Centennial History - Part 1
     
History
                                       
  The Start:                            
                                       
 

In the February issue we presented abbreviated accounts of the history of the ACS and the Northeastern Section. From time to time we will publish excerpts from the original articles in the 1973 NUCLEUS, during the Sectional's Diamond Jubilee year. The following is excerpted from the January issue and was written by the late Robert D. Eddy, Professor of Chemistry at Tufts University.


Under the heading Seventy-Five Years with the Northeastern Section Eddy makes some introductory remarks about the plans for publication of the story in the 1973 issues of The NUCLEUS and he indicates the help he has received and the sources he has consulted. The following is the verbatim text from the January 1973 issue:


Our story is not just a dry summary of events and their dates. It is a story of the lives, and the dreams, and the accomplishments of people. They are the giants upon whose shoulders we all stand. How many of our members have been much-loved teachers to generations of students? How many of these students have picked up the torch, and have become the leaders of their own, new, generation? How many of our officers have served the Section organization with distinction, and have then stepped upward to make a permanent mark on the national scene? How many of our speakers, and medallists , have won acclaim, both nationally and internationally, for the brilliance of their scientific efforts? The answers to these questions are not trivial: they demonstrate better than anything else could that we have a glorious past. May we cherish it, and take heart from it, and build upon it to fashion a similar, glorious future.


Though many of our records are couched in the terse, undemonstrative prose of the busy scientist, they are not dull. A love of fun, a love of life and a heart-warming humanness keep shining through. Can you imagine a Section meeting, where the audience welcomed its speaker by breaking forth in song? Did you ever hear of the great Mass Marathon Run? It was staged at a joint outing (with the Rhode Island Section) "under the incentive of a sudden and very moist shower" as the soggy participants covered the few hundred feet from the baseball stands to the Club House. Do you know about the "First Quadrennial Leap Year Party" of February 1924? It was perpetrated at the American House (wherever that was) with singing and dancing. About one hundred and fifty members and guests were entertained with a pantomime, presented by a bevy of Simmons girls. And some unscrupulous soul accumulated a tidy profit by distributing, in exchange for ten cents, copies of an underground newspaper called The Nude Lâil Cuss. And when it was all, over, the exhausted revelers had to rush to catch the late train home.


Because there is so much of interest to report, not only about the early years of our Section, but of the national events that preceded its formation, we shall spend much of the first installment in setting the stage. Later on, we can build upon this base to focus more carefully on the individuals involved, their accomplishments, and the effect that their work has had on later generations.


The Organization of the Northeastern Section

Note: We have since received via email some information that differs from that presented below. If you are interested in reading it, go to the ACS History Rebuttal page.


The first page in the Secretary's book bears the date: February 4, 1898, but this was not the beginning. The American Chemical Society was founded more than twenty year before that, on April 12, 1876. Nor was that a starting date, either, Most observers agree that the real beginning of everything was a suggestion made by Dr. H. Carrington Bolton of the Columbia College School of Mines in April 1874. He wasn't thinking about forming a society at all: serendipity was in charge of things then, even as it is now. What Dr. Bolton wanted to do was to somehow commemorate the discovery of oxygen by Joseph Priestly, one hundred years earlier. It was on August 1, 1774 that the good Doctor Priestley had heated his "mercurius calcinatus per se" with a twelve inch burning lens and for the first time had released some "dephlogisticated air". Because this discovery, followed by Lavoisier's quantitative treatment of it, had led to the oxygen theory of combustion and the subsequent development of all modern chemistry, Dr. Bolton thought that the centennial deserved some sort of observance. After all, because of his rashly liberal views, Dr. Priestley had been driven by an unruly mob from his home and his laboratory in Birmingham, England. He fled with his family to the United States, and so became an American chemist, by adoption, if not by birth.


Enter a woman chemist. Professor Rachel L. Bodley of the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania proposed that the centennial celebration should be held at Northumberland, Pennsylvania, where Dr. Priestley had lived and where he was buried. This suggestion was immediately adopted, and plans went forward for a three-day meeting beginning on July 31, 1874. This was the sequence of events that brought seventy-seven of the most influential American chemists, some with wives and children, together in a peaceful little village in the valley of the Susquehanna. There was no hotel there: the participants were quartered overnight by the villagers, some of whom were direct descendants of Joseph Priestley, himself. Historical papers and technical papers were presented in the tiny public schoolhouse. Cablegrams were exchanged with Birmingham, England, and the commemorative exercises were held beside Priestley's grave. It was a remarkable affair. The friendliness and fellowship and excitement were so great, that there was a strong sentiment to carry on with such meetings. On the second day, the Centennial Day, to be exact, a group met to consider the feasibility of forming a national American Chemical Society with this purpose in mind. There were pessimists present, but nearly everyone went home with great hopes, expecting that a society would soon be formed.


Unaccountably, there was a two year delay, but the plan would not die. Professor Charles F. Chandler, also of the Columbia School of Mines, who had presided at the Centennial Program, finally set thing moving again. He uncovered more than one hundred chemists in New York and nearby cities, whose work and training rendered them eligible for membership in a chemical society. With seven confederates, he finally sent out a notice for an organizational meeting to be held April 6, 1876. That meeting was called to order with thirty-five chemists present, and the Society began operations.


Naturally, a society created in this way was a New York based organization. It had non-resident members, but the monthly meetings were held in New York, and there were not many benefits for the out of towners. A Journal was published, but few cared to submit papers, and the Society was most successful as a local organization. Small wonder that other quite similar local organizations sprang up in other parts of the Country. There was a constant agitation to get a truly national organization going: for a while it seemed likely that some of these upstart outsiders might be strong enough to take over. But the New York group had the name and they had the charter and it was apparent that the best solution was to put some new direction in this ineffective organization. The turnabout came in 1889, when the officers sent out a letter asking for suggestions as to the best way that the Society could become more useful to their non-resident members.


Upon receiving this letter, Professor Charles E. Munroe, of Newport, Rhode Island, a charter member, sat down and wrote a detailed and lengthy response. He viewed, quite critically, the situation as it existed for outsiders, and made a number of valuable suggestions. These included the ideas that local Sections should be formed, and that General Meetings should be held outside of New York. Others had independently proposed the same ides, or at least concurred in them, so on June 6, 1890, the Constitution was changed to legalize such practices. One would have thought then that immediate action would have been taken, but that was not the case. According to Professor Munroe's article in the Fifty-Year History, the Directors waited until July 22 of that same year to decide that (1) there would be e General Meeting outside of New York, that (2) it would be two weeks hence, August 6 and 7, 1890, that (3) it would be in Newport, R.I., and that (4) Charles E. Munroe would be in charge of arrangements! Then they let him know. Instead of collapsing under such summary treatment, he scrambled around, firmed a local committee of fourteen and began to make plans. His colleagues included a couple of Harvard Professors with summer residences in the area, some army and navy officers stationed nearby, the local high school principal, the secretary of the Newport Natural History Society, and a few younger chemists working in the area.


This group put together a remarkable program without any idea who, or how many, would attend. As a matter of fact, until the final day, when the Fall River Line boat from New York came plowing into its Newport berth, the only registrants known to be coming were the three guests whom Professor Munroe had invited to stay at his home. However, there proved to be a large and congenial group aboard, headed by Professor Chandler himself, and the meeting got off to a great start. Rhode Islanders from Providence and Kingston appeared, and there were distant visitors from Medford, Cambridge, New Haven, Ithaca, and points even further afield. Seventeen papers, covering almost every possible branch of chemistry were presented. The U.S. Naval Torpedo Station permitted an inspection of its laboratories and workshops, and its personnel presented an extensive series of demonstrations of high explosives. Not to be outdone, the personnel of the U.S. Naval Training Station put on a parade honoring their distinguished guests. On the second day of the meeting the registrants had their choice of relaxation: they could take a leisurely tour of Newport Harbor in the inspection launch, or they could select a thirty mile run around Conanicut Island in the high speed torpedo boat, "Stiletto".


With this successful venture completed, the chemists of Rhode Island wasted no time in getting behind Professor Munroe, and his colleague, Professor John Howard Appleton of Providence to form the Rhode Island Section. Their charter was granted on January 21, 1891, a full nine months before the New York group could get around to applying for its own local section charter on September 30, 1891.


By present day standards, the Northeastern Section is an old Section, but it is actually the eleventh in line. When it was formed, it immediately won a position as one of the larger and more influential Sections, but there is nothing in the record to tell us why it was seven years behind the leaders. This is particularly hard to explain, because the tenth General Meeting was held in Boston and Cambridge on December 27-28, 1894. This should have been a stimulus, but if one remembers how Professor Munroe, with only two weeks notice, had put together the first General Meeting, one can concede that perhaps this was not as demanding as it would seem to us now. However, the seventeenth General Meeting was also held in Boston. Its date, August 22-23, 1898 is close enough to the February 4, 1898 birthdate of the Section to suggest that there may have been a connection. Perhaps the organizers learned something from their 1894 experience.


Here follows a speculation why the Boston and Cambridge chemists were slow to organize under the banner of the American Chemical Society, material which has been covered extensively in the articles by David Adams and Myron Simon in the February, 1998 "Centennial Issue" of the NUCLEUS.


Our records·begin:
Friday Evening, February fourth (1898) about one hundred and fifty chemists met at the Parker House to establish a local section of the American Chemical Society.


The date 1898 was added later, with a caret by a different hand and in a differently colored ink. However, there can be no doubt concerning it, for the Treasurer's records are carefully dated. A remark attributed by the Secretary to the newly elected Treasurer that he "already had about ninety dollars" is corroborated by the Treasurer in the very first entry. On the very first page of his book we find:


Feb. 26, 1898. Drew $90.61 from account of $91.61 with the North End Savings Bank, Book#13384, which had been made from the unexpended balance of the subscription raised to entertain the American Chemical Society at the Tenth General Meeting held in Boston, Dec. 27-28, 1894. Paid therefrom for this book, $ 1.75. Deposited with Metropolitan National Bank, $88.86


The Secretary's minutes then go on to tell us that Henry P. Talbot of M.I.T. (in Boston then) was elected Temporary Chairman. He appointed H.J. Williams of Boston · to be Temporary Secretary. Under their direction the group first voted that they should be governed by a President, Vice President, Treasurer and Secretary, and by an Executive Committee. Then began an election to fill these offices. Arthur A. Noyes of M.I.T. was chosen to be the first president. Once he had been elected, he took the chair and presided over the selection of L.P. Kinnicutt of Worcester (Polytechnic Institute) as Vice President, Willis R. Whitney of M.I.T. as Secretary, and B.F. Davenport of Boston· as Treasurer.


Then follow some details of the nomination and election of the Executive Committee. ·The winners were John Alden of the Pacific Mills in Lawrence, H. Carmichael of Boston·Arthur D. Little of Boston·John Shaw of Boston· and H.P. Talbot.


The remainder of the paper has been covered in detail in the article by Myron Simon in the February 1998 issue.

     
                                       
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