features Big man on campus After he left the White House, William Howard Taft spent eight years teaching at Yale. He left quite an impression. Mark Morosse Taft was provided with an extra-wide seat in Woolsey Hall that is still in use. After losing his ticket to an event at Woolsey, Taft said, he tried to convince an usher that he belonged there “by the breadth of my beam and the corresponding breadth of this seat.’’ View full image Mark Morosse Taft was provided with an extra-wide seat in Woolsey Hall that is still in use. After losing his ticket to an event at Woolsey, Taft said, he tried to convince an usher that he belonged there “by the breadth of my beam and the corresponding breadth of this seat.’’ View full image Mark Morosse The Yale University Art Gallery’s Garvan Furniture Study houses an armchair that was built for William Howard Taft when he taught at Yale. A plaque on the chair says Taft used it in Osborn Hall, an Old Campus classroom building that was later replaced by Bingham Hall. View full image Mark Morosse The Yale University Art Gallery’s Garvan Furniture Study houses an armchair that was built for William Howard Taft when he taught at Yale. A plaque on the chair says Taft used it in Osborn Hall, an Old Campus classroom building that was later replaced by Bingham Hall. View full image Mark Morosse Taft was an enthusiastic baseball fan, so the university installed a double-width seat behind home plate for him at the Yale baseball field. The seat was removed in a 1994 renovation and is now archived at Ray Tompkins House. View full image Mark Morosse Taft was an enthusiastic baseball fan, so the university installed a double-width seat behind home plate for him at the Yale baseball field. The seat was removed in a 1994 renovation and is now archived at Ray Tompkins House. View full image Manuscripts and Archives As a Yale trustee, Taft was a frequent visitor to Yale even while he was president. He marched in the 1911 commencement procession with past Yale president Timothy Dwight (left in photo) and then-president Arthur Twining Hadley. View full image Manuscripts and Archives As a Yale trustee, Taft was a frequent visitor to Yale even while he was president. He marched in the 1911 commencement procession with past Yale president Timothy Dwight (left in photo) and then-president Arthur Twining Hadley. View full image There is no building at Yale named for William Howard Taft, Class of 1878, the first alumnus of the university to serve as president of the United States. But in various corners of the campus, you can find some things to remember him by: four chairs that were installed or acquired to accommodate Taft’s prodigious size during the period just after his presidency when he was a professor at Yale. Three of these have been put aside for safekeeping: an armchair, which can be seen by appointment in the Yale University Art Gallery’s furniture study; a similar chair in Woodbridge Hall, and a special double-wide grandstand seat from Yale Field, now in storage at the athletics department’s Ray Tompkins House. But the fourth, an extra-wide seat in the balcony of Woolsey Hall, is still in place. It’s popular with concert patrons who enjoy a little additional breathing room. These seats remind us not only of Taft’s bulk—he topped out at 355 pounds when he was president—but also of the pleasure and enthusiasm with which he embraced academic life after he failed to win reelection in 1912. Taft had always been an active alumnus, serving as a trustee of the university even while he was president of the nation. But after a bruising term in the White House, during which he was caught in an intraparty Republican feud between big-business conservatives and Theodore Roosevelt’s progressives, he was thrilled to retreat to his alma mater from, as he put it, “the stress and turmoil of the world.” Yale College offered Taft a chair in law immediately after his 1912 loss. (Yale secretary Anson Phelps Stokes, Class of 1896, later recalled that Taft had joked “that he was afraid that a Chair would not be adequate, but that if we would provide a Sofa of Law, it might be all right.”) Taft was 55 when he arrived in New Haven in April 1913, less than a month after leaving office. He received Yale’s top faculty salary, $5,000—a tiny fraction of his $75,000 presidential salary, but he appears not to have minded. He jumped back into academic life, teaching in both Yale College and the Law School, coaching a freshman debate team, and attending proms, banquets, and especially baseball games. Taft’s biographers suggest that his weight problems were due to compulsive overeating in times of stress. After coming to Yale, Taft lost 80 pounds in eight months (he cut out bread, potatoes, fatty meats, and alcohol) and never went over 300 pounds again. He turned out to be prophetic when, on the day of his arrival at Yale, he addressed a crowd of students outside Commons from the balcony of Memorial Hall and said, “As I hear your cheers and your song, and feel the energy of your spirit, it seems to me as if I were young again and had shed some of the flesh that evidences advancement in years.” Taft taught at Yale for eight years, until Warren G. Harding brought the Republican party back into the White House and offered Taft the job he had always wanted: a seat on the Supreme Court. This time, the seat didn’t have to be so big. Filed under

Politics & Law

Campus

Yale History