Rochester's Hope: Albert David Kaiser

Rochester's Hope

The University of Rochester's Connection to
"Our Quietest Neighbor"

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Albert David Kaiser

Albert Kaiser in Interpres

From the 1909 Interpres

Born in Rochester in 1887, Albert David Kaiser earned his Bachelors Degree from the University of Rochester in 1909. Then, following medical school, he returned to Rochester to begin his dedicated affiliation with the field of medicine, particularly in the area of public health. Dr. Kaiser was the Chief of Pediatrics at Rochester General Hospital and a professor at the University of Rochester Medical School. During World War I, Dr Kaiser traveled to Vichy, France, and worked in the Contagious Disease Unit. Later, during his many travels around the world, Dr. Kaiser regularly conducted free local clinics for ill children. A recipient of numerous awards, Dr. Kaiser was also the City of Rochester Health Officer from 1945-55, president of the Rochester Academy of Medicine, and a member of the University of Rochester Board of Trustees until his death in 1955.

 

"As a physician he knew how deep and dangerous was the wound he carried within him. Men are forgiven if they become jealous of the treasure of life and guard it against any further curtailment or dissipation. Here surely was the final demonstration of his compassion for us, his idealism as a humanitarian, his faith in the high purpose of life. He reached into his storehouse where his hand felt the bottom, and gave it all to us."

From the eulogy given for Dr. Kaiser on November 5, 1955 at the First Baptist Church, by Cornelis Willem de Kiewiet, fifth president of the University of Rochester (1951-61). During de Kiewiet's presidency, the women's and men's colleges were united on the River Campus; a residence hall was named in de Kiewiet's honor in 1966.

 
Dr. Albert Kaiser's stoneAlbert Kaiser's stone
 
Cetic Cross

The Celtic Cross, like any Christian cross, alludes to a painful death. Yet, since the cross is empty, it also suggests resurrection and victory over death. Further, the cross is a form of axis mundi, or "world axis," joining the horizontal with the vertical, earth to heaven. Prominent on the Celtic cross is the unbroken knot, symbolizing the lasting ties between the deceased and his/her loved ones and, above all, the firm ties to God. Theologically speaking, the beginningless, endless knot suggests that God was, is, and shall ever be.