Robert Brewster Stanton Collection
Scope and Contents
The Robert Brewster Stanton Collection includes photographs, diaries and journals, correspondence and other manuscripts pertaining to Robert Brewster Stanton, particularly his participation in a surveying expedition to determine the feasibility of constructing a railroad through the Grand Canyon during 1889 and 1890. The survey is one of the most meticulous primary records ever made of the Colorado River from Grand Junction, Colorado to the Gulf of California.
While some items in the collection are unique, others are copies, primarily from the Robert Brewster Stanton Papers, 1861-1960, housed at the New York Public Library. In 1988, the New York Public Library granted permission to deposit the copies of items from its collection along with other Stanton material in the Walter Havighurst Special Collections. All requests to publish or quote from the material must be obtained from the New York Public Library.
The collection begins with biographical information about Robert Brewster Stanton and his family, including his submission for the National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, published by James T. White & Co. A copy of the Stanton coat of arms, including the family mottoes, “In God My Faith” and “Moderate Things Endure,” together with signatures, business cards and ephemera related to Stanton, can also be found in this portion of the collection.
Correspondence includes a letter from Robert B. Stanton to his son regarding his role in the construction of the Georgetown Loop, dated February 10, 1908, as well as a December 21, 1917 letter from Stanton to James White regarding his alleged exploration of the Grand Canyon and the Colorado River in 1869. Letters from Anne Stanton Burchard and her husband, Lewis, provide details regarding the creation of an outline map of the Colorado River for Down the Grand Canyon Rapids, Stanton’s work on the Georgetown Loop, other publications on Stanton, and Stanton’s Grand Canyon photographs. Correspondence regarding members of the Miami University Class of 1871, together with Dwight L. Smith’s publication of the papers of Robert B. Stanton in The Hoskaninni Papers (1961) and Down the Colorado (1965), Robert Livingston Stanton’s reminiscences of President Abraham Lincoln and the Franklin Nims diary, completes this portion of the collection.
Stanton served as general manager of the Hoskaninni Mining Company, organized to remove flake gold from the sand and gravel of the Colorado River. In 1900, Stanton led a project to dredge gold-bearing gravel from the river flats. Therefore, the collection includes notes in connection with placer mining work performed on the Colorado in connection with the Hoskaninni Company. In 1957, the Minerals Division, Utah State Office of the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, sought Stanton’s heirs in connection with the status of several placer mining claims on the Colorado River located from 1889 to 1901, of which Stanton was a co-locator. The collection includes correspondence and legal documents pertaining to the matter, dating from 1957 through 1960.
Anne Stanton Burchard kept detailed notes of information found in her father’s diaries, lists of Stanton’s field notes and diaries, bibliographies of works by her father, and information pertaining to her father’s papers deposited at the New York Public Library and other repositories. Typescript copies and notebooks containing this information can be found in this portion of the collection.
The Burchards recorded copies of several family works, including Robert Livingston Stanton’s reminiscences of President Abraham Lincoln. Written in the 1870s, the original of this work can be found in the Stanton papers housed at the New York Public Library. The typescript copy in this collection provides details of the elder Stanton’s first audience with Lincoln in February 1861, a conversation they had on a subsequent occasion about Lincoln’s “progress in spelling,” and accounts of other exchanges between the two men.
Other typescripts from the Burchards include “A Friendly Debate on a Never-Decided Question,” which focuses on whether Major Powell should have advised President Brown to provide life-preservers for running the Colorado rapids. A foreword for The River and the Canyon, a manuscript about Stanton Point, and typescript copies of incomplete entries from Robert Brewster Stanton’s diaries, annotated by his daughter, are also included here.
A number of Stanton’s original manuscripts are housed in this collection. First, his recollections of the Colorado River expedition reveal that he was hesitant to claim discovery as a result of his exploration. As he writes, “I went down the Colo. in the ordinary discharge of my everyday duties as a railroad engineer for the purpose of locating a RR line along its banks and through its cañons [canyons]. We were not exploring the Grand Cañon [Canyon], nor seeking adventure in it, nor looking for anything – except that RR. line. Therefore I think it out of place to speak even of the somewhat startling adventures that we did meet with which resulted in the death, by drowning, of three of my companions, and the maiming of a fourth….”
Stanton’s revisions to his initial draft of The River and The Canyon, including lists of photographs and other illustrations, can be found in this portion of the collection. A typescript copy of Stanton’s reminiscences provides genealogical information about the Stanton family, his childhood (including memories of President Abraham Lincoln’s assassination and the Civil War), his days as a student at Miami University, and his early professional experiences until approximately 1877. A page from an early first draft of Stanton’s original manuscript reveals information about his family’s move to Oxford, Ohio and how preparations for the opening of Miami University inspired him to attend college.
The collection continues with four typescript volumes and photostatic copies of Stanton’s field notes from the first and second expeditions of the Colorado River for the Denver, Colorado Cañon [Canyon] and Pacific Railroad survey. Stanton became so involved in writing the history of the Colorado River and the Grand Canyon that he never completed his own story. Therefore, his photographs, drawings and papers pertaining to his 1889-1890 exploration of the Colorado River are particularly insightful.
The collection includes an annotated carbon copy of the manuscript Stanton wrote titled The River and the Canyon: The Colorado River of the West, and the Exploration, Navigation, and Survey of its Cañons [Canyons], from the Standpoint of an Engineer. Written between 1906 and 1909, this manuscript records Stanton’s experiences of “an ordinary railway survey, even though the nature of the route made it a perilous undertaking.”
The first volume includes 479 pages and 22 chapters, in which Stanton records the history of the Colorado River until 1871. The second volume completes a total of 1,039 pages. Among the 14 chapters in this volume are descriptions of Stanton’s own Colorado expedition and the work of the Kolb Brothers in 1911-1912.
Although Stanton had published two magazine articles and a number of newspaper articles on his team’s journey through the cañons [canyons], he undertook this work to provide a more accurate description of the Colorado River and his exploration of it than others had published before. The original typescript is at the New York Public Library. A few illustrations and pages containing illustrations have been removed from volume 2, chapters 1-11. These appear in narrative of the expedition, edited by Dwight Smith.
The collection includes a number of professional publications by Robert Brewster Stanton, articles on the Grand Canyon, the Colorado River, Stanton’s expedition, the Georgetown Loop, and James White’s expedition of the Colorado River and the Grand Canyon in 1861. Publications related to the Stanton family’s recollections of President Abraham Lincoln and Robert Brewster Stanton’s reminiscences of his Miami University student days complete this portion of the collection.
Maps represented in the collection include sketches of maps of Bright Angel Creek, the DCC& PRR line, the Colorado River, and Shinumo Creek; a map of river cut in rock at the mouth of Escalante Creek, Glen Cañon [Canyon]; a map of the Colorado River region; and a map of the loop produced by the Colorado & Southern Railway. The collection also includes a drawing for the title page of “A Survey of the History of Exploration of the Colorado River,” by Dwight L. Smith, as published in The Westerners.
Negatives and transparencies of photographic prints of President and Mrs. Robert Livingston Stanton, together with those from Stanton’s Colorado River expedition, begin the audiovisual component of the collection. After presenting photographs of President and Mrs. Robert Livingston Stanton, Robert Brewster Stanton, and Anne Stanton Burchard, the collection provides reprints of images of the Georgetown Loop, including a copy of a photograph taken by Stanton.
Documents prepared by Anne Stanton Burchard provide information about the photographs Stanton and his photographer, Franklin Nims, took during the Colorado Expedition. According to notes from Mrs. Burchard, the negatives of the pictures that Stanton took in the Canyon were given to the United States Geological Survey in 1925. An album housing a complete set of the prints was given to the Manuscript Division of the New York Public Library in 1941. Many of the prints in this collection are mounted on sheets of paper, on which annotations appear.
To begin photographic documentation of Stanton’s Colorado River expedition, the collection presents several photographs of and biographical information for the expedition’s crew members. In addition to Stanton, Leo G. Brown, Arthur B. Twining, Langdon Gibson, J.S. Hogue, H.G. Ballard, Harry McDonald, expedition cook George Washington Gibson, and others, are pictured here.
Stanton’s snapshots of the expedition continue this portion of the collection. Scenic views, together with views of the crew repairing boats, lifting a boat over the head of a rapid in the Grand Canyon, resting at the lower end of the Grand Canyon, and stopping for lunch can be seen here. The expedition is further documented by numbered and annotated prints, capturing views of the Green River, Cataract Canyon, Glen Canyon, Marble Canyon, the Grand Canyon, and Fort Mohave.
Annotated photographs and illustrations collected for use in The River and the Canyon follow. Items in this portion of the collection include annotated groupings of images by volume and chapter, together with miscellaneous photographs of the Grand Canyon and other landmarks. A copy of a map of the Lower Colorado River from the Grand Wash Cliffs to the Los Vegas Wash showing the actual journey of James White from Pierce Ferry to Callville is also included here.
The collection concludes with microfilm copies of several pertinent documents, including the Denver, Colorado Cañon [Canyon] and Pacific Railroad’s articles of incorporation; the Colorado River expedition diaries of William H. Edwards and Franklin A. Nims; gold placer claim documents; and reports by Stanton on the Colorado River expedition and the proposed Gulf and Northwestern Railway. An audio tape of Dwight Smith’s July 7, 1977 Santa Barbara Westerners Series presentation on railroad and mining ventures on the Colorado River completes the collection.
Dates
- Creation: 1889 - 1992
Language of Materials
Materials are in English.
Conditions Governing Access
This collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Use
This collection is under the rules and regulations of the Walter Havighurst Special Collections and University Archives, Miami University Libraries. The Walter Havighurst Special Collections and University Archives, Miami University Libraries, owns the property rights to this collection. Learn more about our policy here: https://spec.lib.miamioh.edu/home/permission/ The use of this collection is restricted to scholarly purposes only. For items in the collection that duplicate original manuscripts from the collections of the New York Public Library, access and use restrictions for that institution apply.
Biographical / Historical
On August 5, 1846, Robert Brewster Stanton was born in Woodville, Mississippi. He was the son of Robert Livingston Stanton (1810-1885), a Presbyterian clergyman, and Anna Maria Stone. Robert Livingston Stanton was a descendant of Thomas Stanton, one of the founders of Stonington, Connecticut. After studying to become a minister at Lane Seminary in Kentucky, he held pastoral assignments in Mississippi, New Orleans, Louisiana, and Chillicothe, Ohio. Later, he served as president of Oakland College in Mississippi (1851-1854) and professor of pastoral theology and homiletics at Danville Theological Seminary (1862-1866). From 1866 to 1871, he was president of Miami University. Robert Livingston Stanton’s sister-in-law was Elizabeth Cady Stanton, wife of the abolitionist leader Henry Brewster Stanton and one of the foremost feminists of American history.
After graduating from Miami University in 1871, Robert Brewster Stanton became an assistant engineer on the survey and location of the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad in Indian Territory. From 1872 until 1880, he served as an assistant engineer on the location and construction of the Cincinnati Southern Railroad through the Cumberland Mountains between Cincinnati and Chattanooga. Then, he became a division engineer for the Union Pacific Railroad until 1884.
As chief engineer for the Georgetown, Breckenridge, Leadville Railroad, Stanton supervised the construction of the Georgetown Loop on a narrow-gauge railroad in the Colorado Rockies from 1881 to 1883. In the mid-1860s, the expansion of silver mining brought rapid growth to Georgetown, Colorado. To facilitate the transportation of silver ore, the Georgetown Loop was created. The loop consisted of a system of curves and bridges to reduce the steep grades that were too great for locomotives. The line included three hairpin turns, four bridges, and a 30-degree horseshoe curve.
From 1886 to 1888, Stanton served as a consulting civil and mining engineer for the Flint, Idaho Mining Company. Then, from 1889 to 1890, he was the chief engineer of the Denver, Colorado Cañon [Canyon] and Pacific Railroad. In May 1889, Stanton was engaged to conduct a survey of the Colorado River to determine the feasibility of building a railroad through the river’s canyons from Green River, Utah to the Gulf of California. Although some boats were lost and three members of the original 16-member party were drowned, it was Stanton who led the exploration party through the Grand Canyon to its destination on April 26, 1890. Stanton and his party became the second in history to make this expedition successfully.
Stanton’s account of this expedition is recorded in his field notes and a two-volume manuscript about the history of the Colorado River, titled The River and the Canyon: The Colorado River of the West, and the Exploration, Navigation, and Survey of its Canyons, from the Standpoint of an Engineer. Although Stanton completed the manuscript in 1920, it was not published until after his death. Dwight L. Smith edited the work, titling it Down the Colorado and publishing it in 1965. Staff photographer Franklin A. Nims also recorded the expedition in his diary, which was edited and published by Smith in 1967 and titled The Photographer and the River, 1889-90. Although the company sponsoring the expedition was unable to fund the idea beyond Stanton’s survey, Stanton’s work was honored by the United States Geographic Board. After Stanton’s death, the board named a spire of rock on the south rim of the Grand Canyon “Stanton Point.”
Stanton’s exploration of the Colorado River led to another project in which Stanton formed his own company and tried to extract gold from the Glen Canyon country of the Colorado River. Without adequate financing and the never-constructed railroad that would have made the venture successful, Stanton’s venture, referred to as the Hoskaninni Mining Company, was not meant to be. Later, Stanton practiced as a civil and mining engineer in America, Canada, Mexico and the Dutch East Indies.
Stanton was the author of Availability of the Cañons of the Colorado River of the West for Railroad Purposes (1892). He also wrote Notes on the Construction of a Water System for Placer Mining and Suggestions for a New Method of Dam Building (1896) and The Great Land Slides on the Canadian Pacific Railway in British Columbia (1898). He was a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, the American Society of the Advancement of Science, the Institution of Mining and Metallurgy, the Institution of Civil Engineers, and the American Institute of Mining Engineers. He was also a fellow of the American and National Geographic Societies.
On December 1, 1881, Stanton married Jean Oliver Moore of Pennsylvania, with whom he had five children. Children included Anna Maria; Robert Brewster, Jr.; Harold Oliver; Edwin Moore; and Jean. Stanton died of pneumonia on February 23, 1922.
Extent
5.58 Linear Feet
8 Boxes
Arrangement
Series I: Manuscripts Subseries I: Background Information on Robert Brewster Stanton Subseries II: Correspondence Sub-Subseries I: Robert Brewster Stanton Sub-Subseries II: Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Sayre Burchard Sub-Subseries III: Dwight L. Smith Subseries III: Hoskaninni Mining Company Subseries IV: Robert Brewster Stanton Bibliographies Subseries V: Works by Stanton Family Members Subseries VI: Works by Robert Brewster Stanton Sub-Subseries I: Miscellaneous Sub-Subseries II: Field Notes, Denver, Colorado Cañon [Canyon] and Pacific Railroad Survey Sub-Subseries III: The River and the Canyon Series II: Publications Subseries I: Professional Publications by Robert Brewster Stanton Subseries II: The Grand Canyon, the Colorado River, and Robert Brewser Stanton’s Expedition Subseries III: James White Expedition of the Colorado River and Grand Canyon Subseries IV: Miscellaneous Western-Related Publications Subseries V: Miscellaneous Publications Related to the Stanton Family Series III: Maps, Drawings, and Sketches Series IV: Audio-Visual Materials Subseries I: Negatives and Transparencies Subseries II: Photographs Sub-Subseries I: Stanton Family Sub-Subseries II: Georgetown Loop Sub-Subseries III: Colorado River Expedition Sub-Subseries IV: Photographs and Illustrations for "The River and the Canyon" Subseries III: Microfilms Subseries IV: Audio Tapes
Custodial History
The Walter Havighurst Special Collections and University Archives received this collection as a donation on 1988-08-10 by Dwight L. Smith, Professor Emeritus of History at Miami University. Materials in the collection were gifted to Smith by Robert Brewster Stanton’s daughter, Anne Stanton Burchard.
Accruals
No further additions are expected.
Processing Information
Collection processing and completed in 1998 by Priscilla L. Dyson. Collection reprocessed in 2007 by Betsy Butler. Finding Aid revised 2020-11-10 by Tiffany Dogan and Cody Sprunger.
Source
- Title
- Robert Brewster Stanton Collection
- Status
- Completed
- Date
- 2020-11-10
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- Undetermined
- Script of description
- Code for undetermined script
- Language of description note
- English
Repository Details
Part of the Walter Havighurst Special Collections Finding Aids Repository