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・ Walter M. Gibson
・ Walter M. Higley
・ Walter M. Jeffords, Sr.
・ Walter M. Lowrey
・ Walter Lee (New Zealand politician)
・ Walter Lee Miller, Jr.
・ Walter Lee Williams
・ Walter Lees
・ Walter Legge
・ Walter Lehmann
・ Walter Lehmann (ethnologist)
・ Walter Lehmann (gymnast)
・ Walter Lehweß-Litzmann
・ Walter Leigh
・ Walter Leigh Rayfield
Walter Leighton Clark
・ Walter Leinweber
・ Walter Leiser
・ Walter Leistikow
・ Walter Leja
・ Walter Lemcke
・ Walter Lemke Department of Journalism
・ Walter Lemon, Jr.
・ Walter Lenox
・ Walter Lentaigne
・ Walter Leo Weible
・ Walter Leslie
・ Walter Leslie (1607–1667)
・ Walter Leslie (Indian Army officer)
・ Walter Leslie Duncan


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Walter Leighton Clark : ウィキペディア英語版
Walter Leighton Clark

Walter Leighton Clark (1859–1935) was an American businessman, inventor, and artist based in Stockbridge, Massachusetts and New York City.
==Biography==

Among other achievements, in 1923 he founded with John Singer Sargent the Grand Central Art Galleries, located within New York City's Grand Central Terminal, to offer notable American artists the opportunity to exhibit their work in the United States without having to send it abroad. Together with sculptor Daniel Chester French and Dr. Austen Fox Riggs,〔http://www.berkshireweb.com/culture/index.html〕 Clark also played a central role in the founding of the Berkshire Theatre Festival in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. When the Stockbridge Casino, designed by Stanford White in 1887, fell into disuse, Clark, French, and Riggs purchased the building and had it moved to its current location. After renovations, the Berkshire Playhouse opened in 1928, and as the Berkshire Theatre Festival continues to be one of the region's centers of cultural life.〔http://www.berkshiretheatre.org/history/index.php〕
Raised a Quaker, Clark kept the telltale pronouns of that faith, using "thee," "thy" and "thou" even after decades of life in Manhattan and overseas. His autobiography, "Leaves From an Artist's Memory," was published posthumously in 1937, reportedly having been dictated to his sister Emma Killé Clark, from his sick-bed. According to family oral history, she could be heard saying "Thee can't say that!" to him from time to time during the dictation. It is assumed he was telling stories that he shouldn't have, and the finished work has a scrubbed feeling that might be explained by this.
"Leaves" is essentially an account of Clark's boyhood adventures and subsequent rise from a machine-shop apprentice to industrialist and world traveler. In the book Clark detailed his friendships with Andrew Carnegie, John Singer Sargent, Thomas Edison, Charles Dana Gibson, Dame Ellen Terry, George Westinghouse, Julius Rosenwald, James A. Farrell, George Pullman, Thomas Hart Benton, and many others. During his time in Stockbridge he also studied sculpture with Daniel Chester French, and in 1916 acted as pallbearer for the funeral of Alexander Wilson Drake.
Clark died in Stockbridge, Massachusetts in 1935. He was staying at his sister's house, "The Roost," at the time, and was buried in Stockbridge Cemetery. His stone is engraved with the words of Edward Everett Hale: "Look up and not down; Look forward and not back; Look out and not in; And lend a hand."

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