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Page 15 text:
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...f-H...---...,... ..,.. ,...,.....................,..-...vu-... .....,.,.,....-...,..-..,..,...,. .,... ........-....... .... 4 ......-....,........,...........,..,. .... ..-.........-.-.....,.....-,......-,.,,,, -- .5345 j,t5v .,.i-s-.V,,,:M y7az::'g:: :m::rr:l'::r3::a:L4.1.::1-m:z::4:::::T:'.'2. ':e::.'::::.'::::.1:u 4'az-::':L2:z1:::1:.ft,:i: -1 -,,,-,,-33, .S gwm, A , if ,, ,, A..A .. . ., ,.., .,., . 'lg , f mf if as F92 ies as we P 1 rf . zaaaf.:-'H -izeferfeif ' fi . ,Wa n , .. .A .4 N .. f ,A .rs , . . 9,2 X ,. , A 'Qfrfg-waf::itZZ'iif'f:ili' ih:1:::1'::::.... '1::xii52:12::::::'I::::::.:.:'m::::::::g::::::::::g:m:::::::: :,.':::'.'l.i s:5f2i'.rQ?::::f- 1 - it- ' ..f:-..... ...........,..e- -..--.-,a... -, A-....,,.......-YV. :vw-...,....-........-...........-.--.......f-.-...-...-......'....-..,.... ,.. .,...... ,YW W ,..,vY, in , '- where Mrs. Carr, his daughter, now re- sides. This was not the case, although he did build a house for her brother, Mr. James A. Yeatman, on a part of this land. This house is of peculiar interest, for just at this time, Mr. Yeatman originated a scheme for the erecting of a house by using cement as the principal building ma- terial, which, of course, was then practically unheard of. To do this, Mr. Yeatman went to enormous expense in building a lime-kiln of his own, and in using the timber from his own land for the interior woodwork of the house. But Mr. Yeatman persevered, and the result was a handsome cement man- sion. . Wfhen, for business reasons, Mr. James A. Yeat1nan's property was sold, and the rest of Glencoe divided among Mr. Yeatmans children, Mrs. Carr decided to build on the share which fell to her. This was then al- most a wilderness, but she cleared the land and built the present existing Glencoe, which Mr. Yeatman often visited. Thus a study of Mr. Y eatman's homes re- veals another slde of his character. We see him a man who delighted in building and beautifying houses, a man who took keen pleasure in making his lawn and garden as beautiful as possible. But this was not for his own comfort alone. Best of all he was a man who was famous for his hospitality. just before he left Nashville, he entertained the whole legislature and their wives, and while he was in St. Louis, there was no one else so noted as a peerless host. Moreover on such occasions, he showed that he heartily appreciated a joke. -Once when he saw a young man sitting over a pan of powder, which in some way had been left under his chair, he could not resist the temptation to accidentally drop a lighted match in the pan. Mullanphy Hospital was the last edifice associated with Mr. Yeatman's life. Here he was taken to have a severe operation per- formed and here on july 7, 1901, he died. This ended the life of a man who was always ready to do good when occasion gave oppor- tunity, and who yet obtained all the pleasure from life that was possible. It was ever his wish that others should do likewise. : s ,w .00 ,m T lll Ill fl? :rar ' I Fr' ' Eleven
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Page 14 text:
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- --H .. 1 . n..i....g-.s.......: ....-w-F-L.: T -.....,.......-..........-.......-'-.,,.........-........ pu-.L ..JQ-6-vii-7-.-:Z.':-'S-Tf:3 3 f f fS.'23-'3ICL -:I:JQ:- ... 13 nothing more than a common sink-hole, but Mr. Y eatman drained it, and made a series of terraces with walks lying between. On these terraces he planted different species of flowers, and watered them by another of his inventions. In the meantime, Mr. Yeatman had been married twice. When Mrs. Yeatman this second wifej died, although she herself was a stepmother, she hated the thought of hav- ing a stepmother for her son. Therefore, Yeatman intrusted this son to Mrs. Mrs. Allen, a sister-in-law of Mr. Yeatman. Mrs. Allen earnestly entreated Mr. Yeatman to move with his family from Belmont to the Allen house. homestead, then only a small brick Mr. Yeatman, accustomed as he was to luxury and beautiful surroundings reluctantly complied with Mrs. Allen's re- quest, and moved to the brick house on the hill, known later in VV inston Churchill's Crisis as Bellegarde. The Allen homestead, standing at 1410 East Grand avenue, is now occupied by Mr. Sturgeon, whose wife was Mr. 'Yeatman's niece. It has few decorations on the ex- terior, the only noticeable one being an or- namental iron veranda on .the front. Al- though from a glance at the outside, one might think that this venerable house is ap- proaching the end of its usefulness, yet on the inside the spacious halls, stairs and rooms, still richly comfortable, recall vividly the artistic grandeur of fifty years ago. Here again Mr. Yeatman comes in for a share of the praise. W'hen he moved into the Allen house, he installed many improve- ments, among them the ornamental iron veranda mentioned before and also minor things, such as gas. But by far the most important of these improvements was the famous library, which he added to one side of the house, and in which he placed book- cases, extending from the floor to the ceil- ing. This old room has been changed to a certain extent, and the bookcases contain no books, for Mr. Yeatman at his death gave these to XN'ashington University, but Ten the large open fireplace, and even the carpet, remain unaltered. This library has in turn been the scene of joy and sorrow. It has seen evenings, when it was beautifully decorated for some ball given by Mr. Yeatman. It has seen many a happy young couple wedded. And it has also beheld many a sorrowful cere- mony at the funeral of some friend the family held dear. The series of weddings held here began with the marriage of Mr. Sturgeon to Miss Allen, which took place soon after the library had been completed by Mr. Yeatman, and the latest wedding was the marriage of Mr. Sturgeon's daughter to Mr. Green. VVinston Churchill was married here to Mabel Hallu. a niece of Mrs. Stur- geon. Then Mr. Yeatman himself was buried from this room, which had been so closely associated with so much that was happy and so much that was sad in his life. Mr. Yeatman practically lived at the Allen homestead after the death of his wife for the remainder of his life. It is true that he did live for a short time in Vandeventer Place, and then on Nifashington avenue, but he still continued his visits to the house on Grand avenue. He did not build houses for an investment, but for business purposes. Mr. Y eatman did build warehouses along the levee, for it will be remembered he was a commission merchant. When the Civil War broke out, he cast his lot with the North, for, although a Southerner by birth, he felt that the South was cutting its own throatu in such a war. And so to prove his loyalty he turned these warehouses over to the Union to be used for whatever was thought best. During a survey of the ground a short distance south of St. Louis by the Missouri Pacific Railroad Co., Mr. Yeatman noticed a tract of land which reminded him of the European Glencoe, and so he bought the land and named it after that beautiful valley in Scotland. It is erroneously thought by some that he built the house at Glencoe,
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Page 16 text:
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- .,..........-.. ..N.. ......-,-..-......- 9, .fi xx 7 .......,...-.-...,1.....s....,......,,..,, ..,,.... m,....-...........-......,....,,...........,,.,.....,....,... ..,.. .. .... .,... .. 'JJX':f:fxL'!L 2:IJJ!f1-4 5f,'7if753:-1':f::'L1Ta:,'-:TIJZ'TI: ffUffL'Elfiffl'-Zi:f:3iLf.f11:11f.21l'-'.T-:T'1 4-' J-,Si 222.55522 4 LM V 4 .-as ,, f' -ay f-aa,:,g:,e,..,,.Z, -.7 - ' ! S w ' s X f' . . N ,- fi-1-,,. we--M ' 1. 'iiflfli' L.::::::fr.11::' 'r , M rr , M , f , , 1 fi . ii 2 1 1 ' '- i.' . inx. ..,... ,A if be f , I I Zi, X: fa E m- -L -1 L. '-A- '- L, .,.......--W....-.-.......,.....-......,.-.. ...,..,.. ,,,,E...., ,......,, an B, 1 .,.. -- - ,024 --4--eg:-p----:f .Y ,E --,- E . , ---vw' ----- - .. DR. JOHN XV. XVITHERS Principal 1904-5 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION NVASHINGTON SQUARE, NEW YORK OFFICE OF THE DEAN November the eleventh, 1925 Yeatman Life Staff, Yeatman High School, St. Louis, Missouri Dear Friends: 1 have your kind letter of November -lth. asking me to contribute something to the forthcoming issue of Yeatman Life. It seems almost a crime against educa- tion that such. an institution as the Yeatman High School' should ever be discontinued. Perhaps it is the price that must sometimes be paid in the educational history of a great and rapidly growing American city. - Twelve The Yeatman has now been in existence somewhat more than a fifth of a century. I can never forget the picture so deeply im- pressed upon my memory of the opening morning in September, 1904. The weeds were still high in the front yard, the build- ing was incompleteg workmen were ham- mering merrily and sawing in every part of the building, and the auditorium was filled with scadolding as the students and faculty came together for the first morning assembly, Everything was new. The building was new, the faculty new and strangers to each other. There were twenty-eight of them and they had been selected from all parts of the United States. They were new. not only to the Yeatman, but also to St. Louis. Only
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