Annual Report
1986-87
132 Essex Street
Salem, Massachusetts
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ESSEX INSTITUTE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
1987-88
OFFICERS
Chairman
Randolph P. Barton
Manchester
Vice Chairman
Stuart W. Pratt
Essex
Vice Chairman
Frederic A. Sharf
Chestnut Hill
Secretary-
Peter B. Seamans
Marblehead
Treasurer
Stanley J. Lukowski
Topsfield
President
Anne Famam
Salem
TRUSTEES
James Amsler
Salem
Mrs. W. Benjamin Bacon
Beverly
C. Richard Carlson
Rockport
Richard Candee
York, Maine
C. Henry Glovsky
Beverly
HONORARY
TRUSTEES
C. Conway Felton
Prides Crossing
Albert Goodhue
Marblehead
Kevin B. Harrington
Salem
Herbert G. Howard
Marblehead
H. Gilman Nichols
Essex
Sumner W. Jones
Salem
Mrs. George Putnam
Manchester
Mrs. George G. Loring
Manchester
Douglas C. Ryder
Marblehead
Mrs. Peter R. Merry
Salem
Robert N. Shapiro
Cambridge
Richard Minturn
Manchester
Mrs. Elaine Wilde
Belmont
Edward H. Osgood
Hamilton
William Saltonstall
Manchester
Richard S. West
Wenham
Essex Institute
Annual Report 1986-87
Chairman's Report
Dear Members and Friends of the Essex Institute:
The Essex Institute depends on the resources of
the community in order to serve as a center for
Essex County history to be collected, studied, and
enjoyed. Fiscal year 1987 will be remembered as a
year when support of the Institute jumped drama¬
tically. I would like to thank each individual who
contributed to the Institute, through membership
and donations. For the second year in a row, the
Essex Institute continued to broaden its base of
financial support from fundraising activities and
earned income sources, resulting a 27 percent
increase over the previous year.
The Essex Institute is indebted to the many local
residents and community leaders who volunteer
their time to the Essex Institute. Of particular note
are those trustees whose term ended at the end of
this fiscal year: Thomas A. Askew, Jr., Wenham;
Mrs. John B. Ballou, Salem; John J. Fox, Danvers;
Mrs. Emerson T. Oliver, Marblehead; and Francis P.
Story, Prides Crossing. In helping to guide the
Institute, trustees offer their skills and their
knowledge of the region.
Of course, the backbone of the Institute is its
membership, which increased 14 percent over the
previous year to 1,700 strong — representing local,
regional, and national support. Our corporate mem¬
bers program has grown to 166 members in three
categories. This “business to business” cooperation
makes apparent that the Essex Institute is an
important resource in the community.
Fundraising activities experienced a significant
boost. A $25,000 trustee challenge enabled the
Annual Giving Program to achieve a record
$126,000. Three donor clubs — Holyoke, Rooster, and
President’s — have also helped to stimulate giving,
and the Essex Institute is very grateful to everyone
who supported annual giving at these generous
levels.
Support from the local community is important
to secure state and federal grants which signify our
increasing professional status in the museum field.
During fiscal year 1987, the Institute received
grants from the Massachusetts Council on the Arts
and Humanities and the National Endowment for
the Humanities (NEH). The NEH award is quite a
milestone in the history of the Essex Institute. It
launches a new era in long-range planning for the
Institute as we develop the projects of the Museum
Neighborhood.
The Essex Institute is learning to make the most
of its income-generating opportunities. With the
application of basic marketing principles, the
Institute achieved a 25 percent increase in
admissions revenue and a 40 percent increase in
museum shop sales. The Cotting-Smith Assembly
House has proven a gracious and profitable rental
facility, while special events such as the Harvest
Festival and the Oriental Rug Bazaar have become
quite popular and financially beneficial for the
Institute.
So, as you can see, the Essex Institute is
branching out in many directions to make the busi¬
ness of history viable for today!
"yJL ,*///? zX/'
Chairman
President’s Report
Dear Members and Friends of the Essex Institute:
Each year it is gratifying to review the progress
of the Essex Institute, and fiscal year 1987 (April 1,
1986-March 31, 1987) is no exception. Increasingly
at the Essex Institute, we recognize two “bottom
lines.” Like many businesses we set goals for income
and a budget for expenses — a financial bottom line.
But we also have a second bottom line that is tied to
our mission to collect, preserve, study, and interpret
the history of the Essex County people from the
seventeenth century to the present. This second
bottom line is the reason we are in business. Thanks
to the generosity of the community and the hard
work of a dedicated board of trustees and staff, we
have continued to broaden our scope of programs
while achieving a financial break-even position for
the second year in a row.
Federal Period Glass
The Institute continues to add to its rich collec¬
tions — a memory of Essex County past. This year,
the Institute received 1 ,057 objects into the museum
and the library collections from 120 donors —
painting, decorative arts of all sorts, costume, books
and manuscripts, diaries and photographs —
stretching over three hundred years. Among the
highlights were thirty pieces of Federal period glass,
which belonged to Joseph White, the second owner
of the Gardner-Pingree House. Another important
acquisition for the Gardner-Pingree House is an
17th Century paneled chest
exquisite garniture of the same period ( circa
1790-1810), of polychrome Chinese export. A rare,
virtually untouched seventeenth-century paneled
chest now joins an already distinguished collection
of early Essex County furniture.
The James Duncan Phillips Library continued to
thrive as a center of scholarly enterprise at all levels
of research — amateur, student, and professional.
During the year, the library staff served 2,694
readers in person, about 13 percent of whom were
members, and answered 600 letters from re¬
searchers around the world. Topics researched
included: the changing image of England in
America, 1800-1860; the growth of radicalism in
pre-revolutionary Salem; the mapping of Essex
County’s coastline; and Canton, China, 1780-1880.
The Essex County Business Records project is a par¬
tnership between staff and fifteen Essex Institute
corporate members to catalog and preserve some of
the many account books in our collections. It has
already led to many new discoveries — with a
collection of 4,000 volumes, the opportunity for a
new view of the past is almost unlimited.
Exhibitions are an important means of comm¬
unicating history to the general public. This year “A
Matter of Taste: Cooking and Dining at Home,
1686-1986” focused on one of the essentials of life:
food. The response to the show exceeded anyone’s
expectations, and certainly contributed to this year’s
surge in admissions. There were a number of
welcome new gifts and purchases, particularly twen¬
tieth-century items for the exhibition.
Collecting and preserving material culture
separates us from other educational institutions,
but, as a museum and library, education is our fun-
damental reason for existence. The Essex Institute
is an educational institution, and this year a record
62,000 people — you, other members and friends, and
visitors to the North Shore — came to the Institute
library, museum galleries, and historic houses to
learn of and from the past. Included in that total
were 8,000 school children from all over New
England who came to the Institute as an extension
of their classroom learning.
Education and membership programs continue
to grow. Highlights this year included the second
Essex Institute field trip, which gave a group of
members the opportunity to learn more about the
regional culture of Savannah, Georgia. Back at
home, the Harvest Festival continued to grow for the
third year as a celebration of traditional crafts and
culture with a regional and national audience. We
also inaugurated “Eerie Events” during Halloween.
These lantern-lit house tours featured costumed
guides telling mysterious tales of Essex County
during Salem’s city-wide celebration, “Haunted
Happenings.”
Perhaps the single most important achievement
of this fiscal year was a $400,000 challenge grant
award from the National Endowment for the
Humanities (NEH), which launches a two million
dollar capital campaign for the Essex Institute
Museum Neighborhood. The NEH Challenge Grant
program is very competitive with high standards for
its applicants, and the award represents national
recognition of the Institute’s goals as a model for
future museum planning. Projects include a major
restoration of the Gardner-Pingree House and the
Derby-Beebe summerhouse and gardens. In
recreating a neighborhood of the 1790-1820 period,
the Crowninshield-Bently House will also undergo
some restoration work. New programs and tours will
be developed which utilize the houses, their
collections, and the history associated with them.
The Plummer Hall auditorium will be renovated
and a new exhibition gallery will be created. A new
climate control system in the library stacks will be
installed. Endowments for the education program,
exhibitions, and paper conservation will be esta¬
blished, and the Gardner-Pingree House endowment
will be increased to maintain the restoration work
for years to come.
Your continued support as members and friends
of the Essex Institute will make it flourish in the
coming years. Thank you!
f\ IAAaXL 0J\aaJ3lAa^
President
Polychrome Chinese Export
Treasurer's Report
Essex Institute is a nonprofit organization
established to collect, preserve, and interpret Essex
County history. The organization is exempt from
federal income taxes under Section 501(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code.
During the fiscal year 1987 the Institute
received a $400,000 challenge grant from the
National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH),
and received funds for a $2,000,000 capital
campaign. Gifts, pledges, and grant payments are
classified as temporary endowment funds until
reallocated or restricted pursuant to the purposes of
the challenge grant.
The accounts of the Essex Institute are
maintained in accordance with the principles of fund
accounting. The audited statements of account
prepared by Albert W. Dodge, Jr., are available by
writing to: Business Office, Essex Institute, 132
Essex Street, Salem, MA 01970. The books are also
available for inspection in the Business Office.
Respectfully submitted,
Revenue Sources 1987
H Endowment and Trust
49.3%
□ Earned Income
23.6%
H Annual Giving
16.2%
□ Membership
6.7%
H Grants
4.2%
Operating Expenses 1987
9 Collections
27
.9%
□ Administration
24.
.6%
il Buildings and Grounds
23.
.6%
E3 Membership and Development
16.
,0%
El Education
7.
9%
ESSEX INSTITUTE
BALANCE SHEET
YEAR ENDED MARCH 31, 1987
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DONORS TO THE ESSEX INSTITUTE
1986-1987 ANNUAL GIVING PROGRAM
President’s Club
($1,000 or more)
Anonymous
Dr. and Mrs. W. Benjamin
Bacon
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph P.
Barton
Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. M.
Barton
Miss Dorothy A. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Eustace W.
Buchanan
Mr. Richard M. Candee
Mrs. Usher P. Coolidge f
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis C.
Copeland
Elizabeth DeBlois, M.D.
Mr. and Mrs. George B.
Farnam
Dr. Josephine L. Murray
Mr. and Mrs. H. Gilman
Nichols
Mrs. Andrew Oliver
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H.
Osgood
Mrs. Edward L. Peirson
Mr. and Mrs. Stuart W. Pratt
Mr. Bennett Rich
Mrs. Chandler Robbins II
Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Saltonstall
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic A.
Sharf
Miss Mary Silver Smith f
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
Steward
Mrs. Abbott Payson Usher
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H.
West
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. West
Rooster Club
($500 - $999)
Mr. and Mrs. W. Gardner
Barker
Mrs. William Chisholm
Mrs. U. Haskell Crocker
Ms. Anne Farnam
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Goodhue
Mr. and Mrs. George Gardner
Loring
Cm dr. and Mrs. Francis H.
Markey
Mr. John T. Northey
Mrs. Emerson T. Oliver
Mr. Alfred Porter Putnam
Mr. and Mrs. Donald C.
Seamans
Dr. and Mrs. Robert C.
Seamans, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Francis P.
Sears, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert L.
Steward, Sr.
Mr. Francis P. Story
Mr. and Mrs. David A.
Wheatland
Holyoke Club
($150 - $499)
Anonymous
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A.
Askew, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Channing
Bacall, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Beyea
Mr. Gregory R. Brackett
Miss Eleanor Broadhead
Dr. and Mrs. David C. Brown
Mr. and Mrs. John Burton II
Mr. and Mrs. W. Keith Butler
Mrs. Dorothy E. Caputo
Mr. C. Richard Carlson
Mrs. Arthur L. Collier
Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Cook
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph H.
Doering, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. James N.
Esdaile, Jr.
Mr. Robert D. Farley
Mr. and Mrs. John Fox, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
Frothingham III
Dr. and Mrs. James D. C.
Go wans
Dr. and Mrs. Roger F.
Greenslet
Mr. and Mrs. Francis W.
Hatch, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Hill
Ronni and Peter Hoover
Mr. Herbert G. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick
Kauders
Mr. and Mrs. George Lail
Mrs. John A. Lord
Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Lord
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J.
Lukowski
Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Lutts
Mr. Keith Melder
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin A.
Meyers
Cm dr. and Mrs. J. Alexander
Michaud
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S.
Mintum
Mr. and Mrs. Richard P.
Northey
Mr. and Mrs. William
Bradford Osgood
Mr. Allan D. Parker
Mr. Jonathan R. Phillips
Mr. and Mrs. Richard B.
Philbrick
Mr. Chester M. Sawtelle
Mr. and Mrs. Peter B.
Seamans
Mrs. Philip Horton Smith
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert L.
Steward, Jr.
Mr. Ronald N. Tagney
Mr. and Mrs. Richard K.
Thorndike
Mr. and Mrs. Gerard B.
Townsend
Mr. and Mrs. Edward R.
Tufts
Mrs. Louise P. Waring
Mr. and Mrs. Francis C.
Welch
Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel G.
Wetherbee
Dr. Adele L. Younis
Mrs. William S. Youngman
Donors
($1 - $149)
Anonymous
Miss Lilly S. Abbott
Miss Elizabeth N. Allen
Dr. and Mrs. Henry Freeman
Allen
Dr. Doric Alviani
Major General Joseph M.
Ambrose
Mr. Courtney A. Anderson
Miss Dorothy M. Anderson
Miss Elizabeth B. Andrews
Mrs. Ray E. Anglin
Ms. Elizabeth Armand
Mr. and Mrs. James H.
Ballou
Capt. and Mrs. Raymond H.
Bates
Mrs. George E. Benson
Mr. William Bentinck-Smith
Miss Barbara B. Betts
Ms. Linda Billows
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver K. Black
Mr. William F. Blackwood
Mr. C. Lawrence Bond
Ms. Barbara P. Boucot
Mr. James H. Boulger, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip W.
Bourne
Mr. and Mrs. M. W.
Bouwensch
Mr and Mrs. Nathaniel
Bowditch
Mr. and Mrs. William H.
Bowden
Mrs. Edwin T. Breed
Mr. and Mrs. William A.
Bresnahan
Mr. and Mrs. David T.
Brewster
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Brown,
Jr.
Mrs. John W. Bryant
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick McG.
Bundy
Miss Jane E. Bunting
Miss Frances L. Burnett
Mrs. Frank H. Burr
Mrs. Robert B. Busteed
Miss Ruth G. Butler
Miss Mary L. Byrne
Mr. and Mrs. C. Meade
Camenga
Mrs. Helen V. Carr
Mr. Robert J. Cascio
Dr. Victoria M. Cass
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin R.
Chadwick
Dr. and Mrs. Harrie R.
Chamberlin
Mr. F. Burnham Chapman
Mrs. Doris Clarke Cheney
Miss Elizabeth H. Christen
Miss Wilma G. Clapp
Mrs. Dean E. Cogswell
Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Colburn
Mrs. Eleanor B. Conary
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Conley
Mrs. William V. Conlan
Mrs. Earl F. Cook
Mr. J. Randolph Coolidge
Mr. Lawrence Coolidge
Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel S.
Coolidge
Mrs. G. Frank Cram
Mr. and Mrs. Albert M.
Creighton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton T.
Crolius
Mrs. Raymond L. Cummings
Mr. William J. Curley
t Deceased
Mr. and Mrs. Francis E.
Currier
Mr. David Dearborn
Mr. and Mrs. John deLaittre
Mrs. Carol A. Denney
Mr. William A. Dennis
Mrs. Charles Dethier
Dr. Ralph W. Dexter
Mrs. William R.A. Dickinson
Mr. and Mrs. Albert W.
Dodge, Jr.
Dr. Evelyn C. Dodge
Mrs. Alfred F. Donovan
Peter and Linda Doran
Susan and Philip Dowds
Mrs. Beth J. Downes
Mr. Hermann F. Eilts
Mr. Richard Elliot
Rev. and Mrs. Sewall
Emerson
Mrs. Merle G. Eramo
Dr. and Mrs. Arthur P. Errion
Miss Adele Q. Ervin
Mr. James W. Falck
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Fales
Mrs. Allen E. Fellows, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E.
Fellows, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius C.
Felton, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. George M.
Fenollosa
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F.
Fitzgibbon
Miss Katharine Foley
Mr. F. Murray Forbes
Mrs. Carl N. Fuller
Mrs. Virginia C. Gamage
Mrs. Stuart N. Gardner
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony N.B.
Garvan
Mr. Edward E. Gerrish
Mrs. Paul D. Giles
Mr. and Mrs. Steven M.
Glovsky
Mrs. William Goldsmith
Mr. David Goodman and Ms.
Marian Abeam
Mr. and Mrs. Roger B.
Gorham
Mrs. Harry N. Gorin
Dr. Geoffrey R. Gough
Mr. and Mrs. Philip E.
Graves
Miss Mary F. Green
Mrs. Calista M. Greenough
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
McLean Griffin
Mr. and Mrs. William
Guenther
Mrs. S. Eliot Guild
Miss Katherine Hackett
Mrs. Garrison K. Hall
Mrs. John S. Hamlen
Mr. and Mrs. Roland B.
Hammond
Mrs. John Hand
Mr. and Mrs. Carter H.
Harrison
Mr. and Mrs. John W.
Harrison
Mrs. Joseph Harrington
Mrs. Richard Harte, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bartlett H.
Hayes
Mr. C.A.S. Helseth
Miss Barbara M. Henry
Mr. and Mrs. Leon B. Hester
Ms. Ruth V. Higgins
Ms. Elinor P. Hoare
Professor Christine Hobart
Ms. Barbara R. Holden
Mr. and Mrs. George C.
Homans
Miss Charlotte Hoodf
Mrs. Harvey P. Hood
Ms. Eleanor Hoover
Mr. Carroll J. Hopf
Ms. Elizabeth Hough
Mr. and Mrs. William M.
Houghton
Mrs. John C. Howland
Dr. William D. Hoyt
Mr. and Mrs. Norman N.
Huff
Miss Raymona Hull
Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Hyam
Mr. Shelby Hypes
Mr. Yoshio Isaka
Mr. and Mrs. Robert S. Ives
Mrs. E. Randall Jackson
Mrs. Thelma H. Jenney
Ms. Betty B. Johnsen
Mr. William E. Jones
Miss Alice Jordan
Miss Dolores Jordan
Ms. Bessie Karanikolas
Mr. and Mrs. Erick Kauders
Ms. Joan Paterson Klimann
Miss Mary E. Koen
Mrs. Robert Kozlik
Mr. and Mrs. James N. Krebs
Mrs. David H. F. Kuell
Mr. Benjamin W. Labaree
Ms. Eleanor G. Lamson
Ms. Martha Larson
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond G.
Lavender
Mr. and Mrs. Bertram K.
Little
Mr. and Mrs. James Lennox
Mrs. Laurence B. Leonard
Mrs. George Lewis, Sr.
Ms. Andrea C. Liftman
Dr. and Mrs. Stanley E.
Listemick
Mr. David B. Little
Mr. Peter B. Little
Mrs. Phyllis Locke
Mr. Caleb Loring, Jr.
Mrs. Robert P. Loring
Miss Susan G. Loring
Mr. and Mrs. William C.
Loring
Mr. and Mrs. Robert W.
Lovett
Mr. and Mrs. John R. Lowe
Mrs. Vincent Lyness
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lyon
Mrs. Laughlin J. MacKenzie
Ms. Elizabeth D. MacPherson
Mrs. Arthur T. Malloy
Dr. Joan Maloney
Mrs. Genevieve M. Manninen
Mrs. Stanley G. Markin
Mr. and Mrs. F. Dike Mason,
Jr.
Mrs. Henry L. Mason
Mrs. Gardner W. Mattson
Hon. Nicholas Mavroules
Mrs. June Mazonson
Mrs. John McCann
V. Adm. and Mrs. John L.
McCrea
Mr. and Mrs. Staley
McDermet
Miss Elizabeth McElligott
Mrs. Norman G. Melander
Mrs. Ann M. Merrill
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Merry
Mr. and Mrs. August R.
Meyer
Mrs. Dorothy Miles
Mrs. Margaret B. Moore
Mr. and Mrs. Ray K. Moore
Mrs. Charles W. Morris
Mr. Edward A. Morris
Mrs. James A. Morrison
Ms. Lynn C. Murray
Mr. Harold C. Musgrave
Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel C.
Nash, Jr.
Ms. Ann L. Nazaroff
Mrs. Kirke A. Neal
Mr. Francis E. Nelson, Sr.
Dr. George Nichols, Jr.
Mrs. Pauline Nickerson
Mrs. John T. Nightingale
Ms. Dorothea M. Nixon
Mrs. Arthur R. Norton
Mr. Donald E. Nutting
Mr. and Mrs. Louis J.
O’Brien
Mr. Vincent P. O’Brien
Mr. and Mrs. Richard H.
Oedel
Mrs. Lydia P. Ogilby
Ms. Patricia C. Olsen
Mr. Warren P. Osborne
Col. Richard M. Osgood
Mrs. Robert L. Osgood
Mrs. Robert W. Osgood III
Mrs. Wilson Palmer
Mrs. Edward P. Parker
Miss Marguerite S. Parker
Dr. and Mrs. Anthony Patton
Mr. Robert Pawson
Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert R.
Payson
Miss Ida May Perkins
Mrs. Helen L. Philbrick
Mr. and Mrs. Charles H.
Phipps
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D.
Phippen
Mrs. John Pickering
Dr. Harold A. Pinkham, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert R. Pitcoff
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Pohl
Mrs. Peirce Prince
Mr. Lei and H. Proctor
Mr. David Proper
Mrs. Frank Pulsifer
Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan A.
Reardon
Miss E. Jane Reed
Mrs. Erminie S. Reynolds
Mr. Elliot L. Richardson
Miss Mary M. Ritchie
Mrs. Richard S. Robie
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C.
Roper, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin A.
Rowland, Jr.
Mrs. Howard Ryan
Hon. and Mrs. Anthony Salvo
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Sanders, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest San tin
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver M.
Sargent
Ms. Marjorie A. Satinsky
Mrs. Winthrop E. Sears
Mr. and Mrs. John Serafini,
Jr.
Miss Myrtle Severance
Mrs. Edna N. Shapiro
Mr. Robert N. Shapiro
Ms. Lisa Sharf
Mrs. Minerva C. Shreve
Mrs. Margaret P. Smith
Ms. Nancy A. Smith
Mrs. W. Gordon Smith
Mr. J. Peter Spang III
Ms. Barbara Spear
Mr. Donald M. Stacey
Miss Marjorie Stasinopulos
Mr. Henry G. Stenberg, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward M.
Stevenson
Mr. and Mrs. Ezra F. Stevens
Mr. Robert B. St. George
Mr. and Mrs. William S.
Stiles
Mrs. Philip W. Stocker
Ms. Rilda M. Stuart
Mr. Anthony Swain and Ms.
Susan E. Rudd
Mr. Marshall W. S. Swan
Mr. William L. Sweezey
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Szabronski
Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor
Dr. and Mrs. Richard H.
Thompson
Mrs. Ralph L. Thresher
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Edward
Tivnan
Rep. Peter G. Torkildsen
Mr. and Mrs. Middleton
Train
Mrs. Herbert S. Tuckerman
Dr. Patricia Tudbury
Ms. Gail Turner
Mr. Donald K. Usher
Ms. Mary L. Vohryzek
Mr. Harold S. Walker
Mr. Ralph H. Waters
Mrs. Arthur F. Watkins
Mrs. F. Carrington Weems
Mrs. Alexander Wheeler
Mr. and Mrs. John C. White
Ms. Lois G. Whitten
Mr. Andrew M. Williams
Mr. John Wilmerding
Mr. and Mrs. Percival W.
Wilson
Ms. Sally Wilson and Mr.
John Kelsey
Dr. and Mrs. Prescott B.
Wintersteen
Mr. Roland H. Woodwell
Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas
Xanthaky
Mr. and Mrs. David K. Young
Mr. Peter Zaharis
Dr. and Mrs. Tomislav Zargaj
Mr. Richard P. Zollo
BUSINESS AND FOUNDATION ANNUAL GIFTS
ANNUAL GIVING
President’s Club
($1,000 or more)
Clara B. Winthrop Charitable
Fund
Fiduciary Trust Company
Harold Whitworth Pierce
Charitable Trust
Holyoke Mutual Insurance
Company
Rooster Club
($500 - $999)
Cricket Press
Heritage Cooperative Bank
Issues Management, Inc.
Old Colony Charitable
Foundation
Parker Brothers
Salem News Publishing Co.
Shawmut Merchants Bank,
N.A.
Holyoke Club
($150 - $499)
Ankeles, Harmon & Bonfanti
Beverly Savings Bank
Bill & Bob’s Roast Beef
Corning Glass Works
Foundation
Country Curtains, Inc.
Danvers Savings Bank
J. Donovan Associates, Inc.
Hawthorne Hotel
King’s Grant Inn
The Sack Foundation
Salem State College
Security National Bank
Serafini, Serafini & Darling
Shetland Properties
William Wallace & Company,
Inc.
Donors
($1 - $149)
Abraham S. Burg & Gertrude
Burg Charitable
Foundation
Anonymous
Atwood & Morrill
Bernard’s Jewelers
The Boston Globe
Connolly Brothers
Delulis Bros. Construction
Co.
Emhart Corporation
The Gillette Company
Gordeau Construction Co.
Historic Salem, Inc.
Houghton Mifflin Co.
International Minerals &
Chemical Co.
Mass. Division, AAUW
New England Telephone
The Ogan Company, Inc.
Salem Suede, Inc.
Shawmut Bank of Boston
SPECIAL GIFTS
Special gifts recognize the
donor’s wish to contribute
to a specific project, endow¬
ment, or event at the Essex
Institute.
Corporate
Ardmore Associates
A. Berube & Son, Inc.
Bob Brest Buick
Bursaw Oil Corp.
C. F. 'Ibmpkins Company
Daniel Low & Company
Essex County Newspapers
Eastern Bank
The Flynn Foundation
Gen. Israel Putnam Family
Trust
Glovsky & Glovsky
Gulf of Maine Research
Center, Inc.
Harvest Catering Co., Inc.
Holyoke Mutual Insurance
Co.
Hunneman and Company,
Inc.
Inter-State Tool Company
John Smidt Co., Inc.
Landry & Arcari
Salem Five Cent Savings
Bank
Salem Laundry Co., Inc.
Salem News Publishing Co.
Individual
Anonymous
Mme. Elizabeth Prince de
Ramel
Mrs. Charles D. Gowing
Mrs. Lot M. Hamlin
Mr. Edward S. Heard
Mr. and Mrs. George Gardner
Loring
Mrs. Lawrence VanB. Nichols
Mr. John T. Northey
Mrs. Samuel H. Ordway
Mr. Edward L. Peirson
Mrs. Stephen Phillips
Mr. and Mrs. Richard S.
Shreve
Mr. William H. Shreve
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
Steward
In-Kind Gifts
Bill and Bob’s Roast Beef
Floral Artistry
Gid’s Giddy Gang
GTE Electrical Products
Hawthorne Hotel
Kennedy Butter & Egg Store
McDougall Associates, Inc.
The Ogan Company, Inc.
Pet, Incorporated
Purity Supreme
Supermarkets
Rich’s Department Store
The Essex Institute received
funding from the following
government agencies during
fiscal year 1987:
The Massachusetts Council
on the Arts and Humanities
The Salem Arts Lottery
We make every effort to
present an accurate and
complete list of our donors.
If an error has been made,
please contact the Essex
Institute Development Office
at (617) 744-3390, ext. 20,
and give us an opportunity
to correct our records . . .
and apologize!
DONORS TO THE COLLECTIONS
FISCAL YEAR 1986-1987
Museum
Elinor Averell
Prudence and John Backman
Kenneth G. Boyles
Pamela Bradstreet
Eleanor Broadhead
Elizabeth Broadhead
C. Richard Carlson
Bruce Chadbourne
Benjamin Chadwick
Estate of Carey J.
Chamberlin
Anne Ward Cochintu
Mrs. Virginia Campbell
Courts
Mrs. John Cushman
Mrs. Stilman G. Davis
Sylvia P. Dine
Nelson Dionne
Peter Doran
Lyle and Helen Drenth
Durkee -Mower
Geraldine and Robert Earle
Alice G. Eastman
Carolyn Farley
Estate of Ida R. Frye
Mrs. John Fulton
Susan and Steve Glovsky
The Gorton Group
Octavia Peirson Hamlin
Lucy Harney
Karen Harwood
Rebecca Haskell
Mrs. John F.P. Hill
Malcolm R. Jones
Quinton Jones
Dean and Elizabeth
Lahikainen
Edna Lail
Esther Litchfield
E. Bradford Locke
Lois Lord
Sarah M. Loring
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low
Wilhelmina V. Lunt
Helen Marquis
Mrs. Henry L. Mason
Edith M. Nadeau
Charles F. Nichols
William G. Nichols
Arthur and Irene Norton
Mary Florence Noyes
Mr. and Mrs. Louis O’Brien
Jean O’Hara
Gilbert R. Payson
Peabody Museum
Andre Perron
Katherine and Lincoln
Richardson
Paula B. Richter
Rebecca P. Ritchie
Lora Robins
Edward Marshall Sargent
Wendell P. Sargent
William R. Sargent
Stephen Schier
Charles Steward
Barbara Strom
Sean Trott
Esther Usher
Vermont Historical Society
Paul Voyer
Thomas Voyer
Robert Weis
David P. Wheatland
Stephen Wheatlandf
Ian McKibbin White
Julia M. Wilcox
Joseph H. Williams
John Wright
Library
Amherst College Press
The Estate of Dorothy
Annable
Janet Appleton
Prudence Backman
Priscilla Munroe Barr
R. B. Beaman
Lenn A. Bergsten
Yolande A. Bickerton
Ronald Bourgeault
George Briggs
Elizabeth Broadhead
Phillips Brooks
Francis J. Burkinshaw
Benjamin Chadwick
Mary Byrne R. Chadwick
Narcissa G. Chamberlain
Cobbleston Publishing Co.
Edith Cole
Mrs. Usher P. Coolidge
Cooper-Hewitt Museum
Donald Costin
Mr. and Mrs. Oliver
Winthrop Crichton
Erlene Huntress Davis
Mrs. Stilman G. Davis
Thomas P. Doherty
Donald Durkee
Eastern Monument
Association
Elizabeth Ellsworth
Anne Farnam
Eugenia Fountain
Estate of Ida R. Frye
Lucia P. Fulton
Robert Gal pern
Robert S. Goodwin
The Gorton Group
Hamilton Hall Incorporated
The Hanes Foundation
Historical Society of Old
Newburyport
Madelyn Holmes
Houghton Mifflin Co.
The House of Seven Gables
Pearson Hunt
Edwin H. Ingills
R. Jacques
Mrs. Louis Kampf
Joyce King
Ellen Cook Kwait
Lois LaBeau
Katherine Laforme
Dean Lahikainen
E. Douglas Larson
B. LeMarquard
Sibyl G. Long
Lois Lord
Mrs. George E. Loring
Barbara Luedtke
Mrs. George Lynch
Lynn Historical Society
Manchester Historical
Society
Marblehead Historical
Soceity
Helen Marquis
Mabelle Martel
Joanne F. Marzolf
Mrs. Henry Mason
Mass. Historical Society
Helen P. McCabe
McGraw-Hill-Ryerson
Limited
Edwin H. Miller
Ray K. Moore
Jean Felton Monihan
Edmund Glover Monroe
Mystic Seaport Museum
Edith Nadeau
The New York Historical
Society
Newbury Historic
Commission
The Nichols Press
Irene and Arthur R. Norton
Florence E. O’Connor
Patricia L. Parker
Gilbert R. Payson
D. Phelps
Dana C. Pierce
Roland A. Pinault
S. Hardy Prince
Margaret A. Putnam
Robert P. Richmond
Sharon R. Ritenour
Enders A. Robinson
Rushlight Club
Salem State College
Sandwich Historical Society
Stephen Schier
Albert J. Schutz
Shawmut Bank, Boston
Shelburne Historical Society
Henry E. Simons Archival
Center, Town of Winchester
Smithsonian Institution,
National Portrait Gallery
The Sometime Literary Press
Rita St. Pierre
Edmund B. Stanton
Beth Stevens
Telephone Pioneers, Patriot
Chapter
Mr. and Mrs. George
Thenault
Louise P. Thomas
Sandra Ames Ufen
University of Pennsylvania
Press
University Press of New
England
Van Voorhees Assoc.
Virginia Army National
Guard
Paul Voyer
Walter N. Webster
Robert Weis
Marjorie C. Wetzel
David P. Wheatland
Whistler House Museum
Whitson Publishing Co.
Willamette Quilt Study
Group
James H. Williams
Joseph Williams
John Wright
Catherine S. Zimmerman
Essex Institute Trip to Savannah, Georgia
ESSEX INSTITUTE VOLUNTEERS
April 1 , 1986 - March 31, 1987
Constance Arlander
Jean Arlander
Bonita Black
Ann Breazeale
Miriam Bresnahan
Craig Brown
Frank Burkinshaw
Keri Cahill
Patricia Camenga
Donald Carlin
Leonard Conway
Robert Crowley
Arthur Cyr
Donald Daly
Dorothy Dente
Dorothy Dickinson
Frances Donovan
Patricia Durkee
Leah Ferris
Lydia Finlay
Margaret Fitzgerald
John Frayler
John C. Fox
Carolyn Gardner
Donald Gleason
Christopher Hall
Lillian Hebert
Thomas Howard
Shelby Hypes
Thelma Jenney
Carolyn Jordan
Natalie Karl
Joyce King
Lois LaBeau
Elizabeth Lahikainen
Edna Lail
George Lail
Ruth Lunder
Eta Lustig
Joanne Mackay
Susan Montgomery
John Morse
Susan Morse
Kathryn Neil son
Edith Nierman
Irene Norton
Julie Parramore
Jane Patrick
Nancy Peterson
Ann Pevear
Anita Read
Doris Renshaw
El win Richter
Susan Robie
Frances Rumsey
Kim Sabin
Minerva Shreve
Charles Steward
Marshall Swan
Moira Thomas
Joseph Weinman
Rick Welles
Barbara Whitmore
Ida Yee
CORPORATE MEMBERS
OF THE ESSEX INSTITUTE
These business and indus¬
trial firms have shown their
interest in one of New
England’s most venerable
historical societies and
museums by becoming corpo¬
rate members of the Essex
Institute.
$500 Benefactors
Delulis Brothers
Construction Company,
Inc., Lynn
The Eastern Bank, Lynn
Parker Brothers, Beverly
Rich’s Department Store,
Salem
The Sack Foundation, New
York City
Salem State College, Salem
$300 Patron
Members
Beverly National Bank,
Beverly
Brewer & Lord Insurance,
Boston
Carlson Real Estate, Salem
Country Curtains, Inc.,
Salem
Cricket Press, Manchester
James W. Daly, Inc., Peabody
Danvers Motor Company,
Inc., Danvers
Deerskin Trading Post,
Peabody
Dunkin’ Donuts, Randolph
EG & G Electron Devices
Group, Salem
Essexbank, Peabody
General Electric, Lynn
GTE Products Corporation,
Danvers
Hawthorne Inn Management
Corp., Salem
Holyoke Mutual Insurance
Company, Salem
Hunneman & Company, Inc.,
Boston
Issues Management, Inc.,
Boston
Johnny Appleseed’s, Inc.,
Beverly
Landry & Arcari, Salem
George Peabody Co-
Operative Bank, Peabody
James Medeiros’s Peabody
Chrysler-Plymouth,
Peabody
Salem Five Cents Savings
Bank, Salem
Salem News Publishing
Company, Salem
Salem Oil & Grease Co.,
Salem
Scott Oil Co., Manchester
Serafini & Serafim, Salem
Shawmut Merchants Bank,
Salem
Shetland Properties, Salem
Town & Country Magazine,
New York City
Waters & Brown, Inc., Salem
William Wallace & Company,
Inc., Boston
XTRA Corporation, Boston
$100 Sponsor
Members
Aid Temporary Services,
Salem
Alex’s Place, Salem
Almy’s Division, Stop &
Shop, Boston
Ankeles, Harmon, &
Bonfanti, Peabody
T. E. Andresen Moving &
Storage, Salem
Ardiff & Morse, Danvers
Ardmore Associates, Inc.,
Beverly
Atlantic Papers, Beverly
Atwood & Morrill Co., Salem
Bank of Boston, Boston
Bank of New England, Bay
State, Lawrence
Barnegat Transportation Co.,
Inc., Salem
Baybank Middlesex,
Burlington
Berkal, Stelman & Davern,
Salem
Bernard’s Jewelers, Salem
A. Berube & Sons, Inc.,
Salem
Beverly Savings Bank,
Beverly
J. Bildner & Sons, Boston
Bill and Bob’s Roast Beef,
Salem
Bob Brest Buick, Inc., Lynn
Bob-Kat Leather Co.,
Peabody
Broderick Telecom, Inc.,
Marblehead
Bull & Finch, Salem
Bursaw Oil Corporation,
Danvers
A. J. Callahan & Son, Inc.,
Beverly Farms
Camera Ready Typesetting,
Salem
Canniffe’s, Inc., Marblehead
Cappuccio Liquors, Salem
Carr Leather Company, Lynn
Century North Shore Bank &
Trust Co., Salem
The Chase House, at
Pickering Wharf, Salem
China Clipper Restaurant,
Salem
Coach House Inn, Salem
Columbia Construction
Company, North Reading
The Commodore Restaurant,
Inc., North Beverly
Compass Press Inc., Salem
Connolly Brothers,
Incorporated, Beverly
Farms
Crosby’s Marketplace, Salem
Daniel Low & Company,
Salem
Danvers Savings Bank,
Danvers
Delande’s Supply Co., Inc.,
Salem
Deschamps Printing Co.,
Inc., Salem
J. Donovan Associates, Inc.,
Salem
Eastman Gelatine
Corporation, Peabody
Eaton the Druggist, Inc.
Empire Clothing Co., Salem
Essex County Newspapers,
Gloucester
Essex Office Associates, Inc.,
Salem
John Flynn & Sons, Inc.,
Salem
Forum Communications, Inc.,
Salem
Gainsboro Studio, Salem
Gardner Mattress
Corporation, Salem
Gibbs Oil Company —
Division of B P Oil, Inc.,
Revere
Glovsky & Glovsky,
Attorneys, Beverly
Gourdeau Construction
Company, South Hamilton
Roger Griffiths Catering,
Peabody
Gulf of Maine Research
Center, Inc., Salem
The Halyard Group, Salem
Hamblet & Hayes Co., Salem
Hamlet Associates, Salem
Harbor Sweets, Salem
The Hardenbergh
Partnership, Inc., Boston
Harvest Catering Co., Inc.,
Stoneham
Heartland Food Warehouse,
Salem
Henry’s Supermarket, Inc.,
Beverly
Heritage Co-Operative Bank,
Salem
Hoffman’s Inc., Lynn
Hutchinson Medical, Inc.,
Salem
E. F. Hutton & Company Inc.,
Salem
Inter-State Tool Co., Inc.
Medford
Irving Tanning, Inc.,
Hartland, Me.
Kaiser Systems, Inc., Beverly
Kennedy Butter & Egg
Stores, Salem
Kidder, Peabody & Co., Inc.,
Boston
J. B. Kidney & Company,
Inc., Salem
King’s Grant Inn
Corporation, Danvers
Knight Lumber Mart,
Beverly
Levesque Funeral Home,
Inc., Salem
Linsey-Woolsey, Salem
The Lyceum Restaurant,
Salem
McDougall Associates, Inc.,
Peabody
Charles E. McQueeny Co.,
Salem
Meriden-Stinehour Press,
Lunenburg, Vt. and
Meriden, Conn.
Robert Murphy, Antiquarian
Bookseller, Salem
My Florist, Inc., Salem
National Grand Bank,
Marblehead
The New England Power
Company, Salem
The North Bennet Street
School, Boston
NYNEX Information
Resources, Lynn
The Ogan Co., Inc., Revere
Pet, Incorporated, Canton
Pickering Wharf, Salem
Red’s Sandwich Shop, Salem
L. H. Rogers, Inc., Salem
Roosevelt’s Restaurant, Salem
Rowley Printing, Inc., Rowley
Ryder Photography, Salem
The Salem Inn, Salem
Salem Laundry Co., Inc., Salem
Salem Maritime National Historic Site, Salem
Salem Paper Co., Salem
Salem Sign Co., Inc., Salem
Salem Witch Museum, Salem
Salon L’Ondina, Salem
Saxony House Furniture, Lynn
Security National Bank, Lynn
John Smidt & Company, Inc., Peabody
S.O.S. Security Systems, Topsfield
Soucy Insurance Agency, Inc., Salem
Steve’s Quality Market, Salem
Sweet Scoops, Inc., Salem
Tinti, Quinn, & Savoy, Salem
C. F. Tompkins Co., Salem
Topsides Seafood Grill, Salem
A Touch of Elegance, Peabody
Traveler’s Choice, Inc., Salem
Tri-City Sales, Inc., Lynn
Victoria Station, Salem
Vincent’s Potato Chip Co., Salem
William Charles Studio, Inc., Salem
Witch Dungeon Musum, Inc., Salem
Harvest Festival Celebration
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Sat., April 5,
12,19
Fri., April 18-
April 21
Tues., April 22
Tues., April 29
Tues., May 13
Sat., May 31
Thurs., June 5-
Wed., Dec. 31
Fri., Aug. 15
Sun., Aug. 17
Fri., Sept. 26
Sat., Sept. 27
Tues., Oct. 7
Fri. Oct. 24 —
Fri., Oct. 31
Sat., Oct. 25
Wed., Oct. 29
Mon., Nov. 3—
Mon., Dec. 1
Thurs., Nov. 6
Thurs., Nov. 20
Wed., Dec. 10
Thurs., Dec. 11
Sat., Jan. 17, 24
Wed., Jan. 21
Wed., Feb. 11
Fri., Feb. 13-
Feb. 16
Sat., Feb. 14
Wed., Mar. 11
18, 25
Sun., Mar. 29 -
Wed., Apr. 1
Summary of Essex Institute Programs
April 1, 1986-March 31, 1987
LIBRARY SERIES ON FAMILY HISTORY.
“Tracing Your Roots: Genealogy,” “Tracing the History of Your House,” “Conserving Your Family
Papers.”
ORIENTAL RUG BAZAAR. Co-sponsored with Knights of Columbus and Landry & Arcari.
FOUR MUSEUMS VOLUNTEER DAY. “Ports in Contention: the Rise of Boston, the Fall of Salem,”
by William M. Fowler.
ESSEX INSTITUTE ANNUAL MEETING.
DAY BUS TRIP TO ESSEX COUNTY GARDENS.
OPENING DAY MILITARY ENCAMPMENT. “18th-Century Military Camp Life.” His Majesty’s 1st
Battalion of Marines.
EXHIBITION OPENING. “A Matter of Taste: Cooking and Dining at Home, 1686 —1986.”
NEW ENGLAND BAKED BEAN LUNCH at the Essex Institute in celebration of Heritage Days.
HERITAGE DAYS PARADE with Essex Institute float.
HARVEST FESTIVAL PREVIEW PARTY/BENEFIT.
HARVEST FESTIVAL. Folk art exhibition and sale, crafts demonstrations, and traditional
entertainment.
FIELD TRIP TO SAKONNET VINEYARD for gourmet lunch and wine tasting.
HAUNTED HAPPENINGS. “Eerie Events”: strange tales told by lantern light in El historic houses.
MAGIC SHOW AND WORKSHOP with Dario.
CONSTITUTION SYMPOSIUM. Sponsored by Bay State Historical League and Salem Maritime
National Historic Site. Workshop at Essex Institute.
NIJESTRO BARRIO. Exhibition of photographs by Salem High School bilingual students.
WORKSHOP. “The Fine Art of Cake Decorating” by Cile Burbidge.
GEORGE S. PARKER MEMORIAL LECTURE. Charles Osgood, speaker.
CHILDREN’S CHRISTMAS PARTY.
FOUR MUSEUMS HOLIDAY SHOPPING EVENING.
DEMONSTRATIONS. “18th-Century Cookery” and “19th-Century Cookery” by Don Daly in the
Gardner-Pingree House.
ESSEX INSTITUTE CORPORATE MEMBERS PARTY.
VOLUNTEER RECOGNITION RECEPTION.
ORIENTAL RUG BAZAAR. Co-sponsored by Landry & Arcari Hawthorne Hotel, and Essex
Institute.
RUG BAZAAR BENEFIT PARTY.
ROPES MEMORIAL BOTANICAL LECTURE SERIES. “Floral Imagery and Symbolism: A Focus on
Boston Area Museum Collections,” Part I and Part II by Carole Taynton. “Flowers, Fun, and Fantasy,”
by Constance McCausland.
SPRING FIELD TRIP. Savannah, Georgia.
Essex Institute
132 Essex Street
Salem, MA 01970
NONPROFIT ORG.
POSTAGE
PAID
SALEM, MA
PERMIT #19
Harvest Festival Celebration