Academia In October 1858, White accepted a position as a professor of History and English literature at the
University of Michigan, where he remained on faculty until 1863. White made his lasting mark on the grounds of the university by enrolling students to plant
elms along the walkways on
The Diag. Between 1862 and 1863, he traveled to Europe to lobby France and Britain to assist the United States in the
American Civil War or at least not to aid the
Confederate States. In the Senate, White met the fellow
upstate Senator
Ezra Cornell, a self-taught
Quaker farmer from
Ithaca who had made a modest fortune in the
telegraph industry. The senators initially wanted to divvy the funds among the numerous small state colleges of their districts. White fervently argued that the money would be more effectively used if it endowed only one university. Ezra Cornell agreed and told White, "I have about half a million dollars more than my family will need: what is the best thing I can do with it for the State?" White immediately replied, "The best thing you can do with it is to establish or strengthen some institution of higher learning." and insisted for the university to be in his hometown of
Ithaca. He proposed to donate land on his large farm on East Hill, overlooking the town and
Cayuga Lake. White convinced Cornell to give his name to the university "in accordance with [the] time-honored American usage" of naming universities after their largest initial benefactors. White became the school's first president and served as a professor in the
Department of History. He commissioned Cornell's first
architecture student,
William Henry Miller, to build
his president's mansion on campus. White was elected a member of the
American Philosophical Society in 1869 and
American Antiquarian Society in 1884. In 1891,
Leland and Jane Stanford asked White to serve as the first president of
Stanford University, which they had founded in
Palo Alto, California. Although he refused, he recommended his former student
David Starr Jordan.
Conflict thesis At the time of Cornell's founding, White announced that it would be "an asylum for
Science—where truth shall be sought for truth's sake, not stretched or cut exactly to fit Revealed Religion." Until then, most of America's private universities had been founded as religious institutions and generally were focused on the
liberal arts and religious training. In 1869, White gave a lecture on "The Battle-Fields of Science" in which he argued that history showed the negative outcomes resulting from any attempt on the part of
religion to interfere with the progress of
science. Over the next 30 years, he refined his analysis, expanding his case studies to include nearly every field of science over the entire history of Christianity but also narrowing his target from "religion" through "ecclesiasticism" to "dogmatic theology." The final result was the two-volume
A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom (1896) in which he asserted the
conflict thesis of science being against
dogmatic theology. Initially less popular than
John William Draper's
History of the Conflict between Religion and Science (1874), White's book became an influential text in the 19th century on the
relationship between religion and science. White's conflict thesis has been widely rejected among contemporary historians of science. The warfare depiction remains a popular view among critics of religion.
Diplomat , where he served from 1892 to 1894 While at Cornell, in 1871, he took leave to serve as a Commissioner to
Santo Domingo, along with
Benjamin Wade and
Samuel Howe, at the request of President
Ulysses Grant to determine the feasibility of an American annexation of the
Dominican Republic. Their report (available here) supported the annexation, but Grant was unable to gain sufficient political support to take further action. Later, White was appointed as the American ambassador to Germany (1879–1881). After returning to the United States, he was elected as the first president of the
American Historical Association (1884–1886). Upstate
New York Republicans nominated him for
governor in 1876 and for Congress in 1886, but he did not win either primary. Following his resignation in 1885 as Cornell's president, White served as the minister to Russia (1892–1894), president of the American delegation to
The Hague Peace Conference (1899), and again as ambassador to Germany (1897–1902). In 1904, White published his
Autobiography, which he had written while he was relaxing in Italy after his retirement from the Department of State with the change in administrations. Cornell's third president,
Jacob Gould Schurman, was appointed as ambassador to Germany from 1925 to 1929. At the onset of
World War I, White supported the German cause within Europe because he had strong professional and emotional ties to Germany. By the summer of 1915, he retreated from this position and refrained from offering any support either publicly or privately. In the fall of 1916, President
Woodrow Wilson appointed White to a peace commission to prepare a treaty with China. As of December 1916, White had reduced some of his obligations, resigning from the
Smithsonian Board of Regents and the trustees of the
Carnegie Institution. In 1879, White enlisted
George Lincoln Burr, a former undergraduate assistant for one of his seminars, to manage the rare books collection. Though Burr would later hold other positions at the university, such as Professor of History, he remained White's collaborator and head of this collection until 1922 by traveling over Europe, locating and amassing books that White wanted. In particular, he built the collections on the
Reformation,
witchcraft, and the
French Revolution. Today, White's collection is housed primarily in the Cornell Archives and in the Andrew Dickson White Reading Room (formally known as the "President White Library of History and Political Science") at Uris Library on the Ithaca Campus. The A.D. White Reading Room was designed by
William Henry Miller, who had also designed White's mansion on campus. While serving in
Russia, White made the acquaintance of author
Leo Tolstoy. Tolstoy's fascination with
Mormonism sparked a similar interest in White, who had previously regarded the Latter-Day Saints (LDS) as a dangerous
cult. Upon his return to the United States, White took advantage of Cornell's proximity to the religion's birthplace in
Palmyra to amass a collection of LDS memorabilia (including many original copies of the
Book of Mormon); it is unmatched by any other institution outside the church itself and its flagship
Brigham Young University. ==Personal life==