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Glenn Matsumura
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leland and jane stanford were
not the type to boast, but in the spring of 1868, they just
couldn’t help feeling
proud. Leland Stanford’s most ambitious business venture,
the western portion of America’s first transcontinental
railroad, was racing toward completion at Promontory,
Utah. Better yet, after 18 years of childless marriage, the
44-year-old
former California governor and his nearly 40-year-old
wife were elated parents of a healthy baby.
To celebrate,
the Stanfords decided to host a gathering
in their handsome house on the corner of 8th and n streets
in Sacramento. In her 1934 book, Mrs. Leland Stanford:
An Intimate Account, Jane’s longtime secretary, Bertha
Berner, retold the story: “Mr. Stanford asked Mrs. Stanford
to arrange a dinner party for a group of their particular
friends, and
when the guests were seated the waiter brought in a large
silver platter with a cover and placed it in the center
of the table.” Then
the governor rose to his feet and announced that there
was someone he wished to introduce. To Jane’s surprise, “the
cover of the silver dish was lifted, and the baby was discovered
lying in it on blossoms,” Berner wrote. “He was
carried around the table and shown to each guest. He was
smiling and went through his introduction very nicely.”
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Stanford Archives
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Like
many wealthy children of America’s Gilded Age, little
Leland Stanford Junior was born into a glittering world
of silver and servants, pampering and privilege. Collared
in lace
and cultivated by tutors, the young heir to the Stanford
fortune had his own pony and a pint-size train that ran
on a 400-foot
track from the family’s Palo Alto house to the stables.
As a teenager, he rubbed elbows with senators, generals
and Supreme Court justices and traveled with his family
by rail
across much of the United States and Europe. Encouraged
by his parents, he developed a small museum on the third
floor of the family’s San Francisco mansion to house
the curiosities collected during his adventures.
Yet there is another side
to the boy—one barely known
to graduates of the university that bears his name. Tucked
inside gray archival boxes in Green Library, Leland Junior’s
carefully preserved letters and his drawings of ships and
trains hint at an energetic and likable kid who loved animals
and
the outdoors, took special care of his playmates and fretted
about his aging parents’ health. He also had an insatiably
curious intellect that Stanford admission deans would have
appreciated. “I’m not sure he was any more of an
overachiever than most kids today, but he comes across
as a smart youngster who was interested in odd things that
you wouldn’t
expect a 12-year-old to like,” says University archivist
Maggie Kimball, ’80, custodian of the Stanford family
letters and scrapbooks. “Who knows how he would have
ended up as an adult? He could have been an insufferable
bore, but you don’t get that sense from his letters.”
IN AN AGE WHEN first-time 40-something
moms are common, it is hard to appreciate just how miraculous
baby Leland’s
impending arrival must have seemed to the Stanfords and
their friends. It is possible that Jane suffered several
miscarriages prior to the child’s birth, and this pregnancy,
too, seemed threatened when, in her last trimester, she
tumbled off the veranda into a flowering bush during a
tea party
at her home. When the family physician finally delivered
the
healthy
baby at the Sacramento house on May 14, the grateful mother
recalled that it was the first time she had ever seen her
husband on his knees in prayer. “I wanted to thank God
that you were doing so well, Jenny,” the governor explained,
using his wife’s pet name. “And for giving us such
a fine boy.”
Unlike many Victorian tykes, who were seen
and not heard, little brown-eyed Leland clearly was the
adored center
of his parents’ world. Although the governor continued
to travel extensively on railroad business, he and Jane
were at a point
in their lives when they could shower attention on the
child, whom they christened Leland DeWitt Stanford after
the governor’s
younger brother. (The boy later asked to have his name
legally changed to match his father’s.) Maids, cooks
and nurses took care of the heavy work, leaving Jane to
focus on her family;
and their richly furnished Sacramento house had all the
19th-century conveniences money could buy.
Nevertheless,
the Stanfords were a pragmatic couple, determined
to bring their son up, in Berner’s words, “as sensibly
as possible.” As former Special Collections librarian
Linda J. Long explained in a 1991 Stanford Historical Society
article, “Both Jane and Leland came from middle-class
hardworking families with strong family values, which they
were determined to teach their son.... They were dedicated
to their growing boy, whom they cherished, but they stopped
short of catering to his every wish.”
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PRIVILEGED SON: Leland Junior’s
amusements included a toy train that ran on 400
feet of track near the Stanfords’ Palo Alto
home (right).
Stanford Archives
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Apparently the strategy
worked, for the Stanford Archives are full of references
to Leland Junior’s good nature.
When he was 5 years old, he and his family moved to San
Francisco to be near the new headquarters of the Central
Pacific Railroad.
Looking out the front window one day, the boy was horrified
to see a small mongrel dog with a broken leg. He carried
the animal into the house, bathed and bandaged the limb,
and then
summoned the family doctor to find out what to do next.
Another time, young Leland was playing outside with the
maid’s
nephew when the little boy started crying about his muddy
shoes. So the Stanford heir took his companion into the
kitchen, stood
him on a chair and, over the protests of the servants,
scrubbed the shoes clean.
Among the most charming items in the
Stanford Archives
are Leland Junior’s letters to a handicapped friend
named Wilsie, who lived down the block from the Stanfords’ Nob
Hill home. “Mamma came downstairs to day and plaid
on the piano,” 10-year-old Leland writes in careful
schoolboy cursive on blue-lined notebook paper. “We
had a delightful trip to the Sierra Nevaddas... snow
balling to our hearts
content our fingers were numb of a hanfanhour after wards.” On
another rail trip, from San Diego, 13-year-old Leland
apologizes to Wilsie for his handwriting. “While I
am writing NOW the car is going MUCH FASTER, so excuse
the shakeness.”
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Stanford Archives
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AT HOME in San Francisco, Leland Junior’s rooms reflected
artistic and mechanical interests typical of many a preadolescent
boy. An enthusiastic amateur photographer, he also enjoyed
sketching trains and ships, meticulously incorporating
tiny American flags and rigging for the sails. (One pencil-and-crayon
effort shows ships engaged in a harbor battle, with a
fort on the shore spewing puffy white smoke.) Among his
playthings were a toy steam engine and locomotive, a
telegraphic apparatus,
a telephone, and a carpenter’s bench and tools that
he used for woodcarving. The house also had a workroom
where he could tinker with mechanical devices. Once,
when their
son was working on a small steam engine, the Stanfords
heard
a
loud pop and went to investigate. They found Leland Junior
holding a handkerchief to his face. “Boiler exploded,” he
said matter-of-factly.
For sheer boyish pleasure, though,
nothing could compare to the Palo Alto family farm. When
Governor Stanford purchased
the first 650 acres of the property along San Francisquito
Creek in 1876, he hoped to acquaint his young son with
the vigorous country pastimes he had enjoyed as a youth
in upstate
New York. The estate quickly grew to become the Stanford
family’s
favorite retreat, a fog-free haven of orchards, vineyards,
grazing lands, stables and training tracks where Leland
Junior could adventure from dawn to dusk. He practiced shooting,
fished
in the creek, hunted arrowheads in the Foothills near Jasper
Ridge. As his tutor, Herbert Nash, recalled in a short
biography of Leland Junior: “The boy would ride about
the farm on his pony with the dogs barking at his heels. He
loved to
spend the day in the fields among the laborers, and a picnic
in the redwoods was his ideal of happiness.
“Being full of life and health,” Nash continued, “he
did not prefer his Latin grammar to his gun, or his algebra
to his driving team.” Nevertheless, Leland Junior apparently
was a diligent pupil with a real knack for French, German
and history. Indeed, his tutors sometimes found it hard
to keep
pace: the boy was impatient with cursory textbook facts,
always hungry for explanations. Determined not to neglect
the practical
side of his son’s education, Governor Stanford enrolled
him in accounting courses at San Francisco’s new Heald
College. While he assumed Leland Junior someday would take
over his various business enterprises, the governor believed
in “bringing up the boy in the spirit of self-dependence,” a
San Francisco newspaper reported in 1877. That way, “if
the father’s riches be-wing themselves, the son will
be able to take care of himself.”
Above all, Leland and
Jane Stanford believed in the educational value of travel.
Shortly after Leland Junior’s first
birthday, the toddler and his mother began making regular
trips on the new transcontinental railroad to visit relatives
and
friends in New York. His first European grand tour, with
his mother and Nash in 1880-81, was a continual source
of wonder for the 12-year-old. “He could not see macaroni
made without having an explanation of the whole process, or
glass blown without learning all the details of the business,
the
wages paid the workmen, the hours of labor, etc.,” Nash
recalled. A well-known Liverpool merchant put it succinctly: “He
had a faculty of drawing from those he met all the information
they had to give.” LELAND JUNIOR’S surviving
travel log entries, dated April to August 1881, describe
a lively
European routine that
included morning lessons and afternoon sightseeing, dancing
classes,
swimming lessons or romps in the Tuileries Gardens, plus
an occasional evening out for dinner or the opera. Traveling
in
Italy, the boy was particularly impressed by a trip to
Mount Vesuvius, by a lavish martial birthday parade in
honor of King
Humbert, and by a solemn audience at the Vatican with
Pope Leo XIII. Later, the Protestant lad told his ailing
mother,
who suffered debilitating headaches, that he was sure
she soon would be feeling better, “as he had mounted
the Holy Steps on his knees, saying a prayer for her
recovery on each
step.”
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FOREVER FIFTEEN: In September
1883,
at age 15, Leland Junior toured Europe and wrote
to his father describing his adventures.
Seven months later, he was dead.
Stanford Archives
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Two years later, when the family embarked on its
second European tour, Leland Junior had matured into
a slender, thoughtful youth of 15, about 5 feet 10 inches
tall, with
clear
fair skin
and light-brown hair. At the same time, his nearly 60-year-old
father and 54-year-old mother were showing signs of age.
Doctors prescribed soaks in Bavarian hot springs for
the aching governor. “Papa
has not improved as much as we hoped for,” the teenager
wrote an aunt from the RMS Germanic in June 1883, “and
Mama has only been to the table twice. She has had a
great deal of pain in her head. I hope you will write
to Mama
often and keep her cheered up.” Although Governor Stanford
rallied under the care of London doctors, Jane’s headaches
continued to trouble her. Between outings with his tutor,
young Leland would sit in her darkened sickroom and tell
her about
everything he had seen in the city.
When Jane was well enough
to travel, the family struck out for museums and auction
houses of Great Britain and
the Continent. On their previous European adventure,
Jane had encouraged
her budding archaeologist to collect and catalog mementos
of the sites he had seen, including Venetian glass animals
and
a bayonet and two rifle balls from Waterloo. Now the
boy was determined to build a public archaeological museum
in San Francisco—“to
help in the art-training of our American people,” as
he told Luigi Palma di Cesnola, director of New York’s
Metropolitan Museum of Art, where his father was a patron.
Helped
by Cesnola’s letters of introduction, Leland Junior
spent many blissful afternoons in the Egyptian wing of
the Louvre, copying hieroglyphics and learning to decipher
them
with the help of famed Egyptologist Georges Daressy. He
also made the rounds of famous auction houses and antiquities
dealers,
purchasing ancient coins, Egyptian bronzes, Greek vases
and other pieces with small sums for which he had to keep
strict accounts. “It frequently happened that in looking
over specimens offered him for sale, Leland would hand some
back to the dealer, quietly remarking that they were imitations,” his
tutor recalled with satisfaction. “Invariably the man,
after a look at his young customer, would apologize, excusing
himself on the ground that the imitations had accidentally
slipped in with the others.” AFTER SPENDING CHRISTMAS of 1883 in Vienna, the Stanfords
headed toward Constantinople, where the sultan wanted
the governor’s
advice about the construction of a Turkish railroad. “When
we arrived we thought we were in the strangest country
we had ever been in before,” the dazzled young Leland
wrote his friend Lizzie Hull. “No two turks seem to
be dressed alike because their clothes are of so many
different colors....
We saw diamonds literally by the bushel and one emerald
as large as your hand.” On one particularly joyous
occasion, the family took a cruise on the Bosporus strait,
and the
15-year-old was allowed to steer the party’s small
steamboat. “He
stood at the wheel all day long, with a sharp wind blowing
in his face and spray dashing over the deck, for it was
a rough day,” Bertha Berner recalled. “He was
greatly excited and very happy.”
Later that evening, Jane thought
her boy looked a little pale. The weather had turned
cold, and by the time the
family arrived in Athens in January 1884, the snow was
knee-deep. Undeterred, Leland Junior insisted on visiting
the ancient
temples and on meeting with the most celebrated archaeologist
of the day, Heinrich Schliemann, who recently had unearthed
the site of ancient Troy. Limping back to the Italian
peninsula in mid-February, “neither Mrs. Stanford nor Leland [Junior]
felt well,” Berner wrote. “The climate of Rome
plainly did not agree with Leland, and they took him to
Florence, where the air was somewhat more bracing.”
In
fact, Leland Junior had contracted typhoid, a bacterial
illness characterized by a sudden high fever, severe headache
and nausea, for which there was no known cure (see sidebar).
Frantically, his parents telegraphed physicians in Rome
and summoned them to the Bristol Hotel. “For three weeks,
alternate hope and fear reigned in the darkened room,” Herbert
Nash recalled. As Leland Junior’s fever spiked, “his
mind was lucid at times, and at times wandering ... to
his horses and his museum, his studies and his pleasures.”
On
February 25, Jane wrote to a friend: “I have turned
for comfort to the Giver of both good and evil and my faith
has increased, and now I again turn to Him with entreaties
to save to me my darling son.”
To reduce the fever, doctors
wrapped Leland Junior’s
body in ice-cold wet sheets, an excruciating treatment
the shivering boy begged to avoid. Nuns were brought in
around the clock to nurse the delirious youth, and at one point,
the
hotel manager had straw scattered outside to deaden street
noise. Their efforts were futile: two months before his
16th birthday, on March 13, 1884, Leland Stanford Junior
died.
Prostrate
with grief at the hotel, Leland Stanford is said
to have had a dream about his departed son, who urged
his parents to keep on living for the good of humanity. Just
one
year after
they laid their only child to rest—in a small mausoleum
near their beloved Palo Alto Farm house—Leland and Jane
Stanford signed a grant founding and endowing the Leland
Stanford Junior University “to qualify students for personal
success and direct usefulness in life.” The same goal
they had had for their son. |