Reverend George Berkeley 
by Alfred Hart, 1731
Oil on canvas, 30" x 25" 
Redwood Library Painting Collection
Bishop George Berkeley

 b. Kilkenny, Ireland, March 12, 1684
d. Oxford, England, January 14, 1753
Irish philosopher, dean of Derry, bishop of Cloyne.
M.A. Dublin University.
Arrives in Newport in early 1729 - supposedly a temporary stay - on his way to Bermuda to establish a college with government (England) funds. The promised funds were to arrive later. 
While in Newport, purchases farm and house as a potential revenue source to establish the college. 
Promised funds never arrive, leaves for homeland in late summer of 1731. 
Gives his house, farm and his library to Yale College with the annual profits to be applied to the maintenance of three resident scholars. 
When built in 1729, his house "Whitehall" was in Newport (Middletown, Rhode Island, was set off from Newport in 1742). A museum today, Whitehall is located on Berkeley Avenue in Middletown. 
"Whitehall" has the distinction of being the first colonial house to be reproduced photographically in a national magazine in the United States (appears in the New York Sketch-Book, December, 1874). 
Berkeley has an interest in Trinity Church, frequently in pulpit. Presents Trinity with an organ in 1733. Infant daughter Lucia buried in church graveyard. 
A chapel named in his honor, Berkeley Chapel or Berkeley Memorial Church, is located off Indian Avenue, Middletown, RI. 
Legend has it that Berkeley wrote his Alciphron, or Minute Philosopher, at Hanging Rock, located within the Norman Bird Sanctuary, Middletown. 
Portrait of Rev. George Berkeley, ca. 1731, attributed to Alfred Hart, is in the collection of Redwood Library. 
 

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