
Hon.
John Robert White, Jr.
Hon. John Robert White, Jr., who
represented the Sixty-first California Assembly District in the Forty-third and
Forty-fourth General Assemblies, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, February
15, 1870; a son of Capt. John Robert and Katie (Ashbridge) White. Capt. White was of Scotch ancestry and a
native of
Capt. John Robert White enlisted, at
the outbreak of the Civil War, with the Eighteenth Pennsylvania Volunteers,
served four months and re-enlisted at once in
Mustered out of the service at the close
of the war, Captain White returned to Philadelphia. In due time he became one of the firm of
Boyd, White & Co., of Philadelphia; manufacturers, jobbers and importers of
carpets and rugs; for many years one of the largest concerns of its kind in the
country. In 1895 Capt. White sold his
interests in Philadelphia and came to California and purchased a walnut ranch
at Burbank, which he managed for several years before retiring. In Philadelphia, Capt. White was a director
of the Ninth National Bank, the Central Trust and Safe Deposit Company and the Industrial
Safe Deposit Company; was a member of the Committee of Fifty, organized to
promote measure for the benefit of the City; and was a well-known member of the
Union League, United Service Club, Historical Society and other minor
societies. Fraternally, Capt. White was
a Mason. His death occurred March 15,
1915, in the eightieth year of his life.
The demise of Mrs. White occurred in 1897.
The subject of this sketch
supplemented his high school education with a three-year course at Wharton
School of Finance and Economy at the University of Pennsylvania, which fitted
him for public life. He became an
employee of Boyd, White & Co.; first as one of the office force, then for
one year sold goods on the floor, after which he was promoted to the position
of buyer of carpets and oriental rugs, and served in that capacity until 1895.
Then, he accompanied his parents to California and assisted in locating them on
a ranch at Burbank. Returning to the
East Mr. White was a traveling sales man for a New York City carpet and rug
concern for two years; after which, he returned to California and followed
ranching at Burbank for four years. He accepted a position as salesman for T.
Bellington & Co., of Los Angeles, and served in that capacity until
1905. He then became buyer and manager
of the carpet and rug department of the newly organized California Furniture
Co., of Los Angeles, which position he still holds. In 1906 Mr. White became a stockholder in the
company, and since 1919 has been on the board of directors.
Mr. White is an ardent Republican,
and has been an active supporter of the party for many years. In 1909 he was appointed to fill an unexpired
term as city trustee, re-elected in 1912, and chosen mayor. He resigned from this position in May of the same
year because of pressing business activities.
During Mr. White’s incumbency as trustee and under his administration as
chairman of the board of trustees, a number of intricate problems were
confronted and brought to a successful issue.
One of these was the lowering to grade of the Pacific Electric railway’s
track on Brand Boulevard. This was
accomplished only after many conferences with the railroad officials and by the
firm and persistent course adopted by the governing body of the city, acting
generally through the chairman of the board and the city attorney. The successful venture of the city into
municipal ownership in the distribution of light and power was accomplished
during this era. In 1918, Mr. White was
elected to the state legislature on the Republican ticket, and re-elected to
the same office in 1920. During his first term he was chairman of the committee
on mileage, and a member of the committees on ways and means, education,
banking, oil industries, labor and capital.
During the second term he was chairman of the committee on governmental
efficiency and economy, and a member of the committees on re-apportionment,
ways and means, attaches, civil services, labor and capital. He was opposed tot he King tax bill which was
passed after a stormy battle had ensued, and which will go down in history as
one of the hardest fought battles that ever took place in the State House.
Mr. White is president of the
Association for the Betterment of Public Service of Southern California; an
organization that seeks to place efficient and capable officers in public service. He is also treasurer of the Federal Discount
Corporation of California. He belongs to
the Flintridge Country Club; the Los Angeles Athletic Club; the Sons of the
American Revolution; the military order, Loyal Legion of the United States; the
fraternity, Delta Upsilon; the Glendale Chamber of Commerce; and represents the
California Furniture Co. in the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. In Philadelphia he was a member of the Union
League Club. Fraternally, he is a Master
Mason. Since 1905 Mr. White has made
semi-annual business trips to New York City for his company, and is recognized
as an authority of national importance on goods in his line; especially on
oriental rugs. He delivers lectures at
the University of Southern California on the oriental rug subject and also
contributes articles for publication to the trade magazines.
At Burbank, California, on August
31, 1901, Mr. White married Rosa A. Luttge, a native of Cook County, Illinois;
daughter of Henry and Rosa (Wagner) Luttge.
The Luttge family came to Southern California in 1893 and settled on a
ranch at Burbank. Mrs. White is well
known and prominent in club life in Glendale.
She is past president secretary of the Glendale Federation of
Parent-Teacher Associations, secretary of the Glendale chapter of the American
Red Cross, director and past treasurer of the Tuesday Afternoon Club. She is a past president of the Columbus
Avenue Parent-Teacher Association, of which whe was
also parliamentarian for two years. Mr.
and Mrs. White have four children: John
Robert 3d., as student in Stanford University;
Douglas Ashbridge, a junior in Glendale Union High School; Kenneth
Ashbridge attends the intermediate school; and Gorden Ashbridge attends the
grade school. The family home is on
Lexington Drive at North Orange Street, and is one of Glendale’s attractive
homes.
From
“History of Glendale and Vicinity” by John Calvin Sherer. The Glendale Publishing
Company, c. 1922 F. M. Broadbooks and J. C. Sherer. P. 327 –329. Photos of John Robert White, Jr. and Rose L.
White are on pages 325 and 326.
