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Phillips Brooks House Celebrates 100th Anniversary
By Ken Gewertz
Gazette Staff
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100
Years of Encouraging
and Supporting Volunteerism
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1917
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1922
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1940's
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1958
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Its elegant meeting rooms have seen the likes of Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Lani Guinier, and ACLU founder Roger Baldwin. Its programs have served
as models for the Peace Corps and the National Service Corps.
Named for one of the 19th centurys most famous preachers, Phillips
Brooks House (PBH) began life as an organization promoting Christian good
works. Now, 100 years later, it brings out the best in students regardless
of religion or creed. But in essence, it has remained true to its original
purpose to encourage and support volunteerism among Harvard students.
This past Sunday, PBH celebrated its 100th anniversary with
speeches, music, and refreshments, including a cake in the form of the house
itself. Sponsored by the Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA), the celebration
featured a talk by Peter Gomes, the Plummer Professor of Christian Morals
and Pusey Minister in the Memorial Church. Gomes remarks brought
to life the man for whom the house was named, Phillips Brooks, Class of
1855. An Episcopal minister and the author of the Christmas carol "O
Little Town of Bethlehem," Brooks was renowned for his sermons at Trinity
Church in Copley Square, as well as for his support of undergraduate volunteer
efforts at Harvard. Brooks died in 1893 at the age of 60. "Not
since the death of Lincoln had Boston mourned so, and it would not be until
the death of John F. Kennedy that they would do so again," Gomes said. The
evolution of PBHA has been chronicled in a Harvard honors thesis, Babbling
Brooks: A History of Phillips Brooks House by Donald Henry Gips 82.
Beginning as an embodiment of Christian teachings, PBHA served as a center
of Red Cross activities during World War I. In the 1920s, PBHA became more
secular in its approach to social problems. Later, under the New Deal, undergraduates
enrolled in record numbers to serve as tutors to local youngsters. During
World War II, many students worked in hospitals and sold stamps and bonds
to support the war effort. In 1954 students formed the Mental Hospitals
Committee, an organization that sent volunteers to befriend mental health
patients and help them readjust to society. This program served as a model
for the National Service Corps, now Americorps. During John Kennedys
presidency many more students became active in social service programs.
One group, Project Tanganyika, sent students to Africa to teach English.
President Kennedy modeled his concept for the Peace Corps on this effort.
The late 1960s and early 1970s were a low point for student social service
participation. But things picked up again in the late 1980s and 90s,
leading to record numbers of students involved in volunteer organizations
of all types. Today PBHA oversees 73 programs comprising approximately 1,800
volunteers. The statistics are impressive, and yet Gomes in his remarks
downplayed their significance, and spoke instead of PBHAs spirit.
"I am willing to argue that when all is said and done, in good
times and bad, this House is defined not so much by its statistics, as by
the Spirit which gives life to old ideals, courage to the young and foolish,
stamina to the old and weary. . . . As long as this work remains to be done,
and there are Harvard students to do it, the memory of Phillips Brooks will
remain alive, and the work of Phillips Brooks House will remain good work
Gods work to do."
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1990
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1997
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Copyright
2000 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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