
Remembering Henry Lee Higginson
by John T. Morse, Jr.
Less than a year
after Henry Lee Higginson's death, his friend John T.
Morse, Jr. published his account: "Memoir of Henry
Lee Higginson." Featured here are excerpts from this piece with comments by Brian Pohanka.

In the passage below, Morse describes Higginson's speaking style after his 1890 Soldiers Field address that explains the significance of the donated land:
His habit was to speak in short, crisp, emphatic
sentences, a dangerous method unless used in perfect good
faith and with genuine earnestness behind it, for if
employed merely rhetorically the affectation is sure to
be detected. Major Higginson used it habitually and
effectively in conversation as well as on formal
occasions; it was natural to him. Therefore when he
talked in earnest he talked forcibly. But he was not
always willing to hand out his thoughts, and in such case
he defensively threw out trifling, banal remarks which
did not always produce a favorable impression. This,
however, meant only that he was not at the moment
inclined for serious talk.
...Henry Higginson was one of those fortunate men who
understood his own character, and who was thus clearly
aware that among his tendencies was an impetuosity which
called for restraint; with intelligent firmness,
therefore, he applied that restraint, with the result
that there was constructive power where there might
otherwise have been destructive violence. This sort of
man the lads [at Harvard] respected, getting at his
nature by the freemasonry of youth.
...The war cost Henry Higginson dear in friends lost....
For him the memory of these men never faded. To his
latest years he frequently referred to them with a still
fresh and ardent affection. One is tempted to use a slang
phrase, though it profanes a sacred subject, and to say
that friendship was a specialty with Henry Higginson. His
friendships were many and were not only warm but
singularly enduring.... He was constant in such a
relationship; sometimes adding a new friend, never
dropping an old one.... Dead or living they were all dear
to Henry Higginson to the end; there were no mistakes in
the list....
Morse concludes:
If he did not take rank among the conspicuous
multi-millionaires of the country, it was because he did
not make the amassing of money his chief purpose. To
spend it well interested him more.

Special thanks to Brian
Pohanka for supplying the following materials: Excerpts
from the "Memoir of Henry Lee Higginson" by
John T. Morse, Jr., Proceedings of the Massachusetts
Historical Society, 1920, and the image of Higginson's
war-time photo from Life and Letters of
Henry Lee Higginson by Bliss Perry, Boston: The Atlantic
Monthly Press, 1921.

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