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Old Yale
John Hay Whitney
Philanthropist,
Film Producer, and Father of the Crew Cut
April
2002
by Judith Ann Schiff
Judith
Ann Schiff is Chief Research Archivist at the Yale University Library.
Twenty
years ago, Yale
mourned the passing
of one of the University's greatest benefactors, John Hay Whitney.
President Giamatti, in summing up Whitney's "unparalleled" contributions,
said: "He devoted himself to, and changed the face of, this University
-- always for the better."
"Jock"
Whitney was born in 1904 and entered Yale in the Class of 1926,
where his major activities were the Dramat and rowing. The stroke
of the University crew in junior and senior years, Whitney became
part of crew history by inspiring the coining of the term "crew
cut."
According to Yale-New
Haven lore, Jock walked into a local barbershop and asked for a short "Hindenburg"
military cut to maximize his rowing performance. Because German words were still
unpopular in the aftermath of World War I, the barber suggested that it would
be better to give the style a new name. To honor Yale oarsmen, they called it
a "crew cut."
After
graduation, Whitney went on to study at Oxford, but he returned
home when his father, Payne Whitney, Class of 1898, died in 1927.
With his family, he gave the Payne
Whitney Gymnasium to the University as a memorial to his father.
Whitney
pursued a number of careers with success and style. He financed Broadway plays, founded Pioneer
Pictures to launch the new Technicolor
process, and in 1935, joined with David
O. Selznick and others to form Selznick International Pictures.
The company produced a series of classic films, including A Star
is Born, Rebecca, and Gone With the Wind.
During
World War II, Whitney, an Air Force colonel, was taken prisoner
in southern France, but he escaped from his German captors while
the train he was riding in came under Allied fire. Afterwards, he
served as an adviser in the Eisenhower administration, and in 1957,
he achieved the career goal stated in his class book when he was
appointed ambassador
to the Court of St. James.
Government service
was a family tradition. Both of his grandfathers had been Cabinet members; one
was also ambassador to Great Britain. In his own ambassadorial tenure, John
Hay Whitney was credited with improving Anglo-American relations, which had
deteriorated after the Suez Crisis.
Whitney
then moved to the publishing world, buying the New
York Herald Tribune in 1958. Whitney Communications Corporation
also owned and operated numerous magazines, newspapers, and broadcasting
stations.
An outstanding
polo player, Whitney continued his family's interest in horses,
operating the Greentree
Stud breeding farm in Kentucky and owning many racehorses. An
avid
art collector of French and American works, he was closely associated
with the development of the Museum
of Modern Art.
Whitney
was a dedicated philanthropist. In 1946 he established the John
Hay Whitney Foundation to fund innovative educational and minority-directed
community projects. He gave Yale his expertise and time, serving
as a Corporation Fellow from 1955 to 1973 and Senior Fellow for
the final three years. Whitney's major gifts to the University include,
in addition to the gymnasium, the land occupied by Morse and Stiles
colleges, the Whitney
Humanities Center, and the renovation of the Old Campus. A gift
from his widow, Betsey
Cushing Whitney, daughter of Harvey
Cushing, Class of 1891, supported a major renovation and expansion
of the Yale Medical Library, which was renamed the Harvey
Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library in 1990.
On the
50th anniversary of Whitney's graduation, his senior society, Scroll
and Key, launched a campaign to endow a professorship in his
honor. In 1977 A. Bartlett Giamatti became the first incumbent of
the John Hay Whitney chair; historian Frank
Turner currently holds the position.  |