Kingman Brewster, Jr.

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Kingman Brewster, Jr.
Kingman Brewster Jr.jpg
Kingman Brewster, Jr.
8th Provost of Yale University
In office
1960–1963
Preceded by Norman Sidney Buck
Succeeded by Charles H. Taylor, Jr.
17th President of Yale University
In office
1963–1977
Preceded by A. Whitney Griswold
Succeeded by Hanna Holborn Gray
United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom
In office
June 3, 1977 – February 23, 1981
Preceded by Anne Legendre Armstrong
Succeeded by John J. Louis, Jr.
Master of University College, Oxford
In office
1986–1988
Preceded by Arnold Goodman
Succeeded by John Albery
Personal details
Born (1919-06-17)June 17, 1919
Longmeadow, Massachusetts
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Oxford, England
Resting place Grove Street Cemetery
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Mary Louise Phillips
Children Constance
Kingman, 3rd
Deborah
Alden
Riley
Parents Kingman Brewster, Sr.
Florence Foster Besse
Alma mater Yale University
Harvard Law School
Occupation Educator, University President and Diplomat

Kingman Brewster, Jr., (June 17, 1919 – November 8, 1988) was an educator, president of Yale University, and American diplomat.

Life and career

Early life

Brewster was born in Longmeadow, Massachusetts,[1] the son of Florence Foster (née Besse), a 1907 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Wellesley College,[2][3] and Kingman Brewster, Sr., a 1906 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Amherst College and a 1911 graduate of the Harvard Law School.[4][5][6] He was a direct lineal descendant of Elder William Brewster (c. 1567 - April 10, 1644), the Mayflower passenger, Pilgrim colonist leader, and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony, through his son Jonathan Brewster; he was also descended from Mayflower passenger John Howland.[7] He was a grandson of Charles Kingman Brewster[4][5] and Celina Sophia Baldwin, and Lyman Waterman Besse and Henrietta Louisa Segee. His maternal grandfather, Lyman W. Besse, owned an extensive chain of clothing stores in the Northeast known as "The Besse System."[5][8]

In 1923, when he was 4, his parents separated and later divorced.[1] He and his surviving sister, Mary, were raised by their mother first in Springfield, Massachusetts and later in Cambridge, Massachusetts. His mother was a firm influence but never overbearing. One of Brewster's friends characterized her as "one of those people whose presence you always felt when she was in the room".[9] Another friend remembered that "she knew poetry, she knew music, she knew art, she knew architecture, and believe me, she knew Kingman."[9]

Brewster wrote that his mother was a "marvelously speculative and philosophical type," a "free-thinking spirit...given to far-out enthusiasms and delighting in sprightly arguments with her more intellectually conventional friends.[1][9]

His mother remarried in 1932 to Edward Ballantine, a music professor at Harvard University and composer she had known since childhood. Brewster was, however, without a real father role, until his uncle, Arthur Besse, stepped into that role. Besse was by all accounts a very good surrogate father;[10] one of Besse's sons described him as "a man of tremendous warmth and honesty, a generous and wonderfully moral person." Brewster described his stepfather as "marvelous, and sensitive to the point of vulnerability." Besse had no children of his own and did not want to play a fatherly role.[10]

Marriage and family

In 1942, while serving in the armed services, Brewster married Mary Louise Phillips in Jacksonville, Florida.[11][12] Phillips was born August 30, 1920 in Providence, Rhode Island, the daughter of Mary and Eugene James Phillips,[13] (he was a 1905 graduate of Yale College, and a 1907 graduate of Yale Law School). She graduated in 1939 from the Wheeler School and attended but did not graduate from Vassar College. She died on April 14, 2004 at her home in Combe, Berkshire, England at age 83. She was buried next to her husband in the Grove Street Cemetery.[14]

Brewster and his wife had 5 children. Their granddaughter is actress Jordana Brewster. His first cousin was Janet Huntington Brewster[4][15][16] (September 18, 1910 –December 18, 1998) who was an American philanthropist, writer, radio broadcaster and relief worker during World War II in London. She was married to Edward R. Murrow (April 25, 1908 – April 27, 1965) who was an American broadcast journalist. His uncle, Stanley King, (May 11, 1883 – April 28, 1951) was the eleventh president of Amherst College. He held that position from 1932 to 1946.[17]

Education and war years

After graduating from Belmont Hill School[18] in Belmont, Massachusetts, Brewster entered Yale University,[19] graduating in 1941 where he was chairman of the Yale Daily News. His junior year, he turned down an offer of membership in Skull and Bones becoming a legend in Yale undergraduate lore.

Like many students at the time, he was an ardent opponent of America's intervention into World War II and was an outspoken isolationist. He idolized fellow isolationist Charles Lindbergh. He was entranced by his Trans-Atlantic flight, and remained, in his words, "bug-eyed about aviation" his entire life. He invited Lindbergh in 1940 to speak at Yale. At the time of the invitation, Lindbergh was the nation's best-known isolationist and the most prominent private citizen advocating to keep America out of the war. He and Lindbergh strategized on AFC.[20]

With the fall of France, he founded the America First Committee (AFC) along with other students at Yale.[21] The founding members of the AFC included many of the East Coast Universities' best and the brightest, from valedictorians to football all-Americans to campus newspaper editors. Many of these men later achieved national reputations. They included future President Gerald Ford; the first director of the Peace Corps Sargent Shriver; future Supreme Court justice Potter Stewart, and Congressman Jonathan Brewster Bingham. AFC became the most prominent organization in the struggle to keep America out of the European war.

Brewster also took great care to ensure that the noninterventionist movement on campus was not led by social outcasts or malcontents but by "students who had attained relative respect and prominence during their undergraduate years". He emphasized again and again that his group represented mainstream campus opinion, and that its views were "in agreement with the great majority of Americans of all ages".[21]

Before the end of his senior year, he had officially resigned from the committee after the passage of the Lend-Lease Act. He said at the time, "I still believe it outrageous to commit this country to the outcome of the war abroad and wish to limit that commitment as much as possible," he wrote Potter Stewart, but "the question from now on is not one of principle it is one of military strategy and administrative policy." Since the passage of Lend-Lease into law, "there is no room for an avowed pressure group huing [sic] a dogmatic line. Whether we like it or not America has decided what its ends are, and the question of means is not longer a legislative matter. A national pressure group therefore is not aiming to determine policy, it is seeking to obstruct it. I cannot be a part of that effort."[22]

With the attack on Pearl Harbor on the morning of Sunday, December 7, 1941, he immediately volunteered for service in the U.S. Navy.[23] During World War II he was a Navy aviator and flew on submarine-hunting patrols over the Atlantic. He served in the U.S. Navy from 1942 to 1946. After the war he entered Harvard Law School, becoming note editor and treasurer of the Harvard Law Review. In 1948, he received his law degree magna cum laude from Harvard Law School.[24]

Career

Marshall Plan

Brewster's first job after graduating was to accompany Professor Milton Katz to Paris, France to serve as his assistant at the European headquarters of the Marshall Plan.[25] Professor Katz, was a teacher and scholar of international law at Harvard Law School and the administrator of the United States Marshall Plan. Though he flourished in the job, he stayed only one year, returning in 1949 -at Katz's advice- to be a research associate in MIT's Department of Economics and Social Science.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

From 1949 and 1950, Brewster was a research associate in the Department of Economics and Social Science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Harvard University

From 1950 to 1953, he was an assistant professor of law at Harvard University, and from 1953 to 1960 he was a full professor at Harvard Law School.

Yale

In 1960, Brewster accepted the post of provost at Yale, serving from 1960 to 1963. After the death of Yale's president, A. Whitney Griswold, despite the fact that Brewster was considered Griswold's logical successor, Yale conducted a lengthy, open, and agonizing search (for Brewster) that lasted five months. On October 11, 1963, the Yale Corporation offered him the presidency by a vote of 13-2; the opposition came from two senior members of the Corporation who feared that the liberal Republican would push too hard for change in their beloved institution.[26] He served as president of Yale University from 1963 to 1977.[27][28]

Brewster was known for the improvements he made to Yale's faculty, curriculum, and admissions policies. He was president of the University when Yale began admitting women as undergraduates.[29] Academic programs in various disciplines were expanded. He was also president when the faculty voted to terminate academic credit for the Reserve Officers Training Corps (R.O.T.C.) program in June 1971 due to the belief that the ROTC program made the University complicit in the war in Vietnam. Alumni relations grew testy at times, yet fundraising increased throughout his tenure.

Brewster's appointment of liberal theologian Rev. William Sloane Coffin to the post of university chaplain is described in Coffin's autobiography, Once to Every Man.[30] After his appointment, Coffin, a former CIA operative, Williams College chaplain and Skull & Bones alum, became an ardent anti-war activist. In 1967, along with Benjamin Spock, Yale 1925, he organized a mass protest in Boston, Massachusetts and then sent hundreds of draft cards back to the U.S. Justice Department in Washington, D.C. When Brewster defended Coffin, who was arrested in 1968 together with Spock for encouraging draft resistance, he did so citing academic freedom. This action only complicated his dealings with an increasingly wary alumni association.[31]

Brewster was chairman of the National Policy Panel of the United Nations in 1968. He was a member of the President's Commission on Selective Service in 1966 and 1967 and of the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice from 1965 to 1967.

Wallace Affair

In 1963, Governor George Wallace was invited by the Yale Political Union to speak at Yale; Provost Brewster asked the Yale Political Union to revoke its invitation for security reasons. The result was a massive outcry across campus. The Woodward Report on free speech, commissioned by Brewster in 1974 was issued in 1975. Historian C. Vann Woodward chaired the committee. The committee labeled the so-called “Wallace Affair” an outright failure.[32]

Black Panthers

On April 23, 1970, during the New Haven Black Panther trials,[33] Brewster spoke to the faculty at Yale. His remarks, which were leaked to the press, made that a day which would follow him for the rest of his life: “I am appalled and ashamed that things should have come to such a pass in this country that I am skeptical of the ability of black revolutionaries to achieve a fair trial anywhere in the United States.”[34] This remark, made one week before the tumultuous May Day protests of the Black Panther trials, was decried in editorials and speeches across the country. Vice President Spiro T. Agnew jumped into the fray calling for Brewster’s immediate resignation.[35][36][37][38]

McGeorge Bundy, the president of the Ford Foundation, addressed the Yale Club of Boston just days before the May Day demonstrations and assured his fellow alumni that "one of the things I have observed about my friend Brewster is that he will deal with anyone and surrender his responsibilities to nobody."[39] Brewster inevitably would be judged on May Day's outcome because he had opened his university to all those coming to New Haven to support the Panthers, even offering them food and shelter. Brewster knew that, in the face of potential catastrophe, he had the support of other leaders cast from the same mold, friends and colleagues who shared his background and outlook.[38]

On May 1, 1970, at ten minutes before midnight, bombers exploded three devices in the Yale hockey rink. Protesters threw rocks and bottles at the National Guardsmen and taunted the New Haven police. The authorities responded by tear-gassing the demonstrators. Yale chaplain, William Sloane Coffin, stated, "All of us conspired to bring on this tragedy by law enforcement agencies by their illegal acts against the Panthers, and the rest of us by our immoral silence in front of these acts." Fortunately, there were no fatalities that evening.[38][40]

President Richard Nixon commenting on the events of May 1, 1970 to the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, stated that to be fair to the students, they were not entirely to be blamed for their actions that day. "What can we expect of students if a person in that position and of that stature (Brewster) engages in such acts?"[41][42] Henry Kissinger, sitting just a few chairs away mused aloud that Brewster was the one man whose assassination would benefit the United States.[41][42] It was Brewster's handling of the May Day demonstrations and his actions after the crisis that made him a target of the Nixon White House.[41][42][43]

Vietnam War

He is also well known for his skillful handling of the student protests on the Yale campus during the Vietnam War era, a war that he openly criticized and opposed. He never allowed such convictions to disrupt the University’s operations, especially classes. His bold stewardship of the University during an era of political unrest is widely regarded as successful.[44]

On May 12, 1972, Brewster made a public statement, printed in full on the front page of the Yale Daily News, prior to a campus visit by Richard Nixon’s Secretary of State William P. Rogers. He is at once uncompromising about upholding free speech and unrestrained in showing his discontent with the Nixon administration. Brewster, on the one hand, threatened to expel students who might bar Rogers from speaking. Still, he also said that he “expects” disciplined picketing and asked that students appropriately protest the Rogers’ appearance. In the end, Rogers unexpectedly canceled his appearance for unknown reasons.[citation needed]

Admissions

As Yale's president, he appointed R. Inslee Clark, Jr. ("Inky")[45][46] as Director of Undergraduate Admissions. Under his tenure, he established academic credentials in the admissions process and the proportion of undergraduate African-Americans, Jews, and public high school graduates at Yale rose. Despite the alumni outrage over these policy changes, Clark held the position from 1965 to 1970.[46]

No aspect of Brewster's presidency stirred more anger and debate than the overhaul of Yale's undergraduate admissions policy in the 1960s.[47] He also had made it clear from the beginning of his presidency that he was not going to preside over a finishing school on Long Island Sound.[48] Admissions became the battleground over the university's true purpose. The outcome of the battle, which was felt far beyond New Haven, was only a part of larger struggles in American society, the thorny debate over race, class, gender and leadership.

Diplomatic career

While serving as Yale's president, he was nominated by President Jimmy Carter on April 7, 1977 to serve as U.S. Ambassador to the Court of St. James. He was confirmed by the United States Senate on April 29, 1977 and he served from 1977 to 1981.[49] [50] Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, a member of the Yale Corporation, and a close personal friend, recommended him to President Carter for the position.[51] Despite his lack of diplomatic experience, the British press was pleased with the appointment, calling Brewster potentially the best ambassador since David K. E. Bruce. They described him as a "New England Patrician" and expressed delight at his gold ring with his family motto in Norman French. My role, he said at the time, is trying to advise my Government on British attitudes and concerns in the fullest way possible.

He wasted no time in beginning his new responsibilities. He was called to step in and resolve difficulties between United Nations Ambassador Andrew Young and the British Foreign Office. This was followed by smoothing out American/British difficulties over policy toward Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), which helped lead to the end of minority white rule in that country. He reveled in the "good life" of London and took advantage of the range of social occasions from dinner with Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom to quaffing a pint of ale in a working class pub, saying, "Becoming aware of the richness and variety here is a lot of fun."[52]

Post diplomatic career

After stepping down as Ambassador in 1981, Brewster was associated with the New York-based law firm of Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam & Roberts.[53] In 1984, he became its resident partner in London.

Master of University College, Oxford

In 1986, Brewster was appointed Master of University College, Oxford, serving from 1986 until his death in Oxford in 1988.[54] During this period, he was also the chairman of the Board of the United World Colleges.[55]

Quotations

  • "If I take refuge in ambiguity, I assure you that it's quite conscious."
  • "Incomprehensible jargon is the hallmark of a profession."
  • "There is no lasting hope in violence, only temporary relief from hopelessness."
  • "It won't make for a quiet life but it will make for an interesting paper vastly more significant because it is doing something only a daily paper can do."
  • "Judgment is more than skill. It sets forth on intellectual seas beyond the shores of hard indisputable factual information."
  • "Maybe you are the "cool" generation. If coolness means a capacity to stay calm and use your head in the service of ends passionately believed in, then it has my admiration."
  • "The function of a briefing paper is to prevent the ambassador from saying something dreadfully indiscreet. I sometimes think its true object is to prevent the ambassador from saying anything at all."
  • "The newspaper fits the reader's program while the listener must fit the broadcaster's program."
  • "There is no greater challenge than to have someone relying upon you; no greater satisfaction than to vindicate his expectation."
  • "Universities should be safe havens where ruthless examination of realities will not be distorted by the aim to please or inhibited by the risk of displeasure."
  • "We all live in a televised goldfish bowl."
  • "While the spoken word can travel faster, you can't take it home in your hand. Only the written word can be absorbed wholly at the convenience of the reader."

personal attendance "I am an anglophile and sax-aphone" speech to commonwealth society, London, 1978

Honors awarded

Brewster was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1956.[56] He received several honorary Doctor of Laws degrees. They were awarded by Princeton University in 1964;[57] the University of Pennsylvania in 1965;[58] Boston College in 1968;[59]Michigan State University in 1969.[60] and Yale University in 1973.

In May 1979 Brewster was awarded an honorary degree from the British Open University as Doctor of the University.[citation needed] Also in 1979, he was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Oxford.[61]

Works

He is the author of Anti-trust and American Business Abroad (1969) and coauthor of Law of International Transactions and Relations (1960).

Death

He died on November 8, 1988 at John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, England. He was buried in the Grove Street Cemetery in New Haven, Connecticut.[6][62]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Kabaservice, 17
  2. Kabaservice, 16–17
  3. Cutter, 967
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Jones, 235–521
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Kabaservice, 16
  6. 6.0 6.1 Obituary: "Kingman Brewster, Jr." New York Times. November 9, 1988.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Cutter, 2105–2106–2107
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Kabaservice, 18
  10. 10.0 10.1 Kabaservice, 20
  11. Obituary: "Mary Louise Brewster" Yale University Office of Public Affairs. April 19, 2004.
  12. Kabaservice, 92–115–294
  13. Kabaservice, 89
  14. Obituary: "Mary Louise Brewster" Yale Bulletin&Calendar. April 23, 2004.
  15. Kabaservice, 486
  16. Sperber, 11–12–15–16–17–22–50
  17. Kabaservice, 32
  18. Kabaservice, 25–28–51
  19. Kabaservice, 51
  20. Kabaservice, 74
  21. 21.0 21.1 Kabaservice, 70
  22. Kabaservice, 83
  23. Kabaservice, 99
  24. Kabaservice, 98
  25. Kabaservice, 114
  26. Karabel, 342
  27. "Kingman Brewster, Jr. succeeds Dr. Griswold as President" New York Times. October 13, 1963.
  28. "Kingman Brewster, Jr. installed as 17th President" New York Times. April 5, 1964.
  29. Karabel, 421–423
  30. Coffin, William Sloan, Once to Every Man: A Memoir, autobiography, Athenaeum Press, 1977, ISBN 0-689-10811-7
  31. Kabaservice, 319
  32. "Report of the Woodward Committee" December 23, 1974.
  33. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  34. "Brewster doubts fair Black Panthers Trails" New York Times. April 25, 1970.
  35. "Agnew wants Brewster removed from his post" New York Times. April 30, 1970.
  36. "Agnew wants Brewster removed from his post" New York Times. March 1, 2000.
  37. "Agnew wants Brewster removed from his post New York Times. April 30, 1970.
  38. 38.0 38.1 38.2 Kabaservice, 3
  39. Kabaservice, 7
  40. Kabaservice, 9
  41. 41.0 41.1 41.2 Kabaservice, 420
  42. 42.0 42.1 42.2 Kabaservice, 421
  43. Kabaservice, 6
  44. "Trustees Praise Brewster's Rule " New York Times. September 28, 1970.
  45. Karabel, 8–332–226–440
  46. 46.0 46.1 Karabel, 349
  47. Karabel, 421–343
  48. Kabaservice, 266
  49. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  50. "Senate Confirms Brewster To Be U.S. Ambassador to Britain" New York Times. April 30, 1977.
  51. Kabaservice, 445
  52. Kabaservice, 450
  53. "Brewster counsel to New York Law Firm" New York Times. April 15, 1981.
  54. "Brewster appointed master of University College, Oxford" New York Times. October 30, 1986.
  55. Peterson, Alexander Duncan Campbell (2003 - 2nd Ed.) Schools Across Frontiers: The Story of the International Baccalaureate and the United World Colleges http://books.google.com/books?id=nTUjMNjNo3EC&lpg=RA1-PA172&dq=Hon.%20Kingman%20Brewster&pg=RA1-PA172
  56. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  57. http://www.princeton.edu/pr/facts/honorary/
  58. http://www.archives.upenn.edu/primdocs/upg/upg7/1965prog.pdf
  59. http://www.bc.edu/publications/factbook/meta-elements/html/fb97honor_dg_recip.html
  60. https://www.msu.edu/~vprgs/honorarydeg/Chronlist1961.htm
  61. http://www.yale.edu/opa/arc-ybc/v27.n15/story6.html
  62. Kingman Brewster at Find A Grave

References

Additional notes

Further reading

Diplomatic posts
Preceded by U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom
1977–1981
Succeeded by
John J. Louis, Jr.
Academic offices
Preceded by President of Yale University
1963–1977
Succeeded by
Hanna Holborn Gray, acting
Preceded by Master of University College, Oxford
1986–1988
Succeeded by
John Albery