White's death in 1915 the White Estate will publicly release all of her unpublished writings online. At the Toronto General Conference Session in 2000, the world church expanded the mission of the organization to include a responsibility for promoting Adventist history for the entire denomination. The mission of the White Estate is to circulate Ellen White's writings, translate them, and provide resources for helping to better understand her life and ministry. The White Estate has branch offices and research centers at Adventist universities and colleges around the world with at least one center in each division of the world church.
It has an independent and self-perpetuating board, but the organization receives an annual allocation just like other departments of the world headquarters. The headquarters is located at the General Conference in Silver Spring, Maryland, where it functions as a quasi-independent department of the denomination. White Estate, Incorporated, or simply the ( Ellen) White Estate, is an organization created in 1933 by the five trustees named in Ellen G. White's last will and testament to act as the custodian of her writings, which Seventh-day Adventists consider as divinely inspired.