Havemeyer, Loomis, 1886-1971
Name Entries
person
Havemeyer, Loomis, 1886-1971
Name Components
Name :
Havemeyer, Loomis, 1886-1971
Havemeyer, Loomis, 1886-....
Name Components
Name :
Havemeyer, Loomis, 1886-....
Havemeyer, Loomis
Name Components
Name :
Havemeyer, Loomis
Genders
Exist Dates
Biographical History
Loomis Havemeyer was born in Rye, New York, on June 7, 1886, to Charles W. Havemeyer and Julia Ida Loomis Havemeyer. He attended the Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, and in 1907 entered Sheffield Scientific School. After receiving a Ph.B. in philosophy (1910S), Havemeyer studied anthropology under Albert Galloway Keller at Yale University and received his M.A. in 1912 and his Ph.D. in 1915. From 1915 to 1954, Havemeyer held many positions in both academic and administrative capacities at the university, but is remembered primarily as registrar of the Sheffield Scientific School (1919-1929) and was recognizable as the marshal for academic processions. Officially retired in 1954, Havemeyer continued to perform administrative duties such as editing course schedules and became an avid chronicler of Yale history and traditions. In 1967, he was awarded the Yale Medal of Honor in recognition of his continuing role in the operation of the university. Havemeyer died on August 14, 1971.
Loomis Havemeyer was born in Rye, New York on June 7, 1886 to Charles W. Havemeyer and Julia Ida Loomis Havemeyer. Havemeyer's paternal great-grandfather, William Havemeyer, established the sugar refining business in North America (1807), and his grandfather, William Frederick Havemeyer, was elected mayor of New York City, during the mid-19th century, on three separate occasions. Havemeyer's maternal grandfather, Francis Bolles Loomis, was lieutenant governor of Connecticut from 1887 to 1889. Havemeyer lived his early childhood years in Brooklyn, New York while his father managed one of the Havemeyer sugar refineries. Havemeyer's mother, after learning of her husband's infidelities, moved her two children to Hartford, Connecticut (ca. 1890) and was later granted a divorce. A bequeathment of $200,000 from Julia's brother-in-law, Hector Havemeyer, helped secure the family's financial independence.
Havemeyer attended the Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania and in 1907 entered Sheffield Scientific School at Yale University. After receiving a Ph.B in philosophy (1910S), Havemeyer pursued graduate study at Yale in anthropology under Albert Galloway Keller, who, according to Havemeyer, "had the ability of making a man feel on the heights and in the depths in the same breath." Keller openly expressed his concern that Havemeyer did not have the maturity or commitment necessary to pursue graduate work seriously; Keller then advised Havemeyer not to be discouraged under any circumstances should he choose to pursue a career in academics. In 1912, Havemeyer received his M.A. in anthropology and after presenting his dissertation, "The Drama of Savage Peoples," he was awarded a Ph.D. in 1915. In 1925, Havemeyer taught a class on social evolution in the Sheffield Scientific School. Keller was opposed to the course, believing it to be "subversive" to the department. The rift ultimately resulted in the dissolution of their professional and personal relationship.
Throughout his four decade career at Yale, Havemeyer held many positions in both academic and administrative capacities. Havemeyer's academic appointments included instructor of geography and anthropology (1913-1919); instructor of geography (1919-1920); instructor of anthropology (1920-1921); instructor of anthropology and economic geography (1921-1923); lecturer (1923-1925); assistant professor of anthropology (1925-1934); assistant professor of social sciences (1934-1937); assistant professor of evolution (1937-1941); and lecturer (1941-1954). Despite numerous teaching positions, Havemeyer is remembered more for his administrative contributions, most notably as registrar of Sheffield Scientific School (1919-1929). Additional administrative duties included assistant dean (1929-1941) and associate dean (1941-1945) of Sheffield Scientific School; registrar of the School of Engineering (1932-1954); director of undergraduate registration (1945-1948); associate dean in charge of undergraduate registration (1941-1954); and director of undergraduate schedules and allocations (1954-1969). In 1967, Havemeyer was awarded the Yale Medal of Honor in recognition of his continuing role in the operation of the university.
Havemeyer was very involved in the Yale community in informal capacities as well. As an undergraduate, he was a member of the Book and Snake Society as well as a co-founder of the Aurelian Honor Society, in both of which he actively participated throughout his life. He was also a great supporter of the Yale Dramat, claiming to have attended over 270 performances.
Beginning in the summer of 1901 and throughout his undergraduate years, Havemeyer traveled extensively with his mother and sister to Eastern and Western Europe, Canada, the Northwestern United States, and Alaska. On a number of occasions he was a guest in the home of the Baron and Baroness von Munchausen and in 1911 was invited by Annette von Munchausen to attend a dance given for the Duke and Duchess of Coburg.
Havemeyer's reputation was that of a generous person with a philanthropic nature. Much of his giving was done anonymously, as in the case of Carnes Weeks, a student whose medical education Havemeyer financed. Havemeyer never married and with the death, in 1941, of his sister, Julia Loomis Havemeyer, he was left with no immediate relatives. Yale became the major beneficiary of his wealth when in 1949, Havemeyer established the "Loomis and Julia Havemeyer Fund" for students in science and engineering. In 1958, with a gift of $40,000, Havemeyer established the "Timothy Dwight College Fellowship Fund," in order to bring distinguished artists in the areas of arts and literature to the college. In 1969 he established the "Julia Havemeyer Musical Fellowship," at the Yale School of Music, to provide a fellowship for advanced students of music.
In addition to music, theater, and dinner parties, Havemeyer enjoyed writing and became an avid chronicler of Yale history and traditions, especially after his official retirement in 1954. Many writings were published privately with his own money and distributed to friends. His writings on Yale history and traditions included Aurelian Honor Society of Yale University and Its Times ; Eating at Yale, 1701-1965 ; Go to Your Room: Undergraduate Societies and Fraternities at Yale, The Engineering Heritage at Yale ; A History of Book and Snake ; A History of Timothy Dwight College ; Sheff Days and Ways ; Out of Yale's Past ; Then and Now ; Undergraduate Yale in the Second World War ; Yale's Extracurricular and Social Organizations, 1780-1960 ; and Yale, 1930-1946 . "The Drama of Savage Peoples" (dissertation), Ethnography (co-authored with A. G. Keller), and The Conservation of Our Natural Resources comprised Havemeyer's published scholarly contributions. Autobiographical writings such as "These Things I Remember" and "The Years Since My Retirement, 1954-?" recollect events and experiences throughout his life. Havemeyer died on August 14, 1971.
eng
Latn
External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/91691502
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-no2010082521
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/no2010082521
Other Entity IDs (Same As)
Sources
Loading ...
Resource Relations
Loading ...
Internal CPF Relations
Loading ...
Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Travel
Families
Parents and death
Women
World War, 1939-1945
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
Authors
Educators
Legal Statuses
Places
Europe
AssociatedPlace
Europe, Northern
AssociatedPlace
United States
AssociatedPlace
Connecticut
AssociatedPlace
Europe
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>