In December, 1957, having completed the active-duty portion
of my National Guard obligation, I returned to Cambridge, Massachusetts to take
up a delayed postdoctoral fellowship prior to beginning my instructorship at
Harvard. I moved into an apartment in a converted one family home at 12
Prentiss St. off Massachusetts Avenue north of Harvard Square. My apartment was
on the first floor and above me lived Hugh Amory, a graduate student in the
English department. Hugh was a member of the Boston Amorys, an old upper crust
family that thought of Harvard as the neighborhood school. I became friendly
with Hugh, and his family “took up” me and my girlfriend, Cynthia, perhaps
amused by a nonreligious Jew and the daughter of a self-made Catholic
businessman. The Amorys had an in town home and an estate on the North Shore
where they summered. Hugh’s birthday, it turned out, was July 4 and the family
had adopted the custom of celebrating it with a big Fourth of July party at
their summer home. In 1958 Cynthia and I were invited to come along to the
shindig.
Cynthia and I pooled our funds and bought Hugh a magnum of
champagne as a present. Then we put on our Sunday best and drove out to the
party. As soon as we arrived, it was clear that we were going to be completely
out of place. Everyone else was wearing T-shirts and cut off jeans and beach
sandals. The party was a clambake – the only actual clambake I have ever seen
or attended. A big pit had been dug in which hardwood had been burned down to
glowing embers and then layers of seaweed and clams and seaweed and lobsters
had been put down to cook. In those days, oddly enough, lobster was actually
cheap and I had on several occasions cooked one in my apartment. I had
inherited my taste for lobster from my father, who would work over a lobster
cracking open the claws and painstakingly sucking the bits of lobster meat from
each of the little legs. When I went up to the table to get my food, Hugh’s
mother was just ahead of me. Mrs. Amory was a rather flamboyant lady who was
rumored to have played the piano with the Boston Pops many years earlier. After
the death of her husband, Hugh’s father, she had married a stuffy white shoe
lawyer named Phillips Ketchum. One evening when Cynthia and I had dinner with
the Ketchums at their in town residence, Mr. Ketchum, in an attempt to make me
feel at ease, had told stories about the sole “Hebrew gentleman” who had been
in his Harvard class.
At the food table, Mrs. Amory picked up a lobster, pulled
off its tail, and tossed the rest into a barrel. She must have seen my appalled
look because she turned and said, laughing, “life is too short.” I took my food
and tried to blend in, which was difficult considering how I was dressed. I sat
down with a group of young people who were chattering gaily about the Boston Arts
Festival, a big summer event. The young man sitting next to me on the ground
seem to know a good deal about the festival so in an attempt to make
conversation I asked him politely “are you with the festival?” He turned to me
and said coolly, “I run it.”
That was my only encounter with the Boston upper crust,
those folks whose ladies had their hats and did not buy them. After one more
year on Prentiss Street I moved into Winthrop House as a resident tutor and
lost touch with Hugh. I think he ended up working at the Harvard library.
Is this the right Hugh Amory?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/hugh-amory-9271813.html
I don't think it can be. Weird.
ReplyDeleteAnd this:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44539539.pdf
Dirt-cheap because they were so copious, lobsters were routinely fed to prisoners, apprentices, slaves and children during the colonial era and beyond. In Massachusetts, some servants allegedly sought to avoid lobster-heavy diets by including stipulations in their contracts that they would only be served the shellfish twice a week. [click for more...]
ReplyDeleteOK, that is clearly not the Hugh Amory I knew!
ReplyDeleteProfessor Wolff --
ReplyDeleteLove the historical class anecdotes in this post. I would have been out of place at that event as well.
-- Jim
Here's an obit for the correct Hugh Amory. My favorite nugget: Frank O'Hara wrote a poem about him.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.americanantiquarian.org/proceedings/44539539.pdf
Phillips Ketchum attended Harvard in 1900 or a little later. At that time, 7% of the undergrads were Jewish. (It rose to 20% after WWI.)
Will the real Hugh Amory please stand up?
ReplyDelete