Roland W. Robbins

Roland Wells Robbins (1908–1987) was an American archaeologist, author, and historian who is known for discovering the site of Henry David Thoreau's house at Walden Pond. His other discoveries include the Saugus Iron Works and the John and Priscilla Alden Family Sites.

Early life

Robbins was born on March 21, 1908, in Worcester, Massachusetts.[1] He dropped out of high school in 1924 and went to work as an office boy at R.G. Dun & Co. He later worked for two employment agencies and was manager of the Boston Reference Bureau.[2] During the Great Depression, Robbins was unable to find steady work, working as a handyman, house painter, and window-washer.[2][3][4] He moved to Vermont. While there he collected tales and stories from local newspapers that he used to form the basis of his first book, Thru the Covered Bridge. He returned to the Boston area in 1934 and moved to Lincoln, Massachusetts, in 1936.[2] In 1942, while washing windows he engaged in a discussion on Daniel Chester French's statue, Minute Man. The statue was being reproduced across the country as a national symbol during World War II, but little was known about the statue or its creator. He began researching and in 1945 he published Story of the Minute Man.[3]

Archaeology

Thoreau site

On July 4, 1945, the 100th anniversary of Henry David Thoreau's first day at Walden Pond, Robbins decided to look for the site of Thoreau's cabin. He used Walden and notes on the house by William Ellery Channing as a reference.[3] On November 12, 1945, he located the chimney foundations of Thoreau's house in Concord, Massachusetts. He began lecturing on his discovery and documented it in his book Discovery at Walden. In 1964, Robbins reproduced Thoreau's cabin in his backyard and opened the building to the public.[5] Robbin's replica was visited by hundreds of people, including P. B. Gajendragadkar and Toshi and Pete Seeger.[3]

Saugus Iron Works

In September 1948, First Iron Works Association president J. Sanger Attwill approached Robbins about trying to find the site of the Iron Works. Robbins was interested in the idea of digging at a site that was over three hundred years old, the challenge of working on a site where there little information, including no plans or sketches, and the opportunity to work at what may have been the first iron-manufacturing plant in the American colonies.[6] Robbins' excavations uncovered the major manufacturing units of the Iron Works, including the foundations of buildings, remains of the blast furnace, holding ponds, and canal, a 500-pound hammer used in the forge, and a waterwheel that powered the bellows for the blast furnace, along with its wheel pit.[7][8] In total, more than 5,000 artifacts were found.[7] Robbins abruptly left the Iron Works in 1953, not long after a dispute with Quincy Bent of the American Iron and Steel Institute (the financial backer of the project), who wanted Robbins to give tours of the excavation site on weekends in addition to his other duties.[9] Robbins also clashed with the project's architects, who he thought were ignorant about and uninterested in archeological data, and was upset with the FIWA's decision to base the reconstruction of the Iron Works primarily on documentary, rather than archeological, evidence.[7]

Other work

Robbins also discovered the sites of the John and Priscilla Alden home in Duxbury, Massachusetts, the remains of Thomas Jefferson's birthplace in Shadwell, Virginia, Fort Crown Point, Sterling Iron Works in Tuxedo, New York, duPont's Powder Rolling Mills in Wilmington, Delaware, the Sleepy Hollow Restorations in Tarrytown, New York, Samuel Parris's parsonage in Danvers, Massachusetts, John Winthrop Jr. Iron Furnace Site in Quincy, Massachusetts, mill sites in Moore State Park, and a Revolutionary War encampment site on Talcott Mountain.[2][4][10][11] In 1967 he was commissioned by the town of Middleboro, Massachusetts, to clear and restore the Oliver Mills.[11]

In 1947, Robbins purchased 1,230 negatives of Herbert W. Gleason, a photographer who took several thousand pictures of areas frequented by Thoreau. His collection of Gleason's work eventually grew to 6,000 pieces. Robbins displayed these works in his Thoreau-Walden Room.[3]

Robbins died on February 8, 1987, at his home in Lincoln.[2]

gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn
gollark: Is it *that* restricted? Apparently there was a thing where it was *somehow* ruled that feeding animals things was "interstate commerce" and thus federally controlled.
gollark: States set their own laws in some things, the central government sets laws for other things.
gollark: I have a rough idea.
gollark: Which is ironic given that it was originally designed to not do much.

References

  1. "Rolland Wells Robbins Slide Images of Concord, Massachusetts, People, Places, and Events and of Other Locations (Primarily in Massachusetts), 1947-1981". Concord Library. Retrieved July 15, 2018.
  2. "Roland W. Robbins, 78; Author, Helped Rediscover Historical Sites". The Boston Globe. February 11, 1987.
  3. Clark, Neal (October 9, 1980). "He Digs History: Roland Wells Robbins' archaeology career was an accident". The Boston Globe.
  4. Fripp, Bill (July 12, 1970). "He Digs Up US History". The Boston Globe.
  5. Sullivan, Mark W. (2015). Picturing Thoreau: Henry David Thoreau in American Visual Culture. Rowman & Littlefield.
  6. Robbins, Roland Wells; Jones, Evan (1959). Hidden America. Knopf.
  7. Linebaugh, Donald W. (2004). John H. Jameson Jr. (ed.). Walden Pond and Beyond. The Reconstructed Past. Rowman Altamira.
  8. "Setting the Stage". National Park Service. Retrieved July 20, 2014.
  9. Linebaugh, Donald W.; Griswold, William A. (2010). Saugus Iron Works: The Roland W. Robbins Excavations, 1948-1953. National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior.
  10. Ashby, Ted (January 22, 1965). "Roland Robbins Digs History". The Boston Globe.
  11. Fripp, Bill (October 2, 1973). "Digging up old America". The Boston Globe.
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