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Kingman Brewster, Jr.

 
Biography: Kingman Brewster, Jr.

Kingman Brewster, Jr. (1919-1988) served as president of Yale University from 1963 to 1977, greatly broadening the base of that university's student body and strengthening Yale's ties to the community. He then served as ambassador to Great Britain for four years.

Kingman Brewster, Jr., was born June 17, 1919, in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, to Kingman Brewster and Florence Besse Brewster, descendants of one of the state's first families. Following graduation from Belmont High School, Brewster entered Yale in 1937 and graduated with an A.B. in 1941. As a student he was an isolationist and a supporter of "America First" and once invited Charles Lindburgh to speak on campus. In 1942 he married Mary Louise Phillips. The couple had three boys and two girls. During World War II he served as a Navy fighter pilot and was discharge a lieutenant in 1946. He then entered Harvard Law School, receiving his law degree in 1948. During the next two years he served as legal counsel for the Marshall Plan in Europe and as a research associate in economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1950 he became an assistant professor of law at Harvard, specializing in antitrust and international law, and a full professor in 1953. He remained at the school the ten years until he was appointed provost at Yale University in 1960.

In 1963 the governing board of Yale elected Brewster president. A leadership controversy developed even prior to his presidency when, as acting president, he denied Governor George C. Wallace a campus speaking engagement shortly after the bombing of an African American church in Birmingham, Alabama. Opponents decried the "denial of freedom of speech, " while Brewster justified his decision as heading off possible inflamation of the African American community. The 1960s were difficult times for university administrators and especially for someone like Brewster who openly sympathized with the anti-Vietnam War movement and with the African American civil rights activists.

Brewster's tenure as president was marked by widespread popularity among students, faculty, and alumni. His reputation as a "good listener" and his approachability assisted him in weathering controversies. This was particularly evident in the student strike in protest of the New Haven trial of Black Panther Bobby Seale. He not only rallied faculty forgiveness for the educational interruption and the support of the Yale Corporation, but publicly stated that he was "skeptical of the ability of black revolutionaries to achieve a fair trial anywhere in the United States." Vice President Spiro Agnew accused the Yale president of lacking maturity and responsibility and called for alumni to demand that Brewster go.

Brewster's primary accomplishments as president of Yale University were the broadening of the base of the student body, admitting women (1969), dropping Reserve Officers Training Corps (R.O.T.C.), and fostering a new partnership between the traditionally staid administration and the student body. During this time the percentage of students who were children of alumni dropped from 30 to 15. The number of public high school graduates entering Yale grew to outnumber the private high school graduates who entered by a ratio of two to one. His critics accused him of not sharing decision-making, yet he met problems head-on, making him extremely vulnerable to personal attack and thus shielding the university. During the 1960s, Brewster also served as an advisor on several Presidential Committees. From 1965 to 1967 he served on the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice. From 1965 to 1968 he served on the President's Commission on Selective Service.

In 1977 Brewster left his position at Yale when Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, a member of the Yale Corporation, recommended Brewster to President Carter for the post of ambassador to Great Britain. Despite his lack of diplomatic experience, the British press was pleased with the appointment, calling Brewster potentially the best ambassador since David Bruce. They described him as "New England Patrician" and expressed delight at his gold ring with his family motto in Norman French.

Ambassador Brewster 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 opportunity and took advantage of the range of social occasions from dinner with Queen Elizabeth 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."

After four years Kingman Brewster resigned the ambassadorship and returned to New Haven to live in his home just a block from the Yale campus. He took a part-time position with a New York law firm and devoted the rest of his time to writing a book on what he called the "Volunteer Society", which was never published. In 1986 he became Master of University College at Oxford University, and remained at Oxford until his death in 1988. On November 8, 1988, Brewster died of a cerebral hemorrhage.

Numerous institutions conferred honorary degrees upon Brewster, and he received several awards, including the Award of Excellence in Human Relations from the New York Council of Churches in 1970. He was made an officer in the Legion of Honor in 1977. In 1997 Brewster was honored with an exhibit at Yale's Sterling Memorial Library, Innovation and Diversification: Yale during the Kingman Brewster Jr. Presidency, 1963 to 1977.

Further Reading

There are no biographies or books with additional biographical information on Kingman Brewster. He was the subject of several articles in TIME, Newsweek, The New Republic, and similar periodicals at the time he became president of Yale and upon appointment as ambassador to Great Britain. Additional essays by and about him appeared in popular periodicals. The following books by Brewster should provide additional insight: Antitrust and American Business Abroad (with James Atwood) (1981); Law of International Transactions and Relations (1960); and The Tanner Lectures on Human Values, Vol. IV (1983).

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Kingman Brewster, Jr.
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Brewster, Kingman, Jr., 1919-88, American educator and public official, b. Longmeadow, Mass., grad. Yale (A.B., 1941) and Harvard (LL.B., 1948). He was a professor of law at Harvard (1950-60) and president of Yale (1963-77), where as an opponent of the Vietnam War, he skillfully handled student demonstrations during that turbulent period. From 1977 to 1981, he was U.S. ambassador to Great Britain. Brewster remained in London as the representative of American law firm. In 1986, he became master of University College, London.
Wikipedia: Kingman Brewster, Jr.
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Kingman Brewster, Jr.

Provost of Yale University
In office
1960 – 1963

President of Yale University
In office
1963 – 1977
Preceded by A. Whitney Griswold
Succeeded by Hanna Holborn Gray

55th United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom
In office
1977 – 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

Born June 17, 1919(1919-06-17)
Longmeadow, Massachusetts
Died November 8, 1988 (aged 69)
Oxford, England
Political party Republican
Spouse(s) Mary Louise Phillips
Children Constance Brewster
Kingman Brewster, 3rd
Deborah Brewster
Alden Brewster
Riley Brewster
Alma mater Yale University
Harvard Law School
Occupation Educator, University President and Diplomat

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

Contents

Biography

Life and ancestors

He was born in Longmeadow, Massachusetts, the son of Florence Foster Besse, a 1907 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Wellesley College and Kingman Brewster Sr., a 1906 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Amherst College and a 1911 graduate of the Harvard Law School.[1][2] He was a direct lineal descendant of Elder William Brewster (pilgrim), (c. 1567 - April 10, 1644), the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony and a passenger on the Mayflower. He was a grandson of Charles Kingman Brewster[3] 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."[4]

His parents separated and divorced when he was about 5 years old. 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". His mother remarried in 1932 to Edward Ballantine, a music professor at Harvard.

Marriage and family

In 1942 while serving in the armed services, he married in Jacksonville, Florida, Mary Louise Phillips,[5] born August 30, 1920 in Providence, Rhode Island, the daughter of Mary and Eugene James Phillips, (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 graduated from Vassar College in 1943. 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.[6]

Kingman and Mary were the parents of 5 children. Their granddaughter is actress Jordana Brewster (D.E.B.S. (2004), The Faculty (1998) and The Fast and the Furious (2001)). His first cousin was Janet Huntington Brewster (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.

Education and war years

After graduating from Belmont Hill School in Belmont, Massachusetts, he entered Yale University, 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.

During his undergraduate years, he was an outspoken isolationist. He idolized fellow isolationist Charles Lindbergh and was his early hero. 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, he was the nation's best-known isolationist and the most prominent private citzen advocating to keep America out of the war. He and Lindbergh strategized on AFC.

With the fall of France, he founded the America First Committee (AFC) along with other students at Yale. 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".

His isolationist point of view changed immediately with the sudden and deliberate attack on Pearl Harbor on the morning of Sunday, December 7, 1941.

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.

Career

In 1949 and 1950, Brewster was a research associate in the department of economics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. From 1950 to 1953, he was an assistant professor of law at Harvard University, and from 1953 to 1960 he was a professor there. In 1960, he accepted the post of provost at Yale, serving from 1960 to 1963. Upon the death of Yale's president, A. Whitney Griswold, he was named president of Yale University and served from 1963 to 1977.

Brewster was known for the improvements he made to Yale's faculty, curriculum, and admissions policies, and for his skillful handling of student protests during the Vietnam War era, a war that he himself opposed. He was president of the University during the Black Panther trials in New Haven where he presided over, and largely initiated, the admission of women to Yale as undergraduates in 1969.

As Yale's president, he appointed an undergraduate admissions director, R. Inslee Clark, Jr., under whose tenure the proportion of undergraduate African-Americans, Jews, and public high school graduates at Yale College rose.

In 1974, Brewster, who knew of Hanna Holborn Gray from her service on the Yale board, named her Yale's first woman provost. In 1977, when Kingman Brewster became U.S. ambassador to Great Britain, he chose Gray to succeed him as acting president. She served as acting President of Yale University for fourteen months.

Brewster's appointment of liberal theologian William Sloane Coffin to the post of university chaplain is described in Coffin's autobiography, Once to Every Man. After his appointment, Coffin, a former CIA operative and Skull & Bones alum, became an ardent anti-war activist, complicating Brewster's dealings with an increasingly wary alumni association.

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.

Honors awarded

He received several honorary Doctor of Laws degrees. They were awarded by Princeton University in 1964;[7] the University of Pennsylvania in 1965;[8] Boston College in 1968;[9] and Michigan State University in 1969.[10]

In May 1979 Brewster was awarded an honorary degree from the British Open University as Doctor of the University.[citation needed]

Diplomatic career

While serving as Yale 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.[11] [12]

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. In 1984, he became its resident partner in London. He was appointed master of University College, Oxford, serving from 1986 until his death there in 1988, during which he was also the chairman of the Board of the United World Colleges. [13]

Quotes

  • "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."

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.[14]

References

  1. ^ Kingman Brewster Jr., 69, Ex-Yale President and U.S. Envoy, Dies - New York Times
  2. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=PDY2AAAAMAAJ&pg=PR9&lpg=PR9&dq=Emma+C.+Brewster+jones+(1908).+The+Brewster+genealogy,+1566-1907&source=bl&ots=WAkLBeluXN&sig=HmeQ3NOLaPjnKYN7egW3rBv5Ly0&hl=en&ei=hhzvSeCdJpa6tgP0xuX1AQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4#PRA1-PA235,M1,
  3. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=9bttd4ByiKMC&pg=PA16&lpg=PA16&dq=Brewster's+grandfather+Charles+Kingman+Brewster&source=bl&ots=7SCnzJcwXf&sig=EodTgoPhp1j0K2-OfutAqHB5hMU&hl=en&ei=glXvSZjHFZOitgPT1MzjAQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1
  4. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=9bttd4ByiKMC&pg=PA16&lpg=PA16&dq=The+Besse+System&source=bl&ots=7SDoxMjr_m&sig=t3NOuYOcCyLVZvuNn2MMerS4YKA&hl=en&ei=u6-USv7fBIOyNq6q1PkH&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8#v=onepage&q=The%20Besse%20System&f=false
  5. ^ http://opa.yale.edu/news/article.aspx?id=4918
  6. ^ http://www.yale.edu/opa/arc-ybc/v32.n27/story17.html
  7. ^ http://www.princeton.edu/pr/facts/honorary/
  8. ^ http://www.archives.upenn.edu/primdocs/upg/upg7/1965prog.pdf
  9. ^ http://www.bc.edu/publications/factbook/meta-elements/html/fb97honor_dg_recip.html
  10. ^ https://www.msu.edu/~vprgs/honorarydeg/Chronlist1961.htm
  11. ^ http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=7306
  12. ^ http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F00617FC3C5E137B93C2AA178FD85F438785F9
  13. ^ 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
  14. ^ http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=brewster&GSfn=kingman&GSbyrel=in&GSdyrel=in&GSob=n&GRid=6727577&
  • Brewster's life and career at Yale is the focus of Geoffrey Kabaservice's 2004 book, The Guardians: Kingman Brewster, His Circle, and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment.

Notes

External links

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

 
 

 

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