The history of Duke University began when Brown's Schoolhouse, a private subscription school in Randolph County, North Carolina (in the present-day town of Trinity), was founded in 1838.[1] The school was renamed to Union Institute Academy in 1841, Normal College in 1851, and to Trinity College in 1859. Finally moving to Durham in 1892, the school grew rapidly, primarily due to the generosity of Washington Duke and Julian S. Carr, powerful and respected Methodists who had grown wealthy through the tobacco industry. In 1924, Washington Duke's son, James B. Duke, established The Duke Endowment, a $40 million (about $430 million in 2005 dollars) trust fund, some of which was to go to Trinity College. The president thus renamed the school Duke University, as a memorial to Washington Duke and his family.[2]
Beginnings: 1838–1886
The school was organized by the Union Institute Society, a group of Methodists and Quakers under the leadership of Reverend Brantley York, and in 1841, North Carolina issued a charter for Union Institute Academy from the original Brown's Schoolhouse. The state legislature granted a rechartering of the academy as Normal College in 1851, and the privilege of granting degrees in 1853. To keep the school operating, the trustees agreed to provide free education for Methodist preachers in return for financial support by the church, and in 1859 the transformation was formalized with a name change to Trinity College and the adoption of the motto "Eruditio et Religio," meaning "Knowledge and Religion."
This era was a time of important firsts. In 1871, Chi Phi was organized as the school's first student social organization. In 1878, Mary, Persis, and Theresa Giles became the first women to be awarded degrees.[3] At that time, women were allowed only as day students.[3] In 1881, Yao-ju "Charlie" Soong from Weichau, China, enrolled, becoming the school's first international student.
Move to Durham: 1887–1900
In 1887, Yale-educated economist John Franklin Crowell became President of Trinity College. Committed to the German university model which emphasized research over recitation, Crowell directed a major revision in the curriculum and convinced the trustees to move to a more urban location. In 1892, Trinity opened in Durham, largely due to the generosity of Washington Duke and Julian S. Carr, powerful and respected Methodists who had grown prosperous through the tobacco industry (see American Tobacco Company and Duke Power). Carr donated the site, which today is Duke's East Campus, while Washington Duke contributed $100,000 for the endowment and construction of a female dormitory named after his daughter Mary, with the stipulation of placing women on an "equal footing with men".[3]
John C. Kilgo became president in 1894 and greatly increased the interest of the Duke family in Trinity. Washington Duke offered three gifts of $100,000 (about $2,200,000 in 2005 dollars) each for endowment. Trinity was the first white institution of higher education in the South to invite Booker T. Washington to speak (in 1900). In 1896 Joseph Maytubby became the first Native American graduate of Trinity.
Bassett Affair: 1903
In 1903, a controversy arose that would eventually lead to a significant event in the evolution of academic freedom in U.S. higher education. This series of events is known as the "Bassett Affair." Popular professor John Spencer Bassett published an article in the South Atlantic Quarterly entitled "Stirring Up the Fires of Race Antipathy" in October 1903. In the article, he spoke about improving race relations and gave praise to numerous African Americans. Near the end of the article, he wrote "...Booker T. Washington [is] the greatest man, save General Lee, born in the South in a hundred years..."[4] This led to an outpouring of anger from powerful Democratic party leaders as well as the media and public. Many demanded that Bassett be fired and encouraged parents to take their children out of the university. Resulting from immense public pressure, Bassett offered his resignation if the Board of Trustees requested that he do so. The Board of Trustees then held a meeting to decide the fate of Bassett. In the end, they voted 18-7 not to accept the resignation citing academic freedom. In their decision, they wrote, "We are particularly unwilling to lend ourselves to any tendency to destroy or limit academic liberty, a tendency which has, within recent years, manifested itself in some conspicuous instances, and which has created a feeling of uneasiness for the welfare of American colleges [...] We cannot lend countenance to the degrading notion that professors in American colleges have not an equal liberty of thought and speech with all other Americans."[4] In 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt commended Trinity and Bassett's courageous stand for academic freedom while speaking to the university. He told the school, "You stand for Academic Freedom, for the right of private judgment, for a duty more incumbent upon the scholar than upon any other man, to tell the truth as he sees it, to claim for himself and to give to others the largest liberty in seeking after the truth."[4]
Blue Devils: 1922
The mascot for Duke's athletic teams, the Blue Devil, has an interesting history. As World War I ended, Duke's Board of Trustees, then called the "Trinity College Board of Trustees," lifted their quarter-century ban of football on campus, leading to an interest in naming the athletic teams.[5] The team was then known as the Trinity Eleven, the Blue and White, or the Methodists (as opposed to the Baptists of nearby rival Wake Forest University). Because of the ambiguity, the student newspaper, the Trinity Chronicle (now called The Chronicle) launched a campaign to create a new mascot. Nominations for a new team name included Catamounts, Grizzlies, Badgers, Dreadnaughts, and Captains. The Trinity Chronicle editor narrowed the many nominations down to those that utilized the school colors of dark blue and white. The narrowed list consisted of Blue Titans, Blue Eagles, Polar Bears, Blue Devils, Royal Blazes, and Blue Warriors. None of the nominations proved to be a clear favorite, but the name Blue Devils elicited criticism that could potentially engender opposition on campus. That year, the football season passed with no official selection.
During the 1922–1923 academic year, campus student leaders and the editors of the two other student publications, The Archive and The Chanticleer, decided that the newspaper staff should decide the name on their own because the nomination process had proved inconclusive. Editor-in-chief William H. Lander and managing editor Mike Bradshaw began referring to the athletic teams as the Blue Devils. Though the name was not officially used that year, no opposition to the name arose (surprising many). The Chronicle's staff continued to use the name and eventually, "Blue Devils" caught on.
Birth of Duke University: 1924–1938
On December 11, 1924, James B. Duke established The Duke Endowment, a $40 million trust fund (equivalent to $711 million in 2023[6]), the annual income of which was to be distributed in the Carolinas among hospitals, orphanages, the Methodist Church, three colleges, and a university built around Trinity College. President William Preston Few insisted that the university be named Duke University, and James B. Duke agreed on the condition that it be a memorial to his father and family.
The university grew up quickly. Duke's original campus (now East Campus) was rebuilt from 1925 to 1927 with Georgian-style buildings. The School of Religion and Graduate School opened in 1926. By 1930, the majority of the Gothic Revival buildings on the campus one mile (1.6 km) west were completed in order to accommodate the Undergraduate Trinity College for men as well as the professional schools. The Women's College on East Campus opened in 1930, at the same time as the men's Trinity College, the Medical School, and the Hospital opened on West Campus. The Law School, founded in 1904, was reorganized in 1930. The School of Nursing was founded in 1931, and the construction of Duke Chapel was complete in 1935. The J. Deryl Hart House, the official residence for Duke's presidents, was completed in 1934. In 1938, the School of Forestry (later becoming the School of the Environment) opened. That same year, Duke's football team, deemed the "Iron Dukes," went unscored upon the entire regular season, finally giving up a touchdown to USC in the final minute of the 1939 Rose Bowl loss. Shortly thereafter, Duke University became the thirty-fourth member of the Association of American Universities.
Expansion and growth: 1939–1992
Human progress never rolls in on the wheels of inevitability. It comes through the tireless efforts and the persistent work of dedicated individuals who are willing to be co-workers with God. And without this hard work, time itself becomes an ally of the primitive forces of irrational emotionalism and social stagnation. And so, it is necessary to help time – and to recognize that the time is always right to do what is right.
Engineering, which had been taught since 1903, became a separate school in 1939. In athletics, Duke hosted and competed in the only Rose Bowl game ever played outside of California in Wallace Wade Stadium in 1942. Up until 1963, Duke University was a whites-only school, in both students and faculty.[8] That year, Duke desegregated when five black students, Mary Harris, Gene Kendall, Wilhelmina Reuben-Cooke, Cassandra Smith Rush, and Nathaniel White, enrolled at the university. The university currently has a scholarship named in their honor.[9] Increased activism on campus during the 1960s sparked Martin Luther King Jr. to speak to the university on the civil rights movement's progress on November 14, 1964. The overflow audience in Page Auditorium necessitated that organizers put the speech on loudspeakers to an outside crowd.[1] Another memorable incident in Duke's history towards racial equality was The Silent Vigil at Duke University, which lasted from April 4, 1968, to April 12, 1968. Provoked by the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., students, faculty, and nonacademic workers participated in The Silent Vigil at Duke University, a peaceful protest that not only demanded collective bargaining rights for the campus' unofficial workers' union, but also advocated against racial discrimination in the local area.
The former governor of North Carolina, Terry Sanford, was elected president in 1969, propelling the Fuqua School of Business's opening. Additionally, the William R. Perkins library completion in 1969 doubled the library's services and increased the collection's total space by five hundred percent. In 1971, the Institute of Policy Sciences and Public Affairs was founded. The separate Woman's College merged back with Trinity as the liberal arts college for both men and women in 1972 and the Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture opened in 1983.[10][11]Duke University Hospital, containing units for medicine, surgery, pediatrics, and obstetrics/gynecology, was finished in 1980. The Bryan University Center, a student union of sorts, was fully constructed two years later. Duke's first NCAA championship was captured by the men's soccer team in 1986. This was followed by the men's basketball team back-to-back championships in 1991 and 1992 under the leadership of Hall of Fame Coach Mike Krzyzewski.
Recent history: 1993–present
Duke University's growth and academic focus have dramatically increased the university's reputation as an academic and research institution in recent years. In 1993, Duke's three-member team finished in first place in the prestigious William Lowell Putnam Mathematical Competition, earning the title of the best collegiate undergraduate math team in the United States and Canada. Duke would repeat as champions again in 1996 and 2000. In nine out of the past ten years, Duke's team has finished in the top three, the only school besides Harvard to do so. Since 1992, five Duke students have been named Putnam Fellows.[12]
In 1998, Duke President Nan Keohane initiated a five-year $1.5 billion Campaign for Duke fundraising effort. Former President George H. W. Bush delivered the commencement address, following Jimmy Carter's lead the year before. Edmund T. Pratt, Jr. ('47) endowed the Pratt School of Engineering with a $35 million gift in 1999. A year later, major plans for an overhaul of the residence life structure were approved. In the 2000s (decade), campus growth has shown no signs of slowing down (see Construction projects at Duke University). The Campaign for Duke ended in 2003 with $2.36 billion raised, making it the fifth largest campaign in the history of American higher education.[13]
In the 2004 fiscal year, research expenditures surpassed $490 million, leading to a myriad of important breakthroughs.[14] The Duke Global Health Research Building, one of four laboratories in the U.S. attempting to "develop new vaccines, drugs, and tests to fight infectious diseases for a Duke-led consortium of universities," broke ground. Also undergoing construction was the Duke Smart House, a 4,500-square-foot (420 m2) research center in which undergraduates explore resource-efficient design.
More recent research includes a blueprint for an invisibility cloak using "metamaterials"[15] and Duke researchers' involvement in mapping the final human chromosome, which made world news as the Human Genome Project was finally complete.[16]
Sustainability
Duke University has undertaken a number of initiatives designed to improve campus sustainability. The school receives over 30% of its energy needs from wind and hydroelectric power sources, making it one of the top five purchasers of renewable energy amongst organizations in the field of higher education. The school makes an effort to buy food from local growers, and adjusts the menus of its eateries seasonally. All of the dining establishments on campus use fair trade coffee, recycled napkins, and are required to recycle and compost.
The Duke campus presently features 17 projects which are LEED-certified, and all future campus buildings will be required to meet this same certification standard. A plan to redesign a 200-acre (0.81 km2) area of the central campus, which will integrate sustainable practices at all levels of its construction, is also currently under development.
As a result of its campus wide efforts at sustainability, Duke University received a B+ grade from the Sustainable Endowments Institute's College Sustainability Report Card 2008.[17]
J.F. Kilgo inaugurated as president; Washington Duke donates $300,000 for endowment
1900
Trinity becomes first white institution of higher education in the south to invite Booker T. Washington to speak; first Native American student graduates
1903
Bassett Affair
1922
Chronicle editors coin the term Blue Devils for athletic teams
1924
James B. Duke establishes the $40 million Duke Endowment, propelling the final name change to Duke University
The Duke lacrosse case ends with the accuser discredited, the three charged players declared innocent, and the prosecutor who pursued the case being disbarred.
2010
The men's lacrosse team wins its first national title.
Bryan, John M. Duke University: An Architectural Tour ( Princeton Architectural Press, 2000) online.
Durden, Robert F. The Launching of Duke University, 1924-1949 (1993)
Durden, Robert F. "Donnybrook at Duke: The Gross-Edens Affair of 1960: Part I." North Carolina Historical Review 71.3 (1994): 331-357.
Gifford, James F. Jr. Undergraduate Medical Education and the Elective System: Experience with the Duke Curriculum, 1966 – 1975 (Duke University Press, 1978).
Kean, Melissa. Desegregating Private Higher Education in the South: Duke, Emory, Rice, Tulane, and Vanderbilt (LSU Press, 2008) online
Longfield, Bradley J. "" Eruditio et Religio": religion at Duke between the world wars." Methodist history 35.1 (1996): 43-56. online
Patel, Amit. "A Great Leap Forward: Department-Building in the Sciences at Duke University and the Medical School." (2006).
Segal, Theodore D. Point of Reckoning: The Fight for Racial Justice at Duke University (Duke University Press, 2021) online.
Donald Ray JohnstonArmy Medal of HonorLahir(1947-11-19)19 November 1947Columbus, GeorgiaMeninggal21 Maret 1969(1969-03-21) (umur 21)Provinsi Tay Ninh, Republik VietnamTempat pemakamanFort Benning Post Cemetery, Fort Benning, GeorgiaPengabdianAmerika SerikatDinas/cabangAngkatan Darat Amerika SerikatLama dinas1968 - 1969KesatuanResimen Kavaleri ke-8, Divisi Kavaleri ke-1Perang/pertempuranPerang Vietnam †PenghargaanMedal of Honor Donald Ray Johnston (19 November 1947 –…
Artikel ini membutuhkan rujukan tambahan agar kualitasnya dapat dipastikan. Mohon bantu kami mengembangkan artikel ini dengan cara menambahkan rujukan ke sumber tepercaya. Pernyataan tak bersumber bisa saja dipertentangkan dan dihapus.Cari sumber: HDAS TV – berita · surat kabar · buku · cendekiawan · JSTOR HDAS TVPT HDAS Rizki DiandraSoreang, Kabupaten Bandung, Jawa BaratIndonesiaSaluranDigital: 35 UHF (multipleksing TVRI Panyandakan)Virtual: 7SloganMedia…
الوشم الاسم الكامل نادي الوشم السعودي الاسم المختصر WFC الألوان الأزرق والأبيض والبرتقالي تأسس عام 1967 (منذ 57 سنة) الملعب ملعب نادي الوشمشقراء، السعودية البلد السعودية الدوري دوري الدرجة الثانية السعودي 2022–23 السابع الإدارة المالك …
President of the United States from 1923 to 1929 For the Vermont state representative, see Calvin Galusha Coolidge. John Calvin Coolidge redirects here. For his father, see John Calvin Coolidge Sr. Calvin CoolidgeCoolidge in 191930th President of the United StatesIn officeAugust 2, 1923 – March 4, 1929Vice President None (1923–1925)[a] Charles G. Dawes(1925–1929) Preceded byWarren G. HardingSucceeded byHerbert Hoover29th Vice President of the United StatesIn office…
Bagian dari seri mengenai Sejarah Indonesia Prasejarah Manusia Jawa 1.000.000 BP Manusia Flores 94.000–12.000 BP Bencana alam Toba 75.000 BP Kebudayaan Buni 400 SM Kerajaan Hindu-Buddha Kerajaan Kutai 400–1635 Kerajaan Tarumanagara 450–900 Kerajaan Kalingga 594–782 Kerajaan Melayu 671–1347 Kerajaan Sriwijaya 671–1028 Kerajaan Sunda 662–1579 Kerajaan Galuh 669–1482 Kerajaan Mataram 716–1016 Kerajaan Bali 914–1908 Kerajaan Kahuripan 1019̵…
1999 video game This article is about the 1999 video game. For the 2020 remake, see Resident Evil 3 (2020 video game). For other uses, see Resident Evil 3 (disambiguation). RE3 redirects here. For other uses, see RE3 (disambiguation). 1999 video gameResident Evil 3: NemesisNorth American PlayStation cover artDeveloper(s)CapcomPublisher(s) Capcom PlayStation, WindowsJP/NA: CapcomPAL: Eidos InteractiveDreamcastJP/NA: CapcomPAL: Virgin Interactive Entertainment[3]GameCubeWW: Capcom Director…
Jump the SharkEpisode The X-FilesNomor episodeMusim 9Episode 15SutradaraCliff BolePenulisVince GilliganJohn ShibanFrank SpotnitzKode produksi9ABX15Tanggal siar21 April 2002Durasi44 menitBintang tamu Bruce Harwood sebagai John Fitzgerald Byers Tom Braidwood sebagai Melvin Frohike Dean Haglund sebagai Richard Langly Stephen Snedden sebagai Jimmy Bond Zuleikha Robinson sebagai Yves Adele Harlow Michael McKean sebagai Morris Fletcher Jim Fyfe sebagai Kimmy Belmont[1] Kronologi episode …
Church in Missouri, United StatesSt. Boniface Roman Catholic Church37°43′34″N 89°52′18″W / 37.72611°N 89.87167°W / 37.72611; -89.87167LocationPerryville, MissouriCountryUnited StatesDenominationRoman Catholic ChurchHistoryFounded1865Consecrated1868ArchitectureCompleted1869AdministrationArchdioceseArchdiocese of St. Louis St. Boniface Parish Church and Parish was a Roman Catholic church in Perryville, Missouri. History Two major waves of German migration to Per…
Series of earthquakes in central Oklahoma, southern Kansas, and northern Texas This article is about earthquakes in Oklahoma and vicinity since 2009. For other earthquakes, see List of earthquakes in Oklahoma. Parts of this article (those related to earthquakes from 2017–present) need to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (July 2020) Oklahoma area earthquake swarmsSeismicity map of Oklahoma and vicinityTime2009–presentDuration…
2027 Super Bowl redirects here. For the Super Bowl at the completion of the 2027 season, see Super Bowl LXII. 2027 National Football League championship game Super Bowl LXISoFi Stadium in 2023DateFebruary 14, 2027StadiumSoFi Stadium, Inglewood, CaliforniaTV in the United StatesNetworkBroadcast:ABC/ESPNESPN Deportes (Spanish)Streaming:NFL+/NFL.com/NFL appESPN+Radio in the United StatesNetworkWestwood One ← LX Super Bowl LXII → Super Bowl LXI is the planned American football …
Head of state of the Republic of Rhodesia President of RhodesiaFlag of the president of Rhodesia (1970–1979)Longest servingClifford Dupont16 April 1970 – 31 December 1975StyleThe HonourableMember ofCabinet of RhodesiaResidenceGovernment House, Salisbury (now Harare)AppointerExecutive Council[1]Term lengthFive years,renewable once[1]Formation2 March 1970First holderClifford DupontFinal holderHenry Everard (Acting)Abolished1 June 1979Superseded byPresident of Zimbabwe Rhodesia …
Diego Barreto Informasi pribadiNama lengkap Diego Daniel Barreto CáceresTanggal lahir 16 Juli 1981 (umur 42)Tempat lahir Lambaré, ParaguayTinggi 1,82 m (5 ft 11+1⁄2 in)Posisi bermain GoalkeeperInformasi klubKlub saat ini Cerro PorteñoNomor 12Karier junior1996–2004 Cerro PorteñoKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)2004–2005 Cerro Porteño 16 (0)2005 Almería 0 (0)2006–2007 Cerro Porteño 70 (0)2007 Newell's Old Boys 0 (0)2008 → Cerro Porteño (pinjam) 4 (0)200…
Daniele Gasparetto Nazionalità Italia Altezza 195 cm Peso 80 kg Calcio Ruolo Difensore Squadra Sant'Agostino Carriera Giovanili 199?-2004 Montebelluna2004-2007 Atalanta Squadre di club1 2007-2008→ Legnano28 (0)2008-2009→ Modena13 (1)2009-2010→ Padova6 (0)2010-2014 Cittadella86 (7)2014-2017 SPAL77 (3)2017-2019 Ternana41 (2)2019-2021 Reggina28 (0)[1]2021-2023 Legnago51 (2)2023-Sant'Agostino0 (0) Nazionale 2005 Italia U-182 (…
Voce principale: Aurora Pro Patria 1919. Aurora Pro Patria 1919Stagione 2014-2015Sport calcio Squadra Pro Patria Allenatore Luís Oliveira (1ª-11ª)poi Aldo Monza (12ª-16ª)poi Marco Tosi (17ª-22ª)poi Marcello Montanari (23ª-) Presidente Pietro Vavassoripoi Carlo Filippipoi Pietro Vavassori Lega Pro17º posto (retrocesso in Serie D dopo i play-out) Coppa Italia Lega ProFase eliminatoria a gironi Maggiori presenzeCampionato: Serafini (36)Totale: Serafini (40) Miglior marcatoreCampionato…
Indonesian animated series This article is about Islamic religious animated series. For television series with same title that aired from 1999 to 2006, see Lorong Waktu (TV series). For scientific concept of traveling through time, see time travel. Lorong WaktuLorong Waktu poster on Vidio.comGenre Animation Science fiction Religion Comedy Based onLorong Waktu by Deddy MizwarWritten byAmiruddin OllandDirected by Deddy Mizwar Freddy Nindan Voices of Deddy Mizwar Santosa Amin Novalina Nasution Open…
Competitive form of ice skating This article is about ice speed skating. For speed skating on wheels, see inline speed skating. Speed skatingPaulien van Deutekom, Thialf, 2007Highest governing bodyInternational Skating UnionCharacteristicsMixed-sexYesPresenceOlympic1924 Speed skating is a competitive form of ice skating in which the competitors race each other in travelling a certain distance on skates. Types of speed skating are long-track speed skating, short-track speed skating, and mara…
Peta infrastruktur dan tata guna lahan di Komune Begnécourt. = Kawasan perkotaan = Lahan subur = Padang rumput = Lahan pertanaman campuran = Hutan = Vegetasi perdu = Lahan basah = Anak sungaiBegnécourt merupakan sebuah komune di departemen Vosges yang terletak pada sebelah timur laut Prancis. Lihat pula Komune di departemen Vosges Referensi INSEE lbsKomune di departemen Vosges Les Ableuvenettes Ahéville Aingeville Ainvelle Allarmont Ambacourt Am…
Crown worn by the Holy Roman Emperor Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman EmpireHeraldic depictionsDetailsCountryHoly Roman EmpireMadec. 962OwnerImperial Treasury The Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire (German: Reichskrone), a hoop crown (German: Bügelkrone) with a characteristic octagonal shape, was the coronation crown of the Holy Roman Emperor, probably from the late 10th century until the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806. The crown was used in the coronation of the King o…