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NOTICE
This mpterial may be ·
protected by copyright
law (Title 17 U. S. Code)
I
jf o r b ·lb a l l ll~ e e t i 11 g s
Conducted by THE BOSTON BAPTIST SOCIAL UNION
SIXTH SEASON - l9J2-l9l3
American Baptist ,,Historical Society
l1106 South Good~an St.
.Rochester,. NY 14620-2532
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING at 7.30 P. M.
/
PROGRAM FOR OCTOBER 13
"A Half II our with Schubert, Chopi11 and Li sz t," ,vith
Piano Illustrations by Mr. John Orth.
HY~IN, "The March of Freedom."
Aoo1rnss, "The Morals of Anarchy and Soci_alism,"
-D r. Thomas C. Hall of N ew York.
HYMN, "0 Goel o f Earth aml Altar,"
QUEST ION S FllOM TJIE F1.oon.
Th e IIUMI~ P1 AN0 ust'lt is ki1ully loan e d by;\[.
S Tlt.lNIUtT
SONS Co., 162 Fl oy l s lo n Stree t.
PROGRAM FOR OCTOBER
20
. "The Place of Mmic in the General Education of the Peo ple."
An illu strated mu sic -talk by :rvir. John Harris Gutterson,
introducing'' Home, Swee t llo111 e" and'' Auld Lang Syne."
Aoo1rnss , "The Function of the J ew in the 'vVorld's Economy,"
-Dr. Maurice H. Harris of the T e mpl e Israel, New York.
HYMN, "The Coming Time."
QUESTIONS FllOM THE FLOOIL
PROGRAM FOR OCTOBER 27
Mn. Ru ssRLL B. K1NG~IAN
l'vln s. P1rnnY \.YA LTON.
. 'Cellist
Accompanist
a. "Slumbe r Song"
Schubert
b. "Ro man ce"
Debussy
HY~IN, "Thy Kingdom Come."
Ano1rnss, "Christianity and Socialism: Their Larger Parallels,"
-Prof. Walter Rauschenbusch of Rochester, N. Y.
HYMN, "0 Go d o f Earth and Altar."
Q_unsTIONS FIIO~I TIIE FLOOll.
GEORGE W . COLEMAN, Chairm an and Director of Meetings
Miss MARY C . CRAWFORD, Secretary for the Meetings
Offi ce Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30 to 4.30 daily, except S a turday s
Telephone. Haymarket 2247
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
John Mos eley
Jesse E. Perry
Harry P. Bosson
James P. Roberts
Jefferson L. Harbour
Benjamin N . Upham
William E . Macurda
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward Cummings
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Rev. Dillon Bronson
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
Meyer Bloomfield ,
Franklin H. Wentworth
Russell B. Kingman
Robert A . Wood s
Henry Abrahams
Ed win D . Mead
John T. Prince
James P. Munroe
Mrs . Glendower Evans
Mrs. Richard Y. FitzGerald
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0 GOD OF EARTH AND ALTAR
(To th e music of "Webb")
0 God of earth and altar
From all that terror teaches,
li'rom li es or ton gue and pe n,
Bow down and h ear our cry,
From all th e easy s peeches
Our ea rthly rulers fall er,
Thal comfort cruel men,
Our people drift and die;
From sa le and profanation
'l'he walls of gold e ntomb us,
or honor and th e sword,
The swords of scorn divide,
From s lee p and from damnation,
Take not Thy thund e r from us,
Deliver us, good Lord.
But take away our pride.
'
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'l'ie in a living tether
Th e pri es t and J)rinc e and thrall,
Bind all our Ii \'CS togeth e r,
Smite us and s av e us all;
In ire and exultation
Aflame wilh faith, and fr ee,
Lift up a living nation,
A single sword lo Th ee.
-0 . K. Chesterton.
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THY KINGDOM COME!
"Thy kingdom come!" 0 Lord we daily cry,
Weary and sad wilh earth's long strife and }lain!
"How long, O Lord!" 'l'hy sutI'ring children sigh!
"Speed Thou the dawn, and o'er the nations r eign!"
I
Thy kingdom come! then all the din of war,
Like some dark dream, shall vani s h with th e night!
Peace, holy 11 eace, her myriad s girts shall pour,
Resting secure from dang e r and affright.
I
Thy kingdom come! no more shall dee ds of shame,
Brutish and ba se, deH troy th e soul divine:
Bright with Thy Joye's all-purifying flame
Thy human t e nq,les e vc rmore shall shine!
\
Thy kingdom come! mad g reed for wealth and power
No more shall grind the w eaklings in th e du st.
Th en mind and stren g th shall share Thy ampl e dow er,
Brothers in Thee, and one in etJual tru st.
- H. \V. Hawkes.
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THE COMING TIME
And is the lime approaching,
By wise m en long foreto ld,
Wh e n all shall dwell toge th er,
United in one fold?
\Vh e n all men shall be brothe rs
li'orsaking nan:ow cree d,
And each for all do service
As ev'ry one hath need!
Shall J e w and Gentile, m ee ting
From many a di s tant shore,
Upon one common altar
Their common lov e outpour?
Shall all that now divides us
R e mov e and pass away,
Like shadows of th e morning
Before th e blaze of day?
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Shall all that now unit es us
More sweet and lasting prove ,
A closer bond of union ,
In a bl es t land of love?
Shall war be learn'd no longer,
Shall strife and t umult cease,
All earth a blessed kingdom
Of harmony and Peace?
- Jane Borthwick.
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�THE MARCH OF FREEDOM
(To the music of "Marse illaise ).
Hark, hark, the peal of clarions callin g,
A host unnumb er ed marching by,
O' e r serried ranks lh e pe nnon s fallin g !
11 The hill s g ive back lhe balll e cry.
II
'Wh ence co111e y e , h e ro warriors, hitli'e r?
What lnnd , \\·hat nges, g nv e ye birlh
·what crave ye s till of bl eedin g earth
What laurel-wreaths thnt sha ll not with e r?
To arms lh e clarion s call ,
To deeds th e doing worth;
March on, 111arch on, till fr eedom dnwn,
And justi ce rnl e th e earlh i
Glory to God, the day is brenldng,
The lon g-a wnit ed golden 111orn !
Th e h e ro es dead who , self-forsaking,
·11 Ga,ve all lo hasten fr eedom's dawn.
. i
II
As broth e rs , co mrad es, march bes id e us;
On, th e n, to conq 11 es t of th e world!
On, till om battl e fla gs are f11rl ed
In fr eedom's peace , and God s hall g11id e 11s.
Ye mount ai ns, clap yo ur hand s !
Exult, 0 s ky and s·ca!
l\farch on, march o n! breaks over· all lands
The dawn of lib erty!
- Charles SiHngue S mith.
TWO HOM F. SONGS.
Should a uld acquaintance b e forgot
And n e ve r brou ght to mind?
Should a uld acquaintance b e for got
A nd days of Auld Lang Syne ?
For Auld Lang Syn c my fri e nds ,
For Auld Lang _Sy nc,
·w e'll tak e a cup of kindn e ss yet ·
For Auld Lang Syne.
Then h e r e's a hand m y trn sty fri end
And g ie _a hand o' thine,
\.Ve'JI tak e a cup of kindn ess th en
For Auld Lang Syne.
For, etc
:rvlicl pl ea s ures and palaces though \lie may roam
Be it e ver so humble th ere 's no place like home.
A charm from th e skies see m s to hallow us th er e
Which see ks through the world is ne'e r m et with elsewh e re.
.I
Hom e ! home! sw ee t! sweet hom e !
Be it eve r so humbl e there's no place like hom e.
An exil e from home sple ndor dazzles in vain.
Oh g ive me th e Jowly thatch ed cottage again.
,vith birds singing gaily that co me at my call
Oh give m e th en sw ee t pe ace of mind clearer than all.
Home! etc.
,)
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October 13.-At the first Ford Hall Meeting
of th e l'vJovcm e nt's Sixth Season DH. T110MA S C.
HALL of New York, well k11 o wn as a highly
successful Cooper Union speaker, will giYe his
brilliant lecture," 'l'/1c ,1/orals of A11arc/1ism a11d
Socialism."
This subject is one upon which
many of u,; have ln11g been desiring more light and
we are, indeed, fortunat e in having Dr. Hall come
to clear · it up for us.
That Same EvenQ
ing Mn. J 011N OwrH,
who talk e d to us so
delightfully 1;1st year
about "Lisz t as a
Radical," will give us a " ,llusica l r.la(f .I.lour
witlt Schubert, C!wpin a11d Liszt. " Mr. Orth
is one of the mo st di stinguished of American
pianists and he is, besides, a man deeply in sympathy with these Meetings. The c01nbination of
Dr. Hall and John Orth should make this a Ford
Hall 'First Night long to be remembered.
.
October 20.-Do you rem embe r the evening
you went a way from here saying: '·That was the
grl'atest Bible lecture I e yer heard, one of the
greatest lectures of ally sort, indeed, that I eyer
heai·d"? The speaker ·was RABBI IlAn1us of
New York, wasn't it? At any rate, Dr. Harris
gave here, two years ago, a Bible lecture packed
with scholarship and so l.Jrilliant in thought that
some denominational papers printed it entire! Ile
it is who will now talk to us on '' The Functioll
of the J ew in the · IVorld's Ecuwmy." ,vhether
you are a Jew or a Gentile you'll want to !·. ear thi s
lecture and you will want, too, to hear our own
]Vlu. GuTTEHSON tell us, that same evening, of
"7'/,e Place of 1
ll11sic i11 the General E'ducation
of the I'eoj>le.. "
October 27.-PrtoF. vV A LTEB H.Au~ c 1rn:-111usc11,
who could not come to 11s at all la st year because
he was so dee ply occupied in the preparation of a
new book, will give ns the fruits of his long
period of retirement and research in a discussion
of "Christianity and Socialism: Their Larger
Parallels." Those who know Rauschenbusch are
anticipating this address with the most intense
eagerness. Our good friend, l'lln. KINGMAN, also,
will be on hand that· evening with his 'cello!
The Meetings Are Entirely Free
No Tickets Required
FORD HALL, corner Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
~15
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0264
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 10/13-10/27/1912
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1912
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Dr. Thomas Hall, Mr. John Orth, Rabbi Harris, Prof. Walter Rauschenbusch
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 48
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
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https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/861ec1cd9a3a54d6e7858893449294b9.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=qy-l1RjtuRzFW6PHNgyAT8Rtm%7EBLNAI3vlJuCl1a8XbOVaELTptqSLFQmGoyX-qf9qOHFcAfQgRM6PbxgjO7xjACZyz97ikwhwpre%7EV22CvY8Z9iO4RNriVG8ukMim-CoBPhGYxUdz80UbTgtmaVLAhE6ZbbWYZSX3295Es6r756V67-cy7GjGrdasx2ror4jZ7C2GtV63vZmtVCMPlctVmFDLUtiDWlvMgWb6fRcO8J58ySDh2vCrGsm29IHdVHPFNotP4Rpic3jRjk1IHrDqPtFBtOVNNYDZUGkvVlKyhvqGrH8%7EARI2B-SEpe1PdigfAHSFjxX2QoXY7TXgmT%7EA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
8841b2809821d83208e0e20aed2879c4
PDF Text
Text
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Conducted by THE BOSTON BAPTIST SOCIAL UNION
FIFTH SEASON-1911-12
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
at
7.30 P. M.
PROGRAM FOR MARCH 17.
1.
,...;,..
2.
Violoncellist
RussELL B. KINGMAN
Violinist
CARMEN A. F ADHIZIO
Accompanist
Mus. R. B. KINGMAN
Arensky
·l\1ovement from Trio
H Yll!N, "America the Beautiful."
Movement from Trio
Saint Geo1-g·e
ADonEss, "The Ethics of a Newspaper Man"
-Mr. James Schermerhorn of the Detroit Times
HY111N, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
QUESTIONS FllOM THE FLoon.
PROGRAM FOR MARCH 24._
Coniralto
Accompanist
Miss ADELAIDE GRIGGS
Miss CoNSTANCE FREEMAN
I
a. "What the Chimney Sang"
b. "Lullaby" from "Pageant Music."
Griswold
(lly request)
HYl\IN, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
1l'/cDer1n/d
a. ''Charity
Whelpl~y.
/,. "Gather Rosebuds"
READING, '•Scenes from the Senate"
-Mrs. E1nily Montague. Bishop of New York
HYMN, "Hark, for the Hour is Coming!"
QUESTIONS FllOl\l THE FLoon.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD, Secretary for the Meetings
Office Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket :2247
James P . Roberts
William J . Hobbs
I
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
Benjamin N. Upham
Charles N. Bentley
Harry P . Bosson
William E. P~rry
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Rev . Edward Cummings
Mrs. Richard Y . FitzGerald
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
John T. Prince
Rev. Dillon Bronson, D. D.
Meyer Bloomfield
Franklin H. Wentworth
Edwin D. Mead
Russell B. Kingman
Robert A. Woods
James P. Munroe
George B. Gallup
Mrs. Glendower Evans
Henry Abrahams
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AMERICA, THE
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BEAUTIFUL
0 beautiful for spacious skies,·
For anther waves of grain,
For purple mountain maj es ties
Above th e fruited plain!
America! America!
God s hed His grace on thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea lo shining sea!
0 beautiful for glorious tale
Of liberating strife,
,vhen valiantly for man's avail,
l\Ien lavi s hed precious life!
America! Ani'erica !
l\Iay God thy go ld re line,
Till all succe ss be noblenes s ,
And cv'ry gain divin e !
0 beautiful for pilgrim feet,
\\'hose stern, impass ioned stress,
A thoroughfare for freedom beat
Across the wilderness I
America! America I
God mend thine ev'ry flaw,
Confirm thy soul in self-contro l,
Thy liberty in law I
l
0 beautiful for patriot dream
· That sees beyond· the years
Thine alabaster cities gleam
Undimmed by human tea rs 1
America! America!
God shed His grace on Thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea!
- l,atherine Lee Ba/rs.
L~BOR
HYMN
OF THE
COMING
DAY.
(Air: ujohn Brown's Ilo~y.") .
Our eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the day
Wh e n all shall give th~ir honest work and take th e ir hones t pay,
And poverty, the social Curse, be wholly swept awayThat day is m~rching on!
CHORUS,
Glory, glory, hal-le-lu-jah ! Glory, g lory, hnl-le-lu-jah !
Glory, glory, hal~le-lu -jah ! That day is marching on!
Vl/e have seen it in the writing of a thousand men who know,
,ve have heard it in the meeting where the cro,,•ding workers go,
\Ve have felt it in the people's heart, where all great movements growThat day is marching on!
The day when every man on earth shall find l1is fullest power,
\Vhen Mother love sha ll ring the world ,111d bring a nobl er hour,
\\'hen every baby born shall live and blossom like a flowerThat day is marching oi1 !
CHORUS.
The end of fort and battleship! The end of gun and sword!
The end of shame and inisery and vice and crime abhorred!
The time for us to build on earth the Kingdom of the Lord!
That day is marching on!
· ,Charlotte Perkins Gilman.
HOW SUPPORTED:
These Meetings are made possible through the
funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we meet) by
the late
DANIEL
SHARP Forro, who owned The Youth's Compa11io11.
The management ·o f the Meetings is in the hands of a Committee from the
Social U11ion.
s
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PROGRAM FOR MARCH 31.
Mn. LEON VAN VLIET
Miss CoNSTANCE FREEMAN
I•
Violoncellipt .
Accompanist
a. "Prelude"
Chopz'n
{ b. Andante from "A Minor Concerto'' .
Goltermdnu
HY~IN, "Labor Hymn of the Coming Day."
2,,
"Reverie"
Dunkler
ADDRESS, "Am I My Brother's Keeper?"
·
-Dr. Stanton Coit of London
HY.MN, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR,
PROGRAM FOR APRIL 7.
Pianist
Soprano
Miss PERSIS Cox
Miss DOROTHY BASSETT
Choj>z'n
~gambatz'
a. "Fantasie Impromptu"
b. '' Minuet"
)
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l\'l1 ss Cox
HYMN, "0 Beautiful My Country."
a. "Oh, Had I Jubal's Lyre,'' from "Joshua"
b. "'vVhen Celia Sings"
1\II SS
. I
8
. Handel
Frank 1l£oir
ASSRTT
ADDRESS, "The New Schism in Sodialism"·
-Mr. John Graham Brooks of Cambridge
HYMN, "America the Beautiful."
QUESTIONS FROM TIIE FLOOR.
PROGRAM FOR APRIL 14.
l'Vlns. BERTHA Cus111NG C111LD
Miss ETHEL LITTLEFIELD
Miss FANNIE GREEN
a. "fields o' Ballyclare" }
b. "In the Dark"
·
Contralto
Violinist
. Pianist ·
1
1/abel Da11iels
Alu. ~. CHILD
''Romanza"
Svendsen
Violin Solo by l\h ss LtTTLEFI HLD
a. "Kol Nedri"
b. "Wanderer's N achtlied'' . .
l\(ns ,
Traditional Afr
Schube1-t
C111LD
HYlllN, "Hark, for the Hour is Coming l"
a. Irish Folk Song
j\-(l{ S . C HILD
anti
Foote
~IJ SS LtTTLRFIELD
b. Trio from "Elijah," "Lift Thine Eyes" .
1l£endelssohn
Mt ss LtTTLB FIELD , . ns. C1111,o and 1\-lr ss Gn&&N
M
ADDRESS, "Evolution and Religion"
-Dean Shailer Mathews of the University of Chicago
HYMN, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
QUESTIONS FHOM THE FLOOR.
HY~IN, "Auld Lang Syne."
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0, BEAUTIFUL MY COUNTRY!
0, beautiful my country!
For thee our father s s11 ffcr'<I ;
Ile thine a noble r care
For thee th ey toil'd and pray'd;
Than all thy wealth of commerce
Upon thy holy altar
Thy harvests waving fair;
Their willing liv es they laid;
Ile it thy prid e to lift up
Thou ha st no common birthright,
Th e manhood of th e poor;
Grand memorie s on th ee shi ne,
Be thou to th e oppressed
The blood of pilgrim nations
Fair freedom's open door.
Commingled tlows in thine,
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0, beautiful our cou ntry!
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'Round thee in love we draw;
Thine be th e grace of freedom,
The maj es ty of law,
Il e righteousn ess thy sce pter,
Justice thy diad em;
And on thy sh inin g fore head.
Be peace the crow ning gem !
-Frederick L. llosmer.
HARi<, FOR HOUR
Hark, for the hour is coming,
\Vhen your ears sha ll anointed be,
Aye I li s te n, 'tis rising.and swe pin g,
O 'er populous land and sea,
·Th e morning stars began it
IS COMING!
Lo, the burden s hall be di\'ided,
And each sha ll know hi s ow n.
And the royalty of manhood
Shall more than crown or throne,
And the flesh and blood of toilers
At the dawn of creation's birth,
And the circling sph eres go swinging
And si ngin'g it unto earth.
Shall no longer be less than gold,
And never an honest li fe
Into hopeless bondage so ld .
i
I
For the song of th e spheres is motion,
1
'
The kings are to se rve th e people,
And m ot ion and to il are life,
. And wealth is to ease th e poor :
And the idl e s hall fail and ' falter,
And learning to lift up the low ly
I
·t
I
-i
And yi e ld at the e nd of str ife
As the s tars tread paths appointed
And th e sun gives forth hi s heat,
. So the so ns of men s hall labor,
Ere th ey rest in le isure's seat.
And strength that the weak may en dqre
For we th e people a re waking
And low and hi g h s hall emp loy,
The s pl endid strengt h of nni o n,
For liberty, li fe a nd joy .
-111. D. Bab.or/.•_
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
I
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
i
I
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Plact'
.I
Doors open at 7 o'clock
/
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Auld Lang Syne.
(i~=pg~~--,=ft=t~~l=t~t~=TJtd
1. Should auld ncqnnintnnce
For
nuld
lang
-
be
for - got, Aud nev - er brought to
syne,
my denr, For
auld
lnng
-
min" t
syne,
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W o'll
tnk'
n cup
o'
kind ~ ness yet, For
2 We twn hne run nbout the brnes,
Ancl pu'cl the gownns fine;
Dut we'vo wanclered mony a weary foot,
Sin' nnld lang syne.
ror nu!d lang syne, etc,
0
GOD OF
EARTH
11
AND ALTAR.
,vcbh.")
From all that terror teaches,
0 God of earth and altar
From li es of tongue and pen, ·
Ilow down and hear our cry,
From all the easy speeches,
Our earthly rul ers falter,
That comfort crue l men,
Our peopl e drift and die;
From sa le and profanation
The wall ~ of gold entomb us ,
Of honor and the s word,
The swords of scorn divide,
I
,J
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From sl~ep and from damnation,
_lut take away our pride .
I
Deliver ·us, good L?nl,
Tie in a living teth er
The pri es t and prince and thrall,
Bind all our lives together,
Smite us and save us all;
In ire and exultation
Aflame with faith, and free,
Lift up a living nation,
A single sword lo Thee.
-G, K. Chrster/011,
i
I
\
.\
ldng - syne.
4 And there's 11, hancl, my trnsty frien'.
And gje's 11, hnncl o' thine;
And we'll tnk' 11, right gude willy-wnugb
For anld lang syne.
,
,For nnld lnng_syne, etc,
_
(To the mu sic of
Take not Thy thupder from us,
auld
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March 24. - Probably not more than twenty thousand different persons
in a year have the opportunity to watch the United States Senate in
action and certainly only a few of us at Ford Hall
have ever done this for several cons~cutive 8essions.
Happily, a good substitute for this experience is
now available in the person of Mns. EM11.y·
:MoNTAGUE BISHOP of New York who, having
sat in the Senate Gallery for many days at a time
and having studied afterwards the pages of the
Co11gressional Record, is able, with almost
startling fidelity, to reproduce the Senate and
the Senators right here on our platform. Her performance is the most fascinating com hination of e lements at once entertaining and educational which
has been originated in
twenty years. ~Vort/1
standing· ht lhze /01: !
March JI .-We hope that the old saying,"The
third time never fails," will prove to be true on this
occasion, for this is the third time we have announced that Dn. STANTON CoIT of London would
speak to us on "Am I 1
lry Brother's I{eeper.2"
On both previous occasions pressing personal niatters compelled Dr. Coit's return to England before
the date schedulecl fo•r his lecture here. This
address is well worth waiting for, however. No
less an authority than Professor Zueblin has declared Dr. Coit to be
one of the most brilliant
speakers of our time.
April 7.-JOI-IN GnAI-IAIII BnooKs of Cambridge will speak to us on "The .New Schism in
Socialism." Mr. Brooks has made a special stucly
of Syndicalism both in this country and in Et!rope
,and will very likely interpret to us the Lawrence
Strike in the light of this latest phase of Socialistic
doctrine. Inasmuch as we have · been trying to
make a Ford Hall date with this speaker eyer
since the Meetings opened, £om years ago, it goes
without saying that we regard it as · rather a triumph to secure him at
just this time on this
particular topic.
April 14. -The last meeting of the season!
And fi_ttingly the series closes, as it began, with
the religious note. The speaker will be DEAN
$HAILER MATHEWS of the University of Chicago,
and his topic, "Evolution and Religion." When
Dr. 1v1athews was last here he gave us a fascinating talk on" The Religion of the .kfodern .Afan,"
in the course of which Evolution was briefly
touched upon. So much interest did the audience
evince in this aspect of the Dean's address that we
have ever since been "saving up" the present topic
for him. And now he comes halfway across the
Continent to address us on this alludng subject.
~
15
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...
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0263
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 3/17-4/14/1911
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Mrs. Emily Montague Bishop, Dr. Stanton Coit, John Brooks, Dr. Matthews
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/10133f24f74c32f88ffad47dbceec06d.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=IhP2rAPrOofloECSGK26U0ZA8Dfc0xMlb42mTgkQ0O7Afm6%7Elh38qPXWyMLg848bCHCe8V5beNZoYaYNkZ9PTURfUj%7EI-OZO-Bu3rVKsCGH4FsHIiUSfJ-qeECi%7EdkUkwNTWytAdRlCf4XjRa4I7hqqTWn5mTHY-8cofzESMlq%7EV9v0%7EBZXCe6jTnzPOYywU2gUzdZuoRFO2oaYxWoA1Hw04qlQDSc4LAdTLND-sIbwaMbTG3bU5wVBd8zAhMqUOu5jrPIH4WariumlC7GAqzwbhjEcGhPMI2t1aBuEe9dHdBKCDsAI0AOjccrmPtEfYiRkBgFsBVgvbonw2ObhToA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
4685e827d260a78af45e7ad2c59f8444
PDF Text
Text
.
.. . . ' .
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ijull ilrrtinga
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Conducted by THE BOSTON BAPTIST SOCIAL UNION
FIFTH SEASON-1911-12
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
at
7.30 P. M.
PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY 18.
Violinist a nd Vocalist
Trombone Player
Pianist
ANTONIO MARTONE
C11AULES STICHEH ,
RICIIAilD BAHNAHD
S1tppe
"Poet and Peasant," Overture
I.
Pia no Duel by ]\flt.
RAIJNARD
and i\ln .
1\IARTONR
Jude
Song, "Bells of Seville"
2,
1\ln. . lHAHTON&
3·
i
HYll·IN, "The Coming Time."
Trombone Solo .
4·
Violin Solo, "Adoration"
Bagley
i\ln. STICIIElt
:
J
.
J\ln,
Borowsky
lllAitTONE
AnnnEss, "The Progressive Sp'irit in Politics"
·
-Ray Stannard Baker of t_hf!'IA111c1·ican 1Jfagazinc
HY!lrn, "0 God of Earth and Altar,"
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR.
I
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PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY 25.
I
.
I
MISS ETIIEL M. BISHOP
Miss RosELLA V1LLERS B1s1-ror .
-I
Soprano
Accompanist
Ger111ai11
a. "vVho Will Buy My Lavender?"
b. "After" · ·•--·
ilfrs. Beach
Hv11rn, "A Creeclless Love."
a. "Fear Not Ye, 0 Israel"
Dudley Buck
b. "The Loni Is My Shepherd"
Li1ldle
Aomui:ss , "Getting to B~ H uman"-Dr. Charles Fleischer of 13oston ,
·
· .,,
HYMN, "The Coming Time."
Q_UESTIONS FHOM THE FLOOR.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
I
• 1
Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD, Secretary for the Meetings
Office Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, St a te Hous e Hill, 3.30-4 . jo daily, except Saturdays,
Telepl!o ne, Haymarket 2247,
•
William
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COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
Charles N . Bentley
William E . Perry
Bobbs
James A. Floyd
Benjamin N. Uph a m
I
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward H . Chandler , Henry Abrahams
Rev . Edward Cummings
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
John T. Prince
Rev. Dillon Bronson, D . D.
Franklin H. Wentworth
Meyer Bloomfield
Edwin D . Mead
Russell B. Kingman
Robert A. Woods
Jame~ P . Munroe
Mrs. Glendower Evans
Mrs. Richard Y . FitzGerald
-·------- -- ''
�. ' :·
·. ,. :
..
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A
CREEDLESS LOVE,
or Prayer. 11 )
A creedless love that know s no clan,
\Ve think man cli1nbs a n endless slopeNo caste, no class, no cult but man;
Toward far-seen tablelands of hope ;
That deems today and now and here
That he, through filth and shame of sin
Arc voice nnd vl sio11 of the seer;
Still seeks th e God who speaks within;
Thnt through thi s lifted human clod
That all the years s ince tim e began
The inllow of the breath of God
• \Vork th e eternal Rise of !\Ian;
Still sheds its apostolic powers;
And all the days t hat tim e shall see
Such faith, such hope, such_love be ours.
Tend toward th e Eden yet to be.
(Music of u Swt"Cl Hour
t
Too\long our music-hungering needs
llave h eard the iron c las h of creeds.
The creecllcss lo~•e that know s no clan,
No caste, no c lass , no cult but man
Shall onward move ,,s mo\'es the s un,
And blend all hearts nnd faiths in one.
Such love with all it s quickening powers ,
Such love to Go el and man, be ours.
- Sain IValter Foss.
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PROGRAM FOR MARCH 3.
DAVIS ENsn111111.n Orrcmis-rnA oF: CoP.LEY S<tuAnn ' ScuooL OF Mus ic
(Twcnty-1\yo Picc,·s)
I
FnANK lvf. DAy1s, Conductor
1,
"March of the Priests," from 1·•Atalie"
2.
"Nazareth"
Gowwd
:Gouuod
HYMN, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
I{ela Bela
"Lustspiel Overture "
''Lost Chord" .
Cornet Solo uy JouN llnl DGE,
_ HY111N,
Ju.
''The Message of Christianity to Socialists"
. -Rev. J. H. Franklin, D. D.
11
Labor Hymn of th~ Coming Day."
,Q_UESTIONS FH0lll
THE
FLoon.
PROGRAM FOR MARCH
Mns. SA~HIN EL1zAnETH KnnLJN
Mi ss Bnssm TUFTS
· Two l\1o,iements from Sona.ta
10.
Clarinetist
Accompa nist
Brahms
For C larinet and Piano
· HY~rN, "The Coming Time." ,
Julian Edwardes
"Romance"
Aomrnss, "The Claim of the Decalogue on the l\'1od ern Man"
-Rabbi Samuel Schulman of New York
•
HYMN, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
Qui;;:sTIONS
l'HOM
THE- FLOPR,
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
F.ORD .HALL, car. ·Bowdoin Stree
• Doors open at 7 o
/--
Sullivan
AoDirnssns,· "The·Appcal of Socialisn1 to Christian People"·
- John E. Frnnkli
I>'
I
Pface
1
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~-
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·/
1,
.',
THE COMING TIME.
(Tune: u Grecn1nnd's Icy lHountains!')
And is the time approaching,
By wise men long foretold,
Wh en all shall dwell together,
United in one fold?
When all men shall be brothers
F'orsaking narrow creed,
And each for all do se rvice
,\ s ev' ry one hath need!
Shall Je,v and Gentile meeting
From many a distant shore,
Upon one common altar
Their common love outpour?
Shall all that now divides us
Remove and pass away,
Like s hadows of th e morning
Before the bla ze of day?
Shall all that now unites us
!\-lore sweet and lasting proYe ,
A closer bond of 11nion,
In a blest land of love?
Shall war be learn'd no longer :
Shall strife and tumult cease ,
All ea rth a blessed kin g dom
Of harmony and peace?
-Ja11e Borthwick . .
LABOR
.
HYMN
OF THE COMING
DAY,
(Air: "John Ilrown's }jody.")
Ou,'. eyes liave see n th e g lory of the coming of the day
,vhen all shall g ive th e ir hones t work and lake th e ir honest pay ,
And pov erty, the social Cnrse, be .wholly s we pt :nvayThat day is marching on!
CH O RU S,
Glory, glory, hnl -le-lu-jah ! Glory, glory, hal-le-lu-jah I
Glory, glory, hrtl -le-111-jah ! That day is marching on I
\Ve ha ve see n it in th e writing of a tho11 sand m en who know,
\Ve have heard it in th e meeting where the crowding workers go,
\Ve ha,·e felt it in the people's heart , where all great 1110,·cments growThat day is marching on!
The clay wh en every man on earth s hall fln(l his fullest power,
\Vh c n Mother love s hall ring th e world and bri,ig a nobl er hour,
,\\'hen every baby born s hall li ve and blosso m like a tlowerThat day is marchin g on!
C n o nus.
The end of fort and battles hip! The e nd of gun and swordJ
The encl of shame and mi sery and vi ce and crime abhorred I
The lime for 11s to bui.ld on earth the Kingdom of the Lord.I
That day is marchin g on!
-Chnrlotlc Pcr!.·i11s Gilman.
d·
GOD OF EARTH AND AL TAR,
(To the mu s ic
0 God of earth and altar
Bow, ~~wn anc.1 hea r our cry ,
O ur ea r t hl j· rul ers falter,
Our peo pl e drift and di e;
Th e wa ll s of go ld entomb u s ,
Th e swo rd s o f scor n divide,
Take n ot Thy thund er from u s,
But take away our pride.
o(
11
\-V.cblJ ,'!) , i
• · . .. · · · ·
From all that terror teaches ,
From lie s of tong;,c nnd j1cn,
From all th c_easy speeches
'
That co mfort cruel men,
'From sa le and profanation
'\
Of honoi· .and t h e s word, ..
From _slcei>. 'a nd fro111 ;1amnntlon, ,
Deliver u s, good Lord.
· .
Ti e iii a liv ing tether ·
Th'c pri est and prin ce and thrall;
l3ind all our li ves togeth er,
Smite us a nd save 11 s all;
\
\
In ire and ex11ltati o n
Allarn e with faith, and free,
Lift up a living nati on ,
A single sword to Thee.
-G. I{, Che.,ter/011.
\
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-- --
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.
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~
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February ·2s. - D11. C11 .. ... ES FI.EISCIIER,
whose "Sunday Commons" · arc 6 ,er..:j' enjoyed
by many of this audience, will speak for the first
•· time on . our platform, the subject he has chosen
being Bobbie Burns' contention that "A :rvlan's a
_
Ma11 for a' That." 'vVe have phrased it" Getting
to Be .IIim1an," but
that gives rio hint of the
stirring call to richer
human brotherhoocl
,vhich the address is
sure to embody.
'
l·
March 3.-There arc to be two speakers, both
of whom, rather oddly, bear the honored name uf
Franklin (though they are in 110 way related), hail
from Colorado Springs, proudly declare themselves
loyal Baptists and strongly advocat~ Christian
Socialism. Jo11N Enny FnANKLIN is a milliollnaire eager to spend the money . he has marle in
spreading the doctrine which means so much to
him, He will discuss "7 he Appeal oj Soct'alism
to Christia1t People." Rnv. JA111n:s B, FnANKLIN,
D. D., was a pastor in Cripple Creek at the time
of the terrible .strike and labor troubles of 1903.
From that ~xperience and from his years of work
in Leadvil,e, the other great mining camp of
~olorado_,. he kn?ws inti1~rntely the clemoralizrng com)1t1ons which exploited workers are often
forced to face; yet he believes ,thal the Church
can greatly help in all this and in his address to
us he will present" The Jlllessage of Clzristianity
to Socialists."
·
.,
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r···. ·
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March 10. - RA11n1 SAMUEL Sct1u1.111AN of
New Yo!lc; ·whom we always hear gladly at Ford
Hall and whose eloquent and scholarly lectures on
social and ethical themes are clarion calls to
righteousness both in the body politic and in our
personal lives, will speak of" The Claim of the
Decalogue on the ivfodern ]\-fan.'' Here is an
addre~s you will not soon forget!
March 17, - No topic is more befo re us, this
winter, than the relation of the news paper to
things as they are - and things as they should be.
We shall be very glad, therefore, to be informed
by a successful publisher of an honest sheet,
JAMES ScuEn~m1u10nN of the Detroit Times,
concerning" The. Ethics of a J\ fe wspaper 1
1/an."
~
IS
t-
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0262
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 2/18-2/25/1911
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Dr. Charles Fleischer
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
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· Conducted by THE BOSTON BAPTIST SOCIAL UNION
t& 00 my , own?
ne
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MRs. PoL PLAN CON
. Violinist
Accompanist
Miss CoNSTANCE FREEMAN
"Barcarolle"
Goldsteiu
. , Sch;tbert
"The Bee"
HYMN, ' 1 The Coming Time/'
Schubert
"Serenade" .
JCela B ela
"The Son of the Puszta"
ADDREss, 11 America's Influence upon the Older Nations"
-William T. Ellis of Philadelphia
HYMN, "Hark, for the Hour Is Coming." _
QUESTIONS FH0M THE FLOOR . .
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY 28.
1.
2.
3.
. Basso
A. R. FRANK ..
GEORGE MENDALL TAYLOR
Accompanist
"Lord God .of Abraham''
.Aie ndelssohn
"Invictus"
Bruno H uhn
HY111N, "My Country 'Tis of Thee."
"Pilgrim's Song"
Tschaikowsky
ADDRESS, "Science and Immortality"
-Prof. James Hervey Hyslop,
Secretary American Society for Psychical Research
HYMN, "Choose Ye, This Day."
QUESTIONS .FROM TI-iE FLOOR,
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD, Secretary for the Meetings
I
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ok up the qu estion 0
d m edlumlstlo Ph c no
e d What th e res ult s
Ot oases lnves tli;u tcrl b
e , y tor Psyc hfca J R es,
h :•dblJ ccn lnveM ll ga tecl
\ll thefurIn dmun y Hild l·
c ea th
I
1e o1
·
<ltlH
l1 uclnn t1 011s wer e fr o ,
d eud , H e d efin ed th,
, or cons etous a c l) v
1
nt or rorl!e . ,,
~t fn o r d hrn1·y m edtu ,
. ,. .n_
eurly B<> mu ch fl'a
11 ,','ftl•l'fu , and li e ..
rberg wh en h u s al ci"
u no t buc n li1v c1-. t1va 1
';', II Y h e Would jus t ~a ,
fraud 11 0 n nylJo<)y 01
·~
aee .!)t' llllss Qu entl "
,,n l• plscopa l bis hop n
,
ough wh om li e hl' ,'J ·
,with Oo vrg 0 P c llu~m
la tter .with D r HI
ll ha d a lHo s poken
l'Oll!fh llfrs P ipe,·. n .
t Mrs . V at'J•ol, th e ; :
olnr and m cdlnm
wJth tne la t,/ F :·(,/
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:r
w•;
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ln ed ·_ th e "ll-lvlnl\ty l
7t ch le u s ua l!)• fur,
1
< u m e on !h e i;ro un c
r 1v 1 1 t'nc t s that c a n,
a
Y m ea ns ot' fra ud "
belf e ves thu t s uch
, a ned by t ele pa th)' "
ex pl a in ed th a t l~l,
1ylng wns an a ccept c,
I1 Y be tween the · d e ,;,
,wae not. 'I'ho fac ts'
ve lh o -e xist ence or 1
In con clu s Jon , h o
c Ve Phlloeoph y h as
n. \Vo muHt 11rovc
~ beyond stock brccu i
r~
lift·
Iona asti ed Prof. ·Hys lt
fi eld . H e ro iu·o a fo ·
and 8P Uco forms o
A. I don ' t l<now, an
!l]O
~o you think of 11
il,Jo t
h onomena ? A. 'l'n bl e 1
al Phenonienn, nncl 111
will nevor ·prov o th e /
spirit aft er d e uth J
aJ , f! Ot n r> td r:a l 1 o1
hy
~r
on t th e spirit s co11
well 11s You'/ A
Tl
n m odlum. ,
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r-•: r am juet as 1111
Office Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays,
Telephone, H a ym ~rket 2247
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P-"I nm not n m edf
ONE'S OWN MASTER
ma:_ hne been oonll'Oi l
n
n force outsftlo' 9 , h
It is poss ibl e to put th e cause of "the
prese nt unres t " into a s ingl e se nte n ce o f
t,..:e nty-eight word s and thirty-fiv e sy llables , and we are g oing to do it. H e re it is :
1-Vhat men w ant is th e cerlai11ty that
every ma11 willi ng l o work shall g rt a
chance to work, a11d g et f or him.<c{l the
full results of h,:, 7t• or!.-.
Observe : cerlai11ty ; n o pa nic, s trike ,
lockout , di s mi ss al, s pree , whim, m a nipulat io n , combine, tru s t, o r s pec ulation
to pre ve nt it.
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ot tlv1.1 co n8eJon
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, clou ene 8 8 , • Not?;'~ 'o,, ~•
con solo,us nes,. f,
nt lln, l 1•l o n t lhlnl,
,
o1·< er to PJ'OV(
1 O -1111 fndl\cfdu a J ll O ll I
AT 7.30 P. M.
2.
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th~~ ~::}~•~~>tic 1Jt n to C:
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY
01 ·
0
FIFTH SEASON-1911-12
,,
ll. UH !,
:vnrl:'ot ~~hlch ! own
:i Wo rld Is my am
~Id do I ' kn,,w a n y
Obsen·e: every man-ditcher, kitc he n
maid, coll ege pres ide nt , fir e man, bank
director, farm er, la wye r, middl e ma n,
break e r boy, manufacture r, Roc kefe ller,
J.P. Morgan, John Smith, l\fary S mith,
Bridge t O'Sulli van.
O bse n ' e: /he full results - wha t hi s.
work is worth to the wo rld, head wo rk,
hand w ork , organi z ing, cli s tribulin g,.
transp o rti n g , g rowin g , makin g , boss in g .
That is th e probl e m. Wh en it is so lved
"the prese nt unres t" will cea se , nnd n oL
till th en .-Chn'., t ia11 E11dca1· or 11·0,ld.
e do about It ? ,\ 1,, 11
atudy lh e tac ts, · 1•1i'e
th oro lo ho JnveR tlsn ll c
o •to know whut th o 81
Ice-must w e w o,·J, fo r
·b A. · I havo n ove1 11
·
out It.
er-"'l'h en Jou l<now u
an I do,"
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Ellis Says That. Spirit · of .1 75
1
s Abroad in ·the JJ:ast . • -: 1 ,-.
:
the '
·• lous
,
Ford
lng, I
fluen
• East,
"Tl
"ls Jr
Itic o:
coun1
unreE
prlce1
slant
J
~- . ···, . ·
and rumors of wa~s, the iatior
d social and !Political conti'o-·
ch are prevalent. indicate that
~astern I world Is hi a. '' turmoil
laused by · the eame spirit and
Lmlbltlons which brought · about
ian Revolution-the d'llelre: !or
1ua1Jty and brotherhood.
So
lam T. Ellie In an address at
1!16t evening upon his return
tens!~ trip through the ·orlent,
econc
re," said the spealcer, "man le
may ·
d under the heel of oppressionI Russi
ustrlal and social. Think of Itlast C
Tu1·lcey have a constitutional
glnnli
t, and even R)l&sla will at la.st
"In
,e citadel o! absolutism[
ture ,
·, has ·1ald her grip on the whole
well
m ,I tlnd A:merlcan flags every~
decla1
roam-In · little out-of-the-way
the g
ey are not displayed for business ·
'j l
·
'rhey testify to the heart-love
mowi
lndus1
t !or this country. While I was · '. are et
.
tubout through the world I heard
rl=n history quoted than I ever
'large
A.merlca.. our- heroes are being
Bagdf
1eroes In other countries and the · _ _ State!
o! foreign nations are being
land
the principles of Americanism.
· than
working out of the probiem of
throu1
1lch sweeps· the entire · worid,
, jca, ti
nd .A,merlca must work together . I ed to
.and. .A;merlca le the promised
: labore
ts talking _ ith the chief rabbi o« . \ 0 f ti1
w
oout the Zionist movement. He
,
elleve In it. He said that the
I other
'd never return to Palestine, He
: mo~t
that 1, t_ elr · p~omlsed- l~nd ·.was
h
: brougl
,. :, :; ,
· .\ : ~ '. .. ~. ~ ·:\• :' ·
the s,
.. ·....· -~ '' ~·
,and It
shall ·
v• - \ .
own I:
~ world.
· · The
'is Pro
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:chlcal
; .-,.i mce i
0 Goll of earth nnd altar
Bow down and h ea r our c ry ,
Our ea rthly rnlers falter,
Our peo pl e drift and di e;
Th e wall s of gold e ntomb u s ,
The s words of scom divid e ,
Take not Thy thunder from us,
But take away our prid e .
13,i;)j.JNI;) W~LD
\(~v,·
, •: / '; Eilis; -' ,;: wo;';rl ~;l'ide
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CHOOSE YE, THIS
Th en to s ide. with Truth is ·noble wh en we share her wretchc.d crust,
E'er her cau se bring fam e and profit and 'tis prosperous to be just.,
Th e n it is the bra,·e man choo ses; whil e the coward s tand s nslde,
And th e multitudes make drtu e of the faith they had denied.
N ew o ccas ion s teac h new duties; tinie makes anci ent good uncouth;
Th ey mu s t upward still and o nward who would kee p abreast of truth;
Lo, befo re us gle1~m her lamp-fir es I we ourseh·es must pilgrimR he, ·
Nor atte mpt th e Future' s portal with the Pas t's blood -rnstcd key.
-James H1use/l l.ot111/I,
PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY • 4.
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Miss MARY \V1NTIIROP SnACKFOllD • Violinist
Miss JESSIE \.Y. S11A~KFOilD
• Accompanist ' '
"Me ditation" from "Thais"
1
lfassc11el
"Rondo" fro;n Sonata in D Major
Hv111N, "My Country 'fis of Thee."
"Cavatina".
ADDilESS, "A Living- vVage"
·
Rev. John A. Ryan, D.
Beethoven
,
D.,
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of St,
Ra.fJ
'Paul, Mlnm ·
Hvr,rn, "Hark, for the Hour Is Coming."
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLoon.
,,·n~·
0
DAY.
Once to ev'ry man and nation comes the moment to decide
.
In the s trife of Truth with Falsehood, for the good or e ,·i l side;
Some g rea t ca u se , God 's new Mess inh, offering each the bloom or blight,
And th e ch o ic;e goes by fore Yer 'twixt that darkness and that light. ,·
•
sociolog1st, ih 'J1is · talk Snndny
Foi·µ ludi, snld tl;nt ·· the ··influ.li ····· 11fi~.! l.~s .. .. . . . nccount• . . .. ,
I
. the ·. desire . fol; li,berty. now
i,ng, H~ei'( .-(11,l ,l\round: the ,- ~ioli~.... ·
'I
1()Je, world is todny cryi11g . for
1d : frnternit~· ~ he <lerlnretl. Even
ne - fount! 't\ic Ame rican flo.g
he'•
.11nd . eheri~_e<l hy · nntives beh
tl,1cir npp_eci, ti.on . l)lld love for
r n
i<lcitJS . . ; ••·-'.' . .'/', .' ' : I . ' •;· ·
,
io{1s :' ~ric;1tnl , •~o~ htries, . wh~ie
d . ·rc11tnries· women .have · enr! l' · from · the , wells in crockery
1tld, )1 · tl1e .,.:ont~ii1icpv ie11,1:rj'.
.alf
~
11dru<l . Oil tin e(lns.:.' • · . ,- .
1 ,.hh· 'said, the politi.ca l. tlnrest
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~- ·- Its ,.. nrg11m ents · with ·· .i1leas
1to11 , nt\d , ~h,e ·Cn~1bridge sl'hool
,·s,'., ).'\t ,.hn1•e henr.d ·11fore ':Ameri-:
•rr :,quotcd in Asia thnn I ·ever
IC ' Uniteli States,", he decliirell.
From all that terr or teaches,
From lie s of tongu e and pen,
From all the ·ensy speeches
That co mfort cruel men,
From sale and profanation
Of honor and th e sword,
From s leep and from damnation, •
Deliver u s, good Lord .
-G. K. Che.<tertou,
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AND AL TAR.
Tie in a living tether
The pri es t nnd prin ce and thrall,
Bind all our lives to gether,
Smite u s and save us all;
In ire and exu ltation
Allam e with faith, nnd free,
Lift up a living nntion,
A single s word to Thee.
~1\:Aii¼t>tA~ .. ""'.\ .
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EARTH
(To the mu sic of" ,vcbb ")
Y\'~~.:J.t-· ·
, ta.ry o
GOD OF
PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY
I •
· 2.
Soprano
MRS. LESTEil M. BARTLETT
Accompanist .
M1ss ·CAnllIE L. HoLLEY- •
Group of Shakespea re's Songs- ..
Ar11e ·
a. "\.Yhere the Bee Sucks" .
Schuber/
b. "\VholsSylvia?".
Srh116erl
c. "Hark, Hark, the Lark!"
HYMN, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
Group of Old En g lish Songsa. "The Lass with the D e licate Air"
Arne
b. "Phyllis"
Whelpley
c . "Oh, for a Breadth of the Moorlands"
Whelpley
Ann1rnss , "The vVorld Outlook for. Temperance"
-Mr. Harry Phillips of London
1-IYMN, "Choose Ye, This Day."
QU ES TIONS P-ll0 ~I TIIE F1.oorr.
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THE COMING
And is the time approaching,
lly wise men long foretold,
Wh e n all s hall dwe ll together,
United in one fold?
" ' he n all me n s hall b~ broth e rs
Forsaking narrow creed,
And each for ill! do se rvi ce
As ev' ry one hath need!
' .j
TIME
S hall J e w and Gentile mee ting
From many a di s tant s hore ,
Upon on e com mon altar
The ir common love outpour?
S hall nil that now di vi des 11 s
Remove and pass a way,
Like s h:i.low s o.f the morning
Before tl; e bla ze of day ?
-Shall all that now unite s 11 s
l\fore s weet and ia sting prm·e ,
A closer bond of union,
In a blest land of love?
Shall war be lea rn'd no longer,
Shall s trife and tumult cea's e,
All ear th a blessed kin gdom
Of harmony and peace?
- Jan e Bor//n;;icA·.
,,,
MY COUNTRY 'TIS OF TH EE
Let mu sic swe ll the breeze,
My country! 'ti s of th ee ,
And ring fr o m all the trees
Sweet land ot lihe rty ,
Sweet freedom' s so n g;
Of thee I s ing ;
Let mortal tongu es awak e ,
Land wh ere my fathers died,
Let all that breath e partak e ,
Land of the. pilgrim's pride,
From ev;;.y n'i'~11ntain s id e ,
Let rocks th e ir silence break,
Let free,jo lll rin g!
The sound prolong.
Our father's God! to Th ee,
Author of libe rty,
To th ee we s in g;
Long m ay our land be bright
With freedom's holy li g ht ;
Protect 11s by _
'.r'hy might,
.Great God, 011r K- ng !
i
My native co untry, th ee ,
Land of th e . nobl e fre e ,
Thy name I love;
I love thy ro ck s and ·rill s ,
Thy wood s and templed hill s;
My hear t with rapture thrill s ,
Like that above.
'.
-S. F. Smith.
HARi<, FOR HOUR IS COMING!
Hark, for the hour is c·oming,
Lo, the burden s hall be dil'id ed,
,vhen your ears shall anointed be ,
And each shall know hi s own.
Aye ! li s ten, 'ti s ri sing a nd swelling,
And the roxalty of manhood
Shall 1i1ore than crown or throne,
O'er populous land and . sea ,
And the fl es h and l)lood of toile rs
The ,norning s tars began it
At th e dawn of creation's birth,
Shall no longer be less than gold,
And the circling spheres go swinging And neve r an honest life
And singing it unto-ear th.
(
Into hope less bondage sold .
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For th e song of t h e s ph er es is motion,
And motion and toil are life,
And the idle s hall fail and falter,
And yield al the encl of stri fe .
;As the stars tread paths appointed
½.nd th e s un gives forth hi s hea t,
So th e so n s of men shall labor,
Ere they res t in le is ure's seat. .
The kings are to serve th e peo ple,
And wealth is to ease the poor.
And learning to lift 11p the lo wly
And strength that the we ak may e ndure
For we th e· peopl e are waking
And low trnd high s h a ll e mpl oy ,
Th e s pl e ndid strength of uni o n,
For liber ty, li fe and joy.
-111. D. B abcock.
THE1 MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
..NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HA:LL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
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. yhlo!\' 9 111,/: tii~ •i;,{la.t ··questlo,
hethe1 ' conscfp,usnosil'• ' l)Wefstccl I
~ t/i and •It wcu, · Op ' td ··sclcncr ~
,.. that cl(he1•., ft ctf<l, or 'that II :..
th111
ne
i:'
t In theE of ;hlch t own me;1•
world la my nm most
. How do I lmc,w any ,·ones lf.e~lde my ' own ? I mei·eJy
Axr,it~nco ot' tll,ll.t consciousness
,
11 the oatalyptlo Htulo ll ts
wn tlhal many l>OO r>lu ,11av..,
con8c ousnes8, ' Now h, the· n1 :t
sure thut consclousn e·s,i Is n ;1:
at death. I <lou't think he ls
t. ~\It In orcl er to Pl'0Ve this
_
,/aim an lnfl\Vldual soul unrl
n took up the question of upand · med iumistic ph e nom e na
la ln ed what th e results had
360 cases lnves tlgn terl by th e
oclety tor Psychical Res·oa r c h
os had been Inves tiga ted fro 11 ;
hours befo1·c cl ea th a nd It was
n whetl1er In m a ny cases th ~
hal111clna t101rn we re from th e
th e dead. He dcllned th e soul
·ea m ot conscious activity-a
s point of forc e. "
that In ordina ry med lunisli ' r>
s not _nearly Su mu c h fraud ~"
nn d w,'R le rla, and he sco1·ed
sterberg when he · said ll'fm c
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lu.\u not bee n h1v.Js tt in ted at
onull~ h e would just a 8 soon
h a f1 aud as anybody else. He
case of 11-Ilss Quentin the
'?f ,Ill Episcopa l bishop and a
tnroug h whom h e httd 00111 •
I! Wllh Cleu1·ge Pelham uhd
tnc latter with Dr Hlchar,1
.He h ad also spoken with
tlirough Mrs Pi per. He c lt ccl
of Mrs .Verrol, the famou s
chol a r and med ium, who hacl
cat0<J with t,1e lat e · F,·iederlcl·
.b~L
.
la ln ed th e "triviality of th e
which is us ua lly furnished
mediums on- \h e ground that
trivial facts that cannot be
by m ea ns of fraud uncl no
ma n beli eves tha t such facts
xplalned by telepa thy." ,
1·
ex pla ined · th a t telepathj,
e liyh,1g wa _ an accepted tac t,
s
athy be tween the dead and
'. wa s not. 'l'h e facts would
1
·ove th e . ex istence ot a pcrtl ty. In conoluslon , he said ·
·uctlvo_ philosophy has eve 1
:
an. 1N e must prove th a t
~~ beyond stock breeding In
lions asked Prof. -Hyslop cove fi eld. He1·e are a -few:
Im a and ,;pace forms ot con? A. I don't kno\v• an>•thlng
1
do you think· ot .t11ble tipping
ph enom ena? A. '.l'able tipping·
cal phenomen!l, und physi cal
will nevor prove th e exi s t- .
e aplrt t after <.l eu th. It is a ·
al, not a physlcnl problem
don't th e splrlls come a11d i
well a s yon'/ A. Beca use I
a m edium. ,
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r- ' \I um just as much as
I
op-"I am not -~ medium a t/
0
man hns been· controlled tor
a · torce ontslde· 9t hlrnsolt
e do ahout It? ,\. 1•1n ·low 1;
study th e tacts. '!'here Is a
the re to be lnves tli:;-11led. • ,
o to know what the spiritual
ce-must we work tor a Jtv.
A. I have never troubled
bout•It.
r-"'.l'h en you lmow no ·more
11n I do,"
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_Ford Ball: Meetings i .
:S TO :A.ME.:iu-, "t+·"',.:.. ·: \: · W
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jour
-' ,
. i . ~ ,l.
•.· the
tya That. ~,p.lrit of .17 · ·· lous
fa ·the East .·· -· •· 1 , /Ford
:
, .·
' ·
' lug,
ors of wars, the· iatior
fluen1
'
and 'P0lltlcaJ'· ccinti·o~· · · EastJ
revalent Indicate that
j "Tl
·orld Is hi ' Ii. ., turmoil
"ls Ir
1
' the eame spirit and
I tic oJ
whl-ch · brought · about
Icounl
Iutlon-the desire · tor
unreE
I
nd brotherhood, so
prlcet
:Ills In an addrMs at
Istant:
nlng upon pis return
·Ip thz·ough the 'Orlent; •
econc
may
the speaker, "man Is
he heel of oppressionI Russi
d social. Think Of ItI last C
have a cohstltutlona.l
glnnh
en Rpssla_wlll at last
"In
ot absolutism!
, ture ,
.•well :
her grip on the whole
LmerJcan flags every~
declal
1 little out-ot-the-way
the gi
: displayed for business
.tlfy to the hea.rt-love
i1mowi
country, While I was
I lndusj·
,ugh the world I heard • are e
large
)ry quoted than I ever
Oui- hel'oes are being
Bagd
other countries and 'the · ◄ State
, nations are being Im-'
land
than
:!pies of Americanism,
out ot the problem of
throu
ps the entire · worid,
, jca, t
·a must work together . ! ed to
erlca Is the promised
I b
with the chief rabbi o( ' a or~
llonlst movement. He
of t
it. He said that the
other
iturn to Palestine. He
moM
· promised. land wa11
broug
1
the s 1
._,. :··,
. -·and l~
shall I
own I:
, worldj
i The
Is Prd
, tary o
.chlcal
·, ence E
,, , .
January 28.-PnoF. JAMns ,H, H)'sr.op
Secretary of the ·American So~iety tor
Psychical Research, will speak to ~ on
u•
"Science and Immortality." Since fbe
death of Prof. William James of Cambrldte
Dr. Hyslop has been recognized as the fort•
most American exponent of the prloclpl I
upon which the scientific investigation
spiritistic phenomena is based. Tlie work
to whic):i he is giving his life was onct
characterized by Gladstone ns II the mo
important which is being clone in the world I"
Come and learn why Gladstone . thought '°•
I
I
I
February 4.-Those who remember the
very interesting addre"'ss which Father Gasson
gave us here last year will be glad to know
that REV. JoHN A. RYAN, D. D., Professor
of Moral Theology and Economics in the
St. Paul (Minn.) Seminary for Catholic
Clergy, will come to us on February 4th with
an addre ss on '' The Living J,Vage." Dr.
Ryan has made a special study of the labor
question, both here and abroad, and to his
book, ''A Liviilg Wage/' has been accorded
the distinction of a Frerich translation.
Attention is called to the fact that, on
account of a gathering to be held in Ford
Hall late on · the afternoon of this cfote the,
doors will probably not be ope'n ed until 7.20
im,tt·ad of at the usual time.
0
February l l. -Mn. HAllltV Pmw
of London will address us on "Th• 011/IHJ
for Temperance." Mr, Phillipi bu ha
extensive and unusual opp!)rtunlty to atudy
from the inside, industrial · <levclopmenta ID
the Old World and in . the New 1ml he
brings with him a particularly clear muaa1
con·c ~rning the relationship bttwteD th .
things and the onward sweep of ·tho temper•
ance mo.Jement. He hns been calltd th
John B. Gough of England and' i• 111"1 t
possess much of that great Mnuachuaett1
man's power in word-painting and In movln
his audience at will to laughter or lb.lt11n,
iii' 'Jiis 'talk ·snhdny
snid thnt the '·influ-
'~1,~~
~vn~· nccount-
rc for libe1'ty _ now
ill . nround • the-glob~,- ........
is t~dny cry ing for
:,,·; he dcclnred. Even
,_ tj,c Amcricn.n ,llug
ii
s hed hy nntivcs be!cin~ion nnd, love · for
. .''
•,:· .. ~:
;
. , ... ,
:nl ·. ·~o~htries, .. where
s
wom cll .hn.ve ·. c·n r-
c •well~ in crockcrv
1c ." :omi:-ii' Ttqw ,·ca,1:r;i'.
,ill CQ.118, '
.'
.
the p~litira I tinrcst
nm cnts · with ·· .illens
he ·Cn111I1ridge · Sl'hool
hcnr.d lliore 'AmcriAsiit thnn ·1 :ever ' .
3tutes,';i
declii.i~u:
i
in
he·
'~'k ,. . ·, ·. , :,~
...
'
.
1) • • ~ ·!.;' '
'°'·\\\~
February 18.-RAY STANNAHD BAKEH
of the American kfagazine will speak to us .
of "The Progressive Spirit in Politics."
Mr. Baker is a close student of social and
political movements in this country and it is
significant that he should choose a suhje_
ct
so strikingly similar to that which Norman
Hapgood- recently treated here. Evidently
men wit.h their ears to the ground feel that
the ''Progressive Spirit" is a thing to be
reckoned with, these days.
~•s
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0261
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 1/21-1/28/1911
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Prof. James H. Hyslof
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/4689d3fce33a71d49f0c330145bc0856.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=CeMHOD5L3BHZfT96ThCwdosWMSfcznbe1G9Gzuu%7E33psdtbP0HtQz7cY1Xq7Lo7bkRnx2GWXmIaA4B0K4cbhGKb2PFciNR8VwLmWVZygg-mpAe9b298k%7EWIreaF0elLFKF5N2UFtjJ%7ESt-v6EOW2bkO%7E0NYTq0KfsMLWRHEEAHI9r2dfKj5x5tUetwJebS3tICs56ZzQQY1UYqwip7bfbhNdytWi-X3UhnzcSz9tcE0ofSzWJUxXoS7kGR9uuc--%7ErHZIpfNCmRyMRiZnjyfRPGOKXHZv8VWmpdO3OCrXbvDoEUABnsU2UYBw2j0Dt8tWgKDuR%7EG8No41WVOB4kFvg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
e831ee428e7fb7a6580e76c2d87ec787
PDF Text
Text
,,.
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'
1J1nrh 1!1all
Conducted by THE BOSTON BAPTIST SOCIAL UNION
FIFTH SEASON-1911-12
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
PROGRAM FOR DECEMBER 24.
lI
'!
I,
2.
3.
• Lyric Soprano
Mns. CAllROLL ·J. SwAN
. Accompanist
Mns. KATHARINE FoRJSTALL.
H.J. Stewart
"See, Amid the Winter's Snow"_.
Nlargaret R. Lang
"Day is Gone';
HYMN, "Battle H _
ymn ·of Women."
"Old Sacred Lul~a~y''. ·
• Samuel Li'ddle
ADDRESS, "Th~ Nation's lluman Resources" · .
· ··
-Prof. Zueblin
Hvr.rn, "Labor Hymn."
.
t ••
.
Q_uESTlONS FROM THE FLoO_ .
R
PROGRAM FOR DECEMBER 31.
RussEp, B. KINGMAN
Mns. R. B. KINGMAN
"Serenade" ·.
'Cellist
Accompanist
Haydn
Hnrn, "Riog qut, Wild Bells."
AoDREss,· "Wanted: A Moral Renaissance"
-Rabbi Wise
HYMN, "0 God of Earth and Altar."
Q_UESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR,
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Mis~ MARY C. CRAWFORD, Secretary for the Meetings
p!lice Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, State House HIii, 3.30-4.30 dally, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket ·2247
Charles N. Bentley
William J. Hobbs
COMMIT.TEE IN CHARGE
Benjamin N. Upham
William E. Perry
James P. Roberts
Harry P. Bosson
I
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Russell B. Kingman
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly Mrs. Susan W. FitzGerald
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
George B. Gallup
James P. Munroe
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
Meyer Bloomfield
Henry Abrahams
Frariklin H. Wentworth
Robert A. Woods
Rev. Dillon Bronson
Rev. Edward Cummings
John T. Prince
Edwin D. Mead
'
-
(
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I
I
B"-TTLE HYMN
OF
WOMEN
.,
-'
..I
Oh, their dreams shall grow in splendor
Till each s leeper wakes and stirs,
Till she breaks from old traditions nnd
is free.
And th e world shall rise and render
Unto \Voman what is hers,
And welcom e in th e race thnt is to be.
They are waking in the c ity, ·
Th ey are waking on the farm,
They are waking in the boudoir and
th e mill;
And th eir hearts are full of pity
As they so und the loud alarm
·To the s leepers who in darkness slumber still.
!
!
They are waking, waking, waking,
In the East a nd in the We t;
They are throwing wide the windows
to tlrn sun;
And they see the dawn is breaking, .
And th ey quiver with unres t,
For th ey know their work is waiting
lo be done.
Unto " 'o man, God the !\faker
Gave th e secret of His plan;
·
It is wi-itte n out in cipher on her sou l.
From the darkness you must take her,
To the li g ht of clay, 0 Man I
\Vould you know the mighty meaning
of the scro ll .
In the guarded harem prison,
Where th ey s moth er under veils,
And aH echo es of the world are walled
away,
Though tl1e sun has not yet risen,
Yet the ancient darkne ss pales,
And · the sleepers. in their slumber
dream of day.
CHORUS:
Joy, joy, joy, they nre awaking, ·
They are com ing to the light.
Let us each do all we can
For the Brotherhoo d of Man . ,
And for \VoMAN s truggling upward
Out of night .
-Ella Wheeler Wilco.~. .
CHOOSE YE, THIS
DAY.
Once to ev 'ry mrin and nation comes the moment tci decide
In the strife of 'Truth with ·Falsehood, £.cir the ·good o r c\'1/ s'fde;
Some great cause, God's new Messia h, offering each the bloom or bllght,
And the choice goes by forever 'twixt that darkn ess and that light,
.
,tit11
Then t ~ sid~
Truth is noble when we share her wretched crust; ·
E'e r her cause bring fame and profit and ' tis pro s perous to .be· just. .. '
Then it is the brave man chooses, while the coward stands aside, .. ·.. · ..•
And the multitudes make vii-tue of the faith they hnd tle'i1i'ed. ,
, ··•·..
'
New occasions leac h new duties; time m~kes anci~nt g- ~~I 11n~out'1;·/ r~ , , ..
o
They must upward st ill and onward who would Jceep abreast of truth I · ';,
Lo, before us gleam her lamp-fires! we ourselves must pllgrimR he,
Nor attempt th e Futurt!'s portal with the r:ast's blood-rusted key.
•t
-James Rtmel/Low,11.
HYMN
OF THE TOILERS,
(To ' ·Italy")
'
./
I
0 nation strong and g reat
For thine own honor's sake
Hear thou our call;
\Ve are thy children . too,
From year to year we grew.
Silent and patient lhro'
Darkness nnd toil,
Out from the de pths of crltne
We've tri ed in vain to climb
Where nothing lee.I;
When life and justice askcil
Still further down were cast,
E'en sobs were hu s hed nt Inst
And hope ~eemed denc.l.
But now, 0 nation stro ng
To thee must truth belong,
· Crown thou th e right;
\Ve are thv c hildren s till
Wm·king ~vith might and will
Ne'er resting till we fill
The world ,vith light.
-Rose A lice Cleveland. .
1
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
,,
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street 'a nd Ashburton Place- .
Doors open at 7 o'clocl.i···· .
. ,.
J• '
�b
.
,' ·o
' , '; ·
,
OOD OF EARTH AND AL TAR,
y. ',-'
(To thu mu•lc of'' \Vcbb ")
.: 0 God of enrth ·and nltnr . . ·
l•'ro m 11II that terror tea ches,
From lies of tongue and pen,
Dow down nnd hear our cry, ·
Our enrthly rulcra falter,
From 1111 the easy _
speeches
Our people drift nnd die; •
Thnt comfort crnel men,
The wnlla of gold entomb us,
Froni snle and profanation
The 1word1 of scorn divide,
Of honor and the sword,
'l'nke not Thy thnndcr from us,
From sleep and from damnation,
But t11ke 11w11y our pride,
Deliver us, good Lord .
Tie In n·llvlng tether
· The priest nnd prince ancrthrnll,
' Illnd 11II our lives together,
Smite us and save us ·1111;
In ire nnd exu ltntion
Allame with faith, 11nd free,
Lift up II living n11tion,
A single sword to Thee,
-G. K. Che.<terton.
RING. OUT, WILD
··.
Ring out, wild beils, to the wlhl sky,
· The llylng cloud, the froHty light; .
. The yeur la dying £n the nlg'ht; .
Ring out, wild bells, nnd let him die,
BELLS,
Ring out the old, ring in the new,
Ring, happy bells, across th e snow;
The year is going, let him.go;
Ring out the fal se, ring in the true.
,:
I
Ring out ·a s lowly dying cnuse,
And ancient form s of party strife;
Rlng ·oul the feqd ·of rich and poor,
Ring in redress to all mankind.
-;Tennyson.
_ ROGRAM FOR JANUARY ·7.
P
, 1,
2,
3.
4,
STANLRY R. MAcLANR
• . • Violinist
Acco.n1panil>t
,FLETT
. Miss Gmnnuon_
Carl B ohm
'' Legend of _
the North"
11 Humoreske"
Dvorak
11 0 God of Earth and 'Altar."
HYIIIN,
.
.
Chopin
"Second Nocturne"
11
. RaJl
Cavatina" · .
Annnnss, 11 The Significance of'Insurgency"
. .
:-Mr. Harigood
HY111N 1 11 0nce to Eyery Man ~nd Nation." .
QunsTIONS 1
1noM 'J'.HR Fr.oon .
... _...'
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY 14.~
1,
2.
3.
MISS H II LEN TUFTS •
Miss BEssm TUFTS •
Violinist
Accompanist
Svendsen
1
lfassenel
''Romance''
11 l\foditation"
HYIIIN, "Hymn of the Toilers,"
"Deutscher Tanz"
Dittersdorf
1 The Working Woman and the State;'
A~DRIIss, ·i
.
..
.·
~Mrs. Glendower Evans and Miss Leonora O'Reilly
HY11rn, ''.Battle Hymn. of Women." ·
Q&u.s -rw~s 1rRoM THE FLOOR.
- - - -- - -- -- - ----- - -- - - ;., -
,:
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7~ti:~'i~~~~"'!!".~~.-;;-:,,. .,.;~ ~ ,·_:', '. --;1~:_;>~
December .11.-Are we not forhmate to
be promised tlie presence, on New Year's
Eve, of RABBI STEPHEN S. W1sE of New
York? His talk bids fair to fit the season
too, for he is to speak on the topid
"J,Vimted: A kloral Renaissance." Since
Dr. Wise on the mildest of°subjects is likely
to administer a salutary ethical shock to his
he~rers, we may fairly enough expect a
untqucly arousing and arresting acldrei;,s with
such a New Year's text as this at his service.
l' • ..
\, :·•, ( .,o,.,,. ..
. ;
' ',
•, ,
....
January 7.-Non!IIAN. HArc.ooi>, editor
. of Collier's fVeekly, whose lecture, lai;,t
season, on " The Social Functi'1,n of the
Press" brought to us so much of stimulus
and information, will again be our ~peaker,
his topic this time being "The Significance
·· · of Insurgency." Political movements and
social ideals are not so far apart in these
days as some would have us think and there
is probably no man in the country better
able than Mr. Hapgood to interpret the
· Insurgent Spirit of our time in terms of
social progress.
''_.,.,,""''I.':"'~:-,,,-<--= ~._
_
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January 14.-Mns. GLENDOWER Ev ANS
an.cl Miss LEONORA O'REILLY will discuss
The J,Vorking Woman and the State."
Mrs. Evans is a member of the Minimum
Wage Commission, 'whose report, soon to
be published, will bring out the shocking
discrt·pancy . which exists in Massachusetts
between the weekly cost of decent living and
the wages paid to many working women.
Miss O'Reilly is an organizer for the New
York Women's . Trade Union League and
knows herself, from having felt it in the past,
what it is to be an exploited woman-worker.
A great opportunity to learn facts about a
question of vital public interest.
i,
January 21. -
i .
I
i...
WrLLIAM T. ELLIS of
Philadelphia, who has been several times
around the world for the purpose of investigating, as a journalist, the social, religious
and political conditions of countries which
contribute largely to our immigrant population, will speak on "America's Injluence
Upon the Older Nations." We all know
somewhat the immigrant here, but Mr. Ellis
will tell us how American money and
American ideals react upon the far-away
home which that immigrant has left behind
him. A highly interesting aspect of the_
matter I
·I
I
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0260
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 12/24-12/31/1911
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Rabbi Stephen S. Wise
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/35a78c24a42bd7213b5a4e57db178e55.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=lYF-i9showA0hD7v16FTCXffmcu1YCYUZE-wflKlodWBoUQHz72ZuQUzVcBOhUZJfKGCaQXd88s73bn%7EquvxotMAUnp6RsvGG4ikCaWs0A9l3inSLLZx9nyK7FdiJktzFtKEr-K1KfHZ%7ETIAjyv%7EHnCXYr0VqaQ1mSSN5MFDZGJmtAeGp5InJ2BC8xMiKvLQp7Yay%7EzV15qXys40Z3WYJf6kcI5czMr3V9NTeJS1C5ryP6Wlz2ACUNT6pqSt0haAY8zn2oydKKqKhDB-RiResz1vSp4QU7TXC3WeB4v2duVc5pInn8Ko316wlxvE7m4Xz5G1at%7ELeYP8KFpDK4zwnQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
2c7a72e9acac6cba6def62a902a453e2
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'1rrttu9a
Conducted
by THE BOSTON BAPTIST SOCIAL UNION
FIFTH SEASON-1911-12
l
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
\
AT 7.30 P. M.
.j
•
PROGRAM FOR NOVEMBER 26.
Miss HARRIETT C. WESTCOTT •
Soprano
ARTHUR R.. p. HEYES .
•,
Tenor
Accompanist
GEORGE MENDALL TAYLOR ;
1.
2.
Lynes
"Again As Evening Shadows Fall"
"Be Strong"
Halm
11[1ss ,VKSTCOTT
HYMN, "What I Live For."
1.
"The Lord Is My Light" •
ll·h t.
• Alitsen
HKYKS
AoDREss, "The Case Against War"-President Jordan
HYMN, "Our Hope and Purpose."
Q._UESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR.
PROGRAM FOR DECEMBER 3.
.
FnANK E. KENDRIE •
\
'
GEORGE MENDALL TAYLOR
I,
2,
3·
. Violinist
Accompani5t
'' Andante Religioso"
HYllIN, "Hark, for the Houri~ Coming."
"Berceuse"
"Madrigal''
Thon~ ·
I(irkman
Simonetti
ADDRESS, "Racial Adjustment "-President Mitchell
HYMN, "Our Hope and Purpose.''
Q._UESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD, Secretary for the Meetings
Office Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 dally, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket ••47
Charles N. Bentley
William J; Hobbs
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
Benjamin N. Upham
William E. Perry
James P. Roberts
Harry P. Bosson
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Russell B. Kingman
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly Mrs. Susan W . FitzGerald
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
George B. Gallup
James P. Munroe
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
Meyer Bloomfield
Henry Abrahams
Franklin H . Wentworth
Robert A. Woods
Rev. Dillon Bronson
Rev, Edward Cummings
John T. Prince
Edwin D. Mead
�•'
,.
.. ~ --;i~t:~.
·,
\I
THE GOVERNMEN-.-: TO
J
BE, .
(To "Austria")
Thro' the clamor and the riot ·
That is heard from sea to sea,
I can feel the coming quiet
Of the government to be ;
Vain the effort to dissemble
For the truth is clear to all,
And the old conditions tremble
Like a ruin doomed to foll.
Vain the veiling and disguising
Of the evils which exist,
For new systems are uprising
From the wreckage and the mist;
And the mills of God are slowly
Sllrely grinding out their grist,
While the lay(S of right and justice
Hold and evermore persist.
I
As the sun first tints the border
Of the darkness with his light,
So the faint far gleam of order
Gilds the chaos of the nigh(;
And the dawn ~hall grow irf splendor
To the fulness of the day
\Vhen. the lian:ds of greed surrender,
What from toll they tore away,
For the land to all was givenIt belongs to you and r'le;
'T is a law of earth and lieaven
Ilroken now from sea to sea.
L e t monopoly be driven
From the fortress of the free;
And let liberty bid welcome
To the governinent to be.
·
-Ella Whc,ler ll'ilco.,·.
WHAT
LIVE FOR.
I live for tho se who love me, whose hearts are warm and true,
For the heaven th:1t smiles above me and awaits my spirit too;
For human ties that bind me, for ta s ks my God assigned me,.
For bright hopes left be hind me, and the good that I can do.
-
I live to read their story who suffered for my sake,
To emulate their glory and follow in their wake.
Tiards, patiiots, martyrs. sages, the noble of all ages,
Wh~se deeds crown 1
-list?ry's pages and Time's gr~.~t ,volume make.
I live to hail that season by gifted minds foretofd, •.
\Vh e n men shall live by reason and not alone by gold,
\ \1 li en each to each united and every wrong thing righted·,
The whole world shall be lighted as Eden was of old.
·
•
HARK, FOR THE ·HOUR IS COMING!'
Hark, for the hour is coming,
Lo, the burden shall be didded,
\Vhen your ears shall anoin led be,
And each ·shall know his own.
Aye! lis ten, 'tis rising and swelling,
And the royalty of manhood
O 'er populous land and sea,
Shall more than crown or throne,
The morning stars began it
And the flesh and blood of toilers
At the dawn of creation 's birth,
Shall no longer be less than gold,
And the circling spheres go swinging.
And never nn honest life
And singing it unto earth.
Into hopeless bondage sold.
For the song of the spheres is motion ;
And ;notion and toil are life,
And tl)e idle ~hall fafl_ a.nd falter,
And yield al the end of strife
As the stars tread path appointed
A,i'd the .sun gives forth his heat,
So 1l{e sons of men shall labor,
· Ere they rest in leisure's seat.
The.kings are to sel'\'e the people,
And wealth is lo ease the poor.
And learning to lift up the lowly
And &trength that lhe weak may endure
For we the people are waking
And low and high shall employ,
The splendid strength of union,
For liberty, life and joy .
- 1 D. Bab cod.
ll.
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
\
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
_____ ,
\
--- --~------•-..-r•' --- - - ...
�L
L
0
OOD OF EARTH AND AL TAR,
.
(To the music of
11
\Vcbb ")
0 God of c11rth 11nd 11lt11r
From 1111 that terror teaches ,
From lies of tongu e and pen,
Bow down nnd hear our cry,
Our earthly rulers falter,
From all the easy speeches
Our people drift nnd die; ·
That comfort crue l men,
The wnlls of gold entomb us,
From sale 11nd profanation
The swords of scorn divide,
Of honor and the sword,
T11ke not Thy thunder from us,
From slee p and from damnation,
But t11ke 11wny our pride.
Deliver us, good Lord.
Tic In II living tether
The priest nnd prince and thrall,
Bind all our lives together,
Smite us nnd snve u s nil;
In ire and exultation
Alhune with faith, nnd free,
Lift up a living nntion,
A single sword to Thee.
-G. K. Che.,terto11.
OUR
HOPE AND PURPOSE,
(To "Webb")
\Ve strive not for dor'niniori;
,vhate'er hi s clime or color,
. \Vhoe'er the worthiest be
Ili s lin eage or ·cree d,'
Shall bear the palm a nd garland
To him be honor give n
And crown of victory.
For honorable deed.
In kindly emulation
Arise, ye nations, ri se ye!
llis willing hand we'll seek,
Exalt th em-for ye can_.:...
And own him for a brother
The di g nity of 1
.abor,
\Vhatcver tongue he s peak.
The broth erhood of man,
Our leaders and our'people .
The grateful truth have learn'd,
And strive for glory fin er'
Th a n s oldiers ever earn'd.
Ari se, ye na tions, ri se ye I
Let ancie nt di scourse cease;
And earth, with myriad voices,
Awake the song of peace!
PROGRAM FOR DECEMBER
I•
2.
3·
10.
·Mus . H. CARLETON SLACK
Lyric Soprano
GEORGE MENDALI, TAYLOR
_
Accompanist
11 The Bird and the Rose
. Horrocks
Becker
"Spring Song"
Buzzi-Peccia
"Gloria''
Hnrn, 11 0 God of Earth and Altar."
Anmrnss, "The Church and Social Justice"
-Bishop Williams
HYr.rn, 11 The Government To Be."
. QUHSTIONS FltOM THE FLOOR,
PROGRAM FOR DECEMBER 17.
Mn. A. R. FRANK .
I•
Basso
GHORGE MEN DALL TAYLOR
Accompanist
• 1lfe11delssohn
"Lord God of Abraham"
B r uno .Fiulm
"Invictus"
"Pilgrim's Son"
Ts~haikowsky
HYMN, 11 0 God of Earth and 'Altar."
ADDRRSS 1 "The Man and the Machine"
-President Faunce
HYMN, "Hark, for the Hour is Coming."
QUESTIONS FROM THH FLOOR,
.,
,,
.
,.
'•
,.
�-
,,
'
·:· ~('< \
i~
.
• I
.,,
·, .
December 3. ""- PRESIDENT SAMUEL C.
of the University of South Carolina will speak to us on "Rada/ Adjustment." Dr, Mitchell has made a life-study
of the race problem in _
the South and there
11 no m1m whose opinions on 'this subject are
more _
respected by both the blacks and the
wl,1ites. A Southerner by birth, he knows
the North also; he was ,for some time a
lecturer on history at -Brown University.
Incidentally, he is a wit; there will be noth. • ing d~y about his discussion · of this tre. '' mendous·question.
MITCHELL
December 10. - B1suor W11,J.1AMs of
lltiiJ!1"4,·ia,,,'UWI. Cbla•n, ~h~•c. .... ~lngle- .r.ax address, lllst .
J
ytaf WH one of .' the red-letter events
our
aeaaon, cornea to us again. This time he will
speak on "The Church and Soda/ Justice,"
a topic no man in America is better able to
hantlle suggestively. The Amerz'can Maga#ine has called Bishop Williams "the most- ·
u~conventional ma~ who ever filled an Episcopal chair I" .
.· ,. ,
.
t
of
I
j •• , . .
J
,.
l
I
December 17. - PRESIDENT FAUNCE of
· Brown University will discuss "The Afan
and the .Afachhie." All who heard the remarkable lecture which this distinguished
speaker gave us last year on "Education
~Vithout Schools," will be glad to hear
from him further as to how a man may rise
above and through his work to a profounder
knowledge of life an°d its manifold meanings.
December 24. - ProFnsson ZunnLIN,
whom Ford Hall folk always hear with joy,
will speak to us about" The Nation's Human
Resources." On the eve of that season when
all that child-life means to the world is particularly brought home to us we are fortunate,
· indeed, to be afforded a Zueblin lecture on
this most significant of all human subjects.
You will need to come early.
' l
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'\.
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. .,. · ,
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0259
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 11/26-12/3/1911
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: President Samuel C. Mitchell
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/70808c670ab6efd5eed6252913463e62.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=JNHOkE9B2jXSUNZZauUVqWMWfkahZnZ3G1P6D0loSa38H9NMmbwUvttrIBFvJNOK-R5uJteOCx9N65nk-fJd3POdi9OYVEoe7LpjYwdtMQA9m1UEgByP6QZzUf1kyfgBQOsvRKMnuf6iDelSzUHWwVWo1sd4D8bGrZ1fsrhrS0L6IgjbXacoqujFnX-gSZf8TGh0ME5g3dzNK7eX7DdqZLDH0vEfpmyqlJCkLj94VLZONKBafWQAw5rEhBDvVzZ9haGrKGuf9nbZCK7ihIqr8GI9wFZZxxWulV-G6jntY-6F%7Ed0FpzACXwDIrc42Yi0Mnt-PEnj5ASRK0zLBdxsPUg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
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PDF Text
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flrrti119a
· Co.nducted by THE BOSTON BAPTIST SOCIAL UNION
FIFTH SEASON-/9/ / ./2
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
PROGRAM FOR OCTOBER 29. ·
"Liszt as a Radical." Personal Reminiscences, with
piano illustrations, by MR. JoHN ORTH.
HYr.rn, "0, Beautiful My Country!"
ADDRESS, "Eliminating the Hoodl.u m Element
Among Boys"- Dr. Winship.
HYMN, "Hark, for the Hour is Coming."
QUESTIONS FROM TH~ FLOOR.
THE HU .\tE Pi ANO used is kindly furnished by TnR M. STKINRRT & SoNs, Steinert Hall, B osten
'\
PROGRAM FOR NOVEMBER 5.
Miss· HELEN TuFTS
M1·ss BEssrn TUFTS
I•
z.
Violinist
Accompanist
'' Adoration "
Borowski'
" Caf:>dce Viennois"
· I(1-e£sler
HYMN," America, the Beautiful."
ADDRESS, "How to Make Boston Efficient, Comfortable and Beautiful "-Mr. Howe.
HYMN, "Home, Sweet Home."
Q.uESTIONS FROM THE FLoon.
·, GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD, .Secretary for the Meetings
. I
Office Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, State House HIii, 3,30-4,30 dally, except Saturday•.
Telephone, Ha.y market '2047
'I
'
),
COMMITTEE IN 'CHARGE
Benjamin N. Upham
William E. Perry
Charles N. Bentley
William J . Hobbs
James P. Roberts
Harry P . Bosson
·,
I
'i
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Russell B. Kingman
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly Mrs, Richard Y, FitzGerald
Rev. Edward H , Chandler
George B. Gallup
James P. Munroe
Miss Ellen P aine Huling
Meyer Bloomfield
Henry Abrahams
Franklin H, Wentworth
Robert A. Woods
· Rev, Dillon Bronson
Rev , Edward Cummings
John T. Prince ·
Edwin ·D. Mead
I, ,
,
' ••
I' •
I
�l
I
i
.\
!
i.
October :29.-Dn. ALnERT E. Wrnsmr,
the well-known educator, will be the speaker
and the topic he has chosen is "Eliminat- ·
ing the I:foodlttm Element Amo-nrr Boys."
Dr. Winship has for a quarter of a century
edited the Journal of Education, a publication particularly interesting to a Ford Hall
audience, because it is the sheet through
which Mr. Coleman made his entrance into
journalism. An additional feature of great
interest, on this evening, will b~ the lecturerecital by Mr. John Orth on "Liszt as a
Radical" - personal rem1111scences, with
piano illu strations of the great musician whose centenary is now being
observed.
BATTLE HYMN OF
Th ey itre waking, wakin g , waking,
In th e East and in the W es t;
They are thro wing wide the windows
to tlrn sun j
And they see tl1e dawn is breaking,
And th ey quiver with unres t,
For th ey kn ow th eir w<;>rk , is waiting
· lo be d on e .
·
They are waking in th e city,
T,hey are waking on the farm,
They are waking in the boudoir and
the mill;
And th eir hearts are full of pity
As th.e y sound the loud alarm
T o the s let•pers who in darknes s _
slu,n- ·
ber still.
In th e guarded harem pri son,
Wh ere they smother under veils,
And all ech o~s ~f the world are walled
aw~y,
Though the sun has not ye Cri sen,
Y e t the an cient darkn ess pal es,
.
And the s lee·p ers in their s lumber'
dream of day .
.
November
WOMEN
Oh, their dream s s hall g row in splendor
Till each sl ee per wakes and s ti rs ,
Till s he breaks from old traditions and
is free.
And th e world shall rise and 'render
· Unto Woman what is hers,
And.we lcom e in th e race th at is lo be .
Unto \-Voman, God the Maker
Gave the secret of His· plan;
It is written out in cipher on h er soul.
From the darkness you must take her.,
To the light of day, 0 Man I
\-Vould you know the mi g hty meaning
of the sc roll.
CHORU S :
Joy, joy, joy, th ey are awaking,
Th ey are comin g lo the light.
L et us each do all we ca n
For th e Brotherhood of Man
And for \-VoMAN struggling upward
·Out of night.
-Ella 1Vh eeler iv,'lco:,:.
•
NOVEMBER DATES
5.-FREDERic C. Hovm of Cleveland, "How to 11/ai.·e
Boston Efficient, Comfortable and Beautiful."
(Stereopticon illustrations.)
November 12.-To be :rnnounced.
November 19.-Dn. R. J. CAMPllELL of the City Temple, London,
"Social and Economic Condit ✓-ons in England,"
November :26.-PHESIDENT JonnAN of Leland Stanford University,
"The Case Ag·ainst War.''
J.
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.
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.
0
000 OF EARTH
AND AL TAR
(To tho music of" Webb")
O God of c'nrth nnd nltnr
.
Bow down nnd hear our·cry,
Our earthly rulcra falter, ·
Our people drift nnd die;
The walle of gold 4;nto111b us,
1'ho ,words of scorn divide,
Tnkc not Thy thunder from us,
. But tnkc awny'our pride.
From nil thnt terror teaches,
From lies of tongue and pen,
From 1111 the easy speeches
-, Thnt comfort cruel men,
From snle and profanation
Of honor and the sword,
From sleep and from damnation,
Deliver us, good Lord .
.. T&f n a living tether
"'T11e priest nnd prince nnd thrall,
, Ulnd nil onr lives together,
Smite us nnd save us nil;
In Ire nnd exultation
Allume ,vith faith, nnd free,
Lift up n living natidn,
A single sword to Thee.
'
-G. K. -Che.,t.,-/011.
O, BEAUTIFUL MY COUNTRY!
0, bcnutlful my country I
For thee our fathers suffer\!;
Uc thine a nobler cnre
For thee they toil'd and prny'd.;
Than nil thy wenlth of commerce
Upon thy holy altar
Thy hnrvests wnvlng fuir;
Their willing lives they laid;
no It thy pride to lift up
Thou hast nc, common birthright,
The mnnhood of the-poor;
Gi-and memories on thee shine,
De thou to the oppressed
The blood of pilgrim nations
Fnlr freedom's open door.
Commit'lgled flows in thine.
0, hcnutlful our country!
'Round thee in love we draw;
Thine he the grace. of freedom,
The !1111jesty of law,
,
De ri[l'hteouM1ess thy scepter,
Justice ·thy diadem;
And on thy shining forehead
Be peace the crown _ng gem!
i
l....Frederick l,.- Hosmrr.
PROGRAM FOR NOVEMBER
12.
Lyric Soprano
Mns. CA1moLL J. SwAN •
Accompanist
Ivins. KATIIAllINR FonISTALL
11 How Lovely Are Thy Dwellings" .
Liddle
Lehmann
z. "Roses After Rain"
1
1-Inrn, ~ 0 God of Earth and Altar."
Bond
11 A . Perfect' Day"
4. · "Serenity"
Salter
Aoorrnss, 11 The United States as a· World. Power"
-Edwin D. Mead
Hn1N 1 "0, Beautiful My Country."
.
,.
QUHSTIONS l'ICOM TIIU: FLOOll,
PROGRAM FOR NOVEMBER 19.
D. MAnKs BAn~ocK •
GRouan M1rnnALL TAYLOH
I, • 11 Who
Basso
Accompani&t
Treads the Path of Duty" .
z. "Prayer"
Jlfozart
.Hiller
· Hn1N 1 11 I-Iark, for the Hour is Coming."
11 In the Time of Roses"
Reichardt
Social and Economic Conditions in
Englancl"--'Dr. R. J. Campbell.
11 0 God of Earth and Altar."
I ·
Aoonnss,
HYMN,
.l
I
I
11
QUESTIONS FllOl\l TIIR FLoon.
. !.
�AMERICA, THE BEAUTIFUL
0 beautiful for spaclou!J skies,
0 beautiful for glorious tale
For amber wa-.es ·of grain,
Of liberating strife,
For. purple mountain majesties
,vhen valiantly for man's avail,
Above the fruited plain!
l\len lavished precious life!
America ! America!
America! America!
God shed His grace on 'thee,
!\fay God thy gold refine,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
Till all success be nobleness,
From sea to shining sea!
And ev'ry gain divine!
0 beautiful for pilgrim feet,
,v110se stern, impassioned stress,
A thoroughfare for freedom beat
Across the wilderness !
America I America !
God mend thine ev'ry flaw,
Confirm thy soul in self-control,
Thy liberty in law!
HOME,
0 beautiful for patriot dream
That sees beyond the years
Thine alabaster cities gleam
Undimmed by human tears!
America ! America !
God shed His grace on Thee,
And crown thy good with brotl;erhood
From sea to shining sea! ·
-ICatherine Lee Bat~s.
SWEET
HOME
'l\Hd pleasures and palaces though we may roam,
Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home .
A charm from the skies seems to hallow us 1he1·e,
\Vhich, seek thro' the world, · is ne'er met with
elsewhere.
I gaze on the moon as I tread the drear wild,
And feel that my rnother now thinks of her child;
As she looks on that moon from ·out· own cottage
door,
Thro' the woodbine whose fragrance shall cheer
me no more .
An exile from hoine, splendor dazzl es in vain,
Oh, give me my lowly thatched cottage ngnin;
The birds siriging gaily, that came nt my call;
Give me them, and that peace of mind, dearer
than all.
Home, home, S\\;eet, sweet home,
There's no pince like home,
Oh, there's no place like home.
-Jo/111 I-lowanl Pay,lc.
HARK, FO~ THE HOUR IS COMING!
Hark, for the hour is coming,
Lo, the burden shall be diddecl,
\Vhen your ears shall anoinlecl be,
And each shall know his nwn.
Aye! li sten, 'tis rising and swelling,
· And the royal ti of manhood
O'er populous land and sea,
Shall more than crown or throne,
The morning stars began it
And the flesh and blood of toilers
At the dawn'of creation's birth,
Siu\11 no longer be less than gold,
And the circling spheres go swinging
And never an honest life
And singing it pnto earth.
Into hopeless' bondage sold.
For the so ng of the s pheres is motion'
And motion and toil are life,
And the idle s hall fail and falter,
And yield al th e encl of strife
As the s tars tread path appointed
And the s un gives forth his heat,
So th e sons of men shall labor,
Ere they rest in leisure's seat.
·The kings are to serve lh e people,
And wealth is to ease the poor .
And learning to lift up the lowly
And strength that the weak may endure
For we the people are waking
And low and high shall employ,
The s plendid strength of union,
For liberty, life and joy.
-1lf. D . Babcock .
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and .Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
'.,.
'\
�I
.•
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November 5, - Fnnnun1c C. HowE
who knowJ more ·about the cities of this
country and of Europe than any other living
__. American, wilt' tell us'' .How to .Aiake Boston
.Eificle11I, . Comfortable and Beautiful."
I
I
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.By way of Illustration he will show numerous atereopticon pictures of beautiful cities
'citae~here, cities which, at the start, had
very likeiy far fewer possibilities in this
direction than Boston.
·•.•.·,
,•',
ov,mbtr 12,-EDWl"fi D;
MIIA.D1
who
a, no lntrodu~tlon to II Boston audience, +
Ill •~k Ob ' ~'Tl,, ,U,i,'ted States as. a
W.r/,I Prnu,r;" Mr; Mead has . just · ~efrom a. 1ummer In Europe, in th~
ne of whfcli he has had unique opport1lty to 1tudy In Ge'rmany~ Austria, Switzerland and England the constructive influences
exerted by the United States for internati_onal ,
progreea and for higher education i,n policies·
that make for_clvlllzRtlon and for uplift.
HI" atldr~11 ~Ill give much food for thought.
November 19'. -Dn. R. J. CAMPBELL,
of the City Temple, London, is to give us
1111 address on "Social and Economic Conditions t'n England." For this date with
Dr. Campbell we are indebted· to Rabbi
Wise, who has · characterized the visiting
• clergyman as the " foremost preacher of his
· duy." To hear him on the subject announced
·.. will certainly be rare good fortune, for many
' ·things of import to us at Ford Hall have
'•, n·centiy been '·' doing" in England !
•====;:November 26,-PnxsmnN'I' JonoAN of
Leland StanfoJd ·Qnlverslty I will give that
extraordinary massing of data against the
military ayatem which has made his lecture,
'~ The Cast1 '.Agalnsl War,'' .one of the most
arreatlng nddresses of ,our time, Of similar
· qlJRllty must have been the speeches delivered
ngnlriat aln'very and its allied evils in the old
'days when Fnneuil Hall was being "rocked" .
hy the Abolitionists I
·
~•s
,,_
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0258
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 10/29-11/5/1911
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Dr. Albert Winship, Frederic, Howe
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/2de58b067586e7351d8fb3dcbaa3766a.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=WeeiAYlV6dq5LwPi5G0Q2Ukdp1ZhKKMdB9k1ciMah0NOLCm2wEQEF-Uqm4seLdZnzx64ncMtx0H5-mFVuE-Nk3dqebC3rd3PsdVlfRdGqDnnG5svKCdiDDET%7ExIPIQv3LYGpUSL4Ae3hxcQUcmbJciU7fPY0gIGPW8FbBGrVihm7WMV-wTkKJkoIKMWI24bzlfy66ud9Nnj2hobhMlwYognA2dZG5Xm2L2-I1Xbw3oFcTH8%7EVYIsScmqF3S9fKYY7eN6DEKwlSzrziuQCjNzstPyQsZVZ83vP6-2xQhshQ%7EYBXXLepj%7EFTFoApydVuLn%7EvG0GMtVurHu797ObE6QxA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
4d9500f4a1f6fe177727e07703c0a92e
PDF Text
Text
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FIFTH SEASON-1911-12
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
PROGRAM FOR OCTOBER 15.
MRS, RussELL B. KINGMAN, Pianist
MR. RussELL B. KINGMAN, 'Cellist
1.
I
z.
•'Sonata in D"
Rubinstein
"Ave Verum"
klozart
HYMN, "Thy Kingdom Come."
ADDRESSES, "vVhat Is the Matter with the Church i'''
-Dean Hodges.
"What Is the Matter with the People
Outside the Church? "-Morrison I. Swift.
HYMN, "0 God of Earth and Altar:"
.QUESTIONS FROM· THE FLOOR,
PROGRAM FOR . OCTOBER
22.
MR. CArtMEN A. FAn1uz10, . . Violinist
Mils. RussELL B. KINGMAN, Accompanist
I.
"Symphony Espagnole" ; .
2.
"Elegie"
Lala
Fa1u-e
HYr.-tN, "New National Anthem."
ADDRESS, "Woman the World Around "-Mrs. Park.
HYMN," Battle Hymn of Women.''
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLoon.
1"•
•
HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
ri1eet) by the late DANIEL SHARP Fono, who owned The 1oullt's
Companion. The management of the meetings is in the hands of a
Committee from the Social Union.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Miss MARY_ C. CRAWFORD, Secretary for the Meetings
Office Hours at Room 707, Ford Building, State Hous e Hill, 3.30•4,30 dally, except Saturdays,
Telephone, Haymarket 0247
�0
00D OF EARTH AND AL TAR
(To th• music of" Webb")
0 Goel of enrth nnd nltnr
Bow down and hear om· cry,
Our earthly rulers falter,
Our people drift und die;
The walls of gold entomb us,
The sworda of scorn divide,
Take not Thy thunder from us,
llut take awny our pride.
J•rom nil that terror teaches,
'
From lies of tongue and pen,
From a ll the easy speeches
That comfort cruel men;
From sale and profanation
Of honor and the sword,
From sleep and from damnation,
Deliver us, good Lord.
,·
I
Tic In n living teth er
The priest and prince and thrall,
· Bind nil our lives together,
Smite us and snvc us nil;
In ire and cxultatfon
Atlamc with faith, and free,
Lift up n living nation,
A single sword to Thee.
-G. K. Che.,terto11.
THY l(INODOM
COME!
Thy kingdom come I" 0 Lord ,~e daily cry,
Weary and snd with earth's long strife and pain I
"llow long, 0 Lord I" Thy suff'ring children sigh I
"Speed Thou the dawn, and o'er the nations reign I"
11
Thy kingdom come I then all the din of war,
Like some dark dream, shall vanish with the night t
·Pence, holy pence, her myriad gifts shall pour,
Resting secure from danger and affright.
Thy kingdom come I no more s hall deerls ·of s·hame,
Brutish and base . destroy the soul divine:
Bright with Thy love's all-purifying tlame
Thy human temples evermore shall shine I
Thy kingdom come I mad greed for wealth and power
· No more shall grind the weaklings in the dust.
Then mind and strength shall share Thy ample dower,
Brothers In Thee, and one in equal trust.
-fl, JV, Hawkes.
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I
NEW NATIONAL ANTHEM
(To the tune of "America")
Our country fuir and strong,
We raise a joyful song
To thy great n11111e,
Sprc11d out from sen to sen,
A country just and free,
Our hearts urc bound to thee
And thy bright fume
Like brothers brave nnd strong,
We'll banis h every wrong
For all the years,
We"II solve the rrobl e ms great
Of labor, church and state.
Tran s planting love for hale
And hope for fear s.
Now sons of noble sires,
Light patriotic fires .
Through this broad land,
Let wnrs forever cease,
Let justice, love and peace
Throughout the world increase
Dy our strong hand.
-A11s011 R. Grave.,.
'
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..
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October 15.-At the first Ford Hall MeetIng of the movement's fifth season the topic
11t Whal ·,Is ./he .Afatler with the Church?"
' will be considered by Rnv. G RORGR HooGES,
, D. ·D., Dean .of the Episcopal Theological
·; School in Cambridge. Since the Dean is
one of the wittiest lecturers in this part of the
country I ns well ·. as a schol11r of parts, an
entertaining and Instructive address may be
expected.
. . . ........
That ,ame evening MonntsoN I. Sw1FT,
(II tell u1 u W/,al Is lhe .Afatler with the
Aoj/, Oulst'de the CJ,u,.ch f" Mr • . Swift
11 a graduate of Williams College, who has
made It the business of his life to become
1ympathetlcally ncquaintcd with the needs
nnd viewpoint of L_incoln's II common
pnople," He la therefore peculiarly equipped
to throw light upon this side of the evening's
aubject,
A record-bre11king Ford Hall
crowd may be looked for on this occasion.
Gut In line early.
October 22.-Mns. MAuo vVooo PAHK,
Secretary of the Boston Equal Suffrage
Association for Good Governmrnt, will talk
II J,Vomau the fVorld Around," giving in
the vivid way which has so delighted many
smaller audiences hereabouts the results of
her observation during the two-years' tour
of the globe from which she has recently
returned , We hope to have more women
on the Ford Hall platform this sea son than
in previous winters and we are glad to be
able to give Mrs. Park an early place.
i
i
[·•
!
on
MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
.. NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
z.-
SEE . INSIDE SHEET FOR NOVEMBER SPE,t\KERS
~•S
...
-
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0257
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 10/15-10/22/1911
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1911
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Rev. George Hodges, Morrison Swift, Maud Park
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/f62c5eca97f8c0ea1f91ef53f508c37b.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=pehM4POppYGZ%7EEgM6W5VEoFqf%7E5re%7E%7Ez-URmAvcuohhh7dRQ-JkunS3RsuwRYNrtORDbT-x3FOixcrAk9P90ts0wF-ZkCgwGCzd1F4h-IbidbqkUY9jmsVUdPU1WPN1r%7Eihq3fsR-MR14nV-u0MWr0p52Rar67si4i8dj7I4uKnrWu6UJEKCa9bDu3wSzyP-Abp%7EouXR2hEF7EnUE6QzJM27gxU5oL2eckb5q-FUQsOhxsWrF9YRAEXhD5ydtJfC%7E3AvPEbt6QEhJ8STOuWDq6s5z10WI0Uot6DtngLm8FzCWnrPxYeD2tkd8285bgZPhRgUJwmSqZhW-rWlaWzsZA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
0917db7d45113c6c735b80f341d42904
PDF Text
Text
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FOURTH SEASON~/9.10-11
.(
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M. ·
-PROGRAM FOR APRIL
, ..
2 ·.
''·
MR.... AnRAII.AM . E. KAHAN, Tenor
!
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Mrss IoA D. BENJAMIN, Accompanist
Mrss LAURA ELLA CRAGIN, H.ead·e·r
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The Lord Is My Light"
Alli'tsen
Mn. KAHAN
·2.
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CttAGIN .
· 3. I' Consider and Hear Me" · .
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KAHAN
Aomin:ss, 11 A Program of Social Reform for a
-~ ,.
Democracy "-Rabbi Wise.
HYMN," Thy Kingdom Come!"
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR,•
..
.
Interpretive Bible Reading of "Esther .''
. ,,
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-
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PROGRAM FOR APRIL g.
MR'. DENIS A. McCARTHY, Author's Reading
SCHUMANN STRING QUARTET
_
.. . .
MR. CARMEN A. FAnRIZIO, First Violin
MR. FRANK Krr.Nmtrn, Second Violin
l\IR. G1ovANNI b!PARATo; Viola
, l\lR, RussELL_B., KINGMAN, ·Violoncello
r. "Q,uart~t in D Minor
. Robert Schuma-nu
Introduction, Andante, Espressivo Allegro, Presto
I
,.
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j
Reading~ .
.
.
a. 11 Glve Them a Place to Play". T
. b. "A Song for the Child Workers"
Mn. McCAnTIIY
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3. "Music of the Spheres>'
4. '' Bouree" . : .
Rub'i,istein
· J. · . Bach
s
Aoomrns, ·11 The Social F·unction of the Press"
.. , . . ,.
. -Mr. Hapgood
1-Inrn, '.' 0 God ·of Earth and Altar/'
(luns-r:~oNS FROM THE FLOOR,
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THY l<INODOM COME I
we daily cry,
Wenry nod snd with earth's long strife and pain!
"llow long. 0 Lord I" Thy suff'ring children sigh,
"Speed Thou the dawn, nnd o·er the nations reign!"
"Thy kingdom come I" 0 Lord
Thy kingdom comet then all the din of war,
Like some dark drcnm, shall vanish with the night!
Pence. holy pence, her myriad gifts shall pour,
Resting secure from dnnger nnd affright.
\
Thy kingdom come I no more shnll deeds of shame,
Brutish nnd base, destroy the soul divine:
Bright with Thy love's all-purifying flame
Thy human temples evermore shall shine I
Thy kingdom come I mild greed for wealth nnd power
No more shnll grind the weaklings in the dust.
Then mind nnd strength shall share Thy ample dower,
Brothers In Thee, nnd one In equal trust.
-H. JV. Haw):es.
0
000 OF EARTH AND AL TAR
(To tho music of" ,vcbb ")
() God of earth and altar
Bow down nnd henr our ·cry,
From nil that teiror teaches,
• Fro •n lies of tongue and pen,
Fror: • 1111 the easy speeches
That comfort cruel men,
from snle and profanation
Of honor nnd the sword,
From sleep and from damnation,
Deliver us, good Lord.
Our earthly rulen falter;
. Our .people drift and die 1
·.
Th11 wall, of gold entomb 111,
The awordt of acorn divide,
Take not Thy thunder from 111 1
Dul lake away 04r pride,
.
Tio In II living -tether
The prleat 'nnd prince nod thrnll,
Bind nil our llvca together,
Sniltc us nod save us all;
In Ire nod cxultntlon
Aflame with faith, nnd free,
Lift up n living nation, '
A single sword to Thee.
- G, /(, C/IC$/1rton.
.
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April 9 - NuHMAN HAPGOOD, editor of Colli(!r's Weekly, will
speak on "The Social Function of the Press." Happily, this speaku
has demonstrated in his own career that the press has a social function.
You will recall that, four years ago, he was
tried and acquitted in a suit for criminal
libel instituted by a certain stt of individuals
in New York whose blackmailing practices
he hacl dared to expose through the columns
of his pa per. Besides being a courageous
and enthusiastic joun)alist, Mr. Hapgood is
an author of high repute. He has written a
vital unconventional study of Daniel vVebster
and a very remarkable life of Lincoln. Born,
as he was, on Lincoln's own ground and
brought up largely with Lincoln traditions,
he knows exactly what it was in the mart) r
president that makes him the idol of American democra,cy; and it is precisely this knowledge which makes Norman
Hapgood a, highly desirable ford Hall speaker. He recognizes 1hat
"yellow journalism" for instance, is justified, in spite of its faults,
because it is the voice of the people, because in the battle against
oppression in this country it has helped enormously tl~e purposes of
democracy. Something of this will very likely come out in his lecture,
At ai1y rate you are safe in anticipating a stimulating evening:,
HOW SUPPOR.TBD : · These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late DANIEL SHARP Fono, who owned The Youth's
Companion, The management of the meetings is in the hands of a
Committee from the Social Union.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
Office Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4,30 dally, except Saturdays, ·
Telephone, Haymarket 2340,
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
William J. Hobbs
James A. Floyd
Charles N, Bentley
William E. Perry Benjamin N. Upham
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward Cummings
Robert A. Woods
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Mrs. Richard Y. Fitz Gerald
Franklin H. Wentworth
Russell B. Kingman
Henry Abrahams
.
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
R"v. Dillon Bronson '
Edwin D. Mead
John T. Prince
Meyer Bloomfield
,James P. Munroe ·
.,
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THE MEETINGS ARE . ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS ,REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
~•5
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0256
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 4/2-4/9/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Norman Hapgood
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/6363cacb1df269713550c43aeccc5182.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=Au9ueRo-oJMcTrRXgraXklH5KtpiwqFBvsR0xg8Mryv1vta2KyH%7ELPcGIQgBSp0SBhvMtljcgKwj2jkuWMlgbQ-vwdqz-UG58XnhcdJ0MROSP71nCKO%7E7pI9ErIAgh%7ETCXepzpcJ2UWbtRCxSd37GK0kbftlORKtw2xGuXh6w3q0nQZ-a5yQxW4FtQkqQ0uPx%7Egh7xNrSp7I2IaN2BtINlv6iSEcYHGyWCZ4OIKht2Se9ACiBfv6hHDJBWuBeYc%7EfbSdColUNPaRbEzTy647PUdV9oXB-Lj8wl0-cFFw4zHn0ea2rCdxztpidnxy4e518oT1fhHkQmrq293awajM1w__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
ffb81820e7649dae9ebc7cb861497168
PDF Text
Text
H. RiollAnns; . of the Massachust:tts
Irmltute of Technology, will speak on the
wry Interesting and timely topic, " Does
the Increased Cost of Living Mark a
Social Advance?'' When Mrs. Richards
~~~1iia 1g ilven the honorary degree of Doctor
ii1 a
of Science at Smith College, last fall, she
was characterized as follows : " Bachelor
'and Master ·of Arts of Vassar College,
·Baclielor of Science of the Massachust"tts
Inititu~e of Ttirhnofogy, and there for
over a quarter of . a century Instructor in
Sanlrary Che• istry. By investigations
m
Into the ·explosive properties of oils and
111 the .analysis>of water, and by expert
'knowlcdge.telatirig to air, food, water and
sanitation, and the cost of fond and shelter,
1-it. forth . in , ,numerous publications and
raNly contributed to promote, in the community the
fit healthful, and economic living.'' Which is to say .
that Ford Hall honors itself in inviting as a speaker. ,
1.1.•N
,,l •
;.
'I,
..
N
L,
·GnBNl'BLL 1
who v.·as six years state
n1tructlon In
ow one of the
ii of that Com-
.I
rankly and truly
one In Colorado
er,elf h11 voted
onal election In
nd ahe baa heli:1 1
nt public offices.
ome-maker and a
oman - one ,who
n th11t exercising
being the 11 unsex•-·
.1
r.
I .
F0R 1' .. .
M:ARCli *
~6.
.
~
,(
, .•
\
.
'
L. G1,tKBN1t 1 Baritone
GUTTRR ~ONi_ Accompanist
·. ·Bruno I-Iulm
•, '
- orrocks
H
I
ntry."
.
Tours
.. . .siJne 1-io,ner
y
ftVe Dope ln Colorado with
renfcll.
ay."
LOOR,
, ,
·'
r
r
-<
_~: - : -· .i
..0:t,l'·.
.
.
• -·. -
• ••
:
�•.:..,~ L~
/
••
~
.,
,,
- ' ~.
,
.
',· . . I~ .
·/r,'°.' ~.
J'
,
.
·1·
•, :·.,. .
JERUSALEM, THE GOLDEN. ·
,·
,.
•
.... ..
0, beautiful my country!
De thine a nobler care
Than all thy wealth of commerce
Th Jc harvests waving fair;
De it thy pride to lift up
The man hood of th e poor ;
De thou to tti,e oppressed
Fair freedom'R open door.
· For thee our fathers su ffer'd ;
For thee they toil'd and pray'd;
Upon thy holy altar
Thei~ willing lives they laid;
Thou hast no common birthright,
Grand memories on thee shine,
The blood of pilgrim nations
Commingled flows in thine,
0, beautiful our country I
'Round thee in love we draw;
Thine be the grace of freedom,
The majesty of law,
De righteousness thy scepter,
Justice thy diadem;
And on thy shining forehead
Be Peace the crowning gem I
-Frederick L . Hosmer.
.'
'
THE DAWNING
DAY
The morning hangs, its signal upqn the mountain crest,
While all the sleeping valleys in silent darkn ess rest;
From peak to peak It flas hes, it laughs along the sky ,
The day of pow'r is coming, is coming by and by I
'
I'
Above the g enerations the lonely prophets ri seThe truth flings dawn and day-star within th eir glowing eyes;
From heart to heart it brightens, it draweth e ver nigh,
It blesseth all men thinking, it cometh by and by.
The soul hath lifted moments above the drift of days,
When life's great meaning breaketh in sunrise on our ways;
From hour to hour it haunts us , th e vision draweth nigh.
It crowneth living, dyl11g: We'll see it by and by .
And in the sunrise standing, our kindling hearts confess
That no good thing is failure, no evil thing s uccess I
From age to age it groweth, that radiant F a ith sq high,
Its crowning day is coming in power by and by.
- W. C. Ganmtt .
I
.
'
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0255
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 3/19-3/26/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Mrs. Ellen H. Richards, Mrs. Helen L. Grenfell
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/22b9375f84460f77028fff02e6b69dbb.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=HtAXRiOueHZc8S6XudJ5UtIaeVvFETzwTiv7e8hiAcIudq1a1uC0j6bbfEtUeU5MaANRQVM2Hm9A9CChD%7Ek0eruJxspIA%7E7lVUwIqSEdUcPz%7ET5L-kYBddekgeRWcUtvUhGnP%7EnKLYL2nXnY2ObSeXMlUJZ0kl0Gd8NH%7EV3sTNVCxQ79SSm%7EceqK49hF06kgZeuoEdZz0a4sEJajdfrsDU6q8U3O4MobmYsMTI-h2hPEQPSEgF3LKW2H2Q%7EX7tKak3BlvpEp14QoXIDIjHk4%7Eg2GeRGzo30lSkfZeH6qmaKxkJRX-ljbeXG9oicNC5KowdhlRNY0qcc5mssbOJ7v%7EA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
68204b9d099b625033b55c38a6a25ec3
PDF Text
Text
--:.. -- . .. J_
FOURTH SEASON-1910-l I
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
PROGRAM FOR MARCH
12.
lVI1ss MARY WINTIIHOP S11AcKFOllD, Violinist
l\11ss JEssm SHACKFonD, Accompai1ist
a. "Ma z urlrn in F
,1.ftnarski
Sch1w1ann
b. ''Traumerei
I-lYl'IIN, "0, Beautiful, My Country."
f,'ieuxte111ps
a. Romance, Op. 40 , No. · 1
b. Gavotte ·.
Carl Bohm
ADDRESS, "The Sacredness of Propert) ," illustrated,
- J. W. Ilengough
HYMN, "The Government to Ile."
Q_UESTIONS FH0J\l TJIE FLOOR.
PROGRAM FOR MARCH 19.
l\1rss ADELAIDE GnrGGs, Contralto
lvlR. GEOHGE MENDALL TAYLOR, Accompanist
" Eye Hath Not Seen "
Gaul
HYMN, "Ameri ca ,· the Beautiful."
"A Little Windin g Road"
Ronalds
"Gloria " .
Buzz i-Peccia
ADDrtEss, "Does the Increased Cost of Living Mark a
Social Adrnnce? "-1\frs. Richards.
HYMN, "Hymn of the Toiler8.
Q_uESTIONS FllO~I TJIE FLOOH.
HO\V SUPPORTED: These m eeti ngs are made possible through
the funds le[ t to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in .whose hall we
meet) by th e • late DANIEL S11AHP Fono, who owned The Youth's
Companion. The management of the mee tings is in the hands of a
Committee from the Social Union.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss. MARY C. CRAWFORD
Office Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, e xcept Saturdays.
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
�AMERICA, THE BEAUTIFUL
() beautiful for spacious skic,,
For a1nhcr waves of grain,
For purple 111ou11tai11 lllajestics
A hove the fruited plain!
A1ncrica ! :\nicrica !
(,od shed I lis grace 011 thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to s hining sea!
0 beautiful for glorious tale
Of libera ting st rife,
\Vh e n valiantly for man 's avai I,
l'l'len lavished precious life !
America I Ameri ca I
1\Iay God thy gold re fin e ,
Till all success be nobl e ness,
And e v'ry gain divin e !
0 beautiful for pilgrim fee t,
\Vhosc s tern, i 111passinncll stress,
0 beat1tiful for patriot dream
That sees beyond the years
Thine alabaster cities gleam
Undimmed hy human tears!
America! A111erica !
G~d s hed IIis grace 011 thee,
And crown thy good with brotherhood
From sea to shining sea!
-llalheri11e Lee Bates.
,\ thoroughfare for freedom hea l
Across the wi ldcrness !
America! A111cric1 !
God u, c nd thine ev'ry ll.,w,
Co11lir1n thy soul in self-control,
Thy liberty in law!
THE
GOVERNMENT TO
To the tune of
0
Au~tria ,0
BE
)
Thro' the c lan1or and the riot
Thal is heard from sea lo sea,
I can feel the coming quiet
Of the government lo be;
Vain the dfort to di sse mble
l"or the truth is clear to all,
And the old conditions tremble ·
Like a ruin doomed to fall.
As the sun first tints the border
Of the darkness with hi s light,
So the faint far gleam of order
(3ild s the chaos of the night;
And the dawn shall grow in splendor
To the fullne~s of th e day
\\Th e n th e hands of greed surrender,
\.Yhat from toil they tore awa)'.
Vain the veiling and disgui sing
Of the evils which exist,
1-'or new systems arc uprising
From the \\Tecka~c and th e mist ;
And the mills of (jod arc slowly
Surely grinding out their grist,
\Vhile the law s of right and ju stice
I lold and Cl'ermorc per s ist.
For the land to all was givenft be longs to you and me;
'Tis a la1y of earth and ·heaven
Broken now fro1n sea to i:;ea.
L et monopoly he driven
From the fortress of the fr ee;
And le t liberty bid welcome
To the government to be.
-Ella IVhcelcr IVilco.,.
HYMN OF THE TOILERS
() nation strong and great
For thine own honor' s sake
!!ear thou our call;
,\\'<! arc thy children, too,
From y.:ar to year we grew .
Silent and patient thro'
I >arknc ss and toil.
But now, 0 nation strong
To thee mu s t truth be long,
Crown thou the right;
We arc thy children s till
\\forking with 111ight and will
Ne'er re s ting Lill \\'c fill
The world with light.,
-Rose Alice Clc1•cla11d.
Out fro111 the d<; pth s of crime
\Vc'v e tried in min lo climb
Wh e re nothing led;
When life and ju stice asked
Still furth e r down we re cast,
E'en so bs were hushed at las t
And hope see med dead.
, ,!. _
I
....
◄►
. ri: :i,
-
I
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0254
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 3/12-3/19/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/a7ce9f34f1ac0c9309e371565926c018.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=W2xzW1AyYXFn0Y4jcvStwiAhwJl2zfP0gjHcQDSiWVieGESRSLBqXbpMMFCwQ6Vl%7EaD%7EeT6jJOD1fBYCk-PD4TAIAXRcfgy7VIXa7EL0XAvp4HSxlSZCK7Smddu-G2ngsuaeGLZmOTwVFvN7-FKD0-0eaoQdp6u-P2Wxv9-3H-Md8j8cQWS6DQtY3geA1SpgK4Xs8oJdyiUpbrIzWPqeefuk6VGcIGzc3Fg2V4sLI67OUh7WSDtxH7dmgR6JGO59eKyOMt4THOmfzJlAnpxGxY%7E0ayCfI4cJ%7E%7EGeQCN3yCkBxmcS0zW0yUBU7qfjGOG9HKCYMaHvW3w%7EohUwBqdMpA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
f0ccce05bfc478ede484bfafe10e1ad9
PDF Text
Text
.,
·.. ,
111 nrh IA;all flrrtiugn
FOURTH SEASON-1910-l I
.·
;(
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
\'
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY
,
1.
Miss MARION ALTHEA BURT, Violinist.
Miss BEATRICE HoLBROOK, Pianist.
Grieg ·Sonata in C Minor, Opus 45I. Allegro Molto ed Appassionato.
II. Al_legrettt> Espressivo alla Romanza.
III. Allegro Animato.
Hnt_N, "Ring Out, Wild Bells."
ADDRESS, 11 The Man at the Bottom"
.. .
·
.
-Dr. Samuel Zane Batten·.
HYMN, 11 To Labor."
\ Q_URSTIONS FROM THE FLOOR,
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY 8.
Miss HARRIETT WESTCOTT, Contralto.
Mn, GEORGE MENDALL TAYLOR, Accompanist
1.
2.
11
0 Rest in the Lord" .
My Ro~e.of Yestere'en"
' Hvr.rn, "Tl{y Kingdom Come."
11
3, 61 The Bird and The Rose"
4• ",The Promise of Life "
jJfendelssohn
Ri[:h
,·
. Horrocks
Cowen
ADonnss, "What Religion Can ·Do for a Man"
-Bishop Lawrence.
HYMN, 11 Creation."
Q_URSTIONS . FROM THE FLOOR.
HOW SUPPORTED : These meet_ings are made possible through
left .to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
) by the late · DANIEL SHARP FORD, who owned The Youth's
f'tl#/Otl, The · management of the meetings is in the hands of a
mhtoo from .tho Social ,Union. ·
.i•·
fund,
BORGE W, COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
l1eretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
ffl!IR at Room 31 Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays ,
Telephone, Hayma rket 0340.
d
,t
0
n
\
l
(.
�RING
OUT, WILD
THY
BELLS. ·
KINGDOM
COME!
"'rhy kingdoin co me!" 0 L~rd ~ve daily cry,
,veary and sad with earth's lohg strife and paint
How long, 0 Lord!" Thy sufPring children s igh,11Spced Thou the dawn, and o'er the nations reign I''
Hing out, wild bells, to the wild sky,
The !lying cloud, the frosty light;
0
The ye:~r is dying ii\ the night;
H.ing ont, wild bells, and let him die,
Ring, happy bc}ls, across the s now;
Thy kingdom comf! then all th e din of war,
Like Some dark dream, sh.a ll Vf1nish with the night I
Pcac...'e, holy peace, her myriad gifts shall pour,
Resting secure from tJanger and affright.
The year is going, let him go;
Thy kingdom come! no more shall deeds of shame,
Hing out the old, ring in the new,
Brutish and base, destroy the soul divine :
Bright with Thy love's all-i>urirying flame
Thy human temples evermore shall sh~ne !
· Hing out the false, ring in the true.
Hing out a s lowly dying
c~luse,
Thy kingdom conic! mad greed for wealth and power
No more s halJ grind the weaklings in the dust .
Then mind anti strength Shall share '~hy·amp le Jower,
Broth ers in Thee, and 0;1e in equal trus·t.
AnJ. ancient lorms of party strife; .
Hing out th e feud of r..ich and poor,
H.ing in redress
\<1 all
mankind,
-Tt1111yso11.
..
'
B~.
(To the tune of;, Austria,.)
Thro' the clamor and the riot
That is heard from sea to sea ,
I can feel the coming quiet
Of the government to be
Vain the effort to dissC1~1biC
For th e truth is clear lo all,
And the ol<l conditions tremble
Like a ruin doomed to fall.
As ihc sun first tint s the bonier
Of th C'·dar kness , Vith liis light,
So the faint far gleam of - order
Gild~ the chaos of the night;
And th C dawn shall grow in splendor
·
To the fullness ol the day
,vhcn th e hand s of greed surrender,
.\\' hat from l_ il lh t y lore away.
o
Vain th e veiling :rnd disguising
Of th e edls wh ich exist,
For n~w systems are uprising
From the wreckage and the mi s t;
And the mills of God arc slowly
Surely grinding out their grist, .
,vhilc th e laws of right and justice
I Iol<l and eve rmor e persist ,
For the land to all was givenIt bciongs to you and me;
'Ti s a law of earth and h eaven
n roken now from sea to Sl'a.
Let monopoly be driven
'
1'i-rom · th e fortress of the free;
And let liberty bid welcome
To th e govcr11111 e nt to be,
Ella W/,et/er Wilco.l'.
' They have scorntUllY, 11auu;u - . '
' the p\a·ce Battenburg, and h~ ts ~ow at
'the head of a movement which ~1ms to
\ .
the church and the ,workmgm~.n \ ; .
, b nng
: into closer sympat h y. D r. Batten IS
\ residerit of the Constitutional Ame,nd-,
I ~ent Association of Iowa and_ . vice~
.
1 .
'd
:pres1 en t o f the Des Moines .C1t1zens 1
,
' A ccnri~.tion . Denominationally he IS a· I
TO
LABO
T1111t-" John Brown's Bo<ly.
· · -H. IV, Haw/us,
THE GOVERNMENT TO
I town.-
HYMN
♦
:/
•
Whnt I• this the· •ound and rumor? What Is thi
Like tho wind In hollow valleys when the storm
Like the rolllnl( on of ocea n in the eventide of fl,
· ·
•Tia tho people mnrchipg on!
. \¥hither go they, nnd whence came tney? · Wha
·
ye tel11
. · ..
·
In whnt country nre they dwellinl!' 'twixt th e gat,
Aro they mine or thine !or money I Will they sc
· ,
Still the rumor's marching on!
Cn~nus-Hark I the rolling ol the thun,
Lo I the sun, ancl lo! thcreu nd
.lllseth love and hope and wou
And the host comes marc hin g
Glory, Glory Hallelujah I
Forth they came from grief nod torment: on they
.
nnd mirth j ·
All the wide worlil Is their dwelling, every co rn,
Buy them, sell thenl, !or thy service: ' l'ry the ba
.
. worth.
.
.. ..
For the davs nre marching on!
Thcao nre they who build thy houses, weave t'
wheat
·
Smooth the· rulirgcd, fill the b a rren , turn the bitt,
All (or thee this dny and ever. What reward !or
•..
Till the host comes marching on!-(
Mony a hundred years pas se d over have they la!
Never . tldlnt(1 reache,t their sorrow, nc\.er hope
Now at ~n,t they've heard and hear it, and the
wind,
,
And their feet arc marching' on,
.
On we march then, we. th e workers. an,t the run
h the l,Jendcr1 imund o( triumph and dcli vcr:t ncc
(l'or the hope of every. creature Is the banner that
And the world is marching on,-C111
r
�~·-; ...., .• _ • ,;--
•
I
\•\.
;Ii.' The ' 1ng all \~ ,have ~~r lwhat Is In them, 'I C'
talned there · ii.re ma ·
ver ut- even great, among th
ter, fo1· who have had no <
plrlt In their abllltle~.
He sald that · It hi
<)e, the
~
doctrine lnYestlgatlon that 94
ld the Ive school children
dieted to alcoholic .
y says 77 percent ot the c
crln1e, not addicted to a\co
hey all He would abolish a a
human there oo.n be a perm
cterlted class and a permanE
re Is a
for the
1
i:,fi~t
t
I
bY ,say~
at such
or said:
thait his
ever· or:uld con-
c\"i,fJr~~
i
l
t house
ould be
o barter
1st."
dlty has
a m ·an's
environhe said
r alone,
tihUB tesronment.
children
re taken
rlronment
8
Il
1
o~k h~~
he slums
"tHE MAN AT
Topic ot° Prof
$;
Vigorous ·, Wes
Ford Hall, Sun,
' Another· vigoroc
Prof Swmuel Zane
Is to be the Ford
row evening, .taklr
Man at t.he Botto:
1
trlevably
ronment. '
nI
e •spealrnr
present
Included
rrelatlng
( to men
{h, '
gnt'•
"
ea,
ightl
CREATIO~.
HYMN TO LABOR.
,e,
allow-
. The spacious firmament on high,
T1111t-" John Drow n's Body!'
I1
With all the blue ethereal sky, _
What II thl1 tho 1ound and rumQrl 'What is this that all men hear?
I.Ike tho wind in hollow •alleys when the storm is 1lrawing near,
I.Ike the rolllnic on ol ocean in the eventide of lea,?
'TII the (lCOple marching on I
· ··
-- · · · · -- •·
\Vhlther 1ro they, and whence came tney? ·•\\"hat _
ar~• these of whom
1 :
.
y•tellt
·
. '
·
. .'
·
• ·,
•
In whot country arc thev dwelllnir 'twixt the gates of heaven and hell!
AH they mine or th hie lor nloheyl \Viii they serve a 1111•~ter well? ,,· J
Stlll thc runlor'1 marching on I'
.
.
- .. .
ower
,wer,
wA-ts.
·
l
·
•
· , ·. , :
C11011.u1-Hark I the rolling of the thunder I
\
1
••
Lt
I
1·
'
'
Nner \ldlnl'• reached their 1orrow, ne,er hope their toil might ti11d
N- 11 latl th•1'0 hurd and hc11r it, 1111d the cry comes down 1hc
"hid.
·
.
' )
, ,
'
'
•
The unwearied sun, from day to day,
~c~ lli, ., f~~a~or~s power displny,
And_publishes to every land
'lli;C Work of an a lmighty hand .
,'.nd nightly lo the lis tC1ling earth
Repeat~ the story of her birth;
.1~ .~]!f}},ar~
~
Whil ~
_
that ~~und her l>urn,
J\'1d ~11 ,h~. planets, ~n lheir turn,
Confirm the tiding s, as they roll,
And spiead .t/>~ _
truth from po le
t?
pole,
,vhat though in· ~~lcmn silence all
.
)(aa·r a hundred ynn ' pu,ed over have they labored deaf and blind
.• '
I
,I
worth.
· -.- ,
, "
Pot the,1lay1 '11re mhchlng on I'
Thtn ■JI \ht)' who build ·thy houses, weave_thy raiment, win -ll~y
wheat
·
.
Smooth I.he rvirred,'1111 the barren, lurn the bitter .into sweet;
All for 1he11hhd1y '"'t ever, Wh11t reward lor them is meet?
. ~ . 11 lh• ho11 co111e1 marching on !-C1101ws.
1
•
Soon ~st-~~. ~~~nin~. s_hades prevail,
The,moO~ takes UB. the wondrous talt·,
, )
1/
Loi the sun, an'd lo! thereunder,
lli11elh love nnd hope and woudcr,
·· And the host comes marching on,
:
Glory, Glory Hallelujah I
- :1
' ,.
.
Porth they came from grief and torment: on they wend toward hrnllh
,
ancf mirth; • ·
·
.
All the wide world 11 their dwelling, every corner ol the •~ith,
·
Dur them, aoll them, lor thy service : <rry the barg'llin what 'tis . I '
A1~d spangled heavens, a s1Jining· (rame,
Their great original proc~aim.
And lhtlr feel arc marchlntr on,
On we ma,ch th•n• we, thC workers, and the rumor that ye hear
II the bl 1ndtd ,ound ol triumph und deliveran ce drawing near;
l'or tlll hope nf every crcalure 11 the bai111er that we bear,
·
And lhl world 11 marching on ,-C11onus ,
·
- William Aforris ,
~·l ove round this dark terrestrial ball!
What though no real yoic~ nor sound
.1\mid their radi:u\t o·rbs be found!
In reason's ear they' all rejoice,
And utter forth a glorious voice;
, Forever singing, as they shine,
The hand that made us is divine ,
- Jos,p!, Addiso1J-1712,
, PROD' SAMO
I
Dr Batten was
. about 60 years 3
·early education a·,
going thenc ~ to t
seminary, Then f .
tury he filled Ba1
llolphlo. .and New
. was · for· more tlu
of th<:> leading- B:
co.g;: ~~-ten Is r
co11st1tutlonal amc
Iowa .l\nd vice 1
Moines' · Cltlzem
•
Molne,s being no"
has recently gone
fes sors of Des M
several books th
that called '"rlH
perhaps the me
gresslve.
'.rhe musical pre
will · be su-op\lell b
Burt,' a girted yo
by Miss Beatrice
- - -- -.- - ·
�January 8-B1s110P LAWRENCE, whom
we all heard so gladly last year,
"\Viii
speak on " · hat Religion Can Do For
w
a JVIan."
This is a Cooper Unioh topic
that always draws a large crowd aml
suggests many very interesting questions
from the audi~nce after the address has
been given.
We are fortunate to secure
for its treatmeht so broad, so kindly and
so spiritual a man. as ·the episcopal bisl:op
of Massachusetts.
I-re·
I
rs t~
!all 1
;;::i
! K~
, Shi
Cov
1
Mer
·s at.
,I
,er, 'J
, Ro,
hari
h, o·
I
idea
,g
January 15-We have another bishop,
as it happens, CHARLES ·w1LLIA111s, who·
comes all the way from Detroit, Mich.,
to give us his views on " TVealth- Prod'uctive, Predato1J' and Parasitic."
The Amert'can Jllfagazine, in a recent
sketch, spoke of Bishop Williams as
the "most unconventional man who ever
filled an episcopal chair." We certainly
do not know any other man in his po~ition
who labors tirelessly to advance the doctrines of Henry George.
til
PROGRAM FOR JANUARY 15.
enin' ·
>ciat!
: d is
nd t'.
1•
e sul
2.
that
,as j
vanr.
i:; I(
3.
4.
·eezy
~d ti
l1011-.
Miss HELEN TuFTs, Violinist.
Miss LAURA ARCHANBAULT, Accompanist.
' ' Souvenir " .
D idla
"L'Abeille"
Schubert
HYlllN' "To Labor."
"Thais"
Massenet
"Zortzico ;, . ·
Sarasate
ADDRESS, "Wealth - Productive, Predatory and ParasiJ:ic ','
1
-Bishop Williams . .
Hv111N, "The Government to Be."
QUESTIONS FRQ;\I THE FLOOR,
11 fit
ing .
lS W
·j
A
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, car. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
1
Doors opeh at 7 o'clock
i
~•s
l
l
1·
'I
1
!
!
Il
- - - - - -- --'-----,-me ·piace· .oattenourg, ana he IS "
novi af ·r~ ---'-~
th'e head of a movement which aims to
I?ring the church ;ind the ,workingm'.1n
mto closer sympathy. Dr. Batten is
. presiderit of the Constitutional Amends .
!ment Association of Iowa . and" vfoe-'
!president of the Des Moines Citizens' .
· '. Association. Denominationally he is a
1~-aptist, having occupied fdr the past
·,T:~·-- - -
I
,,•
'
,
rl
••
•,:
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
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ms-0253
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program 1/1-1/15/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Bishop Lawrence, Charles Williams
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/a38ef2c2faca615c0b253fa340606997.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=vSp061hF10gcy02GRF7Qa5jZj5NjPJebEw5ZjY7qjrh2IZwPc5rvfP7i0xS3vR9e4lkosY830d3Jdt1EspM1q1WHfLoVU-onRC7CjDw1jlfYnYf3QlC790maxDA5cqgDbulMwQR6WFSGMGnik68xxUmybH542Qv87sODLPKMZYmCPfCfHDLnYA7di8FbZp8VG9R9I7RDZRpK4D8KW8dmkMTsi4LHwtO-xQJj%7Ed-aG%7EJV3I73%7EDbYZq3pDGYjxt38LNV3aQHtCCdlmvZofHP8AwubmvrPbnAqzcmTPaS4GPgi7%7EukiqEirMmcjEe3jHUJT%7ELlmVgcYPNj8jF8lcESvQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
4dba06dffbd2a5dda4ab8f829a5a4021
PDF Text
Text
. •✓TWO
THEORJ'
7
t ~lllng bis .F~!ill ·all( p=
1
11 y
I
• why ho bellovo~rumo1
. ,, Dr ; Lyman Abbott pµt to eff /
.use I ~
)ha~ has . bJ3en . ·callo<i ,ieoli'rif l,1t\ 5> •t~eory/' that tho
;is th e player iind the · brain t /,
.. st rument.• Only be Jlkene!l th I
··;
t~ an org~nlst and · t he body,.
organ, which Is left lflu'te -and I
when th,o organist goes ...- in·
, nno~ tell whe;her .~eath. _
And he Well · said
d or mind produces
psychologists cairnot · tell w
es not roflow that bral
d
.
s are necessary to
n Pro uces mind or min,
n Physlcal,ly . help- ' _
ducefl the brain."
s, but, his almost
..
till conveys to the ·1 All . the know~ facts lllay I 1
llllancy ,or thought duced In_· aunno·rt of either the,
lclcen bO:dlly. It Is
''°"
ls out or tune r _ ls _ _ t as "scientific" ; to beli'
ju. a
dy th at I ·ct·we11' In · to d b 1J · ·
or In _n \l nlverslt/ . . is e eve Jn· immortality, l
as1c him for proof .Pl,ln,. dispute the faot'·th · up
.at
th em what evl- h I
rtallty, M:y body .: ea th and . BO.l!ndness :- o( th
to times
stence. Myduring xnatte1'. In the ,. br01·n the'-.· 1n
body
.,.
atom It contained of ,all ··mental° p·rooesses· dE
ago, • If my · body l\Iechanfc I j j
. seven , different · · ·
· a ll urles of the bn
oft_ n followed by gra\le -ment
e
river, ever 'flowor~ers : and even by a cha1
. Why ,do .I cease
e body decays at
m~ral character,. .Per111stent
egrees? EvoluorJj Jnally began
~
opium ~nd hl!shish : alters th
_vo Ved through .sonality. :· .The~e fact
e
'
animal ·into the
s mays
,.
. .
"
r~ the result . of .'prove _ that ·,thought. and . se:
1 :;gl·!1e~e? .It
-~re Doth~ng but the produ'ctE
_ occupy ·a i1t- ' .· ~atlons Ill a mechanism ai·ra·
ly
nee. • Tennyson ·
e COUid not be u
defln. te manner, . .
J
.a _, certnfn _
was n STea·l
Uld not . be an
They do not prove Jt, howev
l, then tl1e S U bIf we·regard the mfn·d or soul
nlwny:; drops
v!ollnis~ and q1e brain as th e
cnnn ~t boll cve
how ,can w~ expec~ any but 1
JYe as pu1·e.,.a1,1q_.
~re Imm ortiii or'-'1 ant soun~& fron) ·an instrum,
~rely a· machine _ whol_ly oul 'cif r:>l·der? . We
1~
nes? I don't
the discords be rJu~, to the· vii
rational' to beta!, talking to .not_to the player? .
that I am an
. So tho question r~malns a
~ to Put 11parlc11
hlnes. ; .
·or pure belief 01· faith . "Soler
ty ls ! merely
much right to • no conolusfv,e word: ' wii~n a
has gJven· me
after readlrig' Emerson's essa·
·[· on that came
~u~ject, ·asked him. ~ltll ,mu;
at we do· ·not
an
' gan 'the house I estness, "But YOU do' belfew
crqmbfos
~ live; that
1 Kl'a. ve, the
18
. mortaUty, _ on_t you, Mr Elrr
d '
a8 been long·
the phflosopher's - een ·sens1
k
~ darkness, Is
ng and · saJJs
mot. came
l:>ody ,hlUJ, been . Piled: , to .the . surface ' -~n,
·
t death opens
'
._,'
·.
I
f
rlt go · out to
"M~M!!!._1!,t.W_§___
'!'fll ?"
I
om the a.uai~ ·
ttlry · "Is not
ty father to
/
1Qott said . no
°
lso oonflrms
s
H to animals
believed not
tn a Ute 0 f
Id no' man ls
!fe.
Pe has · soon
~ manltestavJth Sl)lrlts ·
feted With
m rtal.
~
'IN
rr; If
f
JJr. rh ~.all ~rr.ttugri
n
CONFlICTING
0
r
FOURTH SEASON-19/0-I I
I
I
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
0
'
PROGRAM FOR DECEMBER 4.
MRS. CARROLL J. SwAN, Soprano
MRS. STEPHEN A . D. FonISTALL, Accompanis~
.
·•·
2.
.
"There Is An Hour of Hallowed Peace"
"The Four Leaf Clover"
Hv~rn, '•Thy Kingdom Come "-Mendelssohn.
11 Come Unto Him"
.•
11 '),'he Lord Is My Light"
ADDRESS,
.
Chcncry
Brownelt
'
Handel
Nlarslt
The Social Movem'erll in Germany ,,
-Dr. Albert Siidekulll,
Hnrn, "'Tis Coming."
Q_UESTIONS FROM THE FLOOH,
11
PROGRAM FOR DECEMBER
I I.
Miss An~LAIDE ·L. GRIGGS, Contralto
Mn. GEOHGE MENDALL TAYLOR, Accompanist
11 A Little Winding Road" .
Ronald
"Lullaby" (1640)
•Corner
Hvr.rn, "vVaiting '' - Nlcndelsso/111.
11 In the Time of Roses.''
Reichardt
11 The Lost Chord·,,
Sulliva1i
ADDRESS, "Why I Believe in Immortality"
-Dr. Lyman Abbott.
HnlN, "It Singeth Low ."
QUESTIONS FROM THE F;, OOR.
HOW ·suPPORTED:
These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to_ the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late DANIEL SHARP Forro, ,~ho ~w~1ed The l 'outlt's
Companion. The management of the meetrngs u; rn the hands of a
Committee from the Social Union.
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor.. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at .7 o'clock
f
!
l
~
I
I
•
I
I
\
t
;
·:• •' ,:
.. ····1·.
·....,.j•
�i ', o
irrcat an edlto1'that".iie
~odore. Roosevelt II an assista
II ao areat ,i '. reacher ' tha b ~
en to be
r." It
i
tlrman
I Hall
WEBB. 7. 6.
':ffl~~MWIJHM, JIBliliJJ 1ltµJ±n3iJ
~~F 1m tIE t Ir IH Ff]fiJf 1m flFllBH ff iP.4
I~~~~~~
.
LYMj
J~J
an Abl
look,"
·ice
'Tis com in~ I Yes, 'ti s coming I
The li~n e for which we sigh,
Th e clay of man' s rccl emplion
ls surt:ly drawing nigh.
As day s ucceed s th e ni g ht-tim e,
A s snnshinc follow s rain,
So error's niJ!hl s hall va ni s h
And Trulh's cl ear light b e plnin.
led, th
fix a ·
h~
: prog1
~aking
Sund~
for. hit
hen
consi <
i
asld111 ·
1dustri~
me_ 'j
"Thy Id
\Vear
"]low I
"Spl'l'
'Ti s coming! ' Yes , 'tis coming I
Ont not through -bloody strife,
· Nnt thus shall be adjusted,
·
The ill s of huma.n life.
The time for which we're sighing,
,viii only be a ttain ed,
\V h en Love a nd Truth an<l Justice
Full victory have gained.
'Ti s coming! Y es , 'ti s co min g I
The time, wheu eve ryw here, ..
All m en of life' s ri ch bl cs~ ings ,
Shall hav e :u,· equal s hare.
\Yh c n from th e weak and lowly
Oppression's yoke s hall fall,
And freedom-bl essed freedom- .
Be given unto all,
Only
the ~
t
~
Tl
'TIS COMING!
·:t:o:;~
110w
E~~
I•
Thy kl11
Like,
Pcnc.:.e, Ii
Hcsti,
'Tis co ming! Yes, 'tis coming!
It is no idl e dream,
E'en now ahove the hilltops ,
The m o rnin g li g ht doth gleam.
The light of that bl es t era ,
By seer and sage foretold,
,vhcn man shall liv e and labor,
For lo.ve, instead o f go ld.
-Kale H, Stiles,
"IT SINOETH
Thy ld11
Uruti !-o
llrlght ,.
'l:hy_ ·
h
Thy 1<111 ,
No nu
Then mi
llroth,
LOW"
find th
1"uue-"Auld Lang Sync. 11
on, as.l
isten \'.
It singeth low in ev 'ry hear t,
\V e hear it each and all,A s ong or tho se who answer not,
Jlowe\•cr we may ca ll.
Th ey thro ng the s ilence ...,f the breast;
\Ve sec them a~ of yo re,Thc kind, th e true , the brave, ll.te sweet,
\Vl10 walk with u s no more .
I'd I:.
I
sort t
!
!
s decil
on "W
With .'
Se,
'Tis hard to lake the hurd c n up,
Wh e n t'1 ese have la id it down :
They brightc n ' d all th e joy of life, .
They soft en'd C\'' ry frown.
But, oh I 'ti s goo d to think of them,
\Vhcn we are troubl ed so re ;
'l'hnnl{S b e lo God that suc h have been,
Alt ho' th ey are no more!
.
.y
More homelik e seems the vilst unknown,
Since th ey ha,·e entered ther e;
To follow them is not so hard,
\Vh e re\'e r th ey may fare .
Th ey-ca nnot b-c wh ere God i s not.
On any s.ea or s hor e ;
\Vhat c' er betides, thy love abid es ,
Our God forevermore!
- Jo/J u ff ' , Clwdwirl, .
!ivI
to al
will u
Sunda
.elaide '.
will si!
's . frl~
contr
of .th
"'-- - -- - •.•. "", ._...- ...,,:t!Ul"'mlc!fl fot year~, , at length . tii.i~e~
- ..
.
,,.. · , ·.; ·;_. his freight and snlls ,nwny. ' The ,_ship
~~ d!)eS .not . know where It Is going '•. 'J'he
~; ... ·
--v/. · · · ,,_., ,.
.
snlllng must~r directs lts ··cour•e · : .... , .
UI
. ·"'l'ouay,', il.lthough I have mo_ f~lends
;e.
'
· '· ·,·
a1n1o· drea,m of ideallsts -;;v~;:-;-~
up to experience. He defl,ued Im
mortallty as " t
but the '
no unending existence
W-hi I1 l possession o~ a character
here than I hl\ve any i•Jght to. have ·and i 't c
.~ Independent of material
tt nd joy In my ,work, l still ·loolc ·.for•'· .. 8 : nee,
,wa~d· t1 1the Uin~ when the volc_e,•1..~ha.ili ~~·\ ·,/•;.;- ; ~ // .. ,~
--.-- I·-..,_~,,.,.-..,,
~
~11,_ ,_ tµe _ th,ut , my, days ·)are ldonil ..
y ~o
tt,~: t
,
.. 1 ~
.,/11 1 · _
/;.
r:
I•
\\'I
pre~e.
)US
~
I
' ..
�-:,.!
.i'
,:·•
• .
Ill nstro~ . ra'~de ·'., ~ li~~c /
ue on tf10pghLW9Hs',js the e1ld, ,' 1 .: 1
··,
';' ,man .ls •
evor a flnlshe<l ·•pro<1tict- · No ,
an· fl 11~11; ~~._f~ln!~~ ,iJ! •./tufU f;;nl!.,;>.,,.:_..I"t"-- - - -.....:;,;;; ~ ... "
.
''
·1
!llendelssohri.
fl
ffi j In)bGd@
:,
.,
fJEiIBf-~ ffIp4
J,
m!-M ~ £0 ±@=fl
ff$-1 fIt ~ ff]ftU
'I
I•
..
! Ye!;, 'tis coming I
c dream,
,ovc the hilltops ,·
ing light doth gleam.
that blcs t era,
1d sage foretold,
shall li,•c and l.1bor 1
instead of gold.
:.._1(1,1, R. Stiles.
'
~ · ~M~g\¥Ef¥¥~~jg,=JW4-tt~
~ $ r1~ 1 f ~~ml~
COME!
, take the hurclcn un,
:sc have laid it down:
\cn'd all Ille joy of life,
cu'd cv'ry frown,
s good to think of them,
arc troubled sore;
Lo God that such have hccn,
! )' arc no morel
l\\'ll,
ln<
· 01
lS
! ·ar
~I~ I
lla
JkE
s '
YI
skI
;th
~
ta.I
10
:~ n
to1
iro.
uT,hy ldngdom come I,, 0 Lord we daily cry,
"'eary and sad with earth's long strife and pain I
11
•
How long, 0 Lord l" 'Thy sufPring ~hildrcn s igh,
0
S pced Thou the dawn, and o'er the nation s reign{!'
1st
Thy kingdom come I then all the din or war,
Like some dark dream, shall vanish with the night!
Pcac_e, holy peace, her myriad gifts shall pout-,
Resting secure from danger and afiright.
10J
'JV1
WI
, be
g'l'f
rJ g
Thy kingdom come I no ;norc shall deeds of s hame,
Brutish and base, destroy th e sou) divine :
.Bright with Thy l0Ve 1 s all-purifying flame
Thr human temples evermore sh,_11 shine I
1
Thy ldngc;loffi come I mad greed for weahh and power
No more shnll grind the weaklings in the dust.
·ThCI) mind and str~ngth shall s hare Thy ample Jowcr,
Brothers in The<!, and one in equal tnl s l.
-H, IV. Haw/as.
'\I"
.,..
lU~~~~~~~~Eff~~
.
THY l<INODOM
! Yes, 'tis coming I
:ough bloody strife,
II be adjusted,
human lifr.
\°vhich we're sighiug,
be attained,
;rn d Truth and Justice
·y have gained.
.
.nJ ,
ti
~to
.r ec
,
0
pe.
co,
. Wn
'cl l
· ; th
all
!a11
! a.
l Ii
Hy
~8?
•tit
.J,
!la,
:o I
WAITING
Serene, I fold my hands and wait,
Nor care for wiud or tide, or sc>a:
I rave no more 'gain st Time or Fate,
l''o r lo I my own shall come to me.
\Vhnl matter if I stand alone?
I wnit wilh joy the coming years;
1\ly heart shall rcn.p where it has sown,,
And garner up its fruils of lcars.
ne,
Lcl
as
n,
l,
r~I
ra:
I I
ly ,
ieu
. ,The stars come nighlly to the sky :
The tidal wave unto the sea;
Nor time, nor ~pace, nor deep, nor' high,
Can keep my own away from me,
, g
I
It
ry
tn
!t
0 (
Serene, I fold my hands an" wait,
d
\Vhntc 1 cr the storms of lifc"'may Uc
(i'nlth guidrs m e up toJi cavcn's gate,
Aiu.J love will bring my own to me, .
dwid·,
-Jolm JJ11rro11gl,s
to
, ie,
l
,a
no
I
. : ha
)ILi
~tt~
Qt.I
I
,.. ,
�DECEMBER 4.
Drr. ALBERT SuoEKUM, a member of ·the
German Reich stag, will speak' on "7 he Social 1ltfovement i'n Germany."
·
Dr. Sudekum, who is in this country for
a brief period only, has had a most interesting ·c areer. For several years he was
the youngest memher of the Parliament in
his native land, and he now sits on the
Opposition benches as one of the leaders
of the social democratic party. His constituency is the ·old medieval town of
Nuremberg in Bavaria, and his specialty
matters connected ,vith state finance and
the commercial and political welfare of
municipalities. · His otily discussion in
Boston of Germany's progress in a social
way will be on the Ford Hall platform,
where his exposition of his country's awakening to social and sodalistic.
activity should prove ·very interesting . .
L
I
nc1
,at;
t11
Join
ellfj>I
U81 1 I
brain. 11'1
•tence, l
ab9ut. ,
i,
DECEMBER 11. DR. LYMAN · ABBOTT, editor-in-chief of the
Outlook, will speak on " r
,Vhy I Believe in Immortali'ty." Ever since
the Ford Hall Meetings started we have
been trying to arrange a date here for
Dr. Abbott, but it is only this year that
we have succeeded. When it came to
the matter of settling upon a topic .D r.
Abbott suggested that_ he talk on a distinctly religious theme, inasmu~h as it has
been his experience at Cooper Union,where he speaks every winter,-that such
addresses aw~ ken very great interest in
'
an audience like ours. When- asked to
. . :. '.
~~
suggest some books on his subject _ he
. '
named the series of Ingersoll Lectures on
.,. ·:· _-_
~
Immortality; "Life After Death," by
,
Fechne_ "Life Everlasting," by John· Fiske; and "Modern Belief In
r;
Immortality," by Newman Smyth. Those who have lost their grasp
on immortality as a great truth of religion may be interested in the
above-named a pp roaches to · it from . the scholar's and the scientist's
standpoint.
<
l\V
pr
ki
)nl
the
Su
or.
en
co
1:~l·
ind
)ll,
:ste
_
~
I'G
, sol
s
dj
on ~
Wit
I
prj
OUS ·
ty t
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
, w1·1'1
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss.MARY C. CRAWFORD
Sull
Office Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4 .30 daily, except Saturdays ,·
Telephone, Hayniarket 2~40,
:lelail
~
;J
-,
:t'11 · ti
eco\
r o.f . ,,....,.,.
m4p -
~
*
;5
U1ht a
• a.r t ac,r
ualo •en
rU1,•
801
an a~ 1
ay · ot ; I
•Ymtio
1ro'f• t
nru'a1•
It .
tht DU
In ·whit
.and faJ
rtraY1
Y 111
he dJ
llht,
· Into
(I' rli
8Prlrl
th II
01elhj
•b~
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
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ms-0252
Title
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Ford Hall Meetings program 12/4-12/11/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Dr. Albert Sudekum, Dr. Lyman Abbot
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
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English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/088251307443bca9c0d2f55a1d4d7019.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=Nid%7EAVmJwDJ7M5UDg1CqP%7E1%7EurbehMG7oyuzovEAvIwr7LardkvB7cFCi3b%7Ey0UDUOpdN5KF06RiQj-vMler3JS3azVED24KFPnaTvd8DrLr3alc2BIM9JW6FRLF3HMLBovUwO7m6nKymcuGjjT3Z%7Er4ZjH79CZQ5Xg%7EiP6sxO9E7uyA1-2KDQolDw7d55Dke0bfzl6XRdWHQLcIWfnnANHsQykB4%7EzvkSx44uTn1JaZONU3Ao27BSV3-0ran2oFzhDVJYjvbvzYUjF8soP48160PO91NdrquzhJdNq-TVDXP3CZFuMYTvSyy1zcXOd-jDUOBNUV0rw4yxPFZXJ8OQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
0996c34f08ab3e939a55a1188ee9134a
PDF Text
Text
. ..
;
J' nr.h ~all flrrtiugn
FOURTH SEASON-1910-11
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M. _
PROGRAM FOR NOVEMBER
,.
2.
20.
Faure
Fau,-e
" Elegie"
" ·Lame11to"
i
)
i
CARMEN A. FAnn11.10, Violinist
Hn!N, "America the Beautiful 1?.
'
ADDRESS,
.
The Church an<l the Social A.wakening,,.
- Prof. Walter Rauschenbusch
Hv~rn, "Justice, Freedom, Brotherhood"
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOll,
11
" we
and
PROGRAM FOR NOVEMBER . ~71.
"
Oliver ICing·
Israfel "
, (Words by Edgar Allan P oe)
I
a1
Ill
m
al\
e ha
1
gma
the
llfozart
"Who Treads the Path of Duty"
Mil. HARRISON L. BENNETT, Baritone
,. Mn. GEORGE MENDALL TAYLOR, Accompanist
HVIIIN 1 11 Hymn of the Toilers"
'rhos
Aoojrnss, UThe Spiritual Significance of Secular Vocations"
;clali:
2.
-Alfred W. Wishart
HYMN;
11 America
the Beautiful"
l
SOC
hat ·
.o da y
in t
I
cc
it
,I
Fo l
~ the
fe e li
con,
HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
funds left to' the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
Ht) by the late DANiEL SHARP FoRo, who owned The l'outh's
!f'/dt,lon, '. The management of the . meetings· is in the hands of a
mmlttec from .the Social Union.
ti,-.
ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO · TICKETS REQUIRED
ORDi HA.L L, cor, Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
·'
:t Sm
d Wi
l
St
Ids, 1
I Spi
'ocati,
~
I
�1
I ,
_
,
..
:.U, ,Olliolef• •
,
,
.. ,·
., .
\!, , , : .. 'jc Vlllzlitlon~ahd t
'' " ' "
~·:nln~teel)tf\ ,'ceiJ,hlf'i: , ,· t'· ,,h6 cliattge8,
F
.} ''!-ntjdh iJnteueiltua/iiul ' e ,·l~s~1iced• ,tit
"fhe1g~llt tlill.§~· ot·flLJ; , cure.. . , -1: •\ui.l: . ,
lll'll't'ieln~ •tlf•
Jhfg-Jl~l'' lit/l. Jl8_0tlf~i11 ' ~o li111ct;
11 as tho
Js ttatu• .
,
Pro'
mornl
,Confet
whl
JG .
•
~ _,-; . · :
. •• .
.
• ,.
.
.,, .
·· - .. ~ :' ,·,. •· ,·.· '.
• - ~•:,, . •: .
: , .
•I '
.
·
, . ·,
.
;' ; ,': ·••,
. ; .'}., .:
.... ·
tu
:ii: .
g_
and
AUSTRIA.
-
the '
-;-r/.,-f
Chu
tu,o
~
-:.
the '
.
tor·
wa11
lre119
He
Ohur
clent
t}lo
, ' nt '
!'hot
hn,t
thnt
Of·
n.n
~
look
lstlo
.t Jn
had
:sJve
11·eo ~
ot
M
tlt«i
con-
f-;
Katherine Lee Bates, 1895
long .
the I
'
.
_ _ __
Charles S. Brown, ,go(,
~i-~~~--~, ·r -;.-=t: · ~ t~~ ~~~{=~- -PCI,,t
=
1 Rf= =l~
_
~ __:__J
~~_.
~ - ·•- ·c·
• :
·"'rh
tgrlI
America, the Beautiful
or tr
tho n
11 · •
lullnrl
tttbne
halt
O
O
3. 0
4. 0
hea:..
beau
beau
b eau
1.
they ,
2.
only ;
on a.ii
ngolnR
ls nga
rich, ..
Thoy, i:
Were ,i
. nece1111
polltlcn
It we ,
'houses
.
.
.
.
ti
ti
Ii
ti
. fut
·_ fut
. ful
- ful
.·•
-•-
-~- , ·• ··
for
for
for
for
spa . cious skies, For
pil
.grim feet, Whose
glo - rious tale
Of
pa . !riot dream That
lain
for
for
ter
ma - jes . ties A • hove
free - <lorn beat A • cross
man's
a - vail, Men
)a v •
cit • ies gl eam Un-dimmed
-
-•-
am • her waves of
Elem, im - pas- sioned
lib
er · a • ting
sees
he· yond the
grain, :.
stress,
strife,
years
,...
"The'
ho Ct!')
done, a
done w
llhoutd
For
pur - pie moun thor - ough-fare
A
Wh en val • iant - ly,
Thine al
a - has -
on
orro
nnd In t
'l'ho J
the
PeRk
mlnnpl«?,
·,·en>e1n1J
I tho
the fruit . ed
the wil • ·der •
ished pre . ciousby hu - man
plain I
ness !
life!
Jears I ·
Mid tho
1>llllcnt10
nttltudo
"our
uc
Pul 1
dng
Sweeping
Timc-w
'1'1!1thc,
J,lat111i 11
Sec 11111 nu
J111tlcc,
love. · · cruel
tile exCOEslv
t
., ''The C'hur
have lltls ln
for the <llaser
both !i/·£11.t t
sliould be t
Church, in the
. People. . It Ir
' lying ,vJien Jt
die. . 'l'ht:- gte
!lu11 today, , -
, eonservat18in a
. of truth,"
In opening
the crl tlclsm; t
the church, th
·ot Jts property
by scctb.rianls~
. QUil.rrels, t1iat I
deallng' With ne .
tlons being nda
lias diverted the
bf rellglo 1i'- tr6m
ot ritual, ehi: A
the SJ)eb.lcer tho
milted that . the
flatlon or' its ·v
1Yatered Its own
~!·emen.~ ous claim
mer •
mer mer .
mer
A
A
A
A •
hns 11er111ate
mainly Vllld)
has bo1 11 ch
Jt 19 hlUtl!le
. ';The Church
"'I
Tl, tll<!
Cl11J111io
llrnrh• i.:
Ju1ticc ,
What Is II
J>olnt 't.'-hi!te
fel!slon for
by work'ng
. "In ou1· ti
hns bonn · n
mlJzzlel by
\\'l11;t l•th
tu my ~,
fior no J.l'I
Dlcssfnr
I
i
i
i
i
-
ca I
ca I
ca I
ca I
A
A
A
A
'
mer mer
mer mer
·•··
ca I
i
ca I
i - ca I
i - ca I
God
God
May
God
shed
mend
God
~hed
His grace
thine ev thy gold
His grace
on
'ry
re .
on .
thee,
flaw,
fine,
thee,
I
·•· ·•-
~±==-~r=F=Eij=t=F=lci~£:'.:=S~=~~I
~
'
'
'
I
i...:..g~
.
I
•
'
•
thy good with
thy soul in
sue- cess be
thy good with
~T=
broth - er- hood
self - con - trol,
no • ble • ness,
broth . er - hood
From
Thy
And
From
=rt.
I
-.,-
=:: i= - -111-· - - j - ==f=•.--=fl-j_ ~~±: I · 11111-~ J~ ~f:I
---=---r-~
r ~ ~ - -±:• ::t<~ - •- ~ ·
~
-1- ·
-•,.- _ j _ - • - -• jl.- , - - •.--•- • - = L.•:;--- -1 - - ..-.-#tt•- - ~ 0 - . - -And crown
Con - firm
Till
all
And crown
.IT;/·
--IC!
sea
lo shin - ing
seal
lib
er - ty · in
law!
ev - 'ry gain di - vine I
sea
to shin -ing
sea I
.
--
�r
ike~
nse ,
~,~:a~!j.;-:-~ ):
of
the
, enowlnatlops rec.eptlve, bible
!
eply. studying .- social questions I and • ·•
e !soclnl : urllons, · which · are :made up I
the more prosperous members 6t tlw I
urches, ea!~~t~g~11~m;2!!J'.!._re_-~J-~---~-
----.- _
al
Charles S. Brown, 1<)06
== ===1== · - -.
-1--s'-~ ===,
==-- - -•·- f_,!_J-'
==•== •.
_:i •
- ·Iler waves pf
, i1i1 - pas- ~1:med
er - a - ting
be - yond the
grain, •
stress,
strife,
years
'I
·--,.
<
JUSTICE, FREEDOM, BROTHERHOOD.
plain I
the fruit - cd
the wil - 'der ness !
ished pre - cious life I
d by hu - man tears I
on
'ry
re ·
on
\Vhat is this- the mystic rhyming-,
H.ising-, falling in my hrain .
B a ni s hin~ with s olemn chiming
Every s elfi s h care and pain?
1 Tis the World-End drawing nearer,
ti ailing univ er s al good,
Heed ils rich notes ringing clearer,
Justice, Freedom, Brotherhoo d.
\V hat is this - the strong emotion
Pulsing in my heart lo-day
.
Sweeping like th' inflowing ocean.
Tim e-wrought harriers away:
1
Tis the \Vorld . Hope dra\ving nearer,
Planninl! universal good,
See its motto showing- cl earer,
Justice, Freedom, Rrotherhoo~.•
His grace
thine ev •
thy go1d
His grace
\Vhat is lhis-\he vague a s piring
In my s oul toward unfound good,
For no selfish end dcsi1 ing
Bless ings dimly unrlcrstood ?
Tis the \Vorld -Prnycr drawing nearer,
Claiming universal J!OOd
.
Hear hs great word s soututing clearer,
Justice~ Freedom, Brothcrho.od.
\Vhat is this th e tender shining ·
-
fjt"" -
In the eyes of thos e I mee~,
As they turn to me divining
All my visions s trange and sweet?
1
Ti s the \Vorld-Bond draw111g nea rer,
Pledging univers al good,
Hail its bri g ht s igns beaming ~leanr,
Justice, Freedom, Brotherhood.
- Isabella ill. Cron/ ,
thee,
flaw,
fine,
thee,
1
f
l
h
gm;
.he
so
>iat
Pho:
>da;
in
C
. lali
~
f --
--lt- ->-
in
m,
-~-•--r- -~.. !.. .-_I
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--1 .
W<
an,
-~it
Fe
the 1
reel:
•
,c on
·i
I
Su
w
St
Is, l
Spi
seal
to shin - ing
!awl
in
er . ty
'ry gain di .. vine I
seal
to shin - ing
cati
b
HYMN
, 0 nation strong a nd great
For thine own honor's sake
.. I (ear thou our call ·
We arc tl!y children, too,
From year lo year we grew,
Silent nnd patient thro'
Darkn~ss and toil,
OF THE TOILERS.
Out from the depths of crime
\Ve'vc tried in vain to climb
Where nothing led; /
\Vhcn life nru1 justice asked
Still furlhcr d wn were ca st,
E'en sobs were hushed al last
And hope seemed dead.
But now O nation strong
To the e mu st truth belong,
Crown thou the rig-ht;
\Ve are thy children slill
Working with mii,ht a nd will,
N e •er resting hll we fill
'fhe world with li~ht,
-Rost Alic, Cltvt/Rnd ,
"1&W<"U"'IVlfll""t'lllJBe•
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'·
�NOVEMBER 27.
'J
wak-
wu,
H•
drt!U
, ,the
calling and since, has given a great deal .
of thought to the problem of how one may
at one and the same time make a living
and make a life. Those who have fol-
Ohu
., ~· nt
·clent
'J'hnt
·or tre,
hn,t
Ions ,p
lhllt
the ' le
"t.b
n or
the n
o an
looic
81\llirl
rnbne~/
recent '' National Vocation C6>ngress" ·
held in this city, will be especially inter-
·01111 1t
1t In
on all
ngnlnst
had
:-:; s l\'e
·1rco~
.8
I
lowed the interesting proceedings of the
hlllt Ii
they '·a
llstlo
ested in hearing what Mr. Wishart has to
O
of tht
la ngaj
rich.) . iJ1
They, ;~,
. Wero n•
necessa
0(
th~
con'~ .
·saf ori"lhis,' tliit topic
•·
c
done, a'l
dono wh
Should · n
tin orro,
peak
111111-
nplc,
!Ven'1e1n'J
I the
II
,wl
~
er
duce active settlement work in this coun-
our
~
try, hav.ing organized in 1886, the Neighborhood Guilt!, which is no w the
University .8ettlement of New York.
hns bo~n \;
lovil. ··· Cr··
!lie excer,e
hns perMs ,
malnly .vm
has bo-i 11 0
It Is htUtzl
muzzle.] by
· "The ·chu
"have tl1ls J '
tor the <Jlss · • both lil'Mt ,
should be ;
Church In t
People. ' It ·
1
lylng .,vii en J
.die. , '!.'he g
111111
.,
t~
~ :,
~
DECEMBER 4. DR. STANTON · CoIT of London, will speak on
"Am I kly Brother's l(ceper.P" Dr. Coit ha~ done mucl; during his _
nttltudo o
"Our cJC'~t
Point -t.>he'
fesslort for.
by.. work'ng
In
,
.! • ' , •
life to answer this query in the affirmative for he was the first to intro -
and In th
'l'ho In ·
Mid tho
PIIOcatlon
.
.,...
highly enterprising·- cityr and- . is actively
:
,.
interested in politics and in labor affairs. The kirid of rbinister, tn a
word, who believes in doing a man's work in this worid while preaching ·
about the next.
"'l'he'
ho crl~.t.:
'. the
,r
hoi.1r:,;;,'...--"~"',-,.:
,
though he is a Baptist_ minister, he is a .
director of the . Board of Trade in his
Political:
It we I~
' houseli ,ft
r-'
REv. ALFRED W. WISHART of Grand Rapids,
Michigan, will . speak on "The Spi'ritual Significance . of Secular .
Vocations." Mr. Wishart has been a newspaper man and while in that
Though he is an American by birth he
has long been identified with important
social movegiepts in Eng!an(,l and at. the. .,.
last election he was a candidate for Parliament.
In the· shaping of ifuiitics
which have made England the most progressive social democracy of our time he
has had a vital and intimate share, for he
today. ,.,
, <' 0 nservatlsni '
, of . truth."
In opening
the criticism~
~l_e church, t
t
· of Its propeN
, by scctnl'llints·
. tiunrrels, tliat
dealing' with n
tlons being ad
has diverted t
bt reilglon ·•ti-tin
is a very brilliant speaker, and his book, entitled " National Idealism
and a State Church," has had a wide reading among thoughtful men.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY · C. CRAWFORD
Office Hours at Room 3 1 Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30,4,30 dally, except Saturdays.
Tel~phone, Haymarket 2340.
ot 1
·1tual1 eh!:
_
the speb.iter O
· ~1yed that , tho
- ,rhe ot· its '
Church
fin Ion
T\:'Rtered Its ow
tremendous · clal
them, · It, on . ti
Is put ori a level 1--- ~··
tlons. · It '. ti>wers·r head 'an ..., .m11"1,'l'll'II:;,ii~n,.::z:;;ac: -r--------"'!:'- - - ~ - - -- ~-:-,----- - -- - - - ~~
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
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ms-0251
Title
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Ford Hall Meeting program, 11/20-11/27/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Rev. Alfred W. Wishart
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/cd1c86f91c0c36bf9eb9e07e9fcac3cf.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=IGmVLwnUdHyb224sOIRrA0ACcpj6eq25CaEC%7EnlfL4qhPM1aqgM7GySy6dMWhnk6%7EpVmqr-H-fU09Xb7zfqLJsfIGGcDz1djb-m1Nzln6oBUlZko9llulqqwY0HgBKMmEZA5lWqgnUKTkEDiGMftVCH9gb1HmAArDNRq6bhKQTovHs45yefU5p36%7EJaFEoji8fTFcy9%7EcGO07uE4RmUqKjYhCKjJJzUu0Z6mO44Izt09hW4-x2YG9ZqC6TcSd5M1qiaAnNKpy-EqDWkJFRMnU4ZjqFeJvCZkcpqxHKy7kG8TU9ycU6mlyTT0mnT48x6J-gYALnwDjtsOZARyPqqt5Q__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
d0e7c58e52563ba5cd37c0a7203a7931
PDF Text
Text
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f
Hn11 \ , .
f',
\ver, That It Will
!
, velo1)1nent.. .
e
·
1
'
' breakup of ' the .
the prnl<lng of a
a breakup as a
In the people an
II b~ as broad as
human thought,"
unn, of Bchenec- ·
at Ford h a ll,
rotestantlsm an<!,
FOURTH SEASON-1910-11.
ng
f the- Individual to
way Is supreme.
realized as some'jan what ha s been
Ith that Is coming
, tat ls developing
are having now
y, your barons of
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
'
.-,
,..
AT_})O P. M.
I
November 13-REv. ·GEORGE R. LUNN, D. D., of the Pe~ple's
.. . Church, Schenectady, N. Y., will speak of "J,Vhat Happened in
Scl,eneclady." In many ways this will be the most significant
story ever . told on our platform by the
person chiefly concerned, for it will
trace the steps in Dr. Lunn's personal
development - and incidentally " show
up ;' the way "business" is sometimes
bound up with the church - from the
time wl1en he was pastor of the most
aristocratic and ultra-conservative congregation in his city to the present time,
when he is nt the head of a live body of
worklhg people which meets in a theatre
'n Sundays and all the week stands
■boulder to shoulder with their leader in
bl11plendld fight against g_aft, la w-l1reaking and injustice in the public
r
rvlce• .This is a mighty stirring story. Don't rriiss it.
I
FOR NOVEMBER 6.
~I::: : ~ fl:;:::~ t
l
malce a living. I
m a terialistic con- J
spirit of man Is \
brealc Up a ll the
ceases to he true.
s In the grip of I
s why I had to
ractlclng what I ,
11 ,..) lvlng , of a de- '
my church that I ~.
e thing to do was . .
slum and clean
~
I
1 a!t1~~~:i
~;:P
e a cr,mfesslon of
t of ours. There
of ·. faith . In the ·'.
brother[ towardmust get ';I
We
' or It falls.
't yet. government . .
the
Why even
V{e
I
. W, R;o-m, Graduate Fisk Musical Department.
1
Ye, :r'his Day."
•nst Meets West."-Dr , Arthur H. Smith.
Gre.enland's Icy Mountains,"
_..,,,_=-T=-_IB FLqon:
-=-l
.
unlclpal ·corrup~
for a · full · deuch of the steal \
ent . tq . jail and ,
are sent to con- .,
~old' teaching of '1
ile[ldlng 11s It Is '
re o·f the teachlllg . •
j. A. Mvims, B , b.
L; P. O'HARA, Fisk 1910 .
•
i
cons4tutlon were
They . ·were def! should not rule.
iecause It was but
nd they .were too
b, •rhey provided
~ONCERT AT 7-40 P. l',1. Furnished by the
'JUBILEE SINGERS of Fisk University.
•~,Mi A,
1
1
the unrest lri our \
ng up of the old ·;
the .duty of the
but to develop
\
• ·i
~; ~r 'the present j
t the ·child Is for , \
r -play and for
factories, Your ,
are reading hts- -'! ·
w and see that j.
~mployed men In .
· y children In the
laven' s salce why !
w _.rlc a nd the _\
~
. wlth · the syslghted till there
e br~ad- for all:
~ always to be 1
rid
I
starvation, .' Not
[
but you also are . . ,
Let us then build. Let us worlq and let q
the foundations b~ , laid ,. on -~us tic~ : -~ox'
I
r.
••--'!"""~-••-~------'!!""---"'T!llffl;rt!!"""l:iU1:rl:m>"v_1r=~ ,
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CHOOSE YE, THIS DAY.
I
Once to ev'ry man and nation comes thC moment to decide
:ff f EWTintf!f!ITT
1n the s trife of Tn~th with Falsehood, for the good or evil side;
Some great cause, God's new Messiah, offering each the bloom or blight,
And the choice goes by forever 1 lwixt thal darl_ n ess nnd that light.
~
Then to ~hie with Truth is nQble when we share ..h Cr wretched crust,
Ere her cause bring fame and profit and 'tis prosperous to be just.
~EENLAND'S ICY MOUNTAINS ·
Then it. is the brave man chooses, while the co,~ard s tanJ's asidc 1
And th t! mullitudcs make virtue 0;f the faith they had denied.
Frorn Grtcnland's icy mo~rntains,
From lndia.' s coral strand,
New occasions teach new duties ; time makes ancient good uncouth;
\Vhere Alric's sunny fountain.s
They must upward still and onward who would keep abreast of Truth;
Roll down their golder sa nd,
Lo, before us gleam her·lamp fires I we ourselves must pilgrims be 1
From many an ancicn\ river,
Nor attempt lhc Future's portal with the Past's blood rusted key,
From many a palmy plain~
I)
-Janus llusstlf Lowell.
They call us lo deliver
tl
Their land from error's chain,
IC
1t
Whal though the spicy breezes .
THE DAWNING DAY,
Blow soft o'er Ceylon's isle,-
,t
k
n
'fhough every prospect pleases, ·
The morning hangs its sl~nal
And only ~1an is vile?
The soul hath lilted moments
Upon the mountain crest,
In vain with lavish kindness
Above the driltol days
\~hile all the sleeping valleys
The gifts of God arc strown:
In si lent darkness rest;
The h eathen in his blindness
In sunr~se on our ways;
From peak to peak it Hashes,
Dows down to wood and stone,
)eC
:nd
The vision draweth nigh
The day of pow'r is coming,
·s.
y,.
Itcrowueth Jiving, dying,
Is coming by nnd by I
By wisdom from on high,-
We'll 'sec
n1u
,i by and by,
k~.
)hall we to men benighted,
. Above the generations
The lamp ol lile deny?
And in the sunrise standing,
The lonely prophets rise-
,hall we in clarkncss leave them
\Vithin their glowing e}'es;
lo 1 let us claim then:i brothers
It draweth ever nigh,
It blesseth all men tliinking, ,
It cometh by and by,
ro~~
J'hat no good th!ng is failure
!len,
~re c
· No evil thing success I
From heart to heart it brightens,
And mal\C of earth a he3:ven 1
!se1
Our kindling hearts confess
The truth tlings dawn and day star
" ' hile Light to •us be given I
fn,
In, c
From age to age it groweth,
fl
That radiant Faith so high,
ti'.
.or ; \
Its crowning day is coming
e fa ,
In power by and by.
~
C<
;e:
From hour lo hour it haunts us
It laughs along the sky,
Shall we, whose souls arc lighted
t:
\V hen life's great meaning brcakcth
are
JV, C. Ga,111ell,
IOW
:empl
jY ch
1
enve.
.,
!"
w
Is wl
'r ight,
11·e br
lnd a
ctories while their fathers
, street in vain for work.
we have a true Democracy,
1ent built on Justice." f
liter Rausc·•1enbusch of the
'fheological Seminary is the
~ J ~ ~~!Pt .~%}Y.f~.]B~l~n.21J.Jl.llYd;~ :
1
.ffj6,
only Is God the crea o , but l
1--~-~!!%~'.::::!m:::I➔~==::::=::::==::::;:=:rT,;~~T;ri:;;;iiT,';;""c;;:'e;'a'!'ii'i'~ Btarv.
Let us then build. Let us w,
the foundations be laid on
ustlce," :
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astor
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11
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cor~
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ired
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CHOO
set
of
- d na\iQncc to ev'ry man an . i
ln the s trif e of Truth wtth .
·1
•
. leaI
Some great c:iusc, God's i1t
\aw,
J\nd the choice goes by (or
~, s~
,n V
Then to side with Truth is
gn9
ncrc
:cl ~
nulj
hid
:cnl
i
ga,'
ch~
I ii
ErC h er cause bring fame :1
OUR HOPE AND PURPOSE.
GREENLAND'S ICY MOUNTAINS
Then
il is the brave m a n. c1
And the mutlitudcs make '
,ve strive not for dominion;
Frorh Greenland's icy mountains,
From India's coral s trand,
And crown of victory,
Jn kindly cmulittion
Lo, b e fore us gleam her Im
From m any an ancient river,
· Ili s willing hnnd we'll seek,
Nor :lttemnt the Future's p
From many a palmy plain,
A11d own him for n. b_
rother
They call us to deliver
' ,vhntever tongue he speak,
• I
They must upward sti ll an<
Holl down th eir golden sand,
Shnll bear lhe pnlm nnd garland
N~w occasions teach new c
\Vhere Afric's su nny fount;:tin.s
,vhoc- the worthiest be
'er
Their ):ind from error's chain,
alll
t
,vha te' er his clime or co1or,
THE
Whnt thoul)'h lh e spicy breezes
His lineage or creed,
Blow soft o'er Crylon's isl<:,-
To him be honor gi\'Cn
Though every prospect pleases,
ti
For honorable deed ,
Arise, ye nations, ris e yet
And only man is vile?
1
In vain. with lavish kindness
Exalt them-for ye can-
,The gifts of God are strown:
The heathen in his blindn ess
The dignity of labor,
The hrothcrhood of man,
Bows down to wood and stone,
The morning hangs its s ignal
Upon th e mountain crest,
,vhile all the sleepi ng valleys
. In silent darkness resl;
From peak to p·C'ak it Ha.s hes,
It laughs along the sky, .
The day of pow'r is coming,
Our lenders and our people
Shall we, whose souls arc lighled
The gratcfu) truth hnvc lcarn'd,
Is coming by nnd by I
By wisdom from on high,-
And strive for glory finer
Shall we to men benighted,
Than soldiers ever earn'd ,
The lamp of lile deny?
Shall we in darkness .leave thC'm
Arise, ye nations; rise ye I
Let ancient discords cease;
,vhil e Light lo us be given?
And earth, with myriad voices, ·
No 1 let us claim them brothers"
Awake the son g of peace I
And make of earlh a he~ven ,
. Above the generations
The lonely prophets riseWithin their glowing eyes;
Front heart to heart it hri~htcns,
It draweth ever nigh,
It cometh by and by.
strov~- -to get clollar gas rcinn
nd so it went · on until those of
city. A
·
the
his congregation representing
, ''moneyed interests" came to ,h ear
. more than they could enjoy and djge~t
about graft and corruption in . pubhc
offices.
,,._ .. -~ hail not have chUctren wun,o, '~ e ~actorles while their fathers
t~!m1; the street In vain for work.
Then ~vlll we have a true Dem~?rac_ ,
Y
a overn-ment built on Justice.
.
f Walter Rausci1enbusch of the
Roc\~e~ter 'fheologlcal Semlnar,Y ~s \~:
spea!rnr for ·next S·unda.y eveum ,
\
f
i.
\
The truth tlings dawn and day stn
lt blesselh all men tliinking,
-j;;
\
�\
js_
November 20-PROFESSOR WALTER RAUSCHENBUSCH comes to tis
Ile ·•
again, his topic this time being "The
C
, be
<l he
Church and the Social Awakening."
Nay,
Merely_to announce Professor Rauschen- ·
is o
busch's date will suffice
t~~
hi this place, .for -
. a•t>,- ..II
g
there is no man whom we at .Ford Hall
its
hear more gladly.
c, s
pllt i
hi, rec
.- ·9,0,,e :
biographical sketch of him, written by
'1frche1
mo4c
CONCERT AT 7.40 P. M, Furnished ~y
Mn. A. S. EcK!lfAN; Violinist.
MR. JoHN H. GuTTERSON, Accompanik
•
has ·-~
,r. H!
tre/
0011,1-
HYMN, "The Dawning Day."
ADDRESS, "W:hat Happened in Schenectady."-Rev. G. R. Lunn, D.D.
HYMN, "Choose Ye, This Day."
Q_UESTIONS FROM THE FLOOit.
wi
d the
jtople,
'?::J••
v:•
Al
DATES AHEAD.
thi5 ci
ns an'
ston
ssag~
,j
.,
\ .
1
i
Baro1
ht ts
L
lllMllff
I
fJ
tJ
Udy,"·
trlalls!l
8'Jcatlj
f, firfa110
PROGRAM FOR NOVEMBER 13.
ma
,. .
•11 au~
I-Jim
1lfagazine of last December.
with
ich
ch
oJ· nl• •t
,-13oJtQJ
those interested to look up the America·n
who1
,osi111
~re fol
rcgat\
1c re
~
• a .,trenupJ
l
lrionJ. '111a1
· Ray Stannard Baker, may be found by
cnatc
so
a
A very interesting
, nQl
Novemb~r 27_.'._ALFRED 'vV. WISHART of Grand Rapids, Mich., "The . ·
Spirilttal Significance of Secitlar Vocations,"
December 4-DR. STANTON Co1T of London, ·" Am I 1lfy Brother's
ICeeper .2 "
·
.
December 11-Dn. Lv111AN AnnoTT," ~Vhy I Believe i'n Immortality."
December 18-NORJIIAN HAPGOOD, "The Social Function of the
Press."
·
d 10-
a
l
lret
dt
-i..:
..,r
~n••o
'IJH'
PIO•
,r
IS
1:o
Is
,1-
.e
0
s.
g
1
I
0
y
,t
•
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
-NO TICKETS REQUIRED
·l
~
FORD HALL, cot. Bowdoin Street and Ashburtotj Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
0
s,
oifr,.
lor
HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the Boston Baptist ,Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late DANIEL .- SHARP Fono, who owned The 1'outh's .
Companion. ·The management of the me_etings is in the hands of a
Committee from the -Social Union.
~~5
~
0
d
d
,,
I
\.__,
'N
n
,s
e
r, ',
,e·
,- '
~
1;ls congregation · re_
presenting -the
''moneyed interests" came to hear
more than they could enjoy and d.igest.
about graft and corruption in pubiic
I
I
offices. ·
·
·
I,
! N i>t that his· preaching .was primarily
economic. He cared, above everything0
111,g in factories while their fathers
. tramp the street in vain for work.
Then ~vlll we have a true Democracy,
a govemment built on Justice.'' :
· Prof. ·w aiter Rausci1enbusch or the
. Rochester Theological Seminary is the
speaker for next Sunday evening, his
top'lc •being, "The Church and 'l'he Soclal Awakening."
• ,
,f'
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, •,;, 'i•: /,.
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•
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0250
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, November 13, 1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
13 November 1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Rev. George R. Lunn, D. D.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/99bb5dfcb85429e2b59e5ab8b612b71d.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=vfcM1qbE%7EBQ%7EbgjpAIeE3kpWwv%7EjgrX-BfjE4Z2GOyqwc%7Ej6fMM56A3VJYXlP9IK95ZsM74vigKrkyksEs2qRvsiBVvSzNWrIgk9WBzdnqzokDmUdgAicQrpZMnLmtzDPDQ1UUbLPnQ489gzlJN-c2TyEQtYQDe2Gr1Plr9x%7E%7EkgRjCnTpoiAI9AaFwGq2J-9spYo9MvDIXbLM00y9nK0k4f2Y7dIYe15PCInNRQHsLsdr7YJEe80iaKh173w4SJLbRDqKLy3ChqV0uSdoX1feO36veNcFN9UIltvRKtCQXARRenHmByQ2udYfGo8RgVamOkPC4M8LT1%7E6nLXXrmXw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
35319b8e84d0921d2dfc37b622b5beeb
PDF Text
Text
•• - .
,,.'
;l~-
..... .
. . , .
, ,
~~:""' J\_,.,,._ , .... ,........... ....
: . ,..,.....___.__ __.._._..._,_.~
:~--,-· =--•······-~ ~-r'···~-
Ford Hall Meetings
·; '· ~ - -:-'.:_,_:· ~- '
\
An au~.lence, so numerous . that the
. _ .... _
F
.
Jr:, '."'")
I
YI
'~i~ £~~-theF~~d- H~ll--Me~ti,ngs .' '
.
~
t Hall Sunday evening meetings open
;Henry George, Jr., speaking . on "V.
is Accomplish~d." The second mee;_
y Alex'ander Irvine ··on "The Church
1 1• · and · the ·last Sunday in- October
al;
l Brown ' whose · topic ·•will ·be · "The lcial ·Fac tor." ' ... ',
' ·:• . .. . ; , •,, ' ,; ,, L
~rs ~nnounced . fo'~ the rest! of 'the·· se
'.Qbott, D. D., the Rev/ Oi - · Gifford
·P.
1uschenbaugh, _Norman · Hapgood,.',:tJ
1
J' nrh fb;all :!lrr.tiugn
w-: Ii.
FOURTH . SEASON-1910-l I
~
l
'
j,
La wren~;.- -Presidc~t
P F~-UI
..
of Atlanta, Miss Margaret
olt of London, J. W. Bengough of
ick Adams of New York, Mrs. Ellen
' James A. Francis, D. D., Professo
hicago, Bishop Charles C. Williams
George B. Lund ·. of · Schenectady a:
York.
. • .
1
Hall mee,ings are ,upported from l
Social Utjion by the late Daniel Sh;
I Companion" and were organized to
ed in Mr. Ford's will, for · gatherin
) dispel the increasing antagonism
' employed. For the first season ti'.
~gs; last season there were twenty.
iey - that when
"s~q:ind seaso·n . c
enthusia~tically to urge the work'o
1 DuBois
,~ ·
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
November 6-Dn. ARTHUR H. SMITH of North China will be the
speaker, and his topic, '' 1Yhen East lvleets 1'Vest." Dr. Smith, though
he has passed nearly forty years of his life in China, is of New England
birth,
His father was a minister in Connecticut and the boy was
educ~te<l at Beloit College, £~om which he graduated in 1870. Two
years later he went to China under the
American Board of Foreign Missions an<l
si11ce then he has been located at several
stations in North China. Dr. Smith was
in the siege of Pekin during . the Boxer
Rebellion of 1900 and has many thrilling
stories to tell of th~t moving experience.
Few Americans or Europeans have so
wide and intimate a knowledge of China
he and we are indeed fortunate to
secute him for a Ford Hall evening.
Known all over the world as uniquely
qualified to interpret the East to the
\Vest, Dr. Smith is also famous for his scintillating wit and for a rapid- ·
fire oratory compact of accurate information, shrewd comment and
: brilliant illustration. His books on . China and its people are delightful
reading whether one cares about" missionary" en~erprises .or not. Yo~
they enable one-as do his talks-to share intimately in the varied life
of an elusive but curiously interesting foreign race.
as
11 A
Cycle of Cathay.''-Dr. W. A. C. Martin.
Forces in Old China.''-Dr. Arthur J. Brown.
"The Evolution of A New China.''-Brewster.
"A Typical Mission in China."-Goothill.
11 The Educational Conquest of the Far Ea~t.''-Rvbert E. Lewis. ·
11 China and Her People.''-Chatles Denby.
·
"Chinese Characteristics" (1890).-Dr. Arthur H. Smith.
4'Vlllagc Life in China" (1899).-Dr. Arthur H. Smith.
"China and America Toclay '' ( 1907) .-Dr. Arthur H. Smith.
"The Story of the American Board."-William E. Strong.
11 New
·
tie·
the people. were glad to fill out the
ved to give the committee in chari
1
residential distribution of Ford Hall
. references (if any), and their oc,
~tie more than lO ·· per cent were tl
m
le . eetings each W<,ek from places
,::e-10 to 25 miles · from Boston; 2!
iton suburbs; while of the rest, al
re · found to live in : the immedial
in other parts of the city proper.
er cent of those who filled out th e
themselves without interest in ·an
on. About • 12 'per cent were Je v
1
six per cent C::atholics, five per
ent Episcopalians, and about the i
e nalists and Methodists.
New
,e, Spiritualism, Quakerism-every
indeed:-appear.s to be represenl
I
I
I
SOME SUGGESTED BOOKS.
.
..
.
~tings reach just the people Mr. F,
f ~urched worl<in~:,folk-i~ made cl
pation. · About 40 per · cent are ti
; the greater number are m.e mber:
lent are clerks and salespeople; 1
and 15 per cent students.
I
Jt
.
.:·.
.,,,.,
.·,.
'r
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0249
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meeting announcement, November 6, 1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
6 November 1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Dr. Arthur H. Smith
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/c38242bf2613da2745909d59826449e6.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=JzlmQrWfL2URnDVTEPjSf6HA7fksw%7EvCYt50xiMIs6r2ZLK6GlhYlzfbhrfBzwTlA0syGKI-zLAEEqWBo7oJmlrBzfb-EFFWioeo-z2PmqyrPCp2p2Cyv%7Ey%7EBTj3J78LweJCFSnIUgZL8AIqK3fXCSzOykgnJls-rPKUMBwJZ-ep0xYref7mFUFSaguAwdIfMV-P9jVdzOEzpkXHaFGKKiIkumXB5nypZGHbhUVohPKeyxndb0xuzvq2dBERS91so1ZNWcHLKniZrxElLvY69ksfUnROhd2zU9vvtYdUdqMvAbWMQQ82CH4lCNuYUJz1Wqa0VJuoHhzZlTgCtciyPQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
73505647e9ca69ff4ea943637aee099b
PDF Text
Text
~
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,1
~~~-·;:_:, -'~\?i/;:·.:.· ~~~:'•,:· : '. .~ ~ . , \.
eetings are
pos
funds left to1 .'t he Bos}Jnion,' in ~vl~.ich hall
..
cld, hv the,,.Jattiillaniel
.--~ . ,
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=
: ,:-··. , ,., ~~
ts·E~s·siNGL
' This Winter at the Ford Hall Meetings
It i~ now only
before"th~ "Fo Hail"'f ueetings, foj
~we~k
-
rd
0
J
' which a large constituency is waitin.g eagerly, will begit:
their wint~~~~!~ns.
Hen.~~ -
·
G~~:•1:. !~. heads
.
I
.
.Henr~.G~orgdi.Jr. -
the lis_t ol
J
ny
/\I I
, Come to IJoston
'
'· . Be!ore , a . large
last nl~ilt Henry 1
\·
:_George,
lhe or1gi
1
gave "r•1
: in . va,Noua . count
. 1110,;emi,11 (',
;_'J.'Hfi :.;
FOURTH SEASON-1910-l I
EVERY .SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
October 16- On this first evening of the new season HENRY
GEORGE, JR,, will speak on " Has The Single Tax Got Anywhere?"
Mr. George has recently returned from a
tour around the world in the interest of
·, ~-.( ..
Colli'er's 1'Veekly and he is peculiarly
able, therefore, to report interestingly and
.. ',
'•
authoritatively of the actual progress
'
.
which has been made towards the adoption of the Single Tax idea so inspiringly
set forth by his distinguished · father in ._ , .
that wonderful book. " Progress ·and
Poverty." Mr. George has inherited his.
father's gifts as a convincing and dramatic
speaker as well as · his economic theories,
and this opening meeting of our seasbn
should prove a _red-letter night in the
history of the Ford Hall Meetings.
rge,
r ry .
a
lick
nd
Is
star!!
c;
SOME SUGGESTED BOOKS.
"Progress and Poverty .''-Henry George.
"The Land Q_uestion.''-Henry George.
"Protection or Free Trade.''-Henry George,
"Social Problem·s.''-:-Henry George.
"Property in Land.''-Henry George.
"The Conditions of Labor.''-Henry George;
"The Menace of Privilege."-Henry Georg·e , Jr.
"Social Service,"-Louis F. Post.
"Privilege and Democracy.''-Fnderic C. Howe.
"The AB C of Taxation,"-C. B. Fillebrown.
al.
S1ngiC'.'r~t'X
'l'hls was the
seas·o n of tiiese
,,
. W:hich- ht.Ye attrac
offerln;; a -p·oirnlar 1
_r_ . lhp 1,rn)llems
· nqync<,inent ' · was
Ooj,Hnan. 'direct,,,·
,, .notwlth~Landlng 11
·.of •certain men ha
an •- inct'~asecl' appr
,meetings moro ·Lhi
musicians have v
fo.r ev~rl' $undav
· . · Mr: G~rge be·g,,
. . "I so;, lhe sing!,
T:· have heard ·a 1
yours . . , '1'hey .',ay
am I, ·\ No matlr·
polltlc!/, ·,May(i 1 Fi
~,
the tali of :i'he ev
- ropos~a ·to · tax ,
p
every inhabi_pnt 0
, Mr. G€orge th e n
as a _pro position, 1
·
on land, to pnt 1
n value createft. b
the sellin1L va·lt1e ,
. OUid • mal,e 811\'
W
. necessary, . he si, 1
,_ possibl~ to exemp 1
ucts of labor · 011
which he deci~r.)•J
_rnost ·. scientific an
plucking machin e
: He declared ('lia t
°1'f'l.W York 1clt:y fo
acre to every fa 1
are lh•ing Jn slngJc
.._ God made pro'vis1
lated thEl provision
wer'l taxed for th ,
but slm,ply hold
would either ha ve
and If tho land , yr,
·they would have 1
.f.'
4•,_ -,,. ~, .,......,.... .
.h~r~if iihd ,; the
v. , 27,· the Rev.
cl Rapids,flichiiflcance of SecuDr. St~nton Coit
othe~•s K~_
eper 1"
' Abbott; D. ,D,,
ortll,ll~y;'! Dec.
i tor ·of , Collier's
unction ' of the
v. 0 :. P:·. Gifford,
he l3irth of the
- - - - - • - .-
new '-y°ear the
, in. every,
'Wise of New I
Deti'oit, Pr~fe~:r.,fo.thews,· the ,
.:'}11, ~t·;follo,'.l~1 .:,.~ ~ov,?i . tl1e -R~v. Ufv. James F~a1~cis a?d _ Rcv, Herl>ert
:
the
hpr ,1.~°'l,t h\' ..D., '..1~:;:. o.f.}.Oluna·,. "When B1gclow: of C1,ncmmit1: are_on ,tJ1'e. !is~ <if
);;:;~~!!~t.s :;: ~'f.e st{r
1_ · the : µev, ; s_pe1ikers1. :_ o ugh. ~
3,
t~.
w1~/1out, · _-top1cr . . att,gqt l,}1, L'Un~, 1 l,J.,,· ,,!:• ~ ha.t_Hrppe~~,1; tfched~r,:•'~ . , , .i '· -,, :' ;-' ,• · .... , , • .,
D
7aJt'eri'J:, ~is)1op :, Lawr~rice i· sjreaks ,· ,J11n, 8 ~n
cMp~~ta.d:r,;'',:'N9~. - . f1;'M, ' ,. ., ) ' '' \ • ,, ,· '
~
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ci51:t· .
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"What Re
·P1'esiilent
' tion With
arcls of t
Technolog
/'Does the
'a Social
_ 'Reilly o
O
·Freclerick
,People's (
Ii~ ·_
spragi
'Is and th,
( -- . ; .
' . I
J.
I
�~_ _ _ ___,_,_,USTBIA.
3egi~ Po p~l~r.
Se~ie'
rax,Half. ,Hour
I
,;
f
' ; 'I
i,
(
.
_I
•• ,
.
of
~
.,
•,
',alway,· · the
,dressed that . a
itlon. ,
· ·, · ·
r Henry G.eorge
(lllnn . who chn
ldeni · and spren
' wor d; He hns
·a tour nround
spenk with nut
· thnt hns been
tlon ·of the sin
mntlc even ker,
fntber, · Those·'
etlngs have meeting well ·
llfe'ln Now ·quelltlona might·
!k · to come th!' · fntlier · wro
eo the Ford and Poverty,"
, . a fet\ture "Protection or
So keen Problems," "P
1t the hnll Conditions of •
re to ntteud hooli:; '.'The 1\Ien
from 1he tl1ere , nre boo
the Sonth F'rt>rlerlc 0. H
c city; but
nrts where an;l Henry Geo
ho mnklng. ; ·1\Ir. Inlne i"
eon of the mnny .nr11 fnml
lit to Ol'ell. the Olrnreh of ·
rest of this York. Ibsen,
thnt Is of-· Kennedy and
On Sundn;v the social mes
e, Jr., will drnmae.J_ of thes
, Tax Got tnlk. HO hns 8
The .concert
Alexnnder: ngnln under th
of "The D .. I{lngmnn, a
tie Iden!.". John H. 'Gutter
the month · For thoM wh
'".rho Mo,1- mny be enld tha
!e," by Al- lngs nre mnde ·
ndny there left to the Bnpt
ldress, null
1ho wi.,hes lnte Dnnlel Sh
"question the Youth's Co
ng pnrt of Coleman Is chn
e thnn .one the meetings, ·
1pl11ased nt free. Not even ·
, it Is not ndm~~slon. , . ,
throu'gh · the
1d11 of mj!n
ivo gone' :to
of Dowdoh1
e, to listen
well. plnyed
1 bour the
md women
,c flel<l or
, sociology,
1 ask ques1 from tho
·. ·. -~t,t!t-· : I ' T~e'f Jo'r
·. l.' i-~1i~10Jsi
,-ety nnd '
The'ftrst n'
l!enry Ge
discuss th
1
,11r111olple ·.
· / father, 0
Irvine ot
' ; Church an
speakers
Rnuschen
i
the apealtet"
,cetlng Sun,ject -wlll be
Anywhere?''.
rrom . a tour
e a trip to
t nrou11d the
inet· TolstOl
Last yenr
on In Eng•
1y speeches.
.lch hnve an .
Ford Hall ·
thhi senson '
heretofore, choral pre:
,s w111 again
lngman, and
meeting will
ggs, · George
lu;ir ,. accom•
s,
October 23 - ALEXANDER IRvrnE, formerly of the Church of the
Ascension, New York, will speak on" The Church and the Democratt'c Ideal," Mr. Irvine is remarkably
we11 qualified to discuss this topic. In
that unique autobiography of his, '' From
the Bottom .Up," he has traced his own
steady growth in passionate love for real
religion as well as his constantly deepening conviction that there is still some distance to go before the democratic ideal
can be obtained in the Church as we of
to-day know it. That . much is none the
less being accomplished in this direction,
Mr. Irvine's successful cosmopolitan ser".ices at the Church of the Ascension prove, He will tell us the way
to do more; show us, perl~aps, how we at Ford Hall may almost realize
that Democratic Ideal of his,
. S
'a
r
ti
i:j
'
-1
SOME SUGGESTED BOOKS.
'•Social Duties from the Christian Point ·of View ."-C. R. Henderson:
"Christian Ministry and the Social Order."-C. S. Macfarland.
"Chapters of Rural Progress."-K. L. Butterfield,
"Function of the Church,"-E. M. Fairchild.
.-
(In A 111erica11 Journal of Sociology, September, 1896,)
"Social vVork of the Church."-Annals, November, 1907.
"The Church and Modern Life."-Washington (;Jadden.
"The Church and Labor."-Charles Stelzle,
"Christianity .and the Social Crisis. "-Walter Rauschenbusch.
"Churches and the Wage Earners.''-C. B. Tho1~psonf
' 1 A Mtrnicipal Church."-vVashington Gladden.
.(Century Afagazi11e of Aug!tst, 1910.)
f\emtnary,
Awakenln
,v1shart o
SeP.ulnr V
Alibott' on
lty;" Dec,
er's Weeki
Bishop Ln
•Do for a 11
on •"Educa
the Rev. L
That Is, i:J.
f spealcers w
l?i, hop
s
, l3,falthews,-, ~ - " ' : " r ' ~ ~ ~ o • ~ ]----.cou10:-,v-.,~ vu•n- uo~~ D•••a•-.
- ~- - .
,
.
· · !gel ow . of Cincinnati, the R ev. George
\the results· wbujd be· so beneficial" thatl g ii> ·
I::'..; '12 ' l'!,
-~ dl O "'lD
, R. Lunn of Schenectady .and the'-·Rev: •
men w:ould. loolt bo.ok o.nd ' wonder' that lc, ro ~ ai'H O {'.j ,
~.g.-:5 ·
: J_ames A. Francis ot Boston. · George W-. · ·. 'they should ever have had the 'civil~~
rfJ. •i::< 1-< dl "-a:l ·i:: -~ - -+> dl <ll · r1>
ColEU))PJI Is to direct· the opening services,
· zatton• such as we have today." . ·. ,_ •' • ')... I!' Ill bO .~ dl dl 'i:.> bl)"' ::I
.
\Tiusscll B. Klngm!l,)_ the · concerts,, and
1
· Mr[ •George . then ,went on , to l tell or 1-< dl
~ - 1-<
ro .!<I ,.,.. 1-o
o
:_;.\l.i_lrn H . · _ utterson " '.Ill be the pre'centoi:.
G
~l)e ,, \jenellta ;-:Cla!.1!1~- : :foi;,. :uie;i; ~l,.I'lgle ~ :B F=l ..., g ~ - ~ ~ 1;l .g .i:f S
d
\
, , If -+-,/
• · tax system. ,·. • . . · "
/1 • ·,
"' 13= <+-l Cl w. ~ P< 1-o c, .S "'•
l: ThEf)ipea,ker /lliBe_rled tlio.t ,Austra- 'H O O
Cf/ CJ . . . .... ~
i
wn,
\·. Jt,)~~(;f.JT/.l.lu~./
t
I
�·./\,··/··_.-·.: ~ ;;.. :-.·.(":·;-~.~ -· -::~
-:·
k
'.':->'.: '.', -. -.
'
t
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. --~·- - ; .· .·.i/dX
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0
_
. This Winter at the Ford Hall Meetings
' . It is no~ only ~·week befor·e··tlit'Fiii'r'd :frall'trttetings, foi
'. 'which· a large constituency is waitin:g eagerly, will begit!
their winter sessions. Henry George,/ Jr., heads the list oJ
-- .... -1,o"~-- ,:o . • ..,n; n....h .. inc<.-.!:Ha .. . Th~ Sinl!'!e __Truc Got
.
~ii!
. Comet
B eforE
hi st nliii
f~
i\
G e Qrgc ,
l U O\ ;~ lll C
· tn . • t
viv
li
?lll]
1
1.'Ha:,;
'!'his
0
ch of the
·e Demo,
markably
opic. In
;, ''From
. his own
e for real
1 deepeny
some disratic ideal
1 as we of
; none the.
direction,
,olitan ser.is the way
: 0st realize. ,
1
October 30-,- ALFRED H . . BROWN will give an address on q The
.Atfodern Drama as a Social Force." When Prof. Salter talked, last
year, on the social message in Bernard
Shaw's plays, there were ~any of us who
went away very eager to know how
Hauptmann, Sudermann, Ibsen ahd
Charles Rann K ennedy fitted in. This
Mr. Brown will set forth. He has studied
for many years the most important social .
messages which have recently been given
to the world in dramatic form and he will
show us what they mean to art,· to literature and to life. The time is now past
when thoughtful people lo,ok on the drama
as mere amusement. Jane .Addams h as
made it clear to those who had not previously reali,-;«;<l it that, for tens of
thousands of our people today the play is" the thing," the medium, that
is, through which moral lessons are being most effectively inculcated.
What the prevailing note of these lessons is Mr. Brown will tell us.
•m .
o_ · llt o
r
r~\.
;
,.no twllh
!27,1'
: of ce.r b
nn ·IU Cl'
no y n c m
Cotema
rh~
!r?'\
m ee th1£
mu s lcb
. 11'
fo.r e ve
.
of
1
.·
be.J1
l.'h<:I .
ear
set~
De-
1
y o urs .
a m I.
politi c:;
the ta i
·Pl'Op os ,
•
every i
. Mr. ,
n-s a p
on fo,
. r1es1
1the
hed.,
n va in
th e se:
'WOUid
nocess
p oss ll>
1 1
:~~:1
1rch
~ ucts
IAd~ ,
1
-rnos t
plu c ki
He .
1
tes t~ . ·
SOME. SUGGESTED BOOKS.
I
whl c·h
-~ q w
ri ck ;
land :
;ch . .
Mr; <
"I SI!
· t · ha v c
ege, \
I
"Youth and the City Streets."-Jane Adda ms.
''Votes for Women."-Elizabeth Robins.
"Strife."-:-John Galsworthy.
"Justice."-John Gal sworthy.
(A111 en'ca11 J.fagazine of Se.ptember and O ctober, 1910)
"Enemy of the People."-Henrik Ibsen.
"Pillars of Society."-Henrik Ibsen,
"Ghosts."-Henrik Ibsen.
"Servant in the House,"-Charles R·a nn K ennedy.
"The Melting Pot."-Israel Z angwill.
"Plays Pleasant and Unpleasant."-George Bernard Shaw .
n
W'hlch
ol'ferfn ;;-
[ I ~.
lary
Henderson ..
rnd.
f:
sea son
ar1\,
....__J
f
ac re
nre
"·
]I ,
God
1
lated
we re
but ,
wo uld
and It
• y
the
tChu,oh
; ,~ .;
fov. 27, the Re
~ml Rapids, ·:Mich
~nifi cnnce of Sec
Dr. Stanton C(
rotlie1:'s Keeper
an Abbott, D. l
mortali ~y°;'' D
edi ~or of . Collie I
Function ' of I
~cv. 0 . P. Giffo
!~1e l3ir~h of
~
1
1
the new year ,
ot,
dlA
in_every
c~
bi ·Wisc of N
pf Detroit, Pro I
Jer :Mathews,
■l!lllllll!l■IIJl!ll,-il!P.~ ln g . ! to~u r a-l'~o~ n~ !'.':r~ m \.r: 1 .T s ."".7:~ 10:'!'::'.s".:·v_ ~J.o:-;:v;.,r,_?i,~ 1i:':1e .~cv;,1.°TsRir~v::-.JJ';i'o,;m;-;:;;; . :,~;:;au'nic_cr.1si',ianii_dtheRev.H~rl
m u r,~~a.Vl!' ~'.l'l:~ u~ d~~ a~!',-~ . q., ~':' fo J'i': w : '.;.. .N "' i
_..
!
;:-"'
::
.es-,
: i:
tD the adoption or the sln- ~ ~~hu~,\S,D\i~h\' ..D; ·p.; .,o,f:,_Cluno,, "Whim 1l1gelow, of C1pcmnat1: are ,011 .t j1e. hst
'Nl• axiom that the un- IJ.Ja~~!: M,eet_,i \Y,est;'.'_ N1,v': ,l~, the ~ !JV,· spe,i kers~ t,h,o ugh . ~~1thout topics
s
:
'
t ilt In •
land belongs to ~Mf g~µ•puri~,·l).,',J:?1,·. •~rha.t Ho,pp~{leJ1; ,t'~cl~ed,, ,··.'· "
;
. , , .i \,;,; . -~ ,r.· ,', · .
that m~kes It, not . to , ln\ Sclillpeo'tady 1'r ' Noy, _ 'F of;,\'~'o.),t~ri. ,,;",J;l1 ~j1pp .' Lawrence ;, speaks , ,;fp.n. 8
'
20
o doea not ma.,ce It, r, ·.'-4 ., ·; e· •"" 1 ;/ , •,, .g t;f,I. , ... 't.\,,. ,..., 1,, , .. , • • . . , , .
,'
· winning Influential ,'. . .... ~- '-_-. -.,,: .
.✓
,-J
··
/
nyaµdCan- - .... ;;,,. . ,_. ·'\,
d
'),~
.,
...,
I
I
�J1ibl'
,ton
Jhe ~
Sha~
~ ~\ UND
\ON.
,' ,/'.
•
._
I I
~:
co'~
,ne,e\
'
PoJ~1~r·'s~~ie.
3·to ...Begi~·
ngl~ Tax~l(~lf::_:Q:o~r· ~(t.
'
..~ ·• ~
•
'
,• I;-\ f,
~
_/
f '. .
~
•
.,
•-,~r
e~lng, through . the '. alway, . the ,'
·hundreds of ml!n flreeeed . tha~ ; 1'- ,
. •h
· "' It . tlon. •
· . ,.
city· ave gone O 1 Henry Georg
r
corner of Ilowdolu imnn who cha
>n place, 0 li st en ·Iden •and eprea
• ,
music vel . played
for an hour the , world. . He has
men ancl women ·a tour around
In one field or . speak with au
erature, eoclo\ogy, that has been ,
and to ask . quee- . tlon ·of the eh~
\QBwere from • tho matlc evenker1
\, •
'·
father. Those·
.Ion meetings have meeting well '
winter Ufe'ln New question!! mlgh
vho seek : to come thr father · wr
mlncl11,'eo the Ford and Poverty,",
become .a · fet\ture "Protection or
Ooston. So keen Problems," "P
rest thn t the hall Conditions of ,,
ho' desire to ntten,I hooli:, "The Me
1 . come from the there are boo
,t · emll the Sonth Frederic 0. H
t of t 10 city; bnt . an;l Henry Ge
hose pnrte wh ere _ . ·Mr. Irvine 1
nn In _
tho mak 1ng., mnny ari, fnm
•th season of the , , 1 Oh
.
f
. Is nbout to open. t ,ie
urc1 o .
I
or the rest of t hie. 'York. Ibsen,
rn\'iety thllt Is of- Kennedy and
n e On SumlnY the eoclnl me
~e orge, Jr., wlh drnma'!i..,of tho
Single Tax Got tnlk. He hne
• ; ·•
Tho .concert
come Afoxnnderi again under · t
tnlk of "The Il. IClngmnn, .
r.mocrlitlc Idenl.' ~ John H. 'Gutte
1y of the month · For tho8e w
cRR on "'l'he Mod- may be said th
nl Force," · by .Al-' ln1ts nre mnde
1ch Sundny there left to the Bn~
tho address, n nd late Daniel S
yone who wi., hee the Youth's 0
The "question
citereetlng pnrt of Coleman Is ch
, Moro thnn one the meetings,
bit nonplussed nt free. Not ·eve
Is not ndmlealon. • ' ,
· ~n~ -
t
0
!t.
.· ·-:f},'i .
J
\ : T~e'(
:i-ell~lotis,
.ety and
I. The'flrst-'
Henry G
discuss t
!,principle
father.
Irvine o
' Church
speakers
Rnusche
11emtnn,ry ,
Awalcenl
,-v1shart
Sepulnr
Allbott ' o
tty;" De l
er's Wee 1
,
Bishop
Do for a ·• .
l
:venlng.
l,, ,_1·· \
- '(:I . ,
.
le to be the apealter
Hall meeting Sun-Ile subject wn, be '
t Got Anywhere?''.
Jrned from a tou~ .
'
'
·, .
e made a trip . to
he went arou)1d the
rip he i:net Tolsto! .
ssla.
Last ~
·enr
election In Engne mnny speeches.
ms, which have an
,r the Ford Hall 1tlnued thlli season '
1cs as heretotore,vlll be choral pre~
rogrnma will again
II B. Kinsman, and .
enlng meeting wlll '
:,, Griggs, · George
ng . as · he~ , accomr
I
.,
., .,.· ·
I
I
fro•~
On
The concert programs, again this season, are to be under the direction
of Mr. Russell B. Kingman, whose valuable services in this way were so much
appreciated by us all last year. As choral
precentor, to lead in the "singing together," which we hope to make an
increasingly enjoyable feature of the
Ford Hall Meetings, the Committee has
engaged Mr. John H. Gutterson who, .
through long experie?ce as musician,
teacher, organist and settlement leader,
comes to us admirably equipped, as we
believe, for this interesting work.
thc.,s
n ,,
her
.'flt,
vays
.
,
1
1'JF[: 11..,1~7~r·
. the
· ,..
.
'. 'RS
chi
. lead
cert
Ru11
· this'·
l~ldc
ac'thi
J
·1
,
I\In, GUTTEIIS ON,
o(
HOW SUPPORTED : These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the Boston Bapti~t Social Unfo_ (in whose hall we
n
meet) by the late DANIEL SHARP Fonn, "vho owned The Youth's
Companior,. The management of the meetings is in the hands of _
a
Committee from the Social Union.
'
ar
co
op
GEORGE W . CO.LEMAN, Chairman and ·Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meelings, J,Vliss MARY C. CRAWFORD
Office Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House HUI, 3.30-4 .30 dally, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.
rct
ag
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
William J. Hobbs
James A. Floyd
•or,d
iii
Charles N . Bentley
William E. Perry
·
Benjamin N. Upham
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward Cummings
Robert A. Woods
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Mrs. Richard Y. Fitz Gerald
Franklin H. Wentworth
Russell B. Kingman
Henry Abrahams
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Rev. Dillon Bronson, D. D .
Edwin D. Mead
John T. Prince
Meyer Bloomf:jeld
James P. Munroe
Wit
lh
I ,
h~~
,endI
ODIi
o 11l
:~
THE MEETINGS ' ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKE_ S REQUIRED
T
lom
Ill~
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
~
nod
•s
en •11 Edu
the Rev.
That Is, .
speakers
Dishop
. ·
: :Matthews, "
,·.'r>"~. ~,~c~
"
a-g-o~·.
77coilid'~
w'e~ oiila- nave-,itnir;tHOc-TI ..
Cn....,x:.,..,
--- --.,,-r.:. ~, b,
1 Bigelow ..ot Cincinnati. the Rev. George
tho r~~ults wtiu)d be so be1'eflcla.l' that g ~ · dl of <l2 6 ..14
, R. Lunn of Schenectady -and the- R ev: ·
\tnen '\V:Ould look back and ' wonder that c!,
ro J-< H .--, 0
\James A. Francis of Boston :· George w.
' \they «hi;mld ever have had the 1,'cly\l~.,,"' ·t::<
Ill ~'I'.\
ColeJJl,ll.fl le to direct the opening servic e~;
itatlon' such as we have today, - ..
~ H IS
bO .... -'Ill
\tlussell B. KlngmaJ:l the concerts, and
\'• Mri •George then ,went on to \ tel) ot1e,11J .:1+> · 8P=l ·ro
:1
~!111 H . -_ utterson will be the precentru;_
G
the , ,betieflta ;-•lllo.lmed , to~, :uie,,, ?l"gle""'-,., ~ <+-I <1> • ):!
't ax s1stem. ; : '.. , ' ·'
'
!i,
~ ·o:l O O c!, W. ~
\':' ll'ha> ,speaker'. asserted tttn.t An~trn'+-<
~e R"ev~IerberJ
,~-··
~,rn . .
J:l
'\. .ll/ct-~f;"f.J//:J/v ,~--J
.....
o
~
rJl
..i:;,
..!4
o
Ii)
Ill
a,-,,..-,l
f:l< P..,.d ~ -_0 '
rJl -,.,
Q.l
Ul
II
~~
bl) o:l O ll
o:i:C 8 ~ 0 o1
~ o:i <1> . ~ ;;~
- m ~ 0 ..u .__ '
l&....L,HIJUD' -
�E
, •.
✓:
'
i .,, ,:
.
f,
•
I ,
• , :~. • ~
_:Ml•••<>~9':M Cl
t,. ~ r ~'
t •·
,.
I
t !, •, \•l
:·\ .~ !!
E>l\lit
•1
,~-I
•
.
? •
•\,"
'
I I
,WMt,' II} ',(I'!)
, 11p,tflcl tl!I"· im
neee io /.lllll
!I, 11011,1.tl!!n ~
·. Mr, flmltl!,
lifl.tlon. n~ver,
latlqn to thli ,
' tile frl~clplll
wha It wirnt
1)av11 Ill\~ brp.l
cou-n._lr;Y , tl!,ey
tlV61!, . · . •
-ln o.n~w~rln
to ijo with Q
•011gM to tea
1 stltu~lonil,1 go
I
ftnd · 011t ho ,
where p.r~ · \l!I
· and IWW}\6rll
law ae In ~'111
· he clal!lled, .
fluence and, Pl
i C·h!na. ,WI!' mu'
, clehoy ·e,nd
' have a large ,
both men iin
tlona.!' lnetlt\l
direction le
eetlng
1ettt1y
:o \t'iie
r ,hie
,blllty1
hrewd
lltlclll,
le
iirif
1'1181-
;h'the
when
3 Is Ii
China.
s the
e cen1907.
eearo·n to b&
vai-c'I., w!llc)J ,
tlrely new· BC
' that It le Imp '
, tla.na' · thii°re
Catljolloa Pl!\
ha.I oonreren ·
Hfi depted ·t" ·,
tlon between
end those .
chants, •
•
PROGRAM FOR OCTOBER, 30.
·.M.issionary U
i{ ?f
CONCERT AT 7,40 P. M.
"When the Heart is Young"
Dudley Buck
Sphor
" Rose S9ftly Blooming" •
Mus. H. CARLETON SLACK, Soprano,
GEORGE MENDALL TAYLOR, Accompanist.
I.
z.
_j_
TH~Y WO~LD
..· · 1, :
//
HY.llrn, "Battle Hymn of the Republic."
ADDRESS, "The Modern Drama As a Social Fo_
rce.''--Alfred H. Brown.
Hnrn, "If All Were Brothers True." •
These meetings are made · possible through
the funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
l1111t' night: ' '
1
1 would hf\ve 5
Chlitbso we call 'b
Cl>Ulltry,_ he eald
••
sront bencnt -to u~
sotvll the servant
would do honsew,
tp ' that work un 1
. ·'
Committee from the Social Union.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
J.
Hobbs
James A. Floyd
Beloit
I
,111 b&
• Juhlup ot
tenor,
cnt in
where
le hli.s
c thau
·Chinn, ,, The Bl'rvR
proved It sol r to b
end Insoluble an/I •
the trouble." '
· Dr, • Smith stated
cxhnuelfble coal ui
had h11rdly been to
ho 10112_ ' Chin ese
J>rouaht lo Arl)orlc
•,' llhlP! , manned t,y
Ol)rnmnndqd by C
VIGI~ 1.0J 1thls ln ev ll1
tlon f h\l people or ,
ec•t~i,11,11 frlo111lly
Charles N. Bentley
William E. Perry
Benjamin N. Upham '
~
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
lnl~t1·y
Alfred
:lu'1.tNl
r , \ha
1Slc In
r m en
been
or an
lhet a
years
homo-
tho Chlnue " he 11
obat11ol111 In t\1e wny
tho Chln11se hH beer
lhe , re11reeent1d lvea 1
t Ion thJ)r•.''
· Dr, Smith · then t
courar-emont of ti''
. Chlna. Ho found /c
rarllam,int In DdQp 1
r•,e~plulll lritdo, w
L. gno .of Amerlcn'a
c111neeo wa, to tcllcl
e,nment he Hid
'
Doors open at 7 o'clock
--,
rover
"'° I
know __how to
It
The. ilootor •aid th~
mor11 like lhQ Ang
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
nnr. other p 01>l0 or
'Many peopl, her
tire Cliln11e people
Jaunar,men we ~
I "Who WQu{d thin
o t~er nauim by lea a ,
1 China, kn<1wleds•
rt•
an · ln, unct, and · the
~bout t'1e rnental au
l
. .,. .. cated Chin 1e. .
ti! -' "MIHlonarle,i In ·oh
ol • with Contuolanl
. ;-.· • On" ot the nob
~ ' th0u11ht &Jl>'Wh11re OU
:
1
,swell
~
lfr
'' Fos' "Ro-
:,/ . lt11 ·111
111onartea In
• tract ebt led 'Ohrt
1
em
thur H.
Meets
i by the
oohUltullonal
,THE . MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE_
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
,. prole four
W
not l10 dcclnreO ur 71Yo1lorn ·ch
ro11lly>Atone 11,ott J! r
Robert A. Woods
Rev. Edward Cummings
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
Mrs. Richard Y. Fitz Gerald
Franklin H. Wentworth
Henry Abrahams
Russell B. Kingman
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Rev. Dillon Bronson, D. D.
John T. Prince
Edwin D. Mead
Meyer Bloomfield
James P. Munroe
mndc
~'f:Vl: t·S,
r
'
girl, t>roblem In o.
meet) by _
the late DANIEL SHARP F:oRo, who owned The l'outh's
Comj>an£on. The managemei1t of the meetings is in the hands of a
1
onnec- ,
' 1
The unrestrlct'e./1
country or 600,000 ,
vored by Dr. Arth
t,aln, China, n 11 a 11 .
HOW SUPPORTED:
COMMITTEE -IN CHARGE
Chlmt. 1
I
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR.
William
,cticut
H. Sm
·. Predicts Gr
I
I
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.
, Inter /
erlca.n
, that 1
,11,j:
.
br:· A.
Office Hours at Room 3, Ford Building', State House Hill, 3,30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays.
~
600,000
·\'. ,:· vant - Gi
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD .
;t
:t.
·, 1
; I - flV; '. ~th
~
, IQ~ll P1)11,r1J'•,
,~~~ 1 ' ep
ln
epe11t
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1.
,
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l (·•. •.,••
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nt ~o
eo.11,u~••n
�Battle Hymn of the Republic
Joli, W,e H=o, ,a,s,
.
.
==4_._c-f\ti-t=t- -{',;-,..-.,-...P.-~-
:4=~-=-.-::._~ •-.--•-•-.---;--_..,-_-ti-- - •..___,.•- ---.- fl'..:_ti-.==:1"~-· ~-~==='iJMine
I have
3. He has
4. In the
1.
2.
eyes
seen
sound
beau
have seen
Him in
- ed fo rlh
- ty of
the
the
the
the
~--=C~~--·-lt-11 ·
-f~=-f ·
-
-,
glo • ry
of the
watch-Etes of
a
trum. et that shall
.Ji - li,s, Christ was
fl-~--:-_ , _ _
_
11- -
Wm.'"";+
~
'
~-- ~t--=11--1
~
--==-~i::;==&==
;; II
II
•-
com - ing
of
hun -clred
cir
nev'- er
call
born a - cross
the Lord;
cling camps;
re - treat;
the sea;
e~J=~~,,~~-==1
=
==
11 ~ 11-11---~- lil....!...- -'--- ~-:--t;-ir-~
r;--p-11.11-11-
--~ · v
-
.,-= -•~ -_---= +-J-1+- ..,~ ~· it -."'!'c± -1=1=~--f\-~
~-....,...~~-t.-~-7'; •--==+ --t-;l:t "' ..
~
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- ==-=- :~ _-,:i-=-.i=
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~
•7-l•
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•--'-· <il .<11 - - • --ti-
- (11-
<J
.
He is tramp, ling out the vin - tage 1 where the grapes of. wrath are ctored.;._ ...hath · ·
He'
• They have build - ed Him an al - tar in , . the even - ing clews and damj>s ; · I can .
He is
sift - ing out the hearts _ cf 1\1en -'be - fore Hi~ juclg-mcnt-seat; . -Oh, ·be
With a
glo - ry iri His bos - om, that trans. fig- ure~ you and Inc; As He
e (~-~-•=-j
.,.,.-·
t·-·-~:_:t-_·-~~--'--- - - ·-~--·--~-s•·-··1•-• ~ . •...!-. ~ - ~-'-- Ill
~-•-1111II!-
1~
- - - i - - + , - - - - t - h l - -~ _
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.
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.
f
THUi\ II.
..
S)!,TH .
.
.• .
,
--==~.
l
t~nor, Jam~s . .A.' 1'1:ver~.
hlmselt for thl;l mlnl>!lt·y
, with the quartet. Alfred
'nrst bass, was gr11dun.tt'd
•cl Nooh vV. Ryder, the
·1s ,a teacher of . music In
ny which there · ·c our men
, their voices has heen
Its cniallty to that ot an
loadlpg critic s11ld th11t a
might live m11ny years
enr such 1:>l'aull(ul homoone ns thelt·s. Their proJW might \vell Include four
, negro follc songs, as well
; '.'Crossing lhe Bar,'.'· Fos, Hlvor" and Rhodes' "Ro.
- .-~=s=S~=G=E~==s~ ,~~-~-11~fr
~=s ~ ~e=t=1!~C~t~-~ ~- -
~-~t-f.
. I
the son ot a CorinecUctit
;,as graduated from Beloit •
In 1870. · Two yei,.rs later
hlna unde, lhe American
, hns served since that
I stations In north Chl~"·I 1
home oh leave' In .c onnec•
missionary pagei;mtt -.i ,,
·tomorrow night w 1 b"
h
the l~l~lc unl\'erslty' jubl0
'he quat'h>t Is made· up ot
rhe learler and first tenor,
\Vorltr was 0, student ht
1g th~ce .to I•'lsk, .,'vhc;ii•e
3.lln an.rl. history. He · hsi.s
3 con11io.~ for tilot•e than
has studied negro' mu£1c
~l'=r-~==f' ~
CHORUS
' ·.-..· _- 1
.
~=E~
loos'd the fate -fol light-ning of His ter - r~ - hie swift sworµ; 1-Iis truth is march-ing
read His right-eoussen-tence by the dim and flar -inglamp~, His truth is march-ing
swift my soul to an-swer Him I be ju- bl -- !ant, my feet I Our God is march-ing
di ed to make men ho - ly, let us <lie to make men free, While God is march-ing
~a:Scq
._
·r
. ,•-
Glo - ry, glo - ry hat - le - lu . jali I
.....
:5~ =.
,.F -
r~3
GI~ - ry, glo - ry hal - _ - In ; jah I . ··
le
-e-· ·•·
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~9 ~~r=C=±l~~=k=S _=Br
~~_,
_
,,_
fi
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-
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,
·
I
=j=:==t<_±=t-=~=~=L=~-~-•-.==I-•-•-- _=f~+~--•- -='=-~--~-~-i-1!}- .
-•·
.
.
;, I
14
I~
$==
;s!:::;:=
~.:::.::::==~~~*~~-r-r-tF~
Glo - ry, glo
~
ry
hal - le - Ju
-
jab I
His
truth
is
march - ing
:9 ..I!~t[M_eeti!!fil!
'Jv-(l'1JA; ,-,-,,,,-;,-~·-
.
i:- 3 ~-_,Et=--~~~~~=.EG-·- ---•~=z~~, _ .•==i- r-===i=-- - ...- i=-, : · ~-,I.=}~] . -=- x -I
-: ~ ~
T~~ ~ r e ~ •
:>vember 6, Dr. Arthur' H_.
ealc on "When East Meets
ic will be furnished by th.e
;ity Jubilee Quartet.
·
r-~=~
=
r
~
Pl
on,
on.
on.
on.
. ,.''
,.
'
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t
..
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, • ,.
.
I
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• ' / • •,:('•I
on.
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,""
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'
.
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. · ..'
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An audience- so numerous that the
, all Meetings
\ :·. : _ ·.· ·.,,.
' (1
...,_,__..__...
....
:·
.....,- .:_.: , · .,.
.
..
. .:
L: ~
\.. .J _
_ _ _ :....-2~:.: :~-'~.:_:,~ ::__~ ..;:.;;Jallii-'illil.:lol~UUU.a.lll..o• .IJlL.LLLILtl:J.l.L,;,l!!LJ ,rlnnrs \VAl'A ~lnr-;P.il fiftAAn ,minntAR hA.. <::.
ThP.. . For
Auld Lang Syne.
;~Ejft.
Republic
.
Wm, Steffe, 1855
'-ffl;--..--gt-.--+-1
==-- .' ~
==11==
-,--Ii==+-•- - 6' -
ib~
~
-
• ---
;,-~--
th e com - ing
of
the Lord;
cir
call
cross
a
hnn -dred
t shall nev • er
;;t was b orn a
1. Should imld acquaintance
cling camps ;
re - treat;
· the sea;
C
. _ _ __.__ , _
_ _ _ _J~
- 7_
j\__i,,._;;I-
- • '
~ - - : : - •.
We'll
- 111-_-<l-
·• - - -
wor~; dis truth is
11np&, His truth is
ect I Our God is
·ree, ,V hile God is
march -ing ·
march-ing
march-ing ·
march-ing
for -got, A~d •," dnys
Jang
eyne,
my dear, For
tak'
a
cup
o'
o'
auld
kind~ ness: yet, For
Jang - syne?
lung
syne,
I
I
I
I
auld
And gie'e a hand o' thine;
And we'll tak' a 1
-ight gude willyswaugb
Fo1· nuld lnng sy11e,
·
•
For auld lnng ._ yne, etc.
e
IF ALL WERE BROTHERS TRUE,
Tt11Je...,-"Auld ·Lang Sync."
T1111e-' 1 John Brown's Body."
•
Should eart h he full o f want and woe ..
And (car a ll 111t'n pursqe,
·
,vh c n t!al:h mi!!ht s hare tin th' s h a [\pi ncss,
. If all were bro thers tr~ e ?
What is this the sound nn d rumor? ,vhal is lhi s that all men hear ?
Like the wind in hollow valleys when lh c storm is dr awi ng near,
1
Like the rolling on of ocea n in the cvt".n·i oc of fc:u?
' Tis the peoJ}le marching on I
\Vhilhcr go they, and w hence ·came th ey? \\· hat a rc these of whom
ye tell?
·
In what coun_ a rc they d we llinJr 'twixt the gates of heaven and h e ll I
try
Arc they min e o r thine for mo n ey? \Viii they serve a master well?
Still the-rum or's ma rc hing o n l
on.
on.
on.
on.
•~l=f=fl==l==J
==?tt-=~t
!:=E8l=:t-r==r=1:r ~
·.,
CuonUs.
.,,
Should mnn in so rdid selfishness
Cause grief the wh ole world thro ugh,
When a ll might -pro s perous partners ~e,
• If all were brothers true ?
.
Should man f~rgel his bro th Cr•s wenf,
And 0 'soul's ·dclsnu ti, nu brC\v,
,,
.
When h ea lth and lov.c , trut cheer, we'd g ive , ' :
If all w ere brothers true?
,
'
'
Smooth the rugg ed, fill the barren, turn ll1e bitter into sweet;
All for thee this d ay anct ever. \Vhat rcwa'rd for th e m is m eet?
Till the liost co mes marching on !-Cuouus.
\ .
Many a hundred years passed o ve r l1ave they labored deal.and blind 1
Nrver tidings re ached their sorrow, ne\.c r ·ht>pe their to il mi g ht find
Now · nt l:u,t th~y•v e-·Henrd artd h ear it, a nd fhc cry comes down the
wind. ·
·
.
·
-:
And their feet are 01,arcl1ipf! on.
On ·wt mnrch then , we, -~he ,'{otl<ers, :\nd the rumor that ye hear
ts the hl enderl so und of triumph and deliverance drawing n ear;
For the hope of ev e r·y creature is th e banner that w e bear.
·And the wo rhl is ma rching on .-Cuonus .
- William Aforris,
.' I
Should. brothers siarve , ~nd sisters f a ll,
E'en helpless s uffer, too,
.
,vhcn th ere's ei1ough (or each a'i1d all;
. If all w e're brothers ln1 t r ,
'
Forth they ca me from grief and torment: on they wend toward li~alth ·
and mirth ;
\·
.
All the wi de worl<l is their dwelling, every corner of lhe earth .
Duy th t' m, scll lh cin, for thy scrv:ice :· Try th e bargain what 'tis
wor,th ;
.
.. For the days are marching on 1
Thcse,: i::athey who build thy ho.uses , '\cave lhy ra:ment, win t~y
.
,.
If ~II were' brothers i r. uc, 1hy l;tds,
· If a ll were brothers true,
·
Then each\vo uld s ha re·catth' s h a ppiness,
.·
1{ all were brothe.rs true .
Cnonus-Harkl th~ i-ollinl{of the thund er I
Lo) the s1111, and)ol thereund~r,
Ris elh love and li o pc and wonder,
. And the ho!-t com e~ march ing on,
..Glo.ry, Glory _Hallelujah!
·
lang ·• syne.
4 And the1:e'& a hand, my trusty frien',
HYMN TO LABOR.
i = J~ J ~ .j_=~*-1 '
1
=~-1
8-
auld
2 ·We twa hne run about the brnes
And pu'd the gowans fine:
'
But we've wnndered many a weary foot
Sin' nuld liing syne.
'
·
For auld lang syne, etc.
. --~--11~--:~
11-
be
I
I
;4~~~1-=~~=
rggH
- ·•· ·•· •··
----~-~·=:~s==i===t=--/1==•=-- ~J
. ---=•==•--"' I== - ~ j
~-
ac4uaintance
-
grapes o,f wrath are ctored; .H eihath
even - ing dews and damps i · I ,.can
fore lli~ j11dg-1i1ent-seat; .Oh, ·be
.fig-1ire~ you and tnc; As He
-,- -•- ;,J-
min' t
(i~·..,__...,____,.i)j~. -~€t~--!7J¥l~r-i@.
,
1-l>,=8
- (I' --<.
for - got, And nev - er brought t_
o
l;s. ~+---,1=-t~=t-=t=1~c=,__~=I#--@'
Should auld
F~r
: =t-:-N
- ~ --!'i
be
.
•
n
'I
Should nntio~s $lay \lu:;.it nob_l~:s_o;1s 1 ., l~ bloorly w a rs •im!,lr,.u e, ·' \.Vh cn, all m,i ght.}_1elpful comrades be,
1, II :1/1 were brothers true I
.
• ,
Then do to others as you would
Thal they should do to yon,
Fill all th e world with happiness,
Make a ll men brothers true.
\' -~
u
il
C
k
LA ST CH O RUS,
Let' s nil be brothers true, my lads,
Let's a ll he brothers true,
Fill a ll th e w o rld with h a ppiness,
Letts a ll b e brothers fruc.
-Harvey P. Moyer .
I
\I
!
I
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
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English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
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See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
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ms-0248
Title
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Ford Hall Meetings program, 10/16-10/30/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Henry George Jr, Alexander Irvine, Alfred H. Brown
Source
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Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
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English
Subject
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Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
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<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/eeaedad34e7afa0e125a788b5e7624d5.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=CdxDN5DzmXVqLOVIUpLTBNmKVOrbEpvYMFzMPabEs%7EWVsuOwB8k3vTngiaoneIiMA-iP6ER1-5qv3yb5d9hIOlS38Ws3nMGV07-1iX-gXCwdWcs68y9k8Kig8Mhdn0qgZ1Evf%7EXTz2K-47MtMEzw9HbJn-cw9YKTtR4CcHgSa8kApDonpefiJnWb0JbO5ggRgCi%7Eo9X6mRNLMKjkSee5xp1QA06k7RACoTa%7EMtbZ1YaZn7AyqM48GzWs-jD1%7ERykQrZAMQu%7EZ6YiOi0sC9bJ3-KJsQJGCx2NwnvO0E8rZ8VCNhf9-z-25jJCDeB2X3HthXhEs%7ESn593liy7Btxwarw__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
9dbb46d5bf362723fe436e5414c95c60
PDF Text
Text
FOURTH SEASON-1910-11
PROGRAM FOR OCTOBER 16.
CONCERT UNDER THE DIRECTION OF MR. RUSSELL B. KINGMAN.
1.
2.
Heilschel
"Morning Hymn"
Balfe
Day Is Done"
Miss ADELAIDE L. GRIGGS, Contralto.
GEORGE MENDELL TAYLOR, Accompanist.
11
Hnrn, "America the Beautiful."
1
ADDRESS, "Has the Single Tax Got Anywhere?"-Henry George, Jr.
HYMN,
"The Government To Be."
Q_UEST!ONS FROM THE FLOOR,
PROGRAM FOR OCTOBER 23.
1.
2.
llifendelssohn
"lf With All Your Heart"
Buck
''Fear Ye Not, 0 lsr_ el"
a
Mr. JoHN W. V. BALLARD, Tenor. ·
Jo11N H. GUTTERSON, Accompanist.
Hnrn, "Creation."
ADDRESS, "The Church_
and The Democratic Ideal."--Alexa nde1; I rvine.
I
ege,
•r '
Iary . ..
,,
l
I
.I.est .;,,...
ick
and
·
)
,arc
~
.·
llniN, "Justice, Freedom·, Brotherhood."
. . Q_UESTIO!\S FROM
THE
FLOOR.
HOW SUPPORTED: . These meetings are made possible through
the funds Je[t to the Boston Bapti6t Social Union (in whose hall we
. ·meet) by the late DANIEL SHARP FoRD, who owned Tlte Youth's
Companion. · The management of the meetings is in the hands of a
Com1nittee from the Social Union.
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIR~LY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD . HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
.. ·
'
�in. Po
p~l;;;'s~rie~
. .
.
America, the Beautiful
(,Ha.If Hour·, ot,.
. ' .. •I , I ..
1gh ' the
of m!)n
;one· :to
owdoln
1 listen
played
,ur the
women
.eltl or
clology,
c ques>m the
!
:·
,. .
..
.
'. nlway1 ... the
dreeeed · that . ask
1
tton. ,
·.
1 Henry George,
,,
{
mnn· who champ
Jelen, · and spread .
world. , He has .r
a tour around ,
, apeak with au tho
thnt hns been ma
tlon of the sing!
mntlc svenker, n
fntl.10r, . ThoRe" w
is have meeting ·. well h
In New queatlo~ might r
o come thr father wrote
10 ;Ford and Poverty," "
fertture "Protection or ·
l keen Problems,". "Pro
he hall Conditions of
ntteml hooli:; "The Menn
nn ' ihe there nre books
Sou th Frederic C. Ho
ty; but a~iI .H enry 0 eor g
where
1
itnklng. ;
l\Ir, Irvine Is
of the many .nre fomlll
J open· the Ohurch of t1i
of this York. Ibsen, Su
· le of- Kennedy and o
3undny the social messn
r., will drnmna.J...of .theae ,
,x Got tnlk. He hns stu
The .coucert
,xnnder' ngnln under the .
'"fhe D. IClngmnn, an
Jtlenl." John H. ' Gutterso
month · For thoRe who '
e l\locl- mny . be said thnt
by .Al- lngs are mnde po
. there left to the Bnptls
1s, nncl lnte Dnnlel Bitar
wishes
11estlon the Youth's Com
)nrt of Coleman - Is chair
nn one the meetings, · a
1eed at free. Not even a
Is not nclmlsslon, •,
L
rd Hall
--...,
spenl<er
ng Sunwill ba
where?"
a tour
trip to
the
Tolstol.
Rt ):enr
.n EngpeccheR.
have nn
1 Hall
·d
; senson
retofore, •ral pre:
Ill again
1nn, and
ting will
George
, nccom-
>U)ld
.· --ff'j~· .
I . ·t, . ,
I .' The Ford
t: rell~loJs'. lie
, ety nnd · e
: The' nrst nie
l!enry Geor
, (llsouss the
:,principle ·. ,J
· , fnther. On
I Irvine of :N
; Church and
! speakers wl
R1tuSchenbl1
11emtnary, o
Awakening;
,v1shart .on
Sepulnr Vo
Allbott · on . '
Charles S. Drown, 1go6
Katherine Lee Dates, 1895
:tiiacbt- --~ -~ -• -•- EF~- --1- -CI.,r I
~ - -- --~r
•- •: c~ ~l~E-•-· -•- - ~~L
•
1.
2.
0
0
3. 0
4, 0
bea~
beau
beau
beau
: ti - ful
- ti - ful
. ti . ful
. ti - fol
for
for
for
for
spa - cious skies, For
pit
grim feet, Whose
glo - rious tale
Of
pa - triot dream That
am - her waves of
ftern, im - pas- sioned
lib
er • a - ting
sees
be - yond th e_
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ter
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Men
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the wil - der ished pre, • cious
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life I
tears I
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With nil the hluc ell
And spnnglccl hran
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law I
vine I
sea I
. 0 nnllnn 111 tu
ltor lhirtc o
llcnr lhnu our
We 11ro th)
!Ly;" Dec. 1
From yenr In)'
I er's Weeki~•.
Bishop Law
S,110111 n111I I'"
Uarkncu •
I Do for a Ma
i
on '"Educo.tl
the Rev. Le
That Is, an
s peo.l<ers wt
[ Bishop Wllll
"
.lfalthews,·· o
I Bigelow ot inclnnat , t 1e Rev. Georgli - ~\th;;•~~llultJ°wtiuld be so bene ficial thatl al ~ ·Ql ~ ~ , ~ ~ ~ tQl S:] ~
, R. Lunn of Schenectady -and tho"· Rev: . . .men would look' baolt and ' wondet that Cl
'd
1'-1 ,_. 0 rn
"' .µ
t
,Tames A. Francis of Boston. · GeoJ'ge W.
'they B'h0uld ever have had the '<!lyll\•
rn ·c:< I-< Q) QlbJJ•I=! 1-<
Ql ui rll
Coll1JlW,.n Is to direct the opening services;
,110.tlon' s uch as we have today," . . · · ').... 1$: Ql bJJ ,,.. <1> Ql o bJJ o:1 ::S
1
,nusscll B. Klngma,n the concerts, a nd
I' Mrf George then .went on to : tell or '"' Ql
~ - i-.. i:q 'd ..!4 :p 1-< ~ O
; :~ .!ID H. Gutterson ,vlll be the precentcu:,
tl}e ,< pi;net!ta ,ielalnied •.,for ,' ~h,e .; B!ngle~~ R
g , ~~<II g ,A El
tax system. '
'·' ·
·,·
"
·
<11 0 0
P..'"' c!l o «1,
L Tqa: ,apea:!f:e.r, a,sae.rt~d. ,tttat.I,Aus\~a:, '<-< I!:=~ c, w ~ .(/). · ? .,_, .µ ...., •
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~s'Et:'s· ·s1NGLE TAX
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. - .- - - .
· : B er-0re '. a . large aiidlcnc
l~st nlgi1t Henry George, .l1
. Geqr.ge, ,ilhe · or1glnalor of
.mov'iim i, rit, gave Tf>SUl\s of
: In ·. va,1•lou.s, countries In
'. 'l.'Hac. '•·S1Jig!t/ 'l'aX {:1o t An)'
'l'his was the · begln'nlng
-seas·o u · of . ti1es_ Sunclay
d
. wli'lch-.hlive attracted ~o 111
' olferfng a -p·opular· forum r,
·o.r tho ,Ji!"oplem~ of ' (•li'l ·. ,
. n·o1tnc<J1nent '· was maclo
0
1
C<>j<Hll!Ul, dlrec tqr of ,· .l hc
i;notwltlwLand!ng 'lhe opposi
- of •certain men ha vlng ·con
.an .. increased appr0p1'lalion
.meetings more -this year ti 1
musicians have volunteere
f(}r eve,ry \ Sufi!)ay even'lng.'
.; .; Mr: · Geqrgo 'began his la
"I· S<.l•J the single lax •lw
. T:·have h<oard .'l lot apo 111
. yours. , \·. '.'-~hoy ~ay - Is a
,
be
am ·1, ·. .., "l\l'o mattc•r what ·. ·
politics, •':i.1ai;e17
,,Fllzgcral,l.
I.he tall of :t:he everlastln e
p
- ropos~a fto ·. tax a val 11c every lnhabipnt or tho cit
, Mr, George then desci· ll11
as a proposition, by ·mean:
on )and . . to put ·into lh e
a value · cre;'ltejl- by. the e
the selllpif'·,value of land.
would - 1halce anv · other
necessary, he said, and
·,_ vosslb!e to · exem_ IJ4lidi1
pt
i ucts of · labor, nnclf to a i
.
which hii' cleclar.),l .to. ue in
-rnost : sclentinc ancl moijl
· pl11cltlng machlnc In 't he ,
, He doclarecl hiat th ere l
·'.l'i'l\V Yor_ 1-city fo . i:1llow
k
acre ,to 'every f;i'mil;,, ~- e
are living ln single robm s ,
('· God made provhHon for
·,
lated. tha provision . . ·He a
wer11 tnxecl fo·r the· land
but s1m:p1y holcl for · ,
woiilrl either hav e to· use
ancl tr . the Ian cl gra.bber,i ,
·they would hav~ !'L.JN
I
CREATION, ·
The spacious firmament on high,
\Vith all the blue ethereal sky,
And spangled heavens, a shining frame,
Their greai orig-inn) proclaim.
·
The unwearied sun, from <lay to dny,
Does his Creator's power display,
And publishes lo every land
The \York
an almighty hand.
of
Soon as the evening shades prevaiJ,
The moon takes up the wondrous talc,
And nightly to the listening <·arth
Repents the story of her birlh;
\Vhile all the stars that round her burn,
And all the plnnets, in 1he ir turn,
Confirm the tiding s , as·thcy roll,
And spread the truth from pole to pole.
\\'hat though in solemn silence all
1\love round \his dark terre~trial ball 1
\,'\'hat though no real voice nor sound
Amid their radiant orbs be found I
In reason's ear they all rejoice,
Aud utter forth a glorious voice;
Forever s.inging, as they shine,
The hand that made us 1s divine.
-Join, Addison-171'1,
ick
nd
Is
stare
~
th;
Church:~: ~td ::
"W)iat-R~;i·:~
the Rev, ·P1'esident Faunc•
ml Rapids, ·fiichi- ' tion Witl10ut Sc
nificance ·of Secu- ~rds of the Mn
Dr. Stil.nton· Coit · ecluiology somT
rotlier's Kii_
eper ?" /.'Does the Incren
n Abbott · D. ,D,, ~ Social Advan
mort~lit/;•( Dec, : •Reill! on "Vh
o
editor of . Collier's Freder:ck Adam:
!Function '. of the. ·,People s Only Ii
lev: Q ; p ;·, Giffprdr ,lif Spragirn, •!'cl
The .l 3irth of the Is and th~. City
0 ~. , 27,'
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HYMN OF THE TOILERS.
0 nulion strong and great
F'or thine own honor's sake
Jlcnr thou onr call ·
\Ve arc thy children, too,
From year to year we grew,
Silent nnd patient tliro 1
Darkness and toil.
Ont from the depths o[ crime
,vc've tried in vain to climb
Where nothing led;
When life and jus1icensked
Still further down were cast,
E'en sobs were hushed at Inst •
And hope seemed dead ,
r.
_
{
'
.
§~
'.!:) +'
alces ·1r; not . to
a not malce It,
nlng Influential
rmany and Can- .,/;:··
gland. : · :.i'.f
c~w '
~r
f):\I''' . ·
•
•~•·/):•~>:J ,,:"
1
I~•, :
••
.'t
1
, •
op ' .. La wrerice· ;.speaks ,' ,J/J,n, 8 !)II
I.',;.,·,,, .. •.;;.
·t , , \
••
.,
. .tl1e
the new · year
not, in, every'
bi 1Wisc of New 1
f ·Dehoit, Pr. fe~·- ;
o
lvlathews,· the
the ·Rev.-. Herbert .
ftl. are 011 J]re lisf _ '
of_
lwit)Joiit · topic~ ._ 11;t~ .
Bt1t now O nation snong
To thee mu s t truth belong,
Crown thou the ril.{ht;
\\'e arc thy children s1ill
\Vorklng w11h mig-ht and will,
Ne 'er resting till we till
•the world with Ji)! ht'.
-Hos, Alice C/eve/«11d ,
I
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�ON ,SUND
.
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Begin
Po p~i- r
~
AUSTRIA.
..
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•/ ~
, .. ~l
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·•
./ •
Se~ie~
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•
1797.
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61
•
hii f .l
\
\
.
' always
the
P.reeeed that -ask
:tlon. , - · -, ·
Henry o ·eorge,
(mnn who champ
lilen, rind eprelld
world. He hne r
a tour around ,
, epenk with nuth
that has been mn
tlon of the eingl
matlc svenker, a ·
father. Thoae· w
eetlngs have meeting well In
· life' In: New questlona might r
!ck· to come thr father:' wrote
so the ;Ford and -Poverty," "
1e _o. fell ture ''Protection or
. ·So keen Problems," "Prop
,n t · the ho.11 Conditions of L
Ire to ntteml hooli:, "The Menne
e from 1he there are books
. the South
How
I1e city; but Frederic 0. Georg
nn;l Henry
mrts where
the n'111lclng. ; ·Mr. Irvine is '
1eon of the many nra fnmill
,ut to open. the Ohnrch of · th
re11t of this York. Ibsen, Su
that le of· Kennedr nnd o
On Bundn;v the eocml measn
:e, Jr., will dramas of these
e Tax Got tnlk. Re hna ~tu
The .concert
Alexnnder' ngnln uncler the
of "'fhe D. Kingman, o.nd
.tic Iden!." John H. 'Gntterao
the month · For those who
'".fhe ?llo<l- may be said thnt
ce," by .Al_. lngs o.re mncle po
ndny there left to the Bnptlet
!dress, nrnl late Dnnlel Bitar
vim wi11hes the Youth's Com
"question
Ing pnrt of Colemlln le chair
e thnn one the meetings, · an
1pluesed nt free. Not even o.
l it le not ndmlsslon.
throu'gh · the
red!I of men
rnvo gone' 1to
of Bowdoin
ce, to listen
well. played
111 hour the
and women
ue field or
e, sociology,
:o ask quee·s from the
~ - ~~±~~~lt4-,J-~-A-~1 ~~ .
•-~==t=t=.....=!i=:1:E=r==f
~I rl ,1 f
~
P-'IIL----.....,_-"tc.---t---'"'---"-'-----'L------
'l'ax,Half:Hour of.
, ,'
Francis Joseph Haydn,
.I
I
I·
. -:h't~ .
•J ,
I
The Ford 1
j: religlotis 1 lie
, ! ety · and ex
: The' ftrst nie
, Henry Geor
discuss the
l,prlnclple ·. ,II
, . r' father.
On
· Irvine of :N
' Church and
speakers wll'
Rnuschenbt1
I
the speaker ··
10etlng Sun,Ject wn, ba
Anywhere?''.
'.rom_ ~ t~ut
a a trip to
t nrou)1d the
fletntnary, 01
Awakening;'
,v1shart on
Sepulnr Voe
Allbott . 011 . "
lty ;" Dec. 18
er's Weekly,
Bishop Lnw
I
THE GOVERNMENT TO
As the Sun fir s t tints the horder
Of the darkness with hi s light,
So the faint far Klcam o( order
. Gilds the chaos of the ni g ht;
And Ure dawn s haH grow in splendor
To the fulln ess of the day
\Vhen th e hand s of greed surrender,
\:Vhat from toil Utt!y lore away.
Vain the veiling and disguising
Of th e evils wh!ch exist,
For new syslt' ms a rc uprising
From the wreckag-e and the mist;
And the mills of God are s lowly
Surely '{rinding- out th ei r l!rist,
,vhilc th e laws of rig-ht and justice
Hold and_evermore persisl.
For th e land to a ll was•g'ivcnIt b elong- s to you anct me;
'Tis a law of earlh and heaven
ll roken now from sea to s.ca.
Let monop o ly be driven
l1~rom the forlrcss of Lh c free;
And let liberty bid welcom e
To the government to he.
· Ell« Jll/utler Wilco.~.
JUSTICE, FREEDOM,
BROTHERHOOD.
\Vhatisthi s -the vague a ~piring .In my so ul toward un(ound .good,
For no ~elfis h e nd desiring
·
Bless ings dimly unrlerstoQd?
Ti1-= the \Vorld -Prayct drawin g nea rer,
Claiming univ e rsal good
. . ,
Hear its g-reat word s sounding cl c;frer,
Justice~ 'Freedom, Brotherhood.
,vhat is this -the mystic rhyming,
Hising, falllng in mv braip 1
Banishing with solerrin chiming
Every selfish care and pain?
'Tis the \Vorld-End drawing nearer,
· Hailing universal _good,
Heed Its rich notes ringing cleare r,
Jus tice, Freedom, Brotherhood. ·
\Vhat is this - the strong emotion
Pulsing in my heart to-day ·
Sweeping like th' inllowing ocean
rl'i m e-wroug ht harriers away:
·
'Tis the \V0r1d -Hopc drawing nearer,
Planning universal good,
See its motto showing clearer,
.Justice, Freedom, Bro~herhood.
,vhat is this the tender shining
'In the eyes of thos e I meet,
As they turn to m e divining
All my visions strange and sweet?
'Ti s the \Vorld - Bond drawing nearer,
Pledgin~ universal good,
Hail its bnght signs beaming clearer,
Justi ce, Freedom, Brotherhood .
·
- Isabella 11£. Croat.
GEORGE W . COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
O'.'fice Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4 .30 dally, except Saturdays.
Telephone; Haymarket ~340,
inet . Tolstol.
Last :vent·
fo In Eng~•S
1y speeches.
!ch have an
Ford Hall
J~{1
this seneon
the Rev. Les
heretofore, That Is, an
choral pre:
speakers wit
s will agntn
1
tngmo.n, and . ; t n,shop WIil!
t\falth ews, ,bf
neetlng will
~
l3 !ge 1Ow of
un..,··1-nrrtt"t1'-,~u~1e~~1c~envr,---ru-:-emom1ngur--r---,-,n:--c,-,=c,:,-r.re-;;;=.-r.,rac;;-l!'l':-i;:Zi"fll!rnn<TliT"flil!'.l
igs, · George
. I R. Lunti of Schenectady -and the· •Rev: ·
her , accom, ;.Jam es A. Frnncls of Boston. · George W.
ColeJllll,Jl Is to direct the opening service~;
\Uusscll B. IClngmM the concerts, an d
; i.\l.',hn- H .. Gutterson 'ivlll_ be the nrecent ·
~n°
BE.
Thro' th e clamor and the riot
That is heard from sea to sea,
I r.an feel the cominl{ quiet
0( lh e gover nment to be
Vain the effort to dissemble
For the truth is clear lo all,
And the olrl conditions tremble
Like a ruin doomed to fall,
~c!1f
1
\ ll!tt-i~»r?!.JIl:JL. ~ _·_1
_ .·-: ::tf'.f:·~ '
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
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ms-0247
Title
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Ford Hall Meetings program, 10/16-10/23/1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Source
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Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
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English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/aadf5038a33b6915010aa362e0256ea4.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=KrSu-BSclAGqlIlrQKb34yJ-BHZJiVNw-r5bhEQvBcSoKIIKlmE9WyKoFi8lcOTylE3-n7dfOhr134uEknPcdyNxMXM7SxL-4%7EmMQ8WAb4y9GLI23%7EenBggY6HbsivLLeRZiU2q6DZ2uac%7EIo6VEXjqI8n-P1tM-EmugA1P-tczFHBXKIc6PUvvVeoFbR4xsZyCi5MiYaanOOAwmb1JLq3rj2nKcTVh96qAwdk5nxWTYuPX8RqDUfq2-lJ2rgMHny8-lMXs6nCeNJLZukeVaJdgF4UME9CJXdHAqwLxLqL1J3y-5%7E%7E4mN1z1RrAjxWKPRczinxCBHZkvnbwKoFQmBQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
e1ce5ddbc76e4355e77565a49080f306
PDF Text
Text
,Ill ·
·•• .::, ••·,
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u pn1 i; U
UL
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.
llll'l{, 1
•
·- --·· _ ., v .. u ,u
..• , l
1• 01 a
LUC: t,Lury (11
ttall
'
Life or Karl 1
\larx."
ay.
l-lnndreds w ere turu ed
away for
Iii" lu ek of room . i\lr. Coleman, In re•
·he s ponse -to a question han<led up from
eceatest neerls. ;n .;.;"" ;, /
cir 1h e audi nnce, outlined th e conditions
.- ly under which the mee tings are carried
cir on and · ex plain ed the reason why
ur th ere is annually the sa me douht a:;
to wlte ther th e work will be co ntln•
,n - 11 ed another year. He spoke fe eling•
ial ly of his pride in th(:l Baptist bre thren ,
;;-s who have made ,th e meetings possi bl e
•ss and asked th e audience to cany th e
gs burden of the
meetings on th eir
r. hea rts and in their prayers. In hi s
_ 011'11 prayer, which immediately fol 11
low ed, he returned thanks for the In·
lie creased
sympathy
and
kindn ess
1.r which th e m eetings have brought to
1.r th ose outside ,th e churches for th e
1 men who are in the church and ask e1l
1,
, . that into the h earts of the m en In ,
!II the church be put deepened und er,h s tanding of the work which the meet,[ In g-,; are doing. He also aclrnow!e dged thankfull y ,the toleration and
,il breadth of those Baptists of th e So •
,c cial Union who by voting to step onl·
,•. s ide I.he beaten path in Sunday C l'·
,l e ning meet ings, have gi\·e11 tu th e
> people of Bos ton and vi cinit y th!,;
·
great opportunity for nplit'L and spir•
i- it nal expansion.
Th e "five-minute t est im ony " as to
<! what
th e meetings hav e mea nt to
;, those 'who come ·to ,them reg ularly,
was give n by l\liss H, V. Hathawuy,
u social worke r in the employ of the
Young " 'o men 's Christian assoclat Ion,
who sa id the meetings are Boston 's
nnswer to th e qu estion, "A m I ~1 .v
Brother',; K eepe r'?"
A collect lull
amounting to $80, wns taken fur the
, e mployes of Ford Hall, hecnuse or
the extra work caused - y the meet•
b
ings.
:Ill'. Spargo, in hi s address, link< •tl
Abraham Lincoln and Karl l\larx )tJ
ge lh er as the two great est men lli og
raphy has to offer. "i\larx had a )lro
fo und love for Lin coln," he said, "fol'
lo him, Lincoln was a great proph et:)'
1of th e time wh en th e common peo ple
should rule th e world . L in coln lo\' e
i\larx, too. And well h e mi ght, fo r n
th e most cri t ica l periorl in our 1.'- ·
t ional hi story, when th e Briti sh go ,·
ernm ent wa s inclin ed to take lh e s ide
of th e Confederacy, ·l \Iarx was th e
· moying s pirit which cu user] th is- re;;olntion to be adopted by lh onsands of
working peo ple in England ancl ~e 111
over to chee r and encoura ge th e
grnat pre sident: ·•mngland is for I.in •
coin , for . the No rth , for th e· l inio11 '
ca use and for Abolition!"
'""" """ """"'.,... , ... · -
ll'Tf, JJ'I
(11 0
UnlV Ct'SJ.IISt
L '.) fi ll l! l
,Yhat a Chul'Ch can do tn th e
p-racu~at · serv~-:!e to •,',u,m~nlt~ 1,';
shown In th e story of Fo1d I·(,111
tf)ll durlni; th o pas t seaaOJJ, '1 hi s
le ft to the Ba pti s t neopl c t o )Jc U S!!
m Bosto~ durmg the past se~son .. This Hall was left to \
the Baptist people to be used m domg good and through ,
't h Ch
.
'
·
:
l t e
urch has been meetmg for Boston one of its !
ie<l ll'a , I.h e s pea ke r nntl hi :; topi c, "The l
c_
I
,
~-" :~:;•"1 ~·'" " r
;
r
1Jf nrh ~,tll ffl}lrrti119n
THIRD SEASON-/909 -10
CLOSING NIGHT, MARCH 13.
The :i°ddress is by Jo11N SPAR GO and his topic is "Th e Life aud
In connection
with this meeting the following b ooks
have been suggested :
J
,Vod, of l\'arl Jlfar.r."
"Life o f Karl Marx."-John Spargo .
11 Substance of Socialism."-John Spargo,
"Socialism- A Summary a nd Interpretation of Socialist Principles."
- J o hn Spargo.
"A Critical E xa mination of Socialism,"
-W. H. :tvfallock.
"Christian Socialism, \\That and-\\Thy."
-P, W. Sprague.
"Christianity and The Social Crisis."
- vValter Rauschenbusch.
"New \Vorlds for Old."-H. (i, \,Velis .
"Equality."-Edward Ilcllamy.
"Forgings of The New."-Franklin H. \\Tentworlh.
I
I
I
.,
II
( S tudi es in Socialism.)
"Socialism In Theo ry and Practice."- lvforri s Hillquit.
y
e
THIS EVENING'S PROGRAM:
Music
t
by
II
:tvirs. Russell B. Kingman, pianist
.tvlr. Carmen A. Fabriz io, violinist
J\fr. R. B. Kingman, 'cellist and
1\faster Clyde R. Close, boy soprano
Accompnnied by Mr. George M. Taylor
1.
''The Holy City"
Adams
Master Close
2.
Tmo for piano, violin, and violo ncello
Trio in D Mino r, Opus 49
1
1:lendclssolm
One movement (l\folto allegro agitato)
Mrs. Kingman, lVIr . Fabrizio and Mr. Kingman
HY~IN "Battle Hymn of the Republi c"
PRAYER
"What These Meetings Have :tvieant to Jvie."
A fiv e-minute testimony.-Miss H. V Hathaway
ADDRESS-Mr. Spargo
IIYMN "Am'!! rica"
q_u ESTIO NS FH0M Tim Fr.ooR,
Singing of Auld Lang Syne
WATCHMAN
MEETINGS,
ord Hall Sunday even11 ig:h t. Modelled after
of the People's Instlrl by t'uncls left by the ,
nve provided a place
SI
it
1,
.c
l·'I
ac
-k
l
]. I
)I'
eI
ch
le
.I I
11 (1
)
1<ucuu,.,.-,,v,v -
uuu~vu
-
vu
uo..., A
,
LUU>
service alone, our informant , . t1inks, was
ample compensation for all the expense
and pains undertaken by the aggressive
Baptist Social Union under the leadership
of Mr. Coleman.
co uld be discussed b~
of faiths, and where
e deserted churcl-1 or
Jr! with exhortrution,
Y.
.D (_Edit-0.,.1~0
:· .
) ·,
I
-
.
.
.
!. -
21 Qt.J's HtRAI., l> · .
.
.
Jr.cm,no't ·Jjl! -c1ia'ngec!
'give way before
. a ll hum a nltari,w · m ove me nt s which thll
I c hur ch es a r c· displaying. Pe rh aps the bettc ,· method o r atta ck Is th o Indir ec t one or
broth e 1
•1iness, rather th a n ·that or _ s h a r 1,1
dent;n c iatlon.
;
1·
·
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f
I
I
.
_• - - -
- - - ~- ~ _ ;
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Ff/Ff
Auld Lang Syne.
* :'-
Battle Hymn of the Republic
Julia Ward Howe, 1862
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Wm. Stef'ie, 1S55
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Mine
2. I have
3. He has
4. In the
I.
eyes
seen
sound
beau
have seen
Him in
- ed forth
- ty of
the
the
the
the
,
~-v v-
glo - ry
of the com • ing
of
·watch-fires of
a
hundred
cir
trum - pet that shall nev - er
call
li - lies, · Christ was born a - cross
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re - treat;
the sea;
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the Lord;
cling camps;
ii
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He hath
I can
Oh, be •
As He
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1. Should auld
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Should auld
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For
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tak'
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V-~il
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CHoRus
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Glo - ry, glo - ry ha!: le - lu - jahl
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His
truth
is
march - ing
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my dear, For
:'-1:
cup
o'
.
kind ~ ness yet, For
4,
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on.
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auld
-
lang
syne,
..
l;J;:3-=f-§ I J. E
.
auld
lang - syne.
And there's a hand, my trusty frien',
And gie's a hand o' thine;,_
And we'll tak' a right gude willy-waugb
For auld Iang syne.
For auld lang syne, etc.
~
~t~!
CaoKt.:s - 1-Iark! the rolling- of the thunder!
Lo ! the sun . and lo! thereunder,
H.iseth ln\.·e and hope and wonder,
_/
min"t
Jang - syne?
In what conn try are they ciwellin!? 'twixt the ~ates of heaven and hell!
Art: tht'y mine or thine for money? \Vill tney serve a master well?
Std! the rumor's marching on!
·
1
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TUNE-John Brown's Body.
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6
a
syne,
"
days
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lang
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for . got, And
\\.hat is this the sound and rumor? \Vhat is this that all men hear?
Likt: the wind in -hollo w valtevs when the:: storm is drawinc.r near
Li ke the rolling- on of ocean ill the eventide oi fear?
~
·\ '
'Tis the pt:ople marching- on !
".hither go the:y, and whence came they ? \Vhat are these o .. whom
"
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610 - ry, glo - ry hal- le - Ju - jahl
be
(.,
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acquaintance
2 We twa hae run about the braes,
And pu'd the gowans line;
But we've wandered mony a weary foot,
Sin' auld lang syne.
For auld lang syne, etc.
march-ii1g on.
r:urch-i r,g on.
march-ing on.
march-ing on.
~-1-r-~===~--~
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.
·
"
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,
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be
for. got, And nev - er brought to
~
~
loos'd the fate - fol light-ning of His ter - ri - ble swift sword; 1-Iis truth is
read H:.sr:ght-eoussen-tence by the di:n and flar. ing lamp~, His tn:th is
swift my soul to an-s,yer Him! be ju- bi . ]ant, my feet I Our God is
c!ied to make men ho - ly, let us die to make men free, vVhile God is
-· +
:ti
r
auld
-;--•-.-fl-fl-.-.-::_-,:i-e---
1·
acquaintance
e,
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fiB l tD m- I " .
We'll
.
He is tramp - ling out the vin · tage, where the grapes of "·rath are stored;
They have build - ed Him an al - t:i.r in the even . ing dews and damps;
He is • sift - ing out the hearts cf men be. fore H ;._ j udg-ment-seat;
\Vith a
glo - ry in His bos - om, that trans - fig. ure~ you and me;
...
... ... ... • . . ... • -fl- ... • .,,. ... • -• -~-9-
~ ..
And the hos t comes marching no.
Glory, Glory Ha lldnjah !
Forth thev c:une from grief and torme:nt: on they wc::nd toward health
and mirth:
-·\.JJ..the wide wol"Jd is their dwelling, every corner of the earth.
Huy t hem, sell them, for thy ~ervice: Try the bargain what 'tis
worth.
For the da.ys are marching on!
These are they who build thy houses, we-ave thy raiment, win thy
wheat:
Smooth the rug-ged. fill the barren. turn the bitter into sweet;
.A ll for thee this dav and ever. \Vhat reward for them is mtet?
Till thi host comes marching on! -CnOKUS .
ivfany a hundred years passed O\.er have they labored de:1.r and blind:
~e:ver tidin gs reached thc.-ir sorrow. never hope their toil m ight rind.
)r;iow at last tht:v',·e heard and hear it, and the cry comes down the
,vind.
1\nd their feet are marchin~ on.
On we march then. we, the workers, and the rumor that ye hear
ls the blendi:d sound of triumph and deliverance drawing ne:1 r ;
For the hope of every cre:iturt: is the bann er t ~ t we: be:1.r.
Anq the world is marching on.-ClIORUS.
- William JJlorris!
�."'··;·,it:. ,..
'
'1
I ' ,.~
,,1 1
•'
t •~ •-.' i'
''
·. .
r;ollcol Allta nce, mado .
minister~ s e ttled In 1
II, s p e nd s a morning ' I
t C hur c it Jl s_
leni,n ~ to i
, Jl s m, by .John Spar g o
sv lrlt of dis c u s sion
i r.
'rh e ndcl r ess ,v u s
i\ lr. S par g-o's coming
.
I
lh e las t of th e 1ror?
)
lie s e a so n.
The Hov, ~
1ry, no Jess ,Ut a n the
in hi s S!'rmon
these mce tlng·s , a re
nut Sumlny
:lal sig 11iflcanc e. The y
one i11 .Doslo1l
l'iti e s, · openini;· 'v isions
as lo he excI J
the sordid ani:I the
and eycry mj
ning· dominant nolns .
ren Ron , l;ecn n
lu e or . th ese c arefully
,
•.!} ;
·~:l..k \ ., .
~\\.I►
~._t'
1 ,
f
l~\l
., ...
•
:"'Bo·s10 N'S .· r·As1·0Rt~IAn~~:i:~~::;~
'
· '
· ·
:(~~-::\::n'.;:i::•l~~:l'gO:~
uthor
I
.1£1, .MOVEMEN ;l, :.,
1
•• ,•
\)
_! .. •of
"'l'he
Bitter Cry of
n MOR AL'·. NOTE ' :
'
U
.
SOUNTI . .
IN
. .,'rh•~-."'."')••c~
the Cliildreu" uud
one f<?~.
At the
thi s.
s;;~~li~!:1/~.:11~~:(; f~f ~~I :ii~t!fa:.~'.;? /ll~r t~:1;,
nwar
~~tl:v!:~~~ll~~~:~;n:t
th, ;"' eml of then· tlurd senes Inst Su_udny.
..".''::· "' "
Hundreds
odm,rnble '"" ,,
1
i
MY COUNTRY.
l.:111tl of th e Pilg-riln s' pri1l c, From cv'r_r
I .cl f1T c1lom ring- .
Our fathers ' Cntl 1 lo th ee , .Author 0£ liberty,
To th ee we s i11 g-; Lon g- 111ay our la11tl be bri g·lf,
,vith fn. ·1. .·tln111' s hol~· Ji g- ht, Protect II S hy Thy 111ig-ht ,
(;n•al God, our Kin g-!
j
The analy sis of the music is by Mr. Rvssell B. Kingman .
•·\:"
Mrs. Vincent 1L Coryell is the lea<le1 ''.)f the dnging.
HOW SUPPOR.TED: These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall \\'C
meet) by the late Daniel Sharp Ford, who owned The 1011/h'.1
Companion.
The management of the meetings is in the hands of a
committee from the Social Union.
I
d
i
GEORGE
known
Chairman and Director of Meetings
Office Hours at Room 3 1 Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4 .30 daily, e xcept Saturdays .
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
William N. Hartshorn
James A. Floyd
Leander K . Marston
Ernest S. Butler
Benjamin N. Upham
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward Cummings
Robert A . Woods ,
Miss Ellen Paine Huiing
H. A. Wilder
Franklin H. Wentworth
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Rev. Charles L. Noyes
Henry Abrahams
Rev. Dillon Bronson
John T. Prince
Edwin D. Mead
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Meyer Bloomfield
Russell B . Kingman
!
I the
I
w.· COLE.MAN,
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
I
g r eat c retlll.
:.\lay
n o f th e, Vls_!~ n ~ ~ver ·
s iclc
Ll'I mu s ic s well th e hrl'l' ~c, , \~ul ri;, g rn1111 all the tree s
S w t·cl rn•edo111 1 S s ong- ; Let mortal ton g- ucs a w al<c,
I.cl ;ill thnt hrcath e partalc e , Let rock s th e ir silen ce hrcnk 1
The s nmul prolo11 g·.
bu1
:t ptl s t Social U1i101~ In ,
1
di s pos ition of a largo \
cm by tho late Dani e l
Youth' s Companloh.
•m e ' thre e humlred In
!I I y deservo crc di t for
ttl on whi c h th C\Y h a ve
~- thi s n e w type o i
Ing, whero rhen and,
n nd no faith to whic h
m e, join loge thet· In
,e r or · u ~ all," sing
·n therhood, and i ls te n
• ply fe lt m essage of
o ur tl1n c 1 wh ose so ul
l nl 1narc h. 'l~h e D a p use they have . ma.do
111011111:iin
:\I~· 11:1tivc country, thee , Lantl of the nohl c fret·,
Thy nam e l lo,·c ; I lo ve lhy rn l' k s arnl rill s,
Thy woncl s :111tl tc mpkcl hill s } ~ly heart with raplnre thrills
Lik e that aho\' e .
Is
1·
The
___ ·_ _j
CH~I
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
t-=~ ...,..,....-.-.- - 1
.....
ST.I LL .Tlj
. Conse.rvut'
Il e. Id and U\
~ ~ rs
--:.:::i!U],:nv"'
oC public IJ
and has co~
the lect111:e 1
rapidly dyl~
thing less ~
ence.
Thi s is n
ton.
The -
-
:._~~·-i
- --. _____
the lectures at Ford hall, a~d ' ma11y
other examples of lhls class of entertainm e nt still show that popular supn n ,•f
f
My Co11nlr~· 1 'li s of tln:c , S \\' ccl land or liberty.
or lln·c l s in g; La1Hl w he re 111y fath e rs tli cd,
Christ n dopt ~
Dr. Allen Jl9
inRtcn<l of ttni
me 11 , In hori1;J
iloing and ig~
life, on cnrth1
with the snm'
the fnct tlmt ;
often at the
sought to sa
R ev.
on "Dridgl'R,
· r e markable that those
n. lnrgc auclie1
in g s h ave bee n Ro sue~
gn tiona I l'llll~
.~s . Slr'1glc ta x has, had
"The probe otj
·, t Ford ll a lt a s So c l:tlr<'al source .
d
a cle nnlonla m h a s b 0en
lies i;, our
r :ite d than tho n e ed of
" 'c hani bj
I 11nls, a hig her · feelin g
Dr. llcrle, si\.i
rl ecp c r desire lo do it
ne~s lllllll is
Ir of th e speake rs, this
hribe taking.
cr g ymcn , · thoug h the
infl11cn ce of
vc r g oes t(1 c hurch Is
:ure, In p oint of 1111111- 1 yo11ng m en o
i:;s.
Yet professional
gin11i11g to
a ttitnde" of
A goodly r e rce!lla gp
John Spa rg
o plnio,rn In coll e gu
socinll
lure 11iatfonns and
Life 111i,J Wo;
,e r s go lo Ford . Hn II
lt e r~ arl'I I h e bes t ll10
Inst of the 1i
'.It o o pportunity to a s k
eYcning bcfoii
valu ed by those in
the hall 50 nj
1<lln g .
for thn lcctm1
,., s t r e markablo thing
The ne w stj
that thou g h projected
str cet Un ptis t
, 'th e y u re lll\scctarl a n
\nl s dee! icat.cc
Homan cithollc,_ and
The I: c v. E. '.
I a nt opinion Is r e pre- · n.ml rend the l
lle e of c itizens ,;•hlch.
toricn.l ndclrea,
Re,·. A. 'J
du c.t o f tile m eetin g s .
~L anu.lysi s, have co11sermon by tli
1g are B a plts ts , Til C Jnof the w,:rre11
g a therings
e v e r ~ night many
'
l11rn e d aw ay for l a ck
r e adin g -lists of ton '
e n print e d, one w e ek
r, s ubj e ct which the
' cllscu ss . 'i'hese hav e
zc, cl. w I th the , res ult :
knowl e d g e has been
1d Ie n c o to tl ..e' topic
were turned
""'":_~!'c.£~".:!~"· ..
FH F l
I
,•e nln g·
m
closing Fonl llnll
_ eason, ~•~I.'! IMl, 8~
s
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0246
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, March 13, 1910
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
13 March 1910
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: John Spargo
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/5be8411fffeb186a755e5d4d88489116.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=CV-dJriPJTxjdOJ-7ioIHuikSxqzpQmbOl49nMLoto08bl2EPdKtCryTYAosIaelr3zEaoTArKfstScA312hsU2W2xNOozwWW9Hn1%7E9FgktYNiTQJFL5HK%7Eh3dAZ%7EEPIMFStpOEO5r-98-5dNMwyqs-ngil5MHdM4f14NSh54GJ7H8QJwaZR5ma%7EpRQfS6lKQ7JJI8E1BoCDsU7E2Wtq48BRMTJtt%7EtTINX0VOm1Do6DxbnO6qsvHTk1X4mSqDxSldhhr5SaGACuMcDaNFskw4DG8cUSgWyBm7V6cA7qyuQhR1yxj0nmTvno3eAsuyjNi6qe4agjhbaf31xpQhTMCA__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
82f60e7b00b84f7891074dfdb3d38d02
PDF Text
Text
F flF (
PROGRAM FOR FEB. 27.
SoLos .by Miss Violet Edge.
a. First and second movements of the 7th Concerto DeBeriot
b. Religious Meditation
Julizts Eichb ztrg
)LIN
ADING from Book of Ruth
MN, "Creation."
111' llrh
Miss Lucy Romberg
~all :!lrdiugn
THIRD SEASON-1909-10
:\YER.
That These Meetings Have Meant to Me."
A five-minute testimony.-Theodore vV. Curtis
DRESS, "The Hebrew Prophets: The Creators of Modern Religion."
-Rabbi Samuel Schulman, D.D.
MN, "Battle Hymn of The Repubiic."
ESTIOKS FROM THE FLOOR.
SUNDAY EVENINGS AT 7.30- P. M.
March 13-JOHN SPARGO will speak on '' The Life and Wo. "-\<>-f.,,
ICarl 1
vfarx." Spargo is a magnetic young
~
Englishman who, for nearly twenty years
~
now, has been an earnest and devoted
student of socialist principles and of the
personality of Marx. For thirteen of those
years he has been at work on a ne·.v ( and
·authentic) biography of Marx which is
now due to appear. He expects to have
one of the first copies of it with him on
the platform next Sunday night. The
beginner in Sparg~ study should however
read first his '' Bitter Cry of The Children,"
a work which unites purity of English to
poignancy of theme as do few other books
which have been published in our generation. Spargo spe~~ s as wonderfully as he writes and as this is his first widely advertisec\ meeting
in Boston you will do well to be in line early.
CLOSING NIGHT
larch 13-JoHN SPARGO, "The Lzfe and Work of ICarl L
lfarx."
HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
:t) by the late Daniel Sharp Ford, who owned The Youth's
ipanion.
The management of the meetings is in the hands of a
1mittee from the Social Union.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
lffice Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
William N. Hartshorn
James A. Floyd
Leander K. Marston
Ernest S. Butler
Benjamin N. Upham
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
SUGGESTED BOOKS ON NEXT SUNDAY'S TOPIC.
Rev. Edward Cummings
Robert A. Woods
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
H. A. Wilder
Franklin H. Wentworth
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Rev. Charles L. N eyes
Henry Abrahams
Rev. Dillon Bronson
John T. Prince
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Edwin D. Mead
Russell B. Kingman
Meyer Bloomfield
"Life of Karl Marx."-John Spargo.
''Substance of Socialism."-John Spargo.
"Socialism - A Summary and Interpretation of
Socialist Principles."-John Spargo.
'' A Critical Examination of Socialism.''- W. ·H. Mallock.
"Christian Socialism, What and Why.-P. W. Sprague.
"Christianity and The Social Crisis."-Walter Rauschenbusch.
"New ·worlds for Oid."-H. G. Wells.
••Equality."-Edward Bellamy·
"Forgings of The New."-Franklin H. vVentworth.
L'HE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
~
(Studies in Socialis m. )
"Socialism In Theory and Practice."-Morris Hillquit.
•s
I ,
ir17-.,..rm
--
�/ .,
PROGRAM FOR FEB. 27.
V10LIN SoLOS by Miss Violet Edge.
JJforh ijull flrrttug,a
a. First and second movements of the 7th Concerto DeBeriot
b. Religious Meditation
Julizts Eichburg
READING from Book of Ruth
Miss Lucy Romberg
HYMN, "Creation."
PRAYER.
"What These Meetings Have Meant to Me."
A five-minute testimony.-Theodore vV. Curtis
ADDRESS, "The Hebrew ~rophets: The Creators of Modern Religion."
-Rabbi Samuel Schulman, D.D.
HYMN, "Battle Hymn of The Republic."
Q_UESTIO NS FROM THE FLOOR.
THIRD SEASON-1909-10
SUNDAY EVENINGS AT 7.30· P. M.
March 13-JoHN SPARGO will speak on "The Li-Fe and ">,v~rk
':I'
I{"arl lvfarx." Spargo is a magnetic young
A~
_-,,
Englishman who, for nearly twenty years
now, has been an earnest and devoted
student of socialist principles and of the
personality of Marx. For thirteen of those
years he has been at work on a ne·n ( and
authentic) biography of Marx which is
now due to appear. He expects to have
one of the first copies of it with him on
the platform next Sunday night. The
beginner in Sparg'.> study should however
read first his" Bitter Cry of The Children,"
a work which unites purity of English to
poignancy of theme as do few other books
which have been published · in our generation. Spargo speaks as ~
derfully as he writes and as this is his first widely adve~
mee
in Boston you will do well to be in line early.
0""°',
CLOSING NIGHT
March 13-JoH~ SPARGO, "The Lzfe and Work of Karl 1
Warx."
HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late Daniel Sharp Ford, who owned The Youth's
Companion.
The management of the meetings is in the hands of a
committee from the Social Union.
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
Offic~ Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays.
Telephone? Haymarket 2340.
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
William N. Hartshorn
James A. Floyd
Leander K. Marston
Ernest S. Butler
Benjamin N. Upham
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward Cummings
Robert A. Woods
H. A. Wilder
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
Franklin H. Wentworth
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Rev. Charles L. Noyes
Henry -Abrahams
John T. Prince
Rev. Dillon Bronson
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Edwin D. Mead
Russell B. Kingman
Meyer Bloomfield
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
SUGGESTED BOOKS ON NEXT SUNDAY'S TOPIC
\
"Life of Karl Marx."-John Spargo.
"Substance of Socialism."-John Spargo.
"Socialism - A Summary and Interpretation of
Socialist Principles."-John Spargo.
"A Critical Examination of Socialism. "-W. H. Mallock.
"Christian Socialism, What and Why.-P. W. Sprague.
"Christianity and The Social Crisis."-Walter Rauschenbusch,
"New vVorlds for Old."-H. G. Wells.
"Equality. "-Ed ward Bellamy"Forgings of The New."-Franklin H. vVentworth.
(Studies in Socialism. )
~
•5
"Socialism In Theory and Practice."-Morris Hillquit.
--rnr "'
�FHF I
s. 7.
AUSTRIA.
Francis Joseph Haydn.
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TUNE-John Brown 's Body.
(Sung to Italian National Air.)
God bless our native lar.d !
Firm may she ever stand
Thro' storm and night r
\Vhen the wild tern pests rave
Ruler of wind and wave,
Do Thou our country save
By thy g reat might'.
g: t:::
Lord of all truth and right,
In whom a lone is might,
On Thee we call t
Give us prosperity;
Give us true liberty;
:\Iay all th' oppressed go free ;
G o d save us all ~
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CREATION.
Many a hundred years passed o"er have they labored rlen.f :.1. n d b l ind:
~ever tiding-s rea ched their sorrow, n c,;er hope their toil m ight find.
Now at last they ' ve heard and hear it, and the cry comes down the
w i nd.
And their feet are marching on.
On we march then, we,. the worke rs, anrl the rumor that ye hear
l s the blended sound of trium p h and deliveran c e drawing near;
For Lhe hope o f every cre~lture is the banner that we bear.
And th e world is marching o n.- CHOkUS.
Soon as the evening shades p r evail,
T he moon takes up the wond ron !"..i-;~~
A n d nig-htly to the listening e a ~
R ep'eats the story of her birth ;
\\. hile all the stars that round her burn,
And all the planets, in their turn,
Confi rm the tidings, as they roll,
And spread the truth from pole to pole.
Vai nl y 'gainst thine ar m contending
Tyran t s know thy might and tlee
Freedom ' s r.ause on earth d:.::fending
Man h a s s et his hopes on thee;
,videning glory, peace unendin g ,
Thy re,va rd and portion be ;
Ark of Freedom, glory's dwelling,
Native I:1.nd, God keep thee free.
,v1nt though in solemn silence all
Move round this dark terrestrial b:.dl !
\Yhat though no r eal ,;oice n o r sound
Amid their radiant orbs be found!
In reason's ea r they all rejoice,
And utter forth a glorious v o.ice :
Fore,;er singing, as they shine,
The hand that made us is divine.
- Joseph Addiso!l- 1712
~
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.
"c>\1' \
T'i, \ -o,.0 'ious firmament on high,
\~rith ._l. '~ 'le blue ethereal ~ky,
And span ii ed he:tvens. a shining frame,
Their g r eat original proclaim .
The unwearied sun, from day to day ,
Does his Creator's power di s pl:ty,
...L\.nd publis hes to every land
The Work of an almighty hand.
- Jos,p!, Haydn .
t.. U~
,,_____,,_
Land of high, heroic glory;
Land, whose touch bids slav'ry tlee;
Land whose name is writ in story
Rock and refuge of the free.
Ou r s thy greatness, ours thy g lo ry
\Ve will e'er be t rue to thee;
Ark of Freedom, glory's dwelling
N a t ive land, God keep thee free.
1
UL
.i:
Ark of Freedom , glory's d w elling,
)fative land, God ke e p thee free.
\Vhen the storms are round thee s welling
Let t hy heart be strong in thee.
God is with thee, wrong repelling,
Nat ive land, God keep th ee free.
- William Jlorris .
\V l$ 1tU[U
~
_,,_
AUSTRIAN HYMN:
"Ark of Freedom. "
Forth t},ev c:-u ne from grief and torm e nt : on th ey wc::nrl t oward health
and mirth ;
All the wide world is their dwelling, eve r y co rn er nf the earth.
Huy them , s eJl them, for thy ser vi ce: Try the bargain what 'tis
worth.
For the davs are march i ng- on!
These are they who b u ild thy houses, w~avt thy raiment, win thy
wheat:
Smooth the i-u~ged. fi ll the barren, turn the bitter into sweet;
All for thee thi s dav ~tnd ever. \Vhat reward for them is meet?
Till the' host comes marching on !--CnoRUS.
On Thee we ,vait:
Be her walls holiness
Her r u lers righteousness
Her officers of pt:act:;
God save the state!
i-1
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\Yhat is this the s ound and r u mor? \Vh a t is thi s that all men hear?
Like the wind in hollow v allc::ys when the s torm is cirawing near,
Like the r9lling on of ocean in 1he eventide of fe-ar?
' Tis the p eople marching on !
\Vhither go they, an d whence came they? VVh a t are these of whom
ye te ll ?
In wha.t countrv are thcv rlwdling- ' twixt the g-atesof heav en and hell!
Are thev mine Or thtne for moneV? ,vill tne~· serve a master well ?
Still the rumor's marChing on ! ·
CnoR u s-Hark! the rolling of the thunder !
L o ! the s un , a ucClo ! thereun d er,
Ri::-eth love and hope and wonder,
..And the host comes marching on.
Glory, Glory Hall e ln j ah !
For her our prayers s hall be
Our father' s God, to Thee,
.
I
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od Bless Our Native Land
.
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0245
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, March 13, 1909
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
13 March 1909
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: John Spargo
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/6bc0bc8402bbd9d95fe048956498ba31.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=c5Jx4n5NZQhsi29T5UrASySkxnTfg7XLVm81C3AfGymlIgBubDOnvlReJdW2PWrL8RTDOEYzWbDjZfXRAE6B%7EgX89ZTpFxR-uqLw5vazlP%7EENaOr9XhlGWdfPhwluMq8AXFPwouLuKSi4GKWTBfx1hX6MrKSKqidnNnvg4yFbtiXLWTVO5raoZ%7EYqdDj18E655kfsQLdNA5D%7Eo3x0K5AmdbXeIefwE4xje-QfAO%7EO25wElyeENfJbY03J3XCJGuokNgC1e1k0q2SPgDLvo7CrMs92HXsHSFJgVvSB1izrZmC6JgOXIpGvXo9BMwN1xeNBVdJUixGhw0OneS9YnvXCQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
ffbef18edac2292be776fc82630d8bb5
PDF Text
Text
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(•llie t:la t Ecl to m a k e . lire a lltll e e a s ie r ro r '
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· ·.. ~ ~ U ~ CH -' NOTES.
'
,'l' h e s p ea ke r at t he For lLJ.J.l~li m ee tlnp; t om orrow eve 11i11 g- \\;,n-no .Tohn
Hall/ ·, S p a r ~o. ,;oc ia li s t ot' New Yo rk . He
.
•, wilt t a lk o n K a rl .M a r x , " li fe or
1
John Spa ~go t 0 ~ k
h
' .
.
pea o~ t e Socia!1st Reformer at the · Ford
Meeting Tomorrow Night.
L
FINAl r
f~t; ,
:A,t t h e fin a l li'ord ' h a ll m eetm g
':~ •~n~ - ~ -~•a·~ -r ~:'.e~ _!: l.v , ~ril_ n .
te
U11 s seaso n · t o morrow n ig ht, Jol11i
/-/
D
i,a- La.-""-"' _;1rs:!l..JY.iU _s p ea lc _o n ~ hil...Ll fo ..,,..ud- - -- - -- - -- .
S,,_
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MEE \
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t ho se yo u C'n111e in ('O n tac t \ \' ; th ,".
\
THIRD SEASON-1909-10
SUNDAY EVENINGS AT 7.30 P. M.
March 6-PnoF. E D\\'ARD .A. ST EINER will speak on "Th e Search
f or Brotlterlwod." Dr. Steiner was b orn
in Au stria, edu cated in Bohemia and Germany and spent his early manhood in
Russia. So he kno ·,v s probl e ms o f immigration as few other men in the country
know them; we count ourselves ve ry fortunate in having this important topic
treated, for the first time at Ford Hall,
by one so cosmopolita n in his expe rience
and so broad of sympathy. Dr . Steiner
is a brilliant orator, too , an<l prese nts his
id eas with very telling pathos and p ower.
Two other interesting fa cts about him,
he is Tol stoi' s olli cial biog raph er a nd T o lstoi is his very good fri e nd.
,
In rn pl y lo qu es ti o n s from th e a udi e nce , I
D r . S le :ner s a id th at th e peo pl es o f gu- •
rop ca n na ti o ns a r e n1ore p r ospe r o us f o11 o w. I
In g- ih P re<l nc ti on o f th e ir nnrnb e r lw e 111i - I
g r a I i o'n t o Lhl s co untry, but h e w n:; ·un a bl !l
t " s.1.v w he f·her tha t i1n 1
11igr- ll o n ha s b ee n
a
an eco11 n 111i c be n e fi t to th is <'o unt ry, H e _/
t liou f< ht it' wig~ lo exC'l u drc C hin e se, n o t be - I
<'H u se ll is ju s t, but in d e fe r e n ce l o lh e {
ov e r w h<>linln g se ntim ent o f A,\i er ic:¾ n s . H e \
s a id t ha t thE> h ig h e r e ,ht ca tl on d id 1 o L t onc1
i
to ii, c r c:-,se th e De m ol' r a ll c s pi r it. H e h a d
foun d it a lm os t h o pe less to ge t t h e bro th e r- ,
h oo,I s pi!'lt Int o unive r s ity s tud e nt s .
·
~
SUGGESTED BOOKS ON NEXT SUNDAY ' S TOPIC.
\
\
I
"Race ~1esti o ns and Provin ciali sm."-Josiah Royce .
"Race Prejudice."-Jean Fi not.
"Races and Immigrants."-John R. E mmons.
"Races and P eo pl e ." -Dani el J. Brinton.
"The Immi g rant Tide ."- Edwarcl A . Steiner.
"The Children o f fvlan."- Leo F robenius.
"The Races of Europe."-\,V. Z . Ripl ey.
\
" Histo ry of Mankind. " -Fridrick Ratzel.
"The Trail of The Immigra nt."-E dward A, Ste iner.
\
\
•
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th e For d h a ll sea s o n · for thi s y ear. 'l'h
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CREATlON.
Battle Hymn of the Republic
·ulia Ward Howe, 1862
;±a·
Wm. Steffe, 1855
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TUNE-John Brown ' s Body.
\\"hat is this th(! sound and rumor? \Vhat is this that ~lll men he:i.r?
Like the wind in hollow val lt:ys wht:n the storm is drawing near,
Like the rolling on of ocean in 1he eventide oi fear?
'Tis the pt!ople marching- on !
\Vhither goo th ey, a ud whence t..· ame they? \ Vhat are these of whom
ye tell?
In wh;1t country are they <lwclhng 1 twixt the gates of heaven a nd hell !
Are thty mine or thine for money? \Vil! they serve a m:Lster well?
Still the rumor's marching on!
CuoRus-Hark ! the rolling of the thunder!
Lo ! the sun, aud lo l thereunder,
Riseth Jo..-e and hope and wonder.
And the host comes marching o n.
Glocy, Glory H:i.llelnjah !
Forth they came from g ,~ef and torment: on they wend towa,d health
and mi rt h ;
All the wide world is their dwelling, every corner nf the earth.
Huy them, sell them, for thy service: Try the ba rgain wha.t 'tis
wonh .
Fo, the days a re marching on l
These are they who build thy houses, we-avt:. thy raiment, win thy
wheat;
Smooth the rugged, fill the barren, turn the bitter into sweet ;
All for thee this day and ever. \tVhat reward for them is meet?
Till the host comes marching on !-•C HORUS.
Many a hundred years passed O\.er have they labored deaf and blind;
Xever tidings reached their sorrow. ne\·er hope their toil might rind.
:-.l' ow at last th ey 1 ve heard and hear it, and the cry comes dow n the
wind.
And their feet are m:t.rching on.
On we march then, we, the workers. and the r umor that ye hear
ls the blended sound of triumph and deliverance drawing near;
For th e hope of everv creature is the banner that we bear.
A1nd the ;Yorld is marching o n. -CttoRus.
-William Norris.
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read His righc-eoussen-tence by the di::n and fiar - ing lamp&, His trt:th is m:nch-ir,g on.
swift my soul to an-swer Him I be ju- bi - ]ant, my feet I Our God is ma.ch-ing on.
died to make men ho - ly, let us die to make men free, Nhile God is march-ing en.
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He is tramp - ling out the vin - tage, where the grapes of wrath are stored;
They ha\·e butld • ed Him an al - tar in the even - ing dews and damps;
He is
sift - ing out the hearts cf men be - fore Hi, ju<lg-ment-seat;
With a
glo - ry in His bos - om, that trans. fig- ure~ you and me;
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Ii - lies, Christ was born a - cross
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CREATION.
The s pacio u s firmament on high,
\Vilh al J the: blue t:therea.l ~ky,
And s pangled ht!avens, a shining fr a me,
Their great original proclaim.
The unwea,ied sun, from day to day,
Does his Creator's power display,
And publishes to .every land
The \.Vork of an almighty h:: d.
m
Soon as the evening shades p revail,
The moon takt:s up the wondrous talc,
And nightly to the? listenin~ earth
Repeats the story of her birth;
\\"hilc all the stars that round her burn,
And all the planets, in their turn,
Confirm the t idings, a s they roll ,
And Spread the truth from pole to pole.
\Vhat though in solemn silence all
Move round this dark terrestrial ball!
\Yh:tt though no real voice nor sound
Amid their radiant orbs be found!
In rc:i.son ' s ear they all rejoice,
And utter forth a gloril')uS voice:
Forever s in ging, as they shine,
The hand that made u s is divine.
-Joseph Addison-1712
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'· Prof Edward A:St~ine~ ,of loV{.a .Col~
lege Will Sp'eak at Ford HaH_,T.0 :
morrow E~enlng.
'·'
· · ·
·
l'rof Edward·
udience
ture.
I
row ni g h t on '".rho I
h ciod" h as himself ·I
,
est111i; nnd vari cd •1
AuHlrla, h e r ece lvcl
n·n lnlng In Boh:1,1 la
e r schoolH of ·1..ierm1
tor's d egree. at. ·l lo
, eal'l y manhood In R 1
: ca m e th e , lntlm al, ,
e
, nnd Is now h eo.d o(
' a 1, ,li ccl C hd stlan lt,
1 G r nn c ll, ll,· .
.
1
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rlcd I•'ord . hnll
•s l lecture !Ju l
.
clo loi:-lc1t l and
a II e njo yable
~ifl o( humoi•
V Dr Edwnrd
e n l of applie d
c i;e, G l'lnnell ,
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\\i t!'i t1~~1r:•~\.: :\
K.'.'._!~!l
·1
at a ll human
ike and that' it
a tmos1
1here to
,,
i;gcr oflc n h1t s
1 a 11 w ith hi s
11
v nicur<Hl ," sald
10 0110 lives uy
ofte n
h11111 11n In nil
tt l th e co lor or
10
: his co n c lu sio n.
practice It
· <lay ll fe calcullllc eas ie r for
c t with."
frolll lit e ut11llhat t h e 1ioop\es
t i n,ore prosper.1c l1011 of t1, e1,·
to thi s cou ntrr ,
t)' wh eth e r lhnt.
lllHl
n econon 1 l>enlc
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.
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; Co t ,· erclal gree
trl\ ' ' a.ri'afrs co
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or
PROGRAM FOR MARCH 6.
YocAL Musi c by the following from the N ew England Conservatory of
Music: Mi ss Edna Hazeltine, Contralto, :M iss Lora Ladd, Soprano,
Mrs. vVarner, Mezzo Soprano, Miss Lotta Stavenlrngen.
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HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
the fund s left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late Daniel Sharp F ord, who owned The l'outh's
Companion,
The manageme nt of the meetings is in the hamls of a
co mmittee from the Social Union,
GEORGE W . COLEMAN, C::h a irman and Director of Meetings
S ec re~ ry for th . M eeti ngs , Miss MARY C . CRAWFORD
Oqicl! Hours a t Room 3, Ford Building, State Hous e Hi11, 3.30-4.30 d a ily, except S a turdays.
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
William N . Hartshorn
J ames A. Floyd
Leander IC Marston
Ernest S. Butler
Benj am in N : Upham
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Rev. Edward Cummings
Robert A. Woods
Mi ss Ellen Paine Huling
H. A . Wilder
Franklin 1-I. W e ntwor th
Miss Mary Boyle O'Reilly
Rev. Charles L. N oyes
Henry Ab rahams
John T. Prince
Rev. Dillon Bronson
Rev. Edwarc ! . Ch a ndler
Edwin D . M ead
Russell B . Kingman
Meyer Bloomfield
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
er at eh e For,
d ay nigh< hi s
t,
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
for Brntherho
' Previou'S tA:
Doors open at 7 o'clock
man offe red
~~come ·to us fl
~ :~ 15
~
e ral hymns• v
gation. H. i
regular atten
gave the five
cour se of w
s eemed to I
same rela;tioL
<lay tibat Faneull hall bore t.o tJhe prolJ- ~\,i- 'iloiii of t he humble. I want you -- - S
lcmJs o f the pa,s t, that is, a place where all to beli eve in th e bl'otherhood of .
iinestions upon w hi ch_ good' •people man and t.o love yot11: fe llows becaus~
1
lliffe r hon cs lly, may he thr esh ed out ,: tihey a)·e hnrnan berngs, ca,p~ble ~-in all kindlin ess• of s pl•rit.
\ YC I)' hi g h de ve lup1.~1ent und e r favo ,
Prol'. S-leine r. who is a fri e nd o[ j ab le circumtsta nc es.
.
... 1
--- - ---~------1111!!111!!1!!!!!1!!1•
1
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The a naly sis of th e music is by Mr. Russell 13. Ki ngman .
Mrs. Vincent M. Coryell is the leader of the singing,
u nd
th o u g h t
I
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, Dr, E, · A:, Steiner Say
'
to, ·Solve Indus
0
pra.ctl ce
.
Q_UESTIONS FHOM TJIE FLOOl1.
Dr Steiner h as
tn1111 tgrat lon, gotn
I ltnpreRslo ns lo th
· a nd lhe m a n y
i who a re con s l n.1
; to t hi s country . .
r as goou a s
i r eu II li es and Is
bouk:; lo ,g lye , us
ces comprising
. Al 'the Twentl~
dlslr u ~t one
j chcon this noon I
o( a blind a nd
of unfumillar \ I )Ct n." . J.mmlgranll
, N<"W 'l'h e con. c
c
r
t ypes a nd : I ~
~urcl hnll m eetlt
I r,li sB gan n . I (llZ
human h ear t i I Lorn Ladd so pr
\
uod ,''1 he said , .
sopt:a no,
1 nezzo
vc pl ay lo th a t
, trios. a 1;1inu'e l
e who are In \ : medley or natlot
\ tine • wdll re. n de.
ccs [l'O!ll pera
. 1,lng of Love J\[y
Loh], t o show \ , · At the last l"oJ
e ra ti'Jns, s0111ci ·i , ~,~
nso!l, Sun d ay,
11 1
, 1~ to be the s pe
me11l that h e 1 \ Work of
\ lll e r lca u born. \
dish boy, who
c here startod
I
,,•boy. A not h ol'
the hea u or ,i
Ford
w h o actu a ll y
veil In appearRev. Eclwat
111oll1er ~ho well
of a,J)pHecl C
tnurnfonned In
college, Gr·in n
;e01n lo be the
,~,.1-
nnm·al
,,,
"vVhat These Meetings Have Meant to Me."
A live-minute testimony.-H. S , Victorson
Ao ,nrnss, "The Search for 13rotherhood."-Prof. Edward A. Steiner
IIYMN, "God Bless Our Native Land."
cll\'e of points
· Stei n er's dlslhl\t though
people In, lllO
J-le
'Ch...~.t~
I
·::-' ~
PRAYEl1.
e s tories, most
other
I
tqLs~ol,. FO__ o~~R , ~E~Ei LL
"The King of Love My Sh epherd Is.''-Gounod
Mi ss Hazeltine
2.
Tnm, Minuet-Patty Stair
Miss Hazeltine, Miss Ladd, Mrs. \Varner
3. QyAn-r°ETTE, " I n the Time of Roses,"- Rciclrnrdt
Miss Hazeltine, : iss Ladd, Mrs. vVarner, Miss Sta venhagen
M
Hv~tN, "Crea tion."
by n n excelMisses 1'Jdna
r,o lla ' SlaVOll·
t W arner . H.
Hussian, , then
~ vn lu e of the
111
tho standla nt.
th a t the Bosof thP, Hos ton
that undoubt~es, G arr1so ns, '
wltl )'Ot :trl~e
•)11 conHn erclal
c ' 'chief evil s l
10
'
I.
Ile SE!al'c h f or
h U lll Ol'OUS ,
-
.\ p,'. of. :~te,;ne,r; ~ d Hall, · Ple ~ds ·
'
fol' B1·othel'hood ~f Man. ·· I · ·
" ' ___: 1 • · • •
A.. Steiner·, -wl\o will
.
Bemgs ,
Alike.
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wpealc at the l~ord •I]
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
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ms-0244
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, March 6, 1909
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
6 March 1909
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Prof. Edward A. Steiner
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
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Text
Documents
Format
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PDF
Language
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English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
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Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/fb9dbabb7773dc8a89ac6ec18e52a91e.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=n8Vo0hPJakHIivz0y-zvChZGvcx%7EnxVebcdYSa-dyHjpwy8Mq7EEvJd04i4Zs9r%7EZoA32nWHlOtA9KEVISXqBkWEl2m5a8-PaUf7bx4sKN%7Es6gFjJX2QyxOnXJoJejuYfSjSP4QaY7E9up8GI2GSmLM790ZJ1ygyiLjtVX%7Eo6H0fPl3-gi-r-UtgJnMTxfBXspFcyKcOrhg1xCP7sfvScNpvRZFaVgqFa8Qm3Frne4a5DSXMM%7EW2-DeBibl1uHjL%7EL3TRJBZrBkIaojIizPjRJJ-n2jOXrb9LJzEe1rFt03HXZVLCcaD%7E%7ENuMCFeINSd-1A8cqDMDCEsHiH9sHJjIg__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
26de50b3267e04e974dc5f77bc2d65c5
PDF Text
Text
FHF
I
r
f
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
I
AT 7.30 P. M.
~HE PROGRAM FOR MARCH IS AS FOLLOWS:
SMITH,
le
I
Director of the
I
lute, New York, aud prethe ~real Sunday evening
oope r Union, upon which
Hnll Meetings are modelled,
ta 11 1 of II IVi1rking· with the
ut f the ~reat success which,
t II years, l'rofcssor Smith has
of rnch \\' ork, the commit1uillcnce alike should draw
/!
I
' - .'... , L,(., c
I
I
IMi~~w,,,-.., f ( the movement here in
tu le will he furnished by Mrs.
M101._.,, '
mO· M, soprano, Miss Virginia
llht, 111ul ~lrs, Minnie Little
a I nht,
The program:
• Andac ht," fro1n Suite" Im Wald" .
•
\ 11th
\'trdurc Clad," from " C r ea tion .,
Mus.
11.
P,ijjcr
I
. /!"yd,,
I
ULoo:\1FIHt.1>
"l lcrb•thh11nc" ,
I. •• (i a,·ottc
.- ,
, L,- l,-- I
11
•
Mi ss
"Lol'c I la s \Vings"
/J, "Au l'rintcmp s "
11.
Mits.
-L /
c ,4 , ,
1,,,
·
I
t. L,, {,A/ l.(,
STJCl{NKY
,
. l?o_ crs
g
(,'ounod
B1.oo:\1F1H1.o
Song•
with 'Cello Ouligato,
11
••
Sl'rcnudc"
I, " Sprlni; Song" .
Shubert
W eil
•
\lit!-, ll1. oo:-.1F JEL O a11d ~II SS ~T I C:KNI!\.
I
f
,,
~I
?/
f
(..I[..
'9
C
,
•
i
,,
~ l . / t ( -f'·.;[,,{r"
Tol'd._
(~
\.i ".· • /\/ ; ,,.· .. , ;I'.·
,- ,",/ •-
�,a,
fl
10
igr
1:h
~at
!SU
ori
,d
,d
da1
,an
t
i
rat
:ha
o.
p
3
~
a,
nk
og
is
e
pet
!OII
the.
1ey
bes
th<
,d c
eric
.rd
,op
:,a
Bl
>YB '
nd
.ter
1an .
;he J
March 14-Y!R. Ho RACE FLETCHE R will speak o n "Feeding for
Mr. Fletcher's name is a household wo rd and we need
add nothing to it; when yo n see him yo u ,vill feel that he is his own
best advertisement. For he carries his
sixty years like a yo uth of eighteen and
he diffuses on every side the sanity and
poise which his system of mastication
sen·es to promote. If, perchance, }"Oll
feel that this topic la cks the "ethical and
spiritual" aspect pronounced a desideratum
in all subjects treated on the Ford H all
pbtform, try living with a dyspeptic before and after h e has learned how best to
care for himself. Recent re sea rch has
shown that nearl y all the mi santhropists
of hi sto ry were victims of an ill-working
di gestive apparatus'. Professor \Villiam
James a t any rate has declared the matter in Mr. Fletcher's address
"of fundam ental importance both to the individual and the state." The
music will be supplied by the Louise vVood-Fo rrest Trio.
Their
program:
qu,
''Allegro from Tri o·,
I.
letic
f th,
c-e cc
, '' Serenade "
S. B. Wlu'tney
"Spanish Dance"
eopl
1em
s b,
like ·
3.
"Fan t:1s ia ,,
sts.
3·
. 1Vidor
5.
. 3I eudclssolm
HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the· Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late Daniel Sha rp Ford, w ho owned The routh's
Companion.
r e<l
ch
,t of
go
l
Fore
,gs a
by
.M iss
PEARSON
Trio , Op. 330
Allegro.
Duo-Adagio Molto ..
Finale- Allegro .
Bohm
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
reg
,ings
1
Chopi1t
Violin Solo
· kne
I a3 i
Chri
tiroV<
Raff
+· ''Kocturne"
D e B eriot-
"Scherzo" .
S·
I
:acti,
D
Trio , " Cavatina ''
Violin Solo by .\·[rss B RANDEGEE
>eop
S qu ires
' Cello Solo by ~I KS . E. THo"rsor<-II ALL
"Serennde,'' Op. 30
4.
H e,·bert
"Gavotte"
Popper
'Cdlo Solo by 2\lt<.S. llowA1<D
rch
iDg
.,tarch 21-:.lR. JoH:-. Z. vVHITE, of Chicago, will discuss ' ' Un, mr /,.;1 mod: Ifs Cause and Cure." Mr. vVhite has studied law, but
it ,:,.,,,. ,15 a p rinter tha t he earned his living before he became a public
, p o::1 ker.
L yma n J. G a~e, late Secret:H,· nt the Treasu ry, once rema rked, after
li~t-t!nin~ to :.fr. \ Vhite in an impromptu
c..:b:1tc ,,·hich called for the ready applicati o n o f the principles of philosophy to
pr:ictical problems in economics and
policies : "\Vhile journeymen printers
can th ink as cle:uly and reaso n as logic:i lly on public ques tions as that , we need
h:i ,·e no fe:ir fo r the future of our country."
T he p u bl ic ques tion w hich especially interests :\Ir. \ Vhite is the remedy which
Sing-le T:ix offe rs for our economic ills.
It is said, too, tha t he can m ake this
\
doct rine so clear that it may be understood hy anybody! The music
will be sup plied by the Grieg Trio, Miss Marguerite Pearso n, violinist,
:\frs. E. Thompso n-Hall, 'cellist, a nd Mrs. M. G. de! Castillo, pianist .
Their progr~m :
Efficiency."
Paul Revere Frothingham
Edward H. Chandler
James A. Floyd
Dillon Bronson
Henry Abrahams
Roben A. Woods
cha
Ge
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
,icn
12se d
lead·
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
ation
,ptist
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
;oget
.all o
.
Doors open at 7 o ' clock
;y an,
eir s,
:t.
Osc,, Ho urs· _
L. K. Marston
John R. Gow
Hayes Robbins
Charles L. Noyes
John T . Prince
Edwin D. Mead
Meyer Bloomfield
H. A. Wilder
Emery B. Gibbs
Ernest S. Butler
W. N. Hartshorn
Franklin H. Wentworth
Secretary, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
· Fo rd Hall, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Satu r d a ys.
Tel. Haymarket 2340
, con
nen 1
is sor
ne. I
: Hat
n.' a1;
1eetir
._...
,sBert
-- ··
_
n:1.n~ Rr e 1n c nurc 11 t1me wnen
nt:
u11.e:.cu 1
~
.•
. ..1-4,.,,
_
...,..~---
- ,_, ·- ,;)
'·?
.,
,.... ,,,... l,l"'!::,I' ··
nr
~
rn--
�1
L
.
...
SUN DAy7
"Those _letters :1nd 11 few iippreciativ~ ne ~ s ~ ,
po_
per articles w~tch had been written, deter.ETI N GS
mmed the committee on Christian Work to Jet
·
Mr. Coleman try the thing o(lain this winter.
SON, D. ·o.
T~e respo'!se was almost immediate . .By tltP
third meetmg there was standing room only in
n hall which seats 1,200, ,-· - in the HERALD of syrnp,sium discussion c
uch. I think now, It,' by four ministers o:
•• paper ought to nominations - 500 pers,
rticle in a recent A few weeks later whe
York, spoke, admission h
This was just after his
,li shed in Chicago
ctting to the Un- York to the justices wh,
1s written by Miss
Perhaps the most si1
this season has be•n t
. ~arch 28 - :-lit.
An,u1s Pu,FFEtt who, for three years, wat
mee tings, who at- William Saller, of Chic,
:I knows the whole 'Story of a Soul's Rei
pr111c1pal oE the Lyman Reform School at \• lestboro, .tvlass, and
\
mlogy of Mr. Cole- have heard a pin fall du
has since visited the leading induslrial
1 ·ist.ian Endcat'or addre,s - wbich ln~tec
.1
questions which follow ec
schools of the United States and Fn~•
ury saint, "canon- to the lofty moral stond,
land, will speak on " Tlie BO)' aud T/1~
liss Crawford mys: cull 'the people' OITha
Gang." l\fr. Puffer believes heartily
peeled that there would
of the Baptist SoProfessor Salter's reiterE
that possibilities for good are to be found
ncome, which Mr. mnn who sins ngninst ch
in every normal boy and that the g~ng
, be used • to soften the woman. But not so.
ly clear to his keen Hall - which is always
instinct is in essentials a social ins1i11ct
recs of cnpitnl and postulated that position 1
misdirected. He maintains that the hoy,
Ir. Coleman imme- deeper things.
if rightly guided \vhile in the "gnni: "
e, was the prepnr"That the people thin I
,n in Boston, under
some hout·s of their long
stage of development, may always bt
Social Union, of a they hear nt Fo1d Holl i1
made into a good and useful citizen. T
o
the Cooper Union, which goes on outside
management of the I before the doors are ope
illustrate this truth he will relate 111nn7
1 begin s to gather, the co1
interesting ~tories, drawn from his 011n
-row th nnd develop- 1 ere and the questions th,
)vement, and every ' interest, uttered as th ey
ex perience. l\1usic by the Bostonia Bra
und himself in or broken English that be,
Q_uartet: Dora Damon Brown, corncli ►q
·n to have his ardor , just coming to feel th
addresses nnd the ' problems of his adopted
Grace Mac Morse, first horn; Alice Florence Morse, second horn; Belk
ston be was gradu- mg, too, to sense the seri
Yeaton Renfrew, trombone . The program :
Ins t year he per- of young people toward
rislinn Wot le of the ' night several sweatshop
.-I/,/
a. "In th e \Voods" .
e chairman he was I some minutes to Mr. 81
(~rnrtct {
I.
,rd Hall on six Sun- j that 'everything he e
Sj>t>//i>l'II
b. "l\lorning Song".
.ry out hie idea. To Near by, two Jewish boys
Sd111l11·1
·t
.
z. Duo for Horn s , "Serenade"
bis undertaking, he , cussing just what kind
(;011110,/
,legates in a smoke- , when - ne Prof. Walter
3· (~rnrtet, "0, Tender ]\-loon "
day afternoon, nnd gested - 'the ablest man
• No111,1
Song for Corn e t, " Resig-nat ion "
added to tbc co- for the same wage as the
/?11t,,'11 ,<f1•i11
:ers and of several his best.'
S· ~tartet, Paraphrase, " 1\lelody in F"
ad impressed from
" Already, too, the qu
I to give the under- reflect a more syrnpatheti,
-off. What really efforts, at any rate of th
however, was the kind. The common' peopl
THESE MEETINGS will continue for two evenings in
ad from New York and ns soon as they are c,
n who spoke was 8
titude toward the church
Announcement of the speaker for April 4 will be made later.
ion man . Charles change it. One of them
llicer, Robbi Schula he hod not for years be
by the Lillian Haynes Trio.
Leighton Williams church, but he would like
four of them Chris- covenant of the Baptiste.
ugh care was token , ~h_nt hundreds of the peop:
, of that in the ad- 1ctse the church ns being ,
<~rs, consequently, to the exclusion of prncti,
April l l-M1t. GEottGE W. CoLEnm men. And th ey of tbe church ns they kne
3 and cosmopolitan
hood. They nre indeed na i
MAN, whom you all know and love,
their humanity.
ore. criticising as the Cini,
will speak on "7'/i e R eligion of tlw
iter stated bis own nil eocinliets want to throw
Crowd." Mr. Coleman has had what
tooled dogmas, of
" For there is otber er!
tter thue, nnd the day tbon thnt of non chc
seems to him a message, borne in upon
·e Jews, respected Christianity ; it is that of
him since he first attenclcrl the Sunday .
s - ju•t aa the non- social movements. A go,
wny nt the close of · too, is being done at Ford
evenings at Cooper Union, three years ago,
hu s instic over the directly . The meetings at
and he will give us some hint of what
>y Rabbi Schulman. those, who have no regt
rn the six tentative men ts on Sunday evenings.
those meetings and these meetings he re
no means satisfied • "The c~mmittee in chat
have meant to him. That he can talk
ure that the • great cated in brotherhood. Gee
en reached. When tbe hrotherlinese which I
inspiringly on any subject you who have
series arrived be · nhle successfully to fuse di
followed his introductory remarks know
which really enved co~mi~tee, and now lendi;
verf well. On thi s subject , so near his
ne,' he urged the Umtarmne, Congregations
Jn, • nnd tell me Freethinkers, nnd Baptiste
heart, the secretary thinks she can promise
1Ve the meetings go moniously working togetb
actual eloquence! Music by the Page
,ember my name by may have at Ford Hall oe
.I-man, not the ice- service of such beauty and
Class l'vJale Quartet.
cheer and sustain their so
tte rs began to come beginning to the next.
1t nnd then by the
All the speakers com,
.ever for the cburch !ltnt the busiest of men a·
is spring,' one man rn n movement of this sort
others like you I that Professor Bowne, Li
,m.' ' I have been f,essor Zue~li_ Keir tiarc
n,
Sunday evenings at Fagan, the s1gnnlman, one
e another, ' but I hn,~e Rpoken nt t~e mee tin(
hing you have beP.n
Who, then, wtl! assert t
. leader among the tl)e orthodox B~pttst body_
__ _ _ _
P;;\~et.--ilt ~--<>lh~t:-·; ,;~t;i"t;·~~f~;.'\'i, e''nr,;'t~t~~~,.....-----.ed such mee tings h!m nre _
n?t d_omg n ~o.nsptcuous service to geneen good men who u!ne re!Jgton rn provtdtng a platform for nn unln tho hi s tory of these m co tlni:,s. But that
gles is necessary if bta~ed and unc~nv~ntional presentation of the
he will h n.ve n. s pecia l message for this s pefully the transition ethtc~I 8 f!d ~octal impulses second to none of
cial gro up tho se who kn'o w how the welfal'e
Mr. Ford's very ?1" time •J? importance 7 • I could easily imagof the ma sses res ts upou his hcn rt at'e sure
rom 8 diametrically me the Galilean on that platform answering the
F or lit e l'est of thi s month th o s penk et' s:
l1eglnnln 1; tomo l'l'OW nl g- ltt, :tl'e: Mt·. H orea11e~, ea~nest questions of tho perplexed multia,· c F le tc her , :.llr. ,John Z. V.' hllo, i\fr. J.
tud e, en!d _one Christian visitor who had hccn
, Arin.m s Puffer. 1.'hc ma nageme nt ltnpl'Ovcd 1
swept o!I hta feet by an evening nt Ford Hall
l\• nhu thtn•n ht'A fn tJ.Phn thiA"
f
•
. th e opportunlly afforc1ed by Professo r 1
I ".
J.
I
I
I
I
I "
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0243
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings, March Programs, 3/7-3/28/1909
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1909
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Prof. Charles Smith, Horace Fletcher, John White, J. Adams Puffer
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/1442bc3c372853d9e03ef183f6dc6b05.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=gD%7EoYtzmgSftxOjMy35Ru96mHP5kTwAwP3k0NH6H-1rdCPd4p3zfXhGwD1U8h4UtYV62FWGNUz80u-eizoiv7n8FdkbPmiMLyI7Qc5K3FI-ebj2wp81zwjyNQar%7ETTFHmBN0hsrzvz8ag5XM14lxx7AnPn%7EyOVqTiW3Rw8F814DV0z0TMdGwG59yQ%7E%7E4yExPIroRAGqB7s21Z1evL2Dzzn7r-eT65rDm5zFsB4O05CHX1yqSNWJOg2CzRi3Imvidq9Nn%7E6jcsqooWAQ38To7UneIBCJWyL6ZnOQ5pyXckM%7EdXkUlPcZ2QFa7cTLu3tYHe4odp8XwObALGVXcIwqkBQ__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
1082d2bab8c6794e9b5c56c4c75866e1
PDF Text
Text
re f-f F= (
PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY 13 .
S,~s by Miss M ,uion Althea . Burt, accornpanitcl by Mi~s
·ivian Helena B a rt.
'Minnet" .
.
.
Beet/u,ven
,,
Edmztnd Severn
'The _ ~ ~cl Damozel"
'-\,
Edmund Severn
•Bacha.,:; \ - .
.
'Ameri~a lue Beautiful."
111 nrh ijall .a[rrtt11gn
THIRD SEASON-1909-10
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
s, "The Case for the Employer"-Jonathan Thayer Lincoln.
·'To Labor."
>NS FROM THE FLOOR.
AT 7.30 P. M.
DATES AHEAD
February 27-RA BBI SAMUEL ScHUL\IAN, D.D ., of New York, will
speak on" The Hebrew Prophets: The Creators of iviodern R eligion.''
Dr. Schulman spoke to us <luring our first
season on'' What the Jew Has Don efor
the T orld and What the World Has
,V
Done to the Jeu·." That was a wonder'·
fully insp iring address and helped us all
·.•;::-,
to a better understandi ng of each other's
viewpoint. Last year his topic, here,
. ~
.~
was "Thin~s That Separate 11,f en and
1
Things T hat Unz"te Them." Religion,
he then said, unites men while religions
divide them. This time he ·w ill tell us
how deeply we are all indebted to the
Hebrew prophets for that wonderful
uniting bond-religion. And he will do
this wi th- great eloquence an<l power, for he is a rarely gifted orato r ,
fired with intense enthusiasm for the place his race has to fi !I in the
world's work and history.
·y 27-RABBI SAMUEL ScHUL,\o!AN, D. D., of New York, "The
. Hebrew P rophets : The Creators of LVIr,dern Religion."
6-PRoF. EDWARD A. STEINER, "The Sear,;h for Brotherhood."
3-JOHN SPARGO, "The Lzfe and Work of Ii:arl ilfarx."
W SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
ls left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
>y the late Daniel Sharp Ford, who owned The ]'outh's
ion.
The management of the meetings is ·in the han<ls of a
ee from the Social Union.
·_<~
.
3EORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
lours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
am N. Hartshorn
James A. Floyd
Leander K. Marston
Ernest S. Butler
Benjamin N. Upham
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Robert A. Woods
Edward Cummings
H . A. Wilder
ll!iss Ellen Paine Huling
Miss Mary Boyle O ' Reilly
Franklin H . Wentworth
Henry Abrahams
Rev. Charles L. Noyes
Rev. Dillon Bronson
John T. Prince
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Edwin D. Mead
Russell B. Kingman
Meyer Bloomfield
E
MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
~D HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashbur~9.-%.5:lace
Doors open at 7 o ' clock
~
15
·":>'
SUGGESTED BOOKS ON NEXT SUNDAY'S TOPIC.
_,. ,,
fl
ti
I
"The Prophets and the Promise."-Willis J. Beecr.er.
"How to Read the Prophets. "-Buchanan Blake.
''The Prophets of Israel."-C. H. Cornill.
"Old Testament Prophecy. "-A. B. Davidson.
"Introduction to the Literature of the Old Testament." -S. R. Driver,
''The Doctrine of the Prophets."-A. F. Kirkpatrick.
"The Prophets of the Ol<l Testament. "-G. H. A. Ewald.
''Israel's Historical and Biographical Narratives."-C. F. Kent.
"The Prophets of Israel."-W. R. Smith.
"The Books of the Prophets."-G. G. Findlay.
'
1,. , n r--;11--
�"
~
/
· 'J
PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY
13 //
VIOLIN SoLOS by Miss Marion Althea . Burt, accom_ :.. :ied hy Mi~s
Vivian Helena Burt.
a. "Min•iet" .
.
.
Beetlu,ven
b. "The . ' sed Damozel"
Edmund Severn
Edmund Severn
c. ·'Bacha., \
.
.
HYMN, "America t.,e Beautiful."
PRAYER
ADDRESS, "The Case for the Employer"-Jonathan Thayer Lincoln.
HYMN, "To Labor."
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR.
DATES AHEAD
February 27-RABBI SAMUEL SCHULMAN, D. D., of New York, "The
Hebrew Prophets: The Creators of 1vli,dern Religion."
March 6-PRoF. EDWARD A. STEINER, "The Sear,;h for Brotherhood."
·
March 13-JoHN SPARGO, "The Lzfe and Work of I<arl 1
Warx."
HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall we
meet) by the late Daniel Sharp Ford, who owned The l'outh's
Companion.
The inanagement of the meetings is in the hands of a
committee from the Social Union.
.
GEORGE W . COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
,,
OfficG Hours at Room 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket 2340.
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
William N. Hartshorn
James A. Floyd
Leander K. Marston
Ernest S. Butler
Benjamin N. Upham
COMMITTEE OF CITIZENS
Robert A. Woods
Rev. Edward Cummings
H. A . Wilder
Miss Ellen Paine Huling
Miss Mary Boyle O 'Reilly
Franklin H. Wentworth
Rev. Charles L. Noyes
Henry Abrahams
Rev. Dillon Bronson
John T. Prince
Rev. Edward H. Chandler
Edwin D. Mead
Russell B. Kingman
Meyer Bloomfield
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQ!::'.:iRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o 'clock
~'5
~
IJf nrh ~all fmrrtt11-gs
THIRD SEASON-1909-10
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
February 27-RAB BI SAMUEL ScHUL:.\IAN, D.D., of New York
speak on" The Hebrew Prophets : The Creators of 11:lodern Relig
Dr. Schulman spoke to us <luring our first
,
season on '' What the Jew Has Done for
the World and What the World Has
Done to the Jeu·." That was a wonderfully inspiring address and helped us all
to a better understanding of each other's
viewpoint. Last year his topic, here,
was " Thing-s T h at Separate 1
Ven and
Things That Unite Them." Religion,
he then said, unites men while religions
divide them. This time he will tell us
how deeply we are all indebted to the
Hebrew prophets for that wonderful
uniting bond-religion. And he will do
this with- great eloquence and power, for he is a rarely gifted 01
fired with intense enthusiasm for the place his race has to fill ir
world's work and history.
SUGGESTED BOOKS ON NEXT SUNDAY 'S TOPI·
j .)
"The Prophets and the Promise."-Willis J. Beecr.er.
"How to Read the Prophets."-Buchanan Blake.
' ' The Prophets of Israel. " -C. H. Cornill.
"Old Testament Prophecy."-A. B. Davidson.
"Introduction to the Literature of the Old Testament. " - S. R. Dri\
"The Doctrine of the Prophets."-A. F. Kirkpatrick.
"The Prophets of the Old Testament."-G. H. A. Ewald.
''Israel's Historical and Biographical Narratives."-C. F. Kent.
"TlHfProphets of Israel. " -W. R. Smith.
"The Books of the Prophets. '.'-G. G. Findlay.
inr- im
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s\\·ift my soul to an-swer Him I be ju- bi . ]ant, my fee t J Our God is
died to make men ho - ly, let us die to make men free, vVhile God is
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call
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Katherine Lee Bates, 1Sg5
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Copyright, 1900, by Charles S. Brown.
Used by per•
.::;#~,,,-!'·
' . ' ' ill"..,.
~-·
,1
�, ~ • ~ • , . . . . . , ~ . ,_ -..;n.,,,-peop1
n
leurn what lhc lu ne! Is worth they · wlll
wnnt part of thut vnlue, for · It Is begin ning to be known, even h ere In New
.England, that vahm Is given t o lnn<Lb,
I
Ion
.
f
d
,
or a goo many years w11;~
e.\ ressed 'by Joseph Fels, a
' ·hta manufacturer·• who
the ac tivity of tho
~
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hln
.c rortl
llhllld
>IIH
tnd
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/
/
PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY
V10LIN
20.
So1.os by Master Jo se ph Gerwitz.
a. "Sonatina"
b. "Air Varia"
c. ' 1 Cavitina"
HYMN 1
''
Schubert
Vie1t,de111ps
Ra//
America the Beautiful."
"vVhat These Meetings I-lave Meant to Me."
A fiv e-minute testimony. -Geo rge Brewster Gallup .
ADDRESS, "The English Budget and 'vVhat It Mea ns."-Jose ph Fels,
I-IY~IN 1
".IVly Country 'Tis of Thee."
Q_UESTIONS FHOM Tll E FLOOR.
MY COUNTRY.
M y Co unlry, 'tis or th ee, Sweet land or lihe rty,
or lhl'C I s in ,l.{ ; Laml \\' he re my lath e rs <I ic d,
L:11ul of the PilgTin1 s • pride, From cv'ry 111ot111t:dn s ide
I.cl rrcc1 l11m ri11 g- .
~ly 11 :. ~ .n111lr_v, thee, l..:111d of the 11oblc £rec,
Thy 11:i111 c I lo,·c ; I Ion.: th y rorlt :-. an,1 rill :-. ,
Thy womls and tc111pkd hill s, i\ly h eart with rapture thrill !'.
Like that aho,·c.
I
1
,·,
I.cl mu tt ;,: swell th e hn·c zc, And ring· £rm11 :ill th e trees"•[:!..
Swed frcc tlom' s so ng-; Let mortal lon gucs :iwakc,
•tH
J.cl :ti! lh:tt hrealhc partake , l.cl rock s llic ir s il c n cc hrc:ilc,
The smuu\ prolong.
"..,_
1
....._
-'~-
C- I
Our fathers ' Cotl 1 to thee, Author or lihc rly,
To th ee w e s i11 ,l .{; Lon.t;' 111:i y our laml h e brig·ht,
\Vith freedom' s liol)· li g- ht, !'roted n s hy Thy 111ig-h l,
Creal Cml, our Kirq.
.(!
DATES AHEAD
March 6-PnoF.
A.
S-rEINEH 1
"Tl,e Searckfor Brother-
March 13~Jo11N SrA1wo 1 "Th e Life and Work of l{arl Jlllarx."
HOW SUPPORTED: These meetings are made possible through
the ftmds left · 10 the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose hall \\·e
meet) by the late Daniel Sharp Ford, who owned The l'outh's
Companion.
The management of the meetings is in the hands of a
committee from the Social Union.
GEORGE ·w. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Secretary for the Meetings, Miss MARY C. \CRAWFORD
/
I .
Office! Hours at Roo1n 3, Ford Building, State House Hill, 3.30-4 '..3 0 daily, except Saturdays.
Telephone, Haymarket 2340 .
. ,., ;
I;
GL
EowAllD
hood."
YJ
tJS
• ... - · ·• -
j
II
·~ .
..J Nnnnrl,<,,....,,.,t,· h n1ti..
·
th
e Land Tax and P
i;c t
·Hm ! "In New Zealnncl
eo- · • ancl no poverty nncl
colony In the world
In which the syst•
co- I duced.
In some
·on i there are no tnx e_
1
11<J..j' l n nrl values. The
ntl \ 12,000 acr es of for
.
ex1> e n ses of th e',
•~e j from this source.''f
.nu
M r Fels th e n toH t
\ question got Into
ng 241 liberal memb e
:aH l conimons were pie
Jc-.1 20 labor m embers,
1<, r Jund values a half
hi~ The rest wns easy.
'1 1s
"One cent on $6 '
Ith one ce nt , for the I
i\' n blood wants more
ho l;]ngland when they
1 the pound back th
·go , lln~s.
•nt I _ "I h ard ly think
.
a j c!at.e how high t~·
e t- Englnnd hold . the!
e r 1 I unclorntand th a t 1
•.Ill I something of the k
,L- , a separate nssess
ou. i · bullcllngs and pro
It. But
1 clon' t lcnow not mor
p eople are
I s lclnn e cl by that t
I cn l! protec tion. I
/: ls m n tle beautifully
,
I, ge n l! c m u n In the ,
11
' 1 mad e necessa-1,7. by·
11 <1 noctrnfe ll cr a .- .,:ot11
,re - In nil but thL . 1 pr
·
•n t ·we have one man
r) who l egally holds ~
1 · of forest ln ncls.
~ vou wnnt In this c~
nu ; ~ uwhat ~h e gngll
i' e I a n ew beir lnnln g o I
1 ~ r the co1nnlon peop]!18 l a nd qnestlon w ill ·
!0 for tf,,, people, hy
;\~ I ucs c r ea t ed by the
I
'·
IHl . ~glJSll:- .f:l'lm
I
worlc on It. 'l'ha
tho common 1
1eop
people are W!tlllng
grent hcrltuge. \
uEngJlshn1en " 'ill
thousa-nds of ncrcs
ror tho plonsure of
over th e r e. Any n
out sow ing ls. a. use
"Th e English bnd
enlng of lhe E n g l
purely clemocra.tlc 1
h a.cl h e lp In thi s fi g
·Hs h col oni es nnd so n
lhe United Stntcs h
to llmd n hand. 1
Englnncl--wlll 11eve
try again In thi s c
lion. The English
sa tl sflecl that 12,000 p
of the land nnd th
people can be leg.
., sen by these 12,000.
cond ition to. allow t
"A little tu x of a
will have Its affe
has made some of
othern will foll ow,
b6 allowed to flour
Jund to build on.
up. .'\:Vhen the la
will be employ ed .
trncl es ·· urilon In th
wngcs like the ta.
And we have some
nd
.',',.
i
!\-leans"· Mr Fels Is n ard · t
ile O f'
,:
·.
n
en
I
Heni J Geoi ge 1111d hie ID
In :the budget lies In >the Cact lbll
1
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
lo
'! 11
ul
~
10
'5
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18
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0242
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, February 27, 1909
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
27 February 1909
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Rabbi Samuel Schulman D. D.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/15d6020b9db175f21b47fe27d0863c1a.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=O6iYcuk4ybulwiQkAFk8JQjTDnHggedWBtDXux1a-eVWRT6-qzyx%7Ew5E-qC6qLK3sKkvYXjIb7ZJ84AfufZLejzCe%7EJBNeY5aSdrFnFyrCEGN5Us9du2jbtTGgrYCpN1ZH%7EB8WAe-t-ciQxLuyk1M-5K2tABoJSoR0S2TQdxoqrWvViibNLhwqjhs6xpXvy7Qn1wy6uJzYiuz6HUvp1t1JahtGttl-DH21dIw9nGy5EbPN3dXq5-xmr5FX3wnx6TCngF8uwvI5OdYMz3M%7EJ5ziIWq6AI1cpXbmFWLR3U2sgxWXZ20n%7ErWZ7GPP2ONRj4SWg968VaVXAQsBlafHjH6w__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
a551f80c9a653b28e834135f339bb3c5
PDF Text
Text
.
Ford Hall Me~tinga
the place left vacant hy the Ills or President Faunce or Brown
l'ersity , Joseph Fels or Phlladoli and London', spo,ke at th e Jpord
meeting .las,t Sunday cvenln,;;• on
,
i English· Blulget and · \V.hat
It
ns." l\lr. }Pcls is an ardent dlsclof Henry George and his ·lntereHt
1c hndget lies In <the fact that thnt
ment calls for · a revaluation or
lish lane! holdings and so mean~
heginning of life ancl living for
·,ommon peopl e of ·England.
/h en the people learn what thn
Is worth they will want part or
value," he .s aid . "Even here In
England It is beginning to he
·11 that .value is given to land by
1cti\'lty of ·people who live 111111
on -it . '!'hat activity belongs to
ommon people and the common
e are waking up to· the fact or
;rent heritage. At present 12,0011
~ own l wo-thircls , ·\ the land lu
,
nd. This is a dar, ·erous concll•
o allow, to exist. i ~ e liltle tax
\
iaH pe nny a pound v, ~11 have Its
For when the land is taxecl.
rl es will be allowed -to flourish.'
•Ions to th e address Gcori,;,,
ter Gallup gav e a five-minute
.1 0ny" as to what th e Ford Hall
gs menu to him . Not since hl:i
l 'Hlll(l meeting expe iiences hn~
ncl SlH:h brotherhood as here , he
.
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wI'TH DR' Ell OT
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.
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,
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\ 'In harmony \~1t11\ 1 e "n1ode\'i1 concepUori
\
f
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,
or religion. Read lilosea and Isnluh uncl
f
,
·
'·' ' Malachi-just read those passages, elo.
VITAL, OPERATIVE
, ,
quent, pr:tc llc11l, full of the worldly aclThe statement was rece1
vice or men who a1·e n,01 al enthusiasts,
' '
wh~ s~a ,~•llh the ylslon ~f the seer and I Shulman of New Yori, and r,
~~~~-rd. a ~tutemun 8 c;oneeption or th o : his l•'o~~- Hau audience, lhat t
,
'
"'l'hore Is 11olhing· In lhe Bible that ' of areal vhaTiialnre opcratl I'
, ·
has such a modern note as the worcls .
.
ot' the Hebrew proph ets.. because· they
I han th tsre has he(!n Ill many
were weremen ll who the people un ultu,·. : 1K, 1nte1, es·ti ng. f 01. ti10 f• t , 1
not• m e or stood nt and lhoy I
'!'h oy
·
ac cl
hro1p;-ht a message In the name or the con vlct!on and earnest atlltnd 1
· e ~~~~ th e people. 'l'lils t110ssuge Is
L>..,J,m
r
.· l
'
Rabb',' SChUIman Ford
··
·
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THIRD SEASON-1909-10
;
'
1)
' 11
in ;
IJ,
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
AT 7.30 P. M.
h,
I
.pli
she
ly
February 20 -PnESIDENT W. H.P. FAUNCE of Brown University will talk on "Education J,Vit!tout Sc/tools." President Faunce has
spoken many times at Cooper Union in New York and he feels \'ery
det'ply the · problems of tlic people. Sometimes he seeks to interpret the
Cooper Union (and Ford Hall?) type of
earnest seeker after truth to other groups.
He once said at a dinner of the very organization which stands behind these
Meetings here : "I would rather be an
agnostic and live a life of tr~ily unselfish
and Christlike emlcayor than sign all the
creeds and attend a fashionable church
twice .every Sunday, and yet live a ~elfish
and grai;ping life isolatl'd from my fellowmen." Again, on anoth e r occasion, he
said, speaking along the lines he will
follow on February 20: '• I count education ,~•orthless unless it makes men realize
that they arc partners in the state. The church should serve as headquarters of civic enterprise." Is not this a man you will wish to turn
out to hear?
Sunday e vening Habbl Schul• New York will speak on "The
, Prophets. The Found ers or
HeHgtion.'•
I
WA 'T'C HM At\'
pP.
a g
. Al
,eta
pl. I
ocii
)rol
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1
sec
he J
1wm,
:to a
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ion al
)rol h
! 'l'i
:hi ch
~llou
I
SUGGESTED BOOKS
RELATED TO NEXT SUNDAY'S TOPIC.
''-- ·
tur/-,/
"Self IIclp."-Samucl Smiles.
"Cho ljing a Vocation."-Frank Parsons.
'' U pl · iildcrs."-Lincoln Steffens.
"lvly Study Fire."-Hamilton \,V right lviabie.
"On the Threshold."-Theodore Munger.
"Pushing to the Front."-Orison Swelt Marden.
"Life of \,V illiam Lloycl Garrison."
"God's Education of Man."-vVilliam De \Vitt Hyde, D. D.
"Lincoln, the 11an and the Boy."-James 1·f organ.
"John Halifax, Gentleman ." - Dinah Muloch Craik.
I
r IS
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spa - c:ous skies, F or
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grim feet, vVhose
glo - rious tale
Of
pa - triot dream That
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336, 337·
,
Charles S. BroWT"
rioe Lee Bates, 18g5
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ma - jes - ties
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lav
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cit - ies gleam Un-dimmed
tain
fo r
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ter
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the fruit - ed
the wil - der ished pre - cious
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plain!
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life!
tears I
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mer mer
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i - ca I
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shed
mend
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broth - er- hood
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broth - er - hood
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His grace
th ine ev thy gold
His grace
I
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sea !
sea
to shin - ing
law !
lib
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in
ev - 'ry gain di - vine!
sea l
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to shin - ing
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FtJr Advent or CllrtStmas.
tell us of the night, \\'hat its signs of promise are;
Traveller, o'er yon mountain's height,
See that glory-beaming star !
·watchman, does its beauteous ray
Aught of hope or joy foretell ?
Traveller, yes; it brings the day,Promised day of Israel.
WAT CIDL-1.N,
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gram, .
stress,
strife,
years
7.
Watchman , tell us of'the night:
H igher yet that star ascends.
Traveller, blessedness and ·1ight,
Peace and truth, its course portends.
vVatchman, will its beams alone
Gild the spot that gave them birth?
Traveller, ages are its own :
See ! it bursts o'er all the earth.
Watchman, tell us of the night ;
For the morning seems to dawn.
Traveller, darkness takes its flight,
Doubt and terror are withdrawn.
Watchman, let thy wanderings cease:
Hie thee to thy quiet home.
Traveller, lo ! the Prince of Peace,
Lo ! the Son of God, is come.
Sir John Bowring.
1825.
TO ,,_ABOR!
'·
Sun g to th~ fune of "~Iarybnd -"
The wo rld'S ·1ifc 'hangs o n your right hand,
Your strong,r ig- h t h:tnd, yo ur skillt:d r ig-ht ha1lll,
You hold th e ·wholt: world in your hand ,
St:e to it ,,:hat you d o!
• Or-<)ark o r
Tli°~-world
Or dark or
Tht: world
lig-ht. or wrong or right,
is made by you!
li!;h t, or wrong- or ri _;h t,
is m ade by yo u '.
Shall you complain who feed the world,
,vho clothe the world, who house the world :
Shall you com plain who a re the wor!J,
Of what the w orld may do?
As from this time you use you r pow'r
. T he world must follow yo u!
As from this hour you use you r pow' r
T he world must follow you!
Then rise as yo u ne' er rose bdore,
Nor hopt:d befo re, nor dared before, and show
As ne'er was shown before
The pow'r th at lies in you!
Stand a ll as
Believe a nd
Stand all as
Bel ieve and
-
one,
dare
one,
dare
till ri g ht is done!
and do!
till right is done!
and do!
Ckarlott~ P er/.:in.s Gi/,na,t ,
I
,-
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~
,io
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0241
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, February 20, 1909
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
20 February 1909
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: President W. H. P. Faunce
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures
-
https://d1y502jg6fpugt.cloudfront.net/11079/archive/files/20ebd621bc1f4213da3cb2d47fb23fdc.pdf?Expires=1712793600&Signature=OhETMoIwKjgtAjSyj8ltQJ2UCo1PNF2q-zohxAyH5l0GkKT1iPKzPXn%7EG3efW5uU4tNtqcdUTv97RhK9oFHDxc7UioxPRXL8vOyLxZ5E62Q2-jg-jwt8op88w9m6S5-YPQg-kgaHPh5mtmvVTkF-cgzgtgMcGLMLTvjizXvyCyjcZ0IgML2V0hCCsidrI09Fx73jTHs7GWJBIx3d1ZjPWQkwvp3ExqKcvVQC6%7EYkqsJJbdx8%7EOVKzI852Cc7cPpjBmpPp-LU0CQcxGvOQRD2xCCEtmFlqpUM8Xb2SN0grDmU3MotCJpTz35w%7EtM-i5u5k0pN%7EWUmY1adhqpKNYIF3A__&Key-Pair-Id=K6UGZS9ZTDSZM
0bdb50e492a7264447e0c510c406e545
PDF Text
Text
'1 11/Ub
\
ward
'
,
;some valuable k sso ns out or
teres llng military ,111<1 elv!c
nlng "Lincoln, th e i\lan anrl
." Anoth er imponan l (caturo
will QC a pnbllc recog-11illo11 of
e l S. Ford, whose fund s, left
n Bapllst Social Union, are
THE PROGRAM FOR FEBRUARY IS AS FOLLOWS:
February 7-PnoF. S. L. Josm ·o f Bombay, India, will talk on
11 Thc
Awakening of the Orient and ,vhat It Means to the Occident."
J'rofcssor Jo shi is recognized as a unique
aut hority on India and the East, by virtue
of the fact that he can look at current
r;:,>lile111s from the Eastern as well as the
Wotcrn l'iewpoint. Born and brought
up In India, he po~sesses the feeling and
lnti11111tc knowledge of his native land
co111lii11cd with a thorough training i11 the
philo ~o phy of the ,~rest. Moreover, he
IJX"ahs the English lang ua ge with lluCllcy
11111 d1a1~11 and he has received the co nfiJrn~c a1ul commendalion of leadin g men
of New York who know him a;1d his
work. lli s address wii'l fit on interestingly to the \'i\'id picture of India, from an American l'i e wpoint, g iven
us ea rly in the season by Miss Elizabeth Colton and to the sharp, snapthot i111prcssi o ns dropped, more rece ntly, by Keir Hardie in his talk:
The ll)II Sic will be supplied by ivliss Edith Sampson Holden, Yiolin"i st ,
Mi~s Lillian Vincent Beatey, so prano, a nd Mi ss Hel v Soren, pianist.
Their program :
"Sundaylllorning".
J.
{
SoHEN
a. "Birthday Song" .
h. "The Cnptain" .
c. "The l\lerry l\'Ionth of l\Iny "
Co-;.vcn
/1.,0J/<' J'S
lVe,,.ilon
1'l1 ss HEATEY
.I·
a . '·Cavatina" .
.
.
.
.
.
h. Selcdion from ''Romeo and Juliette"
l
t
Br11dd
i\lrn:;
Boh111
(,'ounotl
~JJSS Jl oLDEN
~- _
"Sp ring So ng"
(With Violin Obligalo)
IVeil
'l10111orrow th a
be Professor S. L. ,Joshi of
sc ,q,_
emo Is :: -rhe A walrnulng
,l anrl' what It m eans lo the
!L a ter · . in th e month l\11' S,
Jcy, or th e National Con s urnnnrl Rahhl Samuel Sc hulman
,vi ll ·he hea rd. A conscrv\,tlvo
.c o n, who ha s been nlton<ling
I more 01· \ cs• sa id the ot he r
ll thing ll rn
lmpl'essed him
1
dl e ncos Is t ' fa c t that their 1
usc Is to,· senllmen-ts or a \!
nd oven Chl'ls ll a n chal'a c tcr. ~
though th ese m eeti ngs were
a ll y r eligi o us th ey WCl'O helprth en •lh e moral a nd r eli gious
osc who attend, a nd that most
~ co me th ere re g ularly have
nd their thoughts a lready set
r thin gs . Ceri o. Inly there ls
lot a ll'" or "padding" In con-1'110 formal prngmmme. S111"\1
I w ell balanced paper, as Mr.
b1gnalman, r end last Sunday
1
i; f a r toward allaying rancor
on th e part of workingmen
;ra lions. llfr. li'a g,1 n spoke as
nd e1
1endent man s h ould s pealc,
1 co lla,, of any corporation and
lY brief to defend unrlghleo11H
:h e same time e mpha s izin g the
ment that has come a bout In
of corporations to the ir embetter pe rsonnel or the work<1 lhc fu c t lh 11 l It Is nnly fn Ir
the good In corpor ations. anrl
1rd a coilpera live r ein lionship.
one of mutual criti c ism and
1-Ir. F aga n was even n1ore
, anrl suggestive In hi s extemip\l es to quest Jons from th€
, hi s more forma l and careful •
paper.
l
AT 7.30 P. M.
will
1
cse n1cc tin gs.
,
EVERY SUNDAY EVENING
r
.N11clcrson,
I ,tform on Lincoln night, l"ch.
I
I
,I
=
L
r
�-
L .Jl:.:
February 14 - LINCOLN' N IGHT, wi th Col. Ed ward Anderson,
who kne~v am! loved Lincoln long before h e was president, to tell us of
" The lvfan and The Statesman," and to give us an idea, too, as to
how Lincoln would feel about some of the great and pressing problems
of our own time.
T wo day!'; before this meeting the one hundredth
an~iversary of the birth of the Martyr
President will have been celebrated all
over the country. It is particularly fitting,
therefore, that we shoul<l consider here the
life and work of this self-made man.
Another self-made man will be remembered also, that evening, Dan iel Sharp
F ord, to whose beneficent thought for the
working-people of the future we owe this
beautiful hall in w hich we come together,
on Sunday evenings, and these inspiring
meetings, which have meant so mu_ to us
ch
all. For, previous to Colonel Anderson's address, Mr. W. N. Hartshorn, who married
Mr. Ford's daught_ r and who was very closely in touch with Mr. Ford's
e
work and wishes, will tell us a hout the life an<l loving labor of th_s man
i
who owned and e<lited The Youth's Companion and huilt it up to its
present position of influence and power. Music by the Imperial Ladies'
Quartet. Their. program :
1.
-·
Wagner
"Messengers of Peace"
'· Sia.veSong "
Del Riego
Contralto Solo by :Mrss
3.
T RASK
"Story of the Flag" .
---
.
February 21-Mrrs. FLORENCE KELLEY of New York, secretary
uf rhe ::-,Jational Consumers' League and an expert on questions relating to
chil<l bbor, w ill talk as only she can on "New England's Lost Leadership in Child Labor Legislation."
Mrs. Kelley was formerly very
closely associated with Jane Addams in Chicago, where for four yea rs
she was State Inspector of Factories, and she has , more recently, travelled
and im·estigated child labor all over the country.
She btlieves that we
of this part of the United States have retrograded in our wo rk of legis1:nion for children's protection and she is coming to spur us on to fresh
:ind further endeavor.
The music will be furnished by Bertha Cushing
Child, contralto, Miss Anne Abbott, violinist, and Mr. Henry Gideon,
piani sr.
r.
Their program :
Ronald
''The Rosy Morn"
l
( a. " Scottish Cradle Song "
"Spring"
l h.
'\
!VI,·s. Beach
)fRS. C1tILD
3·
Bo rowski
"1\doration "
~[I SS ABBOTT
a. "Hills o' Skye"
"The Poet Gazes on the Moon"
(Words from the Chinese )
+· { b.
}M.R.Lang
~!RS. CHILD
s. " H onioresque"
Dvorak
:\1rss
6.
ABBOTT
M~S.
"Jewish Folk Songs"
MRS. CHILD
De Kove"
Sopr~no Solo by ~hss D E \VEALE
Camja1ia
4.
' ·Boat Song"
5.
The Songs My Mother Sang
. Arra,,_ eme11t by Smith
g
I "The Last Rose of Summer."
I " Believe Me If All Those Endearing Young Charms ."
'·Annie Laurie. "
L"Old Folks At Home ."
J
6.
" To Thee , 0 Country"
. Eichberg
THESE MEETINGS for the treatment, from the ethical standpoint
( and with prejudice to no one), of live questions, personal or social, are
held in the most beautiful hall in Boston, situated on State House Hill,
convenient to the Park-street Subway. They are for you and your friends.
B,, coming to them yourself and passing on the news of them you will
HOW SUPPORTED:
These meetings are made possible through
the funds left to the Boston Baptist Social Union (in whose. hall we
meet) by the
Companion.
late Daniel
Sharp Ford, who owned The 1outh's
patly help us to develop a'new Boston institution, a place where, as in
I.be Cooper Union, New York, men and women will find mental anci
ral uplif t on Sunday nights, and be able to enjoy in comfort good
ic :i nd st imul:tti ng discussion.
�,,',
February 28-RABBI SAMUEL ScnuLMAN of New York, whose
brilliant address in our last year's co urse is so ,veil rememberccl hy
many, will talk to us about "Things That
Separate Men and Things That U11ile
Them." His topic of last year, "What
the J ew Has Done for the \,Vorltl ancl
·w hat the \ • orlcl Has Done to the Jell',"
V
gave a hint in advance of the line his
address might take, but we can't C\"Cll
guess on this year's rnbject. So you ll'ill
have to come and hear him for yocmclf.
That he will give you something to take
away and think about and present his
message as only a true orator can is, however, certain. For he is a tried and true
Cooper Union speaker; and you know,
from having heard Rabbi \Vise, what that mea ns. Th e music will he
furni shed by the Young :tvicn's Symphony Orchestra, formerly the
Boys' Symphony . Orchestra, conducted by Jacqu es Benavente. Their
progra m :
t.
O\'ert11re, "Morning, Noon and Night"
2.
Walt z, "\Vo die C itron en Bl11hen
Strauss
3.
Selection, "Tannlrnuser"
1Va,t:11cr
4·
" Serenade"
Haydc11
5.
l\[arch, " National Emblem''
Bagley
S 11j,jl
THE MEETINGS ARE ENTIRELY FREE
NO TICKETS REQUIRED
FORD HALL, cor. Bowdoin Street and Ashburton Place
Doors open at 7 o'clock
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
GEORGE W. COLEMAN, Chairman and Director of Meetings
Paul Revere Frothingham
L. K. Marston
John R. Gow
Edward H . Chandler
Hayes Robbins
Charles L. Noyes
James A. Floyd
Edwin D. Mead
John T. Prince
Dillon Bronson
Meyer Bloomfield
H . A. Wilder
Henry Abrahams
Ernest S. Butler
Emery B . Gibbs
Rob ert A. Woods
Franklin H. Wentworth
W. N. Hartshorn
Secretary, Miss MARY C. CRAWFORD
Office Hours: Ford Hall, St ate House Hill , 3,30-4.30 daily, except Saturdays .
Te1. Haymarket 2340
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection 1885-2011 (MS114)
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1885-2011
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Meyers, Arthur S.
Description
An account of the resource
The collection contains 9 boxes of Arthur S. Meyers' research files related to his book, <em>Democracy in the Making: the Open Forum Movement</em>. The book, published in 2012, chronicles the history of the nationwide open forum movement, including the role of the Ford Hall Forum. The collection contains photocopies of letters, articles, and programs related to open forums and the movement’s proponents such as George W. Coleman and Mary Caroline Crawford. <br /><br />A <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/researchguides/12/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">finding aid</a> is available which describes and inventories this collection. Digital files are available at: <a href="https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/">https://dc.suffolk.edu/fhf-docs/</a>
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Civil society -- United States -- History
Coleman, George W. (George William), 1867-
Crawford, Mary Caroline
Democracy -- United States -- History
Meyers, Arthur S
Political culture -- United States -- History
Political participation -- United States -- History
Relation
A related resource
See also, the Ford Hall Forum Collection (MS113), Suffolk University
Document
A resource containing textual data. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
ms-0240
Title
A name given to the resource
Ford Hall Meetings program, 2/7-2/28/1908
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1908
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Description
An account of the resource
Featured: Professor S. L. Joshi
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
Meyers Open Forum Collection, 1885-2011 (MS114)
MS-114 Folder: 47
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Documents
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Language
A language of the resource
English
Subject
The topic of the resource
Ford Hall Forum
Forums (Discussion and debate)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
Copyright Suffolk University. This item is made available for research and educational purposes by the Moakley Archive & Institute. Prior permission is required for any commercial use.
Relation
A related resource
<p>View the <a href="https://www.suffolk.edu/-/media/suffolk/documents/about/moakley-archive-and-institute/collections/ms114_findingaid_pdftxt.pdf?la=en&hash=486EEBE8C7ED9B1E7B1E8400F934ED64828945AC">finding aid to the Arthur S. Meyers Open Forum Collection (MS 114)</a> for more information (PDF).</p>
<p></p>
Ford Hall Forum
Lectures