On the
interesting and inspiring man whose life and legacy the Museum most fully
commemorates.
William
Jackson didn’t build the home in which the Museum is now situated—that would
be Edward,
who was one of the first 17th century English settlers in the
area and who bought the (then) Cambridge land and build the Homestead not long
after his immigration—but it’s his and his wife Mary’s youthful portraits that
greet visitors in the Museum’s lobby and first exhibit room, and for good
reason; even a brief description of William’s life reflects just how much of an
early 19th century Renaissance Man he was: selectman and school
board member and state representative and U.S. Congressman; founder of the
Newton Temperance Society and secretary of the Newton Female Academy; first
President of the Newton Savings Bank; chandler and manufacturer and railroad
advocate; abolitionist and Underground Railroad participant and founder of the
Liberty Party.
Each of
those aspects of his biography is worth extended attention (and the Museum does
a good job including all of them), but I was especially struck by why I would
call a defining characteristic underlying many of them: Jackson’s willingness
to take unpopular, or at least radical and controversial, stands in support of
what he believed. That’s of course deeply relevant to his abolitionist efforts—we
tend to think of Massachusetts as full of abolionists, but the story
of how William Lloyd Garrison was dragged through the streets of mid-1830s Boston,
which the Museum likewise highlighted, tells a different and more accurate story
about how radical that position was. But it’s just as true of his early and
impassioned advocacy for railroads; in the 1820s, a period when that new innovation
was far from universally acclaimed, perhaps especially not among established
families like the Jacksons, William
consistently argued for its possibilities, its benefits to all his fellow New
Englanders and Americans. And from what I can tell, his voice and efforts
were instrumental in helping bring the railroad to Newton and extend it
throughout the state and region.
That’s one
way to highlight William’s influence and legacy, looking at the issues with
which he was involved. But I was also struck, thanks to the Museums
multi-generational storytelling, by how much the subsequent generations, and
particularly William’s daughters Ellen, Caroline, and Cornelia, carried his
legacy forward. Cornelia helped found Newton’s Santa Claus Agency, a unique and
impressive philanthropic organization, and published The
Poems of the Jackson Homestead (1902); Caroline served as the city’s
first assistant librarian, when the library became public in 1878; and Ellen especially
extended both William’s and the Homestead’s legacies, compiling the Annals from
the Old Homestead and serving for decades as president of the
post-bellum Freedmen’s
Aid Society. These impressive women don’t need William’s life to validate
their own achievements and efforts—but they do, I believe, reflect just how
much the family continued to embody William’s ideals, and some of the best of
what Newton, Massachusetts, and 19th century America could be.
Next
Museum story tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
7/2 Memory
Day nominees: A tie between two towering
and
inspiring Civil
Rights leaders
with tragically
different
stories—Thurgood Marshall
and Medgar
Evers.
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