Newel Perry Teacher of Youth and and Leader of Men
Newel Perry Teacher of Youth and and Leader of Men
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Newel Perry - Teacher of Youth and and Leader of Men
by Jacobus
tenBroek
I come before you today indeed we are all gathered here to discharge a
public duty and to honor a private debt. Newel Perry was a public
figure. To us, he was also a personal friend. We can appraise his
public contribution. We can only acknowledge our private
obligation and personal attachment. We can detail his public
record, define his influential role, itemize his accomplishments,
recount his deeds, enumerate his statutes, specify his
doctrines, disentangle the elements of his social philosophy, identify the
general and the institutional fruits of his life's work,
analyze and psychoanalyze the personality traits that made him a
leader. Upon the life we shared, we can only dwell in memory, sifting
through the loose meshes of the mind the hours, the days, the nights,
the months, the years of our common experience; the fears, the
travails, the aspirations, the laughter that were ours together.
We were his students, his family, his
intimates, his comrades on a
thousand battlefronts of a social movement. We slept in his house, ate
at his table, learned geometry at his desk, walked the streets
interminably by his side, moved forward on the strength of his optimism
and confidence.
The boundless devotion to him of his wife
Lillie (to whom he was married
from 1912 until her death in 1935) spilled over onto us to balm our
institution-starved spirits, to lighten with gentle affection
the bewilderment of our eccentricity and the unnatural confinement
of our segregation. Upon a later generation of us, after the
death of Lillie, the same bounty was conferred in her turn by his
sister Emma Burnham, who lived with Doctor during the last 21
years of his life.
As a forward youngster of 12, who made so
bold as to address him as Doc,
I was once thrown out of a class by Doctor with such a lecture as
still rings in my ears. As a somewhat older youngster, still
forward but now also bored by the slow pace and the unimaginative
techniques of high school, I was expelled by him altogether
for incorrigible recalcitrance. Eventually, despite these
unpromising beginnings, I did graduate from high school. With plenty of
ambition but no money, I prepared to enter the University.
At that point I was denied state aid to the blind, a program then
newly instituted as a result of Doctor's efforts in sponsoring a
constitutional amendment and a comprehensive statute. The reason
was not that my need was not great. It was that I intended to
pursue a higher education while I was being supported by the
state. That was too much for the administrative officials. Almost
without discussion, Doctor immediately filled the gap. Just as Warring
Wilkinson had earlier done for him, he supplied me with tuition and
living expenses out of his own pocket for a semester while we all
fought to reverse the decision of the state aid officials.
It was ever thus with Doctor. The key to
his great influence with blind
students was, first of all, the fact that he was blind and
therefore understood their problems; and second, that he believed in
them and made his faith manifest. He provided the only sure
foundation of true rapport: knowledge on our part that he was genuinely
interested in our welfare.
Aside from these immediate personal
benefactions, there were three habits
of life one might almost say three elements of personality
which I formed out of his teaching and example when I was an
adolescent in his charge. First: an attitude towards my blindness, a
conception that it is basically unimportant in the important
affairs of life. A physical nuisance, yes! A topic of unembarrassed
conversation, a subject of loud questions by small children in
the street as you pass, certainly. But not something which shapes
one's nature, which determines his career, which affects his
usefulness or happiness. Second: a basic assumption that sighted
people generally have boundless good will towards the blind and an
utterly false conception of the consequences of blindness.
It is their misconception about its nature which creates the social
and economic handicap of blindness. Third: public activity as
a rule of life, a sense of responsibility to exert personal
effort to improve the lot of others. While I was still a lad in my
teens, I was attending meetings and doing work that Doctor
assigned me in the blind movement. He was a social reformer. He made me
one too. Through participation with him, these attitudes and
practices became habits of my life. So deeply instilled were they that
they have remained ever after an almost automatic behavioral
pattern potent and often governing factors in my outlook and
activity. Mature reflection in later years could only confirm through
reason what his influence had so surely wrought in my youth.
It is altogether fitting that we should
hold this memorial convocation
at the California School for the Blind. It was here that Newel
Perry came in 1883 as a ten-year-old boy penniless, blind, his
father dead, his home dissolved. Two years earlier, he had lost his
sight and nearly his life as the result of a case of poison oak
which caused his eyeballs to swell until they burst and which held him
in a coma for a month. It was here at the School that Warring
Wilklnson first met and took an interest in him, laying the
basis for future years of intimate relationship and mutual
endeavor. Warring Wilkinson was the first principal of the California
State School for the Deaf and the Blind. He served in that
capacity for 44 years, from 1865 to 1909. With his characteristic
interest in his charges, he soon saw young Newel's full
potentiality. He sent him from here to Berkeley High School to complete his
secondary education. It was he who overcame the numerous
obstacles to this arrangement, so fruitful in its understanding
of education and of the needs of the blind. Newel continued to
live here at the School while he attended the University
of California from 1892 to 1896. Again admission had to be secured
over strong resistance. Again Wllkinson was the pathfinder;
Newel his willing and anxious instrument. Wilkinson's role in
Newel's life as a youth can hardly be overestimated: father,
teacher, guide, supporter in Newel's own words, dear Governor.
As this Institution was not only the
school but the home of his boyhood
and the foundation of his manhood, so 16 years later, in 1912, at
the age of 39, Newel Perry returned here to take up his permanent
career as a teacher. He remained in that post until 1947 a third of a
century. It was here that his life's work was accomplished.
It was from this place as a base that he organized and
conducted a movement for social reform. It was here that many of us first
met him as his students. It was here that his impact upon us
first made itself felt. It was here that our lifelong association
with him began. How often in these halls have we heard his
footsteps? How often in this chamber, his voice? The sound of those
footsteps and that voice have now gone from the world as a physical
reality. How often hereafter will they continue to sound in the halls
and chambers of our lives!
In the years between departure from the
School in 1896 and return to it
in 1912, Newel Perry devoted himself to further education
and to the search for an academic job. He took graduate work at the
University of California, meanwhile serving successively
as an unpaid teaching fellow, a paid assistant and finally as
an Instructor in the Department of Mathematics. In 1900, following a
general custom of that day, he went to Europe to continue his
studies. He did this for a time at the University of Zurich in
Switzerland and then at the University of Munich in Germany.
From the latter he secured the degree of Doctor of Philosophy
in Mathematics, with Highest Honors, in 1901. He lingered in
Europe for a time traveling and writing an article on a
mathematical topic which was published in a learned journal. He then
returned to the United States in 1902, landing in New York where he was
to remain until 1912. He had about $80 in capital, a first-class
and highiy specialized education, and all the physical, mental and
personal prerequisites for a productive career, save one, visual
acuity.
During this period, he supported himself
precariously as a private
coach of university mathematics students. He applied himself,
also, to the search for a university position. He had begun the
process by mail from Europe even before he secured his Ph. D. He
now continued the process on the ground in New York. He displayed
the most relentless energy. He employed every imaginable technique.
He wrote letters in profusion. In 1905, he wrote to 500 institutions
of every size and character. He distributed his dissertation
and published article. He haunted meetings of mathematicians.
He visited his friends in the profession. He enlisted the
aid of his teachers. He called on everybody and anybody
having the remotest connection with his goal.
Everywhere, the outcome was the same. Only the form varied. Some expressed
astonishment at what he had accomplished. Some expressed interest. One of these
seemed genuine he had a blind brother-in-law who, he said, was a whiz at math.
Some showed in- difference, now and then masked behind polite phrases. Some
said there were no vacancies. Some said his application would be filed for future
reference. One said ironically, as an encouragement to men who labor under disadvantages
and who may learn from it how much may be accomplished through resolution and
industry.<170> Some averred that he probably could succeed in teaching
at somebody else's college. Many said outright that they believed a blind man
could not teach mathematics.
Many of these rejectlons were, of course,
perfectly proper. Many were
not. Their authors candidly gave the reason as blindness. We know
about this period of Newel Perry's life from reports of contemporaries
or near contemporaries such as Hugh Buckingham, a student at
the School from 1896 to 1900 during Doctor's absence, who has
prepared a manuscript about Doctor's boyhood and youth. We know about
it from what Doctor told many of us in later years. But we know
about it in all its poignancy, desolation and bleakness, from Newel
Perry's own intimate accounts written at the time to his old mentor
and true friend, Warring Wilkinson. These accounts, with copies of
many of the letters of rejection, have been preserved by the
Wilkinson family through the intervening years. In the last two weeks, they
have been opened to my inspection by Wilkinson's granddaughter,
Florence Richardson Wyckoff, who is here with us today.
I have dwelt on this period and these
experiences for several reasons.
They reflect, they accurately portray, a phase of all of our lives as
blind people. In fact, thirty-five years later, I personally
received identical letters from many of these same institutions.
It was almost as if a secretary had been set to copying
Doctor's file, only changing the signatures and the name of the
addressee. Yet great progress has been made. Many of us are now teaching at
colleges and universities around the country and filling many
other jobs hitherto closed to us.
Doctor Perry's reaction to this decade of
defeat and privation was
remarkable. He did not break. He did not resign. He did not even become
embittered. Discouragement, frustration, a sense of wrong and
Injustice, certainly these; but never collapse. He was not licked.
We see in these bitter years of hunger and rejection the source
of true knowledge about the real problems of the blind and an
ineradicable determination to do something about them. Here was a
mainspring of social reform, an ever-flowing motivation to redirect
public attitudes and actions toward the blind. To this was added the
thrust of an active and restless disposition and the wit to perceive
remedies and adapt them to the need.
Out of these elements of mind, personality
and experience were compounded
the public career of Newel Perry; and out of these elements
also were constructed the programs the initiation of which made that
career publicly significant.
First of all, the distress of poverty
must be relieved. The necessities
of life must be available. The minimum essentials must be assured.
So much in some way had been provided in the Anglo-American
system for three centuries before Newel Perry faced near
starvation and economic exclusion in New York City. The Elizabethan
Poor Laws did it in one way. County direct relief, instituted
in California in 1901, did it in another. The almshouse and the
county hospital and poor farm did it in still other ways. At the very
minimum, it had to be done better. It should be done by a system of
cash grants, adequate in amount to maintain standards of decency
and health, receivable upon fixed and uniform standards of
eligibility, made generally applicable by state participation and control,
and expendable by the recipient through a free exercise of
self-management and consumption choice. To bring this about,
however, prohibitions in the state constitution would have to be
removed by the arduous process of a people's amendment, an organic
statute would have to be lobbied through the state legislature,
faithful administration would somehow have to be secured.
Year-by-year and session-by session into the indefinite future, the
myriad minor corrections and major improvements made necessary by
time and disclosed by experience would have to be worked
through the legislature and the administration. And so indeed it
came to pass in California.
Secondly, much more had to be done than
merely relieve the distress of
poverty. Security is a necessity. As an unmixed blessing,
however, it is a stultifying concept. An indispensable ingredient
of any welfare system is opportunity. One of the objects of public
aid must be to stimulate and enable people to become independent
of it. Accordingly, their initiative must not be hemmed in. The
means of productive activity must not be withdrawn or denied.
Independence of action and self-reliance must be encouraged.
Legal liability of relatives must be relaxed so as not to spread
poverty, increase dependence, and disrupt family life. Economic
resources, reasonable amounts of real and personal property,
must be devotable to plans for self-support instead of being
required to be consumed in meeting daily needs. Incentive to earn must be
constructed out of retention of the benefits of earning. And
this too presently came to pass in California. The new system took
cognizance of the need of the blind for adjustments on the social
and psychological as well as the physical level. It permitted
and encouraged them to strive to render themselves self-supporting.
It applied the democratic principle of individual dignity to
an underprivileged class of American citizens. It guaranteed
them a fair measure of independence and self-respect in the conduct
of their lives. The California system, the Newel Perry system, was
thus far in advance of its time. It is still envied and emulated
throughout the nation.
Thirdly, the reintegration of the blind
into society on a basis of
full and equal membership could only be achieved if they had a chance
to earn their daily bread as others do in the community.
Accordingly, action must be taken to eliminate restrictive
barriers and legal discriminations. The main channels of
opportunity must be swept clear of artificial and irrational obstructions.
The public service, private employment, the common callings,
the ordinary trades and occupations, the professions must be rescued
from arbitrary exclusions based on blindness when blindness is
not a factor bearing on competence and performance. Doctor was a
prime mover in securing legal, constitutional and other
provisions which: protect the right of the blind to enter a number of
professions; forbid arbitrary discriminatIons against us in the state
civil service and in secondary teaching; enable blind college
students to pursue their studies with the aid of sighted readers
hired by the state; bring the blind in an ever- increasing stream into
the colleges and universities of the state and thence into the
higher callings.
These achievements legal, social,
economic and political have been the
fruits at once of Doctor Perry's leadership and of the collective
self-organization of the blind which that leadership engendered.
More than any other person, it was Doctor who implanted and nurtured
among the blind of California the sense of common cause, the
spirit of collaborative effort in seeking solutions to our
problems. More than any other person, it was he who taught us that the
blind can and must lead the blind and the sighted, too, when dealing
with the problems of the blind. More than any other person, it
was he who made us aware that to go on unorganized was to remain
disorganized, that only through concerted action can the blind hope
to convert and enlist the power of government and to defeat the
thoughtless tyranny of public prejudice and opportune ignorance.
Newel Perry was a teacher: a teacher of
subject matter and a teacher of
men. He taught his specialty of mathematics and taught it very well
indeed; but he taught his pupils even better. To be sure, not
all the students who came his way during his 35 years on this campus
were wholly inspired by him. His personality was vigorous and
his standards rigorous. But for many of us who attended the
School during those three and a half decades it was Doctor Perry
who furnished the impetus and incentive, the goad and the goal,
that would light our later lives and nourish our careers. Our bond
with him was not broken when our schooldays ended. We went on to become
his comrades and colleagues in the cause which was always his
true vocation.
Newel Perry was, in short, both a teacher
of youth and a leader of
men. These two roles were not, however, quite separate. For the
secret of his success in both of them lay in this: that his teaching was
a kind of leadership, and his leadership a kind of teaching. In
his pedagogical method as well as his social purpose Doctor was
thoroughly Socratic. His classroom manner was essentially
that of the Platonic dialogue: dialectical, inquiring, insistently
logical and incessantly prodding.
In this Socratic combination also lies, I
think, the secret of Doctor's
success as the leader of a social movement. Juet as in the classroom he
taught his students by leading them, so as the pioneer of the
organized blind movement he led his followers by teaching them. His
power, like that of all leaders, rested in the last analysis
upon persuasion. His triumphs, however, were not the product of
oratorical or literary skill, although he had a notable gift for
trenchant and incisive phrasing, the epigrammatic thrust which
distills the essence of a complex issue. His persuasive power was not that
of the demagogue but of the pedagogue. And It was not only his
followers who learned from him. He educated the blind people of
the state to an awareness of their capabilities as individuals
and of their powers as a group. He educated the legislators
in the State Capitol by dint of dogged, relentless, well-nigh
incorrigible campaigns of persuasion carried on year after year
and decade after decade. He educated the general public by his
preachment and his example to regard the blind not in the traditional
terms of charity and custody but in the realistic terms of normality
and equality.
And most of all, in his role as leader,
Newel Perry educated, indoctrinated
and persuaded a distinguished group of cohorts to join him in
carrying on the struggle and carrying out its goals. Those whom
Doctor gathered around him were other blind men and women,
mostly former students, whose special talents and professional
positions uniquely supplemented his.
Raymond Henderson: by profession an
attorney, self-taught, by preoccupation
a reformer, with poetry in his soul and literature in his stylus.
Born in 1881, he attended this School from 1889 through high school
and continued to live here until his graduation from the
University of California in 1904. He practiced his profession in Bakersfield,
California, from his admission to the Bar until his death in
1945. Raymond came to the organized blind movement in his maturity
from a long background of experience in other causes. He brought to
it a notable array of personal abilities, a high degree of
professional skill, a fine spirit of humanity and the enrichment of wide and
intensive activity.
Leslie Schlingheyde: also by profession
an attorney, gentle and
religious by disposition, practical rather than reflective in frame of
mind, with a brilliant academic record and a liberal outlook. He
was born in 1893, attended this School from 1906 to 1913, and
thus came under Doctor's influence in the year of his graduation.
He received a J. D. from the Law School of the University
of California in 1920 and from that time until his death in 1957
practiced his profession In Modesto, California, and served the blind
movement all over the state.
It was Raymond Henderson and Leslie
Schlingheyde who were primarily
responsible for handling cases in court, for preparing innumerable
legal briefs and arguments, for drafting projected bills and
constitutional amendments, for continuous legal counsel during the
insurgent and formative years. They were in a real sense the legal
arm of the organized blind movement
Ernest Crowley: again by profession an
attorney but distinguished
for his service in another arena. He kept a law office open
In Fairfield-Suisun from the time of his graduation from the
University of California Law School in 1923 until his death in
1952. To him, however, the law was only a necessary and not a
particularly attractive means of earning a living. His law office was a
cover for his real love and active life the practice of politics.
He was born in 1896 and attended this School from 1910 to 1916. He
was thus under Doctor's tutelage as a student for four years. His
significant contribution was made as a member of the State
Legislature from 1928 to 1952. It was he who introduced and skillfully
maneuvered through to passage the memorable bills which are now the
statutory landmarks of our movement. In a very real sense, he
was the legislative spokesman and arm of the movement.
Perry Sundquist: social worker and public
administrator by profession,
bringing to his work a sympathetic personality, an unshakable
faith in blind people and skillful management of administrative
techniques and devices. He was born in 1904 and attended
this School from 1918 to 1922. For exactly twenty years now he has
been Chief of the Division for the Blind in the State Department
of Social Welfare. During those two decades he has translated
the principles of the organized blind movement into concrete
administrative action, from legislative parchment into practical
reality. Under his direction programs for the blind have multiplied
and prospered, services have been expanded and their benefits
spread. Most important of all, the working philosophy of the movement
has been transformed into a working practice. In a very real
sense, he has been the effective administrative arm of the
movement.
Through the years this little band grew
in numbers and evolved in formal
structure. It formed the nucleus of the California Council for
the Blind, which came into being in 1934 with Doctor Perry as its
first president. For 19 productive years, until his retirement
in 1953 at the age of 80, Doctor forged and shaped the Council on
the anvil of his own will into an instrument larger and more
formidable but essentially similar to the informal group from which it
originated. Doctor's social vision in the field of
blind welfare outdistanced
his time and placed him in the advance guard of thought and
planning. His liberality on these matters gains, rather than loses,
in significance when it is placed alongside his broader attitudes
toward politics and human affairs; for in matters unrelated to
the blind, Doctor was fully an heir of the 19th century,
conservative, even reactionary, by nature, often inflexible
and not without a touch of old-fashioned nationalist imperialism.
When it came to the cause to which he was most com mitted, he
was far less a Victorian than a Utopian less a standpatter
than a restless progressive in search of new horizons.
How shall we sum up a man's life? How capture the essential quality of a
human career? How convey the inward meaning, the im ponderable
and intangible qualities of will and heart and spirit? There are
the vital statistics. But they are more
statistical than vital. All
that they can tell us of a man is that he was born, he lived, he
loved, he died. For Newel Perry we must amend the litany at least
this much: he lived, and he brought new life to many; he loved, and
he was beloved; he died, and he will not be forgotten. On the day following the death of
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Walter
Lippmann wrote some words about him which might also stand as an
epitaph to the leader and comrade whom we honor today: The man must die
in his appointed time. He must carry away with him the magic of his
presence and that personal mastery of affairs which no man, however
gifted by nature, can acquire except in the relentless struggle
with evil and blind chance. Then comes the proof of whether his
work will endure, and the test of how well he led his people. The
final test of a leader is that he leaves behind him in other men
the conviction and the will to carry on.
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