Celebration of the Two Hundred and
Seventy-fifth Anniversary of the Founding of the Town of Southampton, N. Y.
 |
Edward P. White, Marshal |
In this
two hundred and seventy-fifth year of the settlement of our historic town the
question of a permanent memorial to those early colonists became paramount.
Just what form this memorial should assume was a subject for much discussion on
the part of the committee which had in charge the anniversary celebration.
While several plans were in high favor, the committee were unanimous in feeling
that such a memorial should lend its expression in some project of educational
value rather than in a monument of granite or bronze.
The
Colonial Society had upon two occasions — in 1900 and again in 19 10 — held a
Loan Exhibition, when a rare and beautiful collection of articles representing
the earlier life of the village were placed upon exhibition in The Memorial
Hall of the library. These exhibitions were enthusiastically patronized and
proved our locality rich in treasures of the past. The society has for long
looked forward to making permanent an exhibit of this kind — something which historical societies
everywhere are doing, and often
with a background of incident far less picturesque than that which Southampton possesses. In the light of a permanent
memorial to the memory of those early heroes, it was felt that no monument more
fitting could be established than to provide a place where the long cherished
plan of the society could be realized. Mr. L. Emory Terry and Mr. Samuel L. Parrish, both members
of the Colonial Committee as well as trustees of the library, were instrumental
in devising a plan which has met with enthusiastic approval and support. Since
the building of the beautiful auditorium in connection with the High school the
Memorial Hall of the library had fallen into disuse. Those associated in the
work of the library had long felt the need of added reading and stackroom
facilities. It was proposed to place in Memorial Hall a ten-foot ceiling,
giving ample space below for a much needed children's reading room, and
abundant height above for a hall
well suited to the needs of the Colonial Society.
Plans for these were drawn by Mr. Grosvenor
D. Atterbury of New York, the
approach to the Memorial Room to be made by a Colonial staircase with an entrance
to the west opening out upon the beautiful gardens of the Parrish Art Museum.
So enthusiastically indeed has the plan been received that the $8,000 needed has
been readily forthcoming. The village appropriated $500 a year for five years. Friends who so generously subscribed
to the expenses of the celebration fund, raised through the kind offices of Mr.
J. W. Fletcher Howell, subscribed
at that time also to the memorial. Too much cannot be said in appreciation of
the efforts of Mr. Samuel L. Parrish, interested always in all that makes for
the uplift and advancement of Southampton. Mr. Parrish not only subscribed most
generously himself, but has been instrumental in promoting an interest in the
generous gifts which has made
possible this twin memorial — the children's room, spacious and cozy, and the beautiful Colonial
room. Here youth and age have
clasped hands in a memorial most fitting to the memory of those early
heroes, a memorial indeed which
shall pass on to the future the
story of the past in no uncertain way — a past of which we are all justly proud and which
otherwise would be lost in
oblivion.
--Lizbeth Halsey White | June 12, 1915