Footnotes
- (1)
- This document was produced using Otfried Cheong's
HyperLatex package, available from
http://www.cs.uu.nl/ otfried/Hyperlatex/.
Updated
July 31, 2005
- (2)
- Mrs. Blaine was the
wife of politician, presidential candidate, and Secretary of State James
G. Blaine. Here published letters [1] provide a
description of Washington political life during the Gilded Age and
mention many participants, including Max Heard.
- (3)
- Horace Gray was half brother of Russell Gray, Amy Heard's
husband.
He was an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court and former Chief
Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Court. He was perhaps best known
for his ruling granting citizenship to the children born in the U.S. to
Chinese immigrants working on the railroads. He also participated in
the rather sillier case of deciding whether a tomato was a vegitable or
a fruit.
- (4)
- Henry Cabot
Lodge
- (5)
- Blaine's son
- (6)
- John
Sherman, brother of General Sherman
- (7)
- Probablie Adeline (Addie) Heard, wife of AH's brother
John.)
- (8)
- a hotel in New York City
- (9)
- Chemulpo is modern day Inchon
- (10)
- Hugh A. Dinsmore was
U.S. minister resident and consul general in Seoul (1887-90)
- (11)
- Dr. Horace N. Allen was
an American missionary and diplomat in Korea, he was Chargé
(1893-94) and Minister (1897-1901).
- (12)
- Walter Caine Hillier was the Acting Consul General
for England in Seoul 1889-1891 and Consul General from December 1891 to
February 1894. Previously he had een the British Assistant Secretary in
Peking in 1885.
- (13)
- Victoria West and her sisters, especially
Amalia. See Amy Heard: Letters from the Guilded Age. Victoria,
later Lady Sackville, was the illigitimate daughter of Lionel Sacville
West, Great Britain' Minister to the United States from 1881 through
1885.
She served as his Washington DC diplomatic hostess, married her cousin
who became the next Lord Sackville, and had one child, the writer Vita
Sackville West.
- (14)
- Brigadier General
Charles William LeGendre
was from 1890
till his death in Seoul in 1899 an advisor to the Korean Royal
Household. His duties
primarily involved treaty negotiation (with Japan) and
facilitating communication between Kojong and the foreign diplomatic
community, including men like Allen and Heard.
He served as a
military advisor to the Korean Foreign Office. He negotiated the
Korean-Japanese Convention and was an American Civil War
hero.
He had a reputation for being anti-Japanese and for this reason was
dismissed
as tutor for the King's son.
- (15)
- Amy's second son was Augustine Heard Gray
(1888-1985).
- (16)
- A port West of Seoul and
close to China, also called Inchon.
- (17)
- Addie (Adeline) Heard,
wife of AH's brother John
- (18)
- Augustine Heard Gray and Horace Gray, sons of Russell Gray
and Amy Heard Gray
- (19)
- Sir Robert Hart was the Customs
chief of China. As such he played a key role in the story of the
Empress Tzu Hsi, the last empress of China, the subject of the
Dragon Lady, by Sterling Seagrave.
[9]
- (20)
- Victoria
- (21)
- Mrs Horace Gray was the former Sarah Russell Gardner and the
mother of Russell Gray. Horace Gray (1800-1873) was a merchant who
gained
fame as a founder of the Boston Public Garden, for which he purchased
$1,500 worth of tulips. Legend has it that he went bankrupt in the
Boston waterworks scandal. His children with Sarah included Russell
Gray and John Chipman Gray, the lawyer and Harvard professor and cofounder of Ropes and
Gray, a still thriving law firm. His children by his first wife, Harriet
Upham (1801-1834) included Justice Horace Gray,
Elizabeth Chipman Gray
(born in Florence Italy in 1830), and Harriet
(born in Rome, Italy, in
1832).
- (22)
- Possibly related to
Frederick K. Low, who was
the U.S. Minister to Peking (1869-74)
- (23)
- As
discussed below, the USS Alliance was provided for the tour
- (24)
- Wonsan, also known as Gensan by the
Japanese and Yuensan by the Chinese, was one of the three major ports of
Korea.
- (25)
- Pusan was one of Korea's three
primary ports, but it was in the hands of the Japanese. During the
invasions of 1592 and 1593 by Hideyoshi, Pusan had been taken from the
Koreans and occupied by the Japanese. Even when the Japanese
subsequently evacuated, a sufficient military force was left to keep
Pusan as Japan's only foreign colony, a status which it retained until
1876 when it was opened as a treaty port with the Japanese retaining a
dominant role.
- (26)
- J.H. Hunt was the
commissioner of customs at Pusan
- (27)
- Mr. and Mrs. Johnston were in Korea for at least ten
years and he worked for the Korean Maritime Customs Office and was
apparently Chief Commissioner of Customs in 1893
[6].
- (28)
- Madame Outrey
was the wife of the French minister to Washington in 1882
- (29)
- "Tante
Mary," Mme Henri L'Homme, a childhood friend of Amy's. Daughter of
Philippe Parrot, a neurologist in Paris. Amy and
her sons visited her at her summer home, Chateau de Mercey, Cote d'Or,
in 1901.
- (30)
- V. Collin de Plancy had been the French Consul in Seoul
(1887-1890) and was currently French Chargé d'Affairs in Japan. He
would later return to Seoul as both Chargé and Consul General from
1895-1900.
- (31)
- Kirby, Beard, & Co. was a specialty shop at 5 rue Auber in
Paris, presumably with a branch in Boston.
- (32)
- gossip, scuttlebut
- (33)
- Either Elizabeth Chipman
(Bessie) Gray or Harriet Gray
- (34)
- rough lace
- (35)
- The dictionary defines an amah
as an East Indian nurse or female servant, but in Max's letters it
seems to mean simply a female servant. A friend who grew up in Pakiston
says the term can also mean a nanny.
- (36)
- Baron Speck von Sternburg was the
Secretary
to the German Legation in Peking. He interested himself in studying
Chinese military resources and many of his observations were reported
in G.N. Curzon's Problems of the Far East, Constable and Co.,
London, 1896, a study of China, Korea, and Japan from an extremely
biased English point of view.
- (37)
- Col. Charles Denby was the
U.S. Minister to China (1885-1898).
- (38)
- Baron Rüdiger von Biegeleben,
Austrian-Hungarian diplomat and statesman,
resident minister in Japan, signed the treaty
with Korea on 23 June 1892.
- (39)
- Kyongbok Palace, now a museum
- (40)
-
Mrs. Elizabeth Greathouse
was the mother of Clarence Ridgeby
Greathouse
[c. 1845-1899],
an American advisor to King Kojong. Clarence Greathouse was general
manager of the San Francisco Examiner when in 1886 he was appointed
consul-general to Japan at Yokahama, a post at which he
served for four years. In 1890 he was engaged to serve as a legal
advisor for King Kojong and in January 1891 he was appointed
vice-president of the home office, which put him in charge of legal
affairs.
His best known case was the trial of the Japanese and Korean
conspirators accused of the murder of the Queen in 1895. He died while
serving as an advisor to the King. His mother lived with him until his
death. Mrs Greathouse had been a friend of the Queen, and thought her
a "gentle, pretty creature." After her son's death she returned
to Versailles, Kentucky at the age of 81.
[2][4][7]
The biography in [4] was written by Harold Joyce Nobel, who
wrote of the foreign community in korea in his paper
[3] and his 1931 PhD thesis
[8] (information provided by John Shufelt).
- (41)
- Min Myongsong,
the controversial and powerful wife of King Kojong. She would be
murdered by Japanese soldiers in the palace in 1894.
- (42)
- During a visit to Seoul Korea in 1984 I toured the castle
and its grounds and found the bronze sundial admired by my great aunt
Max almost a hundred years earlier.
- (43)
- This seems to be a
form of silver headdress in a form resembling the tuft of an egret.
- (44)
- 1839-1894, lawyer, Republican Congressman from New
Jersey 1973-75, 1883-89, U.S. Minister to Austria-Hungary, 1881; to
Germany, 1889-93.
- (45)
- Sir
Robert Hart was the British inspector general of Chinese Maritime
Customs Service
- (46)
- Dr. Julius Wiles had been British Deputy Surgeon General in
the British Army. He retired and then joined the English Mission
(religious) in Chemulpo under Bishop Corfe. With his own money he built
the English Mission in Seoul. Later Bishop Trollope described him as a
"splendid old specimen of the army doctor."[6]
- (47)
- Sir Nicholas-Roderick O'Conor, British
legation secretary In Peking (1885-86), minister plenipotentiary to
China and Korea (1892-95).
- (48)
- This is probably the mother of Dr. W.B. Scranton -- Mary
F. Scranton. She came to Korea in June 1885 at the age of 52 and later
founded Ewha University. She died in Korea in 1909.
[6]
- (49)
- Possibly wife of Pavel Andreevich Dmitrevsky,
Russian Consul in Hankow (1883-92) and Tientsin (1893-96), acting
chargé in Korea (1891,93)
- (50)
- Col. F.J.H. Nienstead, American military
instructor in Korea
- (51)
-
Li Hung Chang (1823-1901)
was the Viceroy of China. He was the richest and most
powerful political boss in the Chinese empire, a physically imposing
man of over six feet
four with a thick moustache and black almond eyes.[9]
He was a primary player in much of nineteenth century China, playing an
active role in both Taiping and Boxer rebellions.
- (52)
- Ker was the British Consular Assistant and in the spring of
1892 he was the acting Vice-Consul in Seoul.[6]
- (53)
- Corfe was a former navy chaplain and was head of the Korean
mission from about 1889 through the 1890s. He had the reputation of
being an outspoken man who was not afraid to speak his mind which often
caused the British representative in Seoul some embarrassment and
irritation. [6]
- (54)
- Herman Budler was the former German vice Consul to
Seoul (1884-1886). He had the reputation for not being very fond of
Christians. He died in November 1983.[6]