Access is
granted in accordance with the Protocols
for the University Archives and Records Center.
The main body of the collection will be opened to the public
in 2016. Access to the majority of White's scrapbooks, as well as typescripts
of his diaries, is granted in accordance with the Protocols for the University
Archives and Records Center.
PROVENANCE
The J. William White papers, deposited at the Girard Trust Company in 1926,
were formally turned over to the University Archives in 1947. A large collection
of White's scrapbooks, which were felt by the University Archivist to most relate
to the University of Pennsylvania, were opened to the public in 1956.
A typescript
of J. William White's diaries was given to the Archives by the Historical Society
of Pennsylvania in 1981, and was incorporated into the publicly available collection.
ARRANGEMENT
The scrapbooks and
diaries are arranged chronologically.
BIOGRAPHICAL
NOTE
Dr. J. William White was born in Philadelphia in 1850. He received
his M.D. and Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School in 1871.
He began his career at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School in 1874,
and rose through the ranks as a surgeon and specialist in Venereal Diseases. In
1900 he was named John Rhea Barton Professor of Surgery, a position he held for
12 years until his retirement in 1911. In this capacity White co-authored many
medical textbooks on surgery, venereal disease and anatomy. In 1912 White was
named a Trustee of the University of Pennsylvania.
A noted boxer, climber,
and hiker himself, Dr. White was an early and significant supporter of Athletics
and Physical Education at Penn. In 1884 he was named the University's first Chair
of Physical Culture, a voluntary position which he maintained until 1887. From
1882 to 1890 Dr. White was president or vice-president of the University's Athletic
Association, and throughout the 1890s he served as both formal mentor and adamant
supporter of the University's Football and Rowing programs. In 1905, fund raising
efforts headed by Dr. White culminated in the opening of Penn's first Gymnasium,
open to all male students.
An important part of the Penn community for over
40 years, Dr. White was also involved in the civic life of Philadelphia. At various
times in his career, Dr. White served as Chief Medical Officer for Blockley Hospital,
the Eastern State Penitentiary, and the Pennsylvania Rail Road. He also chaired
the Fairmount Park Commission, served on the committee overseeing Philadelphia's
Department of Charities and Correction, and belonged to many social, service,
chess and medical clubs and organizations.
Dr. White's extensive travels in
Europe, and close friendships with Americans and Englishmen such as the painter
John Singer Sargent, the English doctor Sir Frederick Treves, the writer Henry
James, and former President Theodore Roosevelt, made him acutely aware of Europe's
plight at the start of the first World War. His sympathy for the suffering Belgian
nation lead him to spearhead relief fundraising drives, and, in 1915, to serve
in a University of Pennsylvania Medical School unit at the American Hospital in
Paris. To raise American awareness of the war in Europe, Dr. White published A
Primer of the War for Americans in 1914, which was enlarged in 1915 to A Textbook
of the War for Americans.
Dr. White died in 1916.
SCOPE
AND CONTENT
The scrapbooks are comprised almost exclusively of clipped
newspaper articles, and include extensive coverage of the University of Pennsylvania
Football team from the late 1890s until 1916. The diaries were written during
J. William White's extensive summer adventures, and his summer travels throughout
Europe.
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