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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
In the last two decades of the nineteenth century Columbia College in the city of New York emerged as a modern university. Years of reform agitation culminated in major innovations: a graduate school of political science, Barnard College for women, Teachers College, expanded library facilities, and revised governing statutes. These changes reflected not merely national trends, though the obvious successes of Johns Hopkins and Harvard played important roles, but also the confluence of a number of features particular to Columbia. New faculty members—most importantly John Burgess—arrived with training from the research-oriented German universities. The governing board of trustees began, for the first time, to reflect New York's commercial and internationally oriented classes. Similarly, a generation of post-Civil War liberal arts graduates, having found their classical education inadequate to industrial America, now provided organized pressure for curriculum reform and more advanced studies. But underlying these, were two and a half decades of agitation by Columbia's President F. A. P. Barnard for a university not a college—twenty-five years of hope and frustration.
1. On the changes at Columbia at the end of the nineteenth century, see Matthews, Brander (ed.), A History of Columbia University, 1754-1904 (New York: The Macmillan Company, 1904), pp. 202–305; Butler, Nicholas Murray, Across the Busy Years (New York: Charles Scribners' Sons, 1939), I, 134-87; Burgess, John W., Reminiscences of an American Scholar (New York: Columbia University Press, 1934), pp. 191-244. See also the Columbia University Bicentennial Series volumes on the Faculty of Political Science, Teachers College, Barnard College, and the School of Library Service.Google Scholar
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8. Ibid. , p. 165; Butler, , Across, I, 64-69.Google Scholar
9. In this, the Columbia trustees differed little from most college supervisory bodies. See Metzger, Walter P., Academic Freedom in the Age of the University (New York: Columbia University Press, 1955), pp. 29–30.Google Scholar
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