HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON Biographical Outline BY HORACE E. SCUDDER CAMBRIDGE at tl)t KitersfiDe M DCCC XCVII z HIS H81S3 Copyright, 1897, BY HORACE E. SCUDDER PREFACE WHEN the family of Mr. Houghton asked me to prepare a memorial of his life I gladly consented, for it was a grateful task to recall his vigorous personality. I did not fully per- ceive till I came to write my book how im- possible it would be to make anything like an adequate Life: there were very few let- ters which I could use, for almost the whole of Mr. Houghton's correspondence was of a business sort, and it was difficult to detach him from his business. I was bent on pre- senting him individually, yet some of his most notable achievements were accomplished through and with the hearty cooperation of his associates. I am sure they will not mis- understand the concentration of my attention on him. I was compelled, after I had sketched the vi PREFACE beginning of his life by means of such scanty documents as I could procure, to rely largely upon my own recollections and impressions. The portrait thus is drawn from my own point of view. It is no more than an out- line. If conditions had been more favorable, not only would I gladly have filled out the sketch with a more detailed treatment, but I would have tried to correct my own view by a comparison with that of one and another of Mr. Houghton's acquaintances and friends. In truth I fear I have strayed somewhat from the task set me of preparing a memorial vol- ume. I can only plead that after thirty years' constant intercourse with Mr. Houghton, his personality was too vivid for me to treat it with the studied impartiality of a historian. NOTE ON THE PORTRAITS THE frontispiece is from a photograph taken in 1893 for use by Mr. Robert Gordon Hardie when painting the portrait presented by Mr. Houghton to his partners and associates, which hangs in the Counting Room of the Riverside Press. The picture facing page 12 represents Mr. Houghton just before entering college, and his sister Marilla, after- wards Mrs. Gallup, who was two years his junior. The portrait facing page 56 gives the aspect of Mr. Houghton at the time when he went into business with Mr. Bolles. The three-quarters portrait opposite page 74 is from a photograph taken about 1860. The figure which faces page 82 is from a photograph taken in Paris when Mr. Houghton was there in 1864. The portrait opposite page 110 is from a photograph taken in 1878. In the Aldermanic Chamber at the City Hall, Cam- bridge, hangs a painting by Mr. Hardie which was pre- sented to the city by various persons engaged in the business of the Press, and at the several offices of Houghton, Mifflin and Company. The photogravure facing page 132 is from this painting, and Mr. Hardie in executing the portrait had before him a photograph taken by Sarony about 1884. The latest portrait of Mr. Houghton is that facing page 152, and is from a photograph taken in 1895. HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON was born on the 30th of April, 1823, in Sutton, a hill town of Caledonia County, in the northeastern corner of Vermont. His mother, who was forty-three years old at the time, was Marilla, daughter of Captain James Clay, of Putney, Vermont, an officer in the Revolutionary army. His father, six years his wife's senior, was Cap- tain William Houghton, a native of Bolton, Massachusetts. Bolton had been set off from Lancaster, and Lancaster had been the home of the Houghton family since John Hough- ton, of Lancaster, England, came to America in the Abigail in 1635. Captain William Houghton was somewhat of a rover, and took his growing family with him as he moved from one place to another up the Connecticut valley and into the Vermont hills, and even, 2 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON when his children had begun to establish themselves, into the southwest part of New York State. There were six sons and six daughters, and a period of nearly twenty-one years separated Henry Oscar, who was the youngest but one, from his sister Stella, who was the oldest in the family. Of the six sons, two became clergymen, one died in his early manhood, two were merchants, and the youngest was the printer and publisher. He had one sister younger than himself, Marilla Houghton, who became a teacher, married Dr. J. C. Gallup, and established the large girls' school in Clinton, New York, now known as Houghton Seminary. Mr. Houghton outlived all his brothers and sisters, but during their lifetime his relations with them were very close. He was, at one time, under the watch and ward of his brother Daniel, eight years his senior ; his brother Albert Gallatin became his busi- ness partner in 1866; he owed much to his oldest sister and her husband, David Scott, and the long period when he and his younger sister were the only ones left made the connec- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 3 tion between them one of special tenderness. The family scattered widely, five of the mem- bers going to Alabama ; but when the young- est son was born no one was yet married, and probably all were gathered in the home at Sutton. Sutton is high up on one of the long lines of rolling hills which run north and south. It looks off upon Burke Mountain in the south- east and the Willoughby Gap ahput six miles to the northeast. The Gap and Lake form strikingly picturesque points in the landscape, but otherwise the country is not marked by more noticeable features than the hills which one climbs only to find other hills lying be- yond. The country is a farming and graz- ing district, and has changed little since the Houghton family lived there. The plain house in which Mr. Houghton was born still stands in the village, and there are persons living who remember the little shock-headed boy, with hair hanging over his forehead, who made one of the figures in the household. Captain Houghton moved to Sutton in 1820. It was one of the resting-places in his 4 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON roving life. He was a tanner by trade, but had failed in business in Lyndon, his previous home, and seems to have gained his livelihood in Sutton by working for the farmers there. The family was large and it was a hard strug- gle to keep the wolf from the door. That the worst did not befall them was due largely to the energy and thrift of the mother, whom her son often spoke of with admiration for her force of character. The Houghtons did not strike root very deeply in the thin soil of Sutton, and, after a few years, once more moved on to Bradford. In one of his ad- dresses before the Vermont Association, Mr. Houghton gave a slight reminiscence of this time of his early youth. " When I was a very small boy, not over ten years old," he said, "my family emigrated from the northern part of Vermont, from the little town of Sutton, a famous maple-sugar town, to the town of Bradford, on the Con- necticut River; and my duty on that jour- ney, besides riding on the furniture wagon, was to help drive the cows which we had to take with us. One Saturday evening, just at HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 5 dusk, we came to the little town of Ryegate, and the signs of thrift and industry, as shown by the green fields, attracted my father, so that he stopped at what was then a Scotch village. I remember that I was frightened nearly out of my wits by the landlady, who, while stirring her oatmeal porridge, com- plained volubly because we did not go on to the next tavern. So fearful and depressed was I that I could not taste of that wonderful dish, which, they say, is ' the food of horses in England, and of men in Scotland.' But when I was lighted up to bed by the land- lord's daughter, as she handed me the candle to go to my little chamber, she put her soft hand on my head, — and I have felt the sym- pathetic touch of that soft hand for over fifty years." The reminiscence was used in intro- ducing a reference to Mr. Whitelaw Reid, whose mother was a native of Ryegate, but it was indicative of a nature singularly suscepti- ble to little kindnesses. At Bradford there was a country academy, and here the boy had for three years his schooling, but at thirteen began to earn his 6 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON living by binding himself as apprentice in the office of the Free Press, at Burlington, then owned by H. B. Stacy, where he served for six years. Mr. Houghton liked in a quiet way to observe anniversaries; and when he was in Vermont in 1894, he visited the Free Press office in Burlington on the 27th of October, and stood by the window where, on that same day fifty-eight years before, he took his place at the case as an apprentice. Of his first journey from his home into the world, where he was to make his way at first on foot, as it were, he wrote, nearly sixty years after : — " On October 26, 1836, hours before dawn, I started in the mail-coach from Bradford, on the Connecticut Kiver, for Burlington, on Lake Champlain, to be initiated into a know- ledge of printing, an occupation which I have followed chiefly since that time until the pres- ent, and am still in my humble way engaged in it. On the way over the hills from Brad- ford to Montpelier, a heavy snow-storm was falling, and the apple-trees were loaded with frozen apples. At high noon of that day we HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 7 halted for dinner in this village [Montpelier], then as now the capital of the State. I re- member with what wonder my boyish eyes looked upon the State House, then standing on this site, with its tall columns, and with what admiration they rested on the member from my native town, dressed in the tradi- tional blue coat with brass buttons, the usual apparel of statesmen of that day, so very dif- ferent from the farmer's frock in which I had been accustomed to see him in his native vil- lage. Many hours after dark we arrived in Burlington, having made a journey of eighty miles during the day." It was while he was in the printing-office that he had an encounter which he liked to relate in after years for its curious connection with a large interest in his business life. One day a pale, slim man came into the office, and showed the young compositor a printed list of words which he carried with him. " My lad," he said, " when you use these words, will you please spell them according to this list?" — theater, center, and the like. It was Noah Webster, who was traveling about the coun- 8 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON try, and, with the shrewdness which sent him to the censors of spelling, was visiting the printing-offices, and persuading the composi- tors to adopt his reforms. Webster had already published his dictionary, but the young printer was to be one of the principal agents in making the book in its ultimate form the great handbook of the American people. Captain Houghton and his family had mean- while made another move to Nunda Valley, in Livingston County, New York ; but Daniel Houghton was a student in the University of Vermont, at Burlington, where he was looking forward to the life of a clergyman. He kept a brotherly watch over the young apprentice, and stood to him very much in loco parentis. There is a letter by him to his mother, written in June, 1839, which carries with it a very distinct air of authority. His father was at the time in Bradford, and the mother and son seemed to be arranging in his absence what should be done about the boy's education. "Maria mentioned," Daniel Houghton writes, "that you would like to have Oscar HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 9 come home and go to school there a year. Did I know that you had a good school, a preceptor amply competent to teach the classics, I should have no objections to his going. I wish to have him fit for college; he might possibly do it in one year, but it probably will be better for him not to enter until two years from August. I intend to have him go to school steady after next Au- gust, whether he goes home or not. The only objection to his going home would be that the advantages would not be as good as here, and the expense of the journey. Should it be desirable to have him at home a year, and should the school be suitable, I have no objec- tions to have him go home in the fall. Please inform me respecting the school, — whether the teacher is a graduate and of what college, etc." The work in the printing-office confirmed the young apprentice in rudimentary know- ledge, and after a long day spent in manual labor he applied himself to books in the even- ing, but in the fall of 1839 it was decided that he should go home to Nunda and enter 10 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON the academy there. He appears to have spent at least two years there and at Wyoming, for another migration of the family had shifted the scene from Nunda to Portage, near Wyo- ming. How much he was master of himself at this time is curiously evident in a bundle of faded boyish compositions, translations, and exercises in a debating club. Both the hand- writing and the spelling bear testimony to the influence upon him of his work at type-setting, and, though the literary form is not altogether smooth, there is a vigor and independence in the thought which indicates a good degree of maturity and self-reliance. It strikes one as felicitous that he should be writing with deter- mination on Decision of Character, — an essay which interested him so much that he pro- duced a " revised edition " a couple of months later ; and that he should have amused him- self, in a composition on the New Year, with the following calculation : — " Perhaps we might very profitably, as we commence the new year, look back and see how we have spent the old one. Allowing seven hours for sleep, there are seventeen hours HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 11 in each day to be improved in some way or other ; and, allowing another three hours for work or play (as the case may be), we have fourteen hours left, about half of which we generally spend in school ; and probably there are not many of us, if any, who study more than four hours out of school, which leaves three hours in each day unaccounted for, and, not reckoning Sundays, we have 313 days in a year ; and, losing at the rate of three hours in each day, at the end of the year we should come out minus thirty-nine days and three hours, and in ten years something over a whole year ; and, taking into consideration the maxim that ' time is money/ we might suppose each hour to be worth a sixpence, which would amount in one year to $58.68f , and in ten years to II APPAKENTLY, the year before entering col- lege was spent again at the case in Burlington, but in the fall of 1842, when he was nineteen years old, he was able to pass an examination and enter the University of Vermont. He used to say that he had three York shillings in his pocket when he entered college, two of which he used for getting himself in order in his room, leaving twelve and a half cents for further expenses. But he had been inured to hardship, he had perforce acquired the most frugal habits, and he had the very great advantage of familiarity with a craft which gave him considerable support as he worked his way through college. He was, however, chiefly indebted for his support to the gen- erous aid of Mr. David Scott, who had mar- ried his sister Stella, and was engaged in business in Alabama. He used in later life to illustrate the stringency of his means at HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 13 this time by telling how he received a letter on which the postage had not been prepaid. Between his absolute lack of the needed twenty-five cents and his resentment at being forced by his correspondent to pay, he was inclined to refuse the letter ; but curiosity and hope conspired to defeat his pride, and he borrowed the money, opened the letter, and found it contained money from his brother- in-law, or at any rate a promise of aid. The following extracts from letters written by Mr. Scott to his young brother-in-law during these years will indicate, brief as they are, not only the ready aid which he gave, but the generous spirit and the friendly counsel accompanying the aid: — September 1, 1843. — "A letter from Stella after she arrived at Dana, Massachu- setts, tells me that you are straitened for funds to progress in your college course. If you will inform me what amount is necessary to carry you through, I will endeavor to assist you. In a few months exchanges will be down, and I can then remit you the necessary sums from time to time to defray your ex- 14 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON penses, which you can refund at your conven- ience. . . . "I am in hopes you will improve your time, and when you get through college come South and get into business of some kind." April, 1844. — "I enclose twenty dollars in South Carolina money, which is the best I can find at present. I hope it will relieve your present difficulties as long as it will last. I shall be pleased to hear from you fre- quently, how you are getting along, and it will afford me pleasure to assist you from time to time as you may stand in need. Do not be backward in letting your wants be known." 1845. — "I enclose $50; let me know when you will stand in need of more funds. "Please acknowledge the receipt of this amount. "It will be necessary for you to study book- keeping, so as to understand accounts. If you could improve the appearance of your handwriting, it would be desirable." The University of Vermont at that tune was a modest institution, with the Eev. Dr. HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 15 John Wheeler for President, and a Faculty of half a dozen professors, of whom the Rev. Joseph Torrey, Professor of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy, was perhaps the most emi- nent. There was a library of about ten thou- sand volumes, and the body of students did not much exceed a hundred in number. But no one who knows the spirit of our New Eng- land colleges in the early half of this century will be disposed to measure the worth of the training received by the meagreness of equip- ment or the paucity of numbers. The Uni- versity of Vermont, like other New England colleges, took its impress from a few control- ling spirits, and, at the time when Mr. Houghton was in Burlington, the Marsh family was a prominent factor in collegiate life, and James Marsh was the prophet of Coleridge in America. It is a coincidence that one of Mr. Houghton's contemporaries at college, a young instructor then, afterward the well-known Professor W. G. T. Shedd, became, through the same influence, the American editor of Coleridge's writings, and that one of the latest enterprises in which 16 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON Mr. Houghton took an active interest was the publication in America of Coleridge's Letters. He was unmistakably affected in his judg- ment 'by the strong attraction this writer had for him in college days. There was a philo- sophical and theological bent given to the minds of students at that time, which is ap- parent in the system of education followed in the University. As if to justify such a name for the institution, the studies were divided into four departments, under the names of the Department of English Literature, the Department of Languages, the Department of Mathematics and Physics, and the Department of Political, Moral, and Intellectual Philoso- phy, which comprised recitations and lectures in Political Economy, the Principles and Forms of Government, Laws of Nature and Nations, Ethics, Natural Theology, and Evidences of Eevealed Keligion, Logic, and Metaphysics. In later life Mr. Houghton was a strong ad- vocate of the country college. He was pre- judiced in its favor no doubt by the fact of his own history, but a strong ground for his confidence lay in his recognition of the per- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 17 sonal force exerted by a few men of power upon a small body of students, and especially of the gradual convergence of prescribed courses toward an ultimate philosophical statement of the doctrines which should fur- nish the young student with a rational law of living. The records of the University library give some indication of the character of the read- ing in which Mr. Houghton engaged inde- pendently of his regular college work. It is a meagre list for the four years, not more than thirty books in all ; and some of these were clearly direct aids to prescribed study. It is probable that, with his irregular prepara- tion for college and his necessity to eke out his means with labor, he had little leisure for many excursions in literature ; but the qual- ity of his reading shows the man who throve on a strong diet. The first book he took out in his Freshman year was the first volume of Winthrop's History of New England, following it shortly with a two-volume work by Charles Mills on the History of the Crusades. A long gap, from the middle of 18 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON October to the middle of March, was closed by William Godwin's Enquirer, and before the year closed he had taken out three vol- umes of Dr. Johnson's writings, Tanner's Narrative of Adventures among the Indi- ans, and two volumes of Leighton's works. In his Sophomore year he appears to have drawn but a single book, a volume of Shake- speare; in his Junior year his reading was mainly in ancient and English history. His Senior year shows half the entire list: he was making his way in Scotch metaphysics, but he was also reading Kent's Commentaries, Mil- ton's prose works, Butler's Analogy, Fenelon, and Bacon's works. When recalling his col- lege days, he was wont to speak of Milton in his prose writings as having a strong influ- ence on his intellectual life, especially with re- gard to the theological problems which he was engaged in solving; he pondered at times the expediency of issuing a library edition of Mil- ton's prose ; he looked forward to publishing Leighton in his Library of Old Divines, and there were few of his publications in which he took greater pride than the edition of Bacon's HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 19 works edited by James Spedding, reprinted by him at the outset of his publishing career, upon terms which made Mr. Spedding a warm advocate of American publishers' modes of business. With the package of school compositions is another of similar essays written during the college course. Some of them help to explain the choice of books from the college library, and the subjects have somewhat the air of having been assigned by a college officer. "The Idea of Liberty among the Ancient Greeks," "The Study of the Classics," "Im- portance of Mathematical Studies," "Beauty of Thought makes Beauty of Style," " What is Education," are the set pieces in the old- fashioned display of collegiate pyrotechnics. But now and then there is a phrase, a turn of thought, a whole paper it may be, which has a personal interest as showing how the young student thought and felt, or what was engag- ing his mind. The presidential election which occurred in his Junior year was that in which Clay played the losing game against Polk. The tariff of 1842 had become a party watch- 20 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON word, and the annexation of Texas was a burn- ing question. Like many other ardent young men of his day, Mr. Houghton was an enthusi- astic follower of Clay, and he was old enough to have shared in the slogan of " Tippecanoe and Tyler too," and to have shared likewise in the disappointment over Tyler's defection. In one of his college essays he defines his political position. " One of the parties," he says, " as it seems to me, has fixed its stand upon principles, while the other has broken away, in a measure, from all principle, and seeks to build it all up by flattering the caprices of the multitude. The one advocates a sound national currency, protection to home industry, and an equitable distribution of the sales of the public lands ; while the other sets forth no principles definitely, but promises to do everything well, if the people will only let them have the power. During the adminis- tration of the government for five or six years previous to 1840 [when the Whigs came into power under Harrison], the country was com- pelled to undergo a series of changes, experi- ments, and expedients, when the whole nation HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 21 arose in its might and shook off its thralldom. But, seeing its anticipations all blasted, it sank back into lethargy. But now, hope having dawned upon it once more, the whole country is rising at the ' blast of the bugle ' which is being reechoed from Maine to Georgia, and from Boston harbor to the Mississippi." He devoted one of his compositions to an inquiry into the policy of annexing Texas. His argument against annexation was based on the moral weakness which overtook nations when they turned their attention to the ex- tension of territory, rather than to the devel- opment of internal resources. Such lust of power, he maintains, leads to party strife and distraction within the state itself; and, after citing Greece, Home, and England, he sud- denly turns for an instance of comparison to Delaware and New York, " the former of which is one of the smallest States in the Union, is out of debt, and seems to be thriv- ing, from the fact that she is not torn by sectional interests. The latter is one of the largest, and possesses, perhaps, a greater va- riety of resources than any other State in 22 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON the Union. But at one time she is embark- ing largely in internal improvements ; at an- other she is stopping her public works, and allowing them to go to ruin when well-nigh completed. Now she is borrowing money to defray the expenses of government, now levying a direct tax to pay her debts, just as sectional interests or parties predominate. " The interests of every part of the Union at the present time seem to be at war with each other, but it is so equally balanced that it is confidently hoped that there will always be a sufficient number of the wise and honorable in our national councils to prevent one por- tion of the Union triumphing over another. But add the foreign territory of Texas to our Union, and the worst results are to be feared from the clashing of sectional interests, — nothing less than anarchy and disunion, and when that day arrives it will be truly said that ' our glory has departed.' ' The turn of the argument is a characteris- tic one, for Mr. Houghton often showed in discussion a curious faculty for seizing upon some illustration whose pertinency was not HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 23 immediately apparent, but which, by some involution of his mind, had an effectiveness for him, and served by its picturesqueness or other striking quality to drive home the point he was making. His Commencement part was upon " The Necessity and True Method of a System of State Education." It is interesting to notice, that though he drew from the col- lege library Grimke on Education and an Ab- stract of Massachusetts School Reports for the years 1838-1840, his oration began with a quotation from Bacon, took in Milton by the way, and showed the influence of Coleridge in the closing paragraph. " Since the state is admitted to have a moral being, with moral attributes and a moral char- acter, the system of education which it adopts should be nothing else but a means of self- education ; and this must be limited and di- rected, as has been intimated, by the wants which it feels. If, then, it would have a con- tinued and healthful growth, it will strive to know its own wants, and will use, as far as possible, the means to satisfy them. Its phy- sical wants every nation feels to a greater or 24 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON less extent ; but the higher wants which be- long to the intellectual and moral nature are not so soon awakened, and for that very rea- son, when they begin to be felt, their claims assume a paramount importance. The high- est energies of the state should be directed to their satisfaction; since, by seeking the highest moral and intellectual culture of all its members, it will inevitably seek its own, so that in the state and the individual will be realized the vision of the prophet, ' whose appearance and work was, as it were, a wheel in the middle of a wheel, and whithersoever the spirit went the wheels went, for the spirit of the living creature was in the wheels.' ' The class of 1846, of which Mr. Houghton was a member, contained in its last year twenty- four students, and of that number about a fourth are still living, fifty years after gradua- tion. One of the number, Mr. Neziah Wright Bliss, at the time hailing from Bradford, and now a resident of Chicago, has kindly given me his recollections of his fellow-student. He had known the Houghton family in Bradford; in- deed, a sister of his at one time was engaged HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 25 to be married to a brother of Mr. Houghton. Oscar Houghton he had known but slightly, since he was but a boy when he left Bradford. " Some days/' Mr. Bliss says, " or perhaps weeks, after my entering with the Freshman class of 1842 at Burlington, a tall young man, slim and very much bent or bowed, as homely of feature as Abraham Lincoln, and as awkward and ungainly in person and manners, came up to me on the campus, and asked if I was Nezi Bliss (my name is Neziah) of Bradford, telling me he was Oscar Houghton. Of course I knew all about him at once (as to his antecedents), and was glad to know him again. I was very small for my age (I was then sixteen), and, having been prepared to enter a year before (but remained at the academy a year longer on account of size as much as age), I was unusually well prepared for those days. Several of my former classmates at the academy were then Sophomores at various colleges, — one now Kev. 0. T. Lanphear, at Burlington. I found that Oscar had been, in fact was then, a type- setter in a printing-office, and was so poorly prepared to enter college that he could barely 26 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON squeeze in. The reason for this was entirely legitimate: he had to support himself, while preparing to enter college, by an industry that was not very lucrative ; and he had to attend the academy as he could, and oftentimes study by himself without instructors. All this he told me, and, without in any way announcing any boastful determination, said he was going to try it and see if he could catch up and keep up ; that it would be hard work, as he would still have his living to make, as well as his tui- tion and expenses of text-books and clothing to meet. In entering, he registered himself as of Portage, New York, which was doubtless the place to which his father's family removed from Bradford, and his room the first year was No. 4 South College ; the next year he roomed and boarded at Mrs. Coon's ; the third year he again roomed in college (North Col- lege, No. 2), registering those two years as of Burlington ; but in our Senior year he roomed at Mr. Cook's, and registered as of Dana, Mas- sachusetts, and so wrote his name and place of birth, as well as date, in my autographs of the class. Of course, under these adverse cir- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 27 cumstances, Mr. Houghton's beginnings in the class were inconspicuous, and little attention was paid to him at first by the class gener- ally, in which were a considerable number of well-prepared students of mature age, notably Aiken and Lull, Belcher and Divoll, Hitch- cock and Jameson, May and Prentiss, Steb- bings and Wainwright, and later Nelson ; but being a personal friend, I could not but no- tice, and did notice, how gradually, day by day and week by week, Oscar Houghton was gaining and growing, delivering better recita- tions and becoming better known to his class, more, I am convinced, by his inveterate good- nature and his sterling honesty and integrity than by his increase in scholarship. It was the custom for all the students of that day to attend prayers in the chapel at sunrise and sunset the year round, and religious services at the chapel at first, and later at the White Church (so called), unless a permit had been obtained to attend elsewhere. I obtained a permit to attend St. Paul's Episcopal Church, then in charge of Bishop Hopkins, a man of great force. Houghton, being a member of 28 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON the Methodist Church at Burlington, of course attended there. One Sunday he invited me to go with him to church, which I did, and found carpeted aisles, cushioned seats, chan- deliers, an upholstered pulpit, and a fashion- ably dressed, beribboned and bejeweled au- dience. I was taken by surprise, as the Methodists of my native town insisted on the rule of excessive plainness and simplicity, and on making the seats, as well as psalms, penitential. I called Oscar's attention to the difference, and asked if he was sure of the place. He was embarrassed, but got out of the dilemma by explaining that, even in the Methodist Church, what was the enforced rule in poorer neighborhoods could not be en- forced in wealthier ones. " At that time there were only two public societies in the college, the Phi Sigma Nu and the University Institute, and the practice was, after sufficient time had elapsed, for the upper classes to form some estimate of the charac- ter and capacities of the Freshmen, to take the class list, and for the society, which for that year had the choice, to select the first or HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 29 second name on the list, and then take every other one in the list to its end, so that one half of each class went to each society some- what by lot. Houghton and I both fell to the Phi Sigma Nu. At that time the parties in the societies were divided on the lines of Church or Non-Church, Liberals or Conserva- tives, but, with the usual exaggeration of col- lege life, were denominated Blues and Bloats. Without any essential reason on either of our parts, Houghton fell to the Blues and I to the Bloats, and my party was in power in holding the offices during our entire college course ; but we always elected Houghton to an office, generally that of treasurer, on account of the universal love and respect with which he was regarded, for he never in his life (I believe) made himself offensive in any way to any one. Early in the history of our society life, Oscar Houghton began to take part in the debates. To do so was by no means general ; a few members generally were the speakers, and the great mass of members were listeners only. It was as hard, up-hill work for Mr. Houghton to take part in the debates as it 30 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON was to work up in his recitations. He was troubled immensely with what I suppose the French call mauvaise honte. He would get up, bent over almost in a semicircle, and be- gin a stammering, hesitating, awkward, lum- bering speech, but nevertheless always with a thought or idea at the bottom which he could not express or get out; he would be openly laughed at by some and pitied by his more intimate friends, and he would give up and sit down, laughing himself with the others at his own failure, and by that means relieving both those who laughed and those who pitied of all embarrassment ; but he would soon be up again, and sooner or later he would some- how and after a fashion express a thought on the subject under discussion that would com- mand the attention and respect of all. This went on in the society and in the class-room, and not so slowly as you might suppose, be- cause, when we held our Sophomore exhi- bition, May 16, 1844, Houghton had so advanced that he was assigned the honorable place of the closing speech of the afternoon, his subject being a characteristic one, for the HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 31 handling of which he was evidently peculiarly well qualified, to wit, < The True Ideal of a Manly Character ; ' while to your late Judge John W. May, the oldest and most accom- plished scholar of the class, was assigned the closing address of the evening, his subject being ' Heroism.' At our Junior exhibition, Mr. Houghton opened the evening exercises "by an address on ' The Idea of Liberty among the Ancient Greeks,' and again, in our grad- uation exercises, opened the second session, his subject being ( The Necessity and True Method of a System of State Education.' " His success and standing in his class in scholarship was equal to, if not greater than, his success as an essayist ; and at the close of our college years no man commanded more the respect of the class than did Mr. Hough- ton, and I am sure no man was so universally esteemed and loved. If I were to estimate the elements of his character which brought to him the great measure of success that was accorded to him in his life, I should say it was his entire and incorruptible honesty and in- tegrity, bred in the bone and reaching clear 32 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON through, patent upon the face of all his acts. This, supplemented by his exceeding kindness of heart and never-failing good-nature, gave him those advantages that commanded the success he met and deserved. . . . " And now, Mr. Scudder, I have written to you my impressions of my friend and class- mate, just as I should wish you to have writ- ten me had I inquired instead of you, giving you the facts as they were at the time, not undertaking (after the event) to make out any great things as earnests or prognostica- tions of the success afterwards attained. Mr. Houghton never seemed to me, as in the case of some I have known, to set up any special ideal to which he would strive to attain. I don't think he ever thought of ( aiming high,' or particularly of ' aiming' at all, but I do think he quietly and unostentatiously was de- termined to do as thoroughly and well as he could whatever his hand found to do, and that he in everything and everywhere con- scientiously did his work, leaving the conse- quences to follow as a matter of course, with- out in any case particularly contemplating HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 33 them ; and I believe it was this that largely commanded the confidence of his business associates in Cambridge, which to an unusual degree contributed to his success. He has gone, but he has left a most fragrant memory among his friends, and to his family a name and a character that will command the utmost respect of all." To this vivid reminiscence by Mr. Bliss may be added the memorabilia of other of Mr. Houghton's surviving classmates. Mr. William H. Dodge, now of Westboro', Mas- sachusetts, writes : — • " I was not intimately acquainted with Mr. Houghton outside of his immediate college duties, but in the class and lecture room I sat near him during our entire college course. He was one of the older members of our class, being, I think, nearly twenty-four at graduation, and had then a weU-developed, steady, reliable, and manly character. " As I remember him, while not particularly excelling in any department of college study, he never failed or did poor work, but was a well-balanced, all-round, good average student. 34 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON His written productions were always heavily loaded with good, sound sense. Had he spent less time in the printing-office, working for money to help pay his expenses, he would doubtless have taken higher rank in college work. I think he gave very little if any time to college games or social pleasures that would not yield some profit to present or coming real life-work." Mr. Horace E. Stehbings, of Chicago, adds his recollection in these words : — " I am glad to contribute any information, however little, in relation to the college life of my friend Houghton, for he was my friend and I always called him ' Oscar.' We were classmates for four years. Our time — his time especially — was fully occupied. We had fewer leisure hours together perhaps than students now have. We often worked together, however, and saw new things and realized new relations as a result of our work. How can I cut it short ? Houghton was one of the most genial, kind-hearted young men of them all, and hence perhaps I was drawn to him. It always seemed to me that I was his HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 35 welcome companion, — persona grata in mod- ern phrase, — and I loved him for that. He was lightly built in frame, and so seemed taller in stature than most ; deliberate of speech ; of lively intelligence ; an earnest, honest, unsophisticated Yankee boy. He was a printer, as you know, and earned money by his art while in college. Most young men of that time ' paddled their own canoe.' He set types, read proof, etc., in fact did almost everything at times, in the printing-office of Chauncy Goodrich, of Burlington, Vermont. There he met Father O'Calligan, an amiable old priest of the town, who wrote books of va- rious sorts, one Of Usury. He and Hough- ton together corrected the proofs. The old gentleman would sometimes get inspired re- reading his own text, and stop the really useful work and consume the time lecturing Houghton, his audience of one, on the topics of the chapters. Houghton said he did n't think it made any difference to him, since he was paid by the hour. The two became really attached to each other, — the one a highly educated, confirmed old Papist, the other a 36 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON young Protestant student, and a zealous Meth- odist at that. It always seemed to me a funny relationship, but serves to show how very easy it is to throw away dogma when warm hearts and loving natures meet. " I remember how we often picked out the Greek together by the roots, and wondered how far we should ever go to reap the ripe crops that grow out of these. Houghton, like many other students, did not like to be hindered and limited by the study of what seemed to him unimportant details. We were, for instance, put upon an indigestible diet of Greek prosody for a while. Houghton said : 6 1 wonder if Professor thinks I care any- thing about the feet of those old Greek poets. I care a great deal more about their heads.* ' When Mr. Houghton was seventy years old, a notice of the fact in the press brought a brief note of congratulation to him from another classmate, J. W. Taylor, of Syracuse, New York, in which the writer says : " It must be now near fifty years since I became acquainted with you, daily toiling up the steep ascent of College Hill, in Burlington, to the HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 37 recitations in Alma Mater. I remember it seemed to me a wonderful achievement that you should be able to set type all day at the case, and still find time to study and make the three trips from down town and back again and have any vitality left ! Through the lapse of time I can see the wonderful nerve it required, and the iron will to back it. But the same determined spirit has borne its fruit through these fifty years." It is pleasant to show the response to this friendly spirit of his classmates, in a letter which Mr. Houghton wrote to Mr. Stebbings, December 1, 1887 : — 4 PARK STREET, BOSTON, December 1, 1887. MY OLD FRIEND AND CLASSMATE STEB- BINGS, — I have often thought of you, and was very glad to receive your photograph. I supposed it represented you, although it was very different from the stubbed young man that I knew in college; and I should have responded, but I did not know where to address you, until I met Jameson, who kindly gave me your address, and agreed to be the 38 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON medium through which I could convey my shadow to you in return for yours. I think it is very pleasant to have the faces of our old friends, even if the gray hairs have begun to show. I think I am a little younger than I was forty years ago when we were together, and I am quite anxious to know whether you retain that umbrella that you broke over the head of the Sophomore who was trying to intrude himself into your room without per- mission. I heard that Mr. Bliss was at Burlington this year at Commencement. I think I should have gone there to meet him alone if I had known he was to have been there. I was there a week or more after the Commence- ment, and heard of him. He and I were great friends in college, and I have always taken a kindly interest in him. I wish he would send me his photograph, and I shall be very glad to retaliate if he should do so. I am glad to believe that both you and he are prospered so far as this world's goods go, and I am delighted with the description of your family. I should be glad to see any of them HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 39 if they come to Boston, and I should like to take you to my house and show you mine. I have three of the best girls that there are in the country, except yours, and they are a great comfort to me. I have a son also, who is with me in the business, and who has been married a year or more. My son lives in the house he was born in, and my girls are still with me. Keciprocating heartily your blessings, and hoping we may meet either here or in Chicago, I am, as ever, Your friend, H. 0. HOUGHTON. m WHEN lie was graduated from the Univer- sity of Vermont in 1846, Mr. Houghton was in debt for his education to the amount of $300, but he was equipped for seeking his fortune with a college training, knowledge of a craft, good health, and indomitable energy. His intention, like that of many young grad- uates, was to take up school-teaching until the way opened for a permanent vocation; and he appears to have had a partial engage- ment for the winter of 1846-47 to teach in Hardwick, Massachusetts, not far from Dana, where his parents were now residing. But, missing the first opportunity which presented itself, he fell back upon his craft as a printer, and found also a chance to do reporter's work on the Boston Traveller. It is not improbable that the steps which led him into printing as a vocation were taken somewhat reluctantly; for a college education was re- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 41 garded in his youth as more distinctly the entrance upon one of the learned professions than it is to-day, and the exertions and sacri- fices required for securing such an education would seem scarcely justified by a mechani- cal occupation afterward. I never heard Mr. Houghton speak in this strain, but I have often heard him set a high value on the disci- plinary collegiate training of his day, which supposed hard intellectual labor for four years. Certainly in his case the effect of this training upon his success as a printer and captain of industry was very great. He was not espe- cially dexterous as a mechanic. His work at the case, to be sure, had given him facility in setting type, and I recall an odd illustration of special expertness which his practice had given him. He had no liking for games, but when his children were playing the familiar letter-game, which consists in constructing a word out of a jumble of letters, he would take the unassorted letters and arrange them at once in their proper order. He knew the parts of a printing-press, but he had not the skill which some master printers had, as 42 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON the late Mr. Welch, for example, to take a press apart and put it together again. What he did have, the gift especially of his college training, was the power, so much more sub- stantial than mere empiricism, to make his experiments in his head, — to see what he wished to accomplish, and what means, me- chanical or other, were needed to produce the desired result. This power was unquestion- ably confirmed by many years of experience, so that his knowledge of what went to the making of a good book — paper, ink, cut of type, presswork — was unhesitating, but it was a power which sprang rather from the logical faculty behind the eye than from the eye and touch ; and it was, as I have said, a native gift trained and ordered by intellec- tual discipline. Another element of success in his vocation which he brought with him from college was also a native gift, enhanced in value by colle- giate training, — the gift of good taste, that quality of selection and reserve which lies at the bottom of genuine success in any mechanic art that appeals in the last analysis to the cul- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 43 tivated eye and mind. It was an unfailing source of pleasure to him to examine the work of the great Italian printers, whose masters were in turn the artists of the illuminated missals of the days before printing, and he never wearied of inculcating those fundamen- tal principles of good proportion and simpli- city which may be traced in all the acceptable work from Aldus down. There was a certain rule of proportion for the printed page, which an architect once formulated for him ; it was a rule which mechanically confirmed what his own good taste had fixed independently ; and, in any discussion as to a proposed page, he was pretty sure to apply the rule as an author- ity, but he did not need the rule to satisfy himself : his eye was quite as trustworthy. It was the custom in the office, never inter- mitted to the last, to refer every specimen page and every title-page to him for approval, and no book could be carried forward or com- pleted until the letters H. 0. H. were upon these pages. " The fact has often been commented on," says Mr. Houghton in his address on Early 44 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON Printing in America, " that the printing of the first printers excelled in beauty of exe- cution that of any subsequent issues of the printing-press. The reason for this, I think, will be apparent when we consider that the first types were imitations of the chirography of the monks, and from long experience and practice this chirography had come to be very beautiful ; but, as was inevitable when speed became an important element and the types became mechanical appliances, this love of beauty gave way, as has been the case always, to utility and speed. The old German text, also, through the process of years, has gradu- ally given way to the more common Latin text, and, as we see in the modern newspaper, the process of deterioration still goes on in obedience to the demands of haste. There is a return now among the cultivated to the more careful printing of earlier times. An evidence that this early printing was, as near as could be, transcripts of the careful penman- ship of the old monks, can be seen in the great folios in that remarkable library at Cairo, where it is difficult even for an expert, HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 45 without close inspection, to say whether these books were printed or written." A brief series of letters to his parents after leaving the University, and before setting up for himself as a printer in Cambridge, gives in a random fashion Mr. Houghton's apparently desultory occupation for these two or three years. The letters give also, especially to those who knew him in his later years, curious little intimations of his temperament, and of the resolute spirit which attended him in the early reaching out after a definite plan of life. BOSTON, October 20, 1846. DEAR PARENTS, — I found when I arrived in Worcester that the paper which had been sent me had been nearly a week on the road, and the situation had been filled up when I arrived, and therefore I came on to Boston the next morning. When I got here I found Pres- ident Wheeler at the hotel where I stopped, and he gave me a very flattering recommen- dation, by the aid of which I have succeeded in getting a situation for a month at least in the Daily Traveller office, one of the best 46 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON papers in the city. My business is to be, if I am prospered so as to do it readily, that of reporter ; that is, going about the city and picking up the news and writing it out for the paper, attending lectures and giving ac- counts of them. Perhaps I may come home at the end of the month, and perhaps stay longer. My salary is not very large at first, but if I remain and succeed well it is to be increased. I have found several acquaint- ances in the city, and by means of one of them I obtained board in a private family the first day I came here, so that it has not cost me as much as it would at a public house ; and I have earned about two dollars in cash in a printing-office, besides going on top of Bun- ker Hill Monument, out to Cambridge, etc. ; and I am not at all sorry I came here; in fact it seems to me providential. I wish you would send me all the letters and papers that have come for me since I left. If you will pay the postage on the letters, and get Mr. Russell or Johnson to do them all up in one package, they will come cheaper than they would separately, as they will then come HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 47 by weight. If you can send me some more stockings and my two best night-shirts by Mr. Russell, I should like it. They could proba- bly find me at the Daily Traveller office on Court Street. I wish the letters directed " Traveller Printing - office, Boston." I am anxious to hear from you, how you are get- ting along, and I will endeavor to write again soon if you answer this immediately. I think I shall be able to send you papers occasion- ally. I am very much pleased with Boston, and have been treated very courteously and kindly by gentlemen who were entire strangers to me. I spent an hour or two in the library of the University in Cambridge, which con- sists of 52,000 volumes. I called on Mrs. Chamberlin yesterday, and found her quite smart. Very affectionately your son, H. 0. HOUGHTON. BOSTON, October 13, 1847. DEAR PARENTS, — I am getting rather anx- ious to hear from you, as I have not heard a syllable since I left home. Neither have I 48 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON heard anything from Manila or Maria. Albert spent nearly two weeks in Boston, and has written to me two or three times since, short business letters. I bought a quantity of cran- berries for him a few days since. He and his family sailed from New York about the first of October. Soon after my return from home Mr. Dick- inson sold a large part of his establishment, but I was retained in his employ and promoted to the office of proof-reader, which is about the highest notch as to dignity in the printing- office. I saw in my paper last evening a little para- graph saying that a Mr. Haywood, a drover from Jaffrey, New Hampshire, had his pocket- book stolen from him, or else lost it, containing $3000 in bank-bills. He was in Brighton at the time. I feared from the description that it might be Elizabeth's husband. If so, they must feel very bad about it. I wrote to Mr. Scott that you would send him what cheese you could spare. Mother, if you will knit for me, or get them knit for me, three or four pairs of good substantial socks, HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 49 I will pay you 50 cents a pair, or any price you please. I want them knit long, so that they will come up to the tops of my boots. I have a quantity of old clothes, such as my old over- coat, pantaloons, etc., which I would like to send home, if you would wish them, but I hardly know how to send them. I have not seen Russell this fall ; has he been down yet ? I hope he will call on me when he comes. I think my health is growing better, if any- thing. I am anxious to know how you are getting along, and I hope you will write to me, if not more than two lines, and direct Dickinson's Type Foundry, 4 Wilson Lane, Boston. My earnest prayer is that your last days may be made comfortable, and when you leave this world you may be prepared for a better habitation in another. Affectionately your son, OSCAR. BOSTON, September 2, 1848. DEAR PARENTS, — You will notice, by a circular that I sent to-day, that I have changed my place of business, as I intimated I might 50 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON do when at home. Business declined at the Boston Type Foundry, so that they thought they could not afford to keep two proof-read- ers, and of course I was discharged. They expressed themselves perfectly satisfied with me, however, and gave me a letter of recom- mendation. Mr. Rand made me an offer soon after to come into his office and take in extra proof-reading, by which arrangement, if I am prospered, I hope to do better than I have been doing. The Traveller folks told me they wished to send me to Worcester to attend a Democratic Convention next Wednesday. If there are any delegates from your quarter, please to send some word by them. Did Daniel come home this summer ? Why did he not come to Boston ? Albert is not coming this summer, and Mr. Eeady has not yet arrived. Do not fail to let me hear from you soon, and direct care of G. C. Rand & Co., No. 3 Cornhill. Affectionately your son, OSCAR. P. S. I went on Wednesday last to Ply- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 51 mouth, and put my foot on the rock where the Pilgrims landed. The following is the circular referred to in the previous letter : — A CARD. TO PRINTERS, PUBLISHERS, AND AUTHORS. The undersigned, formerly proof-reader in Mr. S. N. Dickinson's stereotype foundry, has taken a desk in the office of G. C. Rand & Company for the purpose of accommodating those printers who may need extra assistance in proof-reading, or whose business will not warrant the constant em- ployment of a professional reader. By this ar- rangement, it is believed, proofs can be read with promptness and dispatch, and at about the same expense as in the office where the work of composi- tion is performed. If a long and varied experience, the facilities afforded by a regular collegiate education, and a thoroughly practical knowledge of printing, may tend in any degree to inspire confidence, it is hoped the undertaking may meet with encourage- ment. Attention given, also, to the preparation of manuscripts for the press when desired. 52 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON REFERENCES. — Mr. S. Phelps ; James M. Shute, agent of the Boston Type and Stereotype Foundry; C. C. P. Moody, former partner of Mr. Dickinson ; Messrs. Freeman & Bolles ; Messrs. Andrews & Punchard, editors of The Daily Evening Travel- ler ; and a large number of authors and publishers. N. B. For reading first proofs, an intelligent boy provided to read copy without extra charge. H. O. HOUGHTON. No. 3 COBNHILL, BOSTON, August 29, 1848. BOSTON, November 16, 1848. DEAR PARENTS, — I was very agreeably surprised one morning in finding a letter on my desk from mother. I know not who brought it there, but I have not had such a treat for some time past. I thank you for your invitation to Thanksgiving, and designed to avail myself of it; my business, however, is of such a nature that I cannot tell possibly whether I can be there or not on that day. But I hope to be permitted to drop in upon you in the course of two or three weeks. I went to Connecticut, and made James * a visit 1 An older brother, Rev. James Clay Houghton, of Granby, Conn. HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 63 on Saturday last. I found them all well. They have a fine girl, some ten months old, with a white head and a deep-blue eye. JameS was away on Sunday, and did not return until Monday, and I had the visit with his family all to myself. I returned to Boston on Tues- day, after having had a very pleasant time. I have recently had an offer to go into busi- ness here which seems to me very favorable. Mr. Freeman, of the firm of Freeman & Bolles, who are among the best printers in the city, if not the very best, has offered to sell me one half of the office for $100 down and the rest in yearly payments of $250 each. He esti- mates that the half of the office will be worth about $3000, which is to be left to referees to say. Messrs. Little & Brown, who are the most extensive publishers of law books in New England, if not in the United States, propose to make a contract with us to do all their printing that we can do, at a stipulated price, which will probably of itself be sufficient to keep a large establishment in operation. They , are building a large office in Cambridge, the rent of which is to be about half Freeman '&' H 64 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON Bolles are now paying in the city. Mr. Bolles has been in business here about twenty years, and offers to put his experience on a par with my education, if I will go in with him. Gen- tlemen here in the city have agreed to sign a note for me, by which I can raise $500 or $600. Persons here who are acquainted with the business tell me that it is a good oppor- tunity, and that we can probably make $2000 a year clear of expenses. Mr. Scott1 and James both speak very favorably of it, and James tried to raise some additional funds for me, but did not succeed. I will try and come home soon, and tell you more about it. Till then adieu. Affectionately your son, H. 0. HOUGHTON. P. S. Albert has a daughter a month or two old. They call it Maria, I believe. Mr. Scott's family are well. He said nothing about the cheese. I have not heard from Marilla for a long time. Write soon. I am almost out of socks. 1 Mr. David Scott, his brother-in-law. HENKY OSCAR HOUGHTON 55 The last of these letters shows Mr. Hough- ton just on the eve of establishing himself in business with Mr. Bolles, but still lacking the funds needed to complete the bargain. There is a story that he was at work on the morning of the day when the option was to expire. There was a rap at the door, and, in response to his "Come in," there entered a countryman, who inquired, "Is this Oscar Houghton?" He was told that it was. " Well, now, Oscar, I 'm right glad to see you," said the stranger; "my wife Sarah said that when I came to Boston I must be sure and see her cousin Oscar." The visitor proved to be a well-to- do New England farmer. He inquired after his relative's affairs, and Mr. Houghton told him of his plans, and stated that the hour had come when he must give an answer to the offer made him, but that he must give up the chance for lack of the needed money. "How much do you lack, Oscar?" asked the farmer. "About five hundred dollars," was the reply. Whereupon the visitor, who had become thoroughly interested, offered to make up the amount in a loan. As nearly 56 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON as can now be known, the amount which Mr. Houghton raised was fifteen hundred dollars, one third of which was raised from friends on his promissory note, one third was lent by Mr. David Scott, and one third by his cousin's husband, Rufus Heywood, of East Jaffrey, New Hampshire. The office was first established on Reming- ton Street, in Cambridge, and a glimpse of the activity of the new business is seen in a paragraph of a letter to one of his sisters, written from Cambridge, March 5, 1849 : "Your favor dated February 10 was not re- ceived until this evening. I had business in town, and went to the post-office and found it advertised. You know, I suppose, that I now live in Cambridge, and when you write again please direct there. I should be much gratified to see you, and hope I may have the opportunity before you leave on your mis- sion. I have been designing to visit home, if permitted so to do, about the first of April, but it would be very difficult for me to leave now. We have about thirty persons in our employ, are chock-full of business, and hardly HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 57 settled yet. Please to let me know your plans definitely, as I am very desirous of see- ing you before you go." A year later he was writing to his parents : CAMBRIDGE, February 18, 1850. DEAR PARENTS, — I am getting quite anx- ious to hear from you, and I write with the hope that you will give me a few lines in return. Daniel was here a few days ago, and left here for Dana, and I suppose he told you all about me, and perhaps made a sorry story. I sent a gold dollar by him for mother, which I trust he delivered. Our business has given us a good deal of trouble, both before and since I was home, but we are getting along more smoothly, I think, now ; and I am con- fident, with the help of Providence, we shall prosper. The "strike" will, I think, work to our advantage in the end, as we get better prices now, and are driving a heavier business than ever. I suppose you saw in the Trav- eller an account of the " striking " one of our women received some time since. There has been quite a noise made about it. 58 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON I received a letter from Maria a few days since ; she appeared to be in fine health and spirits. The Sioux had all gone a-hunting, and she and Mr. Hancock had gone 200 miles further north among the Winnebagoes, where the thermometer stood the first week or two in January at 27 and 30 degrees below zero. We shall look for Albert in March. I think I shall try and coax him to go home. Harriet appears to be getting along finely, and likes Boston and Boston people much better than she did. Her father wrote that she might come home with Albert in March, but she wrote back she did not wish to go until fall. Harriet Eyler is keeping house this winter for Governor Collier, and has not yet gone to Wetumpka. Do let us hear how you are getting along, and if you are in need let me know it. May the Lord help you is the prayer of Your affectionate son, OSCAR. The religious expression at the close of this HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 59 letter was not a mere form of words. Mr. Houghton in his earliest years had been under the influence of the Congregational church, but the example of his eldest sister led him to cast in his lot with the Meth- odists. During his college days his read- ing and thinking had at one time led him to question the doctrinal basis of his re- ligion, and he was inclined for a while to the Unitarian statement ; but he worked out the problem with the result of becoming more securely established on the foundations of his early faith, at the same time that he acquired a habit of mind which gave him intellectual sympathy with a wide range of religious expression. Dean Huntington, of Boston University, wrote of him : " He did not care always to do what was simply con- ventional, or the thing that some one else expected him to do, but he had clear ideas of duty as he saw it, and this duty he was glad to do with all his strength. His type was ethical. The emotional kind of piety did not affect him deeply. He laid the emphasis of his belief upon integrity, justice, frugality, self- 60 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON respect, and charity to the suffering and needy." It is a confirmation of the sturdy character of his loyalty to the Methodist form of religion, which he believed to be the most practical order and the freest from the perils which beset institutional religion, that he never swerved from an identification with it, though the engagement to be married, which he formed at the beginning of his career, was with a member of the Congregational Church ; and he was brought into intimate and very admiring relations with her family, though he married afterward a member of the Baptist communion, and though, as years went on, his wife and some of his own children passed over into the Episcopal Church. The intimate connection with the Methodist Church, though it brought him into positions of service and responsibility in the denomination, did not restrict or narrow his sympathy. He had a very great appreciation of the work of the American Board of Commissioners for For- eign Missions; and he was wont to dilate upon the admirable organization of the Rom- ish Church, as well as upon the great impor- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 61 tance of the contention of that church that education of the young should be primarily religious. It was not merely that his busi- ness brought him into close relations with intellectual men of various creeds, and that his business sagacity forbade him to make the lines of his enterprise coincide with the lines of his ecclesiastical relationship, but his nature was catholic in its sympathy ; he was at once too large a man to be narrowly sectarian, or to be religiously indifferent. Upon first coming to Boston he had con- nected himself with the Bromfield Street Methodist Episcopal Church, and after estab- lishing himself in Cambridge, he returned for a while to that church home. Dr. Warren, now President of Boston University, was pas- tor of the church during a portion of that time, and writes : — " He was the Assistant Superintendent of the Sunday-school of the Bromfield Street Church when, with less than four years' expe- rience in the ministry, I was sent thither to be the pastor of such men as he, and of yet older and riper saints, such as Mother Monroe, 62 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON Jacob Sleeper, Isaac Rich, David Snow, and others of their generation. Mr. Houghton was already a man of mark in the goodly congregation that filled the house. It was natural that it should be so. He was a man of liberal education, clear-headed, warm- hearted, prosperous in business, one of the comparatively few who came to church in his own family carriage, driving all the way from his Cambridge home, yet ready to remain to attend the Sunday-school and to do his part in the work of the church. Whenever I now think of those days, and realize that he was riper than his pastor by ten or more years of Christian experience and of world-experience, I marvel that he could have listened so atten- tively, and that he could have evinced his friendly feelings in such manifold and encour- aging methods as he did." There was another reason why Mr. Hough- ton clung to his Boston connection. He had made the acquaintance of Miss Elizabeth Har- ris, and the acquaintance had ripened into love, so that an engagement of marriage took place; but Miss Harris was frail in health HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 63 and was attacked by consumption, a more dis- tinctive New England disease then than now, and died, so that the marriage did not take place. Many of Mr. Houghton' s friends will remember the strong and kindly presence in his household of Miss Mary Harris, "Aunt Mary," as she was familiarly known, the real aunt of Miss Elizabeth Harris, and the titular aunt of the young family that afterward grew up under her eye, for she made her home with Mr. Houghton for many years before her death; the respect and affection he had for her, and the confidence she had in him, were manifest to all who knew the two together. How much this beautiful connection meant may be seen from the impulse which led Mrs. Houghton to give to her eldest daughter the name of Elizabeth Harris. IV THE quarters in Kemington Street soon be- came insufficient for the growing business, and there was need of a more substantial establishment. As has been seen, the most important connection of the new firm was that with Messrs. Little, Brown & Company, of Boston, then as now an eminent publishing house, especially of law books. The moving spirit at that date was Mr. James Brown, a warm friend of the elder John Murray, from whom he named a son, who has succeeded him in business. Mr. Brown gave the young printer substantial encouragement, and by his advice and aid Mr. Houghton, who was now by himself, became Mr. Brown's tenant in a brick, domestic-looking building on the banks of the Charles Eiver. The building had for- merly been used by the city of Cambridge as a house for the town poor, and stood almost in the open country. Mr. Brown had bought HENRY OSCAK HOUGHTON 65 the estate, and the building, after being re- modeled, was occupied by the firm of H. 0. Houghton & Company. Mr. Houghton and Mr. Brown were desirous of giving the new press a significant name, and tried various ex- periments, till Mr. Brown said one day : " This press stands by the side of the Charles Eiver ; why not call it ( The Eiverside Press ' ? " and this most natural name was then given it, so that now the term Riverside has come to cover a thickly populated district, and to be applied to various neighboring industries. It was in 1852 that the firm of H. 0. Houghton & Company was established at the Riverside Press,1 and on September 12, 1854, Mr. Houghton was married to Miss Nanna W. Manning, who was at the time a teacher in the Cambridge High School. The first house occupied by the couple was in Ellery Street, but shortly after, by the aid and with the wise advice of Miss Mary Harris, he built 1 An old payroll book shows for the first week, ending January 18, 1849, a list of sixteen names, aggregating $74. The increase of the business is seen by that for April 10, 1852, when there were fifty names and a total of $575.22. 66 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON the house on Main Street, now Massachusetts Avenue, still the home of the family. He added an apartment easy of access on the ground-floor for the use of his parents, who came* to live with him. His mother died in 1858 ; and his father afterward went to the home of William Houghton, the oldest of the sons, in Nunda, where he died. There was a period, therefore, of about ten years when Mr. Houghton may be said to have been establishing himself. He was mar- ried, had a house of his own, and saw a young family growing up about him. He was in full control of a printing-office; for though he did business under the firm name of H. 0. Hough- ton & Company, the company was a friend who had embarked money in the enterprise and assumed no share in the management. He was in close relation with the Harvard Street Methodist Episcopal Church, where he was Superintendent of the Sunday-school,1 and 1 He was Superintendent from 1850 to the end of 1853. For several years after that he resumed his connection with the church in Boston, but returned to the Harvard Street church in 1862, was then made a trustee, and resumed his office of Superintendent in 1864, retaining it till his death. HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 67 he was taking his part in the government of the young city of Cambridge as a member of the school committee, as well afterward as a member of the Common Council and of the Board of Aldermen. There were two connections which he main- tained in business that were of great impor- tance to him. The firm of Little, Brown & Company, besides being very large law pub- lishers, took the lead in enterprises calling for a "good deal of capital. They planned and carried out a series of dignified historical and political works, of the kind to which we eas- ily give the name of monumental, like the writings of John Adams and John Quincy Adams, and the speeches of Daniel Webster. They undertook also that long series of Brit- ish Poets and British Essayists, neat, sober volumes in black cloth, each preceded by a steel-plate portrait of the author. A few of the volumes of the British Poets, those least in demand, like the poems of Bishop Heber, were simply small editions from English sheets bound uniform with the others ; most of the books, however, were passed under the critical 68 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON supervision of Professor Francis J. Child, with occasionally the aid of Mr. C. E. Norton and Mr. James Kussell Lowell, and reset and stereotyped here. Much of this mechanical work fell to Mr. Houghton, and he was brought thus into friendly relations with the editors, and into very close relations with Mr. Brown, whom he always looked upon as the most far-sighted and courageous publisher whom he had known, — a man who saw his business in a large way, and yet had the resolution and decision to keep clear of specu- lative ventures. "Mr. Houghton," the elder man once said to him impressively, "never hesitate to stop any enterprise which is not paying : if you see a part of your business to be unprofitable, cut it off, no matter how much it hurts ; " and Mr. Houghton laid the advice to heart. The other house with which the young printer made an alliance was the firm of Tick- nor & Fields, which was rapidly acquiring a list of books in general literature, and mak- ing friends amongst English and American authors, especially of poetry and belles-lettres HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 69 generally. If the volumes of the British Poets stood for substantial standard literature, the decorous brown-clad volumes with blind side-stamps will even now bring up delight- ful associations in the minds of readers who were young men and women in the decade of 1850-1860. When, a few years ago, the old firm name of Ticknor & Company was revived for a short time, Mr. Howells, with the en- thusiasm of reminiscence, urged the new firm to hunt up the old-fashioned die, get some brown cloth made of the pattern of the old, and burst forth in a sort of resurrection suit, with the expectation of creating a genuine furore among book-lovers. As Mr. Brown in the one house had been the one to take the initiative, so Mr. Fields, with his love of literature, gave direction to the list of the other; and, as good books de- mand good printing, he had very frequent recourse to Mr. Houghton. But the two men were nearer of an age than were Mr. Hough- ton and Mr. Brown, so that the relations were of a different sort ; and Mr. Houghton was so confident of himself in his own art that he 70 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON took the position of an adviser in mechanical matters, and not always that of a mere execu- tive agent of the publisher. Once he invited Mr. Fields to look at a shelf of books in his counting-room. He had collected a number of the recent publications of Ticknor & Fields, and ranged them with special reference to showing the irrational irregularity of sizes of paper used in the manufacture. For Mr. Houghton was devoting himself with the greatest ardor, not simply to the development of his business, but to the im- provement of his art, and in doing this he was governed by a few broad, fundamental princi- ples. I have spoken already of the clearness with which he saw the correct proportions of a page, and how pleased he was at finding that what his eye saw to be correct, a canon of architectural proportions confirmed. By a similar direct judgment, he early and always protested against the use of sizes of paper except the old, accepted dimensions, and re- garded any departure from these as a futile attempt to secure individuality. He tried to enforce system and regularity in this respect HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 71 into the books which he made for his custom- ers ; and when he had the power to order, as he did later in his own publishing house, the canon of regularity in paper was one which he would not have infringed. He carried the underlying principle of beauty through simplicity into his typography. He at once discarded the customary typo- graphic ornaments, though he pleased himself later when he was in England with having devices and initial letters designed expressly for him by a daughter of one of his printing friends, Mr. Whittingham. He discarded also the common expedients for securing variety by means of change in type ; his aim was, not to startle, not to distract, but to make his type so clear, simple, and orderly that it should do its plain work of expressing language with the least ostentation. In all this he was helped by the constant handling of the best English books of the day, and he studied the work of Aldus, Bodoni, Baskerville, Pickering, and other master printers ; but it is to be noted that he went straight to the mark from the start, and had apparently no false notions to get rid of. 72 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON It is not easy for the book-lover of to-day, accustomed to seeing well-printed books, to appreciate the important contribution which Mr. Houghton made to the art of book-mak- ing in America. There were other good printers contemporaneous with him, such men, for example, as Mr. Alvord and Mr. Trow, but no one seems to have emphasized with such distinction the few but fundamental laws of good printing, and he had, as we have shown, the occasion at his hand in his close associa- tion with two important publishers of the best literature. After all, the force which lay be- hind this manifestation of an art was the char- acter of the man himself. He knew a good thing in printing, and he was not the man to give up his knowledge to the opinion of any one else. He was so much more positive than most of his customers, and he impressed his own convictions on them so determinedly, that he had his own way; his tenacity and his energy made him a most effective reformer in printing when he was engaged strictly in minding his own business. His management of the printing-office was HENRY OSCAK HOUGHTON 73 marked by an unwearying attention to every detail, and, hard as he made his men work, he worked harder than any. On one occasion he found himself drawn into contention with his compositors. They made demands which he thought were unreasonable, and they seemed to have the advantage of him in the situation. He quietly went about amongst some teach- ers and other well-educated young women in Cambridge, persuaded them to put themselves under his tuition, privately trained them to set type, and, when the battle seemed to have gone against him, suddenly appeared with his reinforcements, established them in his com- posing-room, and from that day to the end not only had no further strike, but gave to the entire composing-room a character for in- dustry, skill, and courtesy. He was one of the first to demonstrate on a considerable scale the practicability of the employment of women in this capacity ; and it was characteristic of hun that he should draw to himself the best- educated and best-mannered girls, and not be aiming for the lowest-priced. He long had a proof-reader, Miss Harris, on whose services he set a very high value. THE reputation which Mr. Houghton made, not only as a printer of singularly good taste, but as a prompt man, of business, attracted to him other , publishers than those already named, and made his office the favorite one of the small class of connoisseurs in printing who wished to secure a specially choice result in private publishing. One of the most in- teresting connections which Eiverside made, and fruitful in the end, was with Mr. 0. W. Wight, a scholarly gentleman, who was also a man of means, and adopted a mode of grati- fying his tastes, and at the same time making his money earn interest, which I have often wondered is not more commonly followed. He was a lover of Montaigne, Pascal, Madame de Stael, and Voltaire, and he edited, I believe in part translated, writings of these authors, and resorted to Mr. Houghton as a printer who could make his books as beautiful in HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 75 page as he could desire. Mr. Houghton made the stereotype plates, as he might have made them for any author, and then Mr. Wight farmed them out to this or that publisher, who bore the cost of printing, binding, and selling, and paid Mr. Wight a royalty for the use of the plates. I do not attempt to name all the books which Mr. Wight made in this way, but his last, most considerable venture was a new edition of Dickens, which long re- mained as the best example of Mr. Houghton' s art, and no one can now come upon an early impression of the Household Edition of Dick- ens, as it was called, without being delighted with the classic beauty of the page. It was for this edition that Mr. Darley made a series of careful India-ink drawings, the originals of which have long hung on the walls of Mr. Houghton's house. In all these projects Mr. Houghton took a most active part, lending his judgment and skill in planning the mechanical treatment, and advising respecting the publication. He was studying all the while to enlarge the circle of his connection with publishers, aware 76 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON of the risk he ran if he tied himself too closely to any one. Moreover, his independence and his consciousness of mastery in his own art made him impatient of any relation which left him only the position of agent, and he found himself often placed, as he thought, at a disad- vantage. Not only did his transactions with Mr. Wight bring him into very close dealings with publishers, and familiarize him with the publishing side of book-making, but out of the difficulties which arose in these transac- tions there seemed but one way of wise escape, and that was into the assumption himself of the publisher's function. He needed an out- let for his manufacturing enterprise, and he felt increasingly the disadvantage of stopping short with the production of a book. The publication of the Dickens was in itself a serious affair in those days, for it was com- prised in a long series of volumes. It was under these circumstances, when his mind was gravitating toward publishing, that his business brought him into frequent inter- course with Mr. Melancthon M. Hurd, then a partner in the house of Sheldon & Com- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 77 pany. The business of this house was mainly in school books, and Mr. Kurd's taste and interest were in the direction of literature. The friendship of the two men, and their common tastes in the matter of books, easily led to the proposal of a partnership under the firm name of Hurd & Houghton.1 They reasoned that New York was fast becoming the great centre for the sale and distribution of books, as of other merchandise, and that not only was Riverside already well equipped for the printing of books, but that Cambridge must long be a natural meeting-ground for authors and editors. There were long con- ferences in those days before and after the inception of the new firm, and Mr. Houghton was full of ardor in this enlargement of scope. As, in the case of printing, he did not regard his business merely as a support and means of enrichment, so now his mind was given to a forecast of the great field which lay before him in the business of publishing. He meant emphatically to make good books, to spare no effort to make them pleasant to the eye and i The " notice " of the partnership is dated March 1, 1864. 78 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON the touch, — that he was sure he could do, — and to be sure that they were wholesome and worth making beautiful. The new firm meant to cultivate new authors, but the list of books with which they began, books which for the most part had grown out of Mr. Houghton's connection with Mr. Wight, — Bacon, Cooper, Dickens, Montaigne, Macaulay, and others, — naturally opened the way for that attention to standard literature which always since has characterized the house. A year after the firm was established, it was announcing a portly library of old divines, to be edited by the former University of Vermont scholar, Pro- fessor W. G. T. Shedd, and five volumes of South's sermons was the result. Mr. Hough- ton also, from his great familiarity with the making of law books and his knowledge of the profitable nature of the business as then conducted, determined to make the publica- tion of law books a specialty. He was more encouraged to this by the acquaintance he had formed with law writers, and by his intimate relations with Judge Bennett. He had, more- over, a natural proclivity toward the science HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 79 of law. It appealed strongly to his robust, argumentative mind. I do not know the exact order of events, but very close to this important step in Mr. Houghton's career was the business engage- ment he made with the house of Messrs. G. & C. Merriam of Springfield, the publishers of Web- ster's Dictionary, who were, I think, at this time ready to begin the production of a new edition of that work. Mr. Houghton knew very well that, however carefully he might keep the firm of H. 0. Houghton & Com- pany, printers, distinct from that of Hurd & Houghton, publishers, he was running the risk of losing engagements with other publishers by entering their domain himself ; and he was too far-sighted to think that he could at once build up a publishing house which would exhaust the capacity of his printing establish- ment, so that he looked upon this alliance with G. & C. Merriam not only as good in itself, but as giving great stability to his manufac- turing enterprise. He was aware of the fluc- tuations which attended the fortunes of mis- cellaneous publishing, and of the speculative 80 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON element which inevitably attached to this busi- ness, and he valued highly this very important connection. The men on both sides were ad- mirably joined. They were upright, honor- able men, and they were also exceedingly able business men, unflagging in their attention to details, fair in dealing, but as keen in their bargains as they were faithful to their engage- ments. A life-long friendship grew up among them, which found many opportunities of ex- pression outside of immediate business engage- ments. Several years later Mr. 0. M. Baker became connected with the Springfield house, and much of the detail fell upon him. At the time of Mr. Houghton's death he wrote these words, which bear witness to the strong human relations which sometimes are formed within the shell of business : — "During the whole eighteen years of my acquaintance with Mr. Houghton he has al- ways impressed me as being my friend, even in the discussion of vexed questions where our interests were quite at variance, and I never had an interview with him that did not leave me with a feeling of the most profound HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 81 respect for his manliness. It has been a source of much pleasure and satisfaction to me that I have seemed to merit his confidence and friendship ; but I could be as nothing to him in comparison with what he has always been to me, and there is no one left, outside of the members of our firm, that I can go to with the same familiarity and confidence that I have so many times gone to him." The formation of the new firm, and the demands created by the large contract with the Messrs. Merriam, called for an increase of facilities at Kiverside, especially in the matter of a bindery, and in the spring of 1864 Mr. Houghton made his first journey to Europe. His errand chiefly was to secure master bind- ers, and to open the way for securing the best material both in binding and in types. Neces- sarily he made himself acquainted at once with the wages paid to workmen in his own craft, and, since he was not only a practical printer but a man of education, he took a very strong interest in the economic and political questions which a comparison of the condi- tions in England and in the United States 82 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON suggested to him. He had, as a Henry Clay Whig, accepted the doctrine of protection when he was a student in college, and had never seen any reason to change his mind. His experience in London did much to con- firm him in this economic belief, and he used often to speak of the profound impression made upon him by the evidence which he saw of the almost hopeless prospect of the English workman as compared with that of his American fellow. A few years later, when the question of Protection vs. Free Trade was stoutly debated by Hon. W. D. Kelley, the veteran champion of protection in Congress, one of the workmen whom Mr. Houghton secured at this time wrote the following letter to Mr. Kelley : — CAMBRIDGE, MASS., May 10, 1872. HON. "W. D. KELLEY, — Dear Sir, — A fellow-workman having lent me a pamphlet containing a speech deliv- ered by you, March 16, 1872, against free trade, I take the liberty of addressing you, as I am interested in that subject. Sir, let us HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 83 look at the blessings of free trade where it works so well. I cannot do better than take my own case. When in England I always had a great desire to come to this country, not that I expected to get rich, but wanted to be able to save something for my mainte- nance in my old age. In 1857 we began to save. In 1864 Mr. H. 0. Houghton was in England, trying to engage some compositors, printers, and book-binders. I am a book- binder, and applied to him to see if he would pay our passage, — myself, wife, and two children. He came to Derby and I told him what I could do. He agreed to advance our passage money. We had been saving nearly seven years ; had twenty-four shillings per week, which was the best wages given. I had saved only <£12 10s. What is the difference between my life there and that which I enjoy here? Mr. Houghton lent me money to buy furniture, and with the passage money I was in debt for $270. I received $15 per week first; have been advanced several times ; now I have $22 per week. I paid the debt, have my life in- 84 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON sured and $615 in the bank. This has been done in less than eight years. You men- tion Hon. H. 0. Houghton speaking of the compositors of England not being able to pay their passage ; there were about twenty in the same shop with me, and not one married man better off than myself. . . . Kespectf ully yours, JAMES WILSON. The new firm of Hurd & Houghton be- gan at once to use the term " Riverside " in characterizing a series of books they pro- jected, the Riverside Classics, and the custom grew of giving the title to editions in which special care had been taken to secure beauty and dignity of form, but always with a re- serve in its use. Mr. Houghton, with the traditions of older printers before him, ob- tained from Miss Whittingham, in London, a monogram in which the two H's of the firm name were linked together, and used it on the title-pages of books. He had found a crest of the Houghton family, but he did not like the motto, which was somewhat tru- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 85 culent, and supplanted it with another, Tout bien ou rien, and used this phrase on his book plate, with satisfaction in its concise statement of his business creed; it was not till about 1880 that the motto began to be used delib- erately by the publishing firm. VI MY own acquaintance with Mr. Houghton — though I had seen him once, a few years before, when I consulted him ahout the printing of a college magazine, of which I was an editor — began in the year 1864, upon occasion of the printing of a life of an older brother, which I had written. It chanced that the plates of the book were made just before Mr. Houghton made his connection with Mr. Hurd, and, as I intended publishing the book at my own risk, I placed it naturally with the new firm. I had pre- viously appeared as the author of two books for the young, and was intending to occupy myself with literature. The acquaintance, begun during the composition of the memoir of my brother, which took me frequently to Eiverside, quickly ripened into friendship; and when the new firm of Hurd & Houghton was established I was asked to be the reader HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 87 of the manuscripts submitted for publication, and the critic of such English books as they might arrange to republish. As my home was in Boston, I was more frequently in Mr. Houghton's company than in Mr. Kurd's, though my reports were sent to the New York office. To be in with the formation of a new publishing house, when it already enjoyed the prestige of the foremost printing house in the country, as regards mechanical work, offered a pleasurable excitement to a young litterateur, and I took frequent occa- sion to walk out to Cambridge at the end of the day and visit the Press. Mr. Houghton then, as long afterward, found his greatest recreation in riding or driving, and it was not long before we fell into the habit of tak- ing long drives together in the late afternoon, supplemented by a weekly dinner with the young family on Saturday. As my connec- tion with the house became more intimate, the intercourse with the head of the house increased. Sometimes we rode together, sometimes we drove ; and, as years went on, the son, who has now succeeded his father, 88 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON was stowed away in a little seat in the buggy, until one day his father suddenly woke to the fact that the boy was growing up, and stopped our conversation to enjoin upon him the necessity of not repeating anything he heard us saying. The rides and drives after a while diminished, as Mr. Houghton's own family came to be his friendly companions and I had my separate family interests ; but the peregrinatory conferences were resumed in recent years, when we were both living in Cambridge and having the same office hours in Boston. We looked forward to the spring, and to the fall after the summer diver- sions, when we could again walk out over the West Boston Bridge ; and when the Harvard Bridge was built we found a new delight in the sunsets, which interrupted our talk as the western sky was brilliant above the noble sweep of the Charles Eiver. Mr. Houghton, at the beginning of our connection, was fif- teen years my senior, but the thirty years which slipped away found this breach clos- ing, for we had established so many common causes that he came to ignore the difference HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 89 in age more even than I : that is one of the privileges of the senior in such associations. One of the first subjects which we dis- cussed was the natural one of an organ of the new publishing house. The fact that such slight experience as I had enjoyed in litera- ture was mainly in the direction of writing for the young had something to do, no doubt, with his resolution to undertake a magazine for young people, but he was incited to it also by the opportunity which it afforded the Press. He was ambitious of doing superfine work. It was an era when book illustration was making very rapid advances. The Uni- versity Press had achieved some notable suc- cesses, and Ticknor & Fields, then the most prominent publishing house in Boston, had made a mark with Our Young Folks, an illustrated magazine. Mr. Houghton thought he saw in the publication of a similar maga- zine an opportunity to show what he could do in good printing, and he was besides genu- inely interested in the organization of sound literature for the young. He saw how largely English juvenile books filled the bookstores, 90 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON and he had a hearty and honest ambition to supersede them with books instinct with American life. He may have overstated the case, for he was impatient of nice distinctions when he had a point like this to make, but he was sincere in his adherence to protective principles, not only on the ground of self- interest, but on the more substantial moral ground of securing the greatest possible inde- pendence for America, and of fortifying the social institutions of the country. He used to repeat with great earnestness a criticism which Agassiz once made to him of a chil- dren's book in some department of natural history, in which every illustration was drawn from some object not native to America, and he denounced the ordinary English juvenile books as assuming the unalterable relation of classes as they exist in England. Such books, he declared, were unwholesome reading for American children; and he was for driving them out, partly by a tariff which discrimi- nated against them, and partly by the produc- tion of native books which should supplant them as objects of merchandise. HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 91 A magazine seemed to offer the most fa- miliar mode of exploiting juvenile literature, and so he planned a monthly which should be generous in proportions and wholesome in its character. There was much discussion over the name to be given it, and, after many proposals had been made and rejected, we fell back on the most obvious one of The Riverside Magazine for Young People. I say most obvious, and yet the term had not then been applied much further than to the Press itself, except in the case already men- tioned of the Riverside Classics; but Mr. Houghton had at once a pride in the name, and a jealous regard for its fame. He had, when the magazine was started, a little shyness about its use ; but he had already perceived its value as a trade-mark, and he found it a grate- ful substitute for the use of his own name, which he did not care to see used superfluously in the conduct of business. Indeed, the im- personal character of the word " Riverside " was its great value in his eyes. It stood for something objective, gathering his ideals, his aims, his honorable ambition, so that he could 92 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON enjoy and glory in it without any shame- facedness. " Riverside/' he once said to me, " is like a diamond which I can hold up be- fore my eye, and turn it this way and that, and let the light fall on it, and see it sparkle." In this saying he unconsciously disclosed the secret of his power. He grew prosperous in the conduct of his business, but the prosperity fell to him because he was seeking something higher. He was building an institution ; he was creating something which should have an organic life of its own, and the whole stream of his energy passed into this external crea- tion. He projected himself into it, and never withdrew his hand, but he thought of it as an artist thinks of the picture he paints, the poet of the poem he writes. As I have intimated, the secret of Mr. Houghton's power in business lay in the re- lation which he bore to his work : he was not thinking of himself and his own aggrandize- ment, — he was thinking of the institution he was creating, and by a paradox, though he threw himself heart and soul into the en- terprise, he effaced himself to a remarkable HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 93 degree. It was impossible that so positive, so vigorous a personality should not be conspicu- ous in the business, and yet he shaped his industry with distinct reference to the growth of an organism. He was by nature and tem- perament a leader, and was impatient of any- thing like divided authority, but he was equally aware of the need of an order with clearly defined responsibility. In arranging his business, therefore, even when it was small and he carried all the details in his head, he insisted upon such a system of reports as should almost imitate the methods of an army. " If I tell a boy to hang up my overcoat, I expect him to come back and tell me he has done it," he would say, and his memory for details was extraordinary. An error, espe- cially one arising from carelessness, committed by one of his young men, might have been forgotten in the course of time by the one who committed it, but Mr. Houghton never forgot it, and never allowed the young man to forget it. Abstractly considered, there was something comically terrible in this supervis- ing memory, but in reality many a one, though 94 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON withdrawing as far as he could into some recess of exculpatory consciousness when he saw the familiar reminiscence making for him, was rendered distinctly less capable of repeat- ing his blunder, or making another like it. As the range of the business increased, Mr. Houghton continued the system by which every operation came regularly under his eye. At first not a letter was written or a bill made out that did not pass before him for inspec- tion before it was sent out, and when this minuteness of oversight became physically impossible, he continued to have a daily re- port of the correspondence made to him with a memorandum of the contents and the names of the persons to whom the several letters were assigned, and it was a familiar sight to see him going from desk to desk with a strip of yellow paper containing these memoranda, and acquainting himself with the condition of affairs. In the complexity of a great printing and publishing house there are multitudinous details, and the chance of error in some par- ticular which shall confuse the result is very great. It was partly the necessity of meet- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 95 ing this condition, partly a native passion for thoroughness, which made Mr. Houghton ex- traordinarily alert and vigilant. " Follow it up" was his watchword, and his persistence in getting to the bottom of every difficulty, in fixing the responsibility of a mistake, was unflagging, his memory for derelictions most tenacious. The vigor of this discipline was very great and many chafed under it, but it was never relaxed, and no one was more com- pletely subject to it than Mr. Houghton him- self. It led him to the printing-office often early in the morning, before his men had arrived, and late in the evening again, to see that all was safe for the night. If he made rules, he was strenuous in enforcing them on himself, but he did not make many rules ; he was not a martinet in discipline : he de- manded obedience to the great laws of order, accuracy, thoroughness in all that was under- taken, and he aimed at simplicity rather than complexity of method. Indeed, he was sometimes a little impatient of method, he believed so much more in the man behind the method. The most perfect 96 HENRY OSCAK HOUGHTON method he knew would never execute itself ; and when an elaborate plan was outlined, he spent little criticism on the plan, but wished to know at once who was to carry it out. Hence his attack, for failure in any enterprise, was directed upon the person who had failed, and few there were who escaped being hauled over the coals, as the expressive phrase is. The coals were rarely allowed to burn into dead ashes ; they were fed by many occasions, and the hauling was performed with an energy which kept the hand well in practice. Mr. Houghton sometimes lost his temper in this exercise, but usually he drew back from the edge, and the person who was a disinterested bystander could often extract a vast deal of entertainment out of the racy speech which enlivened the reproof. Mr. Houghton's good sense of humor was his safeguard at such times, and his felicitous comparisons, his shrewd epi- thets, his remote anecdotes, all tempered the severity of his judgments. He showed, more- over, not infrequently, a singular faculty for conveying his meaning by the most casual and indirect speech, which was curiously incon- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 97 sistent with the vigor of his direct attack. I remember one of his associates coming out of his room one day and saying : " Well, I have been talking with Mr. Houghton for half an hour, and I know just what he thinks, but I '11 be blessed if he has said a word which could be taken as an explicit expression of his opinion." It is a proper comment on this statement of Mr. Houghton' s manner toward his associ- ates and employees that he kept by him year after year the same persons. They were often sorely vexed, — no chastisement for the pres- ent seemeth joyous, but rather grievous, — yet it was rare that one of them deliberately withdrew from his post. There were two or three reasons for this : the person at fault felt the justice of reproof; there was a positive esprit de corps; discipline, however severe, is apt to have something of a tonic virtue in it ; but above all, I think there was a gen- uine recognition of the inherent justice and generosity of Mr. Houghton's nature, and an assurance that there was nothing personal in the retribution which he visited upon the 98 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON delinquent. Mr. Houghton used to say, ear- nestly, that he never discharged a clerk and never would. I used to think, sometimes, that there was not much to choose between an abrupt dismissal and a slow freezing out ; but there was this marked difference, that the ordeal to which one was subjected might, and sometimes did, result in a distinct induration of the temper, so that a very effective work- man was the result, and every one felt con- fidence that he would not be the victim of arbitrary action, or suffer permanently from an impulse of his employer. It was a characteristic saying of Mr. Hough- ton that when the Press was crowded with work, he busied himself most with seeking new work. He was forearmed against the danger of over-confidence, and he knew that every harvest meant a time of sowing long before. But he was, above all, unceasingly mindful of the need of keeping the Press occupied. As a man of business, he knew the importance of making his machinery earn money uninterruptedly ; as a captain of indus- try, he never forgot the company he had mus- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 99 tered ; that work should be slack was a mis- fortune, but that thereby men should be thrown out of employment was a disaster, and he strained every nerve in dull times to find work with which to keep his men along, even though he had to take it at prices which yielded him little or no profit. This solidarity of the Press, so that Mr. Houghton lived to see the grandchildren of some of his first workmen employed side by side with their grandparents, was further illustrated by one or two measures which he took for confirming the close relation he held with his workmen. He pondered long the ex- pediency of making his growing business one of cooperation formally, and went so far at one time as to have papers drawn up for in- corporation, providing for a pecuniary interest of all engaged in the business. But he was not a theorist : he was a business man with an idealistic tendency, and he had a stable mind which guarded him against a too experimen- tal habit. Moreover, he could not help seeing that his own temperament would make it dif- ficult for him to enter into engagements which 100 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON might abridge his instinctive governing power; and finally, when the matter assumed a tenta- tive shape, he did what a wise man will under such circumstances, — he heeded the voice of his wife, who threw the whole weight of her judgment in the opposite scale. But, though he did not change a partnership into a cor- poration, he could not rest content until he had devised some means by which he could bring every one in the Press into possible in- terest in the business, and the shape which his plan took was that of a savings department, by the terms of which any person employed could deposit savings and receive a good rate of interest, and, upon every even hundred dol- lars deposited, there might be at the end of the year a dividend if the business prospered, but a limit was set to the amount of this divi- dend. It was not cooperation in the technical sense of the term ; it was not profit-sharing as a basis of business management ; but it was an experiment in the direction of a closer interde- pendence of employer and employed, a rough- and-ready device for getting over some of the disadvantages of the wage-system without HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 101 loosening the control of the business by those who organized it, and had to bear the re- sponsibility of successful conduct and the risk of adversity. One of the few men now employed at River- side, of the group that came over in 1864, is Mr. James Wilson, of the bindery, whose let- ter to Mr. Kelley has already been printed. I have asked him to jot down some of his recollections and impressions, and he writes in part as f ollows : — " One of the things I noticed about Mr. Houghton was his attention to business: he was at the place early in the morning very often before we were, and often after we left at night. One Saturday night I was gilding some books that were wanted ; it was eleven o'clock, and I was alone. He came into the old back room and said : ' Well, Mr. Wilson, I am sorry to see you at work, as I do like a man to have his Saturday night to himself.' I was the more struck with it because he had been working in the counting-room himself alone, and only seemed to think of me. "There was one trait in Mr. Houghton's 102 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON character which will always stand out in the memory of his early employees ; that is the way he had of going to the men while they were at work, and saying a few encouraging words to each one. This caused a mutual feeling of goodwill to exist between the em- ployer and employees, so that all felt a per- sonal interest in the welfare of the place. This acknowledgment of the employees was not confined to the Riverside Press, but he would always>have a kind word wherever he met you. " There was another good trait about Mr. Houghton : if any of the workpeople were away sick, he would soon miss them, and he would make it his business to inquire about them, and frequently go to see them. By such acts as these he wound himself into the hearts of the workpeople in a way that few men have the power of doing." Mr. Wilson speaks also, in his notes, of a scheme which Mr. Houghton had at one time of building houses in the immediate vicinity of the Press for the use of the workpeople. He carried out his design to a slight extent HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 103 by taking occasion, when enlarging the build- ing, to remove some wooden houses which stood in the way, making a court, to which he gave the name of Daye Court, from the first printer in Cambridge; but he never carried the design very far, partly, I think, because he required at that time all his capital for his business, partly because he had strong convic- tions of the unwisdom of segregating the people. He visited with interest such estab- lishments as that of Mame at Tours, and spoke appreciatively of the villages which had grown up about great printing-offices; but he was emphatic in belief that in our Ameri- can life every family should have its own vol- untary place in the general community, and take part in church, school, and politics quite independently of industrial relations. For one illustration of Mr. Houghton's in- terest in workingmen in connection with social order I am indebted to Hon. Carroll D. Wright. The time referred to was long subsequent to that of which I have been writing, but the incident has its value in this place. " About 1882," says Colonel Wright, "Mr. Houghton 104 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON submitted to me a proposition which I have always felt more clearly disclosed the breadth of the man's mind than would his regular business operations. He informed me that he had for some years had in mind the advisa- bility of publishing a periodical weekly for the benefit of wage-earners. He wished to have the periodical first-class in every respect, — as well gotten up, as thoroughly arranged, and as well printed, as the best illustrated papers. He wished it to be of the size of Harper's Weekly, and to contain interesting matter for the employees of New England especially, — all industrial facts, put in an attractive way ; the treatment of current questions on a broad and non-partisan basis ; the discussion of ques- tions that would interest organized and un- organized labor ; information as to inventions, — everything, in fact, that could interest and enlighten the men and women who are em- ployed in. great manufacturing works. He wished to have the journal illustrated in the best way. His idea was to furnish persons, at their address, by mail, copies of the pub- lication, first asking the proprietors of works HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 105 to submit a reasonable list of persons to whom it should be sent free for a while, or on sub- scription lists furnished by employers, who would be asked in the first instance to pay the subscription for the sake of distributing healthy labor literature among their people. Mr. Houghton confidently expected that the quality of the publication would soon result in actual cash subscriptions to a sufficient extent to pay all expenses. He knew, of course, that such an undertaking would involve a large expenditure of money, and that it would be some time — two or three years perhaps — be- fore any return could be expected in the way of income for expenses. It was not in his plan to make any money out of the enterprise, but simply to establish a high-toned journal work- ing in industrial interests. To accomplish his purpose he proposed to raise a guaranty of $100,000, the parties subscribing to the fund pledging themselves to pay in at times such sums as might be necessary for the support of the scheme, and until it was on a paying basis, that is, paying expenses ; and in this, after his own pledge of $10,000, he secured 106 HENRY OSCAK HOUGHTON other pledges, so that the total amounted to $30,000. But Mr. Houghton was too good a business man to enter practically upon his plan until the whole $100,000, which he deemed to be necessary, should be pledged. It was impossible to secure more than the $30,000. " Mr. Houghton very kindly proposed that I take the editorial and business management of the periodical, — a proposition which at once enlisted not only my sympathy, but my cordial cooperation. I should have been glad to join in any such plan, for I believe that, if it could have been carried out, very great good could have been done to all involved, both employer and employee. " In considering the plan which I have out- lined, I was, of course, thrown very much with Mr. Houghton, and I was greatly gratified to see how thoroughly interested he was in the elevation of those who work for wages. He had the right idea, that is, that the truest ele- vation can come only from a broad enlighten- ment, — from instruction, from knowledge of conditions; for it was in the plan to bring HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 107 out not only conditions as they exist, but in comparison with other times and countries, — everything, in fact, that would give the work- ingman a true picture of industrial conditions and the conditions of production. I believe now that, could a sufficient number of em- ployers be induced to become interested in such a plan as that suggested by Mr. Hough- ton, more practical good could be done than in any other way. Of course, the publication of official documents furnishes a certain kind of information, but not in the way to attract men who are not students of economic condi- tions. A popular, high-toned, illustrated labor paper, with capital enough behind it to assure its success regardless of the subscription list, would be an undertaking of the greatest value and importance. Mr. Houghton was far ahead of his time." Mr. Wright's letter illustrates the imagina- tive side of Mr. Houghton' s nature. He liked to project a scheme of this kind, connected with his business, but reaching much beyond the scope of a merely commercial enterprise, and the process of persuading himself of its 108 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON practicability was often accompanied by the exercise of his persuasive power on others. He was given to thinking aloud, as he would say, and his active mind grasped certain desir- able results, and then busied itself in work- ing out the means to reach the end. Thus at another time he imagined a great clearing- house for publishers which should be under their own management and bring certain im- portant functions of distribution into the con- trol of the houses engaged in it, thus minim- izing the employment of jobbers. Again, he pondered long the intricate questions involved in trade discounts and net prices. He was not one to allow his theories too far to govern his business action ; he drew back often when the time came for putting his theories to an explicit test. But when he was committed to any plan, especially if it was one he had care- fully worked out, he had a tremendous resolu- tion in carrying it into execution, and in those cases he inspired others with great confidence in him. Much of his remarkable success was due to a faith in himself, which confirmed the faith of others. VII THIS is a sketch of Mr. Houghton, and not of the house of which he was so long the head ; but in order to give the reader a con- venient chronological survey of the develop- ment of the business, I will set down in a paragraph the successive changes in the style and personal constituency. The firm of Hurd & Houghton existed under the same name until 1878, but from time to time changes occurred in its person- nel. In 1866 Mr. Houghton' s brother, Mr. Albert G. Houghton, who had formerly been a merchant in Alabama, was admitted, occu- pying himself mainly with the interests in New York. Not long after the establishment of the Riverside Magazine, Mr. George H. Mifflin, a recent graduate of Harvard College, came into the service of the house. In 1872 both he and I became members of the firm. I retired after three years, preferring to give 110 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON my time more exclusively to literary pursuits, but have ever since been identified with the editorial department of the business. Mr. Mifflin is just completing a quarter century of membership, and is the head of the house. Failing health led to the retirement of Mr. Albert G. Houghton in 1878 from active en- gagement ; and Mr. Hurd, who for a similar cause had previously withdrawn from close attention to details of business, also retired. At the same time the house formed a com- bination with James R. Osgood & Company, the successors to Ticknor & Fields and Fields, Osgood & Company. Mr. Osgood represented this house in the new firm, and the style be- came Houghton, Osgood & Company. This consolidation greatly increased the list of pub- lications of the house through the accession of the names of the great leaders of American literature. The premises in Boston formerly occupied by James R. Osgood & Company became the headquarters of the publishing department, and the books now bore the im- print of Boston and New York instead of New York and Cambridge. The firm as thus HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 111 constituted continued for two years, when Mr. Osgood retired, and the style of the firm became, in 1880, Houghton, Mifflin & Com- pany ; and, shortly after, the publishing head- quarters in Boston were removed to 4 Park Street, and in New York to 11 East Seven- teenth Street. Mr. Lawson Valentine became a partner, and continued thus till his death in 1889. In 1884 Mr. James D. Hurd, a son of Mr. Houghton' s former partner, was admitted to the firm, but he died in December, 1887. On the 1st of April, 1888, three new partners were admitted, — Mr. James Murray Kay, who was born in Glasgow, Scotland, but sub- sequently had large business interests in New Brunswick ; Mr. Thurlow Weed Barnes ; and Mr. Henry 0. Houghton, Jr. Since that date, Mr. Barnes has left the business, and Mr. Oscar E. Houghton and Mr. Albert F. Hough- ton, sons of the late Albert G. Houghton, have been admitted to the firm, and have their resi- dence in New York. In all these various changes Mr. Houghton was the controlling force. After the business was concentrated in Cambridge and Boston, 112 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON he gave up with great reluctance the special oversight of the Press and made his head- quarters in Boston. For a long tune, how- ever, he made it his practice to visit the Press daily, and it was there that his real affection in his work lay. I was walking home with him one day, the spring before his fatal ill- ness, when he was contemplating his address on Early Printing in America, and he fell on some reminiscence of his own occupation. He half whimsically and yet with real seri- ousness was disposed to regret that he had allowed himself to be drawn from the simpli- city of a printer's business into the complexity of publishing. He sketched his career as it might have been, — the perfection of all the processes of making books; the enlargement of his premises to meet the demands of his business, and yet the centralization of the business and its restriction to one great func- tion. It was in a way the passing mood of a somewhat tired man; but I realized how strong was his passion for his early vocation, and also how his mind fastened on a large, concrete expression of his ideals. He used HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 113 in the vigor of his days to speculate on an old age spent in the country with a toy print- ing-office to play with. He never relinquished a close scrutiny of the style of his books ; he labored with type founders and paper makers to secure the results he wanted, and one of his most satisfactory achievements was a par- ticular font of type, which goes in the Press by the matter of fact name of Number Thir- teen, but is coming to be recognized as the " Houghton " type.1 Nevertheless, it is not likely that he would, if hard pressed, have refused to admit that, in giving his mind more exclusively to publish- ing, he was following a course clearly marked out for him in the expansion of his energies ; and, as the publishing side of his business came to absorb more and more the product of the Press, he identified the two interests and treated them as a whole. It had always been a marked element in the success of the Press that books there were treated, not piecemeal, but with careful study of the interrelation of the several parts; and it was only a more 1 This book is printed from Number Thirteen. 114 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON comprehensive application of the same prin- ciple when he perfected the organism of a manufacturing publishing house. He often expressed the opinion that the function which discriminated the publisher from the manufacturer and the seller of books was that of making books known, and, as he found it necessary to concentrate his attention upon the general conduct of the business, and to give over the details of man- ufacturing to others, he made much of what may comprehensively be termed " advertis- ing." The details of this he intrusted to others, and indeed the system followed was scarcely in any sense his scheme ; but certain general principles he insisted on with great earnestness, and, in two or three instances, worked out plans which illustrated his con- ception of the most effective advertising. Newspaper advertising he termed dress pa- rade, and he did not greatly rely on it, for he thought the real work was done when knowledge of a book was brought imme- diately to the attention of the person who might naturally be interested in this particu- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 115 lar book; and he was constantly pressing, therefore, the intelligent collection of lists of names of probable book-buyers, to be classified for use in the forwarding of special circulars and bulletins. He devised, also, the system by which an author should be advertised, especially when a new book was to appear, by means of a circular containing a woodcut portrait, and a well-arranged statement of the author's writings. Out of this grew the Por- trait Catalogue, which received the flattery of imitation in different quarters. He believed, also, in phalanxes of books, and, recognizing the great accumulation of titles in the firm's catalogue, he planned a series of special cata- logues by subjects, which developed finally into a carefully classified list of publications, perhaps the latest important piece of work organized by him in his business. It is a further demonstration of this atti- tude toward his work, what may be called the egotistic as contrasted with the selfish, that he was singularly indifferent to the element of competition. He had of course, in his business enterprises, to measure strength with 116 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON his neighbors, but he was not greatly in- fluenced by what they did. For example, he did not study closely the work of rival presses, nor scrutinize the lists of other publishers, and, above all, he had a very lofty sense of comity between publishers. He never would solicit an author who had formed connections with another house. "If he chooses to ap- proach us," he would say, " well and good. We are at liberty then to treat with him. But we will not stir a finger to get him away from the publisher who already issues his books." And he carried this scrupulosity to its utmost limits, though he was aware that efforts were constantly made to draw away from him the writers whose reputation he had stimulated. He carried his favorite ad- vice to authors, to keep their books together, so far that more than once he discouraged a writer who was dissatisfied with existing arrangements from coming to him. He was wont to use a pretty strong term, " loyalty," of those who held by him in spite of temp- tations to go after other publishers ; but he recognized quite as strongly the reciprocal HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 117 relations involved, and, once an author was " on the list," he would strain a point before he would suffer a new book from the same hand to go elsewhere, even though it might fah1 below the standard previously set. And here I venture the assertion that in nothing did Mr. Houghton show more sincerely the friendly interest he took in the , authors who intrusted their books to him than in the pa- tience and candor he showed while the books were yet in manuscript. He knew well the business principle involved in the requirement that the manuscript should be ready for the printer, and that it was no function of a pub- lishing house to edit for authors the books it issued ; but in many an instance, when the manuscript offered was not thoroughly accept- able, he would deal with it as a possible book, and, by advice, encouragement, and criticism, get the work finally into proper shape. It was this temper, over and beyond the com- mercial spirit, which made him a representa- tive of the best class of publishers. He was not in the technical sense a literary critic, and he was perhaps disposed to underestimate the 118 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON art of literature, but he had a strong sense of what was enduring, and a very direct way of appraising books. Especially, whatever appealed to the broad, common interest of men, and was helpful in its character, com- mended itself to his judgment. It was in keeping with the largeness of his ideals in business and his far-sightedness that he did not require the demonstration of imme- diate success. If an enterprise commended itself to him as sound, he was willing to wait for returns. There was, indeed, something very attractive to him in projects which were based on broad, fundamental principles, and would take time for their execution, and these projects were all the more acceptable if they took the shape of modest beginnings. He felt his way with experiments, but he was con- stantly seeing the probable development. He had the courage which comes from a large business imagination. At the same time no one could be more resolute in a demand for the cold facts in the history of undertakings. He perfected a system of records by which he could ascertain the exact history of every HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 119 one of his ventures, and carried about in his pocket for frequent reference what he called his Bankrupt List — a merciless showing of the books that were not paying. Great was the satisfaction when one book or another would slowly emerge from the list and take its place among those which had paid for themselves. Perhaps the most significant illustration of Mr. Houghton's treatment of his business as an institution is to be found in a step which he took not long after the formation of the firm of Houghton, Mifflin & Company. He established a weekly council, to which he gave the name, half in jest, half to conceal its importance, of "The Powwow." To it he invited his partners, and those persons who were heads of departments in the business, or charged with special functions. He made out a formal order of business and appointed a secretary, who kept the records, which were read at each session. At the meetings the various enterprises of the house were dis- cussed, especially the new books which were recommended for publication, and action was 120 HENRY OSCAR HQUGHTON taken which was held to constitute the policy of the house. Such councils are no doubt common enough in large firms and corpora- tions; but I think it is an unusual course for a house to invite subordinates, who have no di- rect pecuniary interest in the concern, into an equal share in deliberations and votes which definitely affect the conduct of the business. Naturally this recognition of the interest of subordinates in the welfare of the house led to a caution on their part in asserting them- selves. There was a mutual concession with- out any loss of independence ; and, though friction might now and then arise, the weekly conference, year after year, of the same men, engaged in the same general work, effected just what Mr. Houghton designed, — a soli- darity of mind. He saw that each member of "The Powwow" was likely to look at every project not only from his personal point of view, but with the consideration suggested by the function he performed in the business, so that there would be diversity of judgment, and every plan would be subjected to a variety of tests. He saw also that the discussion HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 121 would inform all the members of what was going on, and lead to greater union of action, a matter of great importance when the ten- dency of each was to become engrossed in his own part of the business. In the early years of " The Powwow " he not infrequently ex- pressed to me his doubt whether on the whole it was worth while ; he was more than once piqued by our criticism of measures, or ren- dered impatient by the expenditure of time over plans when he knew what was wanted and only wished to get it done. But, as time wore on, these expressions of doubt grew less frequent, and he threw more weight into the decisions of " The Powwow." As in other cases, he struck out in a course, upon which he had deliberated, with decision but with modera- tion, feeling his way, and perhaps only partly aware of how much the step meant. But it is clear enough now that he builded well, and that the power of organization which he showed at the beginning of his career, when he was captain and a large part of the crew, always looked toward the creation of an institution so perfected in its parts, and so self-perpetu- 122 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON ating, that his final withdrawal in the full- ness of time should not appear to disturb a normal action. Mr. Houghton died on Sun- day. The Tuesday following was a holiday in the city ; on the Tuesday after that " The Powwow" met as usual, and proceeded at once with the business of the week. VIII IT was a cardinal principle with Mr. Houghton to put all his eggs in one basket, and carry the basket himself. He had a clause in his early partnership papers, pro- hibiting himself and his partners from enga- ging in any other business enterprise, and for his part he asked no other pleasure or interest than that which grew out of the varied and constantly changing forms of his occupation. He loved travel, indeed, and most of all to take his carriage and horses and drive with his family for days into the country, visiting the regions dear to him from early associa- tions, and it was a privation to him when he was finally forced to give up his horseback- riding. He made occasional trips to Europe, and he crossed the country twice to Califor- nia. Often he would come home from one of his pleasure trips with great glee at having picked up on the way a printing job. 124 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON Yet, with his large ways of looking at his business, it was quite impossible that he should not concern himself with public affairs when they bore very direct relation to the printing and publishing interest. He took a very vigorous hand in the discussions which went on whenever a tariff bill was before Congress, and in 1870 especially, in conjunction with Dr. Henry Charles Lea, was conspicuous in the struggle which went on over the proposed admission of books free. He maintained with great earnestness that such a policy would be fatal to the publishing interest. His influ- ence in this direction was great. His frequent visits to Washington, and his warm friendship with Senator Morrill, brought him into the very heart of the fight. But perhaps his most notable service in public matters was in con- nection with the movement for international copyright. This movement was pushed energetically by the authors of the country, but the most effective work was done when the publishers and manufacturers of books cooperated with the authors. Congress shared in the custom- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 125 ary slighting regard bestowed by practical people on the literary class, and was more disposed to pay attention to the men who represented large industrial interests. Of the authors, Dr. Edward Eggleston was the most influential advocate of the measure; and of the members of Congress, the most steadfast was Senator Chace of Khode Island, who, how- ever, was obliged by illness to retire from active participation before the final action. Mr. Houghton was early interested in the movement and was unremitting in his earnest attention to the interests of the bill. He vis- ited Washington repeatedly, conferring with senators and representatives, and taking coun- sel with his associates in the enterprise. No one who has not been engaged personally in an effort to press through Congress a meas- ure which appeals chiefly to a sense of honor, and yet involves all manner of private and industrial interests, can appreciate the need at such a time, not only of resolution and per- sistency, but of patience, of tact, of individual handling of men, of removal of prejudice and even of counteracting the indiscreet zeal of 126 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON associates. Moreover, there was not always entire agreement among the advocates of the bill as to the policy to be pursued when amendments were offered, and the whole pe- riod, from the presentation of the bill to its final passage, was one of great anxiety and alternate disappointment and hope. It was a hand-to-hand conflict, most of the work being done in and about Congress in personal in- terviews. Mr. W. W. Appleton, who was himself ac- tively engaged in the contest, wrote to Houghton, Mifflin & Company for his firm after Mr. Houghton's death : u The writer has the most pleasant recollections of many inter- views during the long and at times seemingly hopeless contest for international copyright, and found Mr. Houghton ready and eager to aid the good work in any way. His judg- ment, experience, and personal effort did much to bring about the success attained." " Mr. Houghton," says Dr. Edward Eggleston, " was one of the very foremost of all that engaged in that struggle, whether we consider his ac- tivity, or his prudence, or his influence. I HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 127 differed from him strongly at the outset in regard to certain questions about the struc- ture of the bill, but he was always frank, and an opponent knew where to find him." And Senator Chace, writing to Mr. Houghton in the spring of 1891, says : " gave me quite a full account of what transpired in New York and Washington just before the final vote, and, after hearing his account, I should feel very remiss did I not say to thee that it is clear to my mind that the country is most largely indebted to thee for thy prompt and vigorous action. . . . " I am writing to thee in great free- dom and in confidence, for thee is one of those whom I have found all the way through to be, not only clear-headed, but faithful to all interests. Now that the victory is achieved, I feel like giving thee full credit for thy great service to the cause." Mr. Houghton was, in truth, the main de- pendence of the advocates of the bill, as re- gards New England especially. His cordial relation with the printing craft was of great service. At first he was opposed to what is 128 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON known as the manufacturing clause, or at least was not strongly in favor of it. He soon saw, however, that the clause would give to the bill the strong support of the printers, and, with his own sincere belief in the principle of protection, he came to recog- nize the desirability of the clause. Later, when he had the opportunity to observe the reception of the act in England, he wrote home : " I am inclined to think, in the light of subsequent events, that it was a wise thing to do; and I have not hesitated to say to those interested here that, if they undertake to get that part of the law repealed, it will jeopardize the bill." He was present at the Authors' Dinner in London, held after the passage of the act, and, after commenting on the speeches there made, he adds : " I think we have made a great step in advance, and American authors are to reap largely the ben- efit of it ; and this is as it ought to be. The era of cheap books should come in now, and American readers as much as authors should reap the benefit." He had a very just appreciation of Senator HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 129 Chace's labors in behalf of the act, and was indignant at the apparent lack of recognition of his services after the passage of the bill. " When I consider," he wrote, " how much he has done ; that, having nothing, not even the remotest connection with the publishing business or authorship, he gave so much time and so much intelligent effort without any possible motive of personal advantage to him- self or political advancement, the fact that he is so thoroughly ignored has been, I confess, a source of great annoyance to me." When, therefore, an address to Mr. Chace, signed by publishers and authors, was proposed, he took the most active interest in forwarding the plan, — giving, indeed, great personal atten- tion to securing signatures on the eve of his journey to Europe. He wrote as follows to Dr. Eggleston, June 20, 1891 : — DEAR DR. EGGLESTON, — We shall transmit to Mr. Harper in a day or two the paper which you indited, with a good number of signatures, and signatures of a character with which, I think, you will be pleased. We are 130 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON only waiting now for Mr. Whittier's, which we hope to get by Monday ; and we trust the paper will go over early in the week. I want to repeat what Mr. Harper has suggested, — that it is important that you should head the letter ; and I have already taken the liberty to say to Senator Chace that you have written it, and that we are going to insist that you shall sign it first. Since the death of my wife I have taken scarcely any interest in any- thing, but there has been no duty so grateful to me as to help in securing these names. The cordiality which has been expressed and the interest which has been manifested have been extremely gratifying, and I trust it will be gratifying to Mr. Chace himself. I have felt ever since the passage of the act, and before, that Mr. Chace' s interest and labor in this cause have been practically ignored. This will enable us to remove any such im- pression, I trust, from Mr. Chace's mind. I have said that he had not long been a resident of Cambridge before he was asked to serve on the school committee, and afterward HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 131 took his place in the common council and the board of aldermen. He had in these offices shown such qualities, and his expand- ing business had made him so much of a figure in the city, that he was elected to the office of mayor for the year 1872. He en- tered upon his duties with resolution, and with a determination to give the city a prudent and economical administration ; but he also took a large view of municipal life. It was a source of sincere pride with him that, under the impetus which he gave, the beautiful Fresh Pond was made a fine water-park, and the survey which he gave of the city's needs in his inaugural address was both broad and sagacious. Mr. Houghton was not reflected to the office, although he was a candidate for a sec- ond term. His successful opponent was one of the city officers, whose discharge for insub- ordination he had forced. It would be idle to rehearse a quarrel which most people have forgotten ; but it is not out of place to say that the very conscientiousness and energy which Mr. Houghton displayed stood in the 132 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON way of his popularity as a chief magistrate. He abhorred slackness and indifference, and anything approaching a shirk, and, with his self-contained independence and sense of au- thority, he pushed through such obstacles as met him by the exercise of an uncompromis- ing will. Such men do not make themselves favorites in government, but the bracing effect of this strong leadership was not soon lost, and the patient care with which the mayor examined every least concern which came be- fore him was gratefully recognized by those who needed his strong aid. Mr. Houghton did not confine himself to official service in the city. He was on more than one commission, indeed, and he inter- ested himself repeatedly in movements which looked to the betterment of Cambridge. His business reputation brought him also into positions of trust, both as an officer of a bank and in the care of private estates. It also made him of service to the religious denomi- nation to which he belonged. President War- ren, of Boston University, has spoken of the long connection which Mr. Houghton had HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 133 with that institution, and with the Theologi- cal Seminary which antedated it. " It was in 1866," he says, "that our Theological Sem- inary was removed from New Hampshire to Boston. Mr. Houghton favored its establish- ment in Cambridge. I well remember his taking me in his carriage to inspect certain building lots and tracts of land then for sale in this city, on one or another of which he recommended our trustees to build. Some of these I often pass, and never, I think, with- out remembering our visit in 1866. Our trustees, however, found all these suggested lots too small for their generous plans, and hence purchased thirty odd acres in Brook- line. Later their plans were further modified by the founding of Boston University, and the adoption of the Theological School as one of a group of metropolitan professional schools clustering about a vigorous academic department. Mr. Houghton was not dis- pleased that his original suggestion had not been acted upon, and when, in 1872, the pro- jected School of Law required for its safe launching a ' guaranty fund ' of $5000, he 134 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON was one of the five men who pledged and ultimately gave $1000 apiece for this pur- pose. He was one of the earliest Trustees of the University, and for quarter of a century was faithful in his attendance upon its al- most monthly meetings. As Chairman of the Standing Committee on the School of Law, he rendered a highly valued service. His personal knowledge of the leading lawyers of Boston and vicinity was uncommonly exten- sive and accurate. His judgment, moreover, was so sound and unbiased that I never had occasion to regret an appointment to that Faculty when he had previously recommended it. His intimate relation to the Dean of the School, Judge Bennett, as an early and life- long friend, was also in many ways beneficial. To find for a successor in the chairmanship of this committee a man of equal qualifica- tions will be a problem of no small difficulty." One further form of Mr. Houghton's pub- lic spirit may be mentioned in the active part which he took in the organization and practi- cal working of the Indian Eights Association. His friendly relation with Senator Dawes HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 135 made him especially ready to cooperate with him, and he looked forward in the latter part of his life with genuine pleasure to the yearly conferences at Lake Mohonk. But the most moving cause of his interest was the ardor of Mrs. Houghton. IX MRS. HOUGHTON answered well the fine old name of helpmeet ; for not only did she enter heartily into her husband's life in all their common domestic interests, she fortified it by her own independent but not foreign enter- prises. As she became more released from close supervision of her household in the ma- turing of her children, she entered with the enthusiasm and irrepressible cheerfulness of her nature into philanthropic and semi-public concerns. She was an ardent friend of the movement for bettering the condition of the Indian, and she was a very strenuous opponent of the suffrage for women. Mr. Houghton, as I have said, entered with her into the former work, and he was in sympathy with her prin- ciples of anti-woman-suffrage; but a large part of the pleasure he took was in the inti- mate companionship with one so unselfish, so HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 137 full of life and devotion, who filled to the full his own conception of a generous activity. When Mrs. Houghton died, on the 13th of April, 1891, there were those who with affec- tionate chiding were wont to say that, if she had spared herself more, she might not have been so summarily and swiftly carried away by the attack of pneumonia which seized her ; but Mr. Houghton, while conceding the pos- sibility of this, took the nobler view. " She went in all over," he said, " in the matters she was interested in. She did not spare her- self. Perhaps if she had taken care of herself she would have lived longer, but her life was full ; she was happy in her many occupations. It is better so." He was led to speak of the mistaken kindness which succeeded in empty- ing the old of occupation and responsibility, and recounted the experience of his own fa- ther, who had wasted away, he believed, from sheer inanity, because those about him were affectionately anxious to shield him from care and labor. He had himself, before his wife's death, begun to be shaken a little in his firm health ; 138 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON but, though he professed a desire to get some relief from a confinement to business, habit was strong with him, and, despite the share of work he surrendered to his associates, he found it hard to relinquish his hold upon the lever. But his wife's death made a profound impression upon him. The loyalty he always felt for his friends was a sacred feeling as regarded his wife, and the nearly forty years' companionship had made her indeed bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh, so that, when she passed out of his life, strong as he was, he felt almost a bewilderment. The physical weariness, of which he had been little aware in the strength of his will, now became known even to him. He set out with his daughters on a nine months' journey abroad, and wrote back from England that he had not been aware how worn out he was until he got away from home. The party traveled leisurely, spending much of their time on the yacht Victoria, which took them not only into northern waters, so that they visited Norway and Sweden and Russia, but later brought them from the Medi- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 139 terranean to the West Indies on their way home. Part of the winter of 1892 was spent in Egypt. Mr. Houghton by no means relin- quished his concern for the business in his absence. He kept up a busy correspondence with the house, and gave a great deal of at- tention to projects which called for coopera- tion with foreign houses. Upon his return to America in April, 1892, Mr. Houghton resumed his customary place in the business, and, though he succeeded in absenting himself a little more than for- merly in the summer time, there was no very appreciable diminution of activity until the winter of 1894-95. He spent his summer, as for several years before, at Little Boar's Head, New Hampshire, and made occasional excursions to Vermont, especially when he was constrained by the good-natured com- pulsion of his friend, Mr. Norman Williams, of Chicago, himself an ardent Vermonter and a summer neighbor of Mr. Houghton. A Ver- mont Association had been organized in Bos- ton in 1886, and Mr. Houghton was president 140 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON until 1894, when he insisted on retiring. The chief function of the president was to preside at the annual dinner of the Association, and Mr. Houghton carried his thoroughness into his social as into his business duties, and strongly attached to him those who had the execution of the plans of the Association. One of these, Captain S. E. Howard, secretary of the Association, wrote to Mr. Houghton to congratulate him on reaching his seven- tieth birthday, and received this reply : — BOSTON, May 18, 1893. DEAR CAPTAIN HOWARD, — I have some- times thought that if I were a military man and your superior officer, with power of life and death in my hands, I should order you to be shot. I feel a good deal like the boy I used to know in Vermont, who said he could bear anything except being "twitted of facts;" and to find one's self being congrat- ulated upon being threescore and ten leads a man to be a little rebellious. However, I will forgive you for reminding me of it, and also will commute the old grudge which I had HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 141 against you for allowing me to be contin- ued as President of the Vermont Association. There is one advantage of being an " old fellow," and that is that one's friends can say how much they think of him while he is alive and kicking. One of the pleasantest things connected with my membership in the Vermont Association has been the pleasant friends I have made, and among them all there are none that I esteem more highly than you and our mutual friend, Colonel Car- penter, my co-workers. Wishing that you may live to be fourscore and ten or more, I am Yours very truly, H. 0. HOUGHTON. A complimentary dinner was given Mr. Houghton by the Association after he retired from the presidency, but at his request there were no reporters present, and what was said on that occasion was not preserved. This recurrence to early memories was ac- companied by a lively interest in family his- tory, and in one or two letters written to a 142 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON friend at this time, Mr. Houghton gives a glimpse of the manner in which he was using some of his enforced leisure. He was partic- ularly interested in the alliance which he was shown to have with early printers. CAMBRIDGE, December 28, 1893. ... I am much pleased that you are inter- ested in my genealogical researches. Many years ago, before my marriage, I fell in with a man who had been to England to make special researches about the Houghton family; and from him I obtained the family tree, the coat- of-arms, seal, etc., and, in looking over some old papers recently, I discovered a copy of a letter from John Burke, the author of Burke's Peerage, addressed to Sir Henry Bold Hough- ton, an English baronet, informing him that his family were descended from the Planta- genet kings. The motto, I am sorry to say, was a fighting one, " Malgre le Tort," and I changed it many years ago, retaining the crest. At this Christmas, Miss Leach, of Phil- adelphia, — who with her father has been helping me to formulate my ancestors, so that HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 143 I could join the Sons of the Revolution, as well as the Society of the Old Colony Wars, — has sent to me our family coat-of-arms, which she has carefully and I believe accu- rately marked out and painted and had framed. For the Old Colony Wars I have six or eight ancestors from whom I can claim the right. And for the Sons of the Revolution my son has one claim more than I, as his great-grandfather on his mother's side was chaplain in the Revolution. January 11, 1894. . . . Some years ago I was asked to speak about printing at a dinner of the Harvard Club in New York, and then and since I took a great deal of pains to investigate the subject. The principal authority is Thomas's History of Printing, but the information was meagre and confused ; but I got no hint from any source of my relationship to the president [i. e. Pres- ident Dunster of Harvard]. This was discov- ered by my friend, Mr. Leach, of Philadelphia, who has made genealogy a study for many years. The result of my investigations was, 144 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON that President Dunster was the first printer, and not Stephen Daye. A clergyman by the name of Glover, for the purpose of converting the Indians, set sail from England in 1678 with his family, Stephen Daye (supposed to have been a blacksmith), and the printing ma- terials. Mr. Glover died on the passage. The press was set up in President Dunster's house. He subsequently married the widow of Mr. Glover, and years afterwards his children sued Mr. Dunster for an accounting, and Major Willard was called in to settle the matter be- tween the children and the president. Ste- phen Daye was discharged about the time of Mrs. Glover's marriage, and a Samuel Green, a native of the town, took the place of Daye, and kept it for fifty years, while Daye turned land speculator. Meantime President Dun- ster had a law passed by the colonial legisla- ture that all printing required in the colonies should be done in Cambridge. He also had a censorship of the press appointed, and he was one of the censors. Besides, when a com- peting press was sent over, Dunster bought it. So I infer that he was the real printer, HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 145 and rather an enterprising man besides. Now Major Willard, having lost his English wife, married Elizabeth Dunster, a sister of Presi- dent Dunster, and she dying he married Mary Dunster, supposed to have been a younger sis- ter or niece. Mary Willard, a descendant of this marriage, married Ensign Jacob Hough- ton, my great-grandfather. From this union of Willards and Dunsters came two presidents of Harvard College, and some other fairly respectable descendants. . . . Although Mr. Houghton kept his place at the head of the house and rarely missed a day at Park Street, it was clear that he was con- sciously relaxing the tension of his hold on business details. There was the same quick- ness of perception when projects were dis- cussed, the same faculty for going straight to the centre, but there was less disposition to watch closely the separate movements of the great organism he had so long been build- ing up. With this relaxation there seemed almost a release of that part of his nature which in the strenuous activity of his life had 146 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON been held in restraint. With the sunshine of prosperity came a mellowness in which the warmth of his disposition showed itself in generous converse with his friends. As he sat in his office, he welcomed those who came on business as friendly visitors. It had been one of his marked characteristics that he never hurried a caller, and would sit leisurely chatting with him when his clerks outside were fuming over the interruption of what they thought important business ; now he let his sociability have free play, and especially delighted when some old associate, under no greater pressure, as Dr. Holmes for example, who was a frequent visitor, could draw his chair beside him for a familiar chat. Always peculiarly open to the frank friendship of the young, as he grew older he turned instinct- ively to them for companionship. His daugh- ters' friends found in his mingled courtesy and playfulness a charm which won their con- fidence and respect. A touch of his manner may be seen in a letter which he wrote to a neighbor shortly before his return from his last journey to Europe : — HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 147 TO B. W. 0. CAIRO, EGYPT, May 11, 1892. MY DEAR EDITH, — Your kind note and the calendar enclosed were duly received at Christmas, and very gratefully so. The little sweet face on the Christmas card looked as if it was all ready to be kissed, as you were in days long agone. I do not know how to sufficiently compensate you for your charm- ing remembrance unless I send you a camel. Would you like a young one or an old one ? They both look very picturesque. I saw Al- berta mount one for the first time on Satur- day. He groaned and made a great fuss, but after a big effort he raised himself on his fore- legs, and she swayed back and forth in true Oriental style. After she had succeeded, Elizabeth and Justine mounted their respec- tive camels, and I a donkey ! Their camels got up easier, but I had hard work to mount the donkey ; the stirrups were too short and the saddle too high. You will see us all doubtless, in time, reproduced in photograph on our various mounts. 148 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON Please thank Miss B for her kind re- membrance also. I do not quite know what to bring her in return. I had thought of the Sphinx, but that would not do, as she is a woman and would not be appreciated; besides, she has got a battered nose, which indicates she may have been on a drunken spree in her early life. How would a young buffalo do ? They are frisky and seem sociable, and have a way of depressing their horns on their necks so that they look very docile. . . . We have taken passage to-morrow on Ra- meses the Great for the first cataract on the Nile. After that we expect to set our faces homeward. We trust a good Providence will give us favoring winds and speed us on our way, so that we may soon be able to greet all our dear friends. Please give my kindest regards to Miss B and C , if he is not so inveterate a mugwump as not to care for them, and with love for yourself from your still Young friend, H. 0. HOUGHTON. HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 149 To the large circle of his nieces and neph- ews and their children, Mr. Houghton was increasingly bound by the interchange of friendly intercourse and by the frequent acts of kindness which he was able to show, and it is not strange that he was peculiarly drawn to his one living grandchild. He welcomed her advent with a quiet, happy pleasure which was good to see, and it was one of his great resources, as his life contracted in other ways, to visit her and watch her life expanding. When he was absent from her, he wanted news of her, and something of his eagerness to share life with her may be seen in this letter, written when she was an infant only, and he was back in the neighborhood of his own childhood : — MONTPEUEB, VT., December 24, 1894. MY DEAR GRANDDAUGHTER ROSAMOND, — I received your sweet letter to-day, the first I ever received from a granddaughter, and I suppose the first you ever wrote. I must say that the penmanship, as well as the expres- sion of your ideas, did you great credit. If 150 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON you keep on improving until you are thirty you are likely to be the most famous female member of the Houghton family. Perhaps you may be allowed to vote on account of your great learning. To prevent you from being a " blue stocking," I think I was none too early in suggesting that we would have " high jinks " together as soon as you get big enough. I think this is important, as I do not want you to be too literary, nor do I think your grandmother, if she were living, would like to have you vote, but would much pre- fer you should be a sweet, healthy, rollicking little girl than a prudish, pale pedant, so please kick and jump just as hard as you can, so you can be in good training for us to have a lot of frolics together. Perhaps you will come up to Vermont with me some time, where there is in winter usually plenty of ice and snow. There is but little snow here to-day, but Aunt Alberta and Cousin James have just gone out to ride in a wagon, although the thermometer this morning was about down to zero. I was sorry not to see you before we came away, because you were asleep, but when HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 151 you get older we will try and regulate these matters to suit ourselves. With love to your mamma and papa, and with ever so much to your dear self, I am Your affectionate GRANDPA. P. S. Your photograph in your papa's arms is right before me, in which you appear to excellent advantage. In the autumn of 1894 Mr. Houghton was affected by a difficulty of breathing, which greatly impeded the freedom of his move- ments, and kept him from time to time housed at home ; so that, when the winter came, it was thought wise for him to go South, in hopes that a less stringent climate would give him relief. His eldest daughter went with him, and his family physician, also, as far as Asheville. He was restless and moved farther South, trying one place after another, only to return in the spring with the kind of new hope and courage which come to one who has done with travels for health, and is once more in his own home. A letter written when 152 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON he was making his way northward gives a hint of his winter : — TO CAPTAIN S. E. HOWARD. LAKEWOOD, NEW JERSEY, April 2, 1895. MY DEAR CAPTAIN HOWARD, — There is something very good about you ; whether it is innate, or comes from your association with Vermonters, I cannot say. It seems to be there just the same, as evidenced by your thinking of a poor fellow suffering from the grippe and wandering about seeking for sleep and rest. We first went to Asheville, North Carolina, where for a few days everything seemed to go well, when there came a succession of rainy and cold days, when breathing was dif- ficult, and sleep seemed impossible except by stealth. The local doctor told me I must get out, and, as it seemed against his inter- est to have me do so, I did it. He sent me to Columbia, South Carolina, where I did im- prove in the sleeping and the weather was milder, but the "fodder" was dreadful, — the old Virginia style. I stood it as long as I could, and then we struck out for this place. Here I HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 153 we have comfortable quarters, high prices, palatable food, and a tendency to sleep added. I purpose to try this awhile, unless something drives me away from here. At any rate, I trust to be home about the middle of April. Not long after Mr. Houghton returned to Cambridge, in the spring of 1895, there was a festival held by the Riverside Press, on the occasion of Mr. Mifflin's fiftieth birth- day. The celebration was happily conceived and carried out by a committee chosen by the large body of some six hundred men and women who now made up the establishment. Mr. Mifflin himself knew only so much of the affair beforehand as it was necessary to con- fide to him. Mr. Houghton was apprised of the event and took a deep interest in it, but necessarily could have nothing to do with the management. When the day came, his family, ever watchful of him in his declining strength, debated whether he would be able to attend the festival, which was to be held in the evening. He listened without much com- ment, but in the course of the discussion he 154: HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON quietly slipped out and went down to the Press, where he held a consultation with some of the committee; he had resolved that the affair should be more significant than appeared on its face. It was agreed in his home that he might safely venture to the hall for a part of the exercises, and his carriage could wait to bring him away if at any time his strength or his interest flagged. Several times during the earlier part of the evening, when speeches and song and other entertainment were going on, one of his daughters whispered to him a sug- gestion that he might easily escape, but he smiled and thought he would stay through. In fact, he had his own plans, which he had no intention of subjecting to debate. A sup- per was to follow, in the lower hall, and Mr. Houghton quietly took his place at the head of the procession. His daughters, surprised at his endurance of an excitement to which he had not seemed equal for several months, were now overtaken with dismay and appre- hension when he was called upon for a speech. They did not know then that he had specially HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 155 asked the committee to call upon him; they feared only that his weakness would distress him and the audience if he attempted, with his wavering voice and struggling breath, to make even the simplest remarks. Mr. Houghton rose to his feet with all the strength of his prime, and in a voice which was never firmer or clearer, with a manner direct and coherent, he told at length the story of Mr. Mifflin's association with him from the beginning, — giving him the hearty praise of one who had long tried him and had come, strong man as he was, even to lean on him. Many of the younger workers at the Press had never before seen Mr. Houghton ; none of them ever saw him in his capacity of leader again. It was an open, frank, and loyal transfer of his mantle to the younger shoulders, — a plea that his successor might have the respect and support and fidelity of the men which had heretofore been given to himself. It was a fitting climax to a great career. When the summer of 1895 came, Mr. 156 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON Houghton was advised not to expose himself to the climate of the seacoast, and he availed himself of the courtesy of Mr. Mifflin, who placed at his partner's disposal his country- seat at North Andover. There, in a quiet rural district, Mr. Houghton could have not only the seclusion of his own home, but the pleasure of exploring the beautiful country about the place. He took daily drives when he was at home, but, with the unconquerable energy of his nature, he persisted in frequent journeys to the office in Boston. There was something very pathetic, something also very noble, in the resolution with which he clung to his work. He had never known when he was beaten ; he did not know it now, but kept up the attack week after week. His daughters shielded him in every possible way; his friends visited him ; and the humor which had so often turned the warm side of life toward him did not fail him now. There was, now and then, an acute form taken by his disease which alarmed not only those about him, but Mr. Houghton himself ; and, though he was not much given to pre- HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 157 sages, it was clear that he saw his end draw- ing near. Without referring to this directly, he made it somewhat evident by the seri- ousness with which he collected himself in occasional talks over important concerns. I remember one such, which made a strong impression upon me. It was the last day of July, when he arranged to have me see him by himself. There was a matter in which we were both greatly concerned that had come to the point of decision. He began, in his characteristic manner, at a long distance from the matter in hand. His words came with difficulty, his attitude showed discomfort. He rehearsed many situations and relations with which we were both familiar, and came nearer and nearer to the heart of the subject. His manner deepened in earnestness, his voice be- came stronger, and he spoke with emphasis, — with eloquence, indeed. In this matter he could make no personal inquisition, as he had been wont to do; he must leave it to the decision of his partners. Yet the principles which underlay the whole were insisted upon, and he felt deeply the interest involved. He 158 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON was not thinking of his personal estate : he was thinking of the institution he had founded ; that republic must suffer no hurt. His strength failed him steadily, but he made an almost superhuman effort on Fri- day, the 23d of August, to be present at the celebration of his grandchild's first birthday anniversary in Winchester. It was as if he gathered his strength for this final demon- stration of his love and his indomitable will. He returned the same day to North Andover, and on Sunday, the 25th, he died. After his death there were public expres- sions of appreciation of his worth and his services. Kesolutions of respect were passed by the book trade, the bank in which he was director, the University which he had so long served, humane societies to which he had be- longed, and the city of Cambridge. A me- morial service was held at the Harvard Street Methodist Episcopal Church, at which the Riverside Press was represented by one of its oldest members. Yet, when even a strong man has died, one turns presently from these HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON 159 public expressions, sincere as they are, for there begin to come to light the secret ways of the man's goodness. It was in the nature of Mr. Houghton's care for others that it was confidential. But a man's testament cannot be kept private, and it was quickly known that Mr. Houghton had established a generous fund to be administered by his daughters for the worthy poor of Cambridge. This act was not the tardy charity of him who can no longer use his wealth. He had been doing this kind of good for years, sometimes in direct relations, sometimes through almoners. He aided students struggling for an educa- tion ; he gave liberally to his poorer kin ; and there were certain discreet persons who re- ceived from him regularly sums of money for distribution. He was especially glad to do this through his church. "I cannot better put you in possession of what I have learned of his genuinely benevolent heart," said his pastor, Rev. George Skene, at the memorial service, "than by reading you a letter which I received from him a short time before lie left us. He had from time to time placed in my 160 HENRY OSCAR HOUGHTON hands sums of money to be used in charity as I found occasion. Appreciating the fact that he was a business man, and systematic in his methods of doing business, I was careful to keep an accurate account of all disburse- ments, and report to him in detail the dispo- sition of his gifts. After my last report I received this letter from him : — DEAR PASTOR, — I have your ac- count of your stewardship, and find it very satisfactory. I enclose herewith another check, if it will not trouble you too much, to use in the same way. When this is used up, will you kindly let me know and call for more ? Thanking you for your kind interest in distributing my little benefaction, " I am sincerely yours, "H. 0. HOUGHTON." The last connection which Mr. Houghton had with the office where he had so long transacted the business of his life was to make inquiry into the well-being of one of his ben- eficiaries. z 475 H84S3 Scudder, Horace Elisha Henry Oscar Houghton PLEASE DO NOT REMOVE CARDS OR SLIPS FROM THIS POCKET UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO LIBRARY