New York State Commissioner to Examine and Investigate the Management and Affairs of the Office of the Fiscal Supervisor of…
Statement on Language
Some content in this finding aid may contain offensive terminology. For more information on why this language is occasionally retained, see: New York State Archives Statement on Harmful Language in Descriptive Resources.
Overview of the Records
Repository
- New York State Archives
222 Madison Avenue
Albany, NY 12230
Summary
- This series contains Charles H. Strong's records of his investigation of the State Board of Charities and children's institutions. Strong was to investigate charges made by John A. Kingsbury, Commissioner of the New York City Department of Public Charities, in his annual report to Mayor John Purroy Mitchel, that poor conditions were allowed to persist in many private child care institutions because of the negligent supervision and inspection practices of the State Board of Charities.
Title
- Commissioner to Examine and Investigate the Management and Affairs of the Office of the Fiscal Supervisor of State Charities, the State Board of Charities, the Sites, Buildings and Grounds Commission, the Building Improvement Commission, and the Salary Classification Commission investigation correspondence, transcripts, and printed materials
Quantity
- 0.7 cubic feet
Inclusive Dates
Bulk Dates
Series Number
- A0017
Creator
Arrangement
Arranged by record type or topic.
Administrative History
Governor Charles S. Whitman appointed Charles H. Strong a commissioner under the Moreland Act on November 18, 1915. Strong was to investigate charges made by John A. Kingsbury, Commissioner of the New York City Department of Public Charities, in his annual report to Mayor John Purroy Mitchel, that poor conditions were allowed to persist in many private child care institutions because of the negligent supervision and inspection practices of the State Board of Charities.
In 1916, during the course of the investigation, Edward A. Moree, an employee of the State Charities Aid Association, anonymously issued a pamphlet of reprints of news articles highly critical of conditions in children's institutions. Some Catholic clergy saw the investigation as anti-Catholic because some Catholic institutions were involved. They responded to the investigation and to the anonymous pamphlet by issuing a series of pamphlets defending the church and its children's institutions and attacking the investigation and the individuals conducting it.
At Kingsbury's request, the police tapped the phones of Reverend William B. Farrell, under whose name the pamphlets were issued, and Daniel C. Potter, believed to be the actual author. These men and Robert W. Hebberd, secretary of the State Board of Charities, were suspected of illegally obstructing the investigation. Hebberd later resigned from his post while the investigation was still ongoing.
Strong held hearings concerning the State Board of Charities, children's institutions, and the "Farrell pamphlets." His final report upheld Kingsbury's charges and recommended reorganizing and strengthening the State Board of Charities and having paid, full time, qualified members on the Board. Mayor Mitchel had supported the investigation and, due in part to criticism by the Catholic church, was defeated in his bid for re-election.
Scope and Content Note
This series contains Charles H. Strong's records of his investigation of the State Board of Charities and children's institutions.
The series includes: Governor Whitman's signed certificate of appointment of Strong as Commissioner; lists of issues to consider and questions to answer in the investigation; reports on conditions in several children's institutions; anonymous Moree pamphlet of reprinted newspaper headlines and articles criticizing conditions in children's institutions; "Farrell pamphlets" criticizing the investigation and attacking the investigators as anti-Catholic; letters to Strong commending him on his investigation and report; address by Strong to the State Conference of Mayors in June, 1917 concerning the investigation and the need to reorganize the State Board of Charities; draft article about Catholic criticism of the investigation, dated 1928; brief history of the English Commissioners in Lunacy; and scrapbook of newspaper clippings and articles concerning the investigation.
Related Material
Series A3156, Hearing Transcripts of the Strong Investigation of Charges Against the State Board of Charities, contains related records from the State Board of Charities.
Access Restrictions
All investigative materials in Moreland Act commission records are indefinitely restricted pursuant to Executive Law sect. 6 and 63.8 and Civil Rights Law sect. 73.8. Requests for access to such materials are referred to the Governor's Office.
Transcripts of wiretap (eavesdropping) surveillance: Restricted; confidential; Criminal Procedure Law, Section 700.65.
Access Terms
Personal Name(s)
- Potter, Daniel C.
- Kingsbury, John Adams, 1876-1956
- Hebberd, Robert W., 1857-
- Farrell, William B.
- Strong, Charles H. (Charles Howard), 1865-1949.
- Whitman, Charles S., 1868-1947.
- Mitchel, John Purroy, 1879-1918.
Corporate Name(s)
- New York (State). Governor (1915-1918 : Whitman)
- New York (State). State Board of Charities
- New York (State). Executive Department
- New York (State). Executive Department
- New York (N.Y.). Department of Public Charities
- New York (State). Office of the Fiscal Supervisor of State Charities
Geographic Name(s)
Subject(s)
- Governmental investigations
- Wiretapping--New York (State)
- Charities--State supervision
- Public welfare--State supervision