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Raymond Emerson

Raymond Emerson
Born November 28, 1886
Concord, Massachusetts
Residence Concord, Massachusetts
Nationality American
Alma mater Harvard University (1906-1911)
Parent(s) Edward Waldo Emerson
Annie Shepard Keyes
Relatives Ralph Waldo Emerson
Lidian Jackson Emerson
William Emerson
William Cameron Forbes
Francis Blackwell Forbes
John Malcolm Forbes

Raymond Emerson (November 28, 1886 - 1977) was a civil engineer, an investment banker, and faculty at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. He is known for his large donations of personal Ralph Waldo Emerson letters and other documents for educational purposes. He was part of the Emerson family, Ralph Waldo Emerson's grandson. In addition to his marriage to Amelia Forbes, he was also connected to the Forbes family through other marriages in his parent's and his own generations.

Raymond Emerson was born to Dr. Edward Waldo Emerson and Annie Shepard Keyes on November 28, 1886 in Concord, Massachusetts. He was the youngest of seven children born to the couple, and one of only four that survived to adulthood. Raymond's father, Edward, was the son of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Lidian Jackson Emerson.

Raymond worked as a civil engineer after graduating from Harvard in 1910. His surveying and engineering work took him across the United States and also to Canada and Brazil. In 1927, he joined J.M. Forbes & Co. in Boston as an investment banker and partner in the company. He continued as partner until 1958. His son David was also a partner in the same firm from 1956-1986, which gave the two a two-year overlap of being partners at the same time.

Raymond worked closely and was good friends with William Henry Claflin, Jr., both of whom were faculty at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology at Harvard University. In 1938 Raymond replaced Ingersoll Bowditch as a member of the museum faculty, and was part of the museum oversight body until he retired in 1956. In 1924, Raymond and Claflin funded an expedition into Southern Utah for survey and excavation work performed by John Otis Brew and others. This expedition became known as the Claflin-Emerson Expedition, which lasted four years. While at the museum, Raymond was "particularly involved" with Alfred V. Kidder under the latter's mentorship at the museum.

After his death, Ralph Waldo Emerson's papers and works got passed down through the next generations, and Raymond allowed publications to use some of those works. He was considered the closest kin of Ralph Waldo Emerson after Ralph Waldo Emerson's children died.


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