Last Photo of John Greenleaf Whittier at Old Homestead
PHOTOS: Garden of Whittier Home, Amesbury, during Whittier's funeral.
From Whittier-Land, by Samuel T. Pickard
“If history were taught in the form of stories, it would never be forgotten.” Rudyard Kipling.. From the Vault: Genealogy, Historical Photos, Newspaper Archives
Scarcely are three hundred years past since the discovery of the New World, and already we hardly know what are become of the precious remains of the sagacious, enterprising, and intrepid discoverer?…Not a mausoleum, not a monument, not even an inscription to tell where they lie.When the Spaniards decided to move Columbus’ remains in 1795, to save them from the French who had just won the land in their Revolutionary Wars, they had only sparse records and the memory of the town’s oldest inhabitants to help them figure out where to look. A plain box of bones found under the altar of the cathedral in Santo Domingo were determined to be the best guess. The Spaniards packaged the remains they found into a gilt box and sent them to the cathedral in Havana. But when Cuba won independence from Spain roughly a century later, the Spaniards dug up Columbus yet again and shipped him back to Seville.