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Rossiter W. Raymond

Rossiter Worthington Raymond (April 27, 1840 in Cincinnati, Ohio – December 31, 1918 in Brooklyn, New York)[1] was an American mining engineer, legal scholar and author. At his memorial, the President of Lehigh University described him as "one of the most remarkable cases of versatility that our country has ever seen—sailor, soldier, engineer, lawyer, orator, editor, novelist, story-teller, poet, biblical critic, theologian, teacher, chess-player—he was superior in each capacity. What he did, he always did well."[2]

Early years Edit

Rossiter W. Raymond was of English descent. His earliest American ancestor on the paternal side, Richard Raymond, emigrated from England to this country and settled at Salem, Massachusetts, in 1632. On his mother's side, he was descended from well-known New England families. His great-grandfather, Nathaniel Raymond, was an officer in the Continental Army; and his grandfather, Caleb Pratt, served in the War of 1812.

His father, Robert Raikes Raymond[3] (1817-1888), was a native of New York City, a graduate of Union College (New York) in 1837, editor of the Syracuse Free Democrat in 1852 and Evening Chronicle in 1853–4, and later professor of English in the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute and principal of the Boston School of Oratory. His mother (born 1818, died 1891) was a native of Providence, Rhode Island. They were married at Columbus, Ohio, in 1839. Rossiter was the eldest of a family of seven children, of whom four were sons and three daughters.

He received his early education in the common schools of Syracuse, New York, where his parents participated in the underground railroad, and in 1857 entered the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, of which his uncle, John H. Raymond (later president of Vassar College), was then president. Raymond graduated from that institution at the head of his class in 1858.

Having attended college at the Royal Mining Academy, Freiberg, Saxony, the University of Heidelberg and the University of Munich, 1858–1861, Rossiter would start his post graduate career serving as aide-de-camp, with the rank of captain, on the staff of John C. Frémont, by whom, during his Civil War campaign in the Valley of Virginia, he was officially commended for gallant and meritorious conduct.[4]

Working years Edit

Following the American Civil War, he entered private practice for several years, forming the partnership of Adelberg and Raymond in 1864 in New York City. Besides consulting work, the firm also aided a number of later prominent German-educated mining engineers begin their careers, until Justus Adelberg's death on June 5, 1869, a result of mercury inhalation.

In 1867, Raymond started a 23-year career as editor of the American Journal of Mining, soon renamed the Engineering and Mining Journal, the longest-running mining periodical in the United States (it is still publishing). As editor, Raymond became one of the most influential voices in American mining. He used his editorial platform to expose poorly and crookedly run mining companies, and under his leadership the Engineering and Mining Journal became a major force for honesty in the mining industry.[5]

His work at the E&MJ led, in 1868, to Raymond's appointment to the coveted position of United States Commissioner of Mines to gather mining statistics on the American West. In 1869, Raymond hired Anton Eilers as Deputy Commissioner and, together and apart, the two explored the entire Far West, becoming national experts on the mining industry and creating large annual reports for Congress. These eight reports, for the years of his office, 1868–1875, contain a wealth of historic information about the mining West during this important period, especially the California Mother Lode, the Comstock Lode of Nevada, and the Rocky Mountains camps of Colorado. See, for example, the published version of the 1869 report.

In the 1860s as well, he helped form the short-lived American Mining Bureau, a forerunner of the American Institute of Mining Engineers. An original member of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, he had, at first, the "Engineering & Mining Journal" serve as its official member publication, and published many of the AIME technical reports prior to publication in its Transactions. He served as one AIME's first vice-presidents in 1871, and again in 1876, and 1877, was president from 1872 to 1875, and long-term secretary from 1884 to 1911. His New York City office became the unofficial center for the mining engineering fraternity. As secretary he also edited 40 of the annual volumes of Transactions, to which he liberally contributed essays, especially pertaining to the Federal mining laws, as well as other articles of importance. In 1945, the institute created the Rossiter W. Raymond Memorial Award after him, to recognize the best paper written each year by an author under 33 years of age.

He was a long-time supporter of Brooklyn's Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims, and was the director of its Sunday school for 50 years. His role in the church was so influential that he was asked to take over for Henry Ward Beecher when Beecher died. He would also play an important role during the Beecher-Tildon scandal.

From 1870 to 1872, he was the professor of ore deposits at Lafayette College, which in 1868 had conferred on him an honorary doctorate. He was the United States Commissioner to the Vienna Exposition. In 1875, he was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society.[6]

In 1871, he was a part of the a six-member party that entered what is now Yellowstone National Park, running into the Hayden Geological Survey of 1871 in the process. Raymond's party is officially known as the first group of visitors to enter a National Park, though it technically wasn't a national park at the time.[7] Rossiter recorded the visit in his 1880 book Camp and Cabin. The visit was also recorded by Calvin C. Clawson, a reporter for the New Northwest Newspaper. Pictures were taken by August F. Thrasher who, according to Mary C. H. Williams, carried negative plates and photos of the Yellowstone journey as far east as Indiana where the trail grows cold.

In 1885, he was the New York State Commissioner of Electrical Subways.

Rossiter consulted for Cooper, Hewitt & Company for some twenty plus years, and then Hewitt's and Cooper's American Sulphur Company in 1890.[8]

In 1911, during a visit to Japan as members and guests of the American Institute of Mining Engineers (AIME), Raymond received from the Mikado the distinction of Chevalier of the Order of the Rising Sun, fourth class—the highest ever given to foreigners not of royal blood—' "for eminent services to the mining industry of Japan". These services consisted in advice and assistance rendered in America to Japanese engineers, students, and officials throughout a period of more than 25 years.

Legal scholar Edit

Rossiter left an enduring mark on the jurisprudence of mining law. He defined the 'law of the apex' and gave the term 'lode' a definition that not only swayed the decision in Eureka-Richmond lawsuit, but also influenced all later mining litigation. He was even invited to address the United States Supreme Court on a point of mining law, which the Court accepted based on its subsequent decision.[9]

Raymond had not been a lawyer when he testified before the Supreme Court, but in 1898 he was admitted to the bar in both the state and federal courts. In 1903, he was appointed lecturer on mining law at Columbia University. In June 1906, Lehigh University granted Rossiter the first Doctorate of Laws ever granted by the institution.[10]

Author Edit

Raymond was the author of a large number of poems, stories, newspaper articles, biographies, memorials, opinions, fiction and non-fiction books. Unfortunately, most of his original work was destroyed by a fire late in his life;[2] however, this comprehensive list shows the enormous breadth of his writing.

'Death is Only an Horizon' Edit

Despite the large body of work he produced, the opinions he expressed, and the stories he told, he is best known, at least on the internet, for the latter half of a poem titled 'Death is Only an Horizon':

Life is eternal; and love is immortal; and death is only a horizon; and a horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight.[11]

A few sites also credit an extended version to him: O God, who holdest all souls in life; and callest them unto thee as seemeth best: we give them back, dear God, to thee who gavest them to us. But as thou didst not lose them in the giving, so we do not lose them by their return. For not as the world giveth, givest thou, O Lord of souls: that which thou givest thou takest not away: for life is eternal, and love is immortal, and death is only the horizon, and the horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight.[12] These words were later adapted into the song "Life is Eternal" by Carly Simon, and frequently appear among quotations on the subject of life, death, and sympathy.[13]

HOWEVER, crediting Mr. Raymond as the author of this quote appears to be an error, because the quote "Life is eternal, and love is immortal, and death is only an horizon, and an horizon is nothing save the limit of our site" was written almost 200 years before Rossiter Raymond was born. These words, and many others in Raymond's poem "Death is Only an Horizon" are first recorded in a prayer written by William Penn (1644-1718). This prayer is cited in the NSW Council of Churches Selected Christian Prayers, PR0061. Fr. Bede Jarrett, O.P. also lists this prayer as a prayer of his, but he credits "prayer written by William Penn, 1644-1718". The prayer written by William Penn and documented by the two places listed is as follows: " We give them back to thee, dear Lord, who gavest them to us. Yet as thou didst not lose them in giving, so we have not lost them by their return. What thou gavest thou takest not away, O Lover of souls; for what is thine is ours also if we are thine. And life is eternal and love is immortal, and death is only an horizon, and an horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight. Lift us up, strong Son of God, that we may see further; cleanse our eyes that we may see more clearly; and draw us closer to thyself that we may know ourselves to be nearer to our loved ones who are with thee. And while thou dost prepare for us, prepare us also for that happy place, that where they are and thou art, we too may be for evermore."It appears that many of the lines of this prayer are included in Raymond's poem "Death is Only an Horizon." In contrast, other than references on the internet, no definitive work or reference by Raymond has come to light that includes his version of the poem.

List of Governmental Reports to Congress Edit

  1. [1st] 1868, 40th Cong., 3d sess., House ex. doc. no. 54.
  2. [2d] 1869, 41st Cong., 2d sess., House ex. doc. no. 207.
  3. [3d] 1870, 42d Cong., 1st sess., House ex. doc. no. 10.
  4. [4th], 1871, 42d Cong., 2d sess., House ex. doc. no. 211.
  5. [5th], 1872, 42d Cong., 3d sess., House ex. doc. no. 210.
  6. [6th], 1873, 43d Cong., 1st sess., House ex. doc. no. 141.
  7. [7th], 1874, 43d Cong., 2d sess., House ex. doc. no. 177.
  8. [8th], 1875, 44th Cong., 1st sess., House ex. doc. no. 159.

Partial list of books Edit

  1. 'Die Leibgarde' (1863), a German translation of 'The Story of the Guard' by Mrs. Jessie Fremont (1863);
  2. 'The Children's Week' (1871);
  3. 'Brave Hearts' (1873);
  4. 'The Man in the Moon and Other People' (1874);
  5. 'The Book of Job' (1878);
  6. 'The Merry-go- Round' (1880);
  7. 'Camp and Cabin' (1880);
  8. 'A Glossary of Mining and Metallurgical Terms' (1881);
  9. 'Memorial of Alexander Mining Law' (1883–95);
  10. 'Two Ghosts and Other Christmas Stories' (1887);
  11. 'Tales of Three Corners (1890);
  12. 'The Life of Peter Cooper' (1897);

Legacy Edit

Raymond Peak, a 10,014-foot mountain located in northern California, was named in his honor in 1865.[14]

References Edit

  1. ^ Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Raymond, Rossiter Worthington" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  2. ^ a b "Rossiter Worthington Raymond" (PDF). Rossiter Raymond Memorial.
  3. ^ Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Raymond, John Howard" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton. This source gives 1839 as the year Robert Raikes Raymond graduated from Union College.
  4. ^ "Rossiter Worthington Raymond". Taking of the Tools; Early Biography of Rossiter Raymond.
  5. ^ Dan Plazak, A Hole in the Ground waith a Liar at the Top (Salt Lake: Univ. of Utah Press, 2005) 64, 134-135, 140.
  6. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2021-05-05.
  7. ^ "Rossiter Worthington Raymond" (PDF). Yellowstone Artists.
  8. ^ Haynes, Williams (1959). Brimstone, The Stone That Burns. Princeton: D. Van Norstrand Company, Inc. pp. 32–33.
  9. ^ "Rossiter Worthington Raymond - Address by Dr. Drinker" (PDF). Rossiter Raymond Memorial.
  10. ^ "Rossiter Worthington Raymond - Address by T.A. Rickard" (PDF). Rossiter Raymond Memorial.
  11. ^ "Death: Death Quotes".
  12. ^ http://www.wccm.org/images/PDF/VV9Lettersmall.pdf[dead link]
  13. ^ "Sympathy Quotes & Sayings (Mourning, Bereavement, Loss, Funeral, Death of Loved One)".
  14. ^ Peter Browning, Place Names of the Sierra Nevada: From Abbot to Zumwalt, 1986, Wilderness Press, ISBN 9780899970479, p. 178

External links Edit

rossiter, raymond, rossiter, worthington, raymond, april, 1840, cincinnati, ohio, december, 1918, brooklyn, york, american, mining, engineer, legal, scholar, author, memorial, president, lehigh, university, described, most, remarkable, cases, versatility, that. Rossiter Worthington Raymond April 27 1840 in Cincinnati Ohio December 31 1918 in Brooklyn New York 1 was an American mining engineer legal scholar and author At his memorial the President of Lehigh University described him as one of the most remarkable cases of versatility that our country has ever seen sailor soldier engineer lawyer orator editor novelist story teller poet biblical critic theologian teacher chess player he was superior in each capacity What he did he always did well 2 Contents 1 Early years 2 Working years 3 Legal scholar 4 Author 4 1 Death is Only an Horizon 4 2 List of Governmental Reports to Congress 4 3 Partial list of books 5 Legacy 6 References 7 External linksEarly years EditRossiter W Raymond was of English descent His earliest American ancestor on the paternal side Richard Raymond emigrated from England to this country and settled at Salem Massachusetts in 1632 On his mother s side he was descended from well known New England families His great grandfather Nathaniel Raymond was an officer in the Continental Army and his grandfather Caleb Pratt served in the War of 1812 His father Robert Raikes Raymond 3 1817 1888 was a native of New York City a graduate of Union College New York in 1837 editor of the Syracuse Free Democrat in 1852 and Evening Chronicle in 1853 4 and later professor of English in the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute and principal of the Boston School of Oratory His mother born 1818 died 1891 was a native of Providence Rhode Island They were married at Columbus Ohio in 1839 Rossiter was the eldest of a family of seven children of whom four were sons and three daughters He received his early education in the common schools of Syracuse New York where his parents participated in the underground railroad and in 1857 entered the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute of which his uncle John H Raymond later president of Vassar College was then president Raymond graduated from that institution at the head of his class in 1858 Having attended college at the Royal Mining Academy Freiberg Saxony the University of Heidelberg and the University of Munich 1858 1861 Rossiter would start his post graduate career serving as aide de camp with the rank of captain on the staff of John C Fremont by whom during his Civil War campaign in the Valley of Virginia he was officially commended for gallant and meritorious conduct 4 Working years EditFollowing the American Civil War he entered private practice for several years forming the partnership of Adelberg and Raymond in 1864 in New York City Besides consulting work the firm also aided a number of later prominent German educated mining engineers begin their careers until Justus Adelberg s death on June 5 1869 a result of mercury inhalation In 1867 Raymond started a 23 year career as editor of the American Journal of Mining soon renamed the Engineering and Mining Journal the longest running mining periodical in the United States it is still publishing As editor Raymond became one of the most influential voices in American mining He used his editorial platform to expose poorly and crookedly run mining companies and under his leadership the Engineering and Mining Journal became a major force for honesty in the mining industry 5 His work at the E amp MJ led in 1868 to Raymond s appointment to the coveted position of United States Commissioner of Mines to gather mining statistics on the American West In 1869 Raymond hired Anton Eilers as Deputy Commissioner and together and apart the two explored the entire Far West becoming national experts on the mining industry and creating large annual reports for Congress These eight reports for the years of his office 1868 1875 contain a wealth of historic information about the mining West during this important period especially the California Mother Lode the Comstock Lode of Nevada and the Rocky Mountains camps of Colorado See for example the published version of the 1869 report In the 1860s as well he helped form the short lived American Mining Bureau a forerunner of the American Institute of Mining Engineers An original member of the American Institute of Mining Engineers he had at first the Engineering amp Mining Journal serve as its official member publication and published many of the AIME technical reports prior to publication in its Transactions He served as one AIME s first vice presidents in 1871 and again in 1876 and 1877 was president from 1872 to 1875 and long term secretary from 1884 to 1911 His New York City office became the unofficial center for the mining engineering fraternity As secretary he also edited 40 of the annual volumes of Transactions to which he liberally contributed essays especially pertaining to the Federal mining laws as well as other articles of importance In 1945 the institute created the Rossiter W Raymond Memorial Award after him to recognize the best paper written each year by an author under 33 years of age He was a long time supporter of Brooklyn s Plymouth Church of the Pilgrims and was the director of its Sunday school for 50 years His role in the church was so influential that he was asked to take over for Henry Ward Beecher when Beecher died He would also play an important role during the Beecher Tildon scandal From 1870 to 1872 he was the professor of ore deposits at Lafayette College which in 1868 had conferred on him an honorary doctorate He was the United States Commissioner to the Vienna Exposition In 1875 he was elected as a member of the American Philosophical Society 6 In 1871 he was a part of the a six member party that entered what is now Yellowstone National Park running into the Hayden Geological Survey of 1871 in the process Raymond s party is officially known as the first group of visitors to enter a National Park though it technically wasn t a national park at the time 7 Rossiter recorded the visit in his 1880 book Camp and Cabin The visit was also recorded by Calvin C Clawson a reporter for the New Northwest Newspaper Pictures were taken by August F Thrasher who according to Mary C H Williams carried negative plates and photos of the Yellowstone journey as far east as Indiana where the trail grows cold In 1885 he was the New York State Commissioner of Electrical Subways Rossiter consulted for Cooper Hewitt amp Company for some twenty plus years and then Hewitt s and Cooper s American Sulphur Company in 1890 8 In 1911 during a visit to Japan as members and guests of the American Institute of Mining Engineers AIME Raymond received from the Mikado the distinction of Chevalier of the Order of the Rising Sun fourth class the highest ever given to foreigners not of royal blood for eminent services to the mining industry of Japan These services consisted in advice and assistance rendered in America to Japanese engineers students and officials throughout a period of more than 25 years Legal scholar EditRossiter left an enduring mark on the jurisprudence of mining law He defined the law of the apex and gave the term lode a definition that not only swayed the decision in Eureka Richmond lawsuit but also influenced all later mining litigation He was even invited to address the United States Supreme Court on a point of mining law which the Court accepted based on its subsequent decision 9 Raymond had not been a lawyer when he testified before the Supreme Court but in 1898 he was admitted to the bar in both the state and federal courts In 1903 he was appointed lecturer on mining law at Columbia University In June 1906 Lehigh University granted Rossiter the first Doctorate of Laws ever granted by the institution 10 Author Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Rossiter W Raymond Raymond was the author of a large number of poems stories newspaper articles biographies memorials opinions fiction and non fiction books Unfortunately most of his original work was destroyed by a fire late in his life 2 however this comprehensive list shows the enormous breadth of his writing Death is Only an Horizon Edit Despite the large body of work he produced the opinions he expressed and the stories he told he is best known at least on the internet for the latter half of a poem titled Death is Only an Horizon Life is eternal and love is immortal and death is only a horizon and a horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight 11 A few sites also credit an extended version to him O God who holdest all souls in life and callest them unto thee as seemeth best we give them back dear God to thee who gavest them to us But as thou didst not lose them in the giving so we do not lose them by their return For not as the world giveth givest thou O Lord of souls that which thou givest thou takest not away for life is eternal and love is immortal and death is only the horizon and the horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight 12 These words were later adapted into the song Life is Eternal by Carly Simon and frequently appear among quotations on the subject of life death and sympathy 13 HOWEVER crediting Mr Raymond as the author of this quote appears to be an error because the quote Life is eternal and love is immortal and death is only an horizon and an horizon is nothing save the limit of our site was written almost 200 years before Rossiter Raymond was born These words and many others in Raymond s poem Death is Only an Horizon are first recorded in a prayer written by William Penn 1644 1718 This prayer is cited in the NSW Council of Churches Selected Christian Prayers PR0061 Fr Bede Jarrett O P also lists this prayer as a prayer of his but he credits prayer written by William Penn 1644 1718 The prayer written by William Penn and documented by the two places listed is as follows We give them back to thee dear Lord who gavest them to us Yet as thou didst not lose them in giving so we have not lost them by their return What thou gavest thou takest not away O Lover of souls for what is thine is ours also if we are thine And life is eternal and love is immortal and death is only an horizon and an horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight Lift us up strong Son of God that we may see further cleanse our eyes that we may see more clearly and draw us closer to thyself that we may know ourselves to be nearer to our loved ones who are with thee And while thou dost prepare for us prepare us also for that happy place that where they are and thou art we too may be for evermore It appears that many of the lines of this prayer are included in Raymond s poem Death is Only an Horizon In contrast other than references on the internet no definitive work or reference by Raymond has come to light that includes his version of the poem List of Governmental Reports to Congress Edit 1st 1868 40th Cong 3d sess House ex doc no 54 2d 1869 41st Cong 2d sess House ex doc no 207 3d 1870 42d Cong 1st sess House ex doc no 10 4th 1871 42d Cong 2d sess House ex doc no 211 5th 1872 42d Cong 3d sess House ex doc no 210 6th 1873 43d Cong 1st sess House ex doc no 141 7th 1874 43d Cong 2d sess House ex doc no 177 8th 1875 44th Cong 1st sess House ex doc no 159 Partial list of books Edit Die Leibgarde 1863 a German translation of The Story of the Guard by Mrs Jessie Fremont 1863 The Children s Week 1871 Brave Hearts 1873 The Man in the Moon and Other People 1874 The Book of Job 1878 The Merry go Round 1880 Camp and Cabin 1880 A Glossary of Mining and Metallurgical Terms 1881 Memorial of Alexander Mining Law 1883 95 Two Ghosts and Other Christmas Stories 1887 Tales of Three Corners 1890 The Life of Peter Cooper 1897 Legacy EditRaymond Peak a 10 014 foot mountain located in northern California was named in his honor in 1865 14 References Edit Rines George Edwin ed 1920 Raymond Rossiter Worthington Encyclopedia Americana a b Rossiter Worthington Raymond PDF Rossiter Raymond Memorial Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1900 Raymond John Howard Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton This source gives 1839 as the year Robert Raikes Raymond graduated from Union College Rossiter Worthington Raymond Taking of the Tools Early Biography of Rossiter Raymond Dan Plazak A Hole in the Ground waith a Liar at the Top Salt Lake Univ of Utah Press 2005 64 134 135 140 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 2021 05 05 Rossiter Worthington Raymond PDF Yellowstone Artists Haynes Williams 1959 Brimstone The Stone That Burns Princeton D Van Norstrand Company Inc pp 32 33 Rossiter Worthington Raymond Address by Dr Drinker PDF Rossiter Raymond Memorial Rossiter Worthington Raymond Address by T A Rickard PDF Rossiter Raymond Memorial Death Death Quotes http www wccm org images PDF VV9Lettersmall pdf dead link Sympathy Quotes amp Sayings Mourning Bereavement Loss Funeral Death of Loved One Peter Browning Place Names of the Sierra Nevada From Abbot to Zumwalt 1986 Wilderness Press ISBN 9780899970479 p 178External links EditRossiter W Raymond National Mining Hall of Fame Works by Rossiter W Raymond at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Rossiter W Raymond at Internet Archive Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rossiter W Raymond amp oldid 1146387377, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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