These three NH leaders are outstanding examples of civics in action
During
a May 6 panel discussion at the Currier Museum of Art hosted by New
Hampshire Civics, retired Union Leader publisher Joseph McQuaid
illustrated civics in action by reading from the obituary of John Swope,
which had run in the paper that day.
Swope,
and two other New Hampshire citizens who have died in the last month,
exemplified what NH Civics aims to instill in today’s youth by
advocating for civics education in public schools.
Swope,
after an enriched childhood in a wealthy enclave north of New York
City, attended elite schools and graduated from Yale with a law degree.
He joined an insurance company in New Hampshire, rose through the ranks
and became president of Chubb in Concord, retiring some years ago.
It
is not in his employment success that he practiced civic involvement,
but certainly his civic involvement helped him and his company. Swope
demonstrated a side of civics that often is overlooked, namely
involvement in nonprofit organizations.
Swope
was a key participant in formation of the Capitol Center for the Arts,
was actively involved in NHPR and NHPBS, served as interim head of
public broadcasting in Washington, D.C., was prominent in philanthropic
and environmental causes, and donated a large tract of land in Concord
for outdoor recreation. He served on many boards, providing wise counsel
to them all, with a warm smile and sense of humor. He was a friend, and
a good one.
Justice
David H. Souter — Concord High, Harvard, lawyer, assistant attorney
general, deputy attorney general under Warren Rudman, attorney general,
superior court judge, NH Supreme Court justice, First Circuit judge and
Supreme Court Justice — died in early May.
Those
of us lucky enough to have known David will remember him as humble,
brilliant, thoughtful, funny and private. He was a student of the law
and a true conservative, confusing those in politics who think a
conservative Supreme Court justice should upend precedent in the name of
ideology, instead of caring for precedent and the rule of predictable
law. He treasured the law and rightly decided cases, understanding our
system and how it should be balanced.
Souter
largely was responsible for raising civics as an issue in New
Hampshire, at the urging of his friend Sandra Day O’Connor and made rare
public appearances in furtherance of the cause. He even endured many
seemingly endless meetings trying to plan for civics education in the
schools of his native state, often expressing frustration at the nature
of committee meetings (under his breath to me often sitting next to
him).
“An ignorant
people can never remain a free people,” he said, according to a New York
Times article published after his death. “Democracy cannot survive too
much ignorance. Not
understanding how power is allocated among the three branches of
government leaves a void that invites a strongman.”
In
a crisis, he said, “one person will come forward and say, ‘Give me
total power, and I will solve this problem.’” That was four years before
Donald J. Trump said in his first acceptance speech, “I alone can fix
it.”
Thank you,
Justice Souter. On the same day that John Swope died in Concord, Raymond
Truncellito died in Manchester. Ray, as he was known to his many
friends and insurance clients, was an intelligent man with many
interests. Like Swope, he exemplified the educated, involved citizen
civics education seeks to encourage.
Born
in New Jersey, Truncellito graduated from high school at 16, went to
Dartmouth to play football and graduated early, went to Columbia,
returned to Dartmouth as an assistant coach, met a lovely woman from
Manchester, married, and moved to his adopted home town to join a life
insurance company.
Ray
and Barbara raised five children, engaged in church and community
activities, and succeeded in business. Ray was actively involved in the
Boys & Girls Club, chaired the Easterseals New Hampshire board,
chaired the New Hampshire College (now SNHU) board and remained a
trustee emeritus to the end of his life, was active in his Catholic
parish and sang in the choir, and was named Manchester’s Citizen of the
Year.
Truncellito, 96,
impressed all who encountered him with his intellectual strength and
curiosity, his love of foreign languages, his interest in the
backgrounds of all he met, and his fantastic ability to remember every
play of every important football game he ever played (or saw).
All
three of these men are examples of what gaining knowledge about
government and community, and then taking that knowledge and acting on
it, can do to preserve and improve the community and society.
Let us be sure to pass it on.
Brad Cook is a Manchester attorney. The views expressed in this column are his own. He can be reached at bradfordcook01@gmail.com.