White Rats Club House, ca 1914.
The White Rats was a fraternal organization of Vaudeville actors founded by comedian, actor, and prizefighter George Fuller Golden. The group was based on the entertainment industry fraternity and charity the British Water Rats. In 1899, the Water Rats had helped Golden and his wife pay for their medical expenses in London after Ms. Golden fell ill. They eventually sponsored the couple's return to the United States. Golden was so moved that when he returned to New York, he founded the White Rats.
The organization's main aim was not charity, like the Water Rats. It was concerned with a more pressing problem which Vaudeville performers faced in New York. A monopolistic group, the Vaudeville Managers Association (VMA), threated the working rights of performers, keeping their wages low and maintaining an iron grip on their mobility. A year after the White Rats formed they began negotiations with the VMA. They organized a strike in February of 1901, which was quickly called off because performers had to secure contracts through the VMA itself.
The White Rats was ultimately disbanded in 1916 after another unsuccessful strike left members blacklisted from productions at any of the 10,000 theaters owned by one of the VMA's leaders. Founder of the White Rats, George Fuller Golden, never worked as an entertainer again.