The Glessners' summer home, The Rocks, in New Hampshire
Exactly 125 years ago, during the summer of 1889, John J. Glessner
penned a letter to the editor of a local newspaper near his summer home in New
Hampshire. Entitled “Good Advice to
Mountain Folk – A Few Words of Truth and Importance by a Prominent Summer
Resident,” the article shared Glessner’s thoughts on the importance of
preserving the natural beauty of the White Mountains, which he felt was being
compromised with signage and other manmade intrusions. In addition to preserving the landscape in
and of itself, Glessner was also careful to point out that it was the natural
beauty that drew many visitors to the area every summer, bolstering the local
economy. Glessner would go on to write
many more articles on this topic, and was among the earliest members of the
Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests when it was organized in
1901. In the late 1970s, nearly 1,300
acres of his summer estate “The Rocks” was donated to the Society by his
grandchildren, a fitting tribute to this early conservationist. The text of the 1889 article, in its
entirety, follows.
A view from the Glessners' home at The Rocks
On an eminence a
little to the south of the carriage-road between Bethlehem and Littleton, and
about midway between those villages stands the “Rocks,” the summer abode of Mr.
J. J. Glessner of Chicago. During a few
years residence amid its beautiful surroundings, that gentleman’s keen eye has
detected many shortcomings of the resident population, and, in a letter
published in a recent number of the LITTLETON JOURNAL, has, in a few kindly
words, made some valuable suggestions to follow. Here is what he says.
I wonder if the
people of the White Mountain region appreciate the grand scenery in the midst
of which they dwell. Frequently the
things which we come in contact with every day are not highly prized. I imagine that here in Chicago, with its dead
level surroundings, even though it has a considerable elevation above the sea
level, we think more of the hills and rocks and forests and magnificent scenery
of Grafton and Coos counties than do the people who see these beauties
constantly.
Looking from the porch at The Rocks
Not only have you the
bracing air and pure water and all things so grateful to the denizens of the
cities, but the beautiful surroundings are greater attractions than you
realize, and draw the summer visitors to your neighborhood. With the advent of the summer visitor comes
not only gaiety, but a handy and profitable market for your commodities and
labor. Under other circumstances the
produce and labor must go to market, but here the market comes to the produce
and labor, and it is because this influx of summer visitors is pleasant and
profitable to you, that I ask whether you fully appreciate the beauty of the
surroundings and their market value.
Personally I am not
anxious to have many city people visit the mountains in summer, for it
increases somewhat the cost of my living there, and I see enough city people in
general at other seasons; but it has a money value to you, in that it enhances
the selling price of butter and eggs and poultry and vegetables, and gives
employment to hundreds of people and horses, etc. etc.
But the pure air and
the pure water are not enough to fill your hotels. City people, with their eyes full of city
dust, and their ears deafened with city din, want something pleasant to look
upon, and your people are not careful enough in preserving the natural
scenery. It is all right and desirable
to have neat fences, well-cleared and cultivated fields, substantial barns,
comfortable houses, etc., but do not mar the boulders or fences or barns with
advertising signs, do not destroy the beautiful wild shrubbery that lines the
roadsides; do not cut down the fine trees on the farm, or by any act reduce the
natural attractions of your surroundings.
As it is now, many persons feel repaid for a journey half the world over
to visit the White Mountains. I have
personally known Englishmen who came to the United States merely to see the
White Mountain country while the forests were in their gorgeous autumn
coloring. But you may be sure a sign on
a boulder advertising some one’s liver pills, or a board nailed to a barn
advertising the tourists to take the Fall River Steamers, or a bridge lettered
to show the virtues of somebody’s bitters, nor yet a dirty barnyard visible
from the road, or a roadside devoid of shrubbery, or a field showing the
deformities made by the woodman’s axe, help in any way to draw the visitor or
induce him to lighten his pocketbook.
These things are not congruous with the landscape.
A view through a window at The Rocks
The wild flowers of
Northern New England, the asters, goldenrod, ferns and maple bush, even the
hazel-bush, are beautiful beyond your thoughts.
Make a good drive-way by all means, smooth it and drain it properly, but
do not destroy the shrubbery at its sides.
Have good fences, walls or board fences, but do not deface them with
signs, and never permit such an indignity as painting anything on the noble
rocks. Keep your barnyards and dooryards
clean, it is both profitable and pleasant to you. Keep your dwelling and other buildings in
good repair; that is pleasant and profitable, too. But as far as possible let Nature alone. Do not try to improve upon her work. In both extremes she surpasses all that you
can do; hers are more delicate and graceful, and again greater and grander than
any workman ever can do.
The summer traveler may
be selfish and supercilious; he may be a cad and disagreeable; he may not be a
model for imitation by your sons, but he spends money, he helps to make your
farm and labor profitable. Cultivate
him, cherish him, even pamper him, do all in your power to induce him to come
again and bring his family and friends, but do not kill the goose that lays the
golden eggs; do not damage or deface or destroy the natural scenery about you.
My great admiration
for your many attractions has induced the writing of this letter, and I shall
be more than pleased if through your courtesy, Mr. Editor, my words have even a
slight influence.
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