A continuously changing collection of trinkets and mementos adorn EED's tombstone
Stone walls do not a prison make, Nor iron bars a cage
Miss Emily's final resting place, centered in West Cemetery, is enclosed by an ornate black wrought iron fence constructed in 1858 for one of the elite families of Amherst--the Dickinson's.
Today the tranquil site enclosing four tombstones attracts visitors from all over the world, almost exclusively to pay homage to the "Belle of Amherst". And it has been showing its age for too many years now.
More recent plaque looks fine
The original 1858 gate was stolen in the 1970s and returned in 2004
Next month Amherst Town Meeting will consider recommendations of the Community Preservation Act Committee, whose sole charge is to sort out capital requests concerning Recreation/Open Space, Affordable Housing and Historical Preservation.
Enter the Holy Grail of Amherst history, the decaying fence that has protected the Dickinson family for over 150 years. The $40,000 request, added to $21,000 appropriated two years ago, will allow for complete refurbishment of the entire fence to good as new condition.
The renovation will start this summer and is expected to be completed before first snowfall, although the fence will have to be disassembled and taken off site.
Since Emily Dickinson is arguably the most famous citizen in our 250+ year history, it's a safe bet Town Meeting will approve the spending article. Although the occasional curmudgeon does point out that perhaps Amherst College with its $1.6 billion endowment and owner of the Dickinson Homestead now turned Museum should shoulder the cost. After all, her grandfather Samuel Dickinson founded Amherst College.
But Miss Emily does not belong to Amherst College; she belongs to us all.
More famous than Robert Frost? Maybe. More famous than Uma Thurman? Nah!
ReplyDeleteTime will tell. Check back with me in 100 years.
ReplyDeletefor 60 k, I hope they'll be guilded
ReplyDelete61,000 for a fence? Let the school pick up another trust fund kid and pay for it, the rest of the world takes care of our properties and that place is rich enough to do so.
ReplyDeleteWe recently spent $65,000 to refurbish Civil War tablets memorializing those from Amherst who perished to preserve the Union.
ReplyDeleteWho would you like to bill for that?
Yeah, that clearly was a waste. Everyone's got a special interest. I hope you opposed that boondoggle.
ReplyDeleteNo, actually I supported it; both here and as a voting member of town meeting.
ReplyDeleteThe armed forces are not comparable to Emily Dickinson. Laying down your life for liberty is far more important, and a public sacrifice to make. Charge AC for the fence.
ReplyDeleteWhat does Amherst College have to do with it? They own the house, not the body.
ReplyDelete"Although the occasional curmudgeon does point out that perhaps Amherst College with its $1.6 billion endowment and owner of the Dickinson Homestead now turned Museum should shoulder the cost."
ReplyDelete