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First university in the United States is a status asserted by more than one U.S. university. In the U.S. there is no official definition of what entitles an institution to be considered a university versus a college, and the common understanding of "university" has evolved over time. At the time of founding of many of the institutions in question, the U.S. didn't exist as a country. Furthermore, questions of institutional continuity sometimes make it difficult to determine the true "age" of any institution.
The 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica tells the story of the gradual emergence of U.S. "universities" thus[2]:
(In alphabetical order by full institutional name):
Harvard University calls itself "the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States" and this claim is only sometimes seriously challenged. William & Mary calls itself "America's second-oldest college", perhaps acknowledging Harvard's claim but in fact adding that it is William & Mary that is our nation's oldest college in its "antecedents".
It is possible to quibble over what year should be taken as Harvard's "real" founding date (Harvard uses the earliest possible one, 1636, when the institution was chartered by the Massachusetts Bay Colony). However, Harvard has operated since 1650 under the same corporation, the "President and Fellows of Harvard College"; thus Harvard has an unbroken continuous institutional history dating back that far.
One official Harvard web page for the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences [6] chooses to phrase this claim: "Founded in 1636, Harvard is America's oldest university."
As an historical curiosity, a College of Henricopolis or University of Henrico, near Jamestown, was chartered in 1618 and construction was possibly started, but was destroyed with the town in the Indian Massacre of 1622 and not rebuilt. At times, the College of William and Mary claimed itself to be the nation's first college "in its antecedents" and technically this is true -- W&M's charter or foundational concept was laid decades before Harvard's founding.
November 27, 1779 is the date of chartering of the "University of the State of Pennsylvania." [7]).
1791 is the year when the "University of Pennsylvania" was chartered.
These events are sometimes presented as if they were simply a change in name in a single institution, but the actual history, summarized in an article from Penn's archives department is complicated.
In brief, in 1779 the College of Philadelphia was directed by provost William Smith. One might have expected it to have become the "University of the State of Pennsylvania" but this did not occur. "Since the Revolutionary state legislature felt that the board of trustees led by Provost Smith contained too many suspected loyalist sympathizers, they created a new board of trustees." Thus, the University of the State of Pennsylvania was created de novo. A schism occurred, with an attenuated College of Philadelphia continuing under Dr. Smith's direction. In 1791 Pennsylvania adopted a new state constitution which merged the College of Philadelphia and the University of the State of Pennsylvania into the "University of Pennsylvania," with a board of trustees comprised of twelve men from each of the two parent institutions. "It is this institution and this board of trustees that has continued to this day."
On December 4, 1779, just eight days after the founding of the "University of the State of Pennsylvania", an event occurred which William and Mary describes [8] thus:
(For historical reasons, The College of William and Mary, as Dartmouth College and Boston College, continues to use "college" rather than "university" in its official name.)
On March 2, 1780 a "A CONSTITUTION OR FRAME OF GOVERNMENT, Agreed upon by the Delegates of the People of the STATE OF MASSACHUSETTS-BAY" was issued, containing this language:[9]
(It is not clear from context, either above or in the paragraphs that follow, that the constitution meant to draw any semantic distinction between "college" and "university." )
The University of Pennsylvania uses "America's First University" as a slogan and has an official, succinct statement of the argument supporting this claim:
"Penn does not claim to be America's first college, but it is America's first University. In the Anglo-American model, a college, by definition, is a faculty whose subject specialization is in a single academic field. This is usually arts and sciences (often referred to as "liberal arts"), but may also be one of the professions: law, medicine, theology, etc. A university, by contrast, is the co-existence, under a single institutional umbrella, of more than one faculty. Penn founded the first medical school in America. In that year, therefore, Penn became "America's first university." If you wish to take the position that "first university" means first institution of higher learning with the name "university," Penn also qualifies as first. In 1779, the Pennsylvania state legislature conferred a new corporate charter upon the College of Philadelphia, renaming it the "University of the State of Pennsylvania" (in 1791 still another new charter granted Penn its current name). No other American institution of higher learning was named "University" before Penn. So whether you take the "de facto" position (1765) or the "de jure" position (1779), Penn is indeed "America's first university." [13]
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The tone or style of this article or section may not be appropriate for Wikipedia. Specific concerns may be found on the talk page. See Wikipedia's guide to writing better articles for suggestions. (December 2007) |
1. What is a university? There are two definitions of a university used between the three schools mentioned above. The definition that Penn uses, given by Mark Frazier Lloyd, Director of the University Archives, is "the co-existence, under a single institutional umbrella, of more than one faculty." [15] The other definition was given by Stacy B. Gould, University Archivist for the College of William and Mary. She stated, "a course of graduate studies was the requisite for the status of university."
One modern dictionary (American Heritage, 4th edition) defines "university:"
Webster's 1913 dictionary says:
1a. A related question: To be a university, must an institution have "university" in its name? Boston College, Dartmouth College, and the College of William and Mary continue to name themselves as "colleges" for historical reasons, but each of these institutions is, in fact, a university.
2. What does it mean to be the "oldest" university? The statement "X is the oldest Y," generally refers the length of time that X has existed. (e.g. if Max is the oldest doctor, the reference is to Max's age. If Max is 50 years old, but only a doctor for 7 years, and Cindy is 43 years old and has been a doctor for 15 years, then Max is the older doctor.) In this instance, the "oldest" university is the one with the earliest date of founding.
Complications arise in the case of institutions, however, because in tangled corporate histories it is not always clear when old and new institutions should be regarded as the same. This arises in the case of Penn: is it correct to say that the College of Philadelphia changed its name to the University of the College of Pennsylvania? Or is it more correct to say that the latter was actually a completely new institution, which later merged with the College of Philadelphia to form the University of Pennsylvania? Such a judgment can hardly be anything other than opinion.
3. What does it mean to be the "first" university? The statement "X is the first Y," generally refers to the date on which X became a Y. (In the above example, Cindy was the first doctor of the two.) By this definition, the "first" university is the one which actually became a university before any of the others, regardless of when it was founded.
To complicate matters, a school which was termed a university in the 1700s would not meet the current criteria for such an institution. As an analog, no doctor who practiced medicine in the 1700s, even having attended medical school at the time and having received a formal education in the field would qualify to receive an M.D. under today's standards, and thus would not be considered a doctor. But it would be incorrect to state that there weren't any doctors in the 1700s. Similarly, it would be incorrect to state that there were no universities in the 1700s.
Harvard dates its own university status to 1780: "The first medical instruction given to Harvard students in 1781 and the founding of the Medical School in 1782 made it a university in fact as well as name." [18])
William & Mary traces its university status to 1779, "the first year of our law school and simultaneously our medicine and chemistry chair was still filled."
Penn claims to have become a university in 1765, when its medical school was created. [19] Penn was designated a university by the legislature of Pennsylvania (the first such U.S. institution of higher learning, beating William & Mary by only one week[citation needed]), fourteen years later, in 1779, although the institution did not receive its current name of "The University of Pennsylvania" until 1791.
Using our definitions above, Harvard is the "oldest university" in the United States as it was the first institution of higher education founded in the present United States (1636).
It is slightly more difficult to determine the first university, although Harvard may be disregarded as, by its own admission, it did not become a university until 1780, after both Pennsylvania and William & Mary.
Pennsylvania and William & Mary use different definitions of "university," as mentioned above. By Penn's de facto definition, Penn is the first of the two to become a university (1765). Using W&M's de jure definition, W&M is the first.
The facts are given above so that the reader can be allowed to make his/her own decision. Disagreement may arise in particular if the reader disagrees with the definitions of "university," "graduate studies," "oldest," or "first."
One possible alternate definition of university is an institution that grants the Ph.D. This would make Yale the first University, as it granted the first Ph.D. in North America in 1861. James Morris Whiton, PhD (Yale, 1861), wrote a dissertation that was only six pages long. [4] Yale also claims to have America's first "graduate school," founded in 1847, but the same source acknowledges that Harvard's first "graduate program" began 16 years earlier in 1831. And each of these is different from William & Mary's claim of "graduate studies." However, Georgetown University's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences was founded in 1820, conferring its first degree in 1821, making it the first graduate school in the United States.[5][citation needed]
Some classifications break institutions down even further. The widely-accepted Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching's classification (as of 2000) differentiates between "doctorate-granting institutions" and "Masters colleges and universities", each of which is broken down into even smaller distinctions. [20]) Note that Carnegie does not require an institution to grant the Ph.D. in order to be considered a university. Nor does US News and World Report in its annual ranking of colleges and universities. [21]
Johns Hopkins University stands out as a strong candidate for "first," as it is universally credited for bringing the German model of higher education (with a very strong emphasis on graduate studies and faculty research) to the United States. In fact, JHU does bill itself as "the first research university in the United States." [22]
Harvard and Penn sometimes claim to be "America's first university" and William & Mary claims to be "America's second-oldest college," but these claims are plausible only if "America" is limited to territory later incorporated into the United States of America. Several institutions with unequivocal university status were founded on the American continent in the 16th century. Their teaching would at first have been in Latin, as at Harvard College which was founded in the following century. They all suffered periods of closure at times of turmoil.
The first university in North America was the Royal University of Mexico, now the National Autonomous University of Mexico, or Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM). It was chartered by the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V on 21st September 1551 and opened on 25th January 1553.
The first university on the American mainland was the University of San Marcos (Universidad Nacional Mayor De San Marcos De Lima) in modern Peru, which received its charter from Charles V on 12th May 1551 and opened on 2nd January 1553. A papal bull confirmed its status in 1571. If a medical school is required to qualify as a full university, its Faculty of Medicine opened in 1573.
But the first university in the Americas was the University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, now the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo in the present-day Dominican Republic, which was originally a Dominican seminary but received a charter from Pope Paul III to become a university in 1538.
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