Thursday, June 13, 2019

Hugh Vernon White and Mabel Wright White


Jane Leddy writes “My father’s cousin Mabel Wright married a minister who grew up in Delano, California….His name was Hugh Vernon (we called him Vernon)…When I first moved to California, Mabel and Vernon invited me to come North to Berkeley for Thanksgiving.  They were very cordial and eager to include me in their extended family.   The day after Thanksgiving, their son Malcolm drove me to Sacramento to meet and visit with Mabel’s father and mother.  Her father was my Grandfather Winter’s brother, Malcolm Wright….Later, after Jack and I were married and had moved to San Mateo, Vernon and Mable came to visit a couple of times. …
Jane then reflects back on her childhood memories of Vernon and Mable.  They “traveled back and forth from California to Massachusetts quite often – camping out, and staying with friends and family along the way.  Iowa became one of their layover stops.   Vernon as a great story teller – mostly about their round-the-world travels (he worked for the World Council of Churches) and also about adventures on the road crossing the country in the late 20s and early 30s.  Gas stations and mechanics were few and far between on Route 55.  He had to patch worn tires and wire parts together (obviously the origin of ‘haywire’). 
He happened to be visiting one winter when I was getting ready to go out beyond the barn to slide downhill on my sled.  He said that growing up in Delano, California had not offered such possibilities – could he join me?  When we got to the hill I demonstrated – holding the sled up to my chest, running a few steps downhill, throwing it on the snow and stretching out full length on top.  I steered with the front bar and slowed down by dragging my toes.  There was a delicious feeling of being one with the sled. 
When it was his turn we both realized there was a problem.  He was too tall – more than six foot – what to do?  He finally folded himself up tight and sat upright on the sled – feet on the steering bar, hands holding on at the side.  I pushed all my weight to get him started.  Well, of course he gained speed and then fell off before going far.  Nevertheless he was game to make three or four more runs and went a bit further each time.  At dinner that night he talked animatedly about this new experience.” 
Hugh Vernon White was for many years an official of the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions.  He wrote “End Missions Imperialism Now!” which can be found here https://www.religion-online.org/article/end-missions-imperialism-now/  He wrote several books including A Theology for Christian Missions Willett, Clark (1937) A Working Faith for the World, Harper & Brothers; 1St Edition (1938) One Gospel for Mankind, Friendship Press 1939, and Truth and the person in Christian theology: A theological essay in terms of the spiritual person Hardcover    Oxford U. Press, 1963  available online here http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=White%2C%20Hugh%20Vernon%2C%201889%2D  (He should not be confused, as this site does, with Rev. Hugh Wright who wrote Meditations in 1842.) 
He and his wife Mabel Wright White were listed as students 1914 Pacific School of Religion, Berkeley. He graduated from U. of California with B.A. in Greek in 1917. According to the Circular of Information for UCB found here https://books.google.com/books?id=8KRIAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA8-PA48&lpg=RA8-PA48&dq=%22Hugh+Vernon+White%22+Mabel&source=bl&ots=ehDhzD8FW8&sig=ACfU3U25J7cFmLyPm9DfZk0zmZRwUP6DdQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjyxaakuODhAhUKKqwKHbKlDUkQ6AEwCXoECAcQAQ#v=onepage&q&f=false
In the book In that there may be minister’s disciples:  Ministerial Education in California by Lester G. McAllister there is some material on him.  There we learn that he was a pastor at the First Christian Church in Berkeley in 1916 and that he attempted at that time to introduce progressive reforms and that he found conservative resistance and resigned later that year.  He went on to pursue a degree at Harvard. 
We pick him up again in Biographical Dictionary of Christian Missions ed. Gerald H. Anderson?  Eermans William Publishing Co.  The entry states he was a Professor of Theology at Pacific School of Religion from 1944-59.    This would have been the period in which Jack and Jane Leddy visited them.