Mosher and Dr. Butterworth
At the most recent Sha-Dor Antiquarian Book Fair in Baltimore over
the Labor Day 2003 holiday, I promised Jack & Linda Lapides that I would do
an article on "Mosher and Dr. Butterworth" after she heard a snippet
from the story and responded with some glee over its details. It is a
delightful story about how we met and conducted business over the years. Dr.
Butterworth was a totally delightful man in whom all the “old school” loves and
rules of books were inculcated by an indulgent mother.
|
Dr. Theron H. Butterworth |
I met Dr. Butterworth in July of 1992. I had first received a
typed letter on July 7 in which he indicated that he had gotten my name
from a Dr. Timothy Mosher, a radiologist who had examined him at the Hershey Medical Center. While going through the examination Dr. Butterworth (or Theron which he finally demanded that I call him) was inquisitive as to whether or not Dr. Mosher was any relation
to the publisher Thomas Bird Mosher. Theron's mother, Elizabeth Pearce Rockwell Butterworth, had bought many Mosher books from the publisher over the years, and had directly corresponded with the publisher and later with his assistant, Flora M. Lamb,
following the publisher's death in 1923. The radiologist told Theron
that he was distantly related, but also mentioned that there is a
fellow over in Millersville, PA who currently has an exhibition of the
Mosher books at Temple University. Occasionally Dr. Timothy Mosher
collected some of the Mosher books, and apparently even bought a
couple from Theron, but for the most part wasn't interested in
collecting them to any great degree, so Theron wanted to contact me to see if
I had any interest in the books still in his possession. A couple of days later
I was on Dr. Butterworth's doorstep at the Alpine Nursing Complex in the
Hummelstown - Hershey area. The tall, stooped over yet still dignified
gentleman who answered the door beckoned me to enter and offered me a seat
along with some refreshments, and thus began a delightful relationship with
this tender, retired U.S. government health services employee.
Theron's upbringing in an upper middle class home and his
cosmopolitan experience were evident in his mannerisms, diction, and memories.
I spent many hours together with him discussing his family background and
upbringing, especially as it related to books. His mother always made him and
his sibling wash their hands before touching any of the books in her library,
or before she read them a story. When I got to know Theron, many of the
family’s best books had long been sold before he moved into the closer quarters
of the nursing home complex. No matter, we developed a delightful and
respectful friendship. He had a number of books not worth my while to purchase,
but I made arrangements for another Lancaster area book dealer, Jane Shull of
the Book Bin Bookstore Unltd, to purchase the majority. Others were given away
for library book sales, and a few items I purchased outright, but the Mosher
material--well now, that was another matter. However, before getting to that, I
just have to digress a little by telling a few little stories within the story.
I distinctly remember Theron calling me once and asking if I’d be
interested in this or that book, and then he mentioned some wooden figures from
Alice in Wonderland which sounded intriguing. When I got to his apartment,
Theron brought out a little box filled with 28 articulated figures from Alice,
including Humpty Dumpty, Bill the Lizard, Tweedledee and Tweedledum, the
Jabberwock, the Cheshire Cat, and others. He told me the story about how his
mother would buy these when she visited England and would send him a few from
the set each time she traveled there. He recounted how he used to take Bill the
Lizard to school with him and tease the girls. Actually he wanted to give them
to his children, but nobody expressed any interest, so he offered them to me.
At his dining room table with me at one end and Theron at the other, we got
down to the nitty-gritty. I asked him what he wanted for the set. He named his
price and I looked at him and told him I was sorry, but I couldn’t take them at
that amount. I could visibly see his already bent over frame slump down even
lower, his eyes staring down at the table in dejection. I paused, but then continued.
I wasn’t willing to purchase them at that price, I told him, but added that I
would take them at three times that amount. He looked up at me in amazement and
I dare say in wonderment. “What?” he questioned. I proceeded to explain that I
knew very little about them, and that I felt they were lovely little things. I
liked the provenance, but his sense of
what I should pay for them was, in my simple estimation, off. His smile returned to his face and I just knew we were in for
another long afternoon of stories and reminiscences.
On another occasion we had come across a little booklet entitled Mr. Samuel Whiskers--A Play in Three Scenes
and an Epilogue From the Story of ‘The Roly-Poly Pudding’ by Beatrix Potter
adapted by Theron H. Butterworth. Indeed, Theron had done this back in 1933
through Frederick Warne & Co. of London, and reprinted with the original
inscription Theron had hand-written for his mother: “Oh mother, mother, there’s
been a ‘normous man rat in the library and he’s made us into a play. to Mother
- July 30th 1933 - Theron H. Butterworth.” Theron gave me a copy of this
adaptation of Mr. Samuel Whiskers,
and a few days later I received a little box in the mail. When I unpacked it,
there was a little vintage clay-fired and hand painted mouse--or rat, I didn’t
know--just a little bigger than a golf ball in the seated position and dressed
in an overcoat. He was missing a few of his whiskers and one of his ears, and
his tail was a little worse for the wear, but still he was quite recognizable at
least as a rodent. I called Theron and thanked him for sending the little
mouse. “What mouse?” he replied in amazement. “That’s no mouse, it’s a rat--Mr.
Whiskers!” Golly, I had really put my foot in the ol’ proverbial mouth. After
concluding our conversation and offering my thank you’s and pardons, I set to
mind the task of writing Dr. Butterworh (I never really got that hang of
calling him Theron) a letter from the rat, Mr. Whiskers. Well, apparently I
outdid myself because upon receiving the letter, Dr. Butterworth--OK, it’s
Theron!--Theron’s secretary read it to him and they both apparently sat there
howling in laughter at the insights and reportings little Samuel Whiskers
relayed to him, and the comforting thoughts Mr. Whiskers had to say about his new
home to which he was so rudely crated up and sent. Funny thing though, I’ve
lost my copy of that letter, but still remember what a BIG hit it was with
Theron and his volunteer secretary who had to read it to him because his
eyesight was failing. I still have Mr. Whiskers who sits in a special drawer
(at least that’s what he tells me he does) which I’ll mention a little later.
Of course, the original reason why I went to see Theron was
because of a small Mosher collection he wanted to sell. (Gads, I did digress)
Theron had discussed with me how his mother would sit down and write letters to
the publisher, Thomas Bird Mosher, and later to his assistant after the
publisher died. He also explained to me that many of the books his mother
ordered were for gifts to other people. I did buy a lovely little stash of
Mosher material from him which included his mother’s account book entitled
Catalogue of Books / Thomas
Bird Mosher / Publisher / Portland / Maine
Property of / Elizabeth R.
Butterworth / 79 Forest Ave./ Glen Ridge New Jersey
It’s an accounting of all the books she bought from Mosher, how
much she paid, which editions she purchased, e.g., “2nd edition Japan Vellum”,
etc. Some of these are crossed out and a name is written on the X like Diane,
Dick, Rudge, given to Betsy on her 52nd B.D., Cari Dreckmeier for wedding gift,
given to Stuart H. Merriam, and so on. She also includes some notes like that
adjoining The Story of Amis & Amile about
which she indicates “My first Mosher Book... gift from Chas. Rathbun.” To be
sure, this is not an astounding find, but it is noteworthy in that it records a
collector’s purchases directly from the publisher. More importantly, however is
that it also came along with a little box filled with letters from Mosher in
1914 and from his assistant, Flora M. Lamb, from 1926-1941. I was very pleased
to find these among the Mosher Press material and gladly added them to the
collection along with a number of the books themselves.
When Elizabeth Butterworth wrote to Mosher or to Flora Lamb, she
did so at an Empire-styled writing desk which also housed her Mosher
collection, including a full set of The
Bibelot (21 vols) bound in 3/4 red morocco leather with highly ornate
spines. After several years of meeting with Theron, I could see that his
physical well being was further deteriorating. He called in an appraiser for
his furnishings and gave me a call asking if I’d have any interest in buying
any of it except for a few items he wanted to keep with him when he moved to a
more intensive care nursing facility. When I visited, he toured me around his
little fiefdom and I saw a lamp, a box, the sectional barrister case Theron
took with him to Princeton, and the writing desk his mother used when
corresponding with the Mosher Press. We agreed on terms for all those items,
with the proviso that he would get hold of his secretary who volunteered to
handle his correspondence and record the story behind the desk. It’s an
intriguing tale, and the following is from a typed letter
from Theron H. Butterworth to me in which he reveals the romantic history of
the desk:
MY
GREAT GRANDFATHER'S DESK
My great-grandfather, Dr. Richard Watson Rockwell (born June 9th, 1810
died May 29th, 1890) was a Homeopathic physician and spent most of his life in
Danbury, Connecticut. He was the son of Enos Rockwell and an Indian maid.
According to tradition and some record in a volume entitled, I believe,
"The Rockwell Family in the United States" it is indicated that Enos
was kidnapped in a raid in a town in Connecticut and taken to live with Indians
up north. We have no knowledge of what tribe. It might be the Micmacs because
they were up in the New England area. He grew up with them and married an
Indian girl (daughter of an Indian and a Canadian soldier). He came to
Connecticut, settled in Danbury and had a child, Richard Watson Rockwell, my
great grandfather.
Richard married Elizabeth Pearce by whom he had one son and several
daughters. The son, Augustus Pearce Rockwell, was my mother's father and by
grandfather.
Dr. Richard Watson Rockwell had in the room which served as his office a
desk recently described by an appraiser as an Empire Bookcase Desk, two section
twelve pane two door bookcase, with hinged flap, three drawer base, turned
feet, soft wood with veneer, replaced knobs, missing beading and some veneer).
It was valued at 1,000 - 1,500 dollars. This desk has been in our family until
recently when it was sold to a private buyer [Phil Bishop]. The rest of this
paper details so far as is known the several locations and usages to which
great grandfather's desk has been put over the years.
The earliest history of this desk came to me from my mother, Elizabeth
Pearce Rockwell Butterworth, who as a child used to sit on her grandfather's
lap, as he worked at this desk. There is a little drawer in the bookcase
section of the desk where he kept a pair of small scissors. Mother told me that
her grandfather used these scissors for many purposes in his practice and gave
them to her to cut out paper dolls. This had to be in the latter part of his
life for my mother was not born until February 1874. When the desk was sold
recently the scissors were still in the drawer with a tag on them in my
mother's handwriting explaining about them. Dr. Rockwell kept on the shelves of
the desk his professional and other books. On the bottom shelf to the left was
his large chest full of various homeopathic medicines. When my mother received
the desk, the chest was still in its place. Later it [the chest] was given to a
museum.
I have not exact information about the disposal of the desk after great
grandfather, Richard Watson Rockwell died. I can only assume that the things
which he had in his home, including the desk, came to his son, my grandfather,
Augustus Pearce Rockwell who was living in Bronxville, New York at the time.
My first memory of the desk was when it was in the upstairs living room
of our home on Willard Avenue in Bloomfield, Hew Jersey. I was five years old
when we moved to Bloomfield and I have a very clear memory of that house. This
was mother's personal desk at which she wrote letters [including those to the
publisher, Mr. Mosher] and did her accounting. I have an early memory of
standing beside her with my nose about level with the desk. Mother was writing
Christmas cards and I was allowed to lick the Tuberculosis Association Seals,
sticking one on the back of each envelope. Mother kept photograph albums and
supplies of stationery in the large drawers of the desk. In the bookcase
section of the desk she had books including her Biblio [sic, The Bibelot]. These are the beautiful
little books with paper cardboard covers produced, printed and published by
Thomas Bird Mosher in Portland, Maine. Later as bound volumes of these books
were available they were also kept on these shelves. This is also where she
kept her little notebook in which she entered the purchase of each of the
little Biblio books and also where she made entries when she gave them away. As
I grew older, I was shown these books and sometimes she would read to me out of
one of them, things that a child would enjoy. She handled them as though they
were gold or silver. Mother considered books as friends and always handled them
with great care, and clean hands. We all had to wash our hands before we
touched a book. I don't think she ever sold any but she did give some of them
away. Birthdays, Weddings, Christmases. Always to people who she knew would
understand and appreciate them as something more than just a collection of
words telling a story or reproducing a poem.
The family moved to Glen Ridge, New Jersey in 1923. All the furniture
went to the new House. This desk to the best of my knowledge was placed on the
third floor and used for storage. I next remember it as a china cupboard and
the drawers being used for linen in the Glen Ridge home of my sister, Mrs.
O'Neal Gordon. Some years later my sister and her husband moved in with my
father and mother at which time the desk was probably returned to the third
floor. Neither my sister nor I can remember it being in any of the furnished
rooms of the house.
My next memory of the desk is when it came into my possession, my sister
having given it to me, in the mid 1960's. It was in my home on Huntington
Street in Washington D.C. Then in my apartment on N. Pollard Street in
Arlington, Virginia. And finally in my apartment in Hummelstown, Pennsylvania
from January 1981 till December 1993 when it was sold. In all these locations
it was used as a glass cabinet and the drawers for linen. I think it
interesting to note that when the family sold the desk the purchaser was a man
with a very deep interest in and love for the books of Thomas Bird Mosher. Once
again Mosher books are on the shelves of this old desk.
Theron H. Butterworth
December 10th, 1993
To
this day, Mrs. Butterworth's catalogue, the small number of books in immaculate
condition which Theron still had available from the original collection, two
sets of The Bibelot, and childhood
pictures of Theron and his sister, pictures of his mother and father, a large
portrait picture of Theron and another of his mother, and some letters from Dr.
Butterworth to me are still in that desk. It's become sort of an altar to this
family, and to the Mosher books they loved. And in the little drawer described
above is that same pair of scissors with an attached label saying “Great
grandfather Dr. Richard Watson Rockwell always kept these scissors in this
drawer. He was the father of Augustus Pearce Rockwell, who was the father of
Elizabeth Pearce Rockwell Butterworth who is the mother of Elizabeth
Butterworth Gordon. 1944” as well as an original photograph of Richard Watson
Rockwell (b. June 9, 1810; d. May 29, 1890) who originally had the desk built
in Connecticut, or so I had been told by Theron. Also in that drawer is the
little guardian of the desk and it contents: a little one-eared rat by the name
of Mr. Whiskers who mourned the loss of his life-long friend and companion...
Theron
H. Butterworth '27
Theron H. Butterworth died in his sleep
in Hershey, Pa., July 27, 1996. Butts came to us from Montclair Academy and
Princeton Tutoring School. At Princeton he was a member of the freshman crew
squad, the university band, Whig Hall, and Gateway Club. After graduation, he
earned an MS and PhD at the U. of Wisconsin in bacteriology and dairy science.
He then became a professional milk sanitarian, serving with the Texas Dept. of
Health and the U.S. Public Health Service in Houston and Washington, D.C. From
1951-55, he worked in the secretariat of the World Health Organization in
Geneva, earning assignments in India, Libya, and Liberia. He retired from the
U.S. Public Health Service in 1972. He was chairman of the American Public
Health Assn.'s public health section, and a trustee of the Society of Public
Health Educators and of the American Natl. Council for Health Education of the
Public. Many of his articles on public health education were published in
magazines. He married Alice Sumner in 1931 and had four children: Nancy,
Shirley, Charles, and Mary Elizabeth; a grandchild, and three
great-grandchildren. In his later years, he became separated from his wife and
lived at 451 Sandhill Rd., Apt. 223, Hershey, PA 17033. To his children, the class
extends its deep sympathy.
The Class of 1927 (Princeton
Alumni Weekly, 10/09/96)
©Philip
R. Bishop
MOSHER
BOOKS (member ABAA / ILAB)
mosher@ptd.net
10
November 2003
This
article is Copyright © by Philip R. Bishop. Permission to reproduce the above
article has been granted by Gordon Pfeiffer, president of the Delaware
Bibliophiles and editor of that organization’s newsletter, Endpapers, in which the article appeared in the March 2004 issue.
No portion of this article may be reproduced or redistributed without expressed
written permission from both parties.