FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY
|

A photograph of the title page and frontispiece of one of Ray Stannard
Baker's books on bees, written by John Thorley and published in London in
1744.
| CLIFFORD W. McKIBBIN (MSC '11) President Realtor, 327 1/2 S. Washington Lansing
DR. W. O. HEDRICK. (MSC '91) |
DR. W. C. BAGLEY (MSC '95) Second Vice President Deceased - Successor to be elected at annual meeting, 1947.
GLEN STEWART (MSC '17) |
MERRILL R. PIERSON Treasurer Assistant Comptroller Michigan State College
JACKSON E. TOWNE* |
*The Secretary and Joseph G. Duncan, Department of Public Relations,
serve as editors of the News.
The Baker Bee Collection
This fine gift of apicultural rarities, so rich in
associational value because of the great literary distinction of the original
collector, came to the Michigan State College Library through the kind assistance
of Mr. Ray Baker's son, Mr. James Baker of Detroit, last July. The books
had been in process of being packed for shipment to us at the time of Mr.
Ray Baker's death. As noted in the last number of our News, Mr. Ray
Baker served as a Council Member of our group from the founding period until
the expiration of his term, in June 1945.
It was originally Ray Stannard Baker's intention to write
a pamphlet to accompany his remarkable collection "of old books about bees."
But the pressure of many other duties kept him from this during the last
months of his life.
We have re-arranged the original list as sent us by Mr.
James Baker from alphabetical to chronological, have collated the entries
with the actual title pages of the volumes, making a minimum number of changes
and in a number of instances have provided annotations for the items by quoting
directly from the chapter on "My Bees", and from the two subsequent chapters,
in Under My Elm, which is one of the "Adventures in Contentment" Mr.
Baker published under the pseudonym of "David Grayson". We trust that the
resulting bibliography may serve as a partially acceptable substitute for
the pamphlet Mr. Baker had contemplated writing.
In the previous number of our News the many books
by Mr. Baker were enumerated in our biographical summary.
The bee books were first exhibited in the glass cases
in the main hallway in the College Library in October, 1946.
J. E. T.
*
"David Grayson" Comments:
"It seems to me I could write half a substantial volume
on these old bee books and then not begin to exhaust the interest and amusement
I have had of them. So much remains to be told of the strange things to be
found in them, of the charlatans who played upon the ignorance of the people,
of the development of new kinds of hives, of the interest of one of England's
worst kings, Charles II, in beekeeping . . . The bees indeed stimulated my
interest in the books, and the books sent me back to the bees to consider
them newly, and often with wonder and amusement that such mighty clouds of
tradition and myth should have arisen to obscure the even greater wonder
of their reality. After more than a quarter century of beekeeping, I doubt
whether, even though we take great credit to ourselves for being scientific
observers, we have more than begun to exhaust the mystery of the hive."
"It was not until several years after we came to Amherst
that I discovered the kind of country work that suited me best. In fact,
it suited me exactly and completely, for I found in it unending interest
and variety. This was beekeeping and all that went with it in human contacts
of various sorts and in exploring the astonishingly voluminous lore and
literature of the honeybee. In time I came to take pride in the quality of
the honey I sold. I liked to see the little pyramid of my jars with their
translucent contents in Dickinson's Store, with the sign which the energetic
grocer put below it: David Grayson's Good Honey."
Initial Profit and Loss
| Honey, first three lots. cost to produce, about....... Honey, received for three lots, cash and trade....... Joy at the job since April, 6 mos. @ $3.00........... First-class appetite for supper every night for 6 mos. @ $1.00................................................. Comfortable weariness and good sound sleep after hard labor out-of-doors during same period @ $1.00 ........................................................... Interesting and inventive thoughts. (Capitalists have long considered experimental inventions a valuable asset. Why not I, inventions of the imagination?) 6 mos. @ $3.00............................ Good will. This item appears in many sound accountings of great companies. Why not in mine? I've already earned the good will of several people in this neighborhood. More than that, I've earned more of my own good will than ever before. I think in a like period. So in it goes....................................................... Balance -- clear profit....................................... |
$26.00 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35.00 |
12.00 18.00 . 6.00 . . 6.00 . . . 18.00 . . . . . . 1.00 |
| ............................................................................ |
$61 .OO $61 .OO |
Hyll, Thomas
1568
A PLEASANT INSTRUCTION OF THE PARFIT ORDERING OF BEES. . .London, 1568, (The
first treatise in English on bees and beekeeping. Hyll "gathered and Englished"
from the ancient classics, using without acknowledgment, as Charles Butler
pointed out, "the labour of Georgius Pictorius.")
"I was able to get a copy of the earliest, and probably the most precious
English book on beekeeping. To this day I recall the thrill I had when the
dealer took it from his fireproof vault, held it a moment in his hand, then
passed it to me. . .
It was a small volume, printed in black letter, in the year
1568. It was bound in old calf with a gilt ornamental border. There were
bookworm holes through a few of the pages, and the names of various owners
down through the centuries written in unsuspected places, imperfections which
possibly reduced its money value, but added to my interest. I delighted in
the frontispiece, a woodcut portrait of the author. . . with his thin beard
and Elizabethan cap and rolling collar. The book was at once a treasure and
a temptation; and I fell!"
Heresbachius, M. Conradus
1601
FOURE BOOKES OF HUSBANDRY. . . Containing the whole art and trade of Husbandry,
Gardening. . .Newly Englished. . . (Original sheep skin cover.) London,
1601.
"In less than no time Mr. Cowan had in his hand a most
beautiful copy of Herebachius' Foure Bookes of Husbandry.It was `Newly Englished,
and encreafed by Barnaby Googe, Esquire' and published in London in 1601.
It had the original sheepskin parchment binding with rawhide clasps. (I now
have a copy of that precious book in my own . . . collection.) "
Butler, Charles
1634
THE FEMININE MONARCHIE, or THE HISTORI OF BEES. . . (Contains, pp. 78-81,
a 4-part "Bees Madrigal", printed inversely on the upper and lower halves
of two opposite pages, so that the singers facing each other two and two,
may each hold the book and sing his part.) Oxford, 1634.
"This Charles Butler, for his time, was a thorough-going
scholar. He had 'read' at Oxford and settled down to a poor vicarage near
Basingstoke, where he served the people of his neighborhood, and kept bees
and wrote books, for forty-eight years. I like to think of him there in his
garden, a poor man in worldly goods, but rich in the delights of a lively
mind, and inspired by a passion to know. He was irritated, as some of us
are to this day, by the 'capriciousness of English orthography' and made
the highly sensible proposal that 'men should write altogether according
to the sound now generally received.' He became such an enthusiast that he
translated his own book on the honeybee into his strange new spelling. I
have a copy of it (printed at Oxford in 1634) which is extremely difficult
to read."
Worlidge, J.
1691
SYSTEMA AGRICULTURAE; The Mystery of Husbandry Discovered. Treating of the
several New and most Advantagious Ways of Tilling, Planting, Sowing, Manuring,
Ordering, Improving Of all sorts of Gardens, Orchards, etc. London, 1681.
(Third Edition.)
". . . my friend . . . went into the house again and
brought out a curious old leather-bound book. It looked to be two or three
hundred years old, and indeed, I found these words on the title page: 'Printed
for Tho. Dring at the corner of Chancery lane in Fleetftreet, 1681.' "
Warder, Joseph
1726
THE TRUE AMAZONS: or The Monarchy of Bees. Being a New Discovery and Improvement
of those Wonderful Creatures. (With a finely-engraved portrait of the author.)
London, 1726. Sixth Edition.
1744
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF BEES. Containing An Account of their Production, their
Oeconomy, the manner of their making Wax and Honey, and the best Methods
for the Improvement and Preservation of them. Illustrated With Twelve Copper
Plates. Translated from the French. (Two interesting book plates in the front.)
London, 1744.
"The book was called The Natural History of Bees
and was published in 1744. I was to learn later that it was a translation
of a famous French book on bees, by Bazin. I had no idea, then, of its rarity
or its value, but I knew I wanted it."
Thorley, John
1744
MELISSELOGIA. OR, THE FEMALE MONARCHY. Being an Enquiry into the Nature,
Order, and Government of Bees. . . Illustrated with Copper-Plate (one folding).
London, 1744. (First Edition.)
Thorley, John
1745
THE FEMALE MONARCHY: or the Natural History of Bees. . . London, 1745. (A
piracy, much reduced in text of Thorley's THE FEMALE MOSARCHY, london, 1744.)
Mandeville, Bernard
1755
THE FABLE OF THE BEES: (two parts) or Private Vices, Public Benefits; With,
An Essay on Charity and Charity-Schools: And A Search into the Nature of
Society. Edinburgh, 1755. (A satire by Bernard Mandeville, Dutch-English
author, who stressed the fact that vice, through requiring agencies to curb
it, contributes to the general welfare.)
Bradley, R.
1758
A GENERAL TREATISE OF AGRICULTURE, Both Philosophical and Practical; Displaying
the Arts of Husbandry and Gardening. . . London, 1758. (Bradley was a Professor
of Botany at Cambridge; and a F. R. S.)
Warder, Joseph
1765
THE TRUE AMAZONS: Or, The Monarchy of Bees. . . London, 1765. The Ninth Edition.
Wildman, Thomas
1768
A TREATISE ON THE MANAGEMENT OF BEES. London, 1768. (First Edition.)
Wildman, Thomas
1770
The same. London, 1770. The Second Edition. Wherein is contained The Natural
History of those Insects; With the various Methods of cultivating them, both
Ancient and Modern, and the improved Treatment of them.
Algemeene Oefenschoole
1782
Van Konsten en Weetenschappen. . . Zesde Afdeeling. . ."Amsteldam," 1782.
(Presented to Mr. Baker by C. D. Winslow, Captain of Police, Grand Rapids,
1941.)
Huber, Francis
1808
New Observations on the Natural History of BEES. Translated from the original.
Second Edition. Edinburgh: 1808.
Bevan, Edward
1827
THE HONEY-BEE; its natural history, physiology, and management. London: Baldwin,
Cradock and Joy. 1827.
De Gelieu, Jonas
1829
THE BEE PRESERVER; or Practical Directions for the Management and Preservation
of Hives. Edinburgh, 1829.
Smith, Jerome V. C.
1831
An ESSAY on the Practicability of Cultivating the HONEY BEE, in Maritime
Towns and Cities, as a Source of Domestic Economy and Profit. Boston and
New York. 1831. (First Edition.)
Nutt, Thomas
1832
HUMANITY TO HONEY-BEES; or. . . the Management of Honey Bees upon an improved
and humane plan, by which the lives of bees may be preserved, and abundance
of honey of a superior quality may be obtained. London, 1832.
Nutt, Thomas
1832
The same. (Bound in gold-tooled leather.)
Payne, J. H.
1833
THE APIARIAN'S GUIDE, Containing Practical Directions for the Management
of Bees Upon the Depriving System. London. 1833.
Bagster, Samuel
1834
THE MANAGEMENT OF BEES . . . with . . ."Ladies Safety Hive." London, 1834.
Weeks, John M.
1836
A MANUAL: or an Easy Method of MANAGING BEES, in the Most Profitable Manner
to Their Owner, with Infallible Rules to Prevent Their Destruction by the
Moth. Middlebury, 1836. (First Edition.)
Weeks, John M.
1838
The same. Third Edition.
Cotton, William Charles
1842
MY BEE BOOK. London, 1842. (Contains the two Letters to Cottagers, a list
of bee-books, and a reprint of Huber's preface.)
Wighton, John
1842
THE HISTORY AND MANAGEMENT OF BEES, with notice of a newly-constructed hive,
by the author. . . . London, 1842.
Golding, Robert
1848
THE SHILLING BEE BOOK, Containing the Leading Facts in the Natural History
of Bees, with directions for Bee Management. London, 1848. Second Edition.
Frank, Abram
1848
Manual on the MANAGEMENT OF BEES; Giving a Description of the Bee, its
Disposition and Habits. Busti, New York, 1848.
Miner, T. B.
1849
THE AMERICAN BEE KEEPER'S MANUAL. . . Embellished by Thirty-Five Beautiful
Engravings. New York, 1849.
Filleul, Philip V. M.
1851
THE ENGLISH BEE-KEEPER, or suggestions for the practical management of Amateur
and Cottage Apiaries, on scientific principles . . . by a Country Curate.
London, 1851.
Filleul, Philip V. M.
1851
THE COTTAGE BEE-KEEPER. . . New York, 1851.
Miner, T. B.
1851
THE AMERICAN BEE KEEPER'S MANUAL. . . Embellished by Thirty-Five Fine Wood
Engravings. New York, 1851.
Langstroth, Lorenzo L.
1853
. . . HIVE AND THE HONEY-BEE, a Bee Keeper's Manual. Northampton (Mass.),
1853. (First Edition.)
"For centuries, beekeeping has been a favorite avocation
of English churchmen, and some of the best beemen in America - Langstroth,
for example, who invented the modern beehive - have carried the wisdom they
garnered as beemasters into their pulpits."
Miner, T. B.
1857
THE AMERICAN BEE KEEPER'S MANUAL. . .New York, 1857.
Quinby, M.
1858
MYSTERIES OF BEE-KEEPING EXPLAINED: being a complete analysis of the whole
subject; consisting of the natural history of bees, directions for obtaining
the greatest amount of pure surplus honey with the least possible expense,
remedies for losses given, and the science of "luck" fully illustrated -
the result of more than twenty years' experience in extensive apiaries. New
York, 1858.
Samuelson, James
1860
THE HONEY-BEE; Its Natural History, Habits, Anatomy, and Microscopical Beauties.
With Tinted Illustrations. London, 1860.
Quinby, M.
1861
MYSTERIES OF BEE-KEEPING EXPAINED. . . New York, 1861.
Langstroth, Lorenzo L.
1861
A Practical Treatise on the HIVE AND HONEY-BEE. New York, 1861. Third Edition.
King, N. H. and H. A.
1867
THE BEE-KEEPER'S TEXT-BOOK. . . Buffalo, 1867. Third Edition, Revised and
Enlarged. (Unbound.)
Langstroth, Lorenzo L.
1868
A Practical Treatise on the HIVE AND HONEY-BEE. . . Philadelphia, 1868. Third
Edition.
Allen, John
1878
THE BLESSED BEES. N. Y., Putnam, 1878. ("John Allen" was the pseudonym of
Oscar Clute, a clergyman, in after years President of Michigan Agricultural
College.)
Sourbé, T.
1880
TRAITÉ. THÉORIQUE ET PRACTIQUE D'APICULTURE MOBILISTE. . .
Paris, 1880.
Hamet, M. H.
1883
Cours Pratique D'APICULTURE. . . Professé au Jardin du Luxembourg.
Paris, 1885. (Fifth Edition.)
Hamet, M. H.
1885
L'APICULTURE Journal des Cultivateurs D'Abeilles Marchands de Miel et de
Cire. Paris, 1885.
Root, A. I.
1887
THE A B C OF BEE CULTURE. . . Medina, Ohio, 1887.
"As one gets deeper into the art, he will wish to have
that vast compendium . . . full of more or less unassorted and sometimes
repetitive information, called The A B C of Bee Culture. It
is edited by the most famous of American bee families, the Roots, of Medina,
Ohio."
Root, A. I.
1887
The same. (Presentation copy.)
Maeterlinck, Maurice
1901
THE LIFE OF THE BEE. . . New York, Dodd, 1901.
Root, A. I.
1903
THE A B C OF BEE CULTURE. . . Medina, Ohio, 1903.
Edwardes, Tickner
1911
THE LORE OF THE HONEY-BEE. . . New York, Dutton, 1911.
Comstock, Anna B.
1915
HOW TO KEEP BEES. A Handbook for the Use of Beginners. . . New York. Doubleday,
1915.
"The earliest book I used seems to me still an excellent
one for beginners. It is called How to Keep Bees, by Anna B. Comstock.
Bees for thr Beginner, a bulletin issued free by the United States
Department of Agriculture, is also most useful."
Root, A. I. aud E. R.
1920
THE ABC AND XYC OF BEE CULTURE. . . Medina, Ohio, 1920. (856 pp.)
Geary, Henry
1920
THE BEEKEEPER'S VADE-MECUM. . . London, 1920.
Cowan, Thos. Wm.
1924
BRITISH BEE-KEEPER'S GUIDE BOOK. An autographed copy. London, 1921.
"One experience I had, after I had been for several years
slowly gathering old books on bees, gave a tremendous impetus to my interest.
Being again in England, I went to call on the best-known beemaster and bee
authority in all the kingdom. I had had some previous correspondence with
him and had long wished to meet him face to face.
His name was Thomas William Cowan, and he lived in Bristol.
He had been, at one time, president of the British Beekeepers' Association,
and had written a number of excellent manuals and guidebooks on beekeeping.
What interested me most of all that summer morning, when I entered his home,
were the book-lined walls of his library. I believe he had at that time,
one of the largest independent collections of books on bees and beekeeping
in the world. . . He must have had thousands of books and pamphlets and journals
- including many in French, Dutch, German, Latin. . ."
Lovell, John H.
1926
HONEY PLANTS OF NORTH AMERICA. Medina, Ohio, 1926.
Gilman, A.
1929
PRACTICAL BEE-BREEDING. . . New York, Putnam's, 1929.
Walker, Lt. Col. H. J. O.
DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF A LIBRARY OF BEE BOOKS. . . Autographed copy. (
141 pp.)
*
"So many wintry evenings through the years when the bees are safe in their winter quarters have I spent looking into these curious old books. A fine fire of apple logs on the hearth, and my books piled all around, some to read, some to write in, I think of the friends, both bees and books, they have made me; and I am still longing to buy books I cannot afford."
*
Mr. Baker's collection included some unbound numbers
of certain bee journals, such as The American Apiculturist, The Bee Hive,
The Bee-Keepers Review, The British Bee Journal, and The Progessive
Bee-Keeper, ranging in dates from 1887 to 1937.
Also included are several bulletins of the U. S. Department
of Agriculture on bee-keeping, dated from 1905 to 1925 ; and an interesting
collection of marked rare book catalogues issued by such firms as Bernard
Quaritch and Wheldon and Wesley, ranging from 1912 to 1936. There is an
accompanying correspondence.
There are also "some original notes" of Mr. Ray Baker's
bearing upon his actual bee-keeping experiences. These manuscript memoranda
give dates of the swarming of the "David Grayson" bees, and include such
whimsical notations as the following, on the card used for the year 1936:
"I was ill part of spring and summer, got little comb honey but good crop
extracted honey. The bees did not know I was ill!"
*
Stir des Abeilles
The most important early French authors on bees were Bazin, De Gelius, and Huber. Other early French authors listed in the 1842 edition of Cotton included:
Beaunier, S. Sur l'Education des Abeilles. Vendome: 1806.
Bertin, M. Instruction sur la Culture des Abeilles. Paris: 1836.
Beville, P. C. G. Traite de l'Education des Abeilles. Paris: 1804.
Bienayme, M. Memoire sur les Abeilles. Mets: 1803.
Chambon, A. Manuel de l'Education des Abeilles. Paris.
Cordier, Edmund. L'Abeille Francaise. Paris: 1799.
Cotte, C. Extrait des Memoires sur l'Education des Abeilles. Paris.
De Blangy, D. Traite de l'Education des Abeilles. Paris: 1771.
De la Lauze, C. F. A. Traites sur l'Education des Abeilles et des Vers a Soie. Paris: 1809.
Della Rocca, M. l'Abbe. Traite complet sur les Abeilles. Paris: 1790.
Denys de Montfort, P. Ruche a trois Recoltes Annuelles. Paris: 1790.
Dubost, J. F. Methode Advantageuse de gouverner les Abeilles. Bourg: 1800.
Ducouedic, P. La Ruche Pyramidale. Paris: 1813.
Engel. Instruction sur la Culture des Abeilles. Strasbourg. 1808.
Fontenay. Manuel des Proprietaires d' Abeilles. Bar-sur-Aube: 1829.
Lombard, M. Manuel des Proprietaires d'Abeilles. Paris:
1825.
....................... Sur les Abeilles. Paris: 1805.
Martin, A. Manuel de Proprietaire d'Abeilles. Paris:
1828.
....................... J. and A. Traite sur les Abeilles. Paris: 1826.
Palteau, M. Construction de Ruche de Bois. Met: 1756.
Quiqueran, Beaujeu, M. T. Veuve Barras. Memoire sur l'Education des Abeilles. Paris.
Radouan, J. Manuel des Proprietaires d'Abeilles. Paris: 1828.
Serain, P. E. Instruction sur la Maniere de gouverner les Abeilles. Paris: 1802.
*
"'David Graysot' Comments"; "Initial Profit and Loss"; the etchings, "My Bees" and "A Fellowship of Curiosity," and annotations are from: UNDER MY ELM by David Grayson, illustrated by Darid Hendrickson, copyright 1942 by Doubleday & Company. Inc. (reproduced with permission).