At Sotheby's decorative arts department, friends include Emily
Kiernan, a student at the firm's works of art program, and a
cigarstore Indian standing sentry by his desk.
Peering from a fourth floor conference room lined with his
own bound set of The Magazine Antiques - in all, an 82-year
record of the most important developments in the field - the
inveterate wordsmith surveyed the street below.
"The young can easily be persuaded that the field is full, that
all the answers are in, that everything has been published. I'm
concerned that they feel welcome," began the historian, whose
preoccupation with the past is a measure of his concern for the
future.
Garrett recently returned from Colonial Williamsburg, where he
spoke, as he has on a dozen occasions, at the annual Antiques
Forum, an event jointly organized by The Magazine Antiques
and the Virginia institution in 1949.
"The founding of the Forum marked the turning point when the
small, tight circle of collecting giants opened up to a much
wider panorama of more egalitarian and new collectors," says
Garrett, noting the parallel growth in graduate degree programs
that contributed dramatically to the field's professionalization
between the 1950s and the 1970s.
A celebrated speaker, Garrett has traversed the globe over the
last 30 years, traveling from lecture to panel to forum. He was
instrumental in developing and promoting programs such as the
Natchez Antiques Forum in Mississippi, which recently celebrated
its 30th anniversary.
"For a number of years, in the most remote places, I would either
follow or precede Graham Hood or Clement Conger," Garrett says
with characteristic wit and charm. He has been known to bring
audiences to their feet and tears to their eyes with his
impassioned, vividly patriotic prose, prose that often explains
the American psyche in terms of the vast and varied national
landscape.
"Don't be intimidated! All we lack are questions. Historical
research progresses when we ask the right questions," Garrett
urged students at Colonial Williamsburg. He was moved by similar
advice as a young man growing up in the West.
At the University of California in Los Angeles in the early
1950s, Garrett was dissuaded from a career in medicine by Page
Smith, the first of four men to point the way. An inspired
professor of American history, the Dartmouth- and
Harvard-educated Smith urged Garrett to enroll in the newly
formed master's degree program in Early American Culture at
Winterthur.
As Garrett puts it, "I didn't know what historians did. It was
meeting a teacher that turned me on." The native Californian
arrived in Wilmington, Del., in 1955 to join the fourth class of
fellows in a curatorial training program started by Charles F.
Montgomery, Garrett's second mentor.
"Montgomery was a passionate man, the most charismatic individual
I've ever known. His students would have followed him over a
cliff if he had asked," the editor says of the former pewter
dealer who ultimately left Winterthur to teach at Yale.
Montgomery's greatest gift was instilling in others a visceral
love of objects, a tactile rapport that no amount of book
learning could supply. The professor also had a knack for
introductions. When Walter Muir Whitehill, librarian and director
of the Boston Atheneum, visited Henry Francis du Pont as his
house guest at Winterthur, Montgomery insisted that Garrett guide
Whitehill through du Pont's unsurpassed holdings.
"You're coming to Boston," Whitehill ordered Garrett before the
tour ended. While earning a second master's degree in American
history at Harvard between 1957 and 1960, Garrett's first wife,
Jane, worked as Whitehill's assistant at the atheneum. Wendell
and Jane Garrett, a longtime editor at Knopff, produced the
bibliography that accompanied Whitehill's The Arts in Early
American History. Published in 1965, it is still a treasured
resource. Garrett subsequently married Elisabeth Donaghy Garrett,
a scholar who is vice president of collections and interpretation
at Strawbery Banke in Portsmouth, N.H. Their three children
include Nathaniel, enrolled at Stanford Law School; Maria, a
doctoral candidate in anthropology at the University of Chicago;
and Abigail, a preveterinary student in Vermont.
In 1959, at Whitehill's encouragement, Garrett joined the staff
of the Adams Papers at the Massachusetts Historical Society. The
trove - which dates from 1639 to 1889 and includes
correspondence, diaries, literary manuscripts, speeches and legal
and business papers - would stretch five miles in microfilm if
laid end to end. In 1961, Garrett discovered the earliest diary
of John Adams at the Vermont Historical Society and edited it for
publication by Harvard University Press. His proudest achievement
is the four-volume Diary and Autobiography of John Adams,
which he and two others edited.
"They were not easy people because they were so honest. Henry
Adams was the gloomiest writer in the world. He didn't like what
the future looked like and look what came in the next half
century - two world wars and a depression! But they loved this
country," says Garrett, who has a familial regard for John, the
nation's second president; his wife Abigail; and their progeny.
Garrett's vivid memories of his years at the Adams Papers include
a lunch in Washington at which President John F. Kennedy
vigorously edited a speech. The presentation was written by
either Arthur Schlesinger, Jr, or Theodore Sorenson, Kennedy's
gifted speechwriters, to mark the Diary's publication.
"Kennedy was tightening and refining all the while," Garrett says
with admiration. The publicity surrounding the Diary's
publication, which included a review by Kennedy, brought Alice
Winchester to Boston. Garrett would succeed Winchester as editor
of The Magazine Antiqueswhen she retired in 1972.
Another acquaintance from Cambridge days, and the fourth of
Garrett's mentors, was Bernard Bailyn. The scholar of early
American history, who has taught at Harvard since 1953, inspired
his protégé to write about the past with a sublime mix of reason
and passion. "Charlie Montgomery wrote painfully. Walter Muir
Whitehill never revised what he wrote. It came out of his
typewriter and went straight to the printer. Page Smith wrote too
much. He just churned it out. Of the four, Bailyn was a brilliant
writer and a great stylist," says the editor, who, despite a busy
career, has always found time to read.
"I don't collect antiques, but I do collect books. Bailyn didn't
collect books, I think on the supposition that if you collect
books you don't read them. Schlesinger Jr, who was at Harvard
with me, had a system that I tried to follow. He put books on a
table until they were read and then put them on a shelf," says
the bibliophile.
There are no longer four indispensable books, as Charles
Montgomery insisted, says Garrett, noting the wealth of new
scholarship. (Montgomery's picks were Early American Wrought
Iron by Albert H. Sonn, 1928; Pewter in Americaby
Ledlie Laughlin, 1940; American Glassby Helen and George
McKearin, 1941; and American Furniture: Queen Anne and
Chippendale Periodsby Joseph Downs, 1952.) The author's own
favorites have long included Carl Bridenbaugh's The Colonial
Craftsmanand Montgomery's American Federal
Furniture, along with works by Schlesinger, Howard
Mumford Jones, John Higham, J.H. Plumb, Samuel Morison Eliot and
Henry Steele Commager.
"These are men who not only did remarkable work but were great
literary stylists," explains Garrett, whose articles, columns and
editorials, along with the dozen or so books that he has written,
co-written or edited, bear the distinctive imprint of a man who
was doubly trained as an academic historian and a connoisseur.
"I've tried using what I've learned back and forth. I don't know
that I've done it that successfully, but I think it's an attempt
that's worthy," he says with unwarranted modesty. In 1994,
Garrett received one of the field's highest honors, the Henry
Francis du Pont Award for distinguished contribution to the
American arts. In addition to serving as chairman of the Thomas
Jefferson Memorial Foundation at Monticello for many years, he
has been on the board of the Royal Oak Foundation, the New-York
Historical Society and the Decorative Arts Trust, among others.
Companionable and gregarious in an agreeably understated way,
Garrett cherishes his 35-year membership in the Walpole Society,
an august, discreet organization of antiques enthusiasts who
combine playful fellowship with visits to important private
collections. Garrett, the group's secretary, is writing a history
of the society, whose members have included John Carter Brown and
John Nicholas Brown, Joseph Downs, Charles Montgomery, Henry
Flynt and H.F. du Pont himself.
The author's clear affection for his colleagues and lifelong
generosity of spirit will be acknowledged on April 17, when the
Antiques Dealers Association of America will honor him in
Philadelphia at a dinner celebrating the editor's contributions
to the antiques field. Garrett is the third individual to receive
the award, previously presented to Albert Sack and Elinor Gordon.
The evening's program will include a keynote address by Allison
Ledes, plus presentations by Penny M. Hunt, executive director of
the Decorative Arts Trust; Sotheby's vice chairman William W.
Stahl, Jr; and curator Carrie Rebora Barratt, who will read a
letter from Morrison H. Heckscher, chairman of the American Wing
of The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

A connoisseur of stone carving show chisels slate and sandstone
himself, Garrett admires, among others, the work of David
Kindersley of Cambridge, England.
"Wendell is an icon, a literary giant whose books, articles
and editorials have brought attention to our field and enlightened
us with their understanding of the role of history in our daily
lives. He is an amazing gentleman, almost Edwardian in style. For
ADA members and other professionals, he has given us a much needed
perspective on what we do," says Arthur Liverant, the ADA's vice
president.
Like Thomas Jefferson, who declared, "I like the dreams of the
future better than the history of the past," Garrett, ever the
reader, has a youthful enthusiasm for new ideas. Among the dozens
of books stacked three and four deep around the perimeter of his
desk is The Marketplace of Revolution: How Consumer Politics
Shaped American Independence.
"Scholarship is changing and it is very exciting," says Garrett,
among the first to read the just-released volume by T.H. Breen, a
professor of American history at Northwestern University.
"Breen argues that material culture - the need for British
teapots and the like - caused the war. Joseph Ellis, the Pulitzer
Prize-winning author of Founding Brothers, calls it the
most original interpretation of the American Revolution in the
last 50 years."
Leaning back in his chair, Garrett pauses. With a studied glance,
he opines, "I'm not altogether persuaded by it, but it's progress
to see Breen writing about objects and Oxford University Press
publishing it."