Online Encyclopedia

LENOX

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 421 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LENOX  , a township of

Berkshire county, Massachusetts, U.S.A . Pop . (1900) 2942, (1905) 3058; (1910) 3060 .
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Area, 19.2 sq. m . The
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principal
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village, also named Lenox (or Lenoxon-the-Heights), lies about 2 M . W. of the Housatonic
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river, at an altitude of about r000 ft., and about it are high hills—Yokun Seat (2080 ft.), South Mountain (1200 ft.), Bald Head (1583 ft.), and
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Rattlesnake Hill (154o ft.) . New Lenox and Lenoxdale are other villages in the township . Lenox is a fashion-able summer and autumn resort, much frequented by wealthy
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people from Washington,
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Newport and New York . There are innumerable lovely walks and drives in the surrounding region, which contains some of the most beautiful country of the Berkshires—hills, lakes, charming intervales and woods . As early as 1835 Lenox began to attract summer residents . In the next decade began the creation of large estates, although the
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great holdings of the
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present day, and the villas scattered over the hills, are comparatively
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recent features . The height of the season is in the autumn, when there are horse-shows, golf, tennis, hunts and other outdoor amusements .

The Lenox library (1855) contained about 20,000' volumes in 1908 . Lenox was settled about 175o, was included in

Richmond township in 1765, and became an
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independent township in 1767 . The names were those of
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Sir Charles Lennox, third duke of Richmond and of Lennox (1735-1806), one of the staunch friends of the
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American colonies during the War of Independence . Lenox was the county-seat from 1787 to 1868 . It has
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literary associations with Catherine M . Sedgwick (1789–1867), who passed here the second
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half of her
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life; with Nathaniel Hawthorne, whose brief residence here (1850–1851) was marked by the production of the Houseof the Seven Gables and the Wonder
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Book; with Fanny Kemble, a summer
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resident. from 1836–1853; and with Henry Ward Beecher (see his
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Star Papers) . Elizabeth (Mrs Charles) Sedgwick, the
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sister-in-law of Catherine Sedgwick, maintained here from 1828 to 1864 a school for girls, in which Harriet Hosmer, the sculptor, and Maria S . Cummins (1827–1866), the novelist, were educated; and in Lenox academy (1803), a famous classical school (now. a public high school) were educated W . L . Yancey, A . H . Stephens; Mark Hopkins and David .

Davis (1815–1886), a circuit judge of
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Illinois from 1848 to '862, a justice (1862–1877) of the
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United States Supreme Court, a Republican member of the United States Senate from Illinois in 1877–1883, and president of the Senate from the 31st of
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October 1881, when . he succeeded Chester A . Arthur, until the 3rd of March 1883 . There is a statue commemorating General John Paterson (1744-ISoS) a soldier from Lenox in the War of Independence . See R. de W . Mallary, Lenox and the Berkshire Highlands (1902); J . C . Adams, Nature Studies in Berkshire; C . F . Warner, Picturesque Berkshire (1896) ; and Katherine M . Abbott, Old Paths and Legends of the New England Border (1907) .

End of Article: LENOX
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