What would you want for your 75th birthday? If you were painter Robert Hopkin, it would be an artists’ club named in your honor. The Hopkin Club, formed in 1907, had no rules, officers, or dues. The members wanted to get together occasionally, to talk about art or host artists visiting Detroit. Hopkin passed away in 1909, but the club continued. In 1913, The Hopkin Club established by-laws and was renamed the Scarab Club–the name it continues under today.
Scarab Club Room. Photography courtesy of Scarab Club.
But who was the man the club was originally named after?
Robert Hopkin was a maritime/marine artist born in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1832. He learned to paint and draw from his father. The family emigrated to Detroit in 1842. His grandfather was a sea captain which drew Hopkin to work on the wharves in Detroit and inspired his art. Though chiefly known as a painter of marine scenes and seascapes, Hopkin made frequent trips throughout the American west from 1860 to 1885, painting murals for public buildings and drop curtains and scenery for theaters, including the Tabor Grand Opera House in Denver.
Robert Hopkin (right) and others in studio, ca. 1900. William H. Thomson papers, 1912-1950. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
In the latter half of the 19th century, Hopkins was considered the dean of Detroit artists; he decorated the interior (as well as the stage curtain) for the original Detroit Opera House (1868), painted murals in Detroit’s Fort Street Presbyterian and Ste. Anne’s churches, as well as the Cotton Exchange in New Orleans (1883). By April 1900, the Detroit Free Press wrote, “Many of the art lovers of this city possess one or more of [Hopkin’s] splendid marines, and they have been reproduced and published until everyone is familiar with his work.”
When Mr. Robert Hopkin’s Collection of Paintings opened at the Detroit Museum of Art in May 1901, “There was a large attendance of art-loving Detroiters” (Detroit Free Press, May 16, 1901).
Robert Hopkin (Scottish American, 1832 – 1909), Marine,Oil on Canvas. Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
George and Ellen Booth were no exception. Art lovers with many Detroit-based and self-taught artists in their growing collection, the first inventory of Cranbrook House in 1914 lists two Hopkin “Marine” paintings. The Booths gifted the larger of the two paintings to their daughter Grace Ellen Booth and her husband Harold L. Wallace. The painting returned to Cranbrook House about 1955, when Grace Booth Wallace’s collection was donated to the Cranbrook Foundation.
Cranbrook House Living Room, circa 1909, with Marine visible on the left. Cranbrook Archives, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
The Detroit Historical Society has a copy of the Souvenir Catalogue of Mr. Robert Hopkin’s Collection of Paintings in its collection. The 85 exhibited paintings are listed, with several black and white images of them. “Price List” is written on the cover, and notes have been made indicating which have been sold and who purchased them. (Sadly, the name “Booth” does not appear.)
Another art-loving Detroiter was Merton E. Farr president of the American Shipbuilding Company and owner of a number of freighters on the Great Lakes. His daughter, Carolyn, married George and Ellen Booth’s youngest son, Henry.
The Hopkin painting in the Thornlea collection. Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
In 1927, Farr gifted the couple a Hopkin “Marine.” The painting hung in Thornlea, home to Harry and Carol Booth, from 1927.
The painting’s official title is not noted. The Thornlea painting is interchangeably referred to as Homeward Bound, Schooner on a Stormy Sea, Sailing Ship at Sea, and Marine. However, the 1901 Hopkin exhibition catalog does not list any paintings with those titles.
– Leslie Mio, Associate Registrar, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
This week marks the 250th anniversary of the birth of British artist Joseph Mallord William Turner. Born in 1775, by the time of his death in 1851 Turner had upended all the conventions of landscape painting.
Having won critical acclaim as a young artist, in his later years, Turner pushed the limits of his art form beyond popular comprehension. His late work was dismissed in his lifetime as slapdash and unfinished, but was praised in the twentieth century for its free interpretation of light and color, verging on abstraction. Turner bequeathed three hundred paintings and thousands of prints and watercolors to the British nation in his will; today, works by Turner hang in dedicated rooms in both the National Gallery in London and Tate Britain, as well as in art museums around the world.
Joseph Mallord William Turner, The Fighting Temeraire, 1839. Oil on canvas, 35.7 x 147.8 in. National Gallery of Art, London. Turner Bequest, 1856.
Cranbrook has one work by Turner in its collection, a watercolor view of Lambeth Palace and its surroundings.
Painted in 1790 when Turner was just fifteen years old, the watercolor is an alternate version of Turner’s first exhibited work at the Royal Academy of Art. The Royal Academy watercolor is now in the collection of the Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields; the other watercolor is here at Cranbrook, part of the Cultural Properties Founders Collection that is stewarded by Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
George Booth purchased the watercolor in 1925 from Kennedy & Co., a large New York-based art gallery. George Booth would also purchase dozens of etchings from Kennedy & Co. to give to Cranbrook School, Kingswood School, and Cranbrook Academy of Art Library. Booth displayed the Turner in the original Cranbrook Museum, the precursor of both Cranbrook’s Art Museum and Institute of Science.
Lambeth Palace depicts a cluster of buildings on the north bank of the Thames, just south of Westminster Bridge. The slightly strained perspective on the angled sides of the buildings hints at the young Turner’s limited training at this stage of his career, while the wide expanse of cloudy sky in the picture, touched at the left with the pink of sunset, foreshadows the dramatic skyscapes that would characterize Turner’s mature paintings.
The site of Lambeth Palace has been the official London residence of the Archbishops of Canterbury since the 13th century. The square-towered, red brick building in the background of Turner’s painting is Morton’s Tower, added to Lambeth Palace during the Wars of the Roses. The small cottage and large white pub in the foreground have since been demolished, but the setting otherwise remains much as it was when Turner painted it.
Detail of Turner’s Lambeth Palace, showing Morton’s Tower.
Detail of Turner’s Lambeth Palace, showing the since-demolished “White Swan” pub or inn.
Today, the Lambeth Palace complex is also home to the official archives of the Church of England, including early medieval illuminated gospels and a copy of the Gutenberg Bible, and to a Garden Museum, two institutions that George Booth, an enthusiastic gardener, book collector, and self-taught printer, would have probably admired.
Now at Cranbrook House, Turner’s Lambeth Palace hangs near two works by his contemporaries, Sir Joshua Reynolds and George Romney. The three paintings, all purchased by George Booth, represent a turning point in the history of British art when the newly-established Royal Academy garnered unprecedented esteem for art as a profession.
The training offered at the Royal Academy to young artists such as Turner, and annual summer exhibitions where Turner competed with John Constable for popular acclaim, shaped the emerging school of modern British art. At the same time, the creation of the Royal Academy imposed an institutional authority on aspiring artists, restricting its students to a single ideal style and a narrow range of acceptable subjects.
Of the three British painters whose work George Booth collected (Sir Joshua Reynolds, George Romney, and J. M. W. Turner), Reynolds served as the first President of the Academy, Romney refused to join or exhibit there, and Turner taught, studied, and exhibited regularly, meeting sometimes with acclaim, sometimes with disgust, as his work gradually pushed the bounds of what was acceptable, in terms of subject matter and technique alike.
George Booth may well have had the complicated impact of the Royal Academy on British art in mind when establishing his own art academy here at Cranbrook. Certainly, his inclusion of a Turner in the community’s collection suggests that George Booth, at least, felt that Cranbrook students had something to learn from Turner’s life, his career, and his extraordinary artistic legacy – more widely celebrated now than he ever was in his own life.
— Mariam Hale, 2023-2025 Collections Fellow, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
This week Cranbrook Archives launched Sixty Years of Horizons-Upward Bound, 1965-2025, a virtual exhibition of HUB’s history, told primarily through photographs. While the HUB program celebrates its sixtieth anniversary this year, we’ve partnered with Amy Snyder, daughter of HUB’s founder, Ben Snyder, to select images from each decade. Those from HUB’s first five years are now available, with new images from subsequent decades slated to be revealed on a monthly basis as the HUB digitization project continues.
Aerial view of HUB summer of 1970. Henry A. Leung, photographer. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
A Collaborative Effort
Creating captions for the exhibition coincided with efforts to describe each of the 2,200 images scanned so far. While some photographs included detailed annotations, describing persons and subjects, many did not, requiring additional research.
Images not yet identified or depicting unnamed activities have been fun and challenging. Cross-referencing photos with documents like class brochures, annual reports, and school rosters have helped with developing fuller descriptions. For instance, HUB’s annual reports detail various guests and artists that were invited to campus to inspire and entertain HUB students. But, they do not tell the full story. The following photographs feature an unnamed event and band that we hope to learn more about!
Guest band playing for HUB students in assembly hall, Summer 1969. Jack Kausch Photography. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
Andre Boddie (HUB ’70) playing flute with band in assembly hall, Summer 1969. Jack Kausch Photography. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
In addition to my research, HUB alumni have shared information in meetings, emails, and in-person visits, to help describe photographs.
For our studio sessions with Barry Roberts (HUB ’77), we prepared a workspace with enlarged photocopies of group images to annotate and class brochures and annual reports to cross-reference. It’s been a joy to witness how eyes light-up when alumni like Roberts remember people and places depicted in images. We are grateful for the stories they share because they essentially enrich the HUB collection with personal narrative.
Barry Roberts (HUB ’77) identifying HUB images at Thornlea Studio, February 19, 2025. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
More From the 1960s
I have really enjoyed reviewing the program’s visual history. Since only a small number of images from the 1960s are featured in the exhibition, I thought I would share some others that really spoke to me.
It’s been exciting to finally see photographs for events and activities described in reports, like Theme Day, SoulFest, and other academic and extra-curricular subjects.
HUB students at the Theme Day registration table hand out issues of the student newsletter, The HUB, August 17, 1969. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
Families of HUB students visiting Cranbrook’s campus for Theme Day, August 17, 1969. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
HUB students in choir at Christ Church Cranbrook on Theme Day, August 17, 1969. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
It’s also been interesting to see how HUB students engaged with various spaces across Cranbrook’s campus.
HUB students with Paul Manship’s Armillary Sphere sculpture in Cranbrook School quadrangle , Summer 1969.
HUB student in the reading room of Cranbrook School Library , 1969. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
HUB students in design class, Andre Boddie (HUB ’70) on left, 1966. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
I especially enjoyed a small collection of images featuring art work and displays of writing, which were exhibited during Theme Day in 1969. William Washington, English teacher and Theme Day facilitator at the time, described the event’s focus as students and staff answering the question, “Where Is Love?” (HUB Annual Report, 1969). The following image features students’ responses to this prompt with creative writings entitled “What is this love that we now seek? Love is the language that every man speaks.”
Theme Day display featuring students from Sections 7 and 9 of Gregory S. Mims and Philip Young’s English course, August 17, 1969. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
This fall, all of the images digitized in year two of the digitization project will be available online, but in the meantime check back each month to see those featured in the virtual exhibition!
—Courtney Richardson, Project Archivist, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
HUB digitization is funded by a NHPRC Archival Projects Grant for projects that ensure online public discovery and use of historical records collections. The NHPRC was established by Congress in 1934 as a statutory body affiliated with the National Archives and Records Administration and chaired by the Archivist of the United States.
Year two of the Horizons-Upward Bound (HUB) digitization project has begun. This phase involves digitizing photographs, including images taken by local photographer Jack Kausch.
HUB student with teacher, William Moran, during a class activity, 1966. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
The first year of the project was dedicated to digitizing publications and documents, which amounted to over 32,600 pages of student and administrative material! Digitization of student films was also completed offsite, totaling 57 minutes of footage. Entering the second year of this project, I am very excited to continue working with HUB’s history as it was documented through photography.
Part of digitization workspace with flatbed scanner and various photographic materials. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
HUB photographs include approximately 2.5 boxes (2.9 linear feet) of photographs in the form of prints, slides, and negative film created from 1965 to 1997. HUB students, faculty, staff, and extended community are featured across class and group portraits, within academic and extra-curricular settings, and during many events such as graduations, award ceremonies, fundraisers, and symposiums.
Aerial view of HUB’s class of 1979. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
Group image of HUB’s 1994 students. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
Similar to the first phase of the project, photo digitization began in-house at the Archives in Summer 2024. Two hard-working HUB student volunteers scanned 10% of the photographs.
HUB Red Key students with Mayor Dennis Archer, 1995. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
I am continuing the students’ work by adding description to the files they created and digitizing the remaining photographs. I will also write descriptions and keywords for these items and transfer the digital files to our digital collections website, where they will be made public at the end of the project.
Dancers during HUB fundraising event, Soulfest II, 1974. Jack Kausch Photography. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
HUB students with teacher, Velma McCann Rodgers, during an in-class activity, 1986. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
I look forward to sharing more findings as I continue to review and digitize HUB’s photographs!
—Courtney Richardson, Project Archivist, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
HUB digitization is funded by a NHPRC Archival Projects Grant for projects that ensure online public discovery and use of historical records collections. The NHPRC was established by Congress in 1934 as a statutory body affiliated with the National Archives and Records Administration and chaired by the Archivist of the United States.
The belated arrival of winter weather this year has allowed us all to enjoy the grounds of Cranbrook House far later into the year than is usually possible. However, the time has finally come to shroud our exterior sculptures and fountains in protective tarps for the season. This process is an annual reminder to our staff – and to the Brookside students who come to sing the statues to sleep – of just how numerous and varied the outdoor art collection at the house is. One part of the gardens is particularly rich in art and history: the north staircase.
Florence Booth standing at the top of the new stairs connecting the upper and lower terraces at Cranbrook House, Summer 1921. From The Pleasures of Life, vol. 4, by Henry Scripps Booth. Courtesy Cranbrook Archives.
Stretching from the lakeside path at its base to the uppermost lawn outside Cranbrook House’s North Porch at its apex, the eighty concrete steps are lined with artworks, transforming the stairs into an open-air museum gallery. The stairs themselves were first built in the summer of 1921, as part of a spur-of-the-moment project to improve the view from the North Porch undertaken by James and Henry Scripps Booth. As their grandfather, Henry Wood Booth, recalled,
After ten years of sitting on the north porch and looking at a blank terrace wall, and talking about creating a vista through it, James and Henry got busy one May day with sledge hammers, and beside raising many blisters, razed about ten feet of wall the first day. Immediately a view of the lake came into being, and plans were made for a stairway down the hill.
Whether or not James and Henry had permission to make this change is contested; their grandfather’s account frames it as a collective impulse, while Henry remembers being disciplined for their impetuous action:
After construction of the curved steps, masons started building a series of flights which headed for a large wild cherry tree almost on axis along side rue Gagnier. According to one account, James and I were required to cut that tree down as a penalty for our reputed vandalism. While neither of us had a guilty conscience, we went to work sawing very hard wood and eventually (a full day later, I believe) the tree fell.
The concrete staircase was poured in July of 1921. The hillside around the new staircase was improved with new trees and paths under the oversight of O. C. Simonds, the landscape architect responsible for much of the re-foresting of the estate. After these changes, Henry Wood Booth noted with satisfaction that “[t]his hill, which for so many years had been an object of regret, was at last to be something really fine.”
Aeriel view of Cranbrook House and grounds, showing the new staircase at center right, circa 1921. From The Pleasures of Life, vol. 4, assembled by Henry Scripps Booth. Courtesy Cranbrook archives.
Further improvements were still in store, in the form of a dozen sculptural embellishments.
Walkers along the lakeside path today are met by two stone lions on pedestals flanking the base of the stairs. Carved from travertine and purchased by George Booth from the Galleria Sangiorgi in Rome in 1924, the lions are copies of works by the Italian neoclassical sculptor Antonio Canova, best known for his Cupid and Psyche, now in the Louvre, Paris. Canova sculpted the original lions in 1774 for the tomb of Pope Clement XIII in St Peter’s Basilica, in Rome. On Pope Clement’s tomb, the lions, one sleeping, one waking, face one another, symbolizing the confrontation of life and the long sleep of death. Here at Cranbrook, the lions face out toward the lake, one on guard, one enjoying a nap in the shade of the hill.
Stairway to Lower Terrace at Cranbrook House and Gardens, circa 1924. Photograph by George W. Hance. Courtesy Cranbrook Archives.
Although George Booth’s letters home from Italy in 1924 do not say as much, he and Ellen probably saw the original lions in the Vatican on their visit to Rome in 1922. In the intervening year, George Booth had considered buying copies of the Canova lions in cast stone, a form of concrete, from an American garden sculpture company, Howard Studios.
Just a few steps up, the stairway is flanked by concrete columns, topped with red stone Corinthian capitals. Their origins have not yet been traced, but George Booth purchased many marble capitals in Italy, most of them Roman or early medieval, for the Cranbrook Academy of Art. It would have been characteristic for the Booths to have retained a few Italian finds to ornament Cranbrook House as well.
The construction of the fountain niche and surrounding stairs, 1923. From The Pleasures of Life, vol. 7, assembled by Henry Scripps Booth. Courtesy Cranbrook archives.
From the lower landing of the staircase, its centerpiece is already visible – a fountain niche, added in 1923, requiring considerable reconstruction of this section of the stairs. At the back of the niche, now forming the fountain cascade, are a few of the original 1921 stairs.
The niche houses Mario Korbel’s Dawn, a near life-size female figure holding an apple. The symbolism of the figure is ambiguous. The apple may refer to Eve, the “dawn” of womanhood. It may also associate the figure with the goddess Aphrodite, who was awarded a golden apple as the prize in a divine beauty contest, and is associated with the planet Venus, sometimes called the morning star.
The staircase niche, photographed in 2016.
Korbel visited the grounds in 1923 and contributed ideas to the design of the niche for his sculpture. Cranbrook once also boasted a figurine version of Dawn, offered to George Booth by Korbel during the planning process for the full-size version, until it was stolen in 1926. George Booth did his best to soften the blow when informing Korbel of the loss, framing the theft as a compliment to the artist’s skill:
…you may feel flattered to learn that only a few nights ago some expert burglars after rifling the safe at the Cranbrook Office, ran off with your small figure of “Dawn”, taking along with her a supply of rugs and other articles so as to surround her with suitable luxury.
The Booths’ small Dawn was never recovered.
Mario Korbel in the gardens at Cranbrook House in 1923. From The Pleasures of Life, vol. 7, assembled by Henry Scripps Booth. Courtesy Cranbrook archives.
The newly completed niche, 1923. From The Pleasures of Life, vol. 7, assembled by Henry Scripps Booth. Courtesy Cranbrook archives.
The columns that flank Dawn’s niche are the work of an unknown Italian artist, and probably purchased by George Booth in the early or mid 1920s. Their design is based on twelfth-century examples from the Benedictine cloister at Monreale Cathedral, in Sicily. The courtyard fountain at Cranbrook School is a replica of a fountain from the same cathedral complex. First spotted by Henry Scripps Booth in 1922, George Booth later ordered a replica fountain from the Chiurazzi Foundry, who also carved the Canova lions at the base of the stairs. As evidenced by the blend of geometric, botanical, and animal ornament on this pair of columns, the architecture of medieval Sicily blended classical, Gothic, and Islamic influences, a reflection of the cultural diversity of the Norman Kingdom of Sicily. Their stylistic syncretism aptly complements the polysemy of Korbel’s figure of Dawn-Eve-Aphrodite.
The columns are not wrapped in the wintertime, allowing visitors to enjoy this feature of the staircase year-round.
The topmost landing of the stairs is ornamented with a curling iron railing, quite possibly designed by George Booth and executed at the Cranbrook metalsmithing workshop. To either side of the landing stand four cast stone cherubs, replacements for the original quartet of cherubic representations of the four seasons, which fell to pieces within fifty years of their purchase. One was already missing a head by 1949. The originals were purchased in Italy in 1924. Their replacements were donated by the Cranbrook House and Gardens Auxiliary in 1974.
One of two bronze sphinxes by John Cheere, photographed on the north terrace of Cranbrook House in 2016.
Although the original cherub statues brought an end to the staircase’s parade of sculptures in George and Ellen Booth’s day, Henry Scripps Booth added a final flourish to the ascent in 1963. Two sphinxes, cast bronze copies of sculptures by the English artist John Cheere, bought at auction in England, keep watchful guard over the middle north terrace from either side of the wide upper stair. These bronzes, like so many other features of the staircase, are copies of European artworks. In this case, the eighteenth-century originals were created for Chiswick House, the Greater London home of Earls of Burlington, a Palladian style villa renowned for its refined neoclassical air.
As we set forth into the darkest season of the year, with all the familiar sculpted denizens of the gardens hidden beneath their winter coats, the grounds might start to feel a little lonely. Recalling the history of their making, from the reshaping of the hillsides to the final placing of statuary in their niches or atop their pedestals, can re-animate the familiar byways of Cranbrook, even on the coldest and greyest days. The Booths’ tribulations – a statuette stolen, others shattered by cold – remind us of the evolving nature of even a historic and well-preserved garden, and of the many winters that have passed over these grounds and left them largely unharmed.
The north terraces at Cranbrook House, photographed in January 2024.
The north staircase, a project begun in 1921 and completed more than forty years later, is still “something really fine,” with or without its sculptures and fountain. And the view from the top, which inspired the project, is even finer in winter, when frosty, leafless branches part to reveal a sparkling view of the frozen surface of Kingswood Lake and the snowy hills beyond.
— Mariam Hale, 2023-2025 Collections Fellow, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
Twenty-five miles northeast of Cranbrook lies Lakeville Lake, which was once the site of Cranbrook Institute of Science Botanist, Cecil Billington’s summer cottage, the Little Brown House. Documented in Billington’s Papers, which were recently donated to the Archives, the story of the house provides a fascinating glimpse of one of Cranbrook’s earliest supporters and staff members.
Detail of a Cecil Billington’s property on Lakeville Lake, Oakland County, Michigan. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives
Cecil Billington was an integral part of early Cranbrook history, serving on almost all the founding institutions’ governing boards, as well as the Cranbrook Foundation Board of Trustees (now Cranbrook Educational Community Board of Trustees). He was also a long-time business associate of Cranbrook Founder, George G. Booth, working for him at the Detroit News from 1897-1947 and serving as Secretary of the Evening News Association for twenty-eight years.
Cranbrook Foundation Board of Trustees, May 1942. Cecil Billington second from left. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
Most affiliated with the Institute of Science, in both an administrative and scientific capacity, Cecil Billington headed up the Institute’s first department of botany. As an amateur botanist, he focused particularly on Oakland County, including his Lakeville property. The Institute published both of his books, Ferns of Michigan and Shrubs of Michigan, and was also the recipient of Billington’s principal collection of plant specimens.
Similar to the papers of Institute Director, Robert T. Hatt, Billington’s papers include field notebooks and other items used in gathering specimens and conducting research that are invaluable for understanding the focus of the Institute in its earliest decades. But it is one book in particular that illuminates the man behind the research and particularly captures my attention and imagination.
West view of the Little Brown House, circa 1930s. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
Log of the Little Brown House is part diary and part guest book, documenting sixteen years at The Cove, Cecil and wife Nina’s Lakeville property where they built their cottage. In it, Cecil records reminiscences of each year from 1922, the first year of ownership, to 1938 when the property was sold. His entries document land development and use, scientific study, and leisure activity. Interspersed with the diary entries are the signatures of the couple’s many visitors. Not surprisingly, quite a few of these are Cranbrook names: Lee A. White, Sanford Allen, Carl and Olga Milles, Robert and Marcelle Hatt, and various members of the Booth family, among others.
Little Brown House guest using the archery field. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
The Billington’s desire to create a lake idyll that they could freely share with family and friends is recorded in the first pages of the logbook. In addition to building the cottage, over the years they created playfields consisting of archery, bowling on the green, croquet, horseshoes, an outdoor dining room, and a golf course! An entry by Lee A. White in October 1923 hints at the playfulness and freedom enjoyed by visitors: ““They that live by the sword shall perish by the sword.” In memory of the grievous wounding of our host in competition at archery.”
The written entries are illustrated throughout with photographs of the people, place, and things at the Little Brown House: a presentation of a trophy to the 1928 golf champion; the sunflowers planted for the chickadees and other birds; the building of an addition on the cottage. Framing them all at the front and back of the book are several musings on the Little Brown House, published in the Detroit News and written by columnist Mrs. J. E. Leslie. It seems fitting to end this post with one such entry that may particularly resonate at this time of year:
Crimson woodbine along the line fence; woods brown and green burning with splashes of scarlet and yellow; farm gardens dry and bare—autumn and a drive to Little Brown House. Reaching out to enfold those of its world, is the great, lovely spirit of hospitality and friendship and sincerity that reaches the hearts of those who enter its door. That is the Little Brown House that is reached by a drive through the golden, mellow loveliness of an early autumn day.
—Deborah Rice, Head Archivist, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
In addition to Varity and Junior Varsity sports, students at Cranbrook School for Boys also participated in Club Athletics.
Nina Blomfield (left), Jessica Majeske (top), Kevin Adkisson (right), and Leslie Mio (bottom) setting the flag in place for photography in the Cranbrook Collections Wing, March 10, 2023. Photograph by James Haefner, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
In the 1932 The Brook(the school’s yearbook), it states: “The fact that inevitably there has to be a large proportion of the student body left over from varsity teams has fostered the club system. By dividing the whole school up into the three factions of Fountains, Towers, and Quadrangles . . . every student is able to take an active part in athletics and thus enjoy competitive games.”
Page on Club Athletics from The Brook, 1931. Courtesy Cranbrook Archives.
And, each of the three factions had a flag! Here are the flags of the clubs, stored alongside other Cranbrook School Cultural Properties.
The flags are very large, over 13 feet long and 7½ feet high. Pretty heavy to wave around! These wonderful photographs were made by James Haefner when we photographed all our Studio Loja Saarinen rugs.
The club system did not last very long at Cranbrook School for Boys. Looking at the copies of The Brook, it seems to have been gone by the 1940s. Perhaps some spirited students from Cranbrook Kingswood Upper School might revive the faction system? If so, we are ready to help with your flags!
– Leslie Mio, Associate Registrar, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
Did you know that Horizons-Upward Bound (HUB) had its own flag and that it was created by a HUB student? Continuing with the HUB Records digitization project, I came across evidence of this unique item and an interesting story behind it.
Feature on the front page of The Hub, a newsletter published by students in the Summer Program Publications Class, July 26, 1974. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
In 1974, Gregory Loving, HUB student and a senior from Cass Technical High School (17 years old), won a flag design contest for Cranbrook School’s event, Soulfest II. Building on the tradition of institutional flags at Cranbrook begun by Henry Scripps Booth, Gregory’s design incorporated three wide vertical stripes. The center stripe displayed multiple hands of varying skin tones holding an upward-pointing arrow, a motif that would repeat often in HUB graphics and is likely based on Cranbrook School’s logo.
Detroit News clipping featuring Gregory Loving with Henry S. Booth, and Nancy Corkery, May 1974. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
Soulfest was an biannual and major community fundraising event for the HUB program in the 1970s. It was inspired by HUB parent, Lula Barnes, who also provided the recipes, and created and organized by Margot Snyder. Margot, “whose sustaining and nurturing hands…helped shape Horizons-Upward Bound since its beginnings, ” was an integral and beloved member of the Cranbrook Schools and HUB community and wife of HUB founder Ben M. Snyder (HUB class brochure, 1994).
Cranbrook Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 4, Summer 1972, featuring Soulfest’s inaugural event with Margot Snyder and daughter, Amy. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
1976 flyer featuring repeats of popular features of the 1974 event, including participation of the Detroit Lions! Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives.
In a memo to Cranbrook School and HUB faculty in March 1974, Margot writes, ” We look upon this as a project stressing Cranbrook’s involvement with the community at large…we hope to raise some much need funds for HUB, we are trying to beat the high cost of living and labor.” Gregory’s winning flag design can be viewed as a visual interpretation of Margot and the Soulfest committee’s goal of increased community involvement. Both the event and flag embody collectivity and upward mobility through the work of multiple hands from varying backgrounds.
—Courtney Richardson, Project Archivist, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
HUB digitization is funded by a NHPRC Archival Projects Grant for projects that ensure online public discovery and use of historical records collections. The NHPRC was established by Congress in 1934 as a statutory body affiliated with the National Archives and Records Administration and chaired by the Archivist of the United States.
With thousands of years of recorded history to draw from, every day of the year has some distinction as an anniversary. Today, the 27th of September, is the 958th anniversary of the day William, Duke of Normandy, set sail to conquer England, the 560th anniversary of the birth of Cosimo de’ Medici, founder of the de facto ruling family of Renaissance Florence, and the 100th anniversary of the wedding of Henry Scripps Booth to Carolyn Elizabeth Farr. Here at Cranbrook, it is this last anniversary that holds top billing on our calendars.
Carolyn Elizabeth Farr, on her wedding day. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
Henry Scripps Booth, on his wedding day. He later joked that it was the last time that he would ever wear a waistcoat. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
Henry Booth, youngest son of Cranbrook’s founders, George and Ellen Booth, and Carolyn Farr, daughter of shipbuilding magnate Merton Elmer Farr and Emma Rothe, first announced their engagement on June 29th, 1925. Neither of them believed in long engagements, it appears, as they were married just three months later, at the First Congregational Church in Detroit. The wedding had some competition for most memorable event of the year for Carolyn Farr. On August 30th, while on her way home from a shopping trip to New York City to complete her trousseau, Carolyn’s train crashed into the back of another train which had made an accidental stop on the westbound line near Syracuse.
Clipping from Buffalo Courier, August 31, 1924, page 56
Fortunately, no one was killed in the crash. Some members of a Boy Scouts troop riding at the back of the rear train actually slept through the collision and had to be shaken awake by their bemused troop leaders. Though she escaped serious injury, the crash left Carolyn with cuts on her nose and mouth, which may have still been painful on her wedding day, though they are invisible in her wedding photos.
Both of Henry’s sisters were married at Cranbrook House itself, Grace Booth in the living room and Florence Booth in the library. Although Henry was not married at Cranbrook, the wedding was still very much a Cranbrook event in one way, because it featured an Arts and Crafts artwork. The ring was carried down the aisle by Carolyn’s nephew, Henry Gerhauser, in a silver and enamel box made by the noted Boston-based artist Elizabeth Copeland.
Carolyn Farr and ring bearer Henry Gerhauser holding the Copeland box. Detroit Free Press, October 5th, 1924.
Enameled silver casket, Elizabeth E. Copeland, circa 1922. Courtesy of Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
Enameling, like tapestry weaving and illumination, was a medieval art form revived by the Arts and Crafts movement in England in the nineteenth century. In the twentieth century, enameling evolved out of the medievalist styles that characterized its revival to become a primary medium of both Art Nouveau and Art Deco decorative art and jewelry.
Elizabeth Copeland was the foremost enamel artist of the American Arts and Crafts movement. Born in Revere, Massachusetts in 1866, she did not begin her artistic training until she was in her early thirties. Like many women artists, she was expected to balance her own work with domestic labor. Copeland had to commute daily to attend the Cowles Art School in Boston, and she studied her design patterns while carrying out household chores. So great was her talent, however, that within just a few years her enamels and silver work were already enjoying critical acclaim, including a feature in Craftsman magazine in 1903. Her work is now in many museum collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
As an artist, Copeland embraced the Arts and Crafts movement’s ideals. Eschewing a machine-like precision in her work, her silver work proudly exhibits subtle variations and inconsistencies that distinguish them as truly hand-crafted objects. Her enamel work embraces the fluidity of the medium, allowing different colors to flow into one another within each metal embrasure shaped to contain the liquid medium. Unlike most women artists of her time, Copeland was able to support herself independently through the sale of her work, during a career of more than three decades. She exhibited her work at many venues, including the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts, where Henry Scripps Booth purchased the silver box that would hold the ring for his wedding, two years later.
Henry Scripps Booth with his first child, Stephen Farr Booth, in Brookside Cottage, February 17th, 1925. Note the Copeland box on the mantelpiece. Courtesy of Cranbrook Archives, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
The Copeland Box in Thornlea with a hand mirror by Arthur Nevill Kirk. Photography by Tryst Red, 2021. Courtesy of Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research.
After the wedding, the new couple moved into Brookside Cottage, the little stone house just west of Kingswood School, where they lived for two years until Thornlea House was completed. The Copeland box became a fixture of their new home, where they lived together from 1927 until Carolyn’s death in 1984. During her lifetime, the ring box spent many years on a table in Carolyn’s own bedroom, as a memento of a milestone occasion which we are celebrating again, one hundred years down the line.
— Mariam Hale, 2023-2025 Collections Fellow, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
Friday, September 27, 2024, is Homecoming at Cranbrook Kingswood Upper School. The game will be held in the Thompson Oval, to the east of The Football Game by David Evans.
The Football Game by David Evans. Thompson Oval, Cranbrook Kingswood Upper School – Cranbrook Campus.
Sculptor David Evans (1895-1959) was hired by the Cranbrook Foundation (through George Booth) as Professor of Sculpture and Life Drawing at the Academy of Art for 1929-1930. During that time, Booth commissioned him to create this bas relief for the football field at Cranbrook School for Boys. It is not just a bunch of nameless faces on the relief; it actually features members of the first football squad at Cranbrook School for Boys.
The 1930 Football Team, from The Brook, 1931 (Cranbrook School’s yearbook). Courtesy Cranbrook Archives.
Cranbrook School Football Sweater, circa 1930. Photographed by P.D. Rearick, 2019. Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research | Cultural Properties Collection, Archives.
During the 1930 football season, thirteen boys posed for Evans.
Members of the 1930 Cranbrook Football Team featured on The Football Game. Photos taken from 1931 and 1932 copies of The Brook. Courtesy Cranbrook Archives
The bas relief is in its original location – mounted above the steps leading to Alumni Court and overlooking Thompson Oval. If you are on campus for Homecoming, pose for a photo in your CKU green and blue with the 1930 football squad.
– Leslie Mio, Associate Registrar, Cranbrook Center for Collections and Research
Ed. Note: The Football Game was recently cleaned and waxed by our friends at McKay Lodge Conservation Laboratory. They also touched up other Upper School favorites: Hermes, Discus Thrower, The Wrestlers, Running Dogs, Masque Art, Diana, Dancing Girls, and Aim High.