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Judith
Ann Schiff is Chief Research Archivist at the Yale University Library.
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Previous
Columns
May
2003 The joys and risks of flying.
April
2003 Byers Hall served as a social center for Sheff "scientifics."
March
2003 Irving Fisher's interests ranged from economic indices
to health food to world peace.
February
2003 Eli skaters played in the first intercollegiate hockey
game.
December
2002 During WWII, Yale trained soldiers and scholars.
November
2002 How Yale derailed a career in small-town pharmacy.
October
2002 A family's gift of music.
Summer
2002 When rowing went formal.
May
2002 The Eli role in the origin of intercollegiate baseball.
April
2002 The father of the crew cut.
March
2002 After WWI, Yale played a role in forging the peace.
February
2002 Ross Granville Harrison, Yale's near-Nobelist.
December
2001 The many lives of the Governor Ingersoll house.
November
2001 Henry Parks Wright, the first dean of the College.
October
2001 James Hillhouse, the first master of bringing together
town and gown.
Summer
2001 The ironic history of Woodbridge Hall.
May
2001 Beatrix Farrand: landscaper to Yale.
April
2001 Yale's golf course turns 75.
February
2001 Connecticut Hall has housed patriots and physicists.
December
2000 Basketball may owe the five-man team to Yale.
November
2000
The University's current investment in science can be traced
in part to the influence of Benjamin Silliman, Class of 1796,
who became known as the father of American scientific education.
October
2000 The year 2000 presidential election is not the first
to feature a H-Y-P rivalry.
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Old Yale
Pomp?
Circumstance? Yes, It All Started at Yale
Summer
2003
by Judith Ann Schiff
"I've
got a tune that will knock 'em -- knock 'em flat,"
Edward Elgar boasted to a friend in 1901. The British composer had
just written the first of the five Pomp and Circumstance Marches,
and he was right: He had a winner. When the piece premiered in London
that October, the audience demanded a double encore.
Elgar never intended
Pomp
and Circumstance March No. 1 for commencement ceremonies,
let alone American commencement ceremonies. His title, from Act
III of Othello, invoked military majesty: "Farewell the neighing
steed, and the shrill trump,/ The spirit-stirring drum, the ear-piercing
fife,/ The royal banner, and all quality, / Pride, pomp and circumstance
of glorious war!" In 1902, Elgar recycled the tune for "The Land
of Hope and Glory," a patriotic hymn he included in his Coronation
Ode for Edward VII. A version of the hymn is now known throughout
Britain as an unofficial national anthem.
On June 28, 1905, the
melody began its march into musical immortality on this side of
the Atlantic, when it was heard for the first time at a commencement.
The place was Yale's Woolsey Hall.
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Elgar
was one of 14 honorees that year, but Sanford made him the
star of the festivities.
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Samuel Sanford, a Yale
music professor and pianist, was the man who brought the composition
and its composer to New Haven. A talented pianist, he was too shy
to perform in public, and had dedicated himself instead to promoting
music at Yale and nationally. It was he who managed the installation
of the great Newberry Memorial Organ in Woolsey Hall. (The joint
dedication of hall and organ took place 100 years ago this June.)
Sanford was a close friend of Elgar's; in 1904, he presented the
composer with a Steinway piano. In 1905, he sent Elgar an invitation
from Yale to attend commencement and receive an honorary Doctor
of Music degree. Elgar had turned down other invitations to the
United States, but the combination of friendship, doctorate, and
Steinway must have been persuasive. He and his wife Caroline arrived
in New Haven that June and stayed at Sanford's mansion on Hillhouse
Avenue.
Elgar was one of 14
honorees that year, but Sanford made him the star of the festivities.
Before he received his doctorate for "leadership . in an art which
gives noble expression to that which is uplifting and inspiring
in human feeling," the audience was treated to two parts from his
first oratorio, The Light of Life. Sanford had arranged for
a performance by not only the New Haven Symphony Orchestra and the
college choir, but also the Glee Club, members of the faculty, and
several New York musicians. At the end of the ceremonies, as graduates
and officials marched out of Woolsey, the recessional music was
Pomp and Circumstance March No. 1.
The tune became a staple
at U.S. graduations -- but not at Yale. University band director
Thomas C. Duffy notes that the march has not been heard at a commencement
here since at least 1950, when a predecessor was reportedly told
by the college secretary: "Do not play that song." Pomp and Circumstance
is "high school declasse," says Duffy, and in its stead, composers
from Walton to Berlioz now set the marching pace.
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