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White, Alfred Tredway-1846-1921
While, Alfred Tredung
1846-1921
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Title : General information about gifts to Harvard from Alfred Tredway White.
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Subject : White, Alfred Tredway, 1846-1921.
Subject : Harvard University -- Benefactors.
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Harvard University -- Endowments.
Harvard University. Dept. of Social Ethics.
Keyword Subject : Harvard University -- Bequests.
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3RQS4QS39B7SXUCY32F75U85G7VGNVPJH9RMJ3E9KJU3RJI7FN-01748?func=full-se12/6/200
Alfred T. White
Page 1 of 3
Alfred T. White
Alfred Tredway White (1846-1921), housing reformer
and philanthropist, was known as "the great heart and
mastermind of Brooklyn's better self." Forty years a
deacon and twenty years a trustee of the First Unitarian
Church of Brooklyn, White's reforming work in housing
Dictionary of
grew directly from his church's social service project and
Unitarian &
was deeply informed by his sense of religious duty and
Universalist
compassion. In the course of an address he once asked his
Biography
audience how men and women could understand the love
of God "when they see only the greed of men."
Search the Dictionary
White was born in Brooklyn, New York, the son of
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Alexander Moss White, a wealthy importer, and Elizabeth Hart Tredway. He
earned a Civil Engineering degree at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New
Alphabetical List
York, in 1865, then returned to Brooklyn and worked in his family's Manhattan
importing firm, of which he was later a partner.
A-F G-N 0-Z
Also in 1865 young people in Brooklyn's First Unitarian Church founded a
Main Page
settlement school. Two years later White, a lifelong member of the church, began
About the Project
teaching in the settlement school. In 1869 his minister Alfred P. Putnam asked him
to superintend the church's settlement work. He did SO for the remainder of his life.
Editors
Almost immediately, through house calls to the homes of settlement children,
Contact Us
White became aware of the terrible living conditions of the urban poor. Shocked to
find that the death rate in tenement districts exceeded the general rate of population
Notes for
growth, he worked to stop these needless deaths with better housing. "Well it is to
Contributors
build hospitals for the cure of disease," he said, "but better to build homes which
Information Form
will prevent it."
Contributors
In May, 1878, White married Annie Jean Lyman, a granddaughter of Seth Low,
also a teacher in the settlement school, whose family was active in the First
Universalist Register
Church. They had two daughters who, like their parents, taught in the settlement
Obituaries
school.
Unitarian Universalist
Association
Before inaugurating the housing reform movement with innovative, affordable
Unitarian Universalist
housing for the working poor, White went to England to investigate the housing-
Women's Heritage
reform projects of Sydney H. Waterlow and others. Having learned from their
Society
examples and with financial help from his family, he built homes and apartments
General Assembly of
in Brooklyn for over a thousand families. In 1877 he completed the Home
Unitarian and Free
Buildings on the corner of Hicks and Baltic Streets. These twin, six-story, fire-
Christian Churches
(UK)
proof brick buildings, with their sunlit rooms, private toilets, and balconies, were
"the most advanced tenement houses in the world." Eager that other builders
Notable American
should follow his lead, White made certain his buildings proved that good housing
Unitarians
rented to those of limited means could be profitable. In 1878 and 1879 near his
Note: Major
first buildings White constructed the Tower Buildings with approximately 170
apartments. In 1890, closer to the waterfront, he completed the nine Riverside
Contributor to
Buildings, his greatest achievement. Far ahead of its time, the project had its own
Emerson Hall
park, playground, bathhouse and music pavilion. None of his buildings occupied
more than 52 percent of its lot. White's projects, Jacob Riis insisted, were "like a
http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/alfredwhite.html
9/26/2005
Alfred T. White
Page 2 of 3
big village of contented people, who live in peace with one another because they
have elbowroom." White's buildings and the publicity he gave them in his writings
and lectures helped pave the way for enactment of New York State's 1895
tenement legislation, requiring that a new tenement occupy no more than 65
percent of its lot. By 1900 White was a leading member of the New York State
Tenement House Commission.
In 1876, while completing his first tenement houses for immigrant families, White
moved the First Church's settlement school into its own building, the Willow Place
Chapel. There the school started a kindergarten and, with the help of Pratt Institute,
became a leader in preschool education. In 1906 classes and settlement clubs grew
when a second building, Columbia House, was added. An early member of
Brooklyn's Children Aid Society, White built for that organization the Sea-Side
Home on Coney Island in 1876, the first facility in the country where poor children
could receive medical care and nutritious food in a vacation atmosphere. Credited
with cutting Brooklyn's infant mortality rate by half, White was also a founder of
the Brooklyn Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children. In 1878 he became
the co-founder of the Brooklyn Bureau of Charities and was either its president or
secretary for thirty years. White was SO involved in settlement and charity work
that he returned to Brooklyn from summer vacations in New England every third
week. In 1893, while commissioner of public works in Brooklyn, White built the
Wallabout Market which lasted until the nearby Navy Yard expanded during
World War II. To bring flowers and woodlands to city dwellers, he made the
Brooklyn Botanic Garden a reality in 1910 and until his death helped it through
every financial crisis it faced.
White's concern for education and training reached out beyond Brooklyn. He was a
major supporter of Hampton Institute, where Booker T. Washington was a student,
and of the Tuskegee Institute which Washington built. Tuskegee Institute "would
not have been possible," Washington said, "had it not been for the encouragement
and inspiration I received from Mr. White and his family."
In 1880 Francis Greenwood Peabody, a Unitarian minister and Harvard teacher,
came to Brooklyn to see White's innovative housing. They were friends for 40
years. White endowed a chair to ensure that the teaching of social ethics at
Harvard, which Peabody had begun, would continue. Designed to teach economists
their moral duty and philosophers economic reality, this course was duplicated in
other colleges, bringing White's ideas for reform to generations of students. In
1890 Harvard University awarded White an honorary doctorate.
During and after World War I White made generous anonymous gifts to
desperately needy Unitarian churches in Transylvania. He was later given the
Belgian Order of the Cross for sending money to ravished towns in Belgium and
working with Herbert Hoover's Commission for Relief in that country. White was a
charter member of Survey Associates, an original trustee of the Russell Sage
Foundation, and on the first executive committee of the American National Red
Cross.
While skating across Forest Lake, White, an active outdoor man, fell through thin
ice and drowned near Ramapo Hills, New York. Calling White the "great
parishioner" of Brooklyn's First Unitarian Church, William Howard Taft lamented
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9/26/2005
Alfred T. White
Page 3 of 3
his loss, saying, "I don't know any other one in all that six millions of New York
City who would leave such a void as he does."
Material on White and his buildings can be found in the First Unitarian Church Collection,
Brooklyn Historical Society, Brooklyn, New York, and in other papers there. His own writings
include Improved Dwellings for the Laboring Classes (1879); "Better Homes for Workingmen"
prepared for the Twelfth National Conference of Charities, held at Washington, D.C., June 1885;
and Sun-Lighted Tenements: Thirty-five Years' Experience as an Owner (1912). For writings on
White by his contemporaries, see Memorial Meeting: Alfred T. White, 1846-1921 (Brooklyn
Academy of Music, April 3, 1921); In Memorium, Alfred T. White (Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Record, July 1921); Robert W. de Forest "Alfred T. White," Survey (February 5, 1921); Francis
Greenwood Peabody, Reminiscences of Present-Day Saints (1927); and Jacob A. Riis, How the
Other Half Lives (1890). Modern sources include American National Biography, S.V. "White,
Alfred Tredway"; Olive Hoogenboom and Ari Hoogenboom, "Alfred T. White: Settlement Worker
and Housing Reformer," Hayes Historical Journal: A Journal of the Gilded Age 9 (Fall 1989);
Olive Hoogenboom, The First Unitarian Church of Brooklyn: One Hundred Fifty Years (1987); and
Joseph B. Milgram, Alfred Tredway White (1977). Obituaries are in the New York Times and the
Brooklyn Daily Eagle, January 31, 1921.
Article by Olive Hoogenboom
Main Page About the Project Contact Us
All material copyright Unitarian Universalist Historical Society (UUHS) 1999-
2004
http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/alfredwhite.html
9/26/2005
Present-Day Saints
"Alfred Tredway White
of the teaching which, with such imperfect equip-
was thus secured, with space not only for lecture-
ment and slight encouragement, I had been trying
rooms but for a special library and for a 'Social
to give. Alfred had often expressed his sympathy
Museum' a collection of designs, charts, and
with my undertaking, and remarked one day that
illustrations of social work which it had been my
his own way in social service might have been less
dream to provide. 'I believe," he wrote in his letter
hard to find if he had been given earlier guidance.
of gift, 'that the interest in the study of the social
One morning, at his home, as we sat by the fire after
questions will broaden if the facilities for such studies
breakfast before departing to our different duties,
be increased, and I should be glad to aid in making
he inquired in a casual manner what would seem to
such provision at Harvard as may perpetuate,
me the best way to help young men like himself
expand, and dignify the course already established.
to care for the social problems which made the sub-
This contribution is to be entered for the pres-
jects of my lectures. It had been necessary, he said,
ent simply as from a contributor to the Study of
for him to cross the ocean to learn the science of
the Ethics of the Social Questions, and my name is
housing ; might not other young men be taught while
not to be published in connection with it without
yet in college how to use their time and means effec-
my consent hereafter.'
tively for the public good?
President Eliot's reply to this characteristic letter
It happened that at the moment the Department
contains the following paragraph 'Perhaps you do
of Philosophy at Harvard was pledged to the plan of
not fully understand the happiness you are prepar-
a special building, and had received only two thirds
ing for him [Professor Peabody]. When a man has
of the one hundred and fifty thousand dollars neces-
through long years built up a body of university in-
sary for the purpose. I replied, therefore, that I
struction, invented its methods, interested the stu-
thought the teaching of social ethics would be most
dents in it, and accumulated with difficulty an in-
assured of its future if a permanent place could be
complete special library, and all the time has had
secured for it in Emerson Hall and a few days later
very little assistance and no mechanical and clerical
Alfred White astonished the department by sub-
aids, he dreads to grow old, lest his work should
scribing the necessary fifty thousand dollars, with
not be continued and developed by competent suc-
the condition that pro-rata space should be assigned
cessors; lest in short it prove to be personal and
to instruction in social ethics. As a consequence,
temporary instead of institutional and permanent.
the greater part of the second floor of Emerson Hall
What you are proposing to do - as I understand it
146
147
Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
will make Professor Peabody's work on the ethical
possible were, as has been indicated, entered as
dealing with the grave social and industrial evils
anonymous, and it was not until a new professor
which beset our American communities permanent
took command of the department that the source
at Harvard University.'
of this stream of generosity was discovered to be,
Alfred's appetite for giving being thus stimulated,
not a graduate of Harvard, but an unsuspected, and
he proceeded, without suggestion or knowledge of
to most Harvard men an unknown, benefactor. His
mine - indeed, during my absence on a sabbatical
motive is sufficiently shown in a letter to President
half-year - to fortify the work with an endowment
Lowell in 1917 'While I sympathize with the desire
of one hundred thousand dollars, followed by various
to provide instruction especially designed for Divin-
gifts for furnishings, for the library, and for scholar-
ity School students, I also keep in mind the interests
ships and finally, at his death, by a bequest of one
of that large body of undergraduates who are likely
hundred thousand dollars. His total gifts thus
to become men of affairs, and who should realize
reached at least three hundred thousand dollars;
the fundamentally ethical nature of many of our
and the instruction which for years had been only
social problems.'
that of an individual, and had been driven from one
Nor must it be inferred that the gifts thus
lecture-room to another without assurance of per-
described were of money alone. An even more sus-
manence, became established as a distinct depart-
taining contribution was the complete understand-
ment and recognized unit in the University.)
ing and sympathy with which Alfred White watched
The appointment, in 1920, of the distinguished
the experimental years of this new type of study.
teacher and physician, Dr. Richard C. Cabot, as my
The somewhat slender support secured within the
successor, gave to social ethics a new importance
College Staff was more than compensated for by the
in the college curriculum, and under the direction
approval of a man of that world which social ethics
of his fertile genius there were serving in the depart-
was to interpret and serve. It has seldom happened
ment in 1926 a staff of two professors, eight instruc-
that two men of such different traditions have found
tors and other officers, offering more than twenty
themselves thinking and planning with such uncon-
courses of instruction, with three hundred and sixty
strained identity of hope and faith and after years of
registered students, and a special library of more
silence I find myself asking, at almost every point of
than six thousand volumes for their use. For more
personal or national decision, how Alfred's mind would
than ten years the gifts which have made this growth
have dealt with the case and have shown the way.
148
149
7.9-08
(1846-
Birther
1921)
CHAPTER VII
X
ALFRED TREDWAY WHITE
A
SECOND academic venture which had both
the joy and the risks of novelty was a more
personal enterprise, and must always be associated
with the name of Alfred Tredway White.
My affectionate intimacy with him - a closer
and more confidential friendship than often occurs
between grown men - was a late arrival in my
experience, but soon became the most sustaining
and reassuring guide of my thought and work. We
were of about the same age, and were concerned with
the same problems of social amelioration and reform ;
but had never met each other until we were over
thirty years of age, and then by what seemed an
accident of professional life.
Our paths of early education lay far apart. Alfred
White had been trained to be an engineer, and had
received his degree, at the age of nineteen, from
the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New
York. The demands of his family's business,
however, soon made it necessary for him to attach
himself to his father and uncle, and later, with his
brother, to continue the title of a firm which has
maintained an honorable place in New York for
affy your
nearly a century. I, on the other hand, having been
forced to abandon a parish ministry and to enter the
Ayes 7. White
I34
Prime
65
see
CED'S
On
Alfred Tredway White
academic life, had in large degree lost contact with
men in business affairs. In this withdrawal from
preaching to teaching, it had occurred to me,
however, to undertake, at first with a small group
of divinity students, and in 1882 with a large section
of undergraduates, some examination of the ethical
problems and needs which were confronting and dis-
turbing the modern world. It was a rash venture,
and was observed by some of my colleagues with
scepticism, or even with friendly derision. Professor
Tucker, later the beloved President of Dartmouth
College, had, one year earlier, and in the quiet pre-
cincts of Andover Seminary, offered to his students
a similar course of study, concerned with the ap-
plication of Christian motives to philanthropic
work; but this was a distinctly professional un-
dertaking, designed to promote among young min-
isters a clearer understanding of the social prob-
lems they were soon to meet. Its most notable
result was the establishment of 'Andover House'
in Boston, which still perpetuates as 'South End
House' the influence of Dr. Tucker on his pupil,
Robert Woods. The notion that such subjects might
be appropriate, *not merely as instruments of pro-
fessional efficiency, but for the training of young
men in college, as a legitimate part of a liberal
education, preparing them for the world in which
they were to live, was SO novel that one of the
most respected of Harvard professors frankly con-
I35
Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
fessed that he did not see how such studies could
was described as 'The Ethics of the Social Ques-
be 'seriously pursued.'
tions,' and finally the impulsive genius of William
There were certainly some considerations which
James suggested, 'Why not call it "Social Ethics"?'
WJ
seemed to encourage this distrust. Academic ad-
and that title was soon accepted, not only by
ministrators are likely to dread innovations as
Harvard University, but by similar courses and
disturbing the balance of studies: and here was a
departments in many American colleges and uni-
plan which had no precedent in any country, and
versities, quite without knowledge of the fact that
was involved in many risks both from bad economics
the name had been reached after much tentative
and from loose sentimentalism. There was also
fumbling and as a slowly realized survival of the
serious lack of scholastic material. The literature
fittest.
of social agitation and reform, which is now SO
Thus the academic foundling, without legitimate
abundant, was practically non-existent forty years
descent from any recognized department of study,
ago. What is described in college as 'required read-
wandered from room to room, repelled by economics,
ing' had to be derived either from incidental articles
tolerated by philosophy, and not quite certain itself
or from annual reports of institutions, or from the
to what family it belonged. Alfred White, observing
propagandist writings of precipitate reformers. Pro-
this homelessness, said one day that what was needed
fessors of economics were inclined to oppose what
in the University was a long building with two
seemed an invasion of their field, and radical critics
wings, housing in one the instruction in economics
were disappointed by a guarded or academic treat-
and in the another that in philosophy, and between
ment. A jocular cynic in the Harvard faculty
the two a central dome assigned to Social Ethics,
described the new course as one on 'Drainage and
which might be entered from either end, by an econo-
Divorce'; and a compositor at the University Press
mist who wanted to learn of duty, or by a philos-
unconsciously reached the climax of criticism by
opher who wanted to learn of economic laws. It
sending to the office a galley-proof of the next year's
must be added, however, that when this Cinderella
offering which announced that my instruction was
was provided with a substantial dowry in her own
to be changed from a 'half Curse' to a 'whole Curse.'
right and was settled in a fine home, the attitude
Even the title descriptive of such studies was for
of her relations became that of competition for
years undetermined. At first, with some exaggera-
intimacy rather than that of condescension or in-
tion, it was classified as 'Philosophy 5'; later it
difference, and that another department candidly
136
I37
Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
proposed adopting social ethics under its family
in social ethics have given direction or momentum
name, in spite of the dubious pedigree-but with
to his useful life.
the fortune.
It was in the course of this academic teaching,
Inadequate and provisional as such pioneer work
which might seem to have been remote from Wall
became, it offered an inviting challenge to a young
Street, that lives SO divergent in their interests as
teacher whose chief equipment was the valor of igno-
Alfred White's and mine at last happily met. In
rance. To set one's hand to a brand new undertaking
lecturing on the principles of poor-relief, I had been
in university life, and one which the conditions of
led to report the plans, then just beginning to take
the world made timely, if not imperative, was a ven-
shape in various countries, for the provision of
ture worth the risk of much academic indifference
improved dwellings for working-people, and to call
and much struggling with inadequate material;
attention to the consistency of such schemes with
and while many youths got little from their researches
economic stability or, as the maxim of the new
but an easy 'C,' here and there, I like to believe, a
science called it, philanthropy and five per cent.
life was steadied or a career determined. The most
The Peabody Dwellings had already been established
reassuring counsel I can recollect was that of a
in London, and in 1883 were housing not less than
veteran in the faculty to whom I confessed my in-
fourteen thousand persons, with SO prudent a scheme
sufficient equipment, and who said 'You must
of cumulative income that, when I was inspecting
remember, my young friend, the Oriental proverb,
their admirable premises, the superintendent jest-
"Among the blind a one-eyed man is king."
ingly remarked that within a time quite within com-
Throughout the arduous years of consciously experi-
putation the entire population of the metropolis
mental effort to direct these groups of young men -
might be his tenants. Indeed, the chief obstacle
some of them passionately interested, some mildly
met at this time by the Peabody scheme, as later by
tolerant, and some passively resistant- it was a
the Sage Foundation's Garden City, was the occupa-
solace to reflect that, dimly as I could see the way of
tion of these attractive lodgings by tenants quite
social sanity and peace, most of those before me were
above the wage-earning group, who found economy
almost totally blind; and the chief source of profes-
consistent with reasonable comfort. In London,
sional satisfaction in old age has been to learn, now
also, Sir Sydney Waterlow had established his
and then, from an administrator of business or a
Improved Dwellings Company as early as 1863,
promoter of sane reform, that his youthful researches
with domestic conveniences provided for each family
I38
I39
Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
at a rental of about two shillings a week for each
same time earning an annual income of six per cent
room, and average net earnings of six per cent a
on the investment. It was an unprecedented venture
year.
in this country, and opened the way to the many
The first, and for many years the best, American
and more ambitious schemes of 'Tenementology'
illustration of this new science, combining wise
which, with varying degrees of success, have been
philanthropy and sound business, had been given
undertaken in many American cities.
in 1876 in Brooklyn, New York, through the private
Such was the enterprise which demanded personal
initiative of Alfred White.1 The English examples
observation if it were to be the subject of academic
had attracted his attention when he was but twenty-
lectures, and I therefore made a pilgrimage to Brook-
nine years old, and, with the prudence of a man
lyn, and for the first time met the founder of these
of affairs, he crossed the ocean, examined the system
dwellings, then about thirty-five years old. It was
and budget of the Waterlow Buildings and other
on my part a case of love at first sight, and on his
similar ventures, and, returning to Brooklyn, set
part the beginning of forty years of devoted friend-
himself to devise a similar plan for its rapidly grow-
ship. We were, by inheritance and conviction, of the
ing and seriously congested population. He enlisted
same religious faith and communion, and there were
his family in the investment, and proceeded to erect
few incidents in my own religious life SO appealing
in the thickly settled district near the docks, first the
and tranquillizing as the family worship shared in
Tower Buildings, and later the Riverside Buildings,
his home before the busy day's work began. He was
which when completed contained five hundred and
blessed with a most lovely and devoted wife, of the
forty-seven lodgings, besides thirty small houses,
same rational faith and the same complete dedication
providing in all about two thousand tenants with
to generous thoughts and deeds, and his home life
every convenience of domestic seclusion, sanitary
has been to many a guest a lesson in the simplicity
protection, fireproof construction, playgrounds for
which is in Christ. Indeed, it was more than once
children, and a rebate of one month's rental for
a matter of playful discussion among friends whether
prompt payment throughout the year, while at the
Mr. or Mrs. White was the more perfect in char-
acter - a debate which never reached a conclusive
1 The story is told in detail in two pamphlets of Alfred White's:
Improved Dwellings for the Laboring Classes, Putnam, 1879 (with
decision.
illustrations) : and Better Homes for Workingmen. Twelfth Nat.
Conf. of Charities, 1885. See also, De Forest and Veiller, The Tene-
He was himself SO unassuming and unimpressive,
ment House Problem, Macmillan, 1903, I, 97, 333, 364 II, 94, 95.
with such quietness of demeanor, that I did not
140
141
Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
for years realize his vigor of thought or strength of
where the lovely Japanese section is a memorial of
will. At our first meeting we walked together through
his munificence. He was one of the original trustees
his buildings, and I observed with surprise that
of the Sage Foundation, and a member of the first
scarcely any occupant whose home we inspected
executive committee of the American Red Cross, as
showed any sign of recognizing the landlord, who
organized for the World War; he was decorated by
was at the same time the patron saint of the com-
the King of Serbia in recognition of his gifts to that
munity. No taint of patronage or charity had been
country and received from the King of Belgium the
felt; the administration had become SO automatic
Order of the Cross. The Polytechnic Institute at
and business-like, and the occupant SO personally
Troy, Smith College, the District Nursing Associa-
concerned, through an expected dividend, for the
tion of Brooklyn, Tuskegee and Hampton Institutes,
maintenance of cleanliness and order, that the merits
and many other institutions, were reenforced by his
of the buildings were proudly exhibited to the visit-
gifts. From 1893 to 1895 he served as Commissioner
ing strangers as the occupant's possession. Philan-
of Public Works for Brooklyn, incurring the bitter
thropy had been completely submerged in efficiency ;
hostility of certain contractors by his resolute
the owner was disguised as a guest.
defiance of their schemes; but on his withdrawal
From this point of contact, and through many
receiving an emblazoned testimonial from the very
experiences of companionship, both in his home and
men who had opposed him, commending his integ-
mine, of excursions in summer and conversations
rity and foresight. In recognition of his judicious
in winter, I came by degrees to know something of
philanthropy, Harvard University, in 1890, conferred
other doings of this unassuming and chivalric friend,
on him the honorary degree of Master of Arts, ac-
some of which may be briefly recapitulated. In 1878,
companying it with words SO sonorous- for degrees
with his cousin Seth Low and other young citizens
were still given in Latin - that a translation would
of Brooklyn, he had founded the Bureau of Charities,
be an act of impiety Alfredum Tredway White : -
and was its president for thirty years. To this charge
Virum recte divitem esse scientem, tectorum ad usum
were soon added official relations with almost every
operariorum designatorem callidum, dominum bene-
beneficent project of his city, its Children's Aid
ficum.' These and many other forms of public serv-
Society, its Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
ice and private beneficence made him universally re-
Children, its care of the blind; and, with peculiar
garded as the first citizen of Brooklyn and his death,
affection, its establishment of a botanical garden,
in 1921, was the occasion of a memorial meeting at
142
143
Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
the Academy of Music, where rich and poor, black
found peculiar happiness, and in which his wife had
and white, Catholics and Protestants, with beautiful
shared with all the sympathy of her beautiful soul.
unanimity of affection, testified to a sense of bereave-
When, for example, at the beginning of the World
ment which few private citizens have ever inspired.
War, the towns of Belgium had been devastated, and
The circumstances of his death increased this
before any organization of relief had been proposed
sense of calamity. Nothing had given him SO much
in this country, Cardinal Mercier's representative
refreshment, after a week in Wall Street, as a day
received each month a substantial sum, transmitted
among the solitudes of Nature, where he might
through a Belgian priest in Brooklyn, from givers
lift up his eyes to the hills for help. With this desire
who described themselves as 'friends.' The Cardinal
for release, he had set out on a Saturday in January
took from his own study table a precious crucifix
for a tramp among the mountains of the Ramapo
and ordered it transmitted to these anonymous
Range, west of the Hudson River, and was skating
friends, who had anticipated the general sense of
alone on one of the numerous lakes when he broke
sympathy and compassion which this country soon
through the ice and was drowned. The disaster was
expressed. On arriving in America Cardinal Mercier
a startling shock to the whole community but as
learned for the first time the names of these friends,
one reflects more calmly it may be felt that sudden
and forthwith invited Mr. and Mrs. White to a pri-
death, coming to a man of seventy-five years, in the
vate audience, and gave his gracious blessing to these
fulness of athletic vigor, and with an unbroken
American Unitarians. When, again, a messenger
record of integrity and beneficence, cannot be
reached this country bringing the sad news of des-
regarded as deplorable. He died without anticipa-
perate need among the Unitarian Churches in Tran-
tion or prolonged suffering, in the midst of the wild
sylvania under Rumanian rule, he was led to inquire
nature where his physical renewal had always been
the source of a series of generous gifts which had been
sought and found, and mourned by a whole city and
anonymously sent to these stricken congregations
by grateful friends in many lands.
and discovered that they proceeded from one family
These public acts of citizenship and benevolence
in Brooklyn, where the need had been recognized
are, however, not the most convincing evidence of
and met before it had been generally appreciated
Alfred White's character. By degrees, and often by
or relieved.
accident, I became aware of a long series of private
Of these unprompted benefactions, one of the most
and often anonymous benefactions, in which he had
surprising was his reenforcement and endowment
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Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
of the teaching which, with such imperfect equip-
was thus secured, with space not only for lecture-
ment and slight encouragement, I had been trying
rooms but for a special library and for a 'Social
to give. Alfred had often expressed his sympathy
Museum' - a collection of designs, charts, and
with my undertaking, and remarked one day that
illustrations of social work which it had been my
his own way in social service might have been less
dream to provide. 'I believe, he wrote in his letter
hard to find if he had been given earlier guidance.
of gift, that the interest in the study of the social
One morning, at his home, as we sat by the fire after
questions will broaden if the facilities for such studies
breakfast before departing to our different duties,
be increased, and I should be glad to aid in making
he inquired in a casual manner what would seem to
such provision at Harvard as may perpetuate,
me the best way to help young men like himself
expand, and dignify the course already established.
to care for the social problems which made the sub-
This contribution is to be entered for the pres-
jects of my lectures. It had been necessary, he said,
ent simply as from a contributor to the Study of
for him to cross the ocean to learn the science of
the Ethics of the Social Questions, and my name is
housing might not other young men be taught while
not to be published in connection with it without
yet in college how to use their time and means effec-
my consent hereafter.'
tively for the public good
President Eliot's reply to this characteristic letter
Eliat
It happened that at the moment the Department
contains the following paragraph Perhaps you do
of Philosophy at Harvard was pledged to the plan of
not fully understand the happiness you are prepar-
a special building, and had received only two thirds
ing for him [Professor Peabody]. When a man has
of the one hundred and fifty thousand dollars neces-
through long years built up a body of university in-
sary for the purpose. I replied, therefore, that I
struction, invented its methods, interested the stu-
5621
thought the teaching of social ethics would be most
dents in it, and accumulated with difficulty an in-
assured of its future if a permanent place could be
complete special library, and all the time has had
secured for it in Emerson Hall and a few days later
very little assistance and no mechanical and clerical
Alfred White astonished the department by sub-
aids, he dreads to grow old, lest his work should
scribing the necessary fifty thousand dollars, with
not be continued and developed by competent suc-
the condition that pro-rata space should be assigned
cessors lest in short it prove to be personal and
to instruction in social ethics. As a consequence,
temporary instead of institutional and permanent.
the greater part of the second floor of Emerson Hall
What you are proposing to do - as I understand it
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Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
- will make Professor Peabody's work on the ethical
possible were, as has been indicated, entered as
dealing with the grave social and industrial evils
anonymous, and it was not until a new professor
which beset our American communities permanent
took command of the department that the source
at Harvard University,
of this stream of generosity was discovered to be,
Alfred's appetite for giving being thus stimulated,
not graduate of Harvard, but an unsuspected, and
he proceeded, without suggestion or knowledge of
to most Harvard men an unknown, benefactor. His
mine - indeed, during my absence on a sabbatical
motive is sufficiently shown in a letter to President
half-year - to fortify the work with an endowment
Lowell in 1917 'While I sympathize with the desire
of one hundred thousand dollars, followed by various
to provide instruction especially designed for Divin-
gifts for furnishings, for the library, and for scholar-
ity School students, I also keep in mind the interests
ships ; and finally, at his death, by a bequest of one
of that large body of undergraduates who are likely
hundred thousand dollars. His total gifts thus
to become men of affairs, and who should realize
reached at least three hundred thousand dollars
the fundamentally ethical nature of many of our
and the instruction which for years had been only
social problems.'
that of an individual, and had been driven from one
Nor must it be inferred that the gifts thus
lecture-room to another without assurance of per-
described were of money alone. An even more sus-
manence, became established as a distinct depart-
taining contribution was the complete understand-
ment and recognized unit in the University.
ing and sympathy with which Alfred White watched
The appointment, in 1920, of the distinguished
the experimental years of this new type of study.
teacher and physician, Dr. Richard C. Cabot, as my
The somewhat slender support secured within the
successor, gave to social ethics a new importance
College Staff was more than compensated for by the
in the college curriculum, and under the direction
approval of a man of that world which social ethics
of his fertile genius there were serving in the depart-
was to interpret and serve. It has seldom happened
ment in 1926 a staff of two professors, eight instruc-
that two men of such different traditions have found
tors and other officers, offering more than twenty
themselves thinking and planning with such uncon-
courses of instruction, with three hundred and sixty
strained identity of hope and faith and after years of
registered students, and a special library of more
silence I find myself asking, at almost every point of
than six thousand volumes for their use. For more
personal or national decision, how Alfred's mind would
than ten years the gifts which have made this growth
have dealt with the case and have shown the way.
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Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
These reminiscences of a beloved friend tempt
than the schemes of politicians or the judgments
one to some reflections on the uses of wealth, and
of less competent men. The same discretion is
the place of rich men under the conditions of the
likely to be applied to giving which has been used
modern world. No thoughtful person can disguise
in getting, and the world is better, not only for
from himself the fact that the so-called capitalistic
the money received, but for the sagacity with which
system which fortifies private ownership is in an
it is distributed. In other words, the system of
unstable condition and as yet on trial. Agitators
private ownership, instead of being, as it is often
and revolutionists affirm that it degrades the pos-
supposed to be, easy to administer, is a stern
sessors and wrongs the dispossessed ; and there are
test of character. It calls for conscience as well
instances enough of the misuse or waste of surplus
as for capacity. Cupidity is often an evidence of
capital to encourage the advocates of confiscation
stupidity. Ownership involves obligation. Service
or of communal control. The trouble with the rich
is the only way to freedom. A rich man may be worth
often seems to be, not that they have money, but
having. if he use his peculiar facilities for benefiting
that they do not know what to do with it. They
society. The capitalist may be the most economical
have learned to get, but they have not learned to use.
agent which the community can employ. The system
The development of the prehensile grasp has involved
of private capital which may be SO easily misused
an atrophy of the open palm. The only use of money
offers the best of opportunities for magnanimity
which has become congenial is to make more. Their
and wisdom; but if, on the other hand, self-aggran-
wealth has become what Ruskin called their 'ill-th';
dizement and vulgar ostentation shall supplant sim-
it is not well but ill with them, and the more wealth
plicity and self-sacrifice as the habit of the prosperous,
they accumulate the more they provoke protest and
the capitalistic system - now under severe strain -
justify revolution.
is likely to be found wanting and to be displaced.
A life like Alfred White's - modest, sagacious,
The future of wealth is thus in its own hands, and
and discriminating, - thus provides the best defence
the most active promoters of social revolution are
that can be offered for the present system of industry.
those who abuse the privilege of private ownership.
A rich man who regards himself not as a posses-
To meet this test, to live with simplicity, and hold
sor but as a trustee, who is conscious of owing
one's life and property as trusts for the common good,
his wealth as much as of owning it, is more likely
is to justify the language of President Eliot in con-
to be judicious and far-seeing in his benefactions
ferring the honorary degree on Alfred White, and
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Present-Day Saints
Alfred Tredway White
to know how to be 'nobly rich.' 'How hardly shall
must be endowed with a constructive imagination
they that have riches," said Jesus, 'enter into the
which reenforces sagacity by foresight. His success,
kingdom of God !' Yes, but when they do come in,
like that of the enterprising financier, is in develop-
having passed the barriers of their indolence and
ing unsuspected resources and meeting unrecognized
self-indulgence, it may be that the gates are lifted
wants. He must exhibit the same qualities of ven-
up as for a hard-won victory. The man of whom
turesomeness and originality which make other
Jesus demanded the great renunciation 'Sell that
people rich. Like Wordsworth's Happy Warrior, he
thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt
'Through the heat of conflict, keeps the law
have treasure in heaven, and come and follow me !'
In calmness made, and sees what he foresaw.'
was one who had 'great possessions, yet Jesus
'beholding him loved him,' and it may have been
He adds to generosity prevision he has not only an
that though he was 'sad at that saying, and went
open hand but an open mind.
away grieved,' the loving look of Jesus followed him,
A sill rarer trait in the wise use of wealth is per-
and made what seemed his cross become in the end
sister cy. Much giving, even by generous people, is
his crown.
occasional, spasmodic, and transitory. An object
To justify this way of life, however, more is needed
is temporarily interesting; but the giver soon passes
than good intentions. The administration of wealth
to the next benefaction. It is said that the average
as a trust calls for personal qualities quite as rare as
duration of loyalty to a relief association is not more
those which insure the acquisition of wealth. Dis-
than five years. The enterprises which Alfred White
tribution may be as profitless as hoarding. Invest-
directed and reenforced are perhaps most of all
ment in philanthropy calls for as much prudence as
indebted to him for an indomitable persistency.
investment in securities. Most givers of money wait
Having once assumed an obligation, no vicissitude
until, among the multitudinous calls for their aid,
disheartened him and no reverse made his devotion
their contribution becomes compulsory the demand
slacken. It was one thing to organize a Bureau of
is thrust upon them and they surrender. The wise
Charities in Brooklyn, but quite another thing to
distributor of wealth, on the contrary, must have a
watch each detail of administration, and refresh an
faculty of prevision. Precisely as the maker of money
exhausted treasury during a term of thirty years.
anticipates needs and foresees the course of events,
It was an interesting venture to endow a Department
SO the giver of money, if he is to invest it profitably,
of Social Ethics; but it was a much severer test of
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Alfred Tredway White
character to be the anonymous source of a contin-
was this habit of faith which led him to works of love.
uous stream of benefactions for twenty years, and
His social service was the corollary of his Christian
to secure their continuance after death. To take up
consecration. His generosity was the natural flower
with new causes is exhilarating but to maintain
of a deep-rooted and daily-watered religious life.
causes where romance has been lost in routine calls
The secret of his beneficent activity was in his early
for the rarer gift of persistency. 'Justum et tenacem
discovery and continual assurance of the life of God
propositi virum' - the praise which Horace gave
in the soul of man. Religious faith, in short, for one
to his ideal statesman - might have been written of
thus concerned with social service, is not a super-
Alfred White. The just man holds on to whatever
added luxury but a fundamental support. The
he undertakes.
interpretation of the imperfect task is in the con-
These gifts of prevision and persistency, which
viction of the perfect law. The escape from mechan-
made Alfred White a permanent example in the
ism and routine is in the freedom of faith. Serenity
administration of wealth, were fortified and sustained
and detachment are reserved for those who have
by a still more commanding habit of mind. It was
entered into the communion of the saints.
his rational and lifelong faith in the Divine guidance
I cherish the happy memory of spending with
of the individual and of the world. The supreme
Alfred White the last evening of his life. A lovely
lesson of his beautiful life was that of worldly wis-
daughter, in recalling whose character her friends
dom derived from unworldly consecration. It was
instinctively used the word 'radiant,' had served
the wisdom which is from above, and which is first
untiringly in Washington during the World War,
pure, then peaceable, full of mercy and good fruits.
and being stricken by disease was too war-worn to
Behind a manner of sunny and unassuming kindli-
resist it, and died as truly in the ranks as though
ness which made him a delightful companion were
she were killed in a trench at the front. Knowing
the firmness and serenity derived from the habitual
her keen interest in Hampton Institute, her husband
dedication of his life to accomplish, not his own
caused an inviting club-house to be built there on
will but the will of Him who sent him. His religious
the water-front, and her father equipped this delight-
life was uncomplicated and serene. Neither domestic
ful meeting place with furniture, with a fleet of canoes
sorrow nor public controversy could disturb his
for the use of the devoted teachers, and with an
tranquillity or self-control. He directed his daily
endowment for its maintenance. We were to dedi-
efforts as ever in his Great Taskmaster's eye. It
cate this 'Katharine House,' as it was later called,
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Present-Day Saints
on a Sunday in January, 1921, and I proceeded to
Hampton to await Alfred's arrival, only to hear on
CHAPTER VIII
Sunday morning of his tragic death, and to have the
PHILLIPS BROOKS
sorrowing assemblage meet with the Virginian sun-
shine overshadowed by a mist of tears. This last
expression of his generosity - and none was more
I
PASS to the third, and the most impor-
tant, undertaking in university life with which
scrupulously studied in every detail of convenience
I have had the happiness to be associated, and
and charm - was a touching symbol of his self-
which owed a great part of its permanence and
effacing life. It was enough if he might reenforce
effectiveness to the confident leadership of Phillips
his son-in-law's affectionate intention, and perpetu-
Brooks.
ate in grateful memory, not his own name, but that
Here, however, I write with less claim to intimacy
of his radiant child.
than in the case of Carroll Everett or of Alfred White.
'Whom does the Master choose to be his friend?
Shortly after the death of Phillips Brooks, a clerical
Whom does he trust his wandering flock to tend?
brother, in eulogizing the Bishop, described himself
Not him whose creed is longest, or whose praise
as 'an intimate friend of Phillips Brooks,' but George
Echoes the certitudes of other days;
Gordon, who had as good a right to that title as any
But the trained leader in the world's fierce strife,
Whose faith is service and whose worship life;
one, remarked, 'None of us has a right to say that
Whose lavish heart serves with far-seeing eyes,
he was intimate with Phillips Brooks.' There was,
Whose truth is mercy, and whose pity wise;
in other words, within a fraternal, and even playful,
To whom possessions make an open door
manner, an inner life of isolated experience which
To save the city and to serve the poor
Whose monuments of unrecorded good
revealed itself only in rare moments of sympathy
Escape the praises of the multitude;
and more frequently, as is not unusual in preachers,
For whom the city's sterile wilderness
through the message of the pulpit than through can-
Blossoms with homes amid its homelessness
And from the deadening tumult of the street
dor in conversation. One could go a long way with
The fragrant garden tempts the toiler's feet.
Phillips Brooks in affectionate banter or frank dis-
Across the ages speaks the Son of Man :
cussion but would forfeit all claim to friendship
"For such God's kingdom waits since time began;
if conversation became inquisitive or impertinent.
This, which ye do SO self-effacingly
Those who knew him best knew that there was much
Unto these least, ye do it unto me."
in him which they did not know. Yet this sense of a
1
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White, Alfred Tredway-1846-1921
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Series 2