Difference between revisions of "History of student housing"

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(New page: History of student housing. == College Hall == Housing at Columbia has had a rather interesting history. The first mention of dormitories happened during the King's College days. The...)
 
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Nicholas Murray Butler, once assuming the Presidency in 1902, threw out Low's intention to focus exclusively on the city, and set about trying to make Columbia more of a national university. In doing so, he put forth the first major effort to house undergraduates at any leading American university. The Harvard we know today, with its Houses fronting the Charles River, was not built until the 1920s. The same is also true for Yale's residential colleges. Yet a full two decades before, Columbia had already taken the step of housing its undergraduates. It is to Butler that we can attribute the return of student housing to Columbia since the Forty-Ninth Street campus, and indeed, the first serious commitment to house students since the days of King's College.
 
Nicholas Murray Butler, once assuming the Presidency in 1902, threw out Low's intention to focus exclusively on the city, and set about trying to make Columbia more of a national university. In doing so, he put forth the first major effort to house undergraduates at any leading American university. The Harvard we know today, with its Houses fronting the Charles River, was not built until the 1920s. The same is also true for Yale's residential colleges. Yet a full two decades before, Columbia had already taken the step of housing its undergraduates. It is to Butler that we can attribute the return of student housing to Columbia since the Forty-Ninth Street campus, and indeed, the first serious commitment to house students since the days of King's College.
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==Further Reading==
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*[http://www.college.columbia.edu/cct/sep05/cover.php Home on the Heights: 100 Years of Housing at Columbia]
  
 
== Significant contributors ==
 
== Significant contributors ==
  
 
* Tao Tan
 
* Tao Tan

Revision as of 13:12, 22 March 2007

History of student housing.

College Hall

Housing at Columbia has had a rather interesting history. The first mention of dormitories happened during the King's College days. The second home of King's College after the Trinity Church schoolhouse, College Hall, was a building that outshone its colonial counterparts in every respect when it was erected it 1760. Student quarters were no exception. The layout of the original College Hall (demolished in 1857) was a row of rooms, of dimensions 18" x 21". Attached to this giant room were two smaller anterooms, measuring 9" x 9", next to each other. The total size of these rooms was 540 square feet. When these rooms were assigned to students, the 378-s.f. room was designated as a 'sleeping area' while each 81-s.f. anteroom was a personal study. Yes, Columbia University once boasted 540-s.f. doubles.

Another reason for the size of these rooms was that the professors and the President also lived within College Hall. In this case, the two 81-s.f. anterooms served as a bedchamber and as a study, and the 378-s.f. main room served as a classroom by day and a living room by night. Yet, they were still 540-s.f. rooms. Small wonder then, that a few years after King's College was reconstituted as Columbia College, the faculty and President took over College Hall entirely. In fact, the first thing Columbia's ninth President, Charles King, did was to move his rather sizable family into College Hall. When King presided over the move to the Forty-Ninth Street campus, the first thing he did then was order the construction of a 25-room President's House. Undergraduate student housing at Columbia was not looking good.

49th Street campus

By the time the Forty-Ninth Street campus reached full-build during the end of the Barnard presidency, student housing had made something of a comeback. Hamilton Hall, a dormitory, had been erected, but provided nowhere near enough space to hold Columbia's exploding student population. The statue of Alexander Hamilton in front of our present Hamilton Hall once stood in front of the other Hamilton Hall. Moreover, Barnard (and his two successors, Low, and Butler) were at best indifferent and at worst openly hostile to undergraduates, proposing more than a few times to transform the undergraduate college into a 'fast-track' into the graduate and professional faculties, moving it out to Westchester County, or disbanding it altogether.

Seth Low

By the time Seth Low assumed the Presidency, undergraduate life had taken a different turn. Paraphrasing the popular Biblical passage, Low declared "A university that is set upon a hill cannot be hid." His new Columbia University, moved to spacious and grand quarters on the hill of Morningside Heights, would be a university dedicated solely to the prosperity of the city and its education of its inhabitants. Low wanted no dormitories. Rather, he envisioned that students would come to Columbia for a day of classes, and then return home to their lives in the city. Where Butler Library now stands was once a vista where once could view the rise of New York City all the day to the tip of lower Manhattan. Low envisioned that students would, upon graduation, exit from the campus through that opening, back into the city from whence they came. By the 1930s, that view was hideously obstructed by row houses that clashed rather egregiously with the rest of Columbia's neoclassical architecture, and thus provided the logical place to build Columbia's new research library.

Nicholas Murray Butler

Nicholas Murray Butler, once assuming the Presidency in 1902, threw out Low's intention to focus exclusively on the city, and set about trying to make Columbia more of a national university. In doing so, he put forth the first major effort to house undergraduates at any leading American university. The Harvard we know today, with its Houses fronting the Charles River, was not built until the 1920s. The same is also true for Yale's residential colleges. Yet a full two decades before, Columbia had already taken the step of housing its undergraduates. It is to Butler that we can attribute the return of student housing to Columbia since the Forty-Ninth Street campus, and indeed, the first serious commitment to house students since the days of King's College.

Further Reading

Significant contributors

  • Tao Tan