UMass Amherst: The Magazine for Alumni and Friends

Fall 2009

FEATURES
Sweet 16
Journeying to every Amherst in America
Patricia Sullivan

Photo: Bob Tuthill
Bob Tuthill and his wife Jackie

Fifteen down, one to go! After they visit Amherst, Ohio, once known as the sandstone center of the world, Bob Tuthill ’56 and his wife, Jackie, of Amherst, Massachusetts, will have been to all 16 communities named Amherst in the United States.

The Tuthills got the notion for this quest back in 1994, when a trip to Canada took them through Amherst, New Hampshire; Amherst, Maine; and Amherst, Nova Scotia. When Bob retired in 1998 after 28 years as a professor of epidemiology at UMass Amherst, they began their travels, checking out other Amhersts in New York, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Nebraska, Colorado, Montana, and Texas.

This fall they are making an Amherst circuit covering Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa, and South Dakota. The Tuthills are writing a monograph, Amherst to Amherst, about their travels, and have been warmly welcomed by postmasters, senior citizens, and historians as they seek out information.

They’ve gathered some interesting facts: All that’s left of Amherst, Montana, is a sign with bullet holes by the railroad tracks. Amherst, Maine, had no paved roads until the 1950s. Affluent Amherst village, part of Amherst, New Hampshire, is a lovely well-preserved setting with a picture-perfect town green.
Our Amherst was named for Sir Jeffery Amherst, hero of the French and Indian War and commander of the British Army in North America. Sir Jeff’s reputation has been ravaged due to his expressed contempt for Native Americans, but when Amherst, Massachusetts (the oldest Amherst), became a district separate from Hadley in 1759 he was a glamorous figure. Amherst, New Hampshire, was likewise named for the General in 1760. Others, says Bob, were named by railroad executives, for example Amherst, Colorado, and Amherst, Nebraska, named in that case for an executive’s alma mater, Amherst College. Some Amhersts were named by early settlers such as Amherst, Minnesota, named after the founder’s wife’s Ohio birthplace.

Amherst, Massachusetts, appears to be the only town with a silent “h,” the Tuthills report. In fact, “People look at us strangely when we say we’re from AM-erst,” says Jackie, pronouncing it the locals’ way.

After exploring Amherst, Ohio, next spring, will the Tuthills seek out international Amhersts? How about Amherst Rock in the Auckland Islands of New Zealand, inhabited mainly by sea lions? “Probably not,” says Jackie, “but there’re always some Tuthill namesakes like Tuthill, South Dakota, Tuthill Plateau.…”

 

 

For the Love of Amherst
Living and Learning in a Great American College Town.
Why is the “H” Silent?
Why oh why do the people of Amherst, Massachusetts, pronounce their town’s name without the “h” ?
Sweet 16
Journeying to every Amherst in America.
The Senator from Amherst: Stan Rosenberg ’77...
...has a passion for UMass Amherst that’s deeply personal.
Sister Act
Hadley Farm is home office for two alumnae, 200 head of livestock, and tomorrow’s animal doctors.
What Happens in Amherst Stays in Amherst
What do you remember about Amherst from your student days? Notable alumni come clean.
Many Happy Returns
How sweet it is, coming back home to the Valley.
A Poet’s Tour
Walk in a writer’s footsteps to feel the town’s literary muse
UMass Clicks
Check out the amazing range of UMies online
Zip 01003
Digital Du Bois—a breathtaking group of more than 100,000 items
 
 

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