Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO)

 - Class of 1911

Page 30 of 168

 

Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 30 of 168
Page 30 of 168



Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 29
Previous Page

Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 31
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • High-resolution, full color images available online
  • Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
  • View college, high school, and military yearbooks
  • Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 30 text:

26 THE WESTPORT HIGH SCHOOL HERALD. manry upon whom the system reposed. .Xgain, among the other patriots every one had either his moments of rash vindictive- ness or of indecisiveness. Adams alone was felt to be cool, calm, at all timesg cautious and calculating, strong and undeviating,-a tower of strength, a rock not to be shaken by any storm. So, in decisive moments, when all hung by a thread, in his CLIIIITIHQ' strength and unninching manliness lloston was wont to repose her troubles and her fears. In like manner, by the aid of his co-workers, by his burning articles, by his Committee of Correspondence, did he mould public opinion throughout IXIassachusetts, until the actions and decisions of Boston were echoed by the other towns, and so at last conhrmed by the Assembly and re- echoed from north to south. His power was great, almost inconceivably great, but it all rested upon his fundamental relations as man to man. After Concord and Lexington, after the appointment of Wfashington as commander- in-chief over the Continental armies, a de- cree went forth which shall never be re- calledfl' It was the Declaration of Indepen- dence, passed, contemporaries bear witness, principally by Samuel Adams, efforts. At last he had realized his vision, the dream of his life had come true. Samuel Adams' distinctive work ended with the Declaration of - Independence. During the years of the Wfar of the Revo- lution, during the actual fighting, he re- mained in Congress and was most active in that bodv, zealously supporting Wfashing- ton, always full of hope and strength even in the gloomiest days, serving on a thousand important committees and tending to a thou- sand matters at once. llut his distinctive work ended with the Declaration of Inde- pendenceg the struggle was then transferred to the field and was entrusted to other hands than his. Fifteen years are not a long time, but they have often, especially among peoples that governed themselves, been productive of great changes, great influences that have changed the course of history. But it is almost safe to say that nowhere in the worldls history have there been fifteen years so pregnant with great results as those that transformed loyal English subjects-firmly protestant indeed against injustices, but loyal nevertheless,-into a nation of free and independent Americans. It seems almost too much to credit this to one man. There were potent causes working and an All- seeing Purpose, nor must we forget to give Parliament and the Ministry their full share, but as far as it could be the work of one man, we must credit this transformation to Sam- uel Adams. In this are bound up all his services, as parts in a whole. To it he de- voted his all, and won-Eternity. , l ' EDXNARD NN. MOSES, Ill. A Thought Amidst immeizsc and SZTFIII SUIl'fIllIlt'.S' A 111411115171 0140111 Of HH mu- ms . V , f T V -Ir' f U: Beizmtlz. the szltfm' splendor of the stars, His IJ f d 005 0 sfrezzgflz and frown'-ti morkcrv. 'I IL fi I ' Tv. ' , - . qmimii pd bm ffm -hm CHS Subtle' SPCHV My foolzslz jvrzdc 1'UZ21zlerd, I ZLlH'llC'lI7 atvav, . 7lC.GctC 31 fcilzczes of that bozzfzdlcss spare, But .5'1LlI'dC1Zf,y gn U11-4-0,15-UI1'11g flzonglzz' I I stood-cz mail-twill head b0'ZC'6'Cl, loft' before O'e1'tt.f1Z6Im0d me: jljqmis cfU,.fh M050 Sims The miglzzfiness of G0d's rrcafiolz. God plamzca' and made for mc. SIIIELTON Smiirii, 'l2. ranks c hither l bellious the pri some c might conspi Empei VVI1 howex pelled The wide. the rt dows into ' moutl acclai maje: was peria passe the r deaf' our our l Na the I I man My whit we fam roof

Page 29 text:

.vn ranks l. More: gainst an neness in alter was at in fact s obliged In 1760 lrmly set of their ess were air firmly as merely s. These from the 's of Con- e in upon at Adams During i wrought when at ly for the a power, It must rms him- us now- vrious pa- that to a sublimity Lality that he means exception. ess to a ment, not Lble of a :ting that His logic able, and, ing the st British fiood of 5, instruc- clarations otice. He some new THE WESTPORT HIGH SCHOOL HERALD. 25 move. He did not rejoice prematurely. Others made joyful over the repeal of the Stamp Act, he saw the accompanying De- claratory Act and foresaw further trouble. His energy was prodigious. He was never at rest. lt was nothing unusual for him to serve on several committees, write a dozen state papers, and manage the Assem- bly, all at once. This strong man who ate little, slept little, talked much and thought constantly naturally excited not a little ven- eration comminglecl with awe, not only in the sturdy yeomanry, but in his own asso- ciates. He knew well how to use his vast powers. A thousand master-strokes proclaim him a consummate politician. Witness the famous affair of the Sam Adams Regiments, for whose removal from the town of the Boston Massacre Adams was directly responsible, witness the consummate skill that inaugur- ated the Committee of Correspondence in the face of public indifference, the Hutch- inson Letters, with the overthrowal of the governor's power, witness the epoch-mak- ing Boston Tea Party, witness the election in the Massachusetts Assembly, of dele- gates to the First Continental Congress under the very nose of the bewildered Gage. Sometimes we find even a touch of trick- ery in his methods, the affair of the Hutch- inson Letters is not wholly defensible. But no man was more utterly unself-seeking in his ends. Whatevfer he did was done for the public good. His end once gained he was wholly careless of the means. Papers which would have established his claim to a position among the greatest he either de- stroyed or left lying at hap-hazard. ' He was'forever instilling into promising young men of parts his own advanced ideas. Again-and what really constituted one of his greatest services-he brought forward and introduced to popular favor many a one of the glorious band of Massachusetts patriots. Hancock, John Adams, VVarren, and a dozen others. all owed to him their introduction upon the national stage. These men, whose works are a part of our national heritage, were thoroughly imbued with the spirit of the times,-that is, with the spirit and ideals of Samuel Adams. Behind their brilliancy he would hide him- self, so that the people saw not the mover of it all, but only the figures in the fore- ground.. But perhaps Adams' greatest single feat and the greatest aid to the spread of his ideas, was the establishment by Boston of the Committee of Correspondence. This had for its object the closer binding together of the men of Massachusetts and of the col- onies general, by taking advantage of the inviolable right of man to communicate and confer with each other. It was Samuel Adams' own plan, the consequences of which no one foresaw, neither friend nor foe. And the consequences were swift to follow. A perfect net-work of similar com- mittees in a trice covered Massachusetts and quickly spread throughout the colonies. They were a power without the law, because based on an inalienable right, everywhere was their influence, spreading intelligence, cognizance of rights, and hopes and brother- ly sympathy. It was the first great step toward unity. Hence we seem to be obliged to credit to Samuel Adams one more serv- ice rendered to independence and the nas- cent nation. But we strike at the secret of Adams' power when we refiect that he was, essen- tially, a man of the town-meeting. This remarkable system is nearly dead today, even in its old strongholds, but in those days its supremacy, especially in Massachusetts, was absolute. And over these little basic folk-motes was the Assembly, itself a folk- mote, in that it was composed, not of repre- sentatives acting within their own judg- ments, but of deputies acting under instruc- tions, often minute, from their parent town- meetings. Thus the whole legislative system was based directly on the individual. And Samuel Adams was essentially a man of the people. He was close to the sturdy yeo-



Page 31 text:

1, he re- active in Washing- igth even thousand to a thou- istinetive of Inde- ansferred .ier hands . but they ples that uctive of hat have But it is e in the een years hose that s-firmly ices, but f free and s almost 1. There an All- zt to give 'ull share, one man, i to Sam- .p all his it he de- IS, 'll. 1110c'lee1'y. away, ylzt Lose stars, irrii, 'l2. THE WESTPORT HIGH SCHOGL HERALD. 27 Brant IFTER twenty years of absence I re- turned to my native city. I came not as a friend to revisit the place of my birth, but, as you remember, in the ranks of the royal army which was ordered hither by the Emperor to frighten certain re- bellious subjects. So I was not everjoyed at the prospect of return, because I feared that some of my old friends might be engaged in the conspiracy against the Emperor. Wlhat qualms I had, however, were all dis- pelled when we arrived. The gates were fiung wide. Crowds thronged the roofs, filled the win- dows and fiowed over into the streets. Every mouth was filled with acclamations for his majesty. Every balcony was hung with the im- perial banners. As we passed along the street the din of voices was deafening. lt drowned our drums, it silenced our bugles, Napoleon l . Napoleon lf K'I,ong live 1 1 the Emperor !' burst from every mouth. I recognized many a lusty voice and saw many faces that I had known in my childhood. My breast was filled with pride as I rode my white horse at the head of my battalion. As we passed, il, noted with great pleasure every familiar window, every door and each pointed roof. Everything was beautiful in my eyes. THE FACE There was nothing that had not a score of pleasant memories hanging about it. It was late afternoon when we entered, and the evening found the troops encamped on the square. The officers were quartered in the lodging houses. To one of these I betook myself. Un knocking I was admitted to the smoky bar, where I encountered a man who was on the point of leaving. As I did not see him at first and as I blocked his exit, he was constrained to ask me to let him pass. . Pardon me, sirf, he said, 'twill you kindly let me go? The voice was some- how familiar. It caused me to start and to look intently upon my 265-0- tzis. If the voice was familiar, the face was doubly sog yet for a mo- ment I could not re- member it. Then a cry of recognition broke simultaneously from our lips. '4It is you, Nesbitfl he cried. 2-Xnd you, Tombreauf' H It was indeed my boyhood companion, Pierre Tombreau, whom I had neither seen nor heard of for many long years. Vtfe fairly embraced in our gladness, and after a full five minutes of handshaking and many ques- tions that poured from our lips and got no answers, nor needed any, my friend captured

Suggestions in the Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) collection:

Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Westport High School - Herald Yearbook (Kansas City, MO) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917


Searching for more yearbooks in Missouri?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Missouri yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.