Trask was committed to civic duty, public service, and philanthropy.
Arts Trask was dedicated to the arts. In his lifetime he was president of the
National Arts Club, a patron and member of the
Municipal Art Society of New York, and the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. At the time of his death, Trask's wealth had been greatly diminished by his own generosity.
Yaddo With no close heirs, the Trasks began to entertain the idea of turning their ,
Saratoga Springs, New York estate into a working community of artists and writers. Twelve years after Spencer's death, Mrs. Trask married
George Foster Peabody, and launched the Corporation of
Yaddo. This artist community has operated continuously ever since. Yaddo, the name of the estate, is said to have been coined by the Trask's young daughter Christina, who amused her father by her mispronunciation of the numerous dark spots on the lawn caused by the towering trees' shadows.'' The results of the Trasks' legacy have been historic.
John Cheever once wrote that the "forty or so acres on which the principal buildings of Yaddo stand have seen more distinguished activity in the arts than any other piece of ground in the English-speaking community and perhaps the world". Collectively, artists who worked at Yaddo have won 88
Pulitzer Prizes, 72
National Book Awards, 22
National Book Critics Circle Award, 11
Oscars, a
Nobel Prize, and countless other honors. Many books by Yaddo authors have been made into films. Visitors from Cheever's Day include
Milton Avery,
James Baldwin,
Leonard Bernstein,
Truman Capote,
Aaron Copland,
Philip Guston,
Patricia Highsmith,
Langston Hughes,
Ted Hughes,
Alfred Kazin,
Ulysses Kay,
Jacob Lawrence,
Flannery O'Connor,
Sylvia Plath,
Katherine Anne Porter,
Mario Puzo,
Clyfford Still, and
Virgil Thomson.
Education Spencer Trask was a founder and chairman of the board of trustees for
Teachers College, the school of pedagogy of
Columbia University. He was also actively interested in the Kindergarten Association, and for many years was closely identified with
General Theological Seminary. Trask also founded a public lecture series at his alma mater,
Princeton University in 1891, "for the purpose of securing the services of eminent men to deliver public lectures before the University on subjects of special interest". Over the years, lecturers have included
Niels Bohr on "The Structure of the Atom" (1923–1924);
Arnold J. Toynbee on "Near Eastern Affairs" (1925–1926);
T. S. Eliot on "The Bible and English Literature", (1932–1933);
Bertrand Russell on "Mind and Matter" (1950–1951); and
Margaret Mead on "Changing American Character" (1975–1976).
National Armenian Relief Committee In the 1890s, Trask led what some have called "the first international
human rights movement in American history" in response to the
Hamidian massacres. In New York what began as a local committee to aid the Armenians grew quickly into the
National Armenian Relief Committee. Its board included some of the most powerful men in the United States, including Supreme Court Justice
David Josiah Brewer, railroad executive
Chauncey Depew, Wall Street banker
Jacob Schiff, and church leaders Dr.
Leonard Woolsey Bacon and the Reverend Fredrick D. Greene. The Relief Committee recruited
Clara Barton to take
Red Cross relief teams out of the country for the first time, to the Armenian provinces. By the end of the year-long drive, Americans raised more than $300,000. In 1896, a Thanksgiving appeal was launched nationwide, and Americans from St. Paul to San Francisco to Boston gave thanks by sending money to Armenian widows and orphans of the massacres. Citizens of St. Paul boycotted buying turkey and gave their Thanksgiving food money to the cause.
Other organizations Throughout his life, Trask took a prominent part in municipal reform and local politics, especially in connection with the
Gold Democrats. He was a member of the
Union League,
Grolier Club, and as first treasurer, purchased the Gramercy Park property for the
National Arts Club of New York. The success of Yaddo encouraged Spencer and Katrina to later donate land for a working women's retreat center as well, known as the
Wiawaka Holiday House. Trask died in a train accident on New Year's Eve in 1909. In commemoration of his life,
Daniel Chester French was commissioned to create a statue for Spencer Trask. At a memorial service in
Congress Park,
The Spirit of Life was unveiled. == References ==