Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Commemoration at Mount Auburn | Page 16

People and Happenings A Celebration for the Life of I. F. Stone The crusading life of progres- sive investigative journalist I.F. (Isidor Feinstein) Stone (1907-1989) was recalled and honored at a celebration marking what would have been his 100th birthday on Sunday, November 16, 2008, in Story Chapel. A large number of Stone’s family, colleagues, friends and admirers assembled to hear tributes read by many speakers. Among them were his daughter, poet Celia Stone Gilbert; Jack Beatty, news analyst for NPR’s “On Point”; Robert Giles, creator of the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University; Christopher Lydon, host of radioopensource; and Anthony Lewis, former col- umnist of the New York Times. Stone is famous for his work as the author/editor/publisher of I.F. Stone’s Weekly and as an editor of The Nation. The Nieman Foundation for Journal- ism at Harvard has created an annual I.F. Stone Medal for Journalistic Independence in his honor. I.F. Stone and his wife Esther are buried at Mount Auburn in Lot #163 on Walnut Avenue. Celebrate Somerville! A program and walk on November 8, 2008, “Celebrate Somerville! Some Notable Somervillians” at Mount Au- burn, marked the publication of Somerville: A Brief History (History Press, 2008) by authors Dee Morris and Dora St. Martin. Among the prominent people buried here with strong Somerville ties are: George O. Brastow (1811-1878), the first Mayor of Somerville (Lot #1656, Acacia Path); Edward Everett (1794-1865), Governor of Massachusetts, Mayor of Boston, President of Harvard, (Lot #17, Magnolia Avenue); Martha Perry Lowe (1829- 1902), an historian and clubwoman active in obtaining a college education for female graduates of Somerville High School, (Lot #2757, Mistletoe Path); Melville Parkhurst (1842-1921), police chief, (Lot #5534, Amethyst Path); Charles Tufts (1781-1876) , benefactor of Tufts College, (Lot #2870, Central Avenue); and Columbus Tyler (1805- 1881) and his wife, Mary Sawyer Tyler (1806-1889), who, as a little girl, inspired the poem “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” (Lot #2757, Mistletoe Path). 14 | Sweet Auburn Bidding Bill Good-bye People and Happenings A black-tie dinner honoring Bill Clendaniel, who retired as President of Mount Auburn Cemetery after 20 distinguished years, was held at the Boston Athenaeum (left) on June 19, 2008. Earlier, on June 17, Mount Auburn’s staff and Bill’s friends and colleagues in the historic preservation/cultural/ cemetery worlds bid him a fond farewell at an informal catered cocktail reception on Bigelow Chapel Lawn. Civil War enthusiasts from throughout the country who are members of the Sons of Union Veterans visited Mount Auburn on August 7, 2008. They held a memorial service in Bigelow Chapel and also paid their respects at the monument of Robert Gould Shaw, colonel of the 54th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry Regiment, the first African American regiment to fight in the Civil War. A fleet of trolleys brought the group of more than 100 people to the Cemetery. Their visit was part of the annual encampment of the Sons of Union Veterans, which, this past summer, was held in Boston. Jim Storey Retires as Chair of the Board James M. (Jim) Storey of Boston, the first Chair of the Board of Mount Auburn Cemetery Trustees, assumed that post in September 2005. He has been a Trustee since 1979, when he succeeded his fa- ther, Charles Moorfield Storey, on the Board. (Charles Moorfield Sto- rey served as a Trustee from 1932 until 1979, and is buried in the family lot on Excelsior Path.) Jim has had a distin- guished legal career. He was a partner at Gaston, Snow & Ely Bartlett, as well as at Dechert Price & Rhoads. He was a lecturer at the Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law at the Boston University School of Law. He served as a trustee or director of various mutual funds; Massachusetts Historical Society; The Signet Associates, Cambridge, MA; and the U.S. Charitable Gift Trust. He is a former trustee or officer of the Austen Riggs Center, Inc., Stockbridge, MA; Earthwatch Institute, Maynard, MA; Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children; The Park School, Brookline, MA; Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME; and West End House, Allston, MA. Jim lives with his wife, Isabelle, on Beacon Hill. Jim Roosevelt, Among those sharing roasts and toasts at the Athenaeum were President and CEO Jim Storey, Chair of Mount Auburn’s Board of Trustees; of Tufts Health Gordon Abbot, Jr., Honorary Trustee; Richard Moylan, Plan, with his wife, Ann, now Chair of President, Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, NY; Dennis the Mount Auburn Fiori, President, Massachusetts Historical Society; and Dave Board of Trustees Barnett. In addition, Michael Schaffer gave a captivating media presentation that explored Bill’s life from boyhood to retirement. Speakers at the lawn party included Joseph V. Roller II, President and CEO, Cambridge Trust Company; Anne Hawley, Director, Isabella Stewart Gard- ner Museum; landscape architect Craig Halvorson of Boston’s Halvorson Design Partnership; Bud Hanson, Chair of the Board of Trustees, Forest Hills Cemetery, Boston; and Trustee Ann Roosevelt. In addition, Bill was remembered with warm anecdotes and humor by current and former Mount Auburn staff. Bill Clendaniel has been elected an Honorary Trustee of Mount Auburn Cemetery. Dennis Collins, Horticultural Curator, and Natalie Wampler, Preservation & Facilities Planner, co-led a site tour concerning a famous New England disaster of the past, “Seventy Years Later: The Hurricane of 1938 Re-visited,” on September 29. The tour was an excellent example of interdepartmental collaboration, with Dennis and Natalie taking turns describing the hurricane’s lasting impact on our horticultural collections and built structures. (Above) Children from the Haggerty School in Cambridge, one of many schools that visit Mount Auburn every year, came to the Cemetery on October 27, 2008. (Below) An international group of Loeb Fellows from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard with Mount Auburn President and CEO Dave Barnett (first row, far right) on October 14, 2008 Curator of Historical Collections Meg Winslow and Archivist Brian Sullivan hosted a group of curators and librarians from the Boston Athenaeum for a visit to our Historical Collections and a tour of the Cemetery grounds in October. Also in October, Brian, assisted by Friends Trustee and volunteer Caroline Loughlin, hosted two large groups of Harvard University librarians. On No- vember 6 and 13, Brian hosted two groups of Simmons College graduate students in archival studies. Spring 2009 | 15