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Side-trip Adventure Brings a Smile
This is the fourth in a four-column series on my recent travels to the Eastern Seaboard to visit my son – and visit much more.
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The loveliness of Walden Pond in person is threefold beyond expectations, but 80 miles southwest – as Sammy Jay flies – I happened upon a small body of water that not only rivals Henry David Thoreau’s famous basin, it lives up to its own name: The Smiling Pool.
Most likely you are not familiar with Sammy Jay and his fellow characters who lived in, and played near, The Smiling Pool and neighboring Old Briar Patch in “The Bedtime Story-Books” series written by Thornton W. Burgess beginning in 1910.
But the various “Adventures of” Jimmy Skunk, Grandfather Frog, Old Man Coyote, Bobby Raccoon, Jerry Muskrat, Buster Bear and a menagerie of forest friends wearing clothes were my dad’s favorite stories in the 1930s; mine in the ’60s; and, in turn, my daughter’s and sons’ most-requested in the early 1990s. The tattered book jackets and finger-worn pages of 20 hardcover editions reveal how often they have been reread.
Sometimes you take a trip and other times, I believe, a trip takes you. The latter can be better.
After my wife and I were shown the Mayflower Society House, where pilgrim descendant Ralph Waldo Emerson was married, in Plymouth, Massachusetts; then unexpectedly stumbled upon “Authors’ Ridge” where Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Louisa May Alcott and Thoreau are eternal neighbors in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord; followed by a visit to nearby Walden Pond, it was apparent an “author” theme had grabbed our road map.
So it was that in Cape Cod I serendipitously learned the Thornton W. Burgess Society Museum was in nearby East Sandwich. A side trip beckoned me like Chatterer The Red Squirrel to a pile or acorns.
Burgess, who was born in 1874, is certainly not as acclaimed as the Fab Four at Author’s Ridge. However, during the first half of the 20th Century, it was claimed at the museum, he was as popular as Sesame Street is today.
By the time of his death at age 90, Burgess authored more than 170 books and had 16,000 stories syndicated in newspapers across the country. His work was also published around the world in French, Spanish, German, Italian, Swedish and Gaelic.
And yet “The Bedtime Story-Man” was far more than a children’s author. He was a popular figure on radio from 1912 to 1960, including a show about nature.
Indeed, Burgess was at heart a conservationist. He collaborated on a series of books that proved instrumental in the growth of a fledging organization created in 1910 – The Boy Scouts of America. Too, he helped found bird sanctuaries and in 1918 successfully lobbied Congress to pass the Migratory Bird Act.
His legacy lives on in the non-profit educational Thornton W. Burgess Society with the mission: “To inspire reverence for wildlife and concern for the natural environment.” He wrote his bedtime stories with the same goal.
Housed in a two-centuries-old home that overlooks The Smiling Pool – looking down at it from a hill the curved pond resembles a smile – and Old Briar Patch of Thornton’s youth, the museum also features Green Briar Nature Center; Briar Patch Conservation Area; and Green Briar Jam Kitchen, America’s oldest commercial jam kitchen dating back to 1903 and still looks original, where school children see fruit preserves made without preservatives.
There is also, of course, a writing wing. To see hundreds of rare-edition Thornton Waldo Burgess books, some familiar to my eyes, was a time machine back to both my childhood and my early parenthood.
Outside, admiring the Smiling Pool, my trip’s author theme intensified as a quote from the other wordsmith Waldo – Ralph Waldo Emerson – came to mind: “Live in the sunshine, swim the sea, drink the wild air.”
I smiled, imaging Buster Bear and Reddy Fox doing exactly that below.
In the closing paragraph of each bedtime book, Burgess tells the reader what adventure he will write about next. This especially made sense because his books originated as serialized newspaper stories.
And so, because the advertised four columns proved insufficient for my Eastern Seaboard adventure, we will pick up from here with a bonus chapter next week.
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Woody Woodburn writes a weekly column for The Ventura County Star and can be contacted at WoodyWriter@gmail.com.
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