This item has been sold, but you can get on the Waitlist to be notified if another example becomes available, or purchase a digital scan.
1922 Vaughan Map of Middlesex County, Massachusetts
NorfolkHuntClub-vaughan-1922
Title
1922 (dated) 22.25 x 17.5 in (56.515 x 44.45 cm) 1 : 31680
Description
The Norfolk Hunt Club
Founded in 1895 by members of the old Dedham Polo Club, the Norfolk Hunt Club was conceived so that that these relatively new polo players would not forget the 'noble art of horseback riding'. While early members organized the club casually to have an excuse to ride, it soon became formalized. Henry G. Vaughan became the Master of Foxhounds in 1903 and, according to a history of the Norfolk Hunt Club written by David W. Lewis, Jr., 'brought great distinction to the Hunt, remaining in that post until 1933.' This history also points out that the location of the club, in its early days, was chosen because of its proximity to trains. The club's members, which were mostly men, would travel from Boston by train, spend the night at the clubhouse, hunt early the next morning and then return to Boston that same day.Publication History and Census
This map was created by Henry Goodman Vaughan and published in 1922. This is the only known example.Cartographer
Henry Goodman Vaughan (September 28, 1868 - November 22, 1938) was an American lawyer and avid huntsman. Born in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Benjamin and Anna Goodwin Vaugnan, Vaughan was educated at Noble School in Boston before attending Harvard, from which he graduated cum laude in 1890. He graduated cum laude from Harvard Law School and Harvard's graduate school three years later with both a law degree and a Master of Arts degree. Vaughan worked for thirty years as the master of foxhounds at the Norfolk Hunt Club and retired in 1933. He helped organize the Masters of Foxhounds Association of America and served for twenty-five years as its secretary-treasurer before serving for a time as its president. Vaughan practiced law in Boston with Arthur Hendricks and died on the train on his way home to South Berwick, Maine from Cambridge after attending the funeral Mr. Hendricks in Cambridge. Vaughnan married Olea Bull in 1894, who died in 1911. Their one daughter died in infancy. He remarried on April 5, 1915 to Elizabeth Russell Tyson of Boston. More by this mapmaker...