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Belated

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  • Belated

    Mary C. Masterson, Daughter of Harput Consul William W. Masterson,
    Dead at Age 92

    Armenian News Network / Groong
    June 11, 2007

    Special to Groong by Abraham D. Krikorian and Eugene L. Taylor


    LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK


    Many readers will be familiar with U.S. Consul Leslie A. Davis who
    served in Harput (actually Mezereh) from 1914-1917. The slim volume
    "The Slaughterhouse Province, An American diplomat's report on the
    Armenian Genocide, 1915-1917" (Susan K. Blair ed., Aristide D.
    Caratzas, Publisher, New Rochelle, NY, 1989) has now assumed a special
    place in genocide literature as a classic. William Wesley Masterson,
    Leslie Davis' predecessor as U.S. Consul to Harput is much less well
    known but he too has a special place in Kharpert history, albeit
    pre-genocide, but here is not the place to delve into that.

    Since we live in Port Jefferson, Long Island, it seemed that we could
    have a 'leg up' in any additional study of Leslie A. Davis and his
    role among the Armenians in Kharpert region during the Genocide.
    Indeed, Port Jefferson was Leslie Davis' hometown. But it seemed more
    than coincidence when we discovered that Consul Masterson was from
    Carrollton, Kentucky, the home town of one of us (ELT). The name
    Masterson is well-known in Carrollton. The two Masterson sisters
    (maiden sisters of the Consul) were active in the Methodist Church and
    could be seen strolling along the streets of this small town on the
    Ohio River between Cincinnati and Louisville, going here or there. A
    phone call to Carrollton revealed that Mary Carroll Masterson, the
    daughter of William Wesley Masterson and his wife Louise Carroll
    Masterson was still alive and well at the ripe age of 89, and living
    in Carrollton! She was described as a bit of a recluse and renegade,
    and it was intimated that she might not welcome contact. To the
    contrary, our phone call revealed her to be a dynamic, charming and
    forthright person. She would be more than delighted to have us visit,
    and talk. So our adventure with Mary C. Masterson began. We quickly
    established rapport and became good friends, a relationship that
    lasted until her death.

    We learned that Mary's mother, Louise C. Masterson accompanied her
    husband to Harput in the summer of 1913 soon after their marriage, and
    that Mary was born at the American Hospital there (The Annie Tracy
    Riggs' Hospital in Mezereh) on June 23, 1914. She was delivered by
    Ruth Azniv Parmelee, M.D., who was descended from an old missionary
    family serving in Erzerum and elsewhere, assisted by nurse Margaret
    Campbell, who had traveled with the Mastersons to Harput. In fact, it
    was the first task of Dr. Parmelee in Harput upon her arrival there
    after completing her medical training in America. (The delivery of
    Consul Masterson's daughter is mentioned on page 5 of Dr. Parmelee's
    memoir booklet "A Pioneer in the Euphrates Valley," Gomidas Institute
    Press, 2002).

    On our initial visit, when we inquired about papers and photographs
    from the period, Mary Masterson thought that a photo album or part
    thereof that her mother had maintained from the period in Harput had
    been given to an "Armenian family" years ago somewhere in California
    (coincidentally Mary and her mother had lived in Pasadena) but could
    not recall details. We concluded that it was unfortunate that we had
    not been able to glean more information. And we decided that tracing
    the "Armenian family" would be like finding a needle in a haystack.
    Then one day a sizeable box arrived with a wide range of photographic
    materials, papers, draft manuscripts etc--no photo album, but loose
    photographs, or photos still attached to photo album pages that had
    been cut down in size. Mary had hunted through her closets and had
    come across materials that she had not realized were there.

    What she found is of great interest and very useful from several
    perspectives. Mary's mother, Louise Carroll had beautiful handwriting
    and took pains to write on the back of photographs as to who was who,
    and what was what. This has enabled a number of identifications of
    previously published photographs which have been inachievable or
    spurious to be attributed properly.

    There are some photographs taken inside the Consulate building and in
    the outside garden, of the consular staff, of the house servants,
    visitors etc. The Mastersons spent considerable time at Lake Goeljuk
    during the hot summers. That lake later became infamous as the scene
    of murders during the Genocide. A few of the still photos of leisurely
    life at Harput and at the Lake and which are used in J. Michael
    Hagopian's film "Voices from the Lake" (Armenian Film Foundation,
    2000) exist in what we now refer to as the Masterson Collection.
    Unfortunately there are no negatives but high resolution scans have
    been made of the slowly but surely deteriorating photographs.
    Hopefully they will one day see the light of day. Mary, who had
    failing eyesight, was delighted to see the scans blown-up.

    Quite a few special insights of life in Mezereh-Harput before the
    Genocide and at the outbreak of World War I are obtainable from the
    photos and the papers. Again, this is not the place to enumerate
    these. Suffice it to say that the opportunities to trace Americans who
    were born in Harput (and elsewhere) and their descendants are almost
    all but gone. Having been taken from Harput when she was only a month
    old, Mary could not bear direct witness to what went on, but it was
    clear that she learned from her mother much about that period, and
    even spoke of the ever-efficient and loyal consulate Cavass Garabed
    Bedrosian who maintained a correspondence with them after he came to
    the US, initially to Whitinsville, Massachusetts and later Fresno. In
    that and other ways Mary was for us an invaluable and valid conduit of
    information that might otherwise have been lost or at least very
    difficult to retrieve. So far as we know, Lorrin Riggs of the famous
    "Riggs family of Harpoot," born in Mezereh, albeit now in very frail
    health and in his 90s, remains the only one alive among the offspring
    of those "Harpoot" Americans who tried to serve the Armenian community
    in those fateful years. (Incidentally, we feel fortunate that we were
    able to visit Professor Riggs as well.)

    With a bit of simple arithmetic, the reader would be able to calculate
    that Mary C. Masterson would have been 93 had she lived another 40
    days. One evening, she had a fall down the steep steps going up to her
    apartment, but miraculously was able to navigate upstairs and thought
    she would be O.K. but ended up in the hospital across the street the
    next morning. She had injured her already troublesome and much-weakened
    back. It seemed that she would recover and was admitted after a period
    in hospital to the Green Valley Health and Rehab Center in Carrollton.
    She died early in the morning on Mother's Day, 13 May. Miss Masterson
    never married but lived a full, varied and proverbially checkered life
    in New York, Washington, California etc. She complained that she had
    outlived the vast majority of her relatives and most of her close
    friends. A graduate of the University of Kentucky, she was widely
    traveled, an avid photographer, a gourmet cook, a bridge player and
    voracious reader of historical novels. She was alert to the end,
    widely-read, abreast of current events and liberal and progressive in
    her views.

    Her father "Will", her beloved "Daddy," died on May 10, 1922 in
    Plymouth, England of an infection after an operation for appendicitis.
    Mary was not yet 8 years old. Consul Masterson was posted from Harput
    to Durban, South Africa in 1914, and became Consul at Plymouth in 1920
    until his death. He was a lawyer, and had started his consular
    activities in Aden, Arabia from 1895-1898. His widow died in
    Carrollton in 1960. Mary C. Masterson will have served the Armenian
    community well, albeit by default, because of her willingness to share
    knowledge and information and photographs about a geographical region
    and period of great interest to many of Armenian ancestry. It was our
    privilege to have known her.

    © Copyright 2007, Armenian News Network / Groong
    All Rights Reserved.
    General Antranik (1865-1927): “I am not a nationalist. I recognize only one nation, the nation of the oppressed.”
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