William Curtis Bok (September 7, 1897 - May 22, 1962) was a Pennsylvania jurist, philanthropist and writer. Heir to an enormous fortune, he was also a devout Quaker and an avid sailor.
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Born in Wyncote, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia, he was the son of Edward W. Bok, editor-in-chief of the Ladies Home Journal, and Mary Louise Curtis, the only child and heir of Cyrus H. K. Curtis, founder of the Curtis Publishing Company. His father won the 1920 Pulitzer Prize for biography. His mother founded the Curtis Institute of Music.
He graduated from the Hill School in Pottstown, Pennsylvania (1915), and attended Williams College in Williamstown, Massachusetts. He left college to join the U.S. Navy during World War I, and returned to study law at the University of Virginia, graduating in 1921.[1]
He worked on several public service projects before forming a law partnership with Robert Dechert and Owen B. Rhodes in 1930. He served as an assistant district attorney in Philadelphia, 1929-32, and unsuccessfully ran for district attorney in 1935. Appointed an Orphans Court judge the following year, he became president judge of the Court of Common Pleas in 1937.[2]
His most famous opinion was on obscenity in literature — Commonwealth of Pennsylvania v. Gordon et al., Court of Quarter Sessions, Philadelphia, June 1948. In March 1948, the Philadelphia Vice Squad raided 54 booksellers, confiscating works by authors such as Erskine Caldwell, James T. Farrell, William Faulkner, and Calder Willingham. In an elegantly-written opinion, Bok found that the books were "obvious efforts to show life as it is," and that Pennsylvania could not censor them:[2]
“It will be asked whether one would care to have one’s young daughter read these books. I suppose that by the time she is old enough to wish to read them she will have learned the biologic facts of life and the words that go with them. There is something seriously wrong at home if those facts have not been met and faced and sorted by then; it is not children so much as parents that should receive our concern about this. I should prefer that my own three daughters meet the facts of life and the literature of the world in my library than behind a neighbor’s barn, for I can face the adversary there directly. If the young ladies are appalled by what they read, they can close the book at the bottom of page one; if they read further, they will learn what is in the world and in its people, and no parents who have been discerning with their children need fear the outcome. Nor can they hold it back, for life is a series of little battles and minor issues, and the burden of choice is on us all, every day, young and old.”[3]
In 1958, he was elected a justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, serving until his death.[2]
He served as president of the Philadelphia Orchestra Association, but resigned after his Board forced the resignation of conductor Leopold Stokowski.[4] He was an officer of the Curtis Institute of Music, and founded the Philadelphia Forum, a cultural boosterism group that sponsored lectures, concerts and art exhibits. He was a member of the Committee of Seventy, a Philadelphia watchdog organization that promoted good government.[1]
He directed his father's American Foundation, which promoted world peace. A supporter of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's efforts to normalize relations between the United States and the Soviet Union, Bok made a two-month tour of Russia in 1932, then stayed on for three additional months, working in a factory and as a chauffeur.[1] He wrote an idealistic book about life in the Socialist Republic, which landed him on the July 17, 1933 cover of Time Magazine.[5]
He wrote many legal opinions and made contributions to law journals. His first three novels were courtroom dramas. He was a strong opponent of capital punishment, and in Star Wormwood (1959), he used the most heinous crime imaginable to argue that it was still unjustified.[2] Bok was an avid sailor, and twice sailed a 42-foot ketch across the Atlantic Ocean. His final novel was a romance in which a sailor on a voyage reads a love letter each day.
Non-fiction:
Fiction:
He had one sibling, Cary W. Bok (1905-1970), who unsuccessfully tried to run the Curtis Publishing Company in its final years. The younger brother settled in Camden, Maine.[6]
On May 25, 1924, he married Margaret Adams Plummer, and they had three children: Derek Curtis Bok, Benjamin Plummer Bok, and Margaret Welmoet Bok Roland Holst. The marriage ended in divorce.
On November 25, 1934, he married Nellie Lee Holt (1901-1984), the director of religious education at Stephens College for Women in Columbia, Missouri, who had studied with Mahatma Gandhi.[7] They had two daughters, Rachel Bok Kise Goldman and Enid Curtis Bok Schoettle Okum.
He and his second wife built a famous house in Gulph Mills, Pennsylvania, with Art Deco interiors by Wharton Esherick (1935-37).[8] Demolished in 1989, some of its interiors survive at the Philadelphia Museum of Art[9] and the Wolfsonian Museum in Miami, Florida.
Swarthmore College awarded him an honorary degree in 1960.
Bok's legal colleague, Jerome J. Shestack, wrote of him: "His deep and abiding sympathy for the human condition was the hallmark both of his courtroom and of his life."[2]
His papers are housed at Princeton University and the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.
His son, Derek Curtis Bok, became a lawyer, dean of Harvard Law School, and president of Harvard University.