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Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs

3/29/2025

 
​ Easton’s 300th anniversary celebration continues with a showing of the 1916 silent film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, written and produced by Winthrop Ames.

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​The film will be shown on Saturday, May 3rd at 7:00 pm in the Hemingway Theater at Stonehill College. There is seating for 250 people, doors open at 6:30. Tickets will be sold at the door.
The story is old, a German folk tale, and first recorded in the early 19th century. It was included in a collection of fairy tales by the Brothers Grimm in 1812. They updated their story in 1854. In the first Grimm versions, the dwarfs didn't have names, but the Winthrop Ames’s 1912 Broadway play Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs gave them the names Blick, Flick, Glick, Snick, Plick, Whick, and Quee. 
The tale was written as a play by Winthrop Ames under the pseudonym Jessie Braham White and produced by him under his own name. Debuting at the Little Theater in New York City on October 31, 1912, the play starred Marguerite Clark. The play was a more light-hearted version of the tale that was appropriate for children. Performances were held after school at 3:30 and later eleven o’clock shows were added on Saturdays as the play was so popular. The play was well-received, and Marguerite Clark went on to star in the 1916 silent film. A young Walt Disney saw that film.
The film has a long history. In a letter dated November 23, 1936, and addressed to Dodd Mead and Company, Winthrop Ames acknowledged his sale of the talking picture and motion picture rights of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs to Walt Disney Productions, Ltd. of Hollywood. Disney's film animated the story and introduced the names of the dwarfs we know today: Dopey, Bashful, Sleepy, Sneezy, Happy, Grumpy and Doc. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs was the first feature film produced by Disney (1937) and has gone through many incarnations.

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 Scenes from the stage play, 1912. The play script was published in 1913 and is still licensed to be performed today.

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Sources - Links
Wikipedia
The history of Snow White
Winthrop Ames Biography
Snow White Winter: "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" (1912 stage play by Winthrop Ames)
Barnes & Noble - Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs: The Broadway Play of 1912
 

 By Anne Wooster Drury

SPRING

3/15/2025

 

And the seasons they go round and round
And the painted ponies go up and down
We're captive on the carousel of time
​ (Joni Mitchell, The Circle Game)

Around we go again. Spring is not quite here but there are hints everywhere, snowdrops at Sheep Pasture, crocuses and budding daffodils at Governor Ames, sixty-degree days. The ice on Old Pond and New Pond is melting and this week, all of a sudden, people appeared on the sidewalks.
Spring is when life comes round again. Each new year brings novelty, even though it’s all an approximation of previous years. There will still be cold and blustery days; there might be snow.
But hope has sprung anew and for today that is enough. We go round and round in the circle game of seasons. 

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Crocus at Governor Ames

Spring has arrived in what we call the town of Easton for 300 years and though many things have changed, many remain the same. Queset brook, unchecked, was here before 1725, as were the giant glacial boulders at Borderland. I’m guessing lady slippers in the woods were also, along with cranberry meadows, and bog iron. 

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Queset in Spring


So enjoy the earth as it warms. Happy (almost) Spring!

At the Same Time

There’s a skunk dead in the road at Old Pond,
at New Pond dozens of red-winged blackbirds
sweep through slender tree branches
wrapped in circles of green and white.

Across town, a mourning dove
mourns in the shagbark tree
at dusk.

Call me a thief of lilacs, defender of
dandelions. Farmer of days, slicer of soil,
walker of the rhododendron path,
but never a deceiver of time.

Once, wild asparagus, rhubarb,
blackberries, huckleberries, lady slippers,
all grew within a half mile of here,
Right here, where it’s beautiful and sad

at exactly the same time.  

​
 Anne Wooster Drury

What Richardson Never Built

3/1/2025

 

​Biweekly Newsletter    March 1, 2025
 What Richardson Never Built

 
Just a quick follow-up to last week’s newsletter about the new Richardson book, Henry Hobson Richardson: Drawings from the Collection of Houghton Library, Harvard University (Monacelli Press / Phaidon), by Jay Wickersham, Chris Milford, and Hope Mayo.
 
Below is a sketch showing an icehouse designed by H.H. Richardson that F.L. Ames at one time intended to construct on his Langwater property. It would have been at the northern end of the estate off Elm Street. Apparently, Ames, Olmsted, and Richardson all got together, and a sketch was produced. You can see it below. 

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​Note the pond in the forefront and the ramp to move the ice up into a storage area. The wing on the right is where carts would drive up to retrieve the ice. Ames decided not to go ahead with the icehouse which would have been near the gate lodge. Perhaps it would have taken away from the landscape design? No one knows.
The fact that there was a plan for an icehouse at Langwater was not discovered until 1976 when Larry J. Homolka, a Ph.D. student at Harvard University, found a reference in a letter that F.L. Ames sent Olmsted and published the information in his dissertation.
In addition, there was a freight house designed by Richardson to sit south of the RR Station, but it was never built. It would have been a one-story building with an attached cylindrical water tower to service steam engines. A freight house was built about 1890, south of the station but it wasn’t Richardson’s design. Again, this information was published in Homolka’s dissertation. 

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​Sketch of H.H. Richardson freight house that was never built.
By 1900/1903 the freight house was in a different location on Oliver Street near where the Y is now. Whether it was moved or torn down and another rebuilt is not known. Neither freight house was Richardson’s design. This is according to a Sanborn Fire Insurance map issued 1892 and amended 1900.

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In the left rear, behind the rail cars is the top of what is believed to be the freight house (off Oliver St). The roofline looks like the one in a photo of first freight house, making it likely it was moved to the Oliver Street location.

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Another view of second freight house location. From 1903 document.
Always something new to learn.
Reminder: There will be a presentation at Oakes Ames Hall, 2-4, on April 6. The new book is the first in-depth publication from the Harvard collection of over 4,000 drawings, made by Richardson and his studio. Hope you can attend.
 
Anne Wooster Drury
With special thanks to Paul Berry for all his research.
 
Source:
Homolka, Larry J. “Henry Hobson Richardson and the ‘Ames Memorial Buildings’.” Ph.D. dissertation, Harvard University, 1976.


    ​

    Author

    Anne Wooster Drury

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Easton Historical Society and Museum
​
PO Box 3
80 Mechanic Street
North Easton, MA 02356
Tel:  508-238-7774
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