Ask the Scholar

Document scope · 1 page
doc
Scholar
Ask about this object, its catalog metadata, its source description, or the page inventory. For page-specific OCR and visual context, open one of the page chats.

Scholar Source Context

Document identity
localId
203744312
label
Preservation Roundtable History, December 2010
core
doc
dtoType
document
pageCount
1
Source metadata
Source extras
naId
203744312
levelOfDescription
item
recordType
description
ocrSource
nara-archive
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
d355cb67996aa751
ocrText
History dinner at which was served such delicacies as "The Bonhome Richard (salmon dish, with sauce Howlandaise, discovered on a remarkable The Preservation Roundtable is an informal gathering of historic Smithsonian voyage),' "Murtagh's Pearls of the Maine Soil (boiled preservation professionals and advocates, founded in February 1969 potatoes of National Register quality),' and "The Importance of by Frederick Gutheim, an urban affairs consultant and well-known Being Ernest (ICOMOS green salad laced with a Feissty dressing)." author of The Potomac and Worthy of a Nation. Original members were Ernest Connally, Carl Feiss, John H. Hill, Richard H. Howland, Dorn The Roundtable has no elected officers, but the position of President C. McGrath, Jr., William J. Murtagh, Constance Werner Ramirez, pro tem has been handed down from Frederick Gutheim to Richard Joseph Watterson, and Russell B. Wright. Within the first ten years, H. Howland, and from Constance Werner Ramirez to C. Dudley membership grew to 35, including Charles H. Atherton, Gretchen Brown. To meet at The Arts Club of Washington, the Roundtable Gayle, George Karas, Russell Keune, Francis D. Lethbridge, James C. must be sponsored by a member of the Club. Sponsors have included Massey, Hugh Miller, M. Hamilton Morton, Terry B. Morton, Donald Frederick Gutheim, Richard H. Howland, M. Hamilton Morton, and Myer, John Poppeliers, Robert Rettig, Theodore Sande, Nancy Dixon C. Dudley Brown. Schultz, Ralph Schwarz, Ann Webster Smith, Margaret Sweeney, and Wynant D. Vanderpool, Jr. The administrative details of the Roundtable have been provided over the years by a number of nonprofit organizations, including The Roundtable encourages a broad and vigorous discussion of the Smithsonian Institution, the U.S. National Committee of the topics important to historic preservation. As Gutheim wrote in 1979, International Council on Monuments and Sites (US/ICOMOS), "In their specialized capacities and official positions those who the National Conference of State Historic Preservation Officers, compose this Round Table have little periodic opportunity informally The Accokeek Foundation, the Preservation Action Foundation and in a relaxed atmosphere to exchange experiences and views (previously the Center for Preservation Initiatives), and the National with their peers, and thus contribute to the larger understanding Preservation Institute. of their professional lives. Without this opportunity each of us would be poorer. It is a continual reminder of what we owe to each Today the regular, dues-paying membership is about 80 and other. Over the years it has provided the social adhesion that has attendance at lunches is about 25 each month, including several allowed the Round Table to continue." Noted in Keeping Time by guests. As Gutheim said in his remarks in 1979, and it is still true Roundtable cofounder William J. Murtagh, the monthly luncheon is today, "Once a month we have found a moment to put aside other now a preservation institution in itself. Besides libations, lunch, and cares and relax in the atmosphere of fellowship, to share common opportunities to meet fellow professionals, the Roundtable provides interests, to exchange views, to open our minds, and to grow a little. an opportunity to introduce guests and make announcements about What more can we ask?" historic preservation activities. Guests have included Ada Louise History compiled by Constance Werner Ramirez Huxtable, Barclay G. Jones, and Sir Nikolas Pevsner. revised December 2010 The Roundtable has always met at The Arts Club of Washington to provide support for the preservation of this architectural survivor of decades of building activity west of the White House. The charge for lunch in 1969 was $2 and in 1975 the members agreed to an assessment of $7 annually to cover administrative costs. In 1979, it adopted the official name of The Round Table for Historic Preservation and celebrated its tenth anniversary with a black tie