In
a dusty warehouse in Stratford on Avon in England, there lies a portrait
of the noted American Shakespearean actor, Edwin Booth. Once upon a
time, this picture had an inscription on it reminding everyone that it
had been presented by American Rotarians. Indeed, when Paul Harris was
touring Britain in 1928, he made a special point of visiting
Stratford-on-Avon where, on Friday June 1, he was shown some of the many
places of interest in the town by the local Rotary President Fred
Ballance and the Secretary, Robert Lunn. In particular he asked to see
the full length portrait of the "celebrated tragedian Edwin Booth", the
brother of John Wilkes Booth, who shot Abraham Lincoln.
The
story of how this came to be in Stratford is complicated. It all started
at the 1921 Convention in Edinburgh. There, Past President of Rotary,
Arch Klumph, learned that the United States was the only country in
which the plays of William Shakespeare were regularly performed, but
which had no item on display in the Memorial Theatre Gallery at
Stratford on Avon. He happened to mention this to a fellow member of the
Cleveland Club, E.F. Albee the well known impresario. On their return to
the United States, Albee immediately commissioned J.A. Mohlte, a well
respected New York artist, to paint a replica of the famous painting of
Edwin Booth by Sargent, the original of which hung in the Players Club
in New York. On August 24, 1922, at a meeting of the New York Rotary
Club held at the Hotel Astor, Albee presented the Mohlte portrait to
Rotary so that it could be donated by them to the Stratford gallery. The
meeting at the Astor was attended by a distinguished group of more than
700 members and guests, among them such luminaries as Eugene O'Neil and
Robert Mantell. A full record of the key speeches can be found in 'The
Rotarian' for October 1922. For a few days the painting was exhibited at
the Knoedler Gallery in New York and then on September 1, it was taken
by a group of Rotarians, led by Arch Klumph, on board the S.S. Majestic
and escorted to England.
Later that month, on September 29, 1922,
the little group, complete with the picture, arrived in Stratford on
Avon for the presentation. A very distinguished party of Rotarians and
celebrities processed through the streets of the town to the theatre,
led by the civic mace bearers in full period costume, and by the Mayor
of Stratford. Members of the Board of Governors of the Memorial Theatre
and of British Rotary joined the procession, and in the auditorium the
waiting audience included Count John McCormack the Irish singer, Mary
Anderson, Marie Corelli and many senior Diplomats, Rotarians and local
dignitaries.
Arch
C. Klumph, who had been commissioned to act on behalf of RI, made the
presentation to the Governors of the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre at a
ceremony arranged with the help of local Rotarians and of the Birmingham
Rotary Club in particular, and of the Rotary International Association
for Great Britain and Ireland in general. The portrait not only filled
the gap in the Gallery's array, but served as a memorial to Edwin Booth,
one of America's greatest Shakespearean actors; it was an inspiration to
future actors, and an expression of international appreciation. Both
Klumph's speech and those of other speakers were also reported in full
in 'The Rotarian' for December 1922. Madame de Navarro, better known as
the actress Mary Anderson spoke eloquently about Booth and his superb
interpretations of Shakespearean characters, at a celebratory dinner
that evening. The three volumes were found later at the home of Arch
Klumph's grandson and were brought to the 2009 Convention in Birmingham
by members of the Cleveland Club. Afterwards, they were taken back to
Ohio.
This
was not, however, the end of the story, because the Memorial Theatre was
destroyed in a disastrous fire in March 1926. Luckily the Library and
the Memorial Gallery escaped more or less intact and the picture was
still on show when Paul Harris visited there in 1928. The theatre itself
was rebuilt in 1932 and the portrait was for many years on show
alongside those of such other celebrated Shakespearean actors as David
Garrick, Sarah Siddons and Ellen Terry. According to a small plaque on
it, the painting was "Presented by Arch Klumph of Cleveland, on behalf
of Rotary International, to the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre." With
increasing pressure on space in recent years, some of the items in the
gallery have had to be put in store in the theatre's Costume and
Artifacts warehouse and the Mohlte picture is one of these. Perhaps, if
there was enough interest, the picture could be retrieved, restored and
either put on show in the nearby RIBI offices in Alcester or even
returned to American Rotary.
So
what has this to do with the Former British Prime Minister, Tony Blair?
For those who may be unaware, the wife of the present British Prime
Minister was formerly Cherie Booth. She shares with John Wilkes Booth
and Edwin, a common descent from one Richard Booth. John Wilkes Booth,
who was born in 1838, was the grandson of Richard Booth, a lawyer, and
his wife Jane Elizabeth Game. Another of Richard Booth's sons was
Algernon Sidney Booth and it is this Booth who was the great, great,
great, grandfather of Cherie. This is just the sort of connection which
we in the Genealogy Fellowship like to make!
Basil Lewis UK,
circa 2009
This painting was also featured at the
100th convention of Rotary, in Birmingham UK in 2009
Additional
research with our thanks to *RIBI and RGHF board member Tim Tucker

*Liz Evans Operations Administrator & Presidential Secretarial Support
Rotary International in Great Britain & Ireland Kinwarton Road,
Alcester, Warwickshire B49 6PB |