Nathaniel Burt
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Nathaniel Burt (November 21, 1913, Jackson Hole, Wyoming – July 1, 2003, Princeton, New Jersey) was an American composer, teacher, poet, novelist and social historian."Memorial: Nathaniel Burt '36, *49," ''Princeton Alumni Weekly'', July 200

/ref> A lecturer at
Princeton University Princeton University is a private university, private research university in Princeton, New Jersey. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth, New Jersey, Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the List of Colonial Colleges, fourth-oldest ins ...
and Westminster Choir College, he is best remembered for his 1963 ''New York Times'' bestseller, ''The Perennial Philadelphians''."Nathaniel Burt, Composer and Author, 89," ''The Philadelphia Inquirer'', July 11, 2003, p. B-11.


Life and career

He was the son of writers Struthers Burt and Katharine Newlin Burt. His father grew up in Philadelphia, the son of a prominent lawyer, and was a graduate of Princeton and
Oxford University Oxford () is a city in England. It is the county town and only city of Oxfordshire. In 2020, its population was estimated at 151,584. It is north-west of London, south-east of Birmingham and north-east of Bristol. The city is home to the ...
. A published poet and novelist, Struthers became a Wyoming rancher. Burt's mother wrote Western novels and short stories, several of which were adapted into screenplays for early films. They operated the Bar B C Dude Ranch, outside Jackson Hole, Wyoming, where he was born in 1913.Richard Walser
"Burt, (Maxwell) Struthers,"
''Dictionary of North Carolina Biography'' (Chapel Hill: North Carolina Press, 1979).
He had a younger sister, Julia Burt Atteberry (1915–1986).Obituary: Nathaniel Burt, ''The Times, Trenton'', July 8, 2003
/ref> Among their neighbors was novelist (and Philadelphian) Owen Wister, who owned a nearby ranch. Burt's parents lived in Southern Pines, North Carolina during the winters, where he attended elementary school. He was sent to boarding school at The Saint James School in
Hagerstown, Maryland Hagerstown is a city in Washington County, Maryland, United States and the county seat of Washington County. The population of Hagerstown city proper at the 2020 census was 43,527, and the population of the Hagerstown metropolitan area (exten ...
,"Biography/History," ''Nathaniel Burt Papers'', Special Collections, Princeton University Librar
(PDF)
/ref> and graduated as valedictorian of his class in 1931. He attended Princeton University for a year, before dropping out and teaching in the
Hoboken, New Jersey Hoboken ( ; Unami: ') is a city in Hudson County in the U.S. state of New Jersey. As of the 2020 U.S. census, the city's population was 60,417. The Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program calculated that the city's population was 58,690 i ...
public schools.Roger W. Moss, "Reminiscences of Nathaniel Burt," Forward to 1999 reprint of Nathaniel Burt (1963), ''The Perennial Philadelphians: The Anatomy of an American Aristocracy'' (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, ). He completed an undergraduate degree at
New York University New York University (NYU) is a private research university in New York City. Chartered in 1831 by the New York State Legislature, NYU was founded by a group of New Yorkers led by then-Secretary of the Treasury Albert Gallatin. In 1832, the ...
's
Mannes School of Music Mannes School of Music is a music conservatory in The New School, a private research university in New York City. In the fall of 2015, Mannes moved from its previous location on Manhattan's Upper West Side to join the rest of the New School cam ...
in 1939, and returned to Princeton to teach music theory in the Department of Music, 1939–1941. He joined the U.S. Navy in 1942, spent World War II in the Pacific theatre, and was discharged in 1945 as a lieutenant. He returned to Princeton after the war, and completed a Master of Fine Arts degree in music in 1949. His compositions included ballet, choral, orchestral, and piano music. He taught simultaneously at Princeton and Westminster Choir College, and was co-founder of the Princeton Chamber Orchestra. Burt completed two books of poetry: ''Rooms in a House'' (1947) and ''Questions on a Kite'' (1950). He gave up teaching in 1952 to concentrate full time on writing. His first novel, ''Scotland's Burning'' (1954), was set at a boys boarding school, like the one he had attended. He wrote scholarly articles analyzing the development of drama in the
libretti A libretto (Italian for "booklet") is the text used in, or intended for, an extended musical work such as an opera, operetta, masque, oratorio, cantata or musical. The term ''libretto'' is also sometimes used to refer to the text of major litu ...
of early Italian operas.


''The Perennial Philadelphians''

Burt spent six years researching and writing ''The Perennial Philadelphians'', a 625-page social history of the city's upper class from the 17th century to the 20th.Nathaniel Burt, ''The Perennial Philadelphians: The Anatomy of an American Aristocracy'' (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1963. Having grown up in Wyoming, North Carolina and Maryland, he was considered an outsider, "but Mr. Burt's roots led back to an old Philadelphia family much like those he chronicled." With "biting social commentary," he traced how the great fortunes had been made (and preserved, or squandered), in "a genteel society of inherited wealth that views ambition as vulgar and not very nice." Burt wittily deciphered Old Philadelphia for the general reader:
Philadelphians are house snobs in more ways than one; in the old days when Everybody lived in town, at least in winter, not only ''how'' one lived, but ''where'', could mean the difference between social life and death. Market Street was the "tracks" and if you lived "North of Market" you were on the wrong side of them! "Nobody lived there."
The right side of the tracks, the only area of the city that Old Philadelphia considered really Philadelphia, is that narrow belt that extends from the
Delaware Delaware ( ) is a state in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States, bordering Maryland to its south and west; Pennsylvania to its north; and New Jersey and the Atlantic Ocean to its east. The state takes its name from the adjacent Del ...
to the Schuylkill south of Market and north of Lombard. The rhyme "Chestnut, Walnut, Spruce and Pine; Market, Arch, Race and Vine" expressed the ultimate limits, north and south, of an Old Philadelphian's personal knowledge of the city — and Race and Vine Streets were only included because of the rhyme.
It is not that they don't know that this Greater Philadelphia exists; in fact many of them, particularly historically-minded older gentlemen, have a sort of a benevolent curiosity about it, the feeling a birdwatcher has for some particularly busy bog; they know ''about'' the people that live there, but they don't and won't actually know the odd specimens inhabiting this swamp that surrounds the walled bastion, the Inner, the Forbidden City, of ''real'' Philadelphia, their own narrow historical, hereditary waistband.
''The Perennial Philadelphians'' received a highly favorable review in the ''New York Times Book Review'', and made the ''New York Times'' bestseller list. Burt later wrote: "My best known book, like my father's has been a book about Philadelphia — precisely that Philadelphia from which my father and
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Wister escaped to go West. Since I have never actually lived in Philadelphia, it has had something of the exotic glamour for me that Wyoming had for Wister."


Personal

Burt served on the board of directors of the
Athenaeum of Philadelphia The Athenaeum of Philadelphia, located at 219 S. 6th Street between St. James Place and Locust Street in the Society Hill neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is a special collections library and museum founded in 1814 to collect materials ...
for many years, and was elected a Life Fellow. He was also a member of Philadelphia's Rittenhouse Club (defunct). He served on the Board of Directors of The Historical Society of Princeton, and contributed to its scholarly journal, ''Princeton History''. He was a member of the
Princeton Club of New York The Princeton Club of New York was a private club located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, New York founded in 1866 as the Princeton Alumni Association of New York. It reorganized to its final namesake in 1886. Its membership composed of alumn ...
, and the
Century Association The Century Association is a private social, arts, and dining club in New York City, founded in 1847. Its clubhouse is located at 7 West 43rd Street near Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan. It is primarily a club for men and women with distinction ...
. He married Margaret "Winkie" Clinton (1917–2013), of Barnstable, Massachusetts, on August 5, 1941.Obituary: Margaret C. Burt
''Town Topics'', Princeton, New Jersey, December 26, 2013.
The couple had two children, and lived in Princeton for more than 50 years. They attended Trinity Episcopal Church—where he sang in the choir and she was a member of the altar guild—and he was co-author of a 1982 history of the church. They were married for 62 years, until his death in 2003. Their son, Christopher C. Burt, is a writer and publisher, author of ''Extreme Weather: A Guide and Record Book'' (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 2004). Nathaniel and Margaret Burt are buried with his parents and sister at Aspen Hill Cemetery, Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Burt's papers are at Princeton University, including the diaries he kept for 70 years. He left his musical compositions and music library to Westminster Choir College, now part of Rider University.


List of works


Musical compositions

* ''Fruits of Solitude'' * ''The Elegy of Lycidas'' * ''Sets for Piano'' * ''Margery's Garland'' * ''3 Madrigals'' * ''Athenaeum of Philadelphia Waltz'' (1964)


Poetry collections

* ''Rooms in a House – And Other Poems, 1931–1944'' (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1947) * ''Questions on a Kite'' (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1950)


Novels

* ''Scotland's Burning'' (1954) * ''Make My Bed'' (1957) * ''Leopards in the Garden'' (1968)


Non-fiction


Music

* "Opera in Arcadia," ''The Musical Quarterly'', vol. 41, no. 2 (April 1955), pp. 145–17

"Scholarship in English on the Arcadian Academy and rcadianopera in general, and on Crescimbeni in particular, began with Nathaniel Burt's seminal article, 'Opera in Arcadia,' published in the ''Musical Quarterly'' in 1955."Ayana O. Smith, ''Dreaming with Open Eyes: Opera, Aesthetics, and Perception in Arcadian Rome'' (University of California Press, 2019), p. 236, n. 42. * "Plus ca change, or, The Progress of Reform in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Opera as Illustrated in the Books of Three Operas," ''Studies in Music History'', Harold Powers, ed. (Princeton University Press, 1958).


Philadelphia

* ''The Bonapartes in America'' (The Athenaeum of Philadelphia, 1960) * ''The Perennial Philadelphians: The Anatomy of an American Aristocracy'' (1963, reprint 1999) * (with Wallace E. Davies), "The Iron Age, 1876-1905," ''Philadelphia: A Three Hundred Year History'', Russell Weigley, ed. (New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1981)


Princeton

* "Student Life at Nassau Hall," ''Nassau Hall 1756–1956'', Henry Lyttleton Savage, ed. (Princeton University Press, 1956) * "Struthers Burt '04: The Literary Career of a Princetonian," ''The Princeton University Library Chronicle'', vol. 19, no. 3/4 (Spring-Summer 1958) * "Browsing The New Jersey Historical Series," ''The Literary Heritage of New Jersey, Volume 20'', Laurence B. Holland, ed. (Princeton: D. Van Nostrand Company, 1964) * "The Princeton Novel," ''The Princeton University Library Chronicle'', Spring 1979 * (with Margery P. Cuyler), ''A Short History of Trinity Church, Princeton, New Jersey'' (1982) * "The Princeton Grandees," ''Princeton History'', no. 3 (The Historical Society of Princeton, 1982) * "An Exile in Princeton: The Letters of Charles Thomson," ''The Princeton University Library Chronicle'', 1983 * "Henry van Dyke: Poet of Genteel Princeton," ''Princeton History'', no. 7 (The Historical Society of Princeton, 1988)


Wyoming

* ''War Cry of the West: The Story of the Powder River'' (1964). From the dust jacket: "Based on Struthers Burt's adult book, ''Powder River'' (1938), this lively volume by his son offers a true picture of the region where young imaginations have always loved to roam."Nathaniel Burt, ''War Cry of the West: The Story of the Powder River'', illustrated by Brinton Turkle (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1964). * ''Jackson Hole Journal'' (University of Oklahoma Press, 1983). Burt's recollections of seventy summers spent in Wyoming. * ''Compass American Guide: Wyoming'' (1991). Published by Christopher C. Burt.Christopher C. Burt
from Penguin Random House.


Cultural history

* ''First Families: The Making of an American Aristocracy'' (Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1970). A group portrait of five prominent American families: the Adamses of Massachusetts, the Biddles of Philadelphia, the du Ponts of Delaware, the Lees of Virginia, and the Roosevelts of New York. * ''Palaces for the People: A Social History of the American Art Museum'' (Boston: Little, Brown & Company, 1977). A chronicle of how the collections of American art museums were built.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Burt, Nathaniel 1913 births 2003 deaths People from Jackson Hole, Wyoming Musicians from Princeton, New Jersey Novelists from New Jersey Poets from New Jersey 20th-century American composers American classical composers Writers from Wyoming Princeton University alumni New York University alumni Westminster Choir College faculty Princeton University faculty