University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT)

 - Class of 1907

Page 16 of 325

 

University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 16 of 325
Page 16 of 325



University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 15
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University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 17
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Page 16 text:

14 THE ARIEL, 1907 The Introduction covers the vexed question of the invention of printing, and favors Gutenberg as best entitled to that distinction. The author modestly represents himself as a compiler, but the book gives proof of much careful inquiry, and verification of the statements of others. The value of the work to collectors and librarians is greatly enhanced by twenty-five fczcsifmile illustrations, generally showing the colophon in addition to a full page, The practical value of these accurately dated specimens of early typography is obvious. Previous writers on early books had given lists of places in which presses were set up before the end of the fifteenth century. One makes it 196, another, I52, others, writing between ISOS and 1853, 207, 209, 218, 221. This volume describes 236 books believed to be the earliest issued by the first printers in the towns named. The reproductions in the volume the present writer believes to be in every case from examples in Gen. Hawkinsfs own collection. He remembers seeing in the Cfeneral's study a plain case,,about ten feet long by seven high, filled with these incunabula. It took long years of patient research to assemble these volumes, and more thousands of dollars than one would venture to name. There is no similar collection in the United States, that is equally comprehensive, while in certain respects it is surpassed by butilive or six in Europe. This treasure is to be enshrined at last, we have heard, in a fire-proof building specially designed for it, in Provi- dence, R. I., to be called the Ann Mary Brown Memorial. In addition there will be a room of Old Masters, another of Modern Paintings, and a room for family relics. The whole in honor of his wife, who was a granddaughter of Nicholas Brown, the founder of Brown University,- and to perpetuate her memory. Rush Christopher Hawkins was born in Pomfret, Vt., September 14, 1831. His father was Lorenzo Dorr Hawkins, a son of Dexter Hawkins, who served in a R. I. Regiment in the Revolutionary 'VVar. His mother was a great granddaughter of Rev. Aaron Hutchinson, a graduate of Yale College in I747, who, after a pastorate in Grafton, Mass., came to Pomfret in 1776, and was for a time the sole bishop C Congregationalj of Pomfret, Hartford, and VVoodstock. His discourse at Wiiiclsor before the Vermont Convention of Iuly, 1777.-at which

Page 15 text:

THE ARIEL, 1907 13 Of the first work named above, but two other copies have found their way to the United States, of the Second, one other, of the third and fourth, our copies are believed to be the only ones in America. A rare item, to use a bookseller'S word, is a copy of the first English translation of Rabelais, by S. T. U. Cf dated 1653. The donor's note on a Hy-leaf says that it is the only copy seen or heard of, as offered for sale in forty-three years of book-collecting. ln 1898 Gen. Hawkins gave the University his entire collection of books on the Civil War, the gathering of which had begun long before the struggle was ended. The original 1,450 volumes fnow increased by additional gifts to I,688j includes histories, general and special, biog- raphies, military criticism, rosters, general orders, poetry, lampoons, stories, etc. The Confederate Statutes, reports and orders are here 5 also specimens of the Southern School-books and novels of the time. Many rarities are comprised in the collection. Some graduate from our De- partment of History, it is hoped will some day make the Hawkins Col- lection his workshop, and send out a substantial contribution to our knowledge of that great coniiict. General Hawkins has been a book hunter all his life. Not many years ago fin I887D his accumulations demanded So much space that he Sent 5,000 volumes to the auction room. The- range, and the results, of his bibliographical investigations are best indicated in a quarto volume issued by him in 1884, the title of which we copy in full: TITLES OF THE FIRST BooIcS FROM THE EARLIEST PRESSES, ESTABLISHED IN DIFFERENT CITIES, TowNS AND MONASTERIES IN EUROPE BEFORE THE END OF THE FIFTEENTI-I CENTURY, WIITH BRIEF NOTES UPON THEIR PRINTERS. ILLUSTRATED WITH REPRODUCTIONS OF EARLY TYPES AND FIRST ENGRAVINGS OF THE PRINTING PRESS. BY RUSH C. HAWRINS. New York and London: MDCCCLXXXIV.



Page 17 text:

- ,THE ARIEL,,,19,07 15 the state Constitution was adopted-is the first in a long series of election sermons, and one of the few literary monuments of Early Vermont. Rush Hawkins left Vermont before he was fifteen, and in the fall of 1847 enlisted in the U. S. second dragoons, seeing service along the Rio Grande and in Mexico. Late in the autumn of 1848, for disability contracted in the field, he was discharged from the army at New Orleans. Here he remained until 1851, when he removed to New York. The next ten years were occupied with important business interests intrusted to his oversight, which required extended tours in the VV'est, but left intervals during which he pursued the study of the law. In 1856 he was admitted to the bar in New York City. When the Rebellion broke out,' Mr. Hawkins. was at the head of an independent company' of Zouaves, organized for the purpose of attain- ing the highest possible proficiency in military drill. Cn the evening of the day on which the first call for troops appeared, this company resolved to tender its services to the Government, and by half-past seven they next morning its captain was in the executive chamber of the Governor of New York, the first citizen of the State to tender his com- pany's services for the suppression of the rebellion. In the course of the eight days which followed the 17th of April, 1861, he raised, and had mustered into the service of the State of New York, the 9th Regi- ment of N. Y. Volunteer Infantry, generally known as the Hawkins Zouaves. This regiment shared in the movement against Big Bethel, the cap- ture of Hatteras Inlet, the affair of Chicomocomico, the taking of Roanoke Island, the attack on Winton, N. C., the battles of South Mills fwhere Colonel Hawkins was woundedj, South Mountain and Antietam Qwhere the regiment lost more than 63 per cent of all who were in the fightj, Fredericksburg, and the siege of Suffolk, and was mustered out in June, 1863. - - Colonel Hawkins had charge of the perilous business of landing the Union troops through the surf at Hatteras Inlet in August, 1861. A portion of his own regiment had been anchored in a most dangerous

Suggestions in the University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) collection:

University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

1902

University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

1903

University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

University of Vermont - Ariel Yearbook (Burlington, VT) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910


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