The Greater Good: How Philanthropy Drives the American
Economy and Can Save Capitalism
By Claire Gaudiani
Preface
I feel highly motivated to tell the story of America’s unique and powerful brand
of generosity because of what I have seen and learned during 13 years as
president of Connecticut College and four years as volunteer president of the
New London Development Corporation. In both cases, my job was to call on
people to be generous, to think beyond their own narrow personal interests and
reach out for the common/greater good. So over the years, I have seen the
generosity of donors, wealthy and not. Some families had been
donating to causes for generations. Others had never made a monetary
gift.
In both of these non-profit settings, college and urban economic development, I
saw how personal generosity worked, and sometimes did not work. In my
service learning course called
Literature, Service, and Social Reflection,
I saw how the younger generation gives and how they react to the generous work
they see the older generation doing. They expect us to address the nation’s
equity problems. For more than a decade now, I have seen how
present and menacing selfishness, demagoguery, and discrimination are. How
fragile democracy is and how easy it would be for it to ebb away. I
am always struck, even since September 11, by how much Americans take our
tradition of generosity for granted. We focus so rarely on this amazing quality
though it has been so powerful and has remained so widely shared. Mostly,
I am worried that we could lose this quality if more of us don’t nurture
it. Without our citizen generosity, our country would not be the
same. Neither its democracy nor its economy would be the same.
So as I completed both these jobs, I decided to think more about the role of
generosity, why it is so important in the US, where the tradition came from,
and why giving matters going forward.
I did not always feel this curiosity about my country. For all the
years I taught my field of French Literature in college, I also pretty much
ignored the qualities like generosity in American culture. I always did
volunteer work, but despite the fact that my sisters and brothers and in fact,
my husband and I, were all scholarship students, I did not question how those
donations were made to Harvard, Bryn Mawr, Haverford, Princeton and Connecticut
College. All the while I was living in the States and raising our
children here, I never thought about the fact that if we had all been born in
France, our fate may have been quite different. Maybe we would not have
been able to attend some of the finest institutions in the country as we
did. Certainly my two grandfathers’ fates would have been
different. The French system would not have likely awarded a place in a
premier medical school to a poor young immigrant who had arrived from Italy in
1889. This gentleman, my mother’s father, ended up graduating first in
his class at Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons in 1907. The
French system might not have let a brilliant young surgeon trained in Italy and
Germany practice and pursue research in surgery from 1911 on as happened to my
father’s father in New York. I had always heard stories about their
generation’s generosity to others in New York. How my mother’s father had
gone back to the poorest neighborhood in New York to practice medicine among
those who needed him most — other immigrants like himself.
Somehow none of it registered for me. I was proud of both of them as well
as my grandmothers but I was not proud of my country and all the opportunities
that it had offered them. And, even if they had an uphill battle against
“Italians need not apply” signs, they got into the best
universities. My grandfather sent his only son to MIT in
1923. My father attended West Point, Class of ’43. They all
made progress, like millions of others did. They served in the world wars
and contributed lifetimes to their adopted country — they were a good return on
the investments made in them. But I did not begin to really see America
until I became a college president and eventually a community leader in New
London, Connecticut.
From those perches, I saw generosity — of alumni, of donors, of
townspeople. I learned that the people of New London had collected
$135,000 a penny at a time around 1910 to attract the Founders to put
Connecticut College in New London. That industrialist, Morton Plant gave $1
million at the same time to establish the college. Town and gown,
dime donors and millionaires, educated and very simple proud people — giving
for a common cause — to change some little piece of the world. That is
how America gives.
Of course, I saw selfishness too. Sometimes among some faculty who did not
want to be involved with the city of New London or its people, refused to
re-think the college's place in the town as a major asset to its economic
development. Sometimes among donors too, but most often among faculty,
donors and students, I saw generosity. I watched alumna Carolyn
Holleran and her husband Jerry give $1 million to open a Center for Community
Action and Public Policy right down town. They had hoped to see a time
when students from the college would live downtown in New London for an urban
semester or year.
Meetings I conducted in offices and homes and city council chambers, whether in
New York, New London or San Francisco, demonstrated whether people were able to
put the needs of others and the common good ahead of their own personal
interests and act, or not. I began to understand very slowly that the
spirit of the country made certain things seem like a good idea.
The texts and experiences of others, from Aristotle and Adam Smith to a jobless
New Londoner and a Connecticut College freshman taught me a lot about
democracy, generosity and capitalism.
Americans keep working toward the aspirations of the Founding
Fathers. We invest in each other. We know the job is not
finished yet. We know we have benefited from others and know we usually
cannot give back to those who gave to us, so we give to others who need some
help and express thanks that way. I was struck with how little many
Americans, just like me, really know about our practice of citizen generosity
and how deeply it is connected to our success.
The story of generosity in America and how it has mediated between capitalism
and democracy is almost too good to tell without sounding jingoist or naïve —
potentially fatal flaws for an academic like me. If our government and
economy persist over the next 50 years, the same story is going to be told
about the America of today — how much sharing there was. Only now we need
to get much more generous. We will have the funds and the human
resources. The need is critical. So there must be a way to pause
and tell this great story now. Maybe there is a way…