"Each year to ancient friendship adds
A ring as to an oak, which, without the aid of any merit
Of our own, becomes more and more precious."
IT is painful to record the downfall of the grand old
Caledonian Club of Chicago, the origin of which in 1865 may here
be dated, for although we stood indebted to General Ducat for
the insurance on our burnt library of two thousand dollars, this
amount, added to the balance on hand, forming a handsome sum,
and being just at this juncture at a loss to find suitable
ground whereon to hold our annual picnic, formed the double
incentive to induce the club to venture into the bewitching yet
dangerous arena of real estate. Hence the collapse of one of the
most healthy and promising organizations that ever blessed the
efforts of the Scottish element anywhere. Alas! for the
instability of human affairs. Should the reader be desirous of
obtaining more information thereof I refer him to William
Forrest, who is still chief, and who holds the charter and
documents of the club in his possession, with a hopeful
pertinacity that reflects credit to his honest, loving heart. As
for myself, I bless God for the memory which enables me to live
those happy days over again. While Chicago was, phoenix-like,
rising in tenfold grandeur out of her own ashes, I became for
the winter of 1871-2 a book peddler, undertaking
to supply the citizens of St. Louis, or such as would buy a book
with a copy of Goodspeed's story of the great fire, selling to
the tune of one volume per diem during the winter, clearly
proving that as a book canvasser I was anything but a success.
On my return to Chicago I took the route of the Illinois river,
which, with a little divergence, gave me a chance of revisiting
the scene of my earliest American experience in search of a
home. I found the whole community in a very thriving condition;
my quarter-section not only well cultivated, but yielding coal
for the market. My appearance, like that of the Rip Van Winkle
of Irving, had assumed in the long interim an aspect which
placed it almost beyond recognition. Indeed, the unmarried
daughter of the Oliver family (Annie) was the only person who
could salute me by name. Staying a few days with John Turnbull,
and paying a hasty visit to the neighbors around, I returned by
Kewaunee and Elgin to Chicago, and recommenced viewing. On
August 14, 1873, it fell to my lot, as chief of the Chicago
Caledonian Club, to give a name to its beautiful grounds, which
were, in the presence of a large and brilliant audience,
denominated Chicago Caledonian Park, and which were intended to
furnish a healthful retreat occasionally from the cares of
business within the confines of a city which in magnitude was
rapidly becoming metropolitan; The above park was, by the action
of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railway, rendered
nugatory. In fact, so far as pertaining to the purposes for
which the purchase was made, the ground might as well have
formed part of one of the islands of the sea.