
Yours of 1st inst has only just now come to me having been first mailed unstamped.
I must confess that I would greatly prefer to drop the word Park and am disposed to stick to Back Bay. What you are to have is hardly more a park than it is a theatre or a market and to designate your salt marsh and water a park implies a feeling that the real thing is not as pleasant and favorable to the value of real estate as you could wish it to be. It is a puff and a wholly unnecessary puff, for the real thing will be better in the place, than any park could be. Then as to the park like margin the word park will be a constant invitation to unjust criticism and to demands for what may properly be demanded in a park but cannot be in a promenade with a sylvan border of the character designed.
As to Back Bay all that is to be said is that it is of the class of proper names which though prosaic at first or if regarded analytically are most permanently satisfactory such as Cornhill, Pallmall, High Gate, Brick Yards — (Tuileries), Long Branch, New Port, Cam Bridge, Dobb’s Ferry. (They tried changing the name of Dobb’s Ferry & for several years the P.O. there was Greenburg, but the public would not adopt it). Back Bay is not very euphonious nor a quite pleasant alliteration, but it is appropriate, sensible and of historical value.
Of the names you suggest I prefer that of Water Park. But I would much rather reverse the order and call the interior the Park Water — and give special names to different parts of the outside Park. I do not object as a prefix or descriptive term before another as in Park Way.
On the whole I advise you to call the basin part of the affair,
The Everglade.
Though we hardly know this term except as applied to the Florida glades, it is a descriptive and not a proper name meaning (see Webster) “a tract of land covered with water and grass”, that is to say exactly applicable to the locality.
However, if you think the association unpleasant, which I do not, then say
The Salt Glades
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                     “Preliminary Plan for the Back Bay Park,” February 13, 1879
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                  The Sedgeglade
The Sea Glades,
or
The Glade Water.
Then give different stretches of the banks and roads about it such names as the following.
Everglade Parkway,
(or Gladewater Parkway,)
Hawthorne Place,
Allston Road,
Aggasis Terrace,
May Flower Walk.
Boylston Bridgeway
Charles Gate
Sedgefare
Westland Cross
Westbay Terrace
Northbay Terrace.
Eastover Place.
Longview
Saltcroft.
Fair Leat
Bankshaw
Blooming Bank.
Lowell Road
Whittier Place
May Flower Road
Alden Terrace.

| Messr Tiffany & Co Gentlemen, | 9 Dec. 79. | 
I should like to place under the floor of a Summer House now building on the Capitol Grounds at Washington a small carillon of sufficient power to be heard only some 20 or 30 yards away. It should be set to play a few simple airs, should be strong and enduring; not liable to get out of order or be injured by rust or frost. I would arrange to have it worked by water power at intervals, having the discharge of a drinking fountain to dispose of.
Will you please inform me if you have anything likely to answer my purpose? If not, do you think that it could probably be found ready made in Europe? If not could you have it made to order? I should not require it for three months to come, and could wait if necessary nine months. I shall be glad to have advice as to probable cost &c.
| Tiffany & Co. Mr Gray, | 16th Dec. 1879. | 
One other desideratum occurs to me which it may be as well to have in view in devising the chimes for Capitol Grounds. Suppose the barrel is adapted to a single “change” upon 8 or 9 notes, to be repeated say seven times and followed by silence for an equal period of time. It would be desirable that it should be hardly distinguishable at first, and only heard in full force the fourth time, rising gradually and then dying out or lost in the tinkle of the waters. The simplest way to accomplish this that occurs to me would be to place the chimes in a box, with close fitting lids top and bottom. At first they [432 ] would be closed, then the lower lid gradually drawn out thru the upper. The operation afterwards reversed. This to be done by the clock-work if clock work is used.
] would be closed, then the lower lid gradually drawn out thru the upper. The operation afterwards reversed. This to be done by the clock-work if clock work is used.