Yale, William, 1887-1975
Variant namesMiddle East specialist, educator.
From the description of Reminiscences of William Yale : oral history, 1969. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 309735638
William Yale: diplomat, author, professor; employed by Standard Oil Company of New York in the Middle East, 1910-1917; in 1917 received appointment as Special Agent of the Department of State dealing with the Middle East; in 1919 attended Paris Peace Conference, where he was on the staff of the American Commission to Negotiate the Peace; in 1928 became professor of modern European history at the University of New Hampshire, remaining for 25 years; during World War II he was a special consultant to the State Department on Middle Eastern affairs.
From the description of William Yale papers, 1915-1919 (inclusive). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 702168658
University professor and author of The Near East, a modern history (1958).
From the description of It takes so long : the autobiography of William Yale, 1938. (Boston Athenaeum). WorldCat record id: 182936307
William Yale, an authority on the Middle East, was born in Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., August 6, 1887. In 1907 he served as a civil engineer with the Isthmian Canal Commission in Panama. He began his career in the Middle East in 1913, when he was sent to Constantinople by Standard Oil Company of New York to explore for oil. He later worked in Cairo and in Palestine. In 1919, Yale was technical advisor to the King-Crane Commission sent by President Wilson to discuss the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire at the Paris Peace Talks. Yale served as Professor of History at UNH from 1928-1942, 1945-1957.
From the description of William Yale papers, 1906-1972. (Manchester City Library). WorldCat record id: 28836361
William Yale: diplomat, author, professor; employed by Standard Oil Company of New York in the Middle East, 1910-1917; in 1917 received appointment as Special Agent of the Department of State dealing with the Middle East; in 1919 attended Paris Peace Conference, where he was on the staff of the American Commission to Negotiate the Peace; in 1928 became professor of modern European history at the University of New Hampshire, remaining for 25 years; during World War II he was a special consultant to the State Department on Middle Eastern affairs.
William Yale (a collateral descendant of Elihu Yale) was born in Dobbs Ferry, N.Y., on August 6, 1887. He attended the Lawrenceville School and received his Ph.B. degree from Yale as a member of the class of 1910-S. For the next five years Yale worked in various administrative capacities for the Standard Oil Company of New York, particularly in the Near East. He eventually became SOCONY'S chief representative in Jerusalem, where he resided continuously from June 1915 to March 1917 and where he acquired a speaking knowledge of Arabic and a thorough knowledge of French. He left Palestine in early March 1917 and proceeded to Constantinople, for the most part traveling over the Bagdad Railroad and passing through Damascus, Aleppo, Tarsus, Koniah and Eschi Seher. He returned to the United States soon after America's entry into the First World War.
For a short while afterward, Yale worked with the American Field Service in Washington, D.C. Then, in August 1917, he received an appointment as a Special Agent of the Department of State with instructions to proceed to Egypt. Yale stopped first in London, where he held consultations with William H. Buckler (Colonel House's special liaison man at the American Embassy), with members of the British Military and Admiralty Intelligence Offices, as well as with the heads of the various Middle Eastern Relief Committees. He also visited Paris, where he conferred with many Zionist and Arab leaders (including Boghos Nubar Pasha). Finally, traveling via Rome, Taranto and Malta, he arrived in Alexandria on October 19, 1917.
Yale outlined the purpose of his mission (and the peculiarities of his position in Egypt) in the very first report, which he addressed to Leland Harrison (his immediate chief at the Department of State):
"On my arrival at Cairo I presented myself to Mr. Knabenshue, Vice-Consul in charge of the Diplomatic Agency, and explained to him my presence here and mission. After a lengthy conference with Mr. Knabenshue, in which we throughly discussed my position here, we both came to the Conclusion that the only course to pursue was that he should present me to the [British] High Commissioner, Sir Reginald Wingate, as a special agent of the Department of State, sent to Egypt to keep the United States Government informed of the events of importance occuring east of Suez, in Syria, Palestine, Arabia and the Hedjaz. It was after careful consideration of the question that we came to this decision for the following reasons.
My presence in Egypt as a Special Agent of the Department of State was known to the British Authorities, as I was travelling under a special diplomatic passport defining my position. My work here necessitates my meeting and interviewing the leaders of the groups interested in Palestine and Syria, viz: Zionists and Anti-Zionists, Moslem Arabs and the various sects of Christian Arabs and all other interests. Such activities on my part would have been carefully watched and followed by the British, whose secret agents are everywhere. My comings and goings would have been fully reported upon, and it is very probable that even my conversations would at times have been reported verbatim to the British Authorities. Not only would the British have known the nature of my work, but they might have surmised and imputed other motives to my presence in Egypt. Not only would I personally have been under suspicion and my activities hindered and curtailed but suspicion would have been thrown upon the American [Diplomatic] Agency, which would have resulted in placing both Mr. Knabenshue and myself in a most unpleasant and disadvantageous light."
Yale sent weekly reports to Washington during the period October 1917 - July 1918, paying special attention to Syrian and Palestinian questions.
On June 20, 1918, Yale received an appointment as captain in the U. S. Army through the auspices of the Department of State. This "promotion" was obviously meant to facilitate his movements in and out of Egypt. In fact, soon thereafter Yale was also informed by the office of the U. S. military attaché in London that General Allenby, Commander in Chief of British Forces in Palestine, had agreed to receive him at his headquarters as an official American military observer. Yale jumped at this opportunity, though wondering whether henceforth the Department of State or the War Department would be at the receiving end of his intelligence reports. In any event, Yale was elated: "Although as military observer my activities will in some ways be restricted," he wrote to Harrison, "they will on the other hand be extended by my being able to go to Palestine and later to Akabah and the Hedjaz, and if necessary to Mesopotamia. In so doing I shall be able to get into touch with the leading Arabs in the various parts of the Arab world, and will in the end secure first-hand information of what is going on." In fact, Yale was thus able to observe from close quarters Allenby's brilliant final campaign (September 19 to November 11, 1918), and in his reports he commented at length upon these operations, as well as upon the varied and complicated political ramifications.
After the signing of the armistice, Yale was ordered to proceed to Paris, where he was attached to the staff of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace as an expert on Syrian and Arabian affairs. He remained in France until May 1919, when he was sent back to the Levant as technical advisor to the American section of the International Commission on Mandates in Turkey. He returned to Paris at the end of the summer, spent some more time in London in the fall, and was finally demobilized in December 1919. For a few years after his return to the United States Yale worked for a number of American firms at home and abroad. Then, in 1928, he began teaching modern European history at the University of New Hampshire, and he remained there for the better part of the next twenty-five years of his life. During World War II, Yale was employed by the Department of State as a special consultant on Middle Eastern affairs. Before his retirement Yale also taught history at Boston University. He is the author of The Near East: A Modern History (1958; revised edition 1968). Yale died in 1975.
From the guide to the William Yale papers, 1915-1919, (Manuscripts and Archives)
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
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associatedWith | Allenby, Edmund Henry Hynman Allenby, 1st viscount, 1861-1936. | person |
associatedWith | Buckler, W. H. (William Hepburn), 1867-1952. | person |
correspondedWith | Hocking, William Ernest, 1873-1966 | person |
associatedWith | Husseini, Jamal. | person |
associatedWith | Lawrence, T. E. (Thomas Edward), 1888-1935. | person |
correspondedWith | Lazaron, Morris Samuel | person |
associatedWith | Le Comte Garé, | person |
associatedWith | Monod, Francois. | person |
correspondedWith | Nation (New York, N.Y. : 1865). | corporateBody |
associatedWith | New York Times Company | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Paris Peace Conference (1919-1920). | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Paris Peace Conference, 1919-1920. United States Territorial Section. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | United States. Dept. of State. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Westermann, William Linn, 1873-1954. | person |
associatedWith | Yale University | corporateBody |
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Israel |
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Diplomats |
World War, 1914-1918 |
World War, 1914-1918 |
World War, 1914-1918 |
World politics |
Zionism |
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Person
Birth 1887
Death 1975
English,
French