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       Chauncey M. Depew

      My Memories of Eighty Years

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066225773

       FOREWORD

       MY MEMORIES OF EIGHTY YEARS

       I. CHILDHOOD AND YOUTH

       II. IN PUBLIC LIFE

       III. ABRAHAM LINCOLN

       IV. GENERAL GRANT

       V. ROSCOE CONKLING

       VI. HORACE GREELEY

       VII. RUTHERFORD B. HAYES AND WILLIAM M. EVARTS

       VIII. GENERAL GARFIELD

       IX. CHESTER A. ARTHUR

       X. GROVER CLEVELAND

       XI. BENJAMIN HARRISON

       XII. JAMES G. BLAINE

       XIII. WILLIAM McKINLEY

       XIV. THEODORE ROOSEVELT

       XV. UNITED STATES SENATE

       XVI. AMBASSADORS AND MINISTERS

       XVII. GOVERNORS OF NEW YORK STATE

       XVIII. FIFTY-SIX YEARS WITH THE NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD COMPANY

       XIX. RECOLLECTIONS FROM ABROAD

       XX. ORATORS AND CAMPAIGN SPEAKERS

       XXI. NATIONAL REPUBLICAN CONVENTIONS

       XXII. JOURNALISTS AND FINANCIERS

       XXIII. ACTORS AND MEN OF LETTERS

       XXIV. SOCIETIES AND PUBLIC BANQUETS

       Table of Contents

      For many years my friends have insisted upon my putting in permanent form the incidents in my life which have interested them. It has been my good fortune to take part in history-making meetings and to know more or less intimately people prominent in world affairs in many countries. Every one so situated has a flood of recollections which pour out when occasion stirs the memory. Often the listeners wish these transcribed for their own use.

      My classmate at Yale in the class of 1856, John D. Champlin, a man of letters and an accomplished editor, rescued from my own scattered records and newspaper files material for eight volumes. My secretary has selected and compiled for publication two volumes since. These are principally speeches, addresses, and contributions which have appeared in public. Several writers, without my knowledge, have selected special matter from these volumes and made books.

      Andrew D. White, Senator Hoar, and Senator Foraker, with whom I was associated for years, have published full and valuable autobiographies. I do not attempt anything so elaborate or complete. Never having kept a diary, I am dependent upon a good memory. I have discarded the stories which could not well be published until long after I have joined the majority.

      I trust and earnestly hope there is nothing in these recollections which can offend anybody. It has been my object so to picture events and narrate stories as to illumine the periods through which I have passed for eighty-eight years, and the people whom I have known and mightily enjoyed.

      C.M.D.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      It has occurred to me that some reminiscences of a long life would be of interest to my family and friends.

      My memory goes back for more than eighty years. I recall distinctly when about five years old my mother took me to the school of Mrs. Westbrook, wife of the well-known pastor of the Dutch Reformed church, who had a school in her house, within a few doors. The lady was a highly educated woman, and her husband, Doctor Westbrook, a man of letters as well as a preacher. He specialized in ancient history, and the interest he aroused in Roman and Greek culture and achievements has continued with me ever since.

      The village of Peekskill at that time had between two and three thousand inhabitants. Its people were nearly all Revolutionary families who had settled there in colonial times. There had been very little immigration either from other States or abroad; acquaintance was universal, and in the activities of the churches there was general co-operation among the members. Church attendance was so unanimous that people, young or old, who failed to be in their accustomed places on Sunday felt the disapproval of the community.

      Social activities of the village were very simple, but very delightful and healthful. There were no very rich nor very poor. Nearly every family owned its own house or was on the way to acquire one. Misfortune of any kind aroused common interest and sympathy. A helping hand of neighborliness was always extended to those in trouble or distress. Peekskill was a happy community and presented conditions of life and living of common interest, endeavor, and sympathy

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