at the gardens of Eastman's home in Rochester, 1922 Eastman was a
presidential elector in
1900 and
1916. In 1915, Eastman founded the Bureau of Municipal Research in Rochester to gather information and make government policy recommendations. The agency was later renamed the
Center for Governmental Research and continues to carry out that mission. In 1924, Eastman and the Bureau supported a referendum to change Rochester's government to a city manager system, which passed. In 1920, Eastman established the Eastman Savings and Loan to provide financial services to Kodak employees. The institution was later rechartered as
ESL Federal Credit Union. In the 1920s, Eastman was involved in
calendar reform and supported the 13-month per year
International Fixed Calendar developed by
Moses B. Cotsworth. On January 17, 1925, Eastman invited Cotsworth to his home; he had been introduced to Cotsworth's calendar by a mutual friend and was interested in the system. He secretly funded Cotsworth for a year and then openly supported him and the 13-month plan. Eastman took a major role in planning and financing the campaign for a new global calendar, and also headed the National Committee on Calendar Simplification in the United States, which was created at the behest of the
League of Nations. Eastman supported Cotsworth's campaign until his death. Eastman wrote several articles to promote the 13-month system, including "Problems of Calendar Improvement" in
Scientific American and "The Importance of Calendar Reform to the Business World" in ''Nation's Business''. By 1928, the Kodak Company implemented the calendar in its business bookkeeping, and continued to use it until 1989. He was chairman of the National Committee on Calendar Simplification. Although a conference was held at the League of Nations in 1931, with his death and the looming tensions of
World War II, this calendar was dropped from consideration. In 1925, Eastman gave up his daily management of Kodak and officially retired as president. He remained associated with the company in a business executive capacity, as the chairman of the board, until his death.
Philanthropy During his lifetime, Eastman donated $100 million to various organizations, becoming one of the major philanthropists in the United States during his lifetime. His largest donations went to the
University of Rochester and to the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology to build their programs and facilities. Preferring to remain anonymous, he made donations under the alias "Mr. Smith". In 1918, he endowed the establishment of the
Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester, and in 1921, a school of medicine and dentistry there. In 1922, he founded the
Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, hiring its first music director
Albert Coates. Figured for its value in 1932, the year of Eastman's death, $100 million is equivalent to more than $2 billion in 2022. (
The Eastman Institute) in Stockholm, Sweden In 1915, Eastman provided funds for the establishment of the
Eastman Dental Dispensary in Rochester. He donated £200,000 in 1926 to fund a dental clinic in London after being approached by the chairman of the
Royal Free Hospital,
George Riddell, 1st Baron Riddell. Donations of £50,000 each had been made by Lord Riddell and the Royal Free honorary treasurer. On November 20, 1931, the
UCL Eastman Dental Institute opened in a ceremony attended by
Neville Chamberlain, then Minister of Health, and the American Ambassador to the UK. The clinic was incorporated into the Royal Free Hospital and was committed to providing dental care for disadvantaged children from central London. It is now a part of
University College London. In 1929 he founded the George Eastman Visiting Professorship at
Oxford, to be held each year by a different American scholar of the highest distinction. Eastman also funded
Eastmaninstitutet, a dental care clinic for children opened in 1937 in Stockholm, Sweden.
Views on race Marion Gleason, a close confidante of Eastman, later described his views on African Americans as "typical of his time – paternalistic, but strictly against social fraternization." Although he made generous donations to the
Hampton Institute and
Tuskegee Institute, becoming their largest donor in his era, he also upheld and reinforced the de facto
segregation which existed in Rochester. Kodak hired virtually no black employees during Eastman's lifetime, and a 1939 commission of the
New York State Legislature on living conditions of African Americans found that Kodak had only a single black employee. The Eastman Dental Dispensary also rejected black applicants, and the Eastman Theater restricted black patrons to its balcony. Eastman rejected several requests to meet with
NAACP representatives, including a direct appeal from president
Walter White in 1929. ==Infirmity and suicide==