended in Darmstadt the
stated, an officer in the forestry service of Germany has
conditions to threats of personal last of
school which would correspond to the American high school,
also to serve as an officer in the German army and
which those who know this big bodied, high couraged,
acquiring also the benefits of the gymnasiums and college.
Lieutenant Schenck served one year in the horse artillery,
virile man laugh, though the threats were made by
From the Darmstadt establishment he was graduated in 1886,
in the guard corps of the grand duchy. Another of his
desperate men of tried determination. He took up work
entering the university at Tubeingen, one of the three German
instructors for whom he entertains a strong admiration
under conditions most unpromising and turned a
universities at which forestry is taught, though the country
was Dr. Walther, the well known writer upon forestry
wilderness into a practical, paying enterprise, into oneof
supports a number of technical schools in which forestry
matters, one of Germany's chief forestry inspectors and
the most beautiful areas on the American continent and
forms part of the curriculum. At Tubeingen Dr. Schenck was
secretary of forestry, from whom he learned the lesson of
a live lesson in conservative forestry, such as is not
under the immediate instruction, in forestry, of the well
the value of personal manual labor in the forest and with
afforded elsewhere and which bears the enthusiastic
known Professor Lorey and was a corps student, his career
whom he walked, imbibing instruction and inspiration,
indorsement of the state and federal governments and of
marked by those escapades, intermingled with scholastic
frequently to and from Darmstadt and the neighboring
colleges of agriculture and forestry without exception, as
industry, which seem inseparable from the high spirited, full
forest, a distance of fifteen miles.
was illustrated in the late extraordinary attendance of
blooded student; as Dr. Schenck has expressed it in later
Two years later young Schenck passed further
accredited representatives of all those interests during
years, "We did all that the good Lord has forbidden." It was
governmental examinations, acquitting himself with
the recent "forest festival" on the Biltmore estate, lasting
difficult to attend lectures on sylviculture at 8 in the morning
extraordinary credit, specifically a credit of 440 marks out
three days, when under his guidance experts and
when one went to bed at 4.
of a possible 450. Aside from his intense study, Dr.
authorities on forestry matters paid homage to and
At Tubeingen the young student formed some of his most
Schenck had had the advantage of open air instruction by
learned from the master forester.
lasting friendships and was brought into touch with the best
the best equipped foresters in Germany. In the class room
As formerly intimated in this article. Dr. Schenck's
character forming influences, which he regards as of more
he declares, he learned but little, as also through the
impress upon the future of conservative forestry, and
practical importance than rough with science. Here, too,
instructions at the forest schools, but he acquired his
upon all its ramifications, is already notably
what promised grave disaster threatened to cut short his
practical, exhaustive equipment through his excursions
considerable, and its future effects are incalculable. One
career. An accidental, sudden immersion in the river, of icy
with Sir Dietrich Brandis, Dr. Walther and Dr. Schlich, one
of the most striking phases of this is found in the
cold temperature, resulted in symptoms of tuberculosis and
of the best posted authorities on forestry, through the
Biltmore Forest School, founded and personally
young Schenck was sent by medical advice to a tuberculosis
forests of Germany and Austria.
conducted by Dr. Schenck. Here, after satisfying
asylum, one of his lungs affected. After treatment lasting
After passing the last government examinations recorded
rigorous essentials precedent to admission the pick of
about half a year he went to Geissen to study, wasting here,
above young Schenck read for and later passed
many vigorous young men-vigorous mentally, morally
according to his estimate, two of his best formative years that
successfully an examination for his degree of Ph. D., his
and physically-an taught exhaustively the best and
might have been devoted to scientific study, from his
thesis on "The Financial Side of the Oak Forest"
most practical lessons in the most approved and
eighteenth to his twentieth year "doing nothing." It was his
determining his status and the granting of his degree suma
thoroughly proven conservative forestry and are turned
father's idea that young Schenck should study law, his
cum laude. Then he applied to Dr. Brandis for a position, as
loose, practical foresters and lumberjacks, upon a
physical condition, it was feared, incapacitating him for the
he was aware that advancement in the German forest
waiting constituency of timber owners and lumber
rigorous physical examination which precedes admission to
service was discouragingly slow. At about that time
manufacturers and the government Forest Service to
the army, an absolutely essential precedent to joining the
George W. Vanderbilt had written Dr. Brandis applying for
spread the influence of their school and conserve, as
German forestry service, upon which young Schenck was
a forester to take charge of the Biltmore estate, and Dr.
never before the advent of this school and its graduates,
intent. He followed the unpalatable study of the law fitfully,
Brandis recommended Dr. Schenck, this occurring in
the forestal growth of the country.
but at the same time determinedly pursued his studies in
March, 1895. Dr. Schenck was in Italy at the time and Dr.
Dr. Schenck is president of the firm known as C. A.
forestry, including botany, chemistry, mineralogy, surveying,
Brandis, between whom and Dr. Schenck a genuine
Schenck & Co., Biltmore, timber experts, who send their
engineering and higher mathematics. His distaste for legal
fondness existed, was much touched when the latter
forces of estimators into all parts of the country. He also
lore acted as a stimulus to his other studies and he worked
telegraphed that he would accept subject to the former's
has charge of the Highland forest, a 50,000-acre tract
harder than any of the other 1,200 students. He attended
approval. At Dr. Brandis' suggestion Dr. Schenck cameto
adjoining the Biltmore estate and owned by English
fifty-five lectures each week and broke the college record for
the Biltmore estate, expecting a short stay; he has
German and American capitalists, of whose directorate
industry; incidentally he acquired a practical knowledge of
remained, the stalwart, vigorously effective forester in
he is president.
shorthand, a marked advantage to him then and later in life.
charge of the vast estate, fourteen years, excepting for short
Dr. Schenck is in effect a king in a small kingdom,
Upon the termination of his fourth year at Geissen young
visits to the fatherland. He still retains his rank in the
material and immaterial, 200 square miles in North
Schenck made an enviable record for the examinations on
German army but emains in America on continuous
Carolina and the timbered areas of the continent and of
forestry studies, his examiners, after noting that he had
leaves of absence, the necessity for which he hopes will
that larger kingdom, the future of forested growth. He
secured the highest possible credits, standing up and saying,
soon disappear. In that army two of his brothers are
has administered his kingdom wisely and with present
"Mr. Candidate, never since the university's existence has a
commissioned officers of high rank.
and future benefit to the country beyond calculation.
candidate passed as uniformly well in all branches as you
After his first year's residence in America Dr. Schenck
This forestry enthusiast, expert and authority in his own
have done.'
returned to Germany and there married Miss Adele Bopp,
section of North Carolina, wherever lumber and timber
Dr. Schenck comments upon the disadvantages of practical
daughter of the president of the Bank of Commerce and
interests are a phase in the life of any section of America,
study of forestry in Germany. In effect, the instructions are
Industry in Darmstadt. In this lady he found an ideal
in the founts of learning in this country and abroad, is
confined to gardening and botany. He never was in a saw
helpmate, one with intense, intelligently directed
hailed as a savant and benefactor.
mill in Germany nor had he or any of his fellow students
sympathy with all his purposes and pursuits and who
opportunity to investigate the lumber districts. One learned
presides gracefully and most hospitably over his home,
(To Be Continued Next Week.)
well about sylviculture but little about actual forestry
"Wolcote," a handsome and luxuriously furnished
practice, and a student or instructor who actually planted a
residence dominating one of the most beautiful views on
seedling would have been laughed at: personal manual labor
the Biltmore estate.
was discountenanced.
Dr. Schenck has usually spent some of the summer time
At Geissen Dr. Schenck came into contact with one of the
of each year since his first visit to America on German soil.
dominating influences of his later life. Here he met, admired
accompanied by some of the students of the Biltmore
and became a stanch adherent of Sir Dietrich Brandis, whom
Forest School, and there the editor of the AMERICAN
he characterizes as "the man who introduced forestry to
LUMBERMAN fraternized with him several years ago for a
considerable period. He is familiar by personal visits with
the eastern, northeastern and
southern states and longs for a
chance, at first hand, at the big
forestal growth of the far west.
"When I have two months to
spare," he declares, "I will go
with Mr. Defebaugh out west."
Several years ago Dr. Schenck
induced his mother, now aged
68, to visit him at Biltmore.
His return visits to the
fatherland are influenced
primarily by the prospect of
seeing her, of whom, like all
big men, he is enthusiastically
fond. His estimate of his
mother is almost a deification
and most worthily bestowed.
When Dr. Schenck took
charge of the Biltmore estate,
that 200 square miles of North
Carolina object lessons in the
last
possibilities
in
conservative forestry, he was
made, against his protests,
president of the Biltmore
Lumber Company,
a
Vanderbilt enterprise that
operated a huge, thoroughly
PLANTING 4-YE ODL WHITE PINETREES AT "TIP No. 25" BY PARTICIPANTS INTHETHREE
equipped band saw mill. At
DAYS' FOREST FESTIVAL.
that time he had no practical
knowledge of the lumber
business. The European
forester is not so taught; ninety
DECEMBER 26, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
50
THREE DAYS' FOREST FESTIVAL ON THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
The Feast That Followed the First Day's Fair-Thanksgiving Diners Guests of Forester Schenck- Tribute
in Speeches at an Informal, Sumptuous Banquet-Visitors' Variants
on Phases of Forestry-An Appreciation of George W. Vanderbilt.
CHAPTER THANKSGIVING DINNER.
THE MAN WHO LOOKS LIKE THE KAISER.
Nay, not for these alone
We thank Thee, Lord.
The last previous instalment of the AMERICAN
Who is the man that is riding along;
For there are other gifts
LUMBERMAN'S story of the great three days' "forest festival,"
Singing the words of an old German song,
Our eyes may see-
held in November last on the estate of George W. Vanderbilt,
Telling the boys that the road is run wrong?
A greater treasure lifts
at Biltmore, N.C., under the initiative and charge of Forester
'Tis the man that looks like the Kaiser.
Our hearts to Thee.
C. A. Schenck, concluded with a brief biographical sketch of
Who is the man on the cold black steed,
We thank Thee, Lord, for men
that master of forestry and brought to a termination the
That time reveals
outdoor enjoyment of the day. The first day, Thanksgiving
Riding along at the utmost speed,
Who toil with voice and pen
Day, was concluded by a banquet given at the Battery Park
Little fur muff and a cap o' green tweed?
For high ideals.
hotel, Asheville, N.C., a courtesy extended by Dr. Schenck to
'Tis the man who looks like the Kaiser.
We thank Thee, lord, for eyes
his many guests. Those at the dinner included most of those
That see the right,
whose names were published in the list appearing in the
Who is the man on the horse named Punch,
For full-orbed souls that rise
LUMBERMAN of December 5, augmented by George S. Powell,
Riding along at the head of the bunch,
Upon the night
secretary Board of Trade, Asheville: H. Taylor Rogers,
Don't even give us the time to eat lunch?
Asheville; J. P. Sawyer, president Battery Park bank,
'Tis the man who looks like the Kaiser.
A public purpose true
Asheville; Owen Gudger, Asheville; Burt C. Mason, Mason-
We thank Thee for,
Featherstone Lumber Company, Asheville: Rev. R R Swope,
Who is the man that juggles the chalk,
A conscience made anew
rector All Souls' Church, Biltmore.
Tells us the freight rate from here to New York,
On wrong to war,
The dinner, for which an elaborate menu had been
For greater victories
prepared, began about 9 o'clock in the evening and was
Than those of sword-
purely informal, as was announced by Dr. Schenck, who
For blessings such as these
We thank Thee, Lord.
presided at the banquet and who said that any who had
speeches to make might preferably make them before the
Protection of Southern Forests.
conclusion of the feasting-
for very good reasons; whereas after the dinner if the German has
A call was made for D. T. Keith, of Wilmington, N.C.,
drunk one or two bottles of Rhine wine his mind and wit are not
who responded by reading a paper on "The Future
as clear as before the dinner is finished, consequently I am going
Destiny of the South Depends Upon the Protection of Its
to make my dinner speech now [applause], but it is not going to
Forests." Mr. Keith paid his respects to the longleaf,
be much of a speech, but simply the simplest kind to be made-d
shortleaf and loblolly pine of the south, their durability
thanks and on a Thanksgiving subject.
and their immense value from various economical
There are so many things for which we should be thankful and
standpoints, during which he said:
so many men to whom feel thankful that do not know where to
begin, but begin with you, my friends. I thank the last one of
Take the forests of North Carolina as a whole, comprising
you for taking the trouble of coming down here. You honor me
its cypress, ash, elm tupelo, sweet and red gum, poplar,
by your presence and you give me your backing by your
oak, hickory, basswood and hemlock, producing more than
presence. Thank you, gentlemen, every one of you, for coming
their proportion of the 300 species in the south and
and helping me, and by your presence giving me that backing
constituting a great portion of the wealth of our state and
which we require. Living in the woods, never seeing anyone
southland; it is estimated that three-fifths of the standing
except perhaps the president of the bank when we are short of
timber of the United States is now in the south and that one
money, and never meeting any other civilized persons, we are
half of the labor employed in the forests of the United States
particularly glad and particularly thankful for your coming and
is employed in the south, producing annually something
helping us to celebrate in a humble and simple way the tenth
"THE MAN WHO LOOKS LIKE THE KAISER."
like $175,000,000, while the north and west have almost
anniversary of my dear and beloved forest school [Applause].
depleted their supply. That being true, the main source of
There are many gentlemen to whom I am particularly obliged
Says 1.0p is the price of salt pork?
supply of this product must come from the south in the
and feel thankful today. There are above all the various chiefs of
'Tis the man who looks like the Kaiser.
future. At the rapid rate at which it is being cut, the
the other departments on the estate, of the religious department
government report says, the supply will last only about
headed by the Rev. Dr. Swope, and the electrical department and
Who is the man that corrects our "exams,"
twenty-eight years longer. Isn't it time for every thinking
many others. I am thinking of these gentlemen who helped me in
Tells us our papers are not worth two damns;
person to sit up and take notice of the merciless destruction
these tasks, and I thank you all, gentlemen
Saying our answers are nothing but shams?
of our forests, which is destroying our agricultural as well as
And then comes, not to be forgotten, my beloved old boys, little
'Tis the man who looks like the Kaiser.
greatly affecting our manufacturing interests?
boys who are now out in life and who came o share with us today
in helping to celebrate and again to assure me that they are yet
affiliated with the old-young institution ten years old. I thank
After the jovial uproar had subsided J. E. Defebaugh,
Mr. Keith referred to the piney wood "rooter," scrub
you, boys!
editor of the AMERICAN LUMBERMAN, spoke as follows,
cattle and reckless lumbermen as the greatest enemies of
the forest. He went into details of the destruction which
And there is another man, last but not least whom I want to
observing Dr. Schenck's request to the effect that each
should speak "as the spirit moved him":
they wrought. He referred to foreign methods of forest
mention George Vanderbilt [Applause]. George is not here
conservation as an object lesson for our own country and
today and does not know anything of little fuss, but want to say
The good old custom of conducting an affair of this kind in
that George Vanderbilt is a nobly spirited American; as high
concluded by saying:
the German way is one which commends itself to all of us.
I
principled a man as I ever met; a man of high ideals; reticent if
am sure, and in recognition of that custom feel as I did few
For that reason it behoves every North Carolinian to
you meet him but of splendid purposes, and who has given to me
weeks ago when I visited Quaker meeting in Pennsylvania-
all want of chance to develop, a chance to work, chances to put
appeal to our present legislators to give us a statutory stock
feel that the spirit is about to move me. I want to express
law, and if they are statesmen worthy to represent the great
in our ideas, and thank Mr. Vanderbilt [Applause]. And now,
personally my thanks to Dr. Schenck for the many good things
if you will all do me a favor, join me in three cheers for George
state of North Carolina they will protect the future and its
he has done to me in the last ten years, by counsel, by friendly
unborn generations, rather than listen to the clamor of few
Vanderbilt
action of one kind of another in this country and abroad, for I
who may not want to be restricted to slaughtering the forest,
had the very distinguished pleasure of meeting him when he
This was followed by all rising and cheering for the master
and those who may have the piney woods rooter and scrub
was abroad with his pupils-
cattle which they want to run at large, destroying annually
of the Biltmore estate.
Dr. Schenck we met at the Hofbrau house in
more than they would bring if they were put upon the
The cheering was followed by an innovation as cheering as
Munich
market besides being distributers of disease, which makes it
it was interesting. The strong, fresh voices of the attending
Mr. Defebaugh-And I enjoyed his hospitality there.
almost impossible for the progressive element in this state to
pupils of the Biltmore Forest School rang out in their original
During all these ten years I have hoped for the privilege of
raise stock profitably.
college songs, the apparent disrespect in one, "The Man Who
meeting him here, and now having enjoyed with all of you
Can't we all stand together and form one solid body
Looks Like the Kaiser," being in reality intended as a mark of
today's delightful experiences, and having in prospect another
pleading the just cause before the legislature in January for
respect and esteem and so accepted by him who, facially and
day or two, I feel that I must express myself briefly, and
the protection of our forests, which means more than most
in virile strength, reflects the ruler of his native country, and
particularly because it is Thanksgiving day and because Dr.
statesmen can conceive of? If so, begin now the movement
who beamed appreciatively upon his pupils as they sang.
Schenck has sounded the keynote for speech making here
we are advocating by writing your representative to give us
They were rewarded with three cheers. The song is given
tonight. So rather than say anything of a general character I
state stock law, and our national forest reserve, that the
here:
am going to speak about men, for the one thing of all that
nation, especially North Carolina, is looking to with so
impressed me today was the beauty and utility of Dr.
Schenck's work in the field and in his school and as
exemplified in the work as we have found it
In addition to the trees, the vistas of mountain, forest and
stream which we have seen, the beauties of nature, which have
interested us and which we expect will interest us in retrospect
for many a day. I could not help but think of the men here in
the making as phases of the many things for which we have to
be thankful, and I recalled a little poem that I had in my
pocket, written by the "Lumberman Poet" of the AMERICAN
LUMBERMAN, of which have the privilege of being editor. It is
Thanksgiving poem, and will read it:
WE THANK THEE
Not for our wealth of trees
We thank Thee, Lord,
Not for the victories
Of our good sword,
Not for our fruitful fields
And sun and rain,
Nor for their yellow yields
Of garnered grain,
C.A. KEFFER, W. B. TOWNSEND, J. E. DEFEBAUGH,
Not for the builded stone
C. RANKIN
Our wealth to hoard
B. L. ELLIOTT AND S. CONKLIN.
DECEMBER 26, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
51
much favor, will be solved to a great extent by beginning it at
For a number of years I have been quite interested in forestry
Our planting up there amounts to $20,000 worth a year,
home.
and have read all that could get in that line that I had the
but none of our planting compares in any respect with that
A Pennsylvanian's Views.
capacity to appreciate, but since this day's journeyings with Dr.
which Dr. Schenck has done here. Another word I had
The next speaker was B. L. Elliott, commissioner of forestry
Schenck I appreciate that there has been so much to learn that I
wished to say was that I had the pleasure of working for
of Pennsylvania, who was called for by a score of voices and
really feel that have not yet touched the surface. I would like
nearly two years with one of the graduates of the Biltmore
responded:
to say something to show my appreciation of the wonderful
school, and if all of the students are or will be of the
work that the doctor is doing, and think I can best express
standard that he was, I am sure there is no question about
I do not know why you should call upon me to talk to you. I do
myself by saying that I hope the good Lord will protect and
the quality of the men graduated from Biltmore.
not know much about forestry. True, I have worked at it more or
care for him and allow him to see some of his high ideals
less seventy odd years, and have been around today to learn
realized. [Applause.]
I hope will be able to come back twenty years from now
something about it, and have learned a great deal. I have been
and see Dr. Schenck and his work [Applause.]
very thankful to Dr. Schenck for the mistakes he has made and
The spirit next moved H. L. Eickelberger, of Staunton,
the intelligence and sincerity with which he has admitted them.
Va., who said:
A short speech was delivered by one of its
[Applause.] I came here because I thought I would get at the
representatives on behalf of the engineering department
I have nothing further to say than that I want to say that I
truth I don't know much about forestry.
of the school, in which high tribute was paid to Dr.
thank you very much for the opportunity to be known to you
Schenck and the extraordinary value of his work past
Here Mr. Elliott related a humorous story illustrative of his
I came especially to be with you. We have been interested for a
and present.
point and continued:
number of years in our timber and hope to carry out some of
The Asheville Spirit.
your ideas as illustrated here. We need them in our business
It is just that way with me. There are some things I do no know
Another speech with local flavor was made by a citizen
and I am sure all practical lumbermen who are looking to
about forestry and one wish to learn about is, how are we going
of Asheville, in part as follows:
reforestation would much rather have in their employ Biltmore
to reforest our country by annual reproduction? I cannot see the
men than Yale men [Prolonged applause.]
As a citizen of Asheville I wish to express my gratitude
way to do it. When you destroy dil of the timber or let fire
A Pennsylvania Forest Schoolmaster.
and my appreciation of what the Biltmore estate has done
destroy it and the seed you cannot expect something for nothing.
for Asheville and western North Carolina. I believe voice
A great percentage of our country will not be reforested. You
Several of the banqueters called for Robert S. Conklin, of
the sentiment of 90 percent of the people of this section
must plant trees. I may be ignorant and I may disagree with
Pennsylvania, who said:
when I say that every influence that has been sent out from
many of you but present methods do not seem effective. I have
I desire to thank you personally for the opportunity which
this magnificent estate has been for good and for the
seen the second crop harvested, but that was the end of it There
you have given me to see something that I do not think we
uplifting of our people. [Applause.] We feel grateful to the
never was to be third crop. How are we to exercise the police
could see anywhere else in this country. I do not think any
Biltmore estate for having Dr. Schenck in our midst We feel
power to control the country and plant trees? It must be done in
other place can show us the planting, the nurseries and the
grateful to Dr. Schenck for having brought you gentlemen
some shape, but how I am not lawyer enough to determine, but
school that you have all within one area.
on this occasion and we hope you will come again
we have to control the forests in that way or we shall fail of our
I was very much impressed today with the young men of
[Applause.]
intent
your school. I suppose I noticed them more particularly
I don't know how the lumberman should be blamed, charged
E.P Broadhurst, of Greensboro, N.C., in charge of the
because I am a director of little forest school in Pennsylvania
with destroying the timber of the country when a man much cut
in which we have thirty students endeavoring to teach them
legal department of the Biltmore estate, made an address
everything he can sell to make profit on it It is unreasonable to
the same principles that you are re-practical it
which from a humorous point of view was the gem of
expect man to cut timber to sell for less than he could get out of
pleased me very much to see that they were so attentive to ever
the evening. It was largely a repetition of humorous
it. The rod man takes all that he can, the railroad tie man and the
work Dr. Schenck spoke and every motion that he made.
stories one after another, told in inimitable style,
pulp man and he leaves nothing as thick as my arm. I will not
There did not seem to be anything that escaped them and they
illustrative of conditions on the Biltmore estate
complain of that man if he will replant the trees. Another thing I
seemed to be perfectly in sentiment with you, which shows
generally and in the Biltmore Forest School particularly,
don't know: how you expect people to reforest the country and
good judgment on their part. They have before them a life that
with an undercurrent of seriousness.
tax us for our land as we are taxed today. It can not be done.
I think no other profession can equal They are going to do
[Applause.]
From an Instructor's Standpoint.
work not so much probably for themselves as for the future
Our state of Pennsylvania I boast of. It has done as much
generations. Therefore the responsibility is all the greater on
Collier Cobb, of the faculty of the Biltmore Forest
probably as any state in the Union for forestry and, I believe, has
them.
School and of the University of North Carolina,
the best organization, but it can not do much in the face of
In Pennsylvania we have done a little practical work, but not
followed. Pertinent portions of his remarks include the
exorbitant taxes.
what we should have done. While we have purchased 816
following:
A Philanthropist's Impressions.
acres of land we have done very little in the way of improving
I have been greatly interested in the general trend of the
A call was made for the Hon. James H. Stout, of
it We thought that we would better get the land and in that
remarks bearing on the saving of our forests, but there are
Menomonie, Wis., who said briefly:
way tie the state down b caring for it than to risk getting
many difficulties in the way that even Mr. Keith may not
enough appropriation to care for it at this time. I hope that in
I am not at all accustomed to public speaking, but I can not
have thought of.
the coming season the legislature will give us enough money to
forbear making a few remarks. After driving over small area of
do some ork-something that we can in twenty years show
This point Mr. Cobb emphasized by a humorous story
the Biltmore estate am deeply impressed with the spirit that the
you as you have shown us here today. I would like very much
and continued:
students of this school seem to have, and trust that as they go on
if I were living twenty years from now and in the forestry
with the work it will be a constant inspiration to them to serve
In state like ours Mr. Keith would have some difficulty in
ranks to be able to show each one of the gentlemen here today
their country along that line. I am also impressed with this fact
getting stock laws passed that would keep the razorback our
what Pennsylvania will have done by that time and I believe
while the work being done here by Dr. Schenck and by his school
of the roots of our trees, and yet that is one of the important
that we would equal what you have done here, and you, Dr.
is very valuable it is of advantage 6r you to think of the
things to do and it is a problem that will have to be solved
Schenck, have done better than any other person yet that I
influence that grows out of the work here, that you and and all
know of in this country.
somewhere. taking my cue from him, I would like to
of us will carry to our homes.
emphasize a few things that he brought out in his paper.
I thank you for the opportunity to be present today and to see
I desire now to thank the doctor very kindly for having given
what I have and learn what have, which is a good deal, and I
Here Mr. Cobb emphasized some of the points of Mr.
me an opportunity to be present and to go up and look over the
hope you will continue in your work-continue to educate
Keith's address by comparison with conditions abroad
fine work they are now doing, and hope this may be only the
young men for the work you are doing here today.
beginning of many more forest festivals. [Applause.]
urging particularly the necessity of keeping stock off of
Praise from the Pastor.
Mr. Rowlands here proposed three cheers for Doctor
forest land, and saying:
Schenck, which were given by all present. They
If we can have laws of that kind passed in all the states the
Responding to a popular call. Rev. R P. Swope, of Biltmore,
accentuated the compliment by rising, after which the
problem of reforestation would soon solve itself. It has
N.C., rector of All Souls' Church, said in part:
diners joined generally in singing "For He Is a Jolly Good
shown that right here in this forest We are seeing marked
As the representative of the ecclesiastical department of the
Fellow."
changes wrought by Dr. Schenck along that line. He has not
Biltmore estate I want to express my gratification at seeing such
always succeeded in keeping the razorback out of the forest
an assemblage here at this time, and incidentally to give my
Dr. Schenck asked my neighbor here a question which he
and those in his forests have become roley-poley porkers
indorsement of the moral character of Dr. Schenck [Applause.]
did not answer- what would he do if he were a peacock? I
and are well worth while, as the bears and some of the forest
The boys sang that he looks like the Kaiser, he has good many of
told him if were a peacock I would have my tail feathers
students have already learned. And yet it is very hard for
the high qualities also that distinguish our own chief magistrate.
spread out like this just now. [Laughter and applause.
some of us to realize that this can be accomplished. As a
He is an appreciative lover of nature; he also appreciates keeping
Forestry in the Empire State.
representative of the University of North Carolina I rejoice
in touch with the younger generation that is coming into his
Before the laughter and applause had subsided R.
in the work that Dr. Schenck is doing here.
hands and he is molding them to make of them successful
Pettis, state forester of New York, was called. He said:
Here the speaker referred in detail to the fact that
foresters
I was sent down here from New York to get the benefit of Dr.
125,000 acres of the Biltmore estate had at one time been
I think the doctor has shown you a great deal today that is very
valuable He will show you more tomorrow and still more on
Schenck's lectures. I have only heard part of them yet but am
legally an asset of the University of North Carolina but
Saturday. You go through the estate and see what is being done
more than doubly repaid for my trip.
had reverted to the Biltmore estate, and he said:
and think you will realize that he has here not merely vista of
I would like to say just a word or so about our work in New
York, and I can only say that by comparison. As to acreage,
We have cause for thanksgiving that that forest has fallen
scenic beauty but a good, sound business proposition which will
our reserve land is about ten times the acreage of the Biltmore
into the hands of such a good man as Dr. Schenck and I
work out nicely for the community and the state and the nation
estate, or 1,800,000 acres. The land we are planting there is not
believe that the state is going to gain more from it as an
and for generations to come.
land that cost $30 an acre; it is land on which the people who
object lesson to the state in Dr. Schenck's hands than if we
Here Dr. Swope told a humorous story wholly in keeping
owned it would not pay the taxes; it is almost like a sandy
ourselves possessed it [Applause.]
with the cloth and emphasizing his address. He concluded
beach I was much interested this morning in another way; in
The speaker stated that the accomplishments of the
by saying:
the thought of the difference in conditions, how you are
Biltmore estate in the way of conservative forestry were
planting here today while in the loose sand at Saranac lake we
I trust that the circumstances which have brought us together on
an object lesson of what the state in cooperation and the
have little opportunity. The returns from our land are much
this tenth anniversary of the forest school will work to bring you
national government might accomplish on a larger scale.
different from those Dr. Schenck receives. We have a
together at the twentieth anniversary. [Applause.]
constitutional provision prohibiting cutting on state land under
North Carolina and Virginia Sentiment.
Wisconsin's Appreciation.
penalty of $10 a tree. This year I would not dare to say how
J. Elwood Cox, of High Point, N.C., paid a glowing
The next speaker was Lamont Rowlands, of the C. A.
many thousands of dollars' worth of timber has been burned
tribute to the work of the Biltmore estate generally and
Goodyear Lumber Company, Tomah, Wis., who said:
and killed and left on the ground which could have been
to its high forester especially. He was followed by Mr.
utilized but for the constitution absolutely prohibiting that
Broadhurst, who introduced Frederick Tate, of High
I feel deeply grateful for all the good I have been getting today.
and it was left dead loss.
Point, who said briefly:
RAPID TRANSIT FOR NORTH CAROLINA MOONSHINER
A GLIMPSE OF THE FRENCH BROAD RIVER IN THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
DECEMBER 26, 1908
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
52
I am no speech maker and can only express my appreciation by
sheds for the rivers and the waters for the cities.
would see the value of it. The American farmer is not fool.
thanking you and incidentally paying a compliment to Doctor
In Tennessee we have more of the Tennessee and the
I have heard it suggested that these landmarks be preserved
Schenck's yellow poplar, with which we cannot hope to compete,
Cumberland rivers as object lessons than any other state or
and in ten years from now all who could attend be taken
and I think that is quite a compliment to the doctor.
states through which they flow. Suppose this watershed in the
over the same ground to see what has been done in ten
southern Appalachians is denuded; what becomes of those
years. I offer that as a suggestion. [Applause.]
J. B. Manson, of Petersburg, Va, said in part:
rivers? What becomes of our wells and our springs? I merely
Work of the Owner of Biltmore.
I want to thank Dr. Schenck as a guest from the Old Dominion,
want to suggest to you this thought
I saw so much today that have not had time yet to digest it
At this point remarks were made by Mr. Rowlands
the mother state. I do not know whether there is anyone else here
from Virginia, but I want to thank you for my presence here,
I have been thinking about it and shall take it home with me.
which met with popular sympathy. He said:
which was unexpected
I want to see all that I can tomorrow. I shall take that home
I think there is one point that we as a body have
I have been so interested today and so entertained and so
with me. In due time when I get the subject more thoroughly
overlooked and that is to provide some suitable way in
impressed that I want to go back try to induce our legislators to
digested I hope to be able to think out something else that will
which we can best express our appreciation of the
do something to establish a preserve in our state. I think the
be of advantage to you, Dr. Schenck.
wonderful work Mr. Vanderbilt has been sponsor for here.
different states ought to work together a while and I hope to get
The way came to be here is that was imprudent enough to
He is no more than human and I think every man
back and inculcate some ideas that you have enabled me to learn
write little pamphlet on this subject and somebody, I suppose
appreciates an expression of his brother's love and
today.
it was the publishers, sent Dr. Schenck a copy, and I received
appreciation, and the last two of three years all we have
from him very prettily expressed invitation to come here and
A Harvard Teacher's Views.
heard from the sources of government has been to conserve,
be with him and celebrate this forestry fair. He said that he
conserve. We have had a large Congress at Washington to
Prof. John G. Jack, of the Arnold Arboretum, Harvard
wanted to see the man who wrote that little pamphlet and get
devise ways of protecting our forests and other natural
University, was here introduced and said in part:
personally acquainted with him. I wanted to see him and get
resources, but Mr. Vanderbilt a man who perhaps has been
The arboretum is not the forest school but it may be useful in
personally acquainted with him
left an unusual share of good things of life, has gone ahead
connection with the forest school It is an institution started as a
I was forty-two years at the bar, and I have enjoyed, if you
practically and shown a large amount of good judgment,
technical garden for the study of trees, and, of course, they have
will pardon a personal allusion, a large part of it in teaching in
incidentally building a monument to himself but showing
to be trees adapted to our climate, and we find that the arboretum
the law department of the Vanderbilt University, of which the
what an American citizen should be; and think it would be
was started something like thirty years ago; in fact, the first trees
whole south is proud. [Applause.] The grandfather of the
a graceful act that a committee be appointed to draft up
owner of this estate, Cornelius Vanderbilt, founded Vanderbilt
planted were put out in the spring of 1896, the spring first went
some resolutions that would be fitting for this occasion,
there, and it is really a section of trees as individuals and not
University, the greatest educational institution today south of
showing our appreciation
under forest conditions. We have, however, in the last five years
the Ohio river. I say that without detracting form any other,
nor are there many north of the Ohio river superior to it
The suggestion, or motion, met with many seconds,
started a forest school that is quite distinct from the arboretum
[Applause.] I do not believe that when Commodore
but was held in abeyance for the time being.
which is under separate management
The forest school is not the scientific school and has been until
Vanderbilt made his vast donation to the establishment of that
Canadian Cooperation.
this year an undergraduate school, students taking the regular
great institution of learning he sensed the full force of what he
course when finishing. This year we have started it as a
was doing. I do not believe that he could have realized it, and
One of this distinguished Canadian visitors, Elwood
yet he was a man of wisest prescience. I do not believe that
Wilson, of Grand Mere, P. Q., was the next speaker. He
postgraduate course, taking in students from any college of
this man here senses the full effect and wisdom of what he has
said in part:
school from which go out students who have passed the needed
requirements. We have only thirteen students now. Last year
done. I believe that the pebble that he has dropped into his
I will ask indulgence to say that Dr. Schenck's work has
ocean here will broaden and broaden and broaden. See these
and in years before we had some undergraduates who were not
spread not only in the United States but in Canada and has
taking the full course; we have now thirteen who seem to be very
young men here that are being taught forestry in this country;
brought a few Canadians down here to learn something.
promising young men.
see these people assembled here from every part of this great
One characteristic of the American people is viewed
Of course, we had in the first four years to go out on private
country of ours, riding over this land and getting an object
sympathetically by the people of Canada. [Applause.] It is
lands in the vicinity for field work. This summer we have had
lesson of what can be done by a German citizen. Take this in,
exemplified in a condition certainly fraught with great
2,000 acres of land given us. This forest is 2,000 acres, composed
gentlemen, and you may have some conception of what will
danger to the whole continent all of its progress and all its
mainly of white pine and with a good deal of hardwoods also.
happen in the next fifty, seventy-five, five hundred years from
welfare. An unfortunate characteristic of the American
They estimate about 10,000,000 feet of white pine ready for
now growing out of this example.
people in that they are lawless, especially lawless, where the
marketing, and that will be gradually cut, furnishing
Gentlemen, I predict the continued existence of the
forests are concerned. To the man indifferent to the forests,
opportunities for the students to study lumbering conditions to
government of the United States and of the states. I admit no
careless with his fires, with his matches, in his trespasses,
an extent, this to be supplemented by further work in the field.
promise of problem that assumes for a moment to doubt the
the forest has been the great enemy of the people in clearing
That is all should say about our forest school. It is not really a
continuance of this government or the continuance of this
the country, and that trait is still inherent in almost all our
new school but, compared with the Biltmore school which has
people. We are here to stay. We have a government; we have
people. The foresters above all people should be
been so well established and with Yale and even with Michigan
a people; we have a country the like of which civilization has
commissioners for the suppression of this lawlessness in
and some others, it is comparatively raw, but we hope with all the
never produced before us. [Applause.] But recently in this
regard to the forests.
advantages which Harvard has it will become a good school, not
county one-half was at war against the other half and we
The forester has a tremendous duty before him All
only ethically and technically but a good practical school also,
fought, as President Roosevelt recently said, until we were
through the history of forestry in this country the movement
because the practical work is what is valued. The Yale students
"beaten to a frazzle." Down south look at us today. Not less
has been carried on by men interested in the land who have
ought to turn out pretty good men in some cases, but there, no
than twenty-five years from the time that the war closed
given their service and their work unselfishly, by men who
doubt will be some failures as in others.
confederate soldiers were upon the supreme bench of the
have been not only idealists but eminently practical. It is
I think the whole country generally and the forest schools
United States, in both houses of congress, in the cabinet of the
unnecessary to name them, but everyone knows Professor
particularly owe good deal to Dr. Schenck for the example he
presidents, I myself had the honor to be appointed judge by a
Roth, Gifford Pinchot, C. A Schenck, what they have done
has set. I have heard criticisms about German methods and
president of the United States. I bow my head to a civilization
for this country and what is being done through them in the
American methods and how unsuited German and foreign
that can produce that result [Applause.] Let us preserve our
way of education And there are the embryo foresters of
methods were to American forest conditions, but we must be
forests. Let the states do their duty within their constitutional
today, a magnificent body of young men going out and
guided by the results of experiments and have always had full
limitations. Let our government at Washington do its duty and
carrying on great work, and Dr Schenck is certainly doing
sympathy with these experiments because I have realized that
there will be little left to be done but to employ intelligent
an admirable part in it in training men to carry into the
while American methods and commonsense lumbering were very
agents to carry forward the work.
forests the principles of the engineers. These be men to look
valuable the time would come when German methods would be
I thank you, gentlemen, for your attention. I thank you for
up to the world over, men who will handle a problem so
more appreciated in their exactness; that their statistical faculties
your invitation calling me here. [Prolonged applause.]
that it will pay, which is the secret of forestry. And it is to
would be more developed, and I think that in the last half dozen
Clinton Crane, of Cincinnati, Ohio, followed Judge Judd,
be hoped that all the young men going out of here will bear
years they have been advanced very much in this country and Dr.
paying his respects to that gentleman and in a kindly way
in mind that they must not only utilize these teachings but
Schenck has no doubt impressed his views upon this country a
must exercise them tactfully, be men of judgment, men of
differing from him in regard to methods of forest
good deal and they have become Americanized and American
common sense, who will have all the good qualities of the
conservation. He expressed his pleasure and
teachers and others owe a great deal to the spirit he has infused in
oldest woodsmen, our forefathers in this country.
Germanizing to a certain extent American forests.
acknowledged the advantages he had gained in visiting the
[Applause.]
I don't think that Dr. Schenck takes proper credit to himself. I
Biltmore estate. He expressed and indebtedness to Dr.
note this from one paragraph in his program. On the very last
Schenck, saying: "I do not think another invitation could
A motion was here offered and passed unanimously
page, Tip No. 63, he says: "Do not talk to the conductor; the
have taken me to Asheville at this time than yours."
appointing Lamont Rowlands, of the C. A. Goodyear
conductor is an ox; you will agree with me when you see him."
The Fault for Denudation.
Lumber Company, Tomah, Wis.; Defebaugh, editor
but when you have seen Dr. Schenck hustle around as he has
of the AMERICAN LUMBERMAN, Chicago, and Judge J. W.
The next speaker touched a popular chord by saying:
today you will concede that while he has the strength of an ox he
Judd, of the Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn., a
has more responsibility and more initiative than the conductor,
I have heard several of the speakers say this evening that the
committee to formulate the resolutions offered by Mr.
and he knows more about the forest than do the deer.
lumbermen were destroying the forests. I say that, in this
Rowlands appreciative of the services to his country
[Applause.]
region especially, it is not eh lumbermen but the farmers. In
generally and to conservative forestry specifically of
good many cases the lumberman is endeavoring to save a few
From the Legal Viewpoint
George W. Vanderbilt, of Biltmore, N. C.
good trees while the farmer has rolled them into a heap and
F. W. Rane, state forester of Massachusetts, addressed
The next speaker was Judge J. W. Judd, of the University of
destroyed them, also destroying the soil The lumberman cuts
the banqueters, expressing his pleasure in the forest fai
Tennessee, who after some remarks devoted courteously to
out few good trees and leaves the rest, but the farmer uses it
and its attendant festivities and his faith in the future of
one of the previous speakers said:
all up, and I would suggest that everyone here foresters,
forestry.
lumbermen and everyone aterested-wheneven they get a
The little investigation that I have given this subject convinces
The banquet closed at 11:55 p. m. with cheers for
chance to talk to the small land owners and framers will tell
me that the time has come in this country when we shall even up
George W. Vanderbilt C. A. Schenck the Biltmore estate
matters. They have denuded our forests, they threaten our soil,
them of the great things that are being done here in the way of
and the Biltmore Forest School.
plantations. I have done it myself to a large extent and got
and hence the food of our people.
I have heard it suggested here tonight that there is probably
some interested enough to say that they will try it, and if that
(To be continued.)
under our system of government no constitutional power in the
could be done here and there it would soon grow, because they
states and federal government to deal with this subject Now,
gentlemen, I am from the state of Tennessee, though a child of
North Carolina I am a democrat of democrats. I believe in the
constitution of the government of he United States as it was
written by our fathers. I do not believe in amending our
constitution by judicial or legislative or executive construction
[applause] nor do think it necessary. We inherited the common
law from England and our constitutions, both state and federal
must be constructed in light of this common law from which they
were enacted. The highest law of all laws, that law that knows no
superior, is that the safety of the public, the safety of the people, is
the supreme law of the land. Our constitutions, as I say, both
state and national, recognize in the mind of any constitutional
lawyer that here is ample authority in the constitutions, both of
the United States and of the states, to deal with this forestry
question as it ought to be dealt with, nor can find any serious
difficulty in constructing a proper principle upon which the tax
laws for the forest lands can not be predicated so as to do equal
and exact justice to all. It is a principle that is recognized by all
constitutional lawyers that the legislature has the power to
classify subjects for taxation It may classify corporations,
railroads, it may classify the different subjects, and so it may
classify lands for taxation and by that means so impose taxes
upon forest lands & not only to do no injustice to their owners
but to encourage the perpetuity of the forests and the constant
growth of them so that their owners may get from them an
income and at the same time preserve the forests and the water
JANUARY 2, 1909
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
54
THREE DAYS' FOREST FESTIVAL ON THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
Start of the Second Days' Outing-A Midstream Spectacle-Macadam Roads of Western North Carolina-
Object Lessons on the Biltmore Estate-Commercial and Manufacturing
Features of Asheville and Vicinity.
CHAPTER XXIV - THANKSGIVING
banks of the river. The other occupants of his carriage,
perfect repair, and form a useful object lesson of which
DINNER.
with the exception of ecolored driver, discreetly used the
advantage has been taken in other and even in distant
ferry boat to cross. The driver of the AMERICAN
sections.
The last instalment of this chronicle of the great Biltmore
LUMBERMAN carriage guided his team nonchalantly down
forest fair-Chapter XXIII took leave of the guests of Dr. C.
the steep bank and boldly out into the swift stream. The
CHAPTER XXVII STOCK RAISING.
A. Schenck on the midnight that closed Thanksgiving day,
writer curled his feet under him and watched the rising
amid sumptuous scenes of enjoyment in extreme contrast to
water apprehensively. His eyes bulged as it passed higher
The whole Vanderbilt estate has been an object lesson
that depicted in an accompanying cut, of a freedman's
than the axle. A few yards farther the bulge became more
not only in road building but in agriculture and stock
Thanksgiving which is racy of the soil in the poorer quarters
pronounced as the waters rose to the level of the box and
raising, a fact which was more or less impressed upon
of Asheville, on the outskirts of the Biltmore estate and
the carriage wobbled dangerously over the boulders in the
the participants, and specifically by the visit to the
throughout western North Carolina. The festivities of
river bed. Still farther, past the middle of the stream, that
Vanderbilt model dairy. Owing to the importation of
Thanksgiving evening at the Battery Park hotel, Asheville,
bulge became a grotesque facial phenomenon as the water
blooded hogs the razorback has practically disappeared
while in no case indecorous, had been so thorough in a
entered the box of the carriage and it lurched violently
from the mountains of that section. A decade ago he
hospitable sense that most of the participants were
from side to side; but the objective bank grew nearer and
was practically the only representative there of the
disinclined to rise at a reasonable early hour Friday morning;
nearer, the horses pulled sturdily and the crowd on the
porcine race. The contributing influence to this end was
but the edict of Forester Schenck, who is of that class whom
bank laughed, shouted and cheered derisively, the other
the fact that one can buy in that section a blooded boar
people obey instinctively, forced an early beginning of the
side was gained and the writer, conscious of an
pig at a comparatively small price. At one time the
second day of the forest festival It began at the portals of the
acquirement of "fisherman's luck," breathed more freely as
Vanderbilt blooded hogs were sold at very fancy prices
the big team dragged the carriage clear of the river and up
but as they have been bought and bred throughout the
a steep incline to safety.
country there no longer remains a local market at such
One of the carriages, with its team, became stalled in the
figures.
river and had to be assisted from the bank, but, aside from
One progressive step in stock raising which is
that mishap and the humorous side, the fording of the
noticeable is the character of the milch cows. One can
French Broad river was one of the most picturesquely
hardly find a herd of cattle in western North Carolina
interesting features of the three days' forest fair.
that does not include numbers of the Jersey or Alderney
blood, a result directly traceable to either Mr.
CHAPTER XXVI LESSONS IN
Vanderbilt's own herd or to his example in breeding
GOOD ROADS
blooded stock. Before Mr. Vanderbilt came to Asheville
a good Jersey cow was something of a rarity; it was the
At this point in these chronicles a digression may be
show piece of the average farm and was exhibited with
made in behalf of some of the numerous object lessons
pride and the details of its cost and performances were
acquired during the three days' forest fair that are not
enlarged upon. A notable fact since that date is that no
specifically treated of elsewhere. Among these object
one pretends to raise cows in that section for dairying
lessons that were prominently in evidence was one on
purposes but that his herd is based upon thoroughly
good roads.
good stock. Many herds through western North
Except upon the steep mountain sides and through the
Carolina embrace a high percentage of full blooded
forests, good roads are the rule throughout the Biltmore
Jersies, Alderneys or some of the other high grade
estate. They aggregate in the neighborhood of 200 miles,
breeds.
all macadam. Mr. Vanderbilt's road work may be said to
The Vanderbilt estate has exploited extensively the
have introduced macadam roads to that section of western
raising of chickens. The poultry show held recently in
North Carolina, and it was one of the main causes in
Asheville included one of the finest exhibits of chickens
inducing Buncombe county, in which Asheville and the
ever seen in the south and they came largely from
Biltmore estate are located, to start the system of macadam
western North Carolina, including many entries from
THE LODGE - ENTRANCE TO EBILTMORE ESTATE.
road construction throughout the county. Specifications
the Vanderbilt stock. Poultry raisers from all over the
used by Buncombe county are almost practically identical
state and many good judges from elsewhere declare that
with those used on the Biltmore estate, though it is
the recent Asheville poultry show was one of the best
Battery Park hotel with the arrivals of open carriages and
probable that the county roads are more heavily built on
exhibits if its kind ever seen where-thoroughbreds
account of the greater traffic that they have to bear. But,
saddle horses and their departures, bearing the eighty or
and chickens that lay big eggs.
unequivocally, Mr. Vanderbilt's initiative is what started
more fortunate ones who were to participate in a perfect
Improvements in these matters of course are not
the movement, and it had its advent at a time when the
day's outing a smart, imposing pageant that enlivened the
altogether due to Mr. Vanderbilt but are directly
question of good roads was being agitated throughout the
steep drives around the hotel and quickened the life of the
traceable to his influence. At one time Mr. Vanderbilt
country. The commissioners of Buncombe county adopted
streets of Asheville. It moved quickly to Biltmore village,
furnished free the services of a thoroughbred Jersey bull.
the construction of macadam roads among the first in the
whence, reformed and under the marshalship of Dr. Schenck,
and through this good blooded stock was disseminated
state, though Mecklenberg county was perhaps the first,
it started through the picturesque lodge of the Biltmore
through that section.
and it has a high reputation today all over the state and in
estate, one of its artistic show places, of especial interest to the
fact all over the Union for good macadam roads. The
visitors because it is adorned with a perfect specimen of hard
CHAPTER XXVIII. TITLES TOTHE BILTMORE LANDS.
county has been systematically building such roads as fast
maple ("avenue" maple). This is a tree fifteen to eighteen
as it could do so with convict labor- has employed no
inches in diameter, typical of numerous others on the estate,
Titles to the great area now known as the Biltmore
free labor-since some time prior to 1895, perhaps twelve
which have grown beautifully and rapidly, a demonstration
estate were acquired largely through stress and active
or fifteen year ago. The building of these roads is
of what proper care of shade trees will do and how quickly it
opposition. When George W. Vanderbilt started his
expensive on account of the grades. The engineers are
can accomplish their growth. This lodge is the main entrance
land purchases in North Carolina it was discovered that
to the estate. On certain days any reputable person will be
required to get the grades below an average of 3 percent
he was likely to outrun his supply of ready money and it
and are never allowed to exceed 6 percent except on the
given a permit to go upon the estate upon the payment of a
is related (this without violation of the family
short hills.
25-cent fee, which is devoted to a worthy charity. Formerly
confidence) that the rest of the family feared that he was
The estimated cost of building these macadam roads by
permits were granted only to those known or introduced to
spending too much money in that section and sent a
convict labor is between $2,500 and $3,000 a mile. That is
the Vanderbilt family or to those high in charge of the estate,
committee to investigate. They looked the situation over
as near as the good roads commission could figure it from
and a certain number of permits were given each day to the
and concluded that George was not giving his money
the returns of the county commissioners. But an estimate
better class hotels for the use of their guests. This plan did
away. They saw the utility of the proposition, not in an
on the Vanderbilt estate with its less heavily built roads is
not work satisfactorily, as it was accompanied by a great deal
entirely unselfish way but as one out of which they
$2,000 a mile. The average cost might safely be placed
of vandalism despite all that could be done to prevent it, and
could get personal enjoyment and which would afford
between $2,500 and $3,000 a mile. These macadamized
the fee system, with care as to whom permits are issued,
personal and public advantage and at the same time ex
roads, on the Vanderbilt estate especially, are kept in
succeeded it. A long and delightful drive from the lodge
followed, sweeping past the Biltmore truck farm, Dr.
Schenck's office and school building and other points of
interest.
CHAPTER XXV AN INTRODUCTION
FRENCH BROAD.
At a point variously estimated as to distance from Biltmore
village-by the inexperienced at six miles, by those more
familiar with the estate at ten miles the beautiful French
Broad river was reached. Here it became necessary to ferry
the party across to the opposite bank. The ferry is a primitive
affair, typical of the section but effective. It consists of a flat
bottomed SCOW propelled by broad sweeps operated by
manpower and guided by an overhead cable through a rapid
current. Most of the carriages and the saddle horses were
carried over, two or three at a time, several trips and the loss
of considerable time being thus necessitated.
Some of the more venturesome forded the river. The writer
of these chronicles was one of the latter, essaying a "grand
stand play" that gave some apprehension to himself and
caused considerable entertainment for the spectators on both
THANKSGIVING MORNING IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA A COLORED FAMILY'S FEAST IN PROSPECT.
JANUARY 2, 1909
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
55
tend the usefulness of he valuable object lessons which
CHAPTER XXXI BARK AND TANNING
price in Asheville has doubled, and a considerable local
EXTRACTS.
demand for hemlock has arisen for framing materials
George W. Vanderbilt was offering the south.
The titles are generally good but as to many of the tract
and this timber, once considered an incumbrance on the
defects in title have been caused by carelessness in
A steady and by no means inconsiderable source of
land, is now proving to be a valuable asset. Several
conveyances by former owners at a time when land was
revenue for the Biltmore estate is the neighboring
lumber companies are cutting hemlock regularly and
worth 50 cents to $1 an acre and it did not pay to employ a
tanneries. These buy continuously bark and chestnut
selling it at profitable prices.
lawyer to draw up a deed. Every chimney corner lawyer in
unsuitable for manufacture into lumber, of which the estate
Considerable ash and some cherry are found. Such
that section thought that he knew all that was necessary to be
produces large quantities. Of these patrons of the Biltmore
cherry as is left is of extra fine quality, but, like walnut, it
done and drew up deeds with the result that a great deal of
estate the establishment of Hans Rees' Sons, Incorporated,
has been valuable for so many years that long ago it was
time and attention has been necessary on the part of the last
and the Brevard Tanning Company are the most
largely cut out separately. The Biltmore forests at one
purchaser to cure some of the evils caused by slipshod
conspicuous.
time grew large quantities of black walnut, but little of
methods. In the language of one interested, "Where you find
Hans Rees' Sons, with tannery at Asheville and office at
that remains, as is the case also with most of the cherry,
a defective deed unless you antagonize the people you go and
39 Frankfort street, New York city, are tanners of oak
though of the latter fairly large quantities are still to be
get a quitclaim to cure it." During most of the time that the
belting butts and scoured butts and manufacturers of
found. Of other merchantable timber are linn and
basswood, with an admixture in smaller quantities of
titles belonged to the Cherokee Indians when the lands were
belting leather. Their Asheville plant, on twenty acres of
thrown open to enterers they were limited to 64 acres as a
land on the French Broad river, represents a considerable
other varieties.
maximum. A result was that enterers pasted one land grant
investment and is one of the largest tanneries in the south.
(To Be Continued).
on top of another, so that titles became clouded and a map of
It is a large buyer of extract and bark procured from the
the section resembles a crazyquilt. To get a good title a
Biltmore forests. The tannery is one of the important
problem is to learn who has it all, having acquired it from the
commercial factors of Buncombe county and has an
states, and considerable of the area has been granted three or
extensive domestic and foreign trade. The family of Hans
four times. The oldest title is the one to be sought, after
Rees, a son of the founder of the enterprise, is one of the
whichfinal acquirement is progressive. The Vanderbilt estate
few in Asheville with which the Vanderbilt family is upon
is now a strong, impregnable holding.
cordial terms of social intimacy.
The Brevard Tanning Company's plant, one of the most
CHAPTER) - MANUFACTURERS OF WOOD
successful in the south, is located near Brevard the county
PRODUCTS.
seat of Transylvania county, and its postoffice is Pisgah
Forest, which is the site of the lumber mill operated under
Manufacturers of wood products in and about the Biltmore
the name of C. A. Schenck & Co. W. F. Decker, resident at
estate are few, and these are practically encompassed within
Pisgah Forest, is superintendent of the company's plant. It
three small furniture factories. Murphy, a contiguous point,
is a large consumer of products of the Biltmore forests.
holds one and one has been in operation at Asheville. The
Pertinent to this chapter may be quoted data compiled by
furniture manufacturing center of the section is at High Point,
the Forest Service relative to the country's consumption
farther east. There considerable quantities are manufactures,
and value of tanning materials, the aggregate of tanbark
but only a very small percentage of lumber cut in the western
last year being given as $21,205,547 showing a decrease in
part of the state is there manufactured into its final forms.
quantity from the previous year but a marked increase in
One establishment is being erected at Biltmore and another,
price. Commenting upon this subject, a recent issue of the
for the manufacture of caskets and coffins, is being started at
LUMBERMAN said editorially: "There is an increasing use of
Asheville by Pittsburg (Pa.) enterprise. This is to be a large
extracts, due probably to the fact that they may be more
plant, to be located just below the town.
advantageously shipped than the raw material. Of 583
The available timber is drifting rapidly into the hands of
plants reporting in 1907, 121 used tanbark exclusively, 122
operators-pe who are buying for immediate or future
extracts exclusively, while 340 used both.
operations by themselves. It is passing now from the hands
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and West Virginia rank in order
of the speculator and the original owner through the hands of
in the consumption of bark, consuming 60 percent of the
the speculator into the ownership of the final operator.
output. There has been a decrease in New York,
Practically no large tracts are left but those held by people
Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Michigan and an
increase in West Virginia and Wisconsin.
The
most
able to hold them or to operate them. This does not mean to
imply that one can not buy timber land in that section now,
important and interesting feature of the whole subject is
but timer lands bought there will be acquired from men who
the steady increase in tanning extracts. The growing
know their worth.
scarcity of bark and native extracts makes necessary the
use of chemicals or imported wood extracts. The tanbark
CHAPTER XXX.---RAILROAD AND FREIGHT RATES.
industry is certain to be continuously affected by the influx
of tanning extracts because of the greater ease with which
Western North Carolina in a measure is handicapped, or
they may be handled."
would be under less fortunate circumstances, by enjoying but
All of which will be of interest to those who feel an
one system of railroad, the Southern railway. The Louisville
interest in the future commercial prosperity of the Biltmore
& Nashville reaches Murphy, but none of the North Carolina
estate and Dr. Schenck's efforts to continue it as self
timberlands. It does tap a considerable area of Tennessee
supporting.
timber lands of the same character, but they are just over the
CHAPTER - SOME BILTMORE TIMBER
line dividing the two state.
The freight rates on lumber made by the Southern railway
are said by lumber shippers to be generally satisfactory, and
At the "pink beds" of the Biltmore estate (to this section
they appear to have little to complain of in that road
reference has already been made) and in that vicinity a
considering length of haul and general service. At one time,
large part of the timber growth is native forest, in contrast
in the days of the old Richmond & Danville road, a
to the neighborhood of the residence of Schenck where
predecessor of the Southern, the existing policy is said to
planting operations have been started in what were old
have been to "charge all the traffic would bear." It learned
barren fields, some of which is already bearing good
the market prices of lumber and the cost of its production and
results. From Asheville west well into east Tennessee,
figured its rates as close to the aggregate as the industry
embracing the Great Smoky mountains and Balsam
could stand and live. That is said to have been the avowed
mountains, is doubtless the best of the hardwood timber
left east of the Mississippi river. Most of the notable
Richmond & Danville policy.
The principle of rate making is now changed radically. The
varieties will probably run in this order: poplar, oak,
Southern railroad is credited with using the contrary policy,
chestnut.
charging rates on commodities only fairly commensurate
A considerable amount of the hemlock is just coming into
with the length of haul and the adverse nature of the
the market. Heretofore the price of hemlock did not justify
mountainous country traversed by its rails, and relatively no
cutting it in the Biltmore forests and shipping it to northern
higher than rates in similar country in other sections. The
points, and until recently the local demand for hemlock
average haul is a long one: for instance, 500 miles to
had nil. Pine in central
Washington, and on the rates in effect lumbermen are said to
was the building
formerly been practically staple material North and later all Carolina needed
have made satisfactorily financial progress in recent years.
could be bought at $10 a thousand feet. In years the
TANNERY PLANT OF HANS REES' SONS, AT ASHEVILLE, N.C.
JANUARY 16, 1909
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
52
THREE DAYS' FOREST FESTIVAL ON THE BILTMORE ESTATE.
Chronicle of the Second Morning's Joyous ourneying-Dissertations on Profitable Planting-Some Mistakes
and Their Lessons Value of French Ideas Americanized-A Al Fresco Luncheon
With Extraordinarily Attractive Features.
CHAPTER XXXIII - IN WALNUT PLANTATION.
As an object lesson a student under the direction of Dr.
CHAPTER XXXV.-A WHITE PINE
Schenck dug up a small walnut, apparently thriving, but
IMPROVEMENT CUTTING.
The last direct association that these chronicles had with the
suffering from frost.
participants in the ever memorable three-days' forest festival
Moving to another point in the plantation Dr. Schenck
At Tip No. 31 Dr. Schenck halted his big class and said:
of November last, on that great object lesson in conservative
said:
"Here I made an improvement cutting which did not
forestry the Biltmore estate, left the party on the farther bank
"Here are the two walnut primeval trees which induced
improve. I blame the contractor and the ranger. I was
of the French Broad river on the second morning of the forest
me to plant on these twelve acres. We planted under the
much disappointed with the result, though it does not
fair, after a hazardous passage of the stream following a ten-
trees walnut seedlings and planted yellow pine
look so bad today, after ten years have elapsed. After it
mile ride from Biltmore village in the kind of weather that
everywhere, but nothing is here but the remnants. Why is
was done I planted here a few thousand white pines one
prevailed for uniformly from start to finish of the three
it that pine under the walnut, pine under its shade, will not
year old. At that age the white pine is a wee little thing
days weather of that kind than which no memory can recall
thrive? These trees killed every competitor in the woods
and you can imagine that many of the little pines, after
any nearer perfection. The first objective point of the party
within their reach. Why is it? I must ask some expert who
being planted, stood just long enough for a heavy oak
after the passage of the French Broad, under the tutelage of
knows more about it than do. The shade here or the
leaf to smother them and but few are left. Icut outsome
Forester C. A. Schenck, was Tip No. 28, a plantation near the
proximity killed all the walnuts and all the pines. I do not
of the white pines to give the others a rapid growth. I
bank of the river of black walnut obtained from nuts planted
know the reason. Toxic effects of root excrements is the
have it entirely in my power to help all these little pines.
in the fall of 1897, in furrows planted three and one- half feet
theory of one of my boys, and he may have the correct
Primeval white pines are growing more slowly than
apart at an expense thus estimated:
theory. Only from the time do we find that phenomenon
others because they are always suppressed the first few
Sixty-two bushels of walnuts
$33.00
after the tree has fruited. The green shells are everywhere
years of their lives. These little fellows here will all
Plowing furrows
3.00
and may have a poisoning influence on the soil. The boy
make the trees just as good as any. The influence of light
Planting nuts
18.95
may be correct and he may know more than the botanists
on the development of white pine seedlings is here very
do. The plantation will fail in the immediate vicinity of the
marked."
Total
$54.85
walnut trees. In the primeval woods, where all the trees
started together, the other trees flourished with the
CHAPTERXXXVI-EXPERIMENTS WITH FAR-
Here Dr. Schenck gathered his pupils about
walnut."
WESTERN WOODS.
pupils including all the "grown-ups" as well as the students
The little black walnut that was dug up showed a root
of the Biltmore Forest School and said:
almost as long and stronger than the stem, and it was
At Tip No. 32 Dr. Schenck said:
"The idea in forestry, as in any other business, is to get rich
thought by Dr. Schenck that possibly in time the little
"This shows the relative rapidity of growth of a
quick, and as a consequence the idea is, when you enter the
backward walnuts would grow and thrive. The influence
number of species - Douglas fir, European spruce,
field of forestry, to plant the fastest growing species, and that
of frost was very evident on the specimen dug up.
Colorado spruce and white pine, all of the same age, all
is black walnut. [Laughter.] That was my idea, somewhat
The bill for the "doctoring" of this plantation was given
equally treated and planted about one foot apart. The
Americanized after I had been living here for a year or so, so I
as follows:
Douglas fir has done poorly. Spruce has shown very
planted on this Hillside road, some above and some below
slow progress.
the road, all at one time. it is marvelous to see the relatively
Four thousand pine yearlings
$4.00
"I made a little experiment here. To the right the white
big fellows below the road, and above the road the walnut
Hauling and miscellaneous
.30
pine planted was obtained from abandoned fields and
growing smaller and smaller as the hill advances.
Planting pines
7.50
that to the left was taken from the nurseries, but it all
"These walnuts will grow rapidly only on a patch of land
made no material difference as time went on.
$ 11.80
extremely fertile with heavily fertilized soil, and on such soil
"Here is a German silver fir, and after associating in
these walnuts have grown in ten years to some size. I do not
CHAPTER XXXIV. PINES ON AN ABANDONED FIELD.
the shade with white pine it may average better. In the
call these walnuts very good; they do not have the bold
first seven years the silver fir does very little, but later on
development that seems to be desirable and are not very
Journeying to the next point of interest, Tip No. 29, the
it may overtop the white pine. The upper growth of
straight but they have grown fast, at least.
party was addressed by Dr. Schenck as follows:
white pine is better in early youth. The silver fir makes
"Above the road the walnut plantation is practically a
"I want to draw your attention to the manner in which
better pulp than the spruce; less yield but better
failure. The soil is too poor, below the road the walnut
the abandoned field is growing up in yellow pine and the
quality."
plantation, on agricultural land heavily fertilized, has done
attention of the engineers particularly to the manner in
At another point on the same tip Dr. Schenck said:
what I expected it to do: it has grown quickly to good size.
which the old deep gullies have grown up in pine after
"Here we have white pine and locusts alternating. It is
"You ask why did I do this planting on this abandoned
being saved by the pine humus accumulated through
very notable how much better the white pine does than
field. Because a few black walnut trees growing naturally up
the black locusts or cherries. The black cherries here,
many years. You see that the heavy, deep layers of humus
here gave me a hint from nature and I took this to be black
have stopped erosion entirely and brought the old field
however, are now doing very well. but, volume for
walnut ground, but was wrong. In ten years some of it has
back to productiveness. After cutting out the misshapen,
volume, give me white pine every time. Here is a row of
grown ten inches, but they appear generally to be about as
huge, matured trees after they had reseeded the ground, I
black locusts which suffer very much from insects. The
high as in 1898 above the road. It is remarkable that the slight
obtained a nice, even stand of pine poles. The new trees
insects do not kill but simply injure them. They will
difference in soil makes such a difference in growth-
have produced as a matured growth a second growth for
easily grow to the size of a tie.
there nearly twenty-five feet and here not twenty five inches.
the future use of men."
An Interesting Experiment.
It shows the dependence of the walnut on the quality of the
"Here I want to show another mess which I made.
Three special of pines, echinata, rigida and Virginiana,
soil. It is futile, it seems to me, to plant walnut on poor soil.
were found growing at this point.
This is a plantation of hickory, white pine and chestnut
"When I found had made a mistake I tried to mend it in
Attention was called to a bunch of pines killed by bark-
oak. Where are they? Here and here; these little
the usual way by doctoring up with yellow pine with one-
beetles in 1903.
growths. It shows again that on abandoned fields the
year-old seedlings imported from Germany, costing about 50
Tip No. 30 was given casual attention. It consisted of a
planting of nuts, as in this case, is practically out of the
cents a thousand, and believe that all this walnut plantation
cut stand of oaks, chestnuts and hickories, some of them
question-the planting of acorns, walnuts and hickory
in time will be saved by the pine; the doctoring influence of
forty years old. from which an improvement cutting was
nuts, to being with, is out of the question, in my opinion.
the pine on the soil, I believe will be to make this a financial
removed in 1898, eight cords to the acre being obtained. It
We can raise the hardwoods only by the doctoring
success. These measley little walnuts are now doing better, as
was calculated that in about ten years a thinning would be
influence of pines or in companionship with pines; we
the yellow pine has taken a foothold, than before and I am
made in this tract yielding perhaps three cords to the acre.
cannot raise them alone. This soil was occupied by
hopeful' that finally the walnut will succeed through the
A prominent feature of this tip was a white oak 350 years
hickories and white oaks in primeval days, and so was
influence of the pine. If you come back here after ten years I
old.
induced to plant the same subjects to reproduce what
can tell you whether my theory is correct or not."
nature had here originally, and again I made a mess of it.
STUDENTS AND SOME OF THE FACULTY OF THE BILTMORE FOREST SCHOOL, MAINTAINED ON THE BILTMORE ESTATE OF GEORGE W.
JANUARY 16, 1909
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
53
I planted white pine, which was not a messmate in the
natural seedlings of yellow poplar in a small group. I have
black gum, sourwood and hickory and chestnut,
primeval forest, but I found it did the best for the time being.
given it a little extra light, which, as done here, may not
forming the under story, and the upper story is formed
How it will be three or four years from now I cannot say.
seem to best way to encourage the growth, which is about
of pines. Where that system is regularly used we have
Trees reproduce their kind until the year of their death, be it
twenty feet, but here is a regeneration which is creditable.
the following classes of pines: pines 3 years old. pines
500 or 600 years.
From time to time I go in with my little ax and mark a few
33, 63 and 93 years old respectively. Wese a few of the
"This is a poor stand of white pine, and here is a heavy
of these hardwoods, removing them, making them into
older pines in the background. The idea is this: every
humus which we get when the trees are planted very well
money. I do the same thing in the valley over there and as
thirty years when coppiced down the hardwoods cut
together. Then the boles for clean and quickly and then get
it goes on these groups will merge.
twenty cords to the acre and we will get as many dollars
a better condition generally. This seems to be the best way.
"This natural seed regeneration is known very well
out of it, unless the price is improved, and every thirty
When they are fifteen years old you have a bole of about two
abroad now as the group type of natural seed regeneration
years at the same time we get out for lumber purposes
long logs free of limbs, which makes fine timber. The trees
I have found, to my great pleasure, that yellow poplar
the older classes of the pine standards, of which we have
planted closely together trim themselves. I could trim these
lends itself admirably to this type, which, under conditions
30-year-old ones, 60 and 0-year old ones.
at 6 cents a tree and I would select only the best trees on each
as found here is very easy to handle. I will show you what
"That is the French idea of coppiced understandards,
acre to insure the good trees of the future."
I shall mark in order to give my yellow poplars more light.
which is disputed by the Germans for reasons which I
Stories in Hardwoods.
Above the road there are the trees of the same growth. It is
do not with to dwell upon, but which seems to me
At a further point the doctor said:
all the nucleus for a group which is gradually enlarged just
particularly well adapted to our American conditions
"In this tract I would say the hardwoods, and notably the
as the waves enlarge as a stone is dropped into the water.
and to conditions now prevailing at Biltmore, and as I
yellow poplar and white oak, were prevailing in a primeval
presume they will continue to prevail for a little while.
forest and were cut out about 1893, when lumbering was in
This system of standards yields to me frequent revenue
vogue here after the advent of the railroad into Asheville.
by frequent cuts of twenty cords to the acre and at the
Here we find evidence of spontaneous regeneration of yellow
same time affords a certain amount of lumber. You see
poplar whenever it had a little light and the foot of the
that when coppiced the pines get plenty of space to
forester pressed the seed into the ground. We have only a
grow, but it should be done only when the pines are at
few thousand acres of such forest. The majority we have in
least three years old. Then I give them plenty of food,
the vicinity of Biltmore was cut in 1899. What I have done
light and air and merely an underscattering of
here is simply a little improvement cutting, taking out the
hardwoods to shade the soil. I think that system is good
worst trees to make the average tree a little better and thus
and financially correct, as it yields to me lumber, fuel
making incidentally a little money."
woods, chestnut tannic acid woods and business in other
Further on the doctor called attention to alternate rows of
woods, and wagon timbers from white oaks.
white oak and maple, of which he said:
"This is the system which I want to introduce more
"When the maples were about as high as my belt they were
generally. I tried it here tentatively, where it would not
all attacked by fungus disease and I thought they would all
be seen. I did not know what would develop; I do not
die. First I came and planted here in alternate rows, where
know today. Suppose that after coppicing these pines
the oak had failed, yellow pine and white pine. What was
FAIR NORTH CAROLINIANS PRESIDED AT A FEAST.
they are blown down by a storm! I can not say today
necessary to beat me was that changed my mind three times,
whether it is a good system, but my experience of three
each with entirely different results."
years tends to prove that I am on the right track and that
The tract showed a struggle for existence between white
It all comes from these two seed trees. The ground is
this is financially and sylviculturally the best system for
pine and sugar maples, and of this Dr. Schenck said
strewn with yellow poplar seeds. Every year the seeds fall;
about ten seeds to the foot. not more than one of them out
us. I get my second growth free of charge
characteristically:
of ten is good; most of them are hollow. The percentageof
regeneration of the pines free of charge absolutely. I get
"The slightest difference in soil brings about an entirely
frequent and early hardwood timber and lumber trees,
different result in sylviculture. The differences are shown by
fecundity is German seeds is very poor-only about five in
a hundred."
fuel trees and minor woods for wagon and acid making
a few steps different from place to place. There are three
Here the students, under the direction of Dr. Schenck,
in addition. I stand on six different legs instead of
kinds of lies; first lies; second, statistics; third, theories, and I
marked several trees, mostly misshapen or otherwise of
standing on one. Thus it seems a safe investment. I am
think slipped up on the last."
poor growth, following the instructions of Dr. Schenck He
enlarging this system gradually, having obtained Mr.
Another plantation showed the effects of attacks of rabbits,
Vanderbilt's approval, but in a tentative way, because
which destroyed or discouraged the young growth year after
seemed to pick out the victims with half a glance.
the Lord only knows what will become of it. The
year. The use of poison has been suggested to kill these, but
CHAPTER XXXVIII. ACCORDING TO FRENCH METHODS
primeval forest looked like this system, only magnified
the estate is preserving quail and small game birds and so
many times. Pine is the superstructure, oak is in the
fears to use poison against the rabbits. These pests do not
At a farther point on this tip Dr. Schenck said:
upper structure, and I am rebuilding in a mannerwhich
attack the trees after they are three years of age, as was
"In the vicinity of Biltmore is an elevation known by
seems to me economically correct.
demonstrated by evidence found in an adjoining plantation of
geologists as the French Broad base level, where we would
"So far not a single tree has been burned down or been
clack cherry and black locust.
have found, in the first forests, bug North Carolina pines
attacked by insects. I have no promise from the insects
Leading his party into a dense growth of white pine and
with an undergrowth of decrepit oaks, hickories and the
that they will not attack these individual pines, but so
oaks, Dr. Schenck said:
like. The soil on this French Broad base level was not good
far they have not attacked them. I find that the insects
"This is white pine, and much of it has grown in the way I
enough to produce good hardwoods, but did produce
rather like the dense woods, but not the pines where
wanted it to. From now on it may be desirable to give it more
splendid yellow pine. The primeval stand of yellow pine
they are swaying in the wind and where other
space. Hard maple has been planted here for the benefit of
here had an average of 5,000 or 6,000 feet to the acre.
conditions appear not so advantageous to producing
the white pine. The dead limbs are relatively small. so they
When the pine was cut, about 1883 or 1880, the hardwoods
insects. It may be the very way to eradicate the insects.
can be rubbed off without leaving heavy scars and laying
had the upper hand and were left intact. These are scrub
"It is not necessary that the pines should be distributed
themselves open to fungus growth. In other places we have
oaks found here, the best having been left, the poorest cut
singly over the scope of the wood lands; they may stand
instances of where white pine and sugar maple had outgrown
out. three or four years ago this was a stand which I would
in a little group here or over yonder. We have a few
the pine because the one was planted before the other."
trim into the pole stage; which is to say there was a stand
white pines over here that are welcome. coming in free
The last lecture concluded a walk of four miles and the
of trees of about thirty cords to the acre in which the pines
and promising good financial results. Should you come
party adjourned to their carriages.
were the minority and the hardwoods the large majority. I
back in ten years, instead of the 200 acres on this tip I
CHAPTER XXXVIL REGENERATION OF YELLOW POPLAR
have cut the hardwoods out, coppiced them down and you
think you will see 2,000 acres treated in the same way,
see that in three years they have come up from the stumps
where the conditions are repeated, not taking here and
there a spot, and having good chances for
At Tip No. 34 the forester addressed his students as follows:
rather rapidly.
"This system of sylviculture, which I decided to
transportation.
"The yellow labels which you see here indicate poplar. Ido
introduce here and everywhere else in the larger part of the
not show all the seedlings here. The yellow seedlings in this
CHAPTER LUNCHEON IN THE OPEN.
forests where pine alone will yield lumber, has a growth of
cover are the progeny of two or three big trees down there.
here is one having approximately 1,400 feet and one of 750
coppiced understandards. It is the French system
particularly of sylviculture or forest utilization. In the
With appetites borne of strenuous climbing and the
feet to the right. These few trees which I still find here and
coppiced understandards we have two series of forests, an
fillip of hours spent in the open, the forest fair
there in the hollows, all left of the original forest, give me a
participants here rested for luncheon It was served out
wonderful reproduction and dense stand of second growth of
upper consisting of lumber trees, and a lower consisting of
of doors, around an old log farm house, now and for
strong poplar. In this grove I find the first indication of
fuel trees. The fuel trees are the oaks particularly and
VANDERBILT, NEAR ASHEVILLE, N. C. THE ELEVENTH LEFT, ON THE OPPOSITE PAGE, IS OF DR C. A. SCHENCK.
JANUARY 16, 1909
AMERICAN LUMBERMAN.
54
some time utilized under the patronage of Mrs. William
In the language of an appreciative visitor from a far
fame of North Carolina's fair daughters.
Vanderbilt as a cooking school for children from on and near
northern city, whose apparent disrespect was apparent
The cooking school was formerly used as a Sunday
the Biltmore estate, and some of those children were mighty
only and was hidden by his admiring enthusiasm-
school by the junior residents on the estate, but for that
proud of having been entrusted with the preparation and
"S-a-y, did you expect to see anything like that in this
purpose has been temporarily abandoned. Under the
cooking of the hot biscuit which were passed around in
wilderness? Talk about your belles! Did North Carolina
immediate charge of Mrs. Dr. Wheeler it has now a class
quantities to a ravenous and appreciative crowd. They were
produce these, really? Are they types of their kind of this
of tenant's daughters who are being skilled in cookery,
a gastronomic success that would have done credit to a
section? Then I am going to move down here."
and its influence through them for good and for friendly
French chef or, higher praise, a southern "mammy." The
Those of whom he spoke, whose abounding vitality was
feeling upon the farmers and others resident upon the
biscuits were supplemented by sandwiches, meats, coffee,
reflected in superb forms, blooming complexions, beaming
Biltmore estate is marked.
pies and a profusion of other things provided by Dr.
eyes, supplemented by the very latest, richest "creations"
And in the enjoyment of their hearty luncheon the
Schenck's general and Mrs. Schenck's immediate and
in the dressmaker's and milliner's line, were Mrs. C. A.
good forester, his fair assistants and his gusts may safely
practical foresight, with an experienced understanding of the
Schenck, Mrs. Dr. Wheeler, Miss Rita Rees, the Misses
be left for the time being.
robustness of appetite of hungry scores who had spent the
Bessie and Bonnie Reeves, Miss Martha E. Race, whose
morning in hill climbing. And the way they were served!
hospitality and personal graces added that day to the
(To Be Continued.)
JSTOR: Mississippi Valley Historical Review: Vol. 42, No. 3, p. 577
Page 2 of 3
BOOK REVIEWS
577
The Biltmore Story: Recollections of the Beginning of Forestry in the
United States. By Carl Alwin Schenck. Edited by Ovid Butler. (St.
Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, for the American Forest History
Foundation, 1955. xvi + 224 pp. Illustrations and index. $3.95.)
This interesting little volume tells the fascinating story of Dr. Carl
Schenck's struggles, triumphs, disappointments, and failures as one of the
first three professionally trained foresters in the United States. Based on
his memoirs the account has all the strengths and weaknesses of recollections,
although Schenck obviously kept very copious notes and records to which he
referred in writing his memoirs. The editor has selected the materials for
this volume to make a chronological arrangement of Schenck's story, but the
author's constant interjections often disturb the arrangement.
Dr. Schenck, a German-born and German-trained forester, was employed in
1895 by George W. Vanderbilt (grandson of the fabulous Cornelius) as
forester at Vanderbilt's newly acquired and luxurious Biltmore estate near
Asheville, North Carolina. Although not interested in forestry for itself,
Vanderbilt wanted his extensive woodland holdings to be managed and
preserved (profitably) by the application of scientific principles of forestry -
a field which at that time was virtually non-existent in the United States.
Schenck's story gives us the third account by the first professional leaders of
forestry in this country, the other two being those of his contemporaries,
Gifford Pinchot and Bernhard Fernow. Dr. Schenck was evidently not hesi-
tant in stating his opinion about the errors and shortcomings of these men,
as well as in passing judgment freely on forestry policies in this country and
abroad.
This, however, is more than a book about forestry. The historian un-
doubtedly will be as much interested in Schenck's views on people and issues
prominent around the turn of the century, and in his social and political
philosophy, as in the wide variety of professional matters which this energetic
forester handled. Interest is also increased by Schenck's comments about
the great and near-great who were seen at Biltmore in the heyday of the
Vanderbilt dynasty: Theodore Roosevelt, Pinchot, Alice Longworth, Fred-
erick Law Olmsted, Richard Morris Hunt (architect of Biltmore House),
John S. Sargent, Paul Leicester Ford, Lord Bryce and other foreign digni-
taries, President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard, and many others.
Schenck's effort to put private forestry on a paying basis at Biltmore did
not prove to be a financial success and his relations with Vanderbilt de-
teriorated. This turn of events, however, does not detract from the importance
of his work or from the boldness of his vision. Though he strove for ob-
jectivity in his memoirs, Schenck was not free from bias as he recalled his
heartaches in connection with a project that was far in advance of the times.
Most impressive to the reviewer was Schenck's account of Biltmore Forest
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Page 2 of 3
578
THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY HISTORICAL REVIEW
School the first such school in this country - which he established. After
he was expelled from Biltmore and the school was terminated at that lo-
cation, he traveled through the forests of Germany, Switzerland, and France,
and across America from the Adirondacks to the Pacific Coast, in a vain at-
tempt to maintain his experiment in the training of practical foresters with
the hope that they would be employed by private lumbermen. Although the
school was abandoned in 1913, it would seem that Schenck made his greatest
and most original imprint upon the future of forestry in the United States
through his educational ideas.
The value of the book is enhanced by many excellent illustrations, and it
is remarkably free from typographical errors. It deserves a much wider
reading and use than it is likely to receive.
Northwest Missouri State College
JOHN L. HARR
The Strange Career of Jim Crow. By C. Vann Woodward. (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1955. xii + 155 pp. Suggested reading.
$2.50.)
At a very appropriate time this little volume makes available in print the
James W. Richard Lectures in History, delivered by Professor Woodward
to an unsegregated audience at the University of Virginia in the fall of
1954. The author, an acknowledged specialist in the post-Reconstruction
history of the South, has exploded a myth, widely accepted as historic fact,
that the southern system of Negro segregation with all its ramifications was
established by the revered "Redeemers" who overthrew the Negro-carpetbag-
scalawag governments and restored white supremacy in the former Con-
federate states. He has shown that except for school segregation, which was
introduced by the Radicals themselves, the race policies accepted and followed
in the South in the years immediately following "redemption" were much
milder than they became later. he policies of proscription, segregation,
and disfranchisement that are often described as the immutable 'folkways'
of the South, impervious alike to legislative reform and armed intervention,
are of more recent origin
and the belief that they are immutable and
unchangeable is not supported by history."
For some time after Reconstruction social contacts between the races were
as a rule close and friendly, possibly a carry-over from slavery times. This
was especially true of the conservative upper class, who sought Negro sup-
port on the ground that they were protecting the Negroes from the harsher
designs of the (lower class. This policy was tinged with sentimentalism and
paternalism and was making a virtue of necessity, since the Negro vote was
still important enough to constitute a balance of power between rival politi-
cal groups. Although the author does not mention this, southern whites even
attempted to justify certain types of segregation as a necessary protection for
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2016. Summerguide.
10
Summerguide 2016 | view this story as a pdf
The true historical scope of Acadia, sweeping north from Bath to
the border of Canada, has hosted some of the world's most famous
names within its borders.
From Staff & Wire Reports
It was Acadia's rugged shores and
startling natural beauty that first drew artists from the Hudson River School of
painting to Maine during the 19th century. Their romantic renderings of Acadia's
wild beauty, and the popularity of the "luminism" painting movement that they
championed, began to attract the wealthy families of industrialists and traders, keen
to claim their corner of this pristine summer retreat.
These well-heeled summer visitors flocked from Boston, Philadelphia, and New
York City to the shores of Acadia, where they began competing with one another to
build the most palatial estates and enviable gardens, sealing Acadia's reputation as a
getaway for the upper echelons of society. The seasonal influx was SO dramatic, the
visitors even garnered their own label: "rusticators." Of this illustrious crowd,
several names jump out: the Roosevelts, the Astors, and the DuPonts. The crown of
America's mercantile aristocracy have all summered in the area over the years,
gilding Acadia with the luster of their wealth and mystery. Perennial summer visitor
Norman Mailer was an acute observer of both the people and the geography that
defined this area.
Norman Mailer on Otter Cliffs
"I had heard the growl of black waters on black rock at Otter Cliffs," Mailer writes
in Harlot's Ghost, in a vignette he later reprised for Esquire. Challenged climb to
the sheer, slippery monument as a rite of passage, the young Mailer risked a look
oily face reminded him of "human body parts." Later in life, Mailer would inflict
his own Maine initiation on his children. In an interview with Portland Magazine,
Mailer's youngest son, John Buffalo Mailer, recalled summers spent preparing to
climb Mount Katahdin. "It started to hail as we were on the middle of the Knife
Edge. I don't think I had ever been quite as scared in the eight years I had been
alive, than I was in that moment." [See "When Your Name Is Mailer, You Don't
Phone It In," by Colin W. Sargent: bit.ly/PMNormanMailer]
"Mount Desert is more luminous than the rest of Maine," Norman declares in
Harlot's Ghost. The two-time Pulitzer Prize winner, who'd spent many summers
here with his family, certainly knew how to pick the perfect summer spot. During
the 1970s, the family rented "Fortune's Rock," a stunning 1937 residence
cantilevered over Somes Sound. Designed as a summer abode for New York artists
and heiress Clare Fargo Thomas, the sleek lines of the building are in harmony with
its breathtaking surroundings. Mailer and his kids were particularly fond of leaping
from the timbered balcony of Fortune's Rock twenty feet into the icy water of the
sound below. For Mailer, Acadia represented a sanctuary of calm from the storm of
the New York literati scene.
Astors in Acadia
The Astor clan, hailing originally from Germany before finding their fortune in the
fur trade, owned mansions, hotels, and cottages in Bar Harbor and around Mount
Desert. A fixture of the "rusticator" scene, their wealth and glamor enhanced
Acadia's reputation as a summer destination.
Scandal rocked the family recently, when it was revealed that Anthony Marshall of
the Astor clan had taken advantage of his aging mother's slipping mind to plunder
her fortune. Brooke Astor, a prominent socialite and philanthropist, kept a much-
beloved estate called Cove End, which overlooks the Northeast Harbor Yacht Club.
In her will, Astor gave away hundreds of thousands of dollars to Maine charities,
including the Maine Community Foundation. Marshall passed away in 2014, aged
90. He only served two months of his three-year prison term due to ailing health.
The New Newport
While we may always associate the Vanderbilt name with the flashy appeal of
Newport, Rhode Island, many of the family preferred the relative simplicity and
peace of Bar Harbor. Patriarch William Henry Vanderbilt first removed to Maine in
the early 1880s. George Vanderbilt, William's youngest and supposedly favorite
son, was evidently smitten with us. Upon his father's death, George bought the
former Gouverneur Morris Ogden Cottage in Bar Harbor, renaming the estate
Pointe d'Acadie. In 1895, older brother William Kissam Vanderbilt, seeking refuge
from the media storm surrounding his divorce, sailed up to Bar Harbor on his yacht
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Playground of the Rich & Famous PORTLAND MAGAZINE
Valiant, at the time the largest vessel in the world. William spent much of that
summer moored off Pointe d'Acadie, avoiding the press. According to the New
York Social Diary, "Unlike at Newport, few traces remain of the Vanderbilts at Bar
Harbor. Many of the houses they occupied: Mossley Hall, Pointe d'Acadie, Islecote,
have been demolished." Despite their physical absence, traces of the Vanderbilts
can be found in the old guest books of the famous inns and restaurants of Acadia.
Camelot northeast
Before she was Mrs. John F. Kennedy, before her paparazzi-flashed years as "Jackie
O," or her hidden decades on Park Avenue as an editor at Viking Press, young
Jacqueline Bouvier spent her summers not simply as a debutante in Newport, Rhode
Island, but also up here in Bar Harbor.
"The Auchinclosses had an estate up here," says Denise Morgan, co-owner of Oli's
Trolley of Bar Harbor, "and no doubt visited here every summer with Jackie and her
sister, Lee Radziwill. The estate is gone now-the fire of 1947 took it-but I believe
part of the wall is still there," right at the corner of Routes 3 and 233, also known as
Eagle Lake Road. Trolley drivers mention it as they pass by, talking about the rich
and famous of Bar Harbor.
"So Jackie Bouvier walked the streets of Bar Harbor,' one of our tourists remarked
once while taking the tour."
We can't vouch for the streetwalking, but the presence of the nation's top debutante
must have made the lovely Bar Harbor summers here just a bit lovelier.
But wait a minute. Deborah Dwyer of the Bar Harbor Historical Society says
instead that "Hugh D. Auchincloss stayed at 'Redwood.' It's an important early
William Ralph Emerson Shingle Style design. It's very much still standing, and
that's where Jackie would have stayed."
As for the lost house mentioned by the trolley company, Dwyer has told us, "I have
a 'before' and 'after' picture of the house that stood there on a slide presentation I
do to show the property before and after the school was built. Part of the wall
survived, but the wrought-iron gate disappeared. The last people who had it were
the Sultan ruler of Turkey and Princess Bernadina."
Only in Bar Harbor would a sultan owning a house in Bar Harbor be floated as a
more plausible anecdote.
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Vanderbilt, George W-1862-1914
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Series 2