John W. Randall
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John Witt Randall (November 6, 1813 – January 25, 1892) was a minor poet and, for a brief time, a naturalist, but is best known for the collection of drawings and engravings that he bequeathed to Harvard University.


Early life

Randall was born in Boston, the son of Dr. John Randall (1774–1843), and his wife, Elizabeth Wells Randall (1783–1868). Dr. Randall was an eminent physician and dentist, with three degrees from Harvard College (A.B. 1802, M.B. 1806, M.D. 1811), and Elizabeth Randall was a granddaughter of the American Founding Father Samuel Adams. After they married in 1809, John and Elizabeth Randall lived at 5 Winter Street, a wood-framed house with a garden on the southeast corner of Winter Street at Winter Place (the home, from 1784 until his death in 1803, of Samuel Adams and, until her death in 1808, of his widow Elizabeth Adams). Around 1830, Adams' old house was replaced by Dr. Randall's new one, and the address changed to 20 Winter Street. The family lived there until Dr. Randall's death in 1843. Notwithstanding his Boston residency, Randall retained an attachment to his family's farm in Stow, Massachusetts, on which he grew up. The success of his medical practice allowed him to buy his siblings' interest in the property, after which "he built a new and more comfortable dwelling-house near the site of the original homestead, which had fallen into decay; and it became a cherished summer resort for him and his family." An only son, John Witt Randall grew up with four sisters: Elizabeth Wells Randall (1811–1867), Belinda Lull Randall (1816–1897), Maria Hayward Randall (1820–1842), and Hanna Adams Randall (1824–1862) who later changed her name to Anna Checkley Randall.


Education and brief career in natural history

Randall prepared for college at Mr. Green's school in Jamaica Plain, and at the
Boston Latin School The Boston Latin School is a public exam school in Boston, Massachusetts. It was established on April 23, 1635, making it both the oldest public school in the British America and the oldest existing school in the United States. Its curriculum f ...
, after which he entered Harvard College, graduating in the class of 1834. Compelled by his father to study medicine, he graduated from the Harvard Medical School (M.D., 1839), but never practiced. At Boston Latin and Harvard, Randall was considered eccentric. Thomas Cushing, a contemporary who attended both schools with Randall, wrote that "his peculiar and marked originality of character is well remembered
y his classmates Y, or y, is the twenty-fifth and penultimate letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide. According to some authorities, it is the sixth (or seventh ...
Though among them, he was not wholly of them, but seemed to have thoughts, pursuits and aspirations to which they were strangers." Cushing recalled how Randall formed an interest in natural science while at Harvard:
His tastes developed in a scientific direction, entomology being the branch to which he devoted himself. The college at that time did little to encourage such pursuits, but he pursued the even tenor of his way till he had made a very fine collection of insects, and extensive and thorough knowledge on that and kindred subjects, while his taste for poetry and the ''belles-lettres'' was also highly cultivated.
In 1836, while a student at the Harvard Medical School, Randall accepted an appointment as consulting Zoologist to the United States Exploring Expedition, organized to explore and survey the Pacific Ocean, but resigned before the expedition set to sea in August 1838. In an 1892 obituary notice, one scientific journal noted that Randall was known "to the present generation of entomologists as the author of two papers descriptive of the Coleptera of Maine and Massachusetts published more than fifty years ago in the second volume of the Boston journal of natural history.” (See bibliography below.) Randall's Harvard classmate Henry Blanchard, wrote that Randall was "a very learned man, and in natural science distinguished...had he been allowed by his father to follow his inclination, I have little doubt he would have been a distinguished man — distinguished as a scientist, a more useful and happier man. His father was determined he should adopt medicine as a profession. The son might have enjoyed it as a study, but the practice of it as a pursuit would have been abhorrent.


Later life

According to Randall's friend and literary executor, Francis Ellingwood Abbot, Randall's "whole boyhood and youth had been embittered by unhappy relations with his father" for "Dr. John Randall was a man of iron will, disguised to the world by great suavity and polish of manner, but manifested to his family in a despotic and often capricious arbitrariness that brought much misery to those whom, doubtless, he sincerely loved." After Dr. Randall's death in 1843, "the son lived on, educated for a professional career he abhorred, diverted from the scientific and literary career he desired, and driven into a seclusion from the world which his early companions beheld in dull, uncomprehending wonder.” After his father's death, Randall inherited his father's estate and thenceforth, wrote Abbot, "passed his life in leisure and retirement from the world," nurturing his family's property on behalf of his mother and sisters, expanding and developing the house and grounds at Stow, and indulging his taste for literature and the fine arts. Between 1843 and the outbreak of the Civil War, he accumulated a collection of some 575 drawings and 15,000 etchings and engravings, intending to illustrate the whole history of the art. In an autobiographical sketch written in 1884 for the 50th anniversary of his Harvard Class, Randall summarized his literary accomplishments:
As to my literary works, — if I except scientific papers on subjects long ago abandoned, uchas one on Crustacea in the Transactions of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia; two on insects in the Transactions of the Boston Society of Natural History; one manuscript volume on the animals and plants of Maine...; Critical notes on Etchers and Engravers, one volume; classification of ditto, one volume, both in manuscript incomplete and not likely to be completed, together with essays and reviews not likely to be published, — my doings reduce themselves to six volumes of poetic works, the first of which was issued in 1856, and reviewed shortly after in the North American, while the others, nearly or partially completed at the outbreak of the civil war, still lie unfinished among the many wrecks of Time, painful to many of us to look back upon, or reflect themselves upon a Future whose skies are as yet obscure.


Death and bequests

John Witt Randall died a bachelor at Boston on January 25, 1892, at the age of seventy-eight and was buried in Boston's Mt. Auburn Cemetery. His friend Francis Abbot attended the funeral:
On Thursday, January 28th, a small company gathered at the house. The funeral services were conducted by Rev. Dr. Edward Everett Hale, and all that could die of John Witt Randall was laid to rest at Mt. Auburn. Three of us, Miss elindaRandall and Miss O'Reilly and myself, followed him together in one carriage, at her own request, to the family tomb.
During the previous quarter century, Abbot had observed a change in his friend, which he called a "puzzling phenomenon."
...the apparent diversion of a most serious, lofty and unworldly spirit to the accumulation of worldly wealth. By his own ability and indomitable energy, he multiplied the comfortable family inheritance into a great fortune, ten times as large as he found it. From the period of the Civil War, he almost wholly ceased to increase his invaluable art collections, or to take much interest in the writing of poetry...in the winters, I found him, when I entered his study, bending grimly over a vast mass of maps, railroad reports, statistical tables, and business documents of all sorts. He was studying out for himself, at first hand, the foundations and elements and necessary conditions of all that vast activity in railroad development which in a generation created a new America.
He prepared no will, and his estate passed to his only surviving sibling, Belinda Lull Randall, to whom he entrusted its final disposition. She made many bequests, executed both before and after her death in 1897. Among her beneficiaries were Harvard University, the town of Stow, and many charitable institutions. In April 1892, she created a $500,000 trust fund to be used "for charitable purposes," to be known as the J.W. Randall Fund, and in May the Treasurer of Harvard University reported that, in accordance with her brother's wishes, she "had given to the college his large collection of engravings, gathered by him to illustrate the history of the art of engraving: also the sum of $30,000 to establish the John Witt Randall Fund, the income of which is to be used so far as it may be needed for the care and preservation of his engravings..." That same year she made a gift of $55,000 to the town of Stow, $20,000 for general purposes, $10,000 for poor relief, and $25,000 for the construction of a library building, which was built in 1893 and dedicated in February 1894 as the Randall Library. The new building was initially furnished with 700 books donated to the town by John Randall from his private library. In 1897, the Randall Fund gave Harvard University a large sum, including $10,000 for the construction of a new dining hall (Randall Hall, completed in 1898), a "further $10,000 toward the Phillips Brooks House, and a liberal endowment to Radcliffe.""Recent Bequests," in ''The Harvard Crimson'', September 29, 1897.


Bibliography


Writing on natural history

* John Witt Randall. "Description of new species of coleopterous insects inhabiting the state of Maine," in the ''Boston Journal of Natural History'', February 1838, vol.2, no.1, pages 1-33. * John Witt Randall. "Description of new species of coleopterous insects inhabiting the state of Massachusetts," in the ''Boston Journal of Natural History'', February 1838, vol.2, no.1, pages 34–52. * John Witt Randall. "Catalogue of the crustacea brought by Thomas Nuttall and J.K. Townsend from the west coast of North America and the Sandwich Islands, with descriptions of such species as are apparently new, among which are included several species of different localities previously existing in the collection of the Academy," in the ''Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia'', 1839, vol. viii, Pages 106–147.


Poetry

* John Witt Randall. ''Consolations of Solitude'' (Boston: John P. Hewitt, 1856). * John Witt Randall (author), Francis Ellingwood Abbot (editor). ''An Early Scene Revisited: A Poem'' (Cambridge, MA: John Wilson & Son, University Press, 1894). * John Witt Randall (author), Francis Ellingwood Abbot (editor), with illustrations by Francis Gilbert Attwood. ''The Fairies' Festival'' (Boston: Joseph Knight Co., 1895). * John Witt Randall (author), Francis Ellingwood Abbot (editor). ''Poems of Nature and Life'' (Boston: George H. Ellis, 1899).


Publications about Randall

* A.G.R. Hale. ''John Witt Randall'' (Stow, MA: Stow Historical Society, 1892). * "John Witt Randall," in ''Psyche, A Journal of Entomology'', September 1892, page 316. * Sarah Vure, Fogg Art Museum. ''The John Witt Randall Collection'' (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Art Museums, 1998).


See also

*
Anna Maria Wells Anna Maria Wells (née Foster; 1795–1868) was a 19th-century poet and a writer of children’s literature. The poet and editor Sarah Josepha Hale wrote that Wells, as a child, had a "passionate love of reading and music," and began to write vers ...
, poet, wife of Randall's uncle Thomas Wells *
Frederick A. Wells Frederick Adams Wells (October 13, 1857 – March 12, 1926) was an American businessman and politician from New York (state), New York. Personal life Wells was born in Brooklyn, Kings County, New York on October 13, 1857, the son of James Wells ...
, politician, Randall's first cousin once removed * Webster Wells, mathematician, Randall's first cousin once removed *
Joseph Morrill Wells Joseph Morrill Wells (1853–1890) was an American architect, known for his contributions to the work of the notable architecture firm of McKim, Mead & White. Wells is said to have admired the architects of the Italian Renaissance, especially Don ...
, architect, Randall's first cousin once removed


References


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Randall, John Witt American male poets American carcinologists American entomologists 1813 births 1892 deaths Boston Latin School alumni Harvard Medical School alumni Harvard College alumni People from Stow, Massachusetts 19th-century American poets 19th-century American male writers 19th-century American zoologists Descendants of Samuel Adams