BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA FOUNDED IN 1881 BY SEVENTY-SECOND SEASON I 95 2 " I 953 Tuesday Evening Series
BOSTONSYMPHONYORCHESTRA
FOUNDED IN 1881 BY
SEVENTY-SECOND SEASONI 95 2 " I 953
Tuesday Evening Series
BAYARD TUCKERMAN, J«. ARTHUR J. ANDERSON ROBERT T. FORREST
JULIUS F. HALLER ARTHUR J. ANDERSON. Ja.
HERBERT SEARS TUCKERMAN
OBRION, RUSSELL & CO
Insurance of Every Description
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SYMPHONY HALL, BOSTONHUNTINGTON AND MASSACHUSETTS AVENUES
Telephone, Commonwealth 6-1492
SEVENTY^SECOND SEASON, 1952-1953
CONCERT BULLETIN of the
Boston Symphony Orchestra
CHARLES MUNCH, Music Director
Richard Burgin, Associate Conductor
with historical and descriptive notes by
John N. Burr
The TRUSTEES of the
BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, Inc.
Henry B. Cabot President
Jacob J. Kaplan Vice-President
Richard C. Paine Treasurer
Philip R. Allen M. A. De Wolfe HoweJohn Nicholas Brown Michael T. Kelleher
Theodore P. Ferris Lewis Perry
Alvan T. Fuller Edward A. TaftN. Penrose Hallowell Raymond S. Wilkins
Francis W. Hatch Oliver Wolcott
George E. Judd, Manager
T. D. Perry, Jr. N. S. Shirk, Assistant Managers
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SYMPHONIANA
EXHIBITION
The annual exhibition of the New
England Chapter, Artists Equity Asso-
ciation, is now on view in the gallery.
CHAMBER ORCHESTRAPROGRAMS ATTANGLEWOOD
The programs in detail are announced
for the Berkshire Festival concerts in
the Theatre-Concert Hall at Tangle-
wood. Charles Munch will conduct.
Two Bach programs, Saturday eve-
ning, July 11 and Sunday afternoon, July
12, will include the Brandenburg Con-
certos 1, 2, 3, 5 (concertmaster Richard
Burgin, violin solo; Miss Doriot An-
thony, first flute, flute solo ; Lukas Foss,
piano), and 6. Also Suite 2 for Flute and
Strings (Doriot Anthony, soloist) ; Suite
3; and Cantata 78, "Jesu der du meine
Seele" for solo quartet, chorus and or-
chestra (Hugh Ross, conductor).
A pair of Mozart programs will be
played Saturday, July 18 and Sunday,
July 19, to include Divertimento K.
136 for Strings; Violin Concerto in G,
K. 216 (Isaac Stern, soloist) ; Serenade
for 13 Wind Instruments K. 361 ; the
"Prague" Symphony; Overture to "The
Marriage of Figaro"; Sinfonia Con-
certante for Violin and Viola (Isaac
Stern, violin, and Joseph de Pasquale,
first viola, soloists) ; "Eine kleine
Nachtmusik"; the "Jupiter" Symphony.
A feature of the final weekend of
Theatre concerts, one of contemporary
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[3]
works, one of Haydn, Saturday, July 25
and Sunday, July 26, will be the Cantata,
"A Parable of Death" by Lukas Foss,
which was commissioned by the Louis-
ville, Ky., Orchestra and had its world
premiere there on March 11 last. As
on that occasion, the composer has been
invited to conduct, and Vera Zorina
will be the Narrator.
"A Parable of Death" (for Narrator,
Chorus, Tenor Soloist and Orchestra)
is from Geschichten vom lieben Gott
by the Austrian poet Rainer Maria
Rilke, English version by Anthony
Hecht. The balance of the contem-
porary program will be Richard Strauss'
Divertimento, Op. 86 (after Couperin),
Darius Milhaud's "La Creation du
monde," Maurice Ravel's "Le Tombeau
de Couperin." The Haydn program will
contain the St. Theresa Mass for Chorus,
Soloists and Orchestra (Hugh Ross, con-
ductor) ; Symphonies 93 and 100 ("Mili-
tary").
Nine concerts in the Music Shed by
the full orchestra will follow on the
three weekends July 31, August 1, 2;
August 7, 8, 9; August 14, 15, 16, this
year for the first time the three series
concentrated into three-day weekends,
on Friday and Saturday evenings, and
Sunday afternoons. Pierre Monteux will
be guest conductor on August 1; Leon-
ard Bernstein on August 9 and 15.
SYMPHONY HALL
POPSARTHUR FIEDLER, Conductor
Sixty-eighth Season
OPENING NIGHTTUESDAY, APRIL 21
The Pops will be given each Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday,
Friday, and Saturday night through May 23. The regular Pops
Orchestra will play every night except Sunday through July 3.
Tickets now — Floor (table seats) $2.50; First Balcony $1.50, $1.00;
Second Balcony (unreserved) 50 cents.
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Nothing is permanent except change— Heraclitus
44 Chambers Street, consecrated byBishop Phillips Brooks in 1891 as the first
home of the Vincent Memorial Hospital.
Today's Vincent Memorial Hospital, occupying three floors in this modern building,
operates independently as the gynecological unit of the Massachusetts General Hospital.
It continues to receive considerable financial support from the Vincent Club.
For the welfare of
future generations
Founded in memory of a belovedactress, Mrs. J. R. Vincent, the
Vincent Hospital was created for
women by women. It is a leader in
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Change is reflected in the up-to-
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The modern woman, for instance,
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T. Jefferson CoolidgeChairman, Trust Committee
Augustin H. Parker, Jr., Pres.
Arthur L. Coburn, Jr.Chairman
yTrustInvestmentCommittee
Allied with The First National Bank of Boston
[6]
SEVENTY-SECOND SEASON. NINETEEN HUNDRED FIFTY-TWO AND FIFTY-THRU
Ninth Program
TUESDAY EVENING, April 14, at 8:30 o'clock
Barber Overture, "The School for Scandal"
Debussy "Prelude a l'apres-midi d'un Faune,"Eclogue after the Poem by Stephane Mallarme'
Honegger Symphony No. 2 for String Orchestra
I. Molto moderato
II. Adagio mesto
III. Vivace, non troppo
INTERMISSION
Beethoven Symphony No. 7, in A major, Op. 92
I. Poco sostenuto; Vivace
II. Allegretto
III. Presto; Assai meno presto; Tempo primo
IV. Allegro con brio
The Friday and Saturday concerts are broadcast each week from
Station WGBH (FM)
.
BALDWIN PIANO RCA VICTOR RECORDS
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BOSTON • CHESTNUT HILL
[8]
OVERTURE, "THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL,'' Op. 5
By Samuel Barber
Born at West Chester, Pa., March 9, 1910
Mr. Barber composed his Overture in 1932. It was performed at the summerseries of concerts of the Philadelphia Orchestra in Robin Hood Dell, August 30,
1933. The Overture was performed by the Boston Symphony Orchestra, November
15, 1940, and repeated October 16, 1942, February 10, 1950, and April 25, 1952.
The orchestration is as follows: 2 flutes and piccolo, 2 oboes and English horn,
2 clarinets and bass clarinet, 2 bassoons, 4 horns, 3 trumpets, 3 trombones and tuba,
timpani, bass drum and cymbals, bells, triangle, harp, celesta and strings.
The piece is a concert overture intended, not as an introduction
to a dramatic performance, but as an approximation in music oE
the spirit of Sheridan's comedy. The pattern is classical. The music
begins allegro molto vivace with a flourish and a bright leaping
theme for the full orchestra over a swift figure in the violins. Thestrings take the theme in 9-8 over pulsating chords in the winds. Theenergy spreads itself in a ff climax and the second theme, properly
lyrical, is sung by the oboe and then the violins. There is develop-
ment of the earlier material in the original brilliant vein and a return
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of the second theme, now brought in by the English horn and taken
up by the strings. The overture closes in a sparkling tempo primo.
Music figured early in Samuel Barber's life. It is told that he hadpiano lessons at the age of six and at seven made his first attempt at
composition. He entered the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia
when he was thirteen, and there he studied piano with Isabelle
Vengerova and singing with Emilio de Gogorza. But his main interest
was composition, which he studied with Rosario Scalero.
There have been performances of his music by orchestras in the
United States, in London, in Rome, in Salzburg, in Moscow, andother European cities. The Boston Symphony Orchestra has performed,
besides his Overture "The School for Scandal," his "Essay for Orches-
tra" No. 1, Violin Concerto, "Commando March," Second Symphony(dedicated to the Army Air Forces), Violoncello Concerto, and
"Knoxville, Summer, 1915," for Soprano and Orchestra. His Adagio for
Strings was conducted numerous times by Arturo Toscanini and taken
by him t© South America. Mr. Barber has also written a Symphonyin One Movement, which he has revised, a second "Essay," "Music for
a Scene from Shelley," and his "Capricorn Concerto" for Flute, Oboe,
Trumpet, and Strings. His chamber music includes a Serenade for
String Quartet, "Dover Beach" (for baritone voice and string quartet)
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Men and women often assume that tax economies
follow automatically when property is held in joint
ownership with right of survival. But you should
consult your own attorney to find out the effects of
joint tenancy in your case:
Will your taxes be decreased or actually increased?
Will a trust fund better accomplish your purposes?
Are needless capital gains taxes likely to result?
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a Violoncello Sonata and a String Quartet in G minor. For chorus hehas written "The Virgin Martyrs" (for women's voices) , "Reincarna-tion," and "A Stop Watch and an Ordnance Map" (for men's voices
and kettle drums). He has also written a number of songs.
He served in the United States Army as Corporal in the Army AirCorps.
Robert Horan has described Samuel Barber's aesthetic in ModernMusic (March-April, 1945):
Since the ancient part of this century, when the movement of
modernism in music, as in all the arts, was embarked upon; since its
tar-and-feather days of riot and conversion when the premiere of a
new work constituted a breach of the peace, musical composition
seems to have suffered from a fraudulent energy, a kind of "middle
age." There is an over-emphasis everywhere on the periphery, the
marginalia, the function or the contemporaneity of music. It maybe neither here nor there that a certain natural period of revolutionary
brilliance is clearing away and leaving a good deal of smoke. But
today one has so often the feeling that music has a superfluity of
supports and facilities, what Busoni has termed a "mimicry of
temperament."
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[»3]
If music has lost some of its earlier vitality, musical criticism, on
the other hand, has become perverse and deceptively sophisticated.
It is a commonplace to hear Wagner referred to as "pleasant" or the
Beethoven symphonies as "nicely made"; which is simply a reversal
of the critical terminology for standard works so that certain con-
temporary ones may be more easily included on the same level. It is
therefore refreshing and uncommon to discover individuals who,
without resorting to any current standard of methods or mannerisms,
have entered the front-rank of contemporary composition.
It is in this sense that the music of Samuel Barber seems of par-
ticular importance; because of its concentration on the beauty and
possibility of design; because of its alive and moving personality and
its entirely musical integrity.
What has been designated as conservative in Barber's work is par-
tially due to this emphasis on the larger aspects of architecture. In-
stead of cohering small units, he coheres large ones; instead of design-
ing for textural pieces, explosions, surprises, unusual sound combina-
tions in small relationships, he regards these as a matter of texture, and
texture as the surface of his fabric. His orchestration is simple and
aristocratic. His movement uses little static development and the in-
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Fiduciary Trust Company10 POST OFFICE SQUARE
BOSTON
DIRECTORS
Francis C. Gray
President
Edward F. MacNicholVice President & Secretary
James O. BangsVice President & Treasurer
Ralph B. Williams
Vice President & Trust Officer
Robert H. Gardiner
Vice President & Trust Officer
William H. Best
Ropes, Gray, Best,
Coolidge & Rugg
Winthrop H. Churchill
investment Counsel
Charles K. CobbScudder, Stevens & Clark
David F. EdwardsChairman of the BoardSaco-Lowell Shops
Carl J. Gilbert
Treasurer Gillette Company
Francis Gray
Trustee
Henry R. Guild
Herrick, Smith. Donald, Farley
& Ketchum
David H. Howie
Trustee
Richard C. Paine
Treasurer State Street Investment
Corporation
William A. Parker
President Incorporated Investors
Philip H. Theopold
Minot, DeBlois & Maddison
James N. White
Scudder, Stevens & Clark
Robert l . Wiese
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[15]
vention seems to move underneath rather than on top of the music.
It is essentially non-eclectic and non-urban and often romantic in
character. His personality is decisive often by virtue of what he has
learned to do without — the temptation toward breaking up instead
of sustaining, the abdication of strong thematic material in favor of
immediacy or effect. He makes concessions to simplicity but none to
pedestrianism, although his work suffers occasionally from a false sense
of security.
This kind of music is neither sinewy nor athletic. It is not par-
ticularly robust or nervous, in the American sense of these words. It
is not folksongish or nationalistic; its flavor as well as its technic is
rather international in character. This perhaps explains, to a degree,
the interest it has sustained outside the borders of this country. . . .
It is in pieces such as these [the Second "Essay" and the Adagio for
Strings] that one discovers that Barber's music is not "neo"-anything.
It is actually and absurdly romantic in an age when romanticism is
the catchword of fools and prophets. It is written intensely for strings
in a period when music is written intensely for brass. Its intention is
wholly musical. Its convention is rare, in that it establishes a per-
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Tchaikovsky
Tchaikovsky's American MemoriesCC/^AN you name a fascinating composition of
^-J Tchaikovsky that was inspired by his
American visit in 1891?" Delver Forfax chal-
lenged. "No? I'll tell you. It was not a musical,
but a literary composition. I refer to the diary
of his experiences in New York, Philadelphia,
Baltimore, and Washington, dated from April
26 to May 20.
"This stands as Tchaikovsky's best effort as
a diligent diarist— the most complete of his
eleven diaries. Here is a remarkable study of the
composer's tangled personality.
"The familiar Tchaikovskian moodiness is
there. But often it is swept away by Americaninfluences. One example is the party at which Tchaikovsky expected
to be bored, only to find that he enjoyed himself, rather to his puzzle-
ment. He took delight in the society of various pretty and charmingladies among the wives and daughters of his hosts. He pays tribute to
the friendliness and many kindnesses of Americans in many walks of
life, even the humblest— without any self-interest. He basked in the
sunshine of a general spirit of hero-worship which he had not en-
countered in previous travels.
"He was impressed by the financial success possible in this country,
as exemplified, for instance, by the soloist in his First Piano Concerto,
Adele aus der Ohe; and by the millionaire Andrew Carnegie. He wasparticularly struck by the unaffected simplicity of Carnegie, who madehim laugh at his clever mimicry of Tchaikovsky's conducting.
"His enjoyment of the scenery of Central Park in May causedTchaikovsky to walk there again and again. Words failed him to
describe in detail the 'beauty and majesty' of Niagara Falls.
"A particularly deep impression was made by the totally unconcernedattitude of the American public and newspapers toward a May Daydemonstration of 5,000 socialists with red caps and banners.
"When two new-found friends presented him with a Statue of
Liberty, he pronounced it an 'excellent gift.' Then he wrote: 'Only howare they going to allow this piece into Russia?'
"Well, he managed to get it in. He must have cherished it. In fairly
recent times an American journalist expressed mystification at seeing
it among the personal belongings in the Tchaikovsky Museum estab-
lished in the composer's home near Klin."
r 17
1
sonality before an idea, but a meaning before an effect. It is eco-
nomical, not of necessity but of choice. It is cerebral only in the
perspective of its craft, its logic and its form. It cannot properly be
called "the answer" to anything, or the direction that music must
take, for its distinction is entirely individual. It lacks casualness andoften spontaneity, and sometimes fails in the incident of irony or
humor. But it is composed. On the paper and in the ear, its design
and its articulateness reveal a profound elegance of style, and a per-
sonal, anti-mechanical melancholy.
[copyrighted]
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[18]
"PRELUDE TO THE AFTERNOON OF A FAUN" (After the
Eclogue of Stephane Mallarme)
By Claude Debussy
Born at St. Germain (Seine and Oise), August 22, 1862; died at Paris,
March 26, 1918
Debussy completed his Prelude to the Afternoon of a Faun in the summer of
1894. The Prelude was performed at the concerts of the Societe Nationale, Decembei*2, 1894, Gustave Doret conducting. It was published in 1895.
The orchestration is as follows: three flutes, two oboes and English horn, twoclarinets, two bassoons, four horns, two harps, antique cymbals, and strings.
The first performance in the United States was by the Boston Orchestral Club.Georges Longy, conductor, April 1. 1902. The first performance by the BostonSymphony Orchestra was December 30, 1904. The Prelude did not find its wayinto the concerts of the Paris Conservatoire until the end of 1913.
It would require a poet of great skill and still greater assurance to at-
tempt a translation of Mallarme's rhymed couplets, his complex
of suggestions, his "labyrinth," as he himself called it, "ornamented
by flowers." Arthur Symons (in his The Symbolist Movement in
Modern Literature) wrote: "The verse could not, I think, be trans-
lated," and this plain dictum may be considered to stand.
According to a line attributed to Debussy, the Prelude evokes "the
successive scenes of the Faun's desires and dreams on that hot
afternoon." [copyrit.h ted]
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SYMPHONY FOR STRING ORCHESTRABy Arthur Honegger
Born in Le Havre, March 10, 1892
The Symphonie pour Orchestra a Cordes is dated 1941. It was published in 1942
with a dedication to Paul Sacher* and has been performed by him in Zurich and
other Swiss cities. The first American performance was by the Boston Symphony Or-
chestra, December 27, 1946, Charles Munch conducting. Dr. Koussevitzky conducted
it in the Friday and Saturday series, October 31 and November 1, 1947, and again
on October 8, 1948.
at the end of the printed score is written, "Paris, October, 1941."
jl\ Willi Reich, writing from Basel for the Christian Science Monitor,
May 19, 1945, remarked that the Symphony for Strings "embodies
much of the mood of occupied Paris, to which the composer remained
faithful under all difficulties."
* Paul Sacher is the conductor of the orchestra of the Collegium Musicum Zurich, founded in
1941. It was for him and his orchestra that many important works have been recently
composed.
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The first movement opens with an introductory Molto moderato,
pp, with a viola figure and a premonition in the violins of things to
come. The main Allegro brings full exposition and development. Theintroductory tempo and material returns in the course of the move-
ment for development on its own account and again briefly before
the end.
The slow movement begins with a gentle accompaniment over which
the violins set forth the melody proper. The discourse is intensified to
ff, and gradually subsides.
The finale, 6/8, starts off with a lively, rondo-like theme in duple
rhythm, which is presently replaced by another in the rhythmic
signature. The movement moves on a swift impulsion, passes through
a tarantella phase, and attains a presto coda, wherein the composer
introduces a chorale in an ad libitum trumpet part, doubling the first
violins. (The choral theme is the composer's own.)
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[««]
SYMPHONY NO. 7 IN A MAJOR, Op. 92
By Ludwig van Beethoven
Born at Bonn, December 16 (?), 1770; died at Vienna, March 26, 1827
The Seventn Symphony, finished in the summer of 1812, was first performed on
December 8, 1813, in the hall of the University of Vienna, Beethoven conducting.
It is scored for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets,
timpani and strings. The dedication is to Moritz Count Imperial von Fries.
Beethoven was long in the habit of wintering in Vienna proper, and
summering in one or another outlying district, where woods and
meadows were close at hand. Here the creation of music would closely
occupy him, and the Seventh Symphony is no exception. It was in the
summer of 1812 that the work was completed.* Four years had elapsed
since the Pastoral Symphony, but they were not unproductive years.
And the Eighth followed close upon the Seventh, being completed
in October, 1812. Beethoven at that time had not yet undertaken
the devastating cares of a guardianship, or the lawsuits which were
* The manuscript score was dated by the composer "1812; Slten "; then follows the
vertical stroke of the name of the month, the rest of which a careless binder trimmed off,
leaving posterity perpetually in doubt whether it was May, June, or July.
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soon to harass him. His deafness, although he still attempted to
conduct, allowed him to hear only the louder tones of an orchestra.
He was not without friends. His fame was fast growing, and his
income was not inconsiderable, although it showed for little in the
haphazard domestic arrangements of a restless bachelor.
The sketches for the Seventh Symphony are in large part indeter-
minate as to date, although the theme of the Allegretto is clearly indi-
cated in a sketchbook of 1809. Grovef is inclined to attribute the real
inception of the work to the early autumn of 1811, when Beethoven,
staying at Teplitz, near Prague, "seems to have enjoyed himself
thoroughly — in the midst of an intellectual and musical society —free and playful, though innocent.
"Varnhagen von Ense and the famous Rahel, afterwards his wife,
were there; the Countess von der Recke from Berlin; and the Sebalds,
a musical family from the same city, with one of whom, Amalie, the
susceptible Beethoven at once fell violently in love, as Weber had done
before him; Varena, Ludwig Lowe the actor, Fichte the philosopher,
Tiedge the poet, and other poets and artists were there too; these
formed a congenial circle with whom his afternoons and evenings
t Sir George Grove: "Beethoven and his Nine Symphonies" (1896).
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were passed in the greatest good-fellowship and happiness." There
was more than one affair of the heart within the circle, and if the
affairs came to no conclusion, at least they were not unconducive to
musical romancing. "Here, no doubt," Grove conjectures, "the early
ideas of the Seventh Symphony were put into score and gradually
elaborated into the perfect state in which we now possess them. Manypleasant traits are recorded by Varnhagen in his letters to his fiancee
and others. The coy but obstinate resistance which Beethoven usually
offered to extemporising he here laid entirely aside, and his friends
probably heard, on these occasions, many a portion of the new Sym-
phony which was seething in his heart and brain, even though no
word was dropped by the mighty player to enlighten them."
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It would require more than a technical yardstick to measure the true
proportions of the Seventh symphony —the sense of immensity which it
conveys. Beethoven seems to have built up this impression by wilfully
driving a single rhythmic figure through each movement, until the
music attains (particularly in the body of the first movement, and in
the Finale) a swift propulsion, an effect of cumulative growth whichis akin to extraordinary size. The three preceding symphonies havenone of this quality — the slow movement of the Fourth, many parts
of the "Pastoral" are static by comparison. Even the Fifth Symphonydwells in violent dramatic contrasts which are the antithesis of sus-
tained, expansive motion. Schubert's great Symphony in C major, very
different of course from Beethoven's Seventh, makes a similar effect
of grandeur by similar means in its Finale.
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The long introduction (Beethoven had not used one since his
Fourth Symphony) leads, by many repetitions on the dominant, into
the main body of the movement, where the characteristic rhythm,
once released, holds its swift course, almost without cessation, until
the end of the movement. Where a more modern composer seeks
rhythmic interest by rhythmic variety and complexity, Beethoven
keeps strictly to his repetitious pattern, and with no more than the
spare orchestra of Mozart to work upon finds variety through his in-
exhaustible invention. It is as if the rhythmic germ has taken hold of
his imagination and, starting from the merest fragment, expands andlooms, leaping through every part of the orchestra, touching a newmagic of beauty at every unexpected turn. Wagner called the sym-
phony "the Dance in its highest condition; the happiest realization of
the movements of the body in an ideal form." If any other composercould impel an inexorable rhythm, many times repeated, into a vast
music — it was Wagner.In the Allegretto Beethoven withholds his headlong, capricious
mood. But the sense of motion continues in this, the most agile of his
symphonic slow movements (excepting the entirely different Allegretto
of the Eighth). It is in A minor, and subdued by comparison, butpivots no less upon its rhythmic motto, and when the music changes to
A major, the clarinets and bassoons setting their melody against triplets
in the violins, the basses maintain the incessant rhythm. Beethovenwas inclined, in his last years, to disapprove of the lively tempo often
used, and spoke of changing the indication to Andante quasi allegretto.
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Overture to Oberon ; Paul Creston, Symphony No. 4.
April 30 : Conservatory Chorus, Lorna Cooke DeVaron, conductor, Jordan Hall at
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[29]
The third movement is marked simply "presto," although it is a
scherzo in effect. The whimsical Beethoven of the first movement is
still in evidence, with sudden outbursts, and alternations of fortissimo
and piano. The trio, which occurs twice in the course of the move-
ment, is entirely different in character from the light and graceful
presto, although it grows directly from a simple alternation of two
notes half a tone apart in the main body of the movement. Thayerreports the refrain, on the authority of the Abbe Stadler, to have
derived from a pilgrims' hymn familiar in Lower Austria.
The Finale has been called typical of the "unbuttoned" (aufgt-
knopft) Beethoven. Grove finds in it, for the first time in his music,
"a vein of rough, hard, personal boisterousness, the same feeling which
inspired the strange jests, puns and nicknames which abound in his
letters. Schumann calls it "hitting all around" ("schlagen um sich").
"The force that reigns throughout this movement is literally prodi-
gious, and reminds one of Carlyle's hero Ram Dass, who had 'fire
enough in his belly to burn up the entire world.' " Years ago the
resemblance was noted between the first subject of the Finale andBeethoven's accompaniment to the Irish air "Nora Creina." which hewas working upon at this time for George Thomson of Edinburgh.*
• In an interesting article. "Celtic Elements in Beethoven's Seventh Symphony" (Muaica.Quarterly, July, 1935), James Travis goes so far as to claim : "It is demonstrable that thethemes, not of one, but of all four movements of the Seventh Symphony owe rhythmic andmelodic and even occasional harmonic elements to Beetnoven's Celtic studies."
However piausibly Mr. Travis builds his case, basing his proofs upon careful notation.
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December 8, 1813, is named by Paul Bekker as the date of "a great
concert which plays a part in world history," for then Beethoven's
Seventh Symphony had its first performance. If the importance of the
occasion is to be reckoned as the dazzling emergence of a masterpiece
upon the world, then the statement may be questioned. We haveplentiful evidence of the inadequacy of the orchestras with which Bee-
thoven had to deal. Beethoven conducting this concert was so deaf
that he could not know what the players were doing, and although
there was no obvious slip at the concert, there was much trouble at
rehearsals. The violinists once laid down their bows and refused to
play a passage which they considered impossible. Beethoven persuaded
them to take their parts home to study, and the next day all wentwell. A pitiful picture of Beethoven attempting to conduct is given
by Spohr, who sat among the violins. So far as the bulk of the audi-
ence is concerned, they responded to the Allegretto of the symphony,but their enthusiasm soon gave way to ecstasy before the exciting
drum rolls and fanfares of the battle piece, "Wellington's Victory,"
which followed. The performance went very well according to the
reports of all who were present, and Beethoven (whatever he mayhave expected — or been able to hear) was highly pleased with it. He
it is well to remember that others these many years have dived deep into this symphony inpursuit of special connotations, always with doubtful results. D'Indy, who called it a "pastoral"symphony, and Berlioz, who found the scherzo a "ronde des paysans^" are among them. Theindustrious seekers extend back to Dr. Carl Iken, who described in the work a revolution,fully hatched, and brought from the composer a sharp rebuke. Never did he evolve a morepurely musical scheme.
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[33]
wrote an open letter of gratitude (which was never published") to the
Wiener Zeitung. The newspaper reports were favorable, one stating
that "the applause rose to the point of ecstasy."
A fairly detailed account of the whole proceeding can be piecedtogether from the surviving accounts of various musical dignitaries
who were there, most of them playing in the orchestra. The affair wasa "grand charity concert," from which the proceeds were to aid the
"Austrians and Bavarians wounded at Hanau" in defense of their
country against Napoleon (once revered by Beethoven) . Malzel pro-
posed that Beethoven make for this occasion an orchestral version of
the "Wellington's Victory" he had written for his newly invented
mechanical player — the "pan-harmonicon," and Beethoven, who thenstill looked with favor upon Malzel, consented. The hall of the Uni-
versity was secured and the date set for December 8.
The program was thus announced:
I. "An entirely new Symphony," by Beethoven (the Seventh, in A major).
II. Two Marches played by Malzel's Mechanical Trumpeter, with full
orchestral accompaniment — the one by Dussek, the other by Pleyel.
III. "Wellington's Victory."
All circumstances were favorable to the success of the concert. Bee-
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Concert Bulletins
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[55]
thoven being now accepted in Vienna as a very considerable per-
sonage, an "entirely new symphony" by him, and a piece on so topical
a subject as "Wellington's Victory," must have had a strong attraction.
The nature of the charitable auspices was also favorable. The vicis-
situdes at the rehearsals and their final smoothing out have been de-
scribed. When the evening itself arrived, Beethoven was not alone in
the carriage, driving to the concert hall.* A young musician by the
name of Gloggl had obtained permission to attend the rehearsals, andall seats for the concert being sold, had contrived to gain admission
under the protecting wing of the composer himself. "They got into
the carriage together, with the scores of the Symphony and the 'Well-
ington's Victory'; but nothing was said on the road, Beethoven being
quite absorbed in what was coming, and showed where his thoughts
were by now and then beating time with his hand. Arrived at the hall,
Gloggl was ordered to take the scores under his arm and follow, andthus he passed in, found a place somewhere, and heard the whole con-
cert without difficulty."
* This incident actually pertains to the second performance, but the circumstances were
almost identical.
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[36]
EXHIBITION OF PAINTINGSBY
SYMPHONY SUBSCRIBERS
i. You are invited to submit a painting for an ex-
hibition to be held in Symphony 'Hall next season.
2. Paintings in any medium may be submitted, but
should not be less than about 8 by 10 inches in
size, exclusive of frame and mat.
3. Exact dates and further details will be found in
the programs of next season.
nEVER BEFORE in America's industrial history has the essential need of
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production, to re-sell neglected markets, are helped by
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[37]
LIST OF WORKSPerformed in the Tuesday Evening Series
DURING THE SEASON 1952*1953
Bach Chorale Prelude and Chorale, "The Old Year is Past,"(Arranged for Orchestra by Charles Munch)
.
IV January 6
Barber Overture, "The School for Scandal." IX April 14
Bartok Deux Images. VII March 3
Beethoven Symphony No. 4, in B-flat major, Op. 60.
I October 14Overture to "Leonore" No. 2, Op. 72.
II November 18
Symphony No. 5, in C minor, Op. 67.
VIII March 17
Symphony No. 7, in A major, Op. 92. IX April 14
Berlioz "Royal Hunt and Storm," Descriptive Symphony from"The Trojans." I October 14
Brahms Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 77. IV January 6
Soloist: Arthur GrumiauxSymphony No. 1 in C minor, Op. 68 I October 14
Chausson Symphony in B-flat major, Op. 20. VII March 3
Debussy "Printemps," Suite Symphonique. IV January 6
"Prelude a l'Apres-midi d'un Faune," Eclogue after
the Poem by Stephane Mallarme. IX April 14
Handel Concerto Grosso for String Orchestra, Op. 6, No. 4.
III December 16
Haydn Symphony in D major, No. 93. VI February 17
Honegger Symphony No. 2 for String Orchestra. IX April 14
Moussorgsky "Une Nuit sur le Mont Chauve" ("A Night on BaldMountain") , Orchestral Fantasy.
VIII March 17
Nabokov . "La Vita Nuova" Concerto for Soprano, Tenor andOrchestra on Three Excerpts from Dante.
Soprano: Mary HendersonTenor: Herbert Handt IV January 6
Reger A Romantic Suite, Op. 125. II November 18
(First performance at these concerts)
Rossini Overture to "Semiramide." VI February 17
Schubert .Symphony in C major, No. 7. II November 18
Svmphony in B minor ("Unfinished")
.
Ill December 16
[38]
Schumann Concerto for Violoncello and Orchestra in A minor,Op. 129. V January 27Soloist: Jean Bedetti
Overture to Byron's "Manfred," Op. 115.
VII March 3
Shostakovitch Symphony No. 5, Op. 47. V January 27
Sibelius Symphony No. 1 in E minor, Op. 39. VIII Man h 1 7
Stravinsky "Jeu de Cartes" ("Card Game," Ballet in ThreeDeals) . VI February 1
7
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 4 in F minor, Op. 36.
Ill December 16
Symphony No. 5, in E minor, Op. 64.
VI February 1
7
Wagner Excerpts from Act III, "Die Meistersinger von Niirn-
berg." VII March 3
Weber Overture to "Oberon." V January 27
Richard Burgin conducted the concerts of January 27 and March 17.
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1 67 Washington St., Boston 8r Mass.
[ 4o]
SYMPHONY HALL, BOSTONSEVENTY-THIRD SEASON, 1953 — 1954
^Boston Symphony Orchestra
CHARLES MUNCH, Music Director
Nine Concerts
TUESDAY EVENING SERIES
at 8:30
OCTOBER 13 FEBRUARY 2
NOVEMBER 17 MARCH 2
DECEMBER 15 MARCH 16
JANUARY 5 APRIL 13
APRIL 27
This, year's season ticket holders have an option until
May 15 to retain their seats for next season (Payment to
be made by September 75) .
Renewal subscription cards for signature have been sent
to all present season ticket holders.
G. E. JUDD, Manager.
>*>*--»-'-•»-
r 41
1
MUSICAL INSTRUCTION
JULES WOLFFERSInstruction and Courses for Pianists and Teachers
Coaching for those preparing public appearances
1572 BEACON STREET, WABAN 68
BI 4-1494
DAVID BLAIR McCLOSKYTEACHER OF SINGING BARITONE VOCAL THERAPIST
BOSTON UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MUSIC, BOSTON, MASS.
DIRECTOR: PLYMOUTH ROCK CENTER OF MUSIC AND DRAMA, INC
By Appointment CO 6-6070
LEONARD ALTMANTeacher of Pianoforte
135 Newbury Street, Boston, Mass.
KE 6-5183 GA 7-3294
169 Bay State Rd.
JAMES GRAYPIANIST TEACHER
Associate of the late Felix Fox
Mondays Tel. Circle 7-766)
LOUISE SCARABINO, SopranoTeacher of Voice — Piano
583 Beacon Street
Boston, Mass.
Commonwealth 6-2049
Evenings
KATHLEEN UHLER ADAMSTeacher of Pianoforte
AccompanistAppointments for Summer study
and next Autumn862 Beacon StreetBoston, Mass. Co. 7-1026
Rhodora Buckle Smith DR. ROSE W. SHAINVOICE TEACHER — COACH
TEACHER OF SINGING Member—National AssociationTeachers of Singing
122 Bowdoin St., Boston 4 Stedman St. Dean Vocal DanBrookline, Mass. Staley Collegi
CA 7-2142 Tel. AS 7-2503 Brookline, Mass.
[42]
To the —
Friends of the Boston Symphony Orchestra
I have been asked by the Trustees to express
their gratitude to the members of our Society for
their loyal support of the Orchestra this season.
Without such support, continuation of the
Orchestra would be impossible. The list of these
Friends as of April 6, 1953, is bound into this
program book as a permanent record.
The sole and earnest purpose of the Society of
Friends of the Orchestra is to provide the best in
orchestral music to the greatest possible number,
and all who care to join in furthering this object
are invited to enroll as members. There is no min-
imum membership fee and checks made out to
Boston Symphony Orchestra and forwarded to
Symphony Hall, Boston, constitute enrollment
without further formality.
Oliver Wolcott
Chairman, Friends of the
Boston Symphony Orchestra
[43]
Friends of the Boston Symphony Orchestra
List of Members for Season of 1952-1953
Mrs. John Moseley AbbotMr. and Mrs.
Charles C. AbbottMr. Edwin I. AbbotMr. and Mrs.
James D. AbbottDr. John A. AbbottMr. and Mrs.
A. Howard AbellDr. W. H. AbelmannMrs. Pennell N. AbornMr. and Mrs.
Henry AbrahamsMr. and Mrs.
A. A. Adams, Jr.
Mr. George Wendell AdamsMr. J. B. AdamsMr. R. C. AdamsMr. and Mrs.
Thomas B. AdamsMrs. Winslow H. AdamsMiss Dora L. AdlerMr. Herman AdlerMrs. George H. AgassizMrs. Maximilian Agassiz
Mr. Herbert H. AgoosMr. Otto A. AlcaideMrs. Stephen P. AldenMrs. Talbot AldrichMrs. William T. AldrichMrs. Peter P. AlexanderMiss Martha A. AlfordMrs. Norman Buckner AllardMiss Eleanor W. AllenMrs. Frank G. AllenMrs. Harold A. AllenMiss Hildegarde AllenMiss Mary N. AllenMrs. Paul Hastings AllenMrs. Philip K. AllenMr. and Mrs.
Philip R. AllenMrs. Robert J. AllenMiss Ruth AllenMiss Una L. AllenMrs. Charles AlmyMiss Helen J. AlmyMrs. Margaret G. AlvordMrs. John S. AmesMr. and Mrs.
Stephen B. AmesMrs. William H. AmesMrs. Harold AmoryMr. Roger AmoryMrs. William AmoryMrs. Lloyd D. H. AndersonMr. William G. AndersonMrs. Harold Ansin
[44]
Boston MembersMiss Margaret AnthonyMr. B. Earle AppletonMrs. Frances S. AppletonMiss Helen AppletonMrs. W. Cornell AppletonMr. and Mrs.
W. C. ArchibaldMrs. Lewis A. ArmisteadMrs. Harold Greene ArnoldMrs. Jesse M. AronsonMr. and Mrs.
Mayo M. AshmanMiss Lydia A. AshmeadMrs. E. H. AthertonMrs. Jonathan H. AtkinsonMrs. Henry L. AtwellMrs. David E. AtwoodMr. Alan S. AxelrodMrs. Charles F. AyerMrs. Frederick AyerMrs. James B. AyerMrs. John P. AyerMrs. W. P. F. AyerMrs. James AyresMiss Muriel M. Ayres
Mr. and Mrs.Courtlandt W. Babcock
Mrs. Roger W. BabsonMrs. Louis F. BachrachMiss Denise BaconDr. and Mrs.
Theodore L. BadgerMiss Joanna Bailey
Mrs. Bart W. BairdMiss Florence C. Baker"Mrs. Hamilton W. BakerMrs. Roland M. BakerMrs. Talbot BakerDr. Franklin G. BalchMrs. E. A. BaldwinMiss Margaret S. Ball
Professor and Mrs.Edward Ballantine
Miss Edith BangsMrs. George W. BarberMr. and Mrs.
Richard H. BarbourMr. Charles L. BarlowMr. and Mrs.
William L. BarnardMrs. Joel M. BarnesMr. John S. BarnetMr. and Mrs. S. J. BarnetIn Memory of
Sara Herman BarnetDr. J.
Dellinger Barney
Mrs. William A. BarronMr. and Mrs. Ralph BarronMrs. Thomas BarrowsMrs. John Sedgwick BarssMrs. Carl BarthMrs. Charles W. Bartlett
Miss Elizabeth M. P. BartleMrs. George W. Bartlett
Miss Grace E. Bartlett
Mrs. Matthew Bartlett
Mrs. Nelson S. Bartlett
Mrs. E. F. W. BartolMrs. John W. BartolMrs. Robert S. BartonDr. Alice H. Bassett
Miss Josephine Bassett
Mrs. George L.
Batchelder, Jr.
Mrs. Laurence BatchelderMiss M. E. BatchelderMiss Eleanor BatesMiss Miriam F. BatesMrs. Oric BatesMrs. Roy Elliott BatesMrs. Meredith BauerMrs. Helen Wood BaumanMr. and Mrs.
Jesse B. BaxterMrs. John A. BaybuttMrs. Boylston A. BealMr. and Mrs.
Thomas P. BealMrs. William DeFord Beal
Miss Ann B. BealeMrs. Harry C. BeamanMrs. A. T. BeateyMr. and Mrs.
Bancroft Beatley
Mrs. Ralph Beatley
Miss Winifred M. BeckMrs. G. W. BeckerMrs. Ralph G. Beckett
Mrs. Samuel J. BeckwithMiss Sylenda BeebeMrs. Lawrence BeebeMr. and Mrs.
Robert Jenks BeedeMiss Gertrude C. Belcher
Miss Bess BelinDr. and Mrs.
J. Frank Belin
Mrs. Robert E. BelknapMrs. Arthur W. Bell
Mr. Kenneth E. Bell
Mr. Walter C. Bell
Mrs. A. Farwell BemisMr. and Mrs. Alan C. Bemi 1
Mrs. Eric Benedict
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Mrs. George W.Benedict, Jr.
Mr. A. E. Benfield
Miss Frances Z. T. BennerDr. and Mrs.
Robert E. BennettMrs. Samuel C. BennettMrs. Arthur S. BenninkMiss Sylvia P. BensonMrs. William Bentinck-SmithMiss Priscilla Somes Bentley
Dr. and Mrs.Martin A. Berezin
Miss Eleanor BergMr. George H. BergerMrs. Isabel Kuntz BergerMr. Harry Bergson, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.A. W. Berkowitz
Mr. and Mrs.
George A. BernatMr. and Mrs. Paul BernatMrs. David W. Bernstein
Mr. and Mrs.Maurice J. Bernstein
Miss Tessie S. Bernstein
Professor and Mrs.
C. Harold Berry
Mrs. John BethuneMiss Eleanor BigelowMiss Gladys M. BigelowMrs. Henry B. BigelowMr. Bernard N. Biller
Miss Bernice W. Billings
Miss E. V. BinneyDr. and Mrs. Horace BinneyMr. and Mrs.
Charles Sumner BirdMrs. Francis W. Bird
Mr. and Mrs. Harold S. Bird
Mrs. R. W. Bird
Mrs. Paul H. Birdsall
Miss Ernestine BirnbaumMrs. Maurice B. Biscoe
Mrs. Harold A. BishopMiss Mildred E. BixbyMrs. Taylor Black
Miss Margaret G. Blaine
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Blake
Miss Maude D. BlakeMrs. Archibald BlanchardMiss Clara Blattner
Mrs. Albert H. Blevins
Dr. and Mrs.
Allen D. Bliss
Mrs. John H. Blodgett
Mrs. Thomas S. BlumerMrs. Charles H. BoardmanMrs. Robert W. BoasMrs. Ronald V. C. BodleyMiss Pauline BohnMiss Catherine M. Bolster
Mrs. Stanley M. Bolster
Mrs. D. S. Bond
Mr. Carl C. Bon in
Miss Leah A. BordenMr. Christian E. BornMrs. Mark BortmanMrs. A. D. BossonMrs. George F. BosworthMrs. John T. BottomleyMiss Mary E. BoutelleMrs. Herbert L. BowdenDr. Edward L. BowlesMr. Charles BoydenMiss Elva R. BoydenMrs. Gamaliel BradfordMrs. F. J. Bradlee, Jr.
Mrs. Henry G. BradleeMrs. Ralph BradleyMrs. W. C. BramhallMrs. Edward D. BrandegeeMrs. Carl BrandtMiss Charlotte BraytonMrs. David A. BraytonMr. and Mrs.
Frederick BrechMrs. William B. BreedMrs. J. Lewis BremerMiss Sarah F. BremerMr. and Mrs.
Herbert BremnerMr. and Mrs.
Harry D. BrennerMrs. Charles BrewerMr. and Mrs.
George W. W. BrewsterDr. and Mrs.
Henry H. BrewsterMrs. J. F. F. BrewsterMr. and Mrs.
William E. BrewsterMrs. George Wright
Briggs, Sr.
Mrs. Dwight S. BrighamMrs. F. Gorham BrighamMrs. Frank L. BrighamMr. and Mrs.
Lewis A. BrighamMr. and Mrs.
Virgil C. BrinkMrs. Godfrey M. Brinley
Dr. and Mrs.Hugh F. Broderick
Miss Phoebe BronkhorstMr. and Mrs.
Arthur B. BrooksMrs. Arthur H. BrooksMr. Lawrence G. Brooks
Miss Marion Haskell
BrosseauMiss Edith B. BrownMrs. Edwin P. BrownMr. and Mrs.
George R. BrownMr. Lester P. BrownMr. and Mrs.
Louis E. Brown
Mis. Philip L BrownMiss Sylvia Hi ownMrs. Theodore E. BrownMrs. i iiomas Gilbert BrownMiss Flora Allen BryantMiss Mary L. BryantMrs. Ernie BuckinghamMrs. Walter S. BucklinMiss Alice E. E. Buff
Miss Ellen T. Billiard
Mr. and Mrs.
John M. Bullard
Mr. Philip BullardMr. and Mrs. John Bullitt
Mrs. Philip E. BunkerMrs. Benjamin BunshaftMrs. Everett W. Burdett
Mr. and Mrs.George E. Burdick
Mr. Roland Burdon-MullerMrs. Herbert R. Burgess
Miss Martha J. BurkeMrs. Roger M. BurkeMr. and Mrs.
Arthur BurkhardMiss M. F. Burleigh
Miss Mary C. BurnhamMrs. Russell Burnett
Mr. Hugh BurrMiss Linda F. BurrMiss Elizabeth BurrageMr. H. F. BurroughsMr. and Mrs. F. Allen Burt
Mrs. Ethel M. BurtonMrs. Jessie F. BurtonMrs. George A. BusheeMiss Marion E. Buswell
Mrs. Morgan Butler
Mr. Frederic C. Butterfield
Mrs. Stedman Buttrick, Jr.
Mrs. Henry G. Byng
Mr. Charles C. CabotMrs. Chilton R. CabotMrs. Harry D. CabotMr. and Mrs. Henry B. Cabot
Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Cabot
Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas D. CabotMrs. Walter M. CabotMr. and Mrs. Sidney CahanMrs. Wallace M. CampbellDr. and Mrs.
Bradford CannonMrs. Walter Alvin Carl
Mrs. Philip G. Carleton
Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond S. CarmanMrs. Charles Roslyn CarneyMiss Cornelia P. Carr
Mrs. Houghton Can-
Mrs. John P. Carr
Mr. Joseph Carson, Jr.
[45]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Mrs. Albert P. CarterMiss Alice CarterMrs. Hubert L. CarterMr. and Mrs.
Lyndall F. CarterMrs. Roscoe A. CarterMiss Ruth N. CarterMr. and Mrs.
Paul DeWitt CaskeyMiss Catherine E. CastleMrs. Robert D. CastleMrs. A. G. CatheronMr. and Mrs. Charles CaverlyMr. Alfred Cavileer, Jr.Mrs. Alfred CavileerMr. Robert P. CavileerMiss Doris H. ChadwickProfessor and Mrs.
Z. Chafee, Jr.
Mrs. Marcia K. ChamberlainMrs. William E. ChamberlainMr. and Mrs.
Cary J. ChamberlinMr. and Mrs.
H. Daland ChandlerMrs. Henry M. ChanningMiss Marion L. ChapinMiss Ruth H. CharltonMr. Alfred E. ChaseMiss Alice P. ChaseMrs. Barbara S. ChaseMrs. Frederic H. ChaseMiss Helen B. ChaseMiss Mary E. ChaseMrs. William F. ChaseDr. David CheeverMrs. David Cheever, Jr.
Mrs. Hyman CherensonMr. Gilbert R. CherrickMrs. A. D. ChestertonMrs. Thomas ChestertonMiss Helen T. ChickeringMrs. K. Schuyler ChoateMr. and Mrs.
Elliott B. ChurchMrs. J. M. B. ChurchillDr. and Mrs. J. L. ChuteMrs. Samuel CikinsMr. and Mrs.
William H. Claflin, Jr.
Mrs. Clift Rogers ClappMr. David F. ClappMrs. Dudley ClappMiss Mary A. ClappMr. Roger E. ClappMiss Ethel Damon ClarkMrs. Frank M. ClarkMrs. G. F. ClarkMr. and Mrs. Paul F. ClarkMiss Esther M. ClementMr. and Mrs.
Lindsay ClevelandMrs. Walter B. Clifford
Miss Eleanor Clifton
[46]
Mrs. Alice S. CloughMr. Charles K. CobbMiss Louise CoburnMr. and Mrs.
William H. CoburnMiss Mary McKay
CochraneMrs. Russell S. CodmanMr. and Mrs.
Russell S. Codman, Jr.
Mr. William B. Coffin
In Memory of
Winthrop Coffin
Mr. Willard G. CogswellMr. and Mrs. Eli A. CohenMr. and Mrs.
Herman B. CohenMr. and Mrs. J. H. CohenMiss Sophia B. CohenMrs. Edwin J. CohnMr. and Mrs. Haskell CohnMiss Florence ColbyMr. Howard W. ColeMiss Ruby H. ColeMr. Joseph A. Coletti
Mr. and Mrs.Charles Collens
Mrs. George W. Collier
Mrs. Edward T. Collins
Mr. Lester Collins
Mr. and Mrs.Horatio Colony
Miss Elizabeth W. ColwellMiss Mary A. ComerDr. and Mrs.
James B. ConantMiss Louise ConditMr. and Mrs.
Parker ConverseMrs. C. S. Cook, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Charles CookMrs. Fred C. CookMrs. John S. CookeMr. Richard CookeMrs. Elizabeth Sprague
CoolidgeMiss Ellen W. CoolidgeMiss Elsie W. CoolidgeMrs. John G. CoolidgeMrs. John T. CoolidgeMrs. Julian L. CoolidgeMrs. Russell Coolidge
Mr. and Mrs.
T. Jefferson Coolidge
Miss Elizabeth A. CooperMr. and Mrs.
Harry D. CooperMr. Maurice L. CooperMrs. Charles T. CopelandDr. and Mrs. S. Irving CopenMiss Linda E. CoreyMr. Chester A. Corney, Jr.
Mrs. John J. Cornish
Mr. and Mrs.Charles E. Cotting
Miss Clara V. Cottle
Mr. William D. Cotton, Jr.
Mrs. John A. CousensMiss Laura CoxMiss Mary Florence CoyneMrs. Clayton B. CraigMiss Ellen M. CraneMiss Mary L. CrawshawMiss Lucy C. CrehoreMrs. Albert M.
Creighton, Jr.
Mrs. Bartow CrockerMrs. Bigelow CrockerMrs. C. Thomas Crocker III
Mr. Douglas CrockerThe Reverend and Mrs.
John CrockerMiss Muriel CrockerMrs. Samuel E. M. CrockerMrs. Arthur P. CrosbyMrs. S. V. R. CrosbyMrs. James E. Cross
Mrs. F. B. CrowninshieldMiss Gertrude CumingsMr. and Mrs.
Charles K. CummingsMiss Margaret CummingsMiss Isabel CumminsMrs. Alan CunninghamMrs. Edward
Cunningham, Jr.
Miss Mary CunninghamMrs. Guy W. CurrierMrs. Robert M. CurrierMrs. Thomas P. Currier
Miss Frances G. Curtis
Mrs. Edith Roelker Curtis
Mrs. G. S. Curtis
Dr. and Mrs. G. W. Curtis
Miss Harriot S. Curtis
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Curtis
Mrs. Louis Curtis, Jr.
Miss Margaret Curtis
Mr. and Mrs.
Frederic H. Curtiss
Miss Alice L. dishingMiss Dorothea dishingMiss Fanny E. CushingMrs. George M. CushingMiss Elizabeth CushmanMrs. Elton G. CushmanMrs. H. E. CushmanMr. and Mrs.
Norman CushmanMiss A. Ann Cutler
Miss Elisabeth A. Cutler
Mr. and Mrs.
G. Ripley Cutler
Mr. John L. Cutler
Mr. Robert Cutler
Mrs. Edward L. Cutter
Mrs. John Cutter
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
In Memory of C. S. D.Mrs. George B. DabneyMrs. Fred A. DakinMiss Ruth B. DalrympleMr. John N. DaltonMrs. Marshall B. DaltonDr. William DameshekMr. J. Linfield DamonMr. Herman DanaMiss Sylvia P. DanaMr. and Mrs. Edward DaneDr. and Mrs.
Ernest B. Dane, Jr.
Mrs. Hazel DanforthMiss Margaret DanforthMiss Mabel DanielsMr. and Mrs.
Richard E. DanielsonMrs. Carl F. DannerMrs. Philip J. DarlingtonMr. Charles DaumjMiss Mary D. DavenportjiDr. Charles S. DavidsonjMrs. Edward Kirk DavisIMrs. J. J. DavisiMr. John F. DavisiMrs. Livingston DavisIMrs. William L. DavisDr. and Mrs.
Archibald T. DavisonjMrs. William H. P. DavissonMiss Amy Davol
Mrs. Charles W. DavolMrs. G. Burton DavyMrs. Frank A. Day, Jr.
,Mrs. Munroe DayIMiss Egilda DeAmicisjMr. and Mrs.
C. Bradford DeanjMrs. Dorothea DeaniMrs. James DeanMiss Elizabeth C. DearbornMrs. Thaddeus C. DeFriezJudge and Mrs.
Frank S. DelandDuchess Anna
deLeuchtenbergMiss Helen R. DempseyMrs. Henry S. Dennison3Mrs. G. P. Denny'IMrs. Philip DeNormandiejDr. and Mrs.
Robert L. DeNormandieJMrs. Bradley Dewey(Mr. and Mrs. Franklin DexterIMrs. Lewis DexterMrs. Robert L. DexterjMrs. William DexterIMrs. John M. Dick
JDr. Albert C. DieffenbachIMr. Winslow A. Dightman'Mrs. William H. DimickMr. Robert G. DodgeMr. Paul Doguereau
Mrs. Malcolm DonaldMiss Clare R. DonohueMr. and Mrs.
Alfred DonovanMr. Arthur T. DooleyMiss Lillian DorionMiss Nona M. DoughertyMrs. Sterling DowMrs. Cutler B. DownerMr. and Mrs.
Jerome I. H. DownesDr. John Godwin DowningDr. Virginia DowningMiss Margaret DowseMr. and Mrs. Eben S. DraperMrs. Jesse A. DrewMrs. Carl DreyfusMrs. Edwin J. DreyfusMrs. William R. DriverMrs. Sydney DrookerMiss Geraldine F. DroppersThe Reverend and
Mrs. Frank E. DuddyMr. Gardner T. DunhamMrs. Horace C. DunhamMiss Marjorie H. DunhamMiss Alice M. DunneMr. and Mrs.
William W. Dunnell, Jr.
Miss Josephine Durrell
Miss Flora E. DuttonMiss Laura M. DwightMiss Margaret DwightDr. Richard W. Dwight
Mrs. Marcy EagerEagle-Ottawa Leather
CompanyMiss Louise S. EarleMiss Mabel L. EarleMr. and Mrs.
James S. EasthamMrs. Melville EasthamMiss Blanche E. EatonMr. Harry F. Eaton, Jr.
Mrs. John M. EatonMrs. E. R. EberleMiss Mary Louise EddyMr. and Mrs. L. U. EdgehillDr. George H. EdgellMr. and Mrs.
Melvin J. EdinburgMr. William S. Edsall
Mrs. Curtis A. EdwardsMr. and Mrs.
David F. EdwardsMiss Esther P. EdwardsMiss Mary N. EdwardsMrs. Neilson EdwardsMrs. Lee Einstein
Mrs. Samuel EinsenbergMr. and Mrs. Philip EisemanMiss Lois W. EldridgeMr. and Mrs. Rudolph Elie
Miss Mary Caroline Eliot
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Eliot
Miss Harriett M. Ellis
Miss Kate Ellis
Mrs. William V. Ellis
Mrs. Eben H. Ellison
Miss Helen T. ElmsMrs. Alfred W. ElsonColonel and Mrs.
Alcott Farrar ElwellMiss Augusta C. ElyMiss Elizabeth B. ElyMiss Edith W. EmersonMiss Mabel E. EmersonMrs. Forrest S. EmeryMr. H. Wendell EndicottMrs. Henry EndicottMr. Samuel C. EndicottMrs. William D. EnglishMrs. Richard EngstromMr. Morris David EpsteinMrs. Henry A. ErhardMr. and Mrs. Roger ErnstMrs. Gustavus J. Esselen
Mrs. Augustus HemenwayEustis
Mrs. Dwight D. EvansMiss Louella D. Evereii
In Memory ol
Alexander B. Ewiny
Mrs. Harris Fahnestock, Jr.
Mrs. Murry N. FairbankMrs. H. G. Fairfield
Mrs. Wallace FalveyMrs. Eliot FarleyMrs. J. W. FarleyMr. James W. FarleyMr. and Mrs. Jarvis FarleyMiss E. Mabel FarquharsonMiss Eleanor E. FarrarMiss Frances Farrell
Miss Grace G. Farrell
Mrs. George E. FarringtonMr. Chester Lawrence
Farwe 11
Mrs. James M. FaulknerMr. Joseph A. FaveroDr. and Mrs.
Nathaniel W. FaxonMr. A. D. FayMrs. Richard D. FayMrs. S. Prescott FayMr. and Mrs. Willis W. FayMiss Catherine FehrerIn Memory of
Elihu T. FeinbergMiss Charlotte FellmanMrs. Frederic L. FeltonMrs. W. Sidney FeltonMrs. Frank M. Ferrin
Mrs. William F. Ferrin
Mrs. Cvrus Y. Ferris
[47 1
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
The ReverendTheodore P. Ferris
Dr. and Mrs.Ronald M. Ferry
Mr. Hart FessendenMrs. Elias Field
Mrs. Fred T. Field
Miss M. B. Field
Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Field
Mrs. Simma FinaidMiss Elio FineMrs. Milton A. FineMr. Robert E. FineDr. and Mrs. Samuel FineMr. and Mrs. Harry FineDr. and Mrs. Nathan H. FinkMiss Mabel G. Finlay
Miss Kathryn Claire FinnMr. John G. FinneranDr. Louis FischbeinMiss Margaret A. Fish
Miss Edith S. Fisher
Miss Margaret Fisher
Mrs. Gertrude S. Fitch
Miss Ada M. Fitts
Master Charles K. Fitts, Jr.
Master Daniel Hewitt Fitts
Mrs. Stephen S. Fitzgerald
Mrs. Charles H. FloodMiss May P. FoggMr. Henry E. FoleyMrs. Alexander ForbesMr. and Mrs. Allan ForbesMrs. Allyn B. ForbesMr. Edward W. ForbesMr. and Mrs.
F. Murray Forbes, Jr.
Mrs. Waldo E. ForbesMiss Margaret Forster
Miss Renee FosseMrs. Hatherly Foster
In Memory of
Reginald C. Foster
Mrs. Herbert C. FowlerMiss Edith M. FoxMr. Isidore FoxMr. Walter S. Fox, Jr.
Mrs. G. Tappan Francis
Mrs. Irving FrankelMiss Lina H. FrankensteinMrs. Frederick W. Frazier
Mr. and Mrs.Arthur H. Freedberg
Mr. Hiram FreedmanMr. and Mrs.
Samuel FreedmanMr. and Mrs. John FreemanMrs. Allen FrenchMiss Hannah D. FrenchMiss Helen C. FrenchMrs. Gertrude T. Fretz
Mr. and Mrs.Israel Friedlander
Miss Elsie T. Friedman
Miss Sophie M. FriedmanMr. and Mrs.
Nathan H. FriedmanMiss Kate Friskin
Mrs. George Frost
Mr. Horace W. Frost
Mrs. Langdon FrothinghamMrs. Louis A. FrothinghamMiss Anna D. FryDr. and Mrs. Claude M. Fuess
Mr. and Mrs.Alvan T. Fuller
Mrs. Lon Luvois Fuller
Miss Ruth E. Funk
Mr. Arthur GabelnickMr. Walter H. GaleMrs. William W. GallagherMrs. Charlotte H. GallantMrs. William Albert GallupMrs. John GaitDr. and Mrs.
James L. GambleMr. R. H. Ives GammellMr. and Mrs. Seth T. GanoMrs. Harry GanzDr. and Mrs.
Robert Norton GanzMiss Ethel R. GardnerMr. and Mrs.
G. Peabody GardnerMrs. Marjorie H. GardnerMiss Mary A. GardnerMiss Annette GarelDr. and Mrs. Stanton Garfield
Dr. and Mrs.
Walter T. Garfield
Mrs. William L. Garrison, Jr.
Mrs. Bernard F. Garrity
Miss Florence M. Garrity
Miss Edith M. GartlandMr. and Mrs.
Richard S. GatesMr. A. M. GaudinMiss Clara Edith GavMrs. Clyde GayMr. Heinrich GebhardMr. and Mrs.
Leslie N. GebhardMrs. Harold Geilich
Mr. and Mrs.
Simon H. Geilich
Mr. and Mrs.Sumner M. Gerstein
Mr. and Mrs.George W. Gethro
Mrs. Kirkland H. GibsonMrs. Fred J. GiduzMrs. Carleton S. Gifford
Mrs. Harry P. Gifford
Miss Rosamond Gifford
Miss Jeannette GiguereMiss Helen C. Gilbert
Miss Louise Giles
Mrs. A. Victor GilfoyMr. and Mrs.
Fernand Gillet
Mrs. Herman GilmanMr. Roger GilmanMrs. Roger GilmanMrs. R. S. GinsbergMr. and Mrs.
Harry GinsburgMrs. Joseph S. GinsburgMiss Sadie S. GinsburgMr. and Mrs.
William M. GinsburgMr. and Mrs.
H. J. GinsburghMr. and Mrs.
A. Murray GinzbergMrs. Harry GlassburgMr. Henry H. GlazerMr. Edward H. GleasonMrs. Hollis T. GleasonMiss Marie R. GleesonGlobe Ticket Company of
New EnglandMiss Nura GlobusMrs. Nelson GloverMr. William H. GloverMrs. Paul M. GoddardMrs. R. H. I. Goddard, Jr.
Miss Ruth GoddardMr. Howard GodingMiss Susan GodovMrs. Samuel GoldMr. Alan B. GoldbergMr. and Mrs.
Harold S. GoldbergMr. and Mrs.
Charles GoldmanMrs. E. GoldmanMr. and Mrs.
P. Kervin GoldmanMr. and Mrs.
Sumner GoldmanDr. and Mrs.
Walter GoldsteinMrs. Joel A. GoldthwaitMiss Isabel F. GoodenowMrs. L. Cushing GoodhueMrs. Joseph GoodmanMr. and Mrs.
Reuben E. GoodmanMiss Constance GoodrichMrs. Wallace GoodrichMrs. Frederic S. GoodwinMr. and Mrs.
Harry M. GoodwinMrs. A. L. GordonMrs. Albert I. GordonMiss Eva GordonMiss Ravel GordonMrs. Stanley G. GordonMiss Susan D. GordonMr. and Mrs. Harry N. GoMrs. Bernard L. Gorfinkle
[48]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Miss Vera Gorovitz
Mrs. C. Lane GossMiss Eleanore P. GouldDr. and Mrs.
G. Philip Grabfield
Miss Effie R. GrandinMrs. Isabella GrandinMrs. John L. GrandinMrs. John L. Grandin, Jr.
Mrs. Richard M. GrandinMrs. Arthur E. GrannisMrs. Elizabeth GrantMrs. Russell R. GrantMrs. Clara E. GraverMiss Bertha St. J. Graves
Mrs. Edward C. GravesMrs. C. Chauncey GrayMrs. Charles H. GrayMr. Reginald GrayMr. and Mrs.
Julian F. Greeley
Mr. Philip E. GreenMr. David H. GreenbergMrs. Henry Copley GreeneMr. and Mrs. I. Lloyd GreeneMr. and Mrs.
Jerome D. GreeneMr. George C. GreenerMrs. Chester N. GreenoughMrs. Henry V. GreenoughMrs. Robert B. GreenoughMiss Virginia M. GreenwoodMr. Don S. GreerMiss Eva Jo GreggMiss Agnes GregoryMrs. Edward W. GrewMr. Henry S. GrewMrs. Paul GringMiss Leslie GrinnellMrs. Bennett M. Groisser
Mr. Casper M. GrosbergMrs. Harold K. GrossMrs. Julius GrossmanMrs. Leopold GruenerMrs. S. E. GuildMrs. Trygve GundersonMiss S. V. GustafsonMr. and Mrs.
Sidney Guttentag
Mr. C. W. HadleyMr. and Mrs. Theodore
C. Haffenreffer
Mr. John A. HahnMrs. Albert HaleMr. and Mrs. Harry P. Hale
Mrs. Richard K. HaleMrs. Richard W. HaleMrs. Whitney HaleMiss Anna Hall
Mrs. George P. Hall
Mrs. H. S. Hall
Mr. John L. Hall
Mrs. Joseph A. HallMiss Emily HallowellMr. N. Penrose HallowellMiss Elizabeth V. HamiltonMrs. Robert T. HamlinJudge and Mrs.
Franklin T. HammondMrs. Harold HammondMrs. Herbert T. Hand, Jr.
Mrs. Samuel S. HanfiigMrs. George HannauerMrs. Lawrence H. HanselMr. C. Edward HansellMrs. Edward HardingMr. Francis A. HardingMiss Katherine HardwickMiss Blanche E. HardyMiss Mary Caroline HardyMiss Jean HarperDr. and Mrs.
Herbert I. HarrisProfessor and Mrs.
Robert S. Harris
Mrs. William G. F. Harris
Mrs. Norman HarrowerMrs. Harold C. HartMrs. Arthur W. Hartt
Miss Mary A. Hartwell
Mr. Richard L. Hartwell
Harvard Glee ClubMrs. Carroll S. HarveyMr. and Mrs.
Bartlett HarwoodMrs. Herbert E. HarwoodMrs. Hugh HarwoodMrs. Sydney HarwoodMr. Abraham Haskell
Mrs. Charles H. Haskins
Mr. George L. Haskins
Mrs. Merrill G. Hastings
Mr. and Mrs.Francis W. Hatch
Miss Ruth HatchMiss Mary Jane HathawayMiss Florence E. HathewayMrs. Theodore HavenMrs. John B. HawesMrs. Frank W. HawleyMrs. George HawleyMr. Sherman S. HaydenMr. William F. HaydenMiss Muriel S. HaynesMrs. William Haynes-Smith
Mrs. Harry T. HaywardMr. and Mrs.
Harold L. HazenMrs. W R. Healey
Mrs. Charles S. HeardMr. and Mrs.
Hamilton HeardMrs. Bigelow HeathMiss Lucia R. HedgeMrs. William R. HedgeMr. Hugh Edgar Hegh
Mrs. Arthur WilliamHeintzelman
Mrs. G. B. HellmanMr. Bernard HelmanMrs. Augustus HemenwayMrs. Harriet Sterling
HemenwayMr. and Mrs.
Leland D. HemenwayMr. and Mrs.
R. G. HendersonMiss Laura HenryMr. and Mrs.
Andrew H. HepburnDr. Louis HermansonMiss Ada H. HerseyMrs. Christian A. HerterMrs. Ludwig HerzbergMiss Helen H. HessMr. Bernard C. HeylMr. Sidney B. HeywoodDr. and Mrs. F. H. Higgins
Mrs. John W. Higgins
Mr. and Mrs.Richard R. Higgins
Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Higginson
Miss Dorothy E. Hildreth
Mrs. Arthur D. Hill
Mrs. Converse Hill
Mr. and Mrs. George E. Hills
Mrs. Hugh S. HinceMrs. E. Sturgis HindsMrs. Henriette HirshmanMr. David L. HixonMr. and Mrs.
Richard B. HobartMr. and Mrs. Beecher HobbsMrs. Franklin W. HobbsMr. Walter L. HobbsMrs. George F. HodderMr. and Mrs.
Harold D. HodgkinsonMr. and Mrs.
Chester A. HoeferMrs. Charles HoffbauerMrs. Jacques HoffmanMrs. Donald Holbrook
Miss Edith C. Holbrook
Miss Elizabeth L. HolbrookMrs. Charles M. Hollander
Mr. Gerhard L. Hollander
Mrs. Edward J. HolmesMrs. Edward O. Holmes, Jr.
Mrs. Hector M. HolmesMr. Malcolm H. HolmesMiss Madalene D. Holt
Miss Katharine A. HomansMiss Marian J. HomansMrs. Donald T. HoodMrs. Wilford L. Hoopes
Mr. and Mrs.Gerald W. Hopkins
[49 1
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Mr. and Mrs.Robert H. Hopkins
Mr. Charles HopkinsonMr. and Mrs.
Mark M. HorblitMr. and Mrs.
Maurice H. HorblitMrs. Henry HornblowerMr. and Mrs.
Ralph HornblowerMiss Barbara HortonMrs. Murray P. HorwoodMiss Phoebe Lee HosmerMrs. B. K. HoughMrs. Clement S. HoughtonMrs. Charles P. HowardMrs. Nelson W. HowardMr. and Mrs.
Alfred HowarthMrs. A. Murray HoweMr. Forest W. HoweMr. Henry S. HoweMr. James C. HoweMr. M. A. DeWolfe HoweMrs. Osborne HowesMr. and Mrs.
David H. HowieMiss Edith A. HowlandMrs. John S. HowlandMiss Mildred R. HowlandMr. Alexander E. HoyleDr. Eliot Hubbard, Jr.
Mrs. Henry V. HubbardMr. Ralph K. HubbardMiss Elinor L. HughesMrs. H. Maurice HughesMrs. Eugene J. V. HuiginnMr. and Mrs.
Laning HumphreyMrs. Arnold W. HunnewellMr. Francis Welles
HunnewellMr. and Mrs. Albert B. HuntMrs. E. J. B. HuntoonMrs. G. Newell HurdMrs. Horace Truman
HurlockMrs. B. Hurvitz
Miss Alice HutchinsonMiss Eleanora HutchinsonMrs. Norman HuttonMr. Emery I. HuvosMrs. H. Stanley Hyde
Dr. Joseph Igersheimer
Mrs. Ethel Challenor Ince
Mrs. Walter R. Ingalls
Mrs. Edward IngrahamMiss Ivy F. InmanMiss Minnie M. InmanMiss Emilia Ippolito
Mrs. William Ittmann
Mrs. Edwin E. JackMrs. James R. JackMiss Annie H. Jackson
[5o]
Mrs. Charles JacksonMrs. Delbert L. JacksonMr. and Mrs.
Henry B. JacksonMr. and Mrs.
James JacksonMrs. Lyman JacksonMrs. William JacobsonMr. James JacquesMrs. William JamesMiss Helen M. JamesonDr. and Mrs.
Charles A. JanewayMrs. Benjamin F. JaquesMrs. Charles S. Jeffrey
Mrs. Richard E. Jeffrey
Miss Alice C. JenckesMr. and Mrs.
Charles S. JenneyMr. and Mrs.
E. Morton JenningsMiss Eleanor M. JenningsMr. William Paul JensenMiss Caroline G. JewellMrs. Pliny Jewell, Jr.
Mr. T. E. JewellMr. and Mrs.
T. Edson Jewell, Jr.
In Memory of
Howard Clifton Jewett,
M.D.Professor Edith C. JohnsonMiss Florence E. JohnsonMrs. Frederick JohnsonMr. and Mrs.
G. Blake JohnsonMiss Harriet E. JohnsonMrs. John W. Johnson, Jr.
Miss Marie S. JohnsonMrs. Peer P. JohnsonMrs. Raymond B. JohnsonMiss Winifred H. JohnstoneMrs. Arthur M. JonesMrs. Durham JonesMiss Helen T. JonesMiss Margaret H. JonesMr. and Mrs.
W. St. C. JonesMiss Mary R. Joslin
Mr. and Mrs. Werner Josten
Mr. and Mrs.Mark R. Jouett
Miss Gladys T. Joyce
In Memory of
Carl J. KaffenburghMrs. Carl J.KaffenburghMrs. Hetty L. R.
KaffenburghMrs. Albert S. KahnMrs. Benjamin A. Kaiser
Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob J. KaplanMr. and Mrs.
Joseph Kaplan
Mr. Anthony J. KapusMr. and Mrs. Max KatzMr. and Mrs. Earle B.
KaufmanMitchell B. Kaufman
Charitable FoundationIn Memory of
Mitchell B. KaufmanMrs. Norman B. KaufmanMr. Richard L. KayeMrs. John L. KeedyMrs. Laurence M. KeelerMr. and Mrs.
Joseph H. KeenanMrs. H. Nelson KeeneMiss Ethel M. KeeseMrs. Harold C. KeithMr. Michael T. KelleherMr. Harrison KellerMiss Mary Jane KelleyMr. and Mr. Shaun KellyMr. and Mrs. Charles KemlerMr. Henry P. KendallMrs. Everett E. KentMrs. Ira Rich KentMrs. H. Kerr-BlackmerMr. Phillips KetchumKeystone Charitable
FoundationMr. and Mrs. H. V. Kibrick
Mr. I. S. Kibrick
Mrs. Henry P. KidderMrs. Paul Killiam
Mrs. Daniel M. Killoran
Mrs. Charles H. KimballMr. and Mrs. Chase KimballMrs. Fred Nelson KimballMrs. Walter E. KimballMrs. Gilbert KingMr. and Mrs.
Henry P. KingMrs. William F. KingMrs. Wisner P. KinneMrs. William Abbot KinsmanMiss Katrina KipperMrs. Malcolm C.
Kirkbride
Mr. Samuel Kirstein
Mrs. Francis B. Kittredge
Mrs. Arthur KleinMiss Elise Klein
Mrs. Herbert H. Klein
Mr. and Mrs. Robert V.
KleinschmidtMr. and Mrs. Harry J. Klotz
Mrs. Felix W. KnauthMrs. W. S. Knickerbocker
Mr. Frederick K. KochIn Memory of
Annie Liebman KopfMiss Sara Krivitsky
Mr. J.Frederick Krokyn
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
jkfr. and Mrs.
Hans T. KrotoMrs. George W. Kuehnklr. and Mrs.I David H. F. Kuell, Jr.
klr. Daniel KuntzMiss Margaret Kyle
Jvirs. Charles V. Labovitz
IjVfrs. Morris F. LaCroixMrs. Alexander H. LaddJlMiss Aimee L'Africain
IMiss Alice E. LampreyJMr. Clement R. LamsonMrs. Gardiner M. LaneiJMiss Margaret Ruthven LangMr. and Mrs.
William L. LangerMrs. Herbert F. LangleyjMiss Julia LarimerIMiss Elizabeth Lasell
JMr. and Mrs.Henry A. Laughlin
Mrs. Charles E. Lauriat
Mrs. Charles H. LawrenceMr. and Mrs.
James Lawrence, Jr.
Mrs. John S. LawrenceMr. and Mrs.
Stanley H. LawtonLazarus Charitable TrustMrs. Frederic K. Leatherbee
Dr. Kenneth E. LeBaronDr. Paul B. LeBaronMrs. Halfdan LeeMiss Helene G. LeeMrs. Herbert C. LeeMrs. Joseph Lee, Sr.
Mrs. Richard M. LeeDr. and Mrs. Roger I. LeeMr. and Mrs. Frank LeederMr. H. LehnerMr. and Mrs. Eugene LehnerMiss Elizabeth Carter LelandMrs. William G. LennoxMr. and Mrs. Bryan LeonardDr. Henry H. LernerMrs. H. Frederick LeshMrs. Bernard S. Leslie
Mrs. Horace H. Lester
Mr. Herman LeventhalMrs. Harry LeviMrs. Colman LevinMrs. Francis LevinMr. I. Norman LevinMr. and Mrs. Myer J.
Levin
Mrs. Carlisle LevineMr. and Mrs. Harry Levine
Dr. Julius H. LevineDr. and Mrs.
Samuel A. LevineMrs. Frederick Jefferson
LeviseurMr. and Mrs. Frank M. Lewis
Mrs. George LewisMrs. George Lewis, Jr.
Miss Lillian K. LewisMr. Philip B. LewisMrs. Louis LibmanMiss Constance E. LinbergMr. and Mrs.
Alexander LincolnMrs. Allan P. LindbladMiss Edith LindblomMiss Ruth LindblomMr. and Mrs.
Mark LinenthalMr. Bertram K. Little
Dr. Brian Little
Mrs. Harry B. Little
Mrs. Leon M. Little
Miss Marion O. Little
Mr. and Mrs.Thomas W. Little
Mrs. Rudolf LobMrs. Ernest P. LockeMrs. Dunbar LockwoodMrs. H. deForest LockwoodMiss Lena W. LockwoodDr. Halsey B. LoderMrs. George W. LoganMrs. E. Frothingham
LombardMrs. Laurence M. LombardMrs. Jack I. LondonDr. and Mrs.
W. T. LongcopeMrs. Robert H. LoomisMrs. W. H. LordMr. and Mrs.
Atherton Loring, Jr.
Miss Marjorie C. Loring
Miss Miriam LoringMr. Richard LoudMrs. Frederick H. Lovejoy
Mr. Winslow H. Loveland
Mr. Richard H. Lovell
Miss Kathleen M. Lovely
Mrs. Ernest Lovering
Mrs. F. E. Lowell
Mr. Stephen B. LuceMrs. Lela A. LumianMrs. Joseph W. LundMrs. John A. LunnMrs. George P. LuntMr. and Mrs. Lea S. Luquer
Mr. Jonathan Lurie
Miss Linda Lurie
Mrs. Reuben L. Lurie
Mrs. Willard B. Luther
Miss Alma Lutz
Mrs. Charles Peirson LymanMr. and Mrs.
G. H. Lyman, Jr.
Mrs. George H. Lyman, Sr.
Mrs. Harrison F. LymanMrs. Henry LymanMrs. Frank A. Lvnch
Mrs. Jesse H. LynchMiss Blanche E. LyonMrs. George Armstrong
LyonMiss Mary Frances Lyons
Mrs. Alexander S.
MacDonaldMrs. B. D. MacdonaldMrs. Walter G. MacDonaldMrs. John MacDuffie 2ndMrs. E. S. MacGregorMiss Jeanne MacGregorMr. Joseph N. MackMiss Joan MacKenzieMr. Lauchlin J.
MacKenzieMrs. Eldon MacLeodMiss Lizzie Lake
MacNeilMr. and Mrs.
Edward F. MacNicholMr. John R. MacomberMrs. L. W. MacomberMr. and Mrs.Elmore I. MacPhie
Mrs. Leo F. MadiganDr. and Mrs.
H. Kelvin Magill
Miss Kathryn B. Magill
Miss Elizabeth Maginnis
Mr. William Norris MagounMrs. Calvert MagruderMrs. Jane M. MaguireMiss Alice A. MainMrs. Stephen P. Mallett, Jr.
Mrs. Barbara B.Mallinckrodt
Mr. Frank M. MankerMrs. Earl G. ManningMiss Marion W. Mansfield
Mr. and Mrs. G. D. MarcyMr. and Mrs.
Philip S. MardenMr. and Mrs.
Bernard MarglinDr. and Mrs.
Herbert I. Margolis
Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph B. Margolis
Mr. and Mrs.
George A. Markell
Mrs. Samuel Markell
Miss Alice F. MarshMr. Charles E. Mason, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
H. Crandall MasonMiss H. Florence MasonMrs. Sydney R. MasonMr. and Mrs.
Eugene H. MatherMrs. Philip R. MatherMrs. Alfred Matless
till I
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Mrs. H. N. MatthewsMrs. J. L. MauranMrs. Hans MautnerMiss Anna R. MaxwellMiss Viola S. MayMr. Leo MayerMr. Robert W. MaynardMrs. Lawrence S. MayoMiss Lina A. MayoMr. and Mrs.
John McAndrewMiss Grace E. McClellandMr. Frederick M. McConnellMrs. Stanley R. McCormickMiss Catherine B. McCoyMiss Grace S. McCrearyMrs. Lewis S. McCrearyMiss Zorine McDonnellMiss Alice McDowellMr. and Mrs.
J. Franklin McElwainMrs. Holden McGinleyMrs. Alfred R. MclntyreMrs. Allyn B. MclntireMiss Emily W. McKibbinDr. and Mrs.
John B. McKittrickDr. and Mrs.
Leland S. McKittrickMr. and Mrs.
L. S. McKittrick, Jr.
Mrs. Hugh D. McLellanMrs. Harold McNeillMiss Jean McPheeDr. J. Howard MeansMr. Frank E. MeehanMiss Jane S. MegrewMrs. Joseph Vincent MeigsMr. and Mrs.
Metcalf W. MelcherMiss Ida MeltzerMrs. S. Peter Melville
Mr. and Mrs.Irving R. Merriam
Mrs. R. C. MerriamMr. and Mrs. C. H. S. Merrill
Mr. Ezra Merrill
Mr. Henry W. Merrill
Mrs. Roger B. MerrimanMr. Nestor Merritt
Mrs. Herbert B. MerserMrs. George Putnam Metcalf
Mr. and Mrs.Thomas N. Metcalf
Mr. Henry H. Meyer, Jr.
Mrs. Hilda MeyerMr. and Mrs. John J. MeyerDr. Jost J. Michelsen
Mr. and Mrs.Harry S. Middendorf
Mr. and Mrs. Boris Migliori
Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Milender
Mrs. Joseph L. Milhender
[52]
Mr. Roger MilkmanMr. and Mrs.
Alton L. MillerMrs. J. F. G. Miller
Mrs. V. Rogers Miller
Mrs. Stanley R. Miller
Mrs. Joseph K. MillikenMr. Harry MilmanDr. and Mrs.
LeRoy M. S. MinerMrs. George R. MinotMrs. Herman A. MintzDr. Samuel MintzMr. Stewart MitchellMrs. Arthur G. MittonMrs. Charles G. MixterMrs. Samuel MixterDr. and Mrs.
William Jason MixterMr. and Mrs. Elmer B. ModeMrs. Richard MoerschnerMr. and Mrs. Georges MoleuxMiss Lucille MonaghanDr. and Mrs.
John P. MonksMr. Fred MonossonMrs. Hugh MontgomeryMrs. James A. MontgomeryMr. John MontgomeryMr. and Mrs.
Spencer B. MontgomeryMrs. Edward C. MooreMiss Eva M. MooreMiss Marguerite MooreMr. and Mrs.
W. J. Moore, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. John F. MoorsMiss Betty Jo MoranMr. and Mrs.
Daniel MordecaiMr. and Mrs.
Leonard MordecaiMrs. Dorothea MorettiMr. John Singleton Copley
MorganMr. Vincent MorganProfessor and Mrs.
Samuel Eliot MorisonMiss Mary A. MorleyMr. and Mrs.
Otto MorningstarMrs. R. H. MorrisMrs. Alva MorrisonMiss Gertrude MorrisonMr. and Mrs.
Arthur H. MorseMiss Charlotte G. S. MorseMrs. Herbert B. MorseMr. J.
Robert MorseMiss J. G. MorseMrs. James F. MorseMr. John F. MorseMrs. Julius C. MorseMiss Leonice S. Morse
Miss Marianne MorseMr. and Mrs.
Robert G. MorseMr. Robert M. MorseMrs. Henry A. MorssMr. and Mrs.
Henry A. Morss, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip R. M01Mrs. Evelyn H. MortonMr. and Mrs.
William F. MortonMiss Helen C. MoseleyMrs. Percival MottMr. Jasper R. MoultonMiss Emily MountzMiss Helen MountzMrs. James T. MountzMr. and Mrs.
Penfield MowerDr. and Mrs.
S. Richard MuellnerMrs. George S. MumfordMrs. George S. Mumford, Ji
Mrs. James A. MunroeMrs. T. B. MunroeMiss Margaret MunsterbergMrs. Kenneth B. MurdockThe Reverend
Edward G. MurrayMrs. Henry A. MurrayIn Memory of
Mrs. Lucy S. RantoulMrs. Ronald W. MurrayMr. Ronald W. MurrayMiss Mildred MuscantoMr. and Mrs. Max I. MydaiMr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Myers
Miss Marcia NadellMr. Peter H. NashMr. and Mrs. Israel NasherMr. and Mrs.
Joseph B. NathanMrs. Edward NathansonMiss Mabel R. NathansonMiss Esther NazarianMrs. James A. NealMr. and Mrs. Carlisle Neff
Miss Helen S. Neill
Miss Adeline C. M. Nelson
Mrs. Harris J. NelsonMrs. Saul NestonMiss Katherine NewboldMr. Clifford E. NewellMrs. James M. NewellMrs. Walter H. NeweyMrs. Charles A. NewhallMrs. Samuel J. NewmanMr. and Mrs.
Edwin M. NewtonMr. and Mrs.
Harland B. NewtonMr. Acosta Nichols
Mrs. Henry J. Nichols
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Miss M. M. NicholsAirs. William G. Nickerson
| Mrs. John T. NightingaleMiss Nina NightingaleMrs. Harold L. Niles
Miss Joan NilsonMiss Ruby NilsonAliss Helen NimsMiss Edna NitkinBishop F. S. NoliMrs. Hyman NollmanMrs. Edward W. NorrisMiss Ruth E. NorrisMrs. Richard D. NorthropMrs. Charles F. NortonMrs. E. Russell NortonMiss Annie Endicott NourseMiss Dorothy F. NourseDr. and Mrs.
H. Allan NovackMiss Penelope B. NoyesMr. Charles R. NutterMr. Richard P. Nyquist
Mrs. Francis J. OakesMiss Lillie M. OBrienMiss Dorothy OcnoffMiss Martha OestmannMrs. Thomas Courtney
O'HareDr. W. Richard OhlerMr. Otto OldenbergMrs. Phylis Rome OlianMiss Carolyn OlmstedMiss Margaret OlmstedMrs. Morris OmanskyMrs. Joseph OppenheimMr. and Mrs.
William Dana OrcuttMrs. Herbert F. Otis
Mrs. Richard H. OverholtMrs. Frank Sewall Owen
Miss Marjorie T. PackardMrs. Louis F. PaddisonMiss Elizabeth A. PageMiss Grace D. PaineThe Reverend
George L. PaineMiss Elsie M. PaineMiss Jessie G. PaineMrs. John A. PaineMrs. John B. PaineMr. and Mrs.
Richard C. PaineMiss Ruth H. PaineMrs. Stephen PaineMrs. John G. Palfrey
Mrs. Franklin H. PalmerMiss J. G. PalmerMrs. A. M. PappenheimerMiss Delphina Parenti
Mrs. Charles E. ParkMrs. Edward C. ParkMiss Marion E. Park
Mrs. Augustin H. Parker, Jr.Mrs. Cortlandt ParkerMrs. Edward M. ParkerMiss Eleanor Gilbert ParkerMiss Harriet F. ParkerMrs. J. Harleston ParkerMrs. Robert B. ParkerMrs. William Stanley
ParkerMrs. John ParkinsonMiss Mary Parlett
Mrs. Ernst M. ParsonsMr. and Mrs.
Talcott ParsonsMr. Claude E. PatchMr. and Mrs. Isaac PatchMr. and Mrs.
Isaac Patch, Jr.
Mrs. Loomis PatrickMrs. James E. PattonMiss Amelia PeabodyMrs. Harold PeabodyMr. and Mrs.
Robert E. PeabodyMrs. W. Rodman PeabodyMiss Alice W. PearseThe Reverend and Mrs.
C. R. PeckMr. and Mrs.
Alexander I. PeckhamMiss Katharine E. Peirce
Mrs. Lawrence F. Percival
Mrs. Charles B. PerkinsMiss Charlotte C. Perkins
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Perkins
Dr. and Mrs.
Palfrey Perkins
Mrs. Thomas Nelson Perkins
Miss Elisabeth B.
PerlmuterMiss Lena G. Perrigo
Mrs. John Perrin
Mr. Arthur PerryMr. Donald I. Perry
Mr. Donald P. Perry
Mrs. E. I. PerryMiss Edith M. Perry
Mrs. Edward K. Perry
Mrs. Henry H. Perry
Miss Jacqueline M. Perry
Dr. and Mrs. Lewis Perry
Professor Ralph BartonPerry
Mrs. Roger A. Perry
Mr. and Mrs.Constantin A. Pertzoff
Mrs. Everett W. Pervere
Mr. and Mrs.Arthur R. Peterson
Mrs. Franklin T. Pfaelzer
Mr. and Mrs.
George J.Pfannenstiehl
Mrs. John S. Pfeil
Miss Marguerite Pfleghaar
Mrs. Louis E. 1'lianeuf
Mrs. Merchant PhilbrickMrs. John C. Phillips
Mrs. Whitmarsh Phillips
Hon. and Mrs.William Phillips
Mrs. Richard D. PhippeilMr. C. Marvin Pickett, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.Dudley L. Pickman
Mrs. William Stanwood I'icr
Mr. Edward Franklin Pierce
Mr. Henry L. Pierce
Miss Louisa Q. Pierce
Mrs. Paul J. W. Pigors
Dr. and Mrs.Charles G. Pike
Mrs. Samuel H. Pillsbury
Professor and Mrs.Walter Piston
Mr. Paul R. Plant
Mr. John A. PlummerMr. Ralph Pollan
Dr. and Mrs.E. M. Pollard
Miss Alice F. PoorDr. and Mrs. Alfred PopeDr. and Mrs. Carlyle PopeMiss Isabel PopeMrs. Wilmot T. PopeMr. Frederic T. Poras
Mrs. A. Kingsley Porter
Mrs. Alex S. Porter
Mr. Alexander B. Porter
Mr. F. J. Porter
Mrs. John R. Post
Mrs. Murray A. Potter
Mrs. Robert S. Potter, Jr.
Mrs. George H. PowersDr. George C. Prather
Mrs. Burleigh L. Pratt
Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin H. B. Pratt
Mrs. Frederick S. Pratt
Mrs. Louis Mortimer Pratt
Mrs. W. Elliott Pratt
Mrs. Charles Preisigke
Mrs. Michael T. Prendergast
Miss Minnie A. Prescott
Miss Alice A. Preston
Mr. Roger Preston
Miss Virginia PrettymanMr. and Mrs
Edward W. Pride
Mrs. John PridgeonMiss Annie E. Priest
Mrs. Charles A. Proctor
Mr. and Mrs.Edward O. Proctor
Mr. and Mrs. ThomasEmerson Proctor, 2nd
Miss Joan Projansky
Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob K. Prombain
[53]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Dr. and Mrs. Curtis ProutMrs. Henry B. ProutMrs. Lewis I. ProutyMrs. Henri PrunaretMrs. S. W. PrussianMr. Ernest Pulsifer
Mr. and Mrs.C. Phillips Purdy
Miss Hazel M. PurmortMiss Augusta N. PutnamMrs. F. Delano PutnamMrs. George PutnamMiss Louisa H. PutnamDr. Marian C. PutnamMrs. Theresa Putnam
Mrs. Samuel T. Quint
Mrs. John RabaiottiMr. and Mrs.
Irving W. RabbMrs. Sidney RabbMrs. Anna RabinowitzRadcliffe Choral SocietyMiss Bertha RamseyerMrs. C. Theodore RamseyerMiss Elizabeth S. RamseyerMiss Frieda RandMrs. Robert P. RandMiss Eleanor E. RandallMiss Alice L. RankinMrs. Endicott RantoulMiss Harriet C. RantoulMrs. Theresa S. RatsheskyMiss Eleanor RaymondMrs. Eugene Tryon RedmondMrs. Franklin A. ReeceMiss Mabel S. ReedMrs. A. William ReggioMiss Margaret G. ReillyMiss Mary Ellen ReillyMiss Mary Louise ReillyDr. Anna J. ReinauerMrs. H. S. ReynoldsMiss Ida G. ReynoldsMiss Elizabeth E. RhateganMrs. Charles A. RheaultMrs. Winfred RhoadesMr. and Mrs.
J. B. RibakoffMiss Saidee F. RicciusMr. and Mrs. Albert W. RiceMr. and Mrs. Harold RiceMrs. Chester F. RichMr. Charles O. RichardsonMiss Laura RichardsonMiss Mabel C. RichardsonMrs. J. B. RichmondMr. and Mrs. M. RichmondMiss Edith M. RideoutMr. and Mrs.
Julian S. Rifkin
Miss Sybil RighterMiss Mabel Louise RileyMrs. Charles P. RimmerMr. and Mrs. Karl RisslandMiss Carol M. RitchieDr. and Mrs. Max RitvoMadame Simone RiviereMrs. Russell Robb, Sr.
Miss Harriet A. RobesonMiss Phyllis RobbinsMr. F. N. RobinsonMr. and Mrs.
G. Elliott RobinsonMiss Gertrude B. RobinsonMr. Robert S. RockwellDr. Ethel M. RockwoodMrs. Horatio RogersMr. and Mrs.
Julian W. RogersMis. .Leslie J. RogersMiss Lucy F. RogersMiss Marion L. RogersMiss Martha RogersMrs. James W. RollinsDr. and Mrs.
Eli Charles RombergMrs. Stanley H. RoodMrs. Caroline S. RopesMr. and Mrs. Edward RoseMiss Mildred H. RoseMr. and Mrs.
Lester E. RosenburgMrs. Morris RosenthalDr. and Mrs. Joseph RossDr. and Mrs. R. A. RossMr. and Mrs.
Thorvald S. RossMr. Morris RothsteinMiss Mary S. RousmaniereMr. Richard D. RowMr. James G. RowellMrs. Charles F. RowleyMrs. H. W. RowseMr. and Mrs.
C. Adrian RubelMr. Philip RubensteinMr. and Mrs.
David N. RubinMrs. A. W. RuckerMrs. Carl RudnickMrs. John T. RuleMrs. John C. RunkleMrs. Percy P. RussMrs. James S. Russell
Miss Margaret W. Russell
Mr. Morley Russell
Mrs. Otis T. Russell
Mr. and Mrs.Richard S. Russell
Mrs. Robert W. Russell
Mr. Tallman Russell
In Memory of
Mrs. William F. Ryan
Miss Tyyne Saari
Miss Mary L. SabineProfessor Paul J. SachsMr. George A. SagendorphDr. A. L. SagoffMiss Elizabeth SaltonstallMr. John L. SaltonstallHon. and Mrs.
Leverett Saltonstall
Mr. and Mrs.Richard Saltonstall
Mrs. George E. SampsonMr. and Mrs.
H. LeBaron SampsonMiss Helen M. SampsonMrs. Mary M. SampsonMrs. E. J. SamsonMr. and Mrs.
Ashton R. SanbornMr. and Mrs. H. C. SanbornMrs. Edmund SandarsMrs. Hayward SandersMr. Eliot SandsMiss Dorothy J. SanfordMr. F. Porter SargentMrs. Frank M. SawtellMrs. C. A. SawyerMrs. Henry B. SawyerMrs. William H. SawyerMrs. Robert W. Sayles
Mr. and Mrs.R. W. Sayles, Jr.
Mrs. Bertram F. ScheffreenMr. William L. SchermerhoiMr. Robert A. ScheuermannDr. and Mrs.
J. W. SchirmerMr. Paul A. SchmidMiss Elizabeth SchneiderMr. Harold SchwabMr. Carol L. SchwartzMr. Donald Scott
Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Scott
Mrs. John ScrimshawMr. Campbell L. Searle
Miss Edith H. Sears
Miss Evelyn Sears
Mrs. Francis P. Sears
Mrs. John B. Sears
Miss Leila Sears
Mrs. Richard Sears
Mrs. James D. SeaverMiss Helen C. Secrist
Mr. and Mrs.Samuel M. Seegal
Dr. and Mrs.Maurice S. Segal
Mr. Samuel Seiniger
Dr. and Mrs.B. M. Selekman
Mrs. Henry SetonMrs. H. R. Sewell
Dr. Rose Wies ShainMr. Morris Shapiro
[54]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Dr. and Mrs.George C. Shattuck
Mrs. Mayo Adams Shattuck
Miss Caroline N. ShawMr. Louis Agassiz Shaw, II
Miss Miriam ShawMrs. Quincy A. Shaw, Jr.
Mrs. Sohier ShawMr. and Mrs. T. Mott ShawMrs. Donna E. Shay
Mrs. Winthrop L. Sheedy
Mrs. Anna G. Shelander
Miss Emily B. Shepard
Mrs. Frederick J.Shepard, Jr.
Mrs. Henry B. Shepard
Miss Alice ShermanMiss Edith E. ShermanMiss Carrie E. Sherrill
Mrs. John Shillito
Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Shocket
Mrs. Seabury T. Short
Mr. J. W. Shoul
Miss Gertrude H. Shurtleff
Dr. and Mrs.Benjamin F. Sieve
Mrs. Alfred Sigel
Miss Barbara K. Sikes
Miss Olive Simes
Dr. Fred SimmMrs. Edward B. SimmonsMr. Benjamin SimonMrs. Mildred Simons
Miss Elizabeth Singleton
Mr. Jean Sisson
Mrs. L. I. Skuball
Mrs. Robert Slater
Mrs. John J.Slattery
Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Slosberg
Mrs. Gilbert Small
Miss Helen H. Smiley
Mrs. A. Calvert SmithMiss A. Marguerite Smith
Mr. and Mrs.
Alan A. SmithMrs. C. A. SmithMrs. C. B. SmithMrs. Charles L. SmthMrs. Edward A. Smith, Jr.
Miss Ethanne E. SmithMrs. F. Morton SmithMrs. Frank C. Smith, Jr.
Mrs. George Gilbert Smith
Mr. Graydon SmithMiss Helen B. SmithMr. Louis C. SmithMiss Mary Byers SmithMrs. S. Abbot SmithDr. and Mrs.
Richard Ilsley SmithMrs. Stanley W. SmithLt. Thomas W. SmithDr. and Mrs.
M. N. Smith-Petersen
Mrs. H. Weir Smyth
Mrs. Frederick W. SnowMr. and Mrs.
William B. SnowDr. Chester I. SolomonDr. H. C. SolomonDr. Philip SolomonMr. and Mrs. Dana SomesMr. W. R. SomersMr. Henry M. SondheimThe Sonnabend FoundationMrs. Willard B. SoperDr. and Mrs.
Merrill SosmanMrs. Horace H. Soule, Sr.
Miss Leonora N. SouleMiss Lucia A. Soule
Mr. T. L. SouthackMr. Harry C. SouthardMrs. Huntley Nowell
SpauldingMiss Dorothy SpelmanMrs. Henry M. SpelmanMrs. W. Frederick SpenceMrs. Wilford L. Spencer
Mrs. Willard L. Sperry
Mrs. Charles H. Spilman, Sr.
Miss Edna G. Spitz
Mr. and Mrs.
Julian K. SpragueMrs. Phineas W. Sprague
Mrs. Romney Spring
Mrs. Charles G. SquibbMrs. Pierpont L. Stackpole
Mr. and Mrs.Frederick L. Stagg
Mrs. Richard Stall
Mrs. Arthur B. Stanley
Mr. and Mrs.Creighton B. Stanwood
Miss Faith StanwoodMrs. Frederic A. Stanwood
Mr. and Mrs.
Alvin D. Star
Mrs. Max Starr
Miss Anna B. Stearns
Mr. and Mrs.
Philip M. Stearns
Mrs. Russell Stearns
Mrs. Harry B. Stebbins
Mrs. Roderick Stebbins
Miss Mabel A. E. Steele
Miss Harriet A. Steensen
Mr. H. A. Steeves
Mr. and Mrs. B. Stein
Mr. and Mrs. Henry J.Stein
Mrs. Herbert L. Stein
Mr. Samuel Stein
Mrs. Alexander Steinert
Miss Pearl M. Steinmetz
Mrs. Samuel Stellar
Mrs. Preston T. Stephenson
Mrs. W. R. C. Stephenson
Mrs. Abbot Stevens
Mrs. Ames Stevens
Mrs. Brooks Stevens, Jr.
Mrs. Frank H. Stevens, Jr.
Miss Lena M. Stevens
Mrs. Raymond Stevens
Mrs. Robert H. Stevenson
Mr. Robert W. StewartMr. Rufus Stickney
Mr. and Mrs.
Howell M. Stillman
Mrs. Philip Stockton
Mrs. Clement K. Stodder
Mr. and Mrs.
David G. Stone
Mr. and Mrs.Dewey D. Stone
Mr. Edward C. Stone
Mrs. Joseph Stone
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stone
Miss Katharine H. Stone
Mr. and Mrs. Leo Stone
Mrs. Malcolm B. Stone
Mr. and Mrs.
Robert M. Stone
Mr. and Mrs.Stephen A. Stone
Mrs. David StonemanMiss Elizabeth B. Storer
Mrs. Otto G. T. Straub
Mrs. Louis Strauss
Mr. and Mrs.
Jacob H. Strauss
Mrs. Vcevold W.Strekalovsky
Mr. Charles R. Strickland
Miss Lucy C. Sturgis
Miss Mabel Sturgis
Miss Elizabeth B. SturmMrs. Sydney SugarmanMiss Elisabeth M. Sullivan
Mr. John M. Sullivan
Miss Ethel F. SwanMrs. H. Hogarth SwannMr. and Mrs.
Edward M. Swartz
Miss Helen Bernice Sweeney
Mrs. Homer N. Sweet
Miss G. Marion Swift
Mrs. George H. Swift
Mrs. John B. Swift, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.
Edward A. Taft
Mr. and Mrs.Edward A. Taft, Jr.
Mrs. Charles W. Taintor
Miss B. TalbotMiss Beatrice Talbot
Mrs. Edmund H. Talbot
Dr. and Mrs.
Fritz B. Talbot
Miss Mary Eloise Talbot
Dr. and Mrs.Nathan B. Talbot
Mrs. Robert M. Tappan
[55]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Mr. and Mrs.Frederick Tauber
Mr. and Mrs.Charles H. Taylor
Miss Margaret E. TaylorMiss Millicent J. TaylorMrs. John W. TeeleMrs. Albert B. TenneyMrs. Ruth K. TerryMiss Helen I. TetlowMiss Elisabeth B. ThacherMr. and Mrs.
Louis B. ThacherMiss Mary ThacherDr. and Mrs.
Richard W. ThalerMr. John ThalheimerMiss Harriet F. ThayerMrs. Lucius E. ThayerMrs. Sherman Rand ThayerMiss Atossa B. ThomasMr. and Mrs.
William B. ThomasMr. E. Whitney ThompsonDr. and Mrs.
Richard H. ThompsonMrs. Elihu ThomsonMr. and Mrs.
John L. ThorndikeMiss Mary Q. ThorndikeMrs. Richard K. ThorndikeIn Memory of
Mrs. Lucy S. RantoulMiss Augusta ThorntonMiss Alice A. ThorpMr. Daniel G. ThurmanMiss Grace A. TibbetsMiss E. Katharine TiltonMiss Elizabeth TiltonMrs. George H. TimminsMrs. Harold G. TobeyMiss Mary B. TobeyDr. Rudolf TochMr. and Mrs. John M. TombMiss Kaye TorrantMiss Katharine TouseyMrs. Oswald TowerMrs. Russell B. TowerMiss Annie R. TownsendMiss Elizabeth TownsendProfessor and Mrs.
Alfred M. TozzerMrs. E. M. TracyMiss Jessie C. Travis
Miss Emma G. TreadwellMiss G. W. TreadwellMrs. George W. TreatMrs. Harold J. TrippMiss Ruth TuckerMrs. Bayard Tuckerman, Jr.
Mrs. Henry Dubois TudorMrs. Peter Turchon, Jr.
Mrs. Peter Turchon
[56]
Miss Dora TuritzMr. and Mrs.
Howard M. TurnerMrs. H. A. TuttleMiss Marion L. TylerMrs. R. W. TylerMrs. Griswold TyngMrs. Helen V. Tyrode
Dr. Miriam S. UdinMrs. Israel UditskyMr. and Mrs. H. B. UllianMr. and Mrs. Irving UsenMrs. Kenneth Shaw Usher
Mr. Daniel R. VershbowMr. Herman VershbowMrs. Leon VillmontMrs. I. E. VitkinMiss Doris VollandMrs. Cushing Vose
Mrs. Winthrop WadeMrs. R. G. WadsworthMrs. William WadsworthMiss Eva K. WagnerDr. and Mrs. Hans WaineMrs. Hooper WakefieldDr. Byron H. WaksmanMrs. Charles F. WalcottMrs. Richard WalcottMr. Robert WalcottMr. and Mrs. I. B. WaldMiss Ruth N. WaldronMr. William A. WaldronMrs. Samuel H. WaldsteinMiss Alice S. WalesMr. and Mrs.
Quincy W. WalesMrs. Frederick B. WalkerMrs. Harry H. WalkerMr. and Mrs.
Joseph T. WalkerMr. Percy L. WalkerMrs. William H. WalkerMr. M. W. WallaceMiss Sarah WalmsleyMrs. Howland WalterMiss Alice WaltonMiss Isabel WaltzMr. and Mrs. Adolf WalzMrs. Adeline W. WardMiss Frances Evelyn WardMrs. Sheldon WardwellMrs. Edward Winslow WareMr. Henry WareMrs. Guy WaringMrs. Roger S. WarnerMrs. Arthur M. WarrenMrs. Bayard WarrenMrs. George E. WarrenMiss Miriam E. Warren
Mrs. Prescott WarrenMr. Henry B. WashburnMrs. Joseph S. WatermanMr. and Mrs.
Ralph D. WatermanMrs. B. G. WatersMr. Richard M. WT
atersMrs. Richard P. WatersMiss Agnes WatkinsDr. and Mrs.
Carl L. WatsonMrs. Donald C. WatsonMrs. George H. WatsonMiss Sylvia H. WatsonMiss Sarah L. WattersMiss Gertrude H. WattsMr. and Mrs.
Charles A. WeatherbyMrs. Florence WeberMrs. Edwin S. WebsterMiss Josephine WebsterMr. W. G. WebsterMr. and Mrs.
Albert H. WechslerMr. Charles F. WedenMrs. Arthur H. WeedMiss Clarice J. WeedenMrs. D. R. WeedonMiss Mary WeeksMr. and Mrs. Sinclair WeeksMrs. F. Carrington WeemsMrs. Alfred R. WeinbergMr. and Mrs.
Louis S. WeinbergMr. and Mrs.
Moses WeinmanDr. and Mrs.
Joseph WeinrebeMr. and Mrs.
Nathan WeinsteinMiss Hedy WeissDr. and Mrs. Soma WeissMrs. E. Sohier WelchMr. and Mrs.
James O. WelchMrs. Robert H. Welch, Jr.
Mrs. Bernard C. WeldMiss Elizabeth Rodman WekMrs. Arthur W. WellingtonMr. and Mrs.
Raynor G. WellingtonMiss Virginia WellingtonMrs. A. Turner WellsMr. and Mrs. George B. WellMrs. Barrett Wendell, Jr.
Miss Barbara H. WestMrs. George S. WestMr. and Mrs.
Cyril WetherallMiss Martha WetherbeeMrs. Daniel B. WetherellMrs. Lawrence H. WetherellMr. and Mrs.
C. A. Weyerhaeuser
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Mrs. William P. WhartonMiss Mary WheatlandMrs. Stephen WheatlandMiss Adaline E. WheelerMr. and Mrs.
Alexander WheelerMr. and Mrs.
Clarence B. WheelerMr. Edward C. WheelerMiss Eunice WheelerMrs. Henry WheelerMr. and Mrs.
Leonard WheelerMr. George W. Wheelwright;Dr. and Mrs.
Charles J. WhiteMrs. Charles P. White!Mrs. Eva W. WhiteMiss Esther WhiteMrs. Frank S. White
I Mrs. Henry K. WhiteMr. James N. WhiteMiss Marian E. White{Miss Anne WhitemanMr. Homer WhitfordiMrs. James E. WhitinMrs. Jasper WhitingfMrs. Mason T. Whiting'Mrs. Howard S. Whitley; Miss Dorothy Whitman•Mrs. Raymond L. Whitman' Mrs. Byam Whitney' Mrs. C. Handasyde Whitney! Miss Margaret Whitney\ Mrs. Henry E. Whittemorel Mr. and Mrs.
Robinson WhittenMr. Nathaniel Whittier
; Mrs. Sidney B. Whittier1 Mrs. Frederick S. WhitwellI Mrs. Robert G. WieseI Mrs. Morrill WigginI Mr. Richmond G. Wight
IMrs.Rufus L. Wilbor
Miss Katherine Wilkins
Mr. Marshall S. WilkinsHon. Raymond S. WilkinsMr. Warde WilkinsMiss Alice H. WillauerMr. Alexander W. WilliamsMiss Hilda W. WilliamsMrs. Horace D. H. WilliamsDr. and Mrs.
John T. WilliamsMiss Margaret C. WilliamsMiss Marion WilliamsMrs. Moses WilliamsMrs. Oliver E. WilliamsMrs. Ralph B. Williams, Sr.
Mrs. Ralph B. Williams, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs.Robert S. Williams
Miss Clara R. WilliamsonMiss Margaret WilliamsonMrs. Arthur Willis, Jr.
Mrs. H. B. Willis
Miss Ruth C. Willis
Dr. Edward P. WilmerMrs. Wesley P. WilmontMr. and Mrs.
Albert O. WilsonMrs. Edward Chase WilsonMiss Eleanor WilsonMr. and Mrs.
Grafton Lee WilsonMiss Florence B. WindomMr. Irving WinerMr. and Mrs.
Samuel WinetzkyMr. Frederick WinslowMrs. Allen P. WinsorMrs. Frederick WinsorComte and Comtesse
M. R. deH. WinstonDr. Rose WinstonMr. and Mrs.
Frederic WinthropSarah T. Winthrop
Memorial FundMrs. William M. Wise
Mrs. George B. WislockiMr. and Mrs. Maxwell D. WitMrs. P. C. WithersMrs. S. Burt WolbachMr. and Mrs. Oliver WolcottMr. and Mrs. Roger WolcottMr. Jules WolffersMr. Cornelius A. WoodMiss Rosamond A. WoodMrs. William L. WoodburyMiss Beatrice S. WoodmanMr. and Mrs.
G. Wallace WoodworthMrs. Edith Christiana
WoolleyMiss Constance Rulison
WorcesterMrs. M. I. WoythalerMr. and Mrs.
George L. Wrenn, 2ndMr. Philip W. WrennMiss Elizabeth P. WrightMrs. John G. WrightMrs. Walter P. WrightMrs. Edgar N. WrightingtonMrs. Frederick R. WulsinMr. Dann Coriat WymanMrs. Edward Wyner
Miss Mary E. Yassin
Mr. H. H. YeamesMr. Sidney R. Yoffe
Miss Anna YoungDr. and Mrs.
Edward L. YoungMrs. Henry Melvin YoungMr. and Mrs.
Herman A. Young
Mr. George ZakonMrs. Percy Rolfe Ziegler
List of Non-Resident Members for Season 1952-1953
Mr. and Mrs. George Abrich—Rhode Island
Mrs. Laurence Achilles—Connecticut
Mrs. William Ackerman—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Eugene E. Adams—New York
iColonel and Mrs. Walter Adler—Rhode Island
Mr. Hugh B. Allison—Rhode Island
Mr. Lloyd V. Almirall—New YorkMiss Evelyn Amann—New Jersey
Colonel John L. Ames, Jr.—New YorkDr. and Mrs. John L. Ames—New York
Mrs. Robert R. Ames—MaineMrs. Copley Amory—Washington, D.C.
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Anderson-Rhode Island
Mr. Philip T. Andrews—Rhode Island
Mrs. R. Edwards Annin—Rhode Island
Mr. A. J. Arnstein—New YorkMr. and Mrs. George C. Arvedson—Michigan
Mr. Seymour R. Askin—New York
Mr. Donald S. Babcock—Rhode Island
Mr. J. Deming Bacon—Rhode Island
Mrs. Cornelia M. Baekeland—New York
Mrs. Harvey A. Baker—Rhode Island
Mrs. Edward L. Ballard—New York
Mr. and Mrs. Norman V. Ballou—Rhode Island
Mr. Frederick G. Balz—New Jersey
Mrs. Paul Bardach—Rhode Island
Miss Mary Margaret H. Barr—New Jersey
[57]
fRIENDb OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Mrs. Frederick O. Bartlett—Rhode Island
Miss Helen L. Bass—New Jersey
Dr. Reuben L. Bates—Rhode Island
Mr. Emil J. Baumann—New YorkMr. Gerald F. Beal-New YorkMr. and Mrs. Jean Bedetti—FloridaBeethoven Club of Providence—Rhode Island
Mrs. Frank Begrisch—New YorkBeinecke Foundation—New YorkMrs. Haughton Bell—New YorkMiss Helen Chrystat Bender—New Jersey
Mr. Elliot S. Benedict—New YorkDr. and Mrs. Emanuel W. Benjamin-
Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Herbert Bennett, Jr.—Illinois
Mrs. Winchester Bennett—ConnecticutMr. and Mrs. Aaron W. Berg—New Jersey
Mrs. Henri L. Berger—ConnecticutMr. Louis K. Berman—New YorkMr. Myer Berman—New HampshireMrs. Henry J. Bernheim—New YorkMrs. Sylvan Bernstein—New YorkDr. Frank B. Berry—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Henry Beston—MaineMiss Dorothy L. Betts—New YorkMr. Rene Bickart—New YorkMrs. Arthur W. Bingham—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Sheldon L. Binns—MaineMrs. Max Binswanger—New YorkMiss Mary Piatt Birdseye—New YorkMiss Stella Bishop—New YorkMrs. Louis G. Bissell—New YorkMiss Edith C. Black—New YorkBlackstone Valley Music Teachers' Society-
Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Blauvelt—New YorkMisses Ada and Janet Blinkhorn—
Rhode Island
Hon. and Mrs. Robert Woods Bliss-
Washington, D.C.Mrs. Julius Blum—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Robert E. Blum—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Benjamin Bogin—ConnecticutMr. Edward L. Bonoff—New YorkMr. John C. Borden—New YorkMr. Adolphe E. Borie—CaliforniaMr. Alfred C. Bowman—New YorkMrs. E. S. R. Brandt-Rhode Island
Mr. T. W. Bresnahan—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Wallace W. Bridge—MaineMr. and Mrs. Charles Brier—Rhode Island
Miss Harriet M. Briggs—Rhode IslandMrs. Richard deN. Brixey—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Curtis B. Brooks—Rhode IslandMr. and Mrs. John Nicholas Brown-
Rhode Island
Mrs. Mabel Wolcott Brown—ConnecticutMiss Mary Loomis Brown—New YorkMiss Norvelle W. Browne—New YorkMiss Virginia F. Browne—ConnecticutMiss Ruth E. Buchan—Rhode Island
Miss R. Ethel Bugbee—Rhode Island
Mrs. Arthur M. Bullowa—New York
Dr. and Mrs. Alex M. Burgess—Rhode Isl
Mr. J. Campbell Burton—New YorkMiss Julia A. Butler—Connecticut
Mrs. Samuel Hyde Cabot—Rhode Island
Mr. John Hutchins Cady—Rhode Island
Miss Maria L. Camardo—Rhode Island
Mrs. Wallace Campbell—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew G. Carey—New YorkMrs. Otis Swan Carroll—New YorkMr. Ralph M. Carson—New YorkMrs. A. H. Carter—HawaiiMrs. John L. Carter—New JerseyDr. and Mrs. Francis H. Chaffee—
Rhode Island
Mrs. B. Duvall Chambers—South CarolinaMr. Jackson Chambers—New YorkChaminade Club—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Chasan—Rhode Islan
Miss Rosepha P. Chisholm—New YorkMiss Mabel Choate—New YorkChopin Club of Providence—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. Roger T. Clapp—Rhode Islan
Mr. and Mrs. Frederic S. Clark, Jr.—New YorMrs. Henry Cannon Clark—New YorkMiss Sydney Clarke—Rhode Island
Mrs. Sidney Clifford—Rhode Island
Miss Eloise Close—New YorkMrs. Henry E. Cobb—New YorkMr. William A. Coffin—New Jersey
Miss Dinah Cohen—New YorkMr. Wilfred P. Cohen—New YorkMiss C. Coleman—New YorkMr. V. U. Coletti-Perucca—ItalyMrs. Dayton Colie—New Jersey
Mr. Gilman Collier—New YorkMiss Genette T. Collins—Rhode Island
Mrs. George E. Comery—Rhode Island
Mrs. Arthur C. Comey—MaineMiss Alice M. Comstock—Rhode Island
Mrs. G. Maurice Congdon—Rhode Island
Mr. William G. Congdon—Rhode Island
Miss Margaret Conklin—PennsylvaniaMrs. W. P. Conklin—ConnecticutMiss Anne B. Connelly—New YorkMiss Luna B. Converse—VermontMrs. Francis R. Cooley—ConnecticutMrs. James E. Cooper—ConnecticutMrs. Adelaide T. Corbett—New YorkMiss Margaret Cranford—ConnecticutMiss Constance Crawford—New Jersey
Mr. and Mrs. Swasey Crocker—New YorkMrs. F. S. Crofts—ConnecticutMiss Esther S. Crosby—New YorkMrs. Gammell Cross—Rhode Island
Mrs. A. L. Crowell—ConnecticutMrs. Joseph H. Cull—Rhode Island
Mrs. Gurnee Cumming—New YorkDr. and Mrs. Morgan Cutts—Rhode Island
Miss Mary Daboll—Rhode Island
Mrs. Charles Whitney Dall—New YorkMrs. Murray S. Danforth—Rhode Island
Miss Mildred L. B. deBarritt—New York
[58]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
hi. Aaron W. Davis—New Yorkj/fr. Vincent Dempsey—Missourilr. W. W. Dempster—Rhode Island
lr. John Deveny—CaliforniaLfrs. Adrian G. Devine—New York,frs. Paul Churchill DeWolf-Rhode IslandF»liss Myrtle T. Dexter—Rhode Island/fr. and Mrs. Harvey Dickerman—New YorkAx. and Mrs. Robert E. Dietz—New York,Iiss Judith C. Dinell—;vfrs. Clarence C. Dittmer—New YorkIfrs. Charles W. Dodge—New Yorkvlrs. L. K. Doelling—New Yorkvfr. and Mrs. Max Doft—New York[)r. and Mrs. George B. Dorff—New Yorkvliss Rhea Doucette—New York[Virs. Robert B. Dresser—Rhode IslandMiss Marian Drury—ConnecticutMiss Beatrice Dunn—New YorkMiss Margaret B. Dykes—Rhode Island
Mrs. Henry C. Eaton—New HampshireMr. and Mrs. Nathan D. Eckstein—New York(Vfiss Edith W. Edwards—Rhode Island
;
Mr. and Mrs. William H. Edwards-Rhode Island
Mr. Louis H. Ehrlich—New YorkMrs. Herbert G. Einstein—New YorkDr. Arnold Eisendorfer—New YorkMrs. Edward Elliott—New JerseyMr. and Mrs. G. H. H. Emory—New YorkMiss Ruth E. Erb—New JerseyMrs. A. W. Erickson—New YorkMr. Irving N. Espo—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Esty—Rhode IslandMrs. William A. Evans—Michigan
Mr. and Mrs. Howard L. Fales—Rhode Island
Dr. Marynia F. Farnham—New YorkMiss Jocelyn Farr—New Jersey
Miss Ellen Faulkner—New YorkMr. E. M. Fay—Rhode Island
Mrs. W. Rodman Fay—New YorkMrs. S. L. Feiber—New YorkMrs. Dana H. Ferrin—New YorkMr. and Mrs. James M. Finch, Jr.—
ConnecticutMiss Louise M. Fish—Rhode Island
Miss Margaret Fisher—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Edward P. Fitch-
New HampshireMiss Mary R. Fitzpatrick—New YorkMiss Mary M. Flansburg—New HampshireMrs. Paul A. Fletcher—Rhode Island
Mrs. Oscar Foley—WashingtonMr. George L. Foote—New HampshireMr. Sumner Ford—New YorkMiss Helen Foster—New YorkMrs. F. C. Fowler—New Jersey
Miss Flora Fox—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Heywood Fox—ConnecticutMrs. Lewis W. Francis—New YorkMrs. Clarke F. Freeman—Rhode Island
Mrs. Edward L. Freeman—Rhode Island
Miss Elizabeth S. French—VermontMr. George P. Frenkel—New YorkMr. Arthur L. Friedman—New YorkMrs. Mary Friedman—New YorkMr. Stanleigh P. Friedman—New YorkMrs. Angelika W. Frink—New YorkMiss Helen Frisbie—ConnecticutMiss E. W. Frothingham—New YorkMiss Edna B. Fry—New JerseyMr. M. C. Fuller-New YorkMiss Margaret A. Fuller—Rhode Island
Mr. Murray Gartner—Rhode IslandMiss Regina A. Garvey—New JerseyMr. and Mrs. Edward J. Gately—Rhode IslandMiss Katharine R. Geddes—OhioMrs. Otto Gerdau—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Leo Gershman—Rhode IslandDr. Donald F. Gibson—ConnecticutMrs. Bessie Ginsburgh—New YorkMrs. P. H. Glassberg—New YorkMrs. R. H. I. Goddard, Jr.-Rhode IslandMrs. Barney M. Goldberg—Rhode Island
Miss Mary Golden—FloridaMiss H. Goldman—New Jersey
Mr. I. Edwin Goldwasser—New YorkMr. and Mrs. John D. Gordan—New YorkMrs. William S. Gordon—New YorkDr. Halina T. Gorski—New YorkMr. Harry Hale Goss—Rhode Island
D. S. and R. H. Gottesman Foundation-New York
Mr. Paul Gourary—New YorkMrs. Irving Graef—New YorkMr. Alfred H. Gray—New YorkMrs. Percy R. Gray—New YorkMrs. Thomas H. Gray, Jr.—VermontMiss Gilda Greene—Rhode Island
Mrs. H. M. Greene—ConnecticutMrs. Joseph Warren Greene, Jr.-
Rhode Island
Mrs. Marion Thompson Greene—New YorkMrs. Rosalind Greengard—New YorkMrs. W. B. Greenman—New YorkMrs. William Bates Greenough—Rhode Island
Mrs. Isador Greenwald—New YorkMrs. Ralph F. Greenwood—Rhode Island
Mrs. William Grenier—WyomingDr. Albert W. Grohoest—New YorkMr. and Mrs. George H. Gribbin—New YorkMr. Walter W. Gross—New YorkMrs. Morris Grossman—Rhode Island
Mr. Mortimer Grunauer—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Baldwin Guild—New YorkMrs. H. A. Guinsburg—New YorkMiss Bertha L. Gunterman—New YorkMrs. John T. Gyger—Maine
Mr. and Mrs. Morris Hadley—New YorkMiss Beatrice Hall—New YorkMr. Francis Hallowell—Connecticut
Mr. and Mrs. N. Penrose Hallowell—New York
Dr. Edmund H. Hamann—Connecticut
[59]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)Miss Edna R. Hamburger—New YorkMrs. Edward C. Hammond—ConnecticutMr. Frank R. Hancock—New YorkMiss Lowene Harding—New YorkMrs. F. M. G. Hardy—ConnecticutMrs. Henry C. Hart—Rhode IslandMiss Anna Hartmann—WisconsinMrs. Samuel C. Harvey—ConnecticutMiss Elizabeth Hatchett—New YorkMrs. Victor M. Haughton—New HampshireMr. Stuart Haupt—New YorkMrs. Harold B. Hayden—New YorkMiss Dorothy M. Hazard—Rhode IslandMrs. Irving Heidell—New YorkMrs. E. S. Heller—New YorkMr. George C. Hennigs—New YorkMrs. B. S. Herkimer—New YorkMrs. Percy V. Hill—MaineMr. and Mrs. Frederick Whiley Hilles—
ConnecticutMr. Robert L. Hilliard—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Samuel M. Himmelblau—
ConnecticutMr. and Mrs. Frank L. Hinckley—
Rhode Island
Mrs. Walter A. Hirsch—New YorkMr. Eliot P. Hirshberg—New YorkHochschild Fund, Inc.—New YorkMrs. Paul H. Hodge—Rhode IslandMrs. Arthur Hodges—ConnecticutMrs. H. Hoermann—New JerseyMrs. Robert F. Hoffman—New HampshireMrs. Lester Hofheimer—New YorkMrs. Bernard J. Hogue—Rhode IslandMrs. Arthur J. Holden—VermontMr. Henry Homes—New YorkMrs. C. H. Horner—Rhode IslandMr. Harry Horner—MaineMrs. John Hubbard—New YorkMrs. Lea Hudson—New YorkMr. and Mrs. B. W. Huebsch—New YorkMr. Frederick G. L. Huetwell—MichiganMrs. M. C. Humstone—ConnecticutMrs. John C. Hunt—ConnecticutMrs. L. J. Hyams—New York
Mrs. F. N. Iglehart—MarylandDr. Sidney H. Ingbar—MarylandMrs. Arthur Ingraham—Rhode IslandMiss Marion R. Irvine—New YorkMiss Louise M. Iselin—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Norman Izenstatt—Maine
Mr. R. Jacobs—New YorkMrs. W. K. Jacobs—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Allen P. Jacobson—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Robert E. Jacobson—
Rhode IslandMrs. George W. Jacoby—New YorkDr. M. Jagendorf—New YorkMr. Halsted James—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Sidney Jarcho—New YorkMiss Edith L. Jarvis—New York
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Jewett—New Hampshire
Mr. Charles Jockwig—New YorkMiss Christie M. Jonah—New JerseyDr. Howard V. Jones, Jr.—New HampshireMrs. Howard V. Jones—New HampshireMrs. T. Catesby Jones—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Wallace S. Jones—New JerseyMr. George E. Judd, Jr.—New YorkMr. William M. Judd—New YorkMr. Arthur Judell—New YorkMrs. Stanley Judkins—New York
Mr. Leo B. Kagan—New YorkMrs. Constance V. Kang— New YorkMrs. F. Karelson, Jr.—New YorkMr. Maxim Karolik—Rhode Island
Mr. Frederick L. Kateon—Rhode Island
Mrs. Gerald L. Kaufman—New YorkMrs. Carl F. Kaufmann—New HampshireMrs. Leonard Kebler—New YorkMrs. George A. Keeney—New YorkMr. and Mrs. A. Livingston Kelley—
Rhode IslandMiss Margaret Edna Kelly—New YorkMr. Marshall R. Kernochan—New YorkMiss Marion L. Kesselring—Rhode Island
Mrs. Eugene A. Kingman—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey E. Kivelson—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Morris P. Klar—New YorkMiss Elena H. Klasky—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Victor W. Knauth—New YorkMiss Edith Kneeland—New YorkMrs. Webster Knight, II—Rhode Island
Mrs. Elsa Koenig—CaliforniaMiss Judith Korey—Mrs. Rose Boren Korey—Mr. and Mrs. Otto L. Kramer—New YorkMrs. Fred Krause—New YorkMrs. A. J. Kremensky—New York
Mrs. George Labalme—New YorkMr. Edward F. LaCroix—WisconsinMr. Paul R. Ladd-Rhode Island
Mrs. Merkel Landis—PennsylvaniaMrs. J. B. Lane—New YorkMrs. L. C. Laub—New YorkMrs. Benjamin Lazrus—New YorkMiss A. Lee—New YorkMr. Elliott H. Lee—New YorkMiss Mary F. Leech—New YorkMrs. Arthur Lehman—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Joseph Leibowitz—New JerseyMr. and Mrs. Clement Lenom—New YorkMrs. Nadia Leoboldti—New YorkMiss Priscilla H. Leonard—Rhode Island
Mr. William Lepson—New YorkMrs. J. Levi—New YorkMr. Marks Levine—New YorkMrs. Austin T. Levy—Rhode Island
Mr. Benjamin J. Levy—New YorkMr. Hiram S. Lewine—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Richard Lewinsohn—New York
[60]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
;Dr. and Mrs. Richard Lewisohn—New YorkMiss Aline Liebenthal—New YorkDr. Alfred J. Liebmann—New YorkMrs. Alfred M. Lindau—New YorkMr. Samuel Litt—New YorkWilloughby Little Foundation—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Livingston, Jr.—Rhode Island
Mrs. Frank L. Locke—New HampshireMiss Nancy L. Locke—New HampshireMrs. M. I. Lockwood—New YorkMiss Edith M. Loew—New YorkDr. Lucille Loseke—New YorkMr. Charles R. Lounsbery—New YorkMr. and Mrs. George Y. Loveridge—
Rhode Island
Mrs. Madeline M. Low—New YorkMrs. Walter Lowell—New YorkMr. Irving B. Lueth—IllinoisMr. J. M. Richardson Lyeth—New York
Mrs. Edward M. Mackey—New HampshireMrs. Kenneth B. MacLeod—Rhode Island
Commodore and Mrs. Cary Magruder—Rhode Island
Mrs. Charles H. W. Mandeville—Rhode Island
Mr. O. Manley—New YorkMrs. William Ellis Mansfield—GeorgiaMrs. Gwendoline L. Manuel—New YorkMr. David W. Marcus—QuebecMiss Augusta Markowitz—New YorkMr. Frederick W. Marks, Jr.—New YorkMrs. Albert E. Marshall—Rhode Island
Miss Margaret Marshall—Rhode Island
Mrs. Reune Martin—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Martine—New YorkMiss Elaine Marzullo—PennsylvaniaMrs. Edwin R. Masback—New YorkMiss Priscilla Mason—Washington, D. C.
Mr. Stanley H. Mason—Rhode Island
Miss Marguerite Mathews—Rhode Island
Mrs. Frank W. Matteson—Rhode Island
Miss Katharine Matthies—ConnecticutMrs. Charles H. May—New YorkMrs. John C. Mayer—New YorkMrs. Joseph L. B. Mayer—New YorkMrs. W. M. Mayes—CaliforniaMr. Paul G. Maylahn—New YorkMr. and Mrs. George Melcher—
New HampshireMrs. Chase Mellen—New YorkMiss Hortense Mendel—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Ralph J. Mendel—New YorkMrs. Charles H. Merriman—Rhode Island
Mrs. E. Bruce Merriman—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. George Pierce Metcalf—Rhode Island
Mrs. Houghton P. Metcalf—VirginiaMrs. Jesse H. Metcalf—Rhode Island
Mrs. Kay G. Meyer—New YorkMr. Norbert M. Milair—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Alex Miller—Rhode Island
Mrs. M. J. Miller—New JerseyMrs. Norman F. Milne—New HampshireMiss Anna E. Mohn—New YorkMr. Arthur Montgomery—New YorkColonel John C. Moore—New YorkMiss Ruth Evans Morris—New YorkHon. William H. Mortensen—ConnecticutMr. Eli Moschcowitz—New YorkMrs. Roger G. Mosscrop—New HampshireMr. and Mrs. F. S. Murphy—ConnecticutMr. and Mrs. David H. McAlpin—New Jersey
Mr. Alan J. McBean—New YorkMr. John McChesney—ConnecticutMrs. Irving J. McCoid—Rhode Island
McCook family—ConnecticutMr. and Mrs. George I. McKelvey, Jr.—
New JerseyMrs. Robert McKelvy—New YorkMiss Janet McKenzie—New JerseyMr. David H. McKillop—ChinaMrs. John R. McLane—New HampshireDr. Christie E. McLeod—ConnecticutThe Reverend Everett W. McPhillips—
Rhode Island
Miss Helen M. McWilliams—New York
Mr. and Mrs. George W. Naumburg—New York
Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Naumburg—New York
Miss Evelyn Necarsulmer—New YorkMiss M. Louise Neill—ConnecticutMiss Katharine B. Neilson—Rhode Island
Dr. Harold Neuhof—ConnecticutMrs. Roy Newberger—New YorkMr. John S. Newberry, Jr.—MichiganMr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Newburger—
New YorkDr. and Mrs. Robert A. Newburger—
New YorkMr. and Mrs. Sydney R. Newman—New YorkMr. and Mrs. John W. Nickerson—
ConnecticutMrs. J. K. H. Nightingale -Rhode Island
Mrs. J. K. H. Nightingale, Jr.—Rhode Island
Mrs. Evelyn W. Nolte—New York
Miss Marian O'Brien—Rhode Island
Mrs. Robert J. Ogborn—New YorkMr. Leslie P. Ogden—New YorkMiss Emma Jessie Ogg—New YorkMiss Ida Oppenheimer—New YorkMr. Edwin M. Otterbourg—New York
Miss Elsie F. Packer—ConnecticutMiss Bertha Pagenstecher—New YorkMiss Alice Temple Parkin—New YorkMrs. C. C. Parlin—New Jersey
Miss Hilda M. Peck—ConnecticutMiss Mary M. L. Peck—ConnecticutMrs. W. H. Peckham—New YorkMiss Marjorie I. Pedersen—New YorkMrs. Charles E. Perkins—New York
[61]
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Continued)
Mrs. Carl H. Pforzheimer—New YorkMrs. Clarence H. Philbrick—Rhode Island
Mrs. Max Pick—New YorkMrs. W. R. J. Planten—CaliforniaMiss Grace L. Plimpton—ConnecticutMiss Alice B. Plumb—New YorkMrs. Emery M. Porter—Rhode Island
Mr. Charles E. Potts—New YorkMr. George Eustis Potts—FloridaMrs. T. I. Hare Powel—Rhode Island
Mrs. Alvin L. Powell—New JerseyMr. and Mrs. Horace M. Poynter—
New HampshireMrs. H. Irving Pratt—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Richardson Pratt—New YorkMiss Priscilla Presbrey—New JerseyMr. and Mrs. Bill Price—North CarolinaMrs. Joseph K. Priest—New HampshireMr. Edwin Higbee Pullman—New YorkDr. Irmarita Putnam—New York
Mrs. James Quan—New York
Dr. H. L. Rachlin—New YorkMrs. Alice K. Ratner—CaliforniaMiss Helen Ray—ConnecticutMrs. Frederic B. Read—Rhode Island
Miss Marie Reimer—New YorkMrs. George Relyea—New YorkMrs. John Harsen Rhoades—New YorkMrs. Caroline Holt Rice—MaineMrs. Ralph Richards—Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Lawrence Richardson—ItalyMrs. Anna S. Richmond—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Richmond-
Rhode Island
Miss Rose Riccobono—New YorkMrs. M. Richter—New YorkMrs. Stanley L. Richter—New YorkMr. Martin L. Riesman—Rhode IslandMiss Gertrude L. Robinson—MaineMrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.—New YorkMr. Edgar Roedelheimer—New YorkMiss Bertha F. Rogers—New HampshireMiss Daisy F. Rogers—New YorkLt. Col. and Mrs. Robert W. Rogers-
Rhode IslandMrs. C. V. Romney—New JerseyMr. Edward Ronicker—OhioMiss Hilda M. Rosecrans—New YorkMiss Bertha Rosenthal—New YorkMr. Laurence B. Rossbach—New YorkMr. Samuel Rothstein—New YorkMr. Francis W. Roudebush—New YorkMrs. Aaron H. Rubenfeld—New YorkDr. I. C. Rubin-New YorkDr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Rubinstein—New YorkMr. and Mrs. J. Rulon-Miller—New YorkMrs. Ralph C. Runyon—New YorkMrs. Gerald S. Russell—New YorkMr. Thomas W. Russell—Connecticut
Mrs. Aaron B. Salant—New YorkMr. Charles F. Samson—New YorkDr. and Mrs. J. Savran—Rhode Island
[62]
Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus T. Schirmer—MaineMrs. Fay Brosseau Schlam—New YorkMrs. Fred Schloss—New YorkMrs. Helen E. Schradieck—New YorkMr. Richard S. Schwartz—IllinoisMr. Robert Schwarz—New YorkMiss Katharine Hope Scott—New YorkMiss Margaret W. Scott—PennsylvaniaMiss May Seeley—New YorkMrs. Carl Seeman—New YorkMrs. Isaac W. Seeman—New YorkMrs. S. Seidenbond—New YorkDr. and Mrs. Ezra A. Sharp—Rhode IslandMiss Ellen D. Sharpe—Rhode IslandMr. and Mrs. Henry D. Sharpe—Rhode IslanMr. I. Shatzkin—New YorkMiss Ann Shaughnessy—New YorkMrs. H. Bronson Shonk—New HampshireMiss Martha G. Sias—WashingtonMrs. Robert E. Simon—New YorkMr. Ben Sinel—Rhode IslandMiss Lucile Singleton—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Walter C. Slade—Rhode IslandMrs. Ernest W. Smith—ConnecticutMiss Gertrude Robinson Smith—New YorkMrs. Henry Oliver Smith—New YorkMiss Hope Smith—Rhode IslandMr. and Mrs. Kirk Smith—Rhode IslandMiss Mariana Smith—New YorkMrs. Mason Smith, Jr.—New YorkMrs. H. L. Smithers—New JerseyMiss Marion E. Solodar—New YorkMrs. Irwin L. Solomon—New YorkMrs. Sidney Solomon—New YorkMrs. Ernest H. Sparrow—New YorkMr. Robert R. Spaulding—Rhode IslandMr. and Mrs. Edwin Speidel—Rhode IslandMr. and Mrs. Girard L. Spencer—New YorkMr. Edward S. Spicer—Rhode IslandMr. and Mrs. J. E. Sproul—New JerseyMrs. Philip B. Stanley—ConnecticutMrs. Ellsworth M. Statler—New YorkMiss Anna Stearns—New HampshireMiss Eleanor Steber—New YorkMiss Sophie B. Steel—New YorkMr. Meyer Stein—New JerseyMr. Meyer Stein—New YorkMr. Samuel Stein—New YorkMr. Julius Steiner—New YorkMrs. Albert M. Steinerf—New YorkMrs. Frederick T. Steinway—New YorkMr. Arthur L. Stern—New JerseyMr. and Mrs. Edgar B. Stern—LouisianaMr. Ernest N. Stevens—MaineMiss Ruth Stickney—MaineMr. Marcel H. Stieglitz—New YorkMr. Jacob C. Stone—New YorkMiss Lynn Stone—New YorkMiss Aline C. Stratford—New YorkMrs. Herbert N. Straus—New YorkMrs. Charles H. Street—New YorkMrs. B. W. Streifler—New YorkMrs. M. E. Strieby—New JerseyDr. George T. Strodl—New YorkMrs. James R. Strong—New Jersey
FRIENDS OF THE BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA (Concluded)
Mr. S. Clarance Stuart—New YorkMiss Jeannette Studley—ConnecticutMrs. Edwin A. Stumff—New YorkMr. Howard Sturges—New YorkMrs. J. H. Stutesman—New JerseyMrs. Peggy Sugar—New YorkMrs. Arthur P. Sumner—Rhode IslandMr. and Mrs. Maurice A. Sunderland—
New YorkMrs. Pauline S. Surrey—New YorkMiss Mildred Sussman—New YorkMiss Helen T. Sutherland—Rhode IslandMr. Jerome S. Sverdlick—New YorkMrs. W. R. Swart—New HampshireMrs. Hugh Lee Switzer—Connecticut
Mrs. Royal C. Taft-Rhode IslandMrs. Jerome Tanenbaum—New YorkMrs. Frank Tanham—New JerseyDr. Mary C. Taylor—CaliforniaMiss Lucy O. Teague—New JerseyMrs. W. F. Terradell—New JerseyMiss Meta Terstegge—New JerseyMrs. John S. Thacher—New YorkMr. W. W. Thomas—MaineMrs. R. C. Thomson—New JerseyMrs. Paul Tishman—New YorkMiss Margaret E. Todd—Rhode Island
Mr. S. H. Tolles, Jr.—ConnecticutMr. Stirling Tomkins—New YorkMr. George Toumanoff—New YorkDr. and Mrs. Coleman Tousey—MaineMr. John C. Traphagen—New YorkMiss Ruth True—New YorkMr. Howard M. Trueblood—New YorkMrs. Gregory Tuchapsky—New YorkMrs. W. Tulchin—Miss Alice Tully—New York
Miss Elsa S. Uhlig—New YorkMrs. S. C. Ullman—New YorkMrs. F. L. Untermeyer—New York
Miss Jane K. Valleau—New JerseyMiss Catherine S. Van Brunt—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Byron E. VanRaalte—New YorkMiss Anna Veder—New YorkMrs. R. C. Veit—New YorkMiss Anne T. Vernon—Rhode Island
Mrs. Richmond Viall—Rhode Island
Miss Emily Vivian—New YorkEdwin C. and Florence G. Vogel Fund Inc.—
New YorkMrs. Simon J. Vogel—New YorkMrs. Tracy S. Voorhees—New York
Mrs. John Winthrop Wadleigh—Rhode IslandMrs. H. Waterhouse Walker—Rhode IslandMrs. Ashbel T. Wall-Rhode IslandMr. and Mrs. Leo Wallerstein—New YorkMiss Catherine Walther—New JerseyMiss Anne S. Wanag—New YorkMiss M. Beatrice Ward—Rhode IslandMr. Allen Wardwell—New YorkMrs. W. Seaver Warland—MaineMr. Eugene Warren—New YorkMrs. Ives Washburn—New YorkMrs. George B. Waterhouse—Rhode IslandMiss Marian Way—VermontMiss Grace C. Waymouth—New HampshireMr. Phillips R. Weatherbee—Rhode IslandDr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Webber—Rhode IslandMiss Mathilde E. Weber—New YorkMrs. Arthur P. Weeden—Rhode IslandMiss Elisabeth G. Weeks—Rhode Island
Mr. Leon J. Weil—New YorkMr. and Mrs. Mark Weisberg—Rhode Island
Mrs. H. K. W. Welch—ConnecticutMr. and Mrs. John H. Wells—Rhode Island
Mrs. Thomas B. Wells—New YorkMrs. Alan R. Wheeler—Rhode Island
Mrs. L. R. Wheeler—New YorkMiss Rosa White—New YorkMiss Mabel I. Whiteley—Rhode Island
Miss Edith A. Whitney—New Jersey
Miss Helen L. Whiton—Rhode Island
Mr. Irwin Wile—New YorkDr. and Mrs. Harold W. Williams-
Rhode Island
Mrs. Rodney Williams—New YorkMrs. A. Willstatter—New YorkMr. Charles S. Wilson—Rhode Island
Miss Mary B. Winslow—New YorkMiss Ellen Winsor—PennsylvaniaMrs. Keyes Winter—New YorkMiss Enid Wolf-OhioDr. Louis Wolf—New YorkMiss Anna Wolff—New YorkMr. Claude M. Wood—Rhode Island
Mrs. William E. Woodard—New YorkMrs. Peter Woodbury—New HampshireDr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Wright—New YorkMr. Carroll M. Wright—New YorkMrs. Robert H. Wrubel—New YorkMr. Lucien Wulsin—OhioMrs. William F. Wund—New York
Mrs. Louis E. Young—Rhode Island
Mr. and Mrs. William LeRoy Young-New Hampshire
Mr. and Mrs. Saul Zarchen—Rhode Island
Mr. Joseph Zia—New York
[63]
3hConorc^oll
Among those who attend the concerts of the Boston SymphonyOrchestra, the following are listed as having heard the Orchestra
under each of its regular conductors from Sir George Henschel to
Mr. Charles Munch. Since existing records are insufficient for a full
compilation, any whose names have been omitted are requested to
send them to Friends of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Symphony
Hall, Boston.
Mrs. Lewis A. Armistead
Miss Edith BangsMr. and Mrs.
George W. BarberMrs. John S. Bartlett
Mrs. John W. Bartol
Mrs. Boylston BealMrs. G. W. BeckerMrs. Frances A. M. Bird
Mrs. George F. BosworthMrs. John T. BottomleyMrs. Gamaliel BradfordMrs. Arthur H. BrooksMrs. G. Winthrop BrownMiss Mary C. BurnhamMr. and Mrs.
George D. Burrage
Mrs. J. M. B. Churchill
Prof. H. E. Clifford
Mrs. Charles Collens
Mrs. George W. Collier
Mrs. W. K. CoreyMrs. S. V. R. CrosbyMrs. R. M. Currier
Miss Frances G. Curtis
Mrs. Frank A. Day
Mrs. Henry EndicottDr. Mabel I. Emerson
Mrs. Dudley B. FayMiss Lucy Adams Fiske
Mrs. Parker Fiske
Miss Louisa H. Fries
Mrs. L. A. Frothingham
Mrs. Carleton S. Gifford
Mr. Edward H. Gleasoii
Mrs. Elizabeth GrantMrs. Edith Noyes Greene
Mrs. H. S. HallMr. John W. HallMrs. Franklin T. HammondMrs. Sydney HarwoodMrs. M. G. HaughtonMiss Grace G. HilerMrs. Franklin W. HobbsMrs. Elizabeth T. HosmerMrs. Frederick L. HullMiss Ida Hunneman
Miss Mary V. Iasigi
Miss Harriet E. Johnson
Mrs. Edward L. Kent
Miss Harriet S. LaneMrs. George Lewis
Mr. Frederick L. Milliken
Mrs. Edward C. MooreMiss Helen Graham MoseleyMiss Angelina K. MudgeMrs. George S. MumfordMrs. John C. Munro
Mrs. Henry G. Nichols
Mrs. Frederic O. NorthMiss Elizabeth G. NortonMr. Charles R. Nutter
Miss Sybilla Orth
Mrs. Robert B. ParkerMrs. William Stanley ParkerMrs. Francis A. PierceMrs. Walter C. PierceMrs. Charles C. PondMrs. John R. PostMrs. J. B. PotterMrs. Murray A. PotterMrs. Benjamin PrinceMiss Adelaide W. ProctorMrs. George J. Putnam
Mrs. Andrew F. ReedMr. George L. Ruffin
Miss Mary Thompson SawyerMrs. Francis Augustus SeamanMrs. Edmund H. Sears
Miss Emma M. Sibley
Mrs. Alvin F. Sortwell
Mrs. Daniel Staniford
Mr. F. O. Stanley
Miss Rose StewartMiss Katharine H. StoneMiss Sarah D. Stover
Miss Mary Strickland
Mr. S. Warren Sturgis
Miss Effie C. Sweetser
Mrs. Edmund H. TalbotMrs. Ward ThoronMiss Laura Tolman-KilgoreMrs. Leverett S. Tuckerman
Mrs. George WeatherbyMrs. Margaretha H. Williamso
Mrs. William A. Young
[64]
Boston Symphony Orchestra
CHARLES MUNCH, Music Director
Season 1953
BERKSHIRE FESTIVALAT TANGLEWOOD, LENOX, MASS.
Concerts in the Theatre
(SAT. EVES. AT 8:3©; SUNT. AFTS. AT 3)
July 11 k 12: Bach Programs July 18 & 19: Mozart Programs
July 25: Strauss, Milhaud, Ravel. Foss
July 26: Haydn Program
Concerts in the Shed
(FRI. AND SAT. EVES. AT 8:30| SUN. AFTS. AT 3)
SERIES A (July 31, August 1, 2)
The programs will include: . . . Beethoven — Overture, "Leonore" No. 3;
Mendelssohn — Violin Concerto (Soloist: Zino Francescatti) ; Copland —"Appalachian Spring"; Ravel — "Bolero"; all-Tchaikovsky program — "Hamlet" Overture, Suite, "Mozartiana", "Romeo and Juliet" Overture, SymphonyNo. 5; Schumann — "Manfred" Overture; Foss — Piano Concerto (the com-poser as soloist) ; Mendelssohn — "Italian" Symphony; Liszt — "MephistoWaltz".
SERIES B (August 7, 8, 9)The programs will include . . . Handel — "Water Music"; Barber —
"Adagio for Strings"; Saint-Saens — Cello Concerto (Soloist: Gregor Piati-
gorsky) ; Strauss — "Don Quixote"; Berlio?^ — Dramatic Symphony "Romeoand Juliet"; Koussevitzky Memorial Program: Haydn — Symphony No. 102;
Mahler — Symphony No. 2 ("Resurrection").
SERIES C (August 14, 15, 16)
The programs will include . . . Cherubini — "Anacreon" Overture; Schu-
bert — "Unfinished" Symphony; Ravel — Piano Concerto for the Left Hand(Soloist: Seymour Lipkin) ; Wagner — Prelude and Love-Death, "Tristan andIsolde"; "A Siegfried Idyll"; "Die Meistersinger," Excerpts from Act III;
Sibelius — Symphony No. 4; Brahms — Symphony No. 2; Chavez — "Sinfonia
India"; Brahms — "Requiem."
Programs Subject to Change
GUEST CONDUCTORSPierre Monteux (Aug. 1) • Leonard Bernstein (Aug. 9 and 15)
Berkshire Music Center (July 5 — August 16)
Subscriptions are now being taken at Symphony Hall, Boston, for the
Shed Series A, B, and C.
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