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Bowdoin College

Bowdoin College (/ˈbdɪn/ (listen) BOH-din) is a private liberal arts college in Brunswick, Maine. When Bowdoin was chartered in 1794, Maine was still a part of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The college offers 34 majors and 36 minors, as well as several joint engineering programs with Columbia, Caltech, Dartmouth College, and the University of Maine.[4][5]

Bowdoin College
MottoUt Aquila Versus Coelum (Latin)
Motto in English
As an eagle towards the sky
TypePrivate liberal arts college
EstablishedJune 24, 1794; 228 years ago (1794-06-24)
AccreditationNECHE
Academic affiliations
Annapolis Group
Oberlin Group
CLAC
CBB Consortium
Space-grant
EndowmentUS$2.72 billion (2021)[1]
PresidentClayton Rose
Academic staff
228[2]
Students1,951 (Fall 2021)
Location, ,
US

43°54′31″N 69°57′46″W / 43.90861°N 69.96278°W / 43.90861; -69.96278Coordinates: 43°54′31″N 69°57′46″W / 43.90861°N 69.96278°W / 43.90861; -69.96278
CampusSuburban, 207 acres (84 ha)[3]
NewspaperThe Bowdoin Orient
ColorsBlack and White
   
NicknamePolar Bears
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IIINESCAC
MascotPolar bear
Websitewww.bowdoin.edu

The college was a founding member of its athletic conference, the New England Small College Athletic Conference, and the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Consortium, an athletic conference and inter-library exchange with Bates College and Colby College. Bowdoin has over 30 varsity teams, and the school mascot was selected as a polar bear in 1913 to honor Robert Peary, a Bowdoin alumnus who led the first successful expedition to the North Pole.[6] Between the years 1821 and 1921, Bowdoin operated a medical school called the Medical School of Maine.[7]

The main Bowdoin campus is located near Casco Bay and the Androscoggin River. In addition to its Brunswick campus, Bowdoin owns a 118-acre (48 ha) coastal studies center on Orr's Island[8] and a 200-acre (81 ha) scientific field station on Kent Island in the Bay of Fundy.[9]

History

Founding and 19th century

 
Bowdoin College, c. 1845 (Lithograph by Fitz Hugh Lane).

Bowdoin College was chartered in 1794 by the Massachusetts State Legislature and was later redirected under the jurisdiction of the Maine Legislature.[10] It was named for former Massachusetts governor James Bowdoin, whose son James Bowdoin III was an early benefactor.[11] At the time of its founding, it was the easternmost college in the United States, as it was located in Maine.[citation needed]

Bowdoin began to develop in the 1820s, a decade in which Maine became an independent state as a result of the Missouri Compromise and graduated U.S. President Franklin Pierce. The college also graduated two literary philosophers, the writers Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, both of whom graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1825. Pierce and Hawthorne began an official militia company called the 'Bowdoin Cadets'.[12]

From its founding, Bowdoin was known to educate the sons of the political elite and "catered very largely to the wealthy conservative from the state of Maine."[13] During the first half of the 19th century, Bowdoin required of its students a certificate of "good moral character" as well as knowledge of Latin and Ancient Greek, geography, algebra, and the major works of Cicero, Xenophon, Virgil and Homer.[14]

 
View of the campus from Coles Tower.

Harriet Beecher Stowe started writing her influential anti-slavery novel, Uncle Tom's Cabin, in Brunswick while her husband was teaching at the college, and Brigadier General (and Brevet Major General) Joshua Chamberlain, a Bowdoin alumnus and professor, was present at the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia at Appomattox Court House in 1865. Chamberlain, a Medal of Honor recipient who later served as governor of Maine, adjutant-general of Maine, and president of Bowdoin, fought at Gettysburg, where he was in command of the 20th Maine in defense of Little Round Top. Major General Oliver Otis Howard, class of 1850, led the Freedmen's Bureau after the war and later founded Howard University; Massachusetts Governor John Andrew, class of 1837, was responsible for the formation of the 54th Massachusetts; and William P. Fessenden (1823) and Hugh McCulloch (1827) both served as Secretary of the Treasury during the Lincoln Administration. However, the college's involvement in the Civil War was mixed, as Bowdoin had many ties to slave labor and the Confederacy.[citation needed]

With strained slave-relations between political parties, President Franklin Pierce appointed Jefferson Davis as his Secretary of War, and the college awarded the soon-to-be President of the Confederacy an honorary degree. The Jefferson Davis Award was given to a student who excelled in legal studies after a donation was given to the college by the United Daughters of the Confederacy.[15] The award, however, was discontinued in 2015, with the current college president citing it as inappropriate because it was named after someone "whose mission was to preserve and institutionalize slavery".[16] President Ulysses S. Grant, too, was given an honorary degree from the college in 1865. Seventeen Bowdoin alumni attained the rank of brigadier general during the Civil War, including James Deering Fessenden and Francis Fessenden; Ellis Spear, class of 1858, who served as Chamberlain's second-in-command at Gettysburg; and Charles Hamlin, class of 1857, son of Vice President Hannibal Hamlin.[citation needed]

20th century

 
Bowdoin included the Medical School of Maine from 1821 to 1921.

Although Bowdoin's Medical School of Maine closed its doors in 1921,[7] it produced Augustus Stinchfield, who received his M.D. in 1868 and became one of the co-founders of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. In 1877, the college would go on to graduate the infamous Charles Morse, the American banker who established a near-monopoly of the ice business in New York, which directly led to the financial Panic of 1907.[17] Another scientific alumnus is the controversial entomologist-turned-sexologist Alfred Kinsey, class of 1916.[citation needed]

The college went on to educate and eventually graduate Arctic explorers Robert E. Peary, class of 1877, and Donald B. MacMillan, class of 1898. Robert Peary named Bowdoin Fjord and Bowdoin Glacier after his alma mater.[18] Peary led the first successful expedition to the North Pole in 1908, and MacMillan, a member of Peary's crew, explored Greenland, Baffin Island, and Labrador in the schooner Bowdoin between 1908 and 1954. Bowdoin's Peary–MacMillan Arctic Museum[19] honors the two explorers, and the college's mascot, the polar bear, was chosen in 1913 to honor MacMillan, who donated a statue of a polar bear to his alma mater in 1917.[citation needed]

Wallace H. White, Jr., class of 1899, served as Senate Minority Leader from 1944 to 1947 and Senate Majority Leader from 1947 to 1949; George J. Mitchell, class of 1954, served as Senate Majority Leader from 1989 to 1995 before assuming an active role in the Northern Ireland peace process;[20] and William Cohen, class of 1962, spent twenty-five years in the House and Senate before being appointed Secretary of Defense in the Clinton Administration.[citation needed]

In 1970, the college became one of a very limited number of liberal arts colleges to make the SAT optional in the admissions process, and in 1971, after nearly 180 years as a small men's college, Bowdoin admitted its first class of women. Bowdoin also phased out fraternities in 1997, replacing them with a system of college-owned social houses.[21]

In 1970, Bowdoin began competing in the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Consortium, with Bates and Colby. The consortium became both an athletic rivalry and an academic exchange program. The three schools have produced numerous athletic competitions, most notably a football championship game and the Chase Regatta.[citation needed]

21st century

In 2001, Barry Mills, class of 1972, was appointed as the fifth alumnus president of the college.[citation needed]

On January 18, 2008, Bowdoin announced that it would eliminate loans for all new and current students receiving financial aid, replacing those loans with grants beginning with the 2008–2009 academic year.[22] President Mills stated, "Some see a calling in such vital but often low paying fields such as teaching or social work. With significant debt at graduation, some students will undoubtedly be forced to make career or education choices not based on their talents, interests, and promise in a particular field but rather on their capacity to repay student loans. As an institution devoted to the common good, Bowdoin must consider the fairness of such a result."[22]

In February 2009, following a US$10 million donation (equivalent to $12.63 million in 2021) by Subway Sandwiches co-founder and alumnus Peter Buck, class of 1952, the college completed a $250-million capital campaign. Additionally, the college has also recently completed major construction projects on the campus, including a renovation of the college's art museum and a new fitness center named after Peter Buck.[23]

On July 1, 2015, Clayton Rose succeeded Mills as president.[24]

Admissions

The acceptance rate for the class of 2023 was 8.9 percent. The applicant pool consisted of 9,332 candidates, up from 9,081 for the class of 2022.[25]

Class Admission Statistics
Class 2027 2026 2025 2024 2023
Applicants 10,966 9,376 9,325 9,402 9,332
Admits 850 862 822 861 845
Selectivity 7.75% 9.2% 8.8% 9.2% 9.1%
Matriculants ~500 (TBA) 508 517 464 499
SAT scores (TBA) 1340-1540 1320-1520 1330-1510 1330-1520

U.S. News & World Report classifies Bowdoin as "most selective."[26] Of enrolling students, 89% are in the top 10% of their high school graduating class.[27] Although Bowdoin does not require the SAT in admissions, all students must submit a score upon matriculation. The middle 50% SAT range for the verbal and math sections of the SAT is 660–750 and 660–750, respectively—numbers of only those submitting scores during the admissions process. The middle 50% ACT range is 30–33.[28]

The April 17, 2008, edition of The Economist noted Bowdoin in an article on university admissions: "So-called 'almost-Ivies' such as Bowdoin and Middlebury also saw record low admission rates this year (18% each). It is now as hard to get into Bowdoin, says the college's admissions director, as it was to get into Princeton in the 1970s."[29] Many students apply for financial aid, and around 85% of those who apply to receive aid. Bowdoin is a need-blind and no-loans institution.[22] While a significant portion of the student body hails from New England—including nearly 25% from Massachusetts and 10% from Maine—recent classes have drawn from an increasingly national and international pool. The median family income of Bowdoin students is $195,900, with 57% of students coming from the top 10% of highest-earning families and 17.5% from the bottom 60%.[30] Although Bowdoin once had a reputation for homogeneity (both ethnically and socioeconomically), a diversity campaign has increased the percentage of students of color in recent classes to more than 31%.[31] In fact, admission of minorities goes back at least as far as John Brown Russwurm 1826, Bowdoin's first African-American college graduate and the third African-American graduate of any American college.[32]

Academics

 
Bowdoin Chapel during the winter semester.

Course distribution requirements were abolished in the 1970s but were reinstated by a faculty majority vote in 1981 due to an initiative by oral communication and film professor Barbara Kaster. She insisted that distribution requirements would ensure students a more well-rounded education in a diversity of fields and therefore present them with more career possibilities. The requirements of at least two courses in each of the categories of natural sciences/mathematics, social and behavioral sciences, humanities/fine arts, and foreign studies (including languages) took effect for the class of 1987 and have been gradually amended since then. Current requirements require one course each in natural sciences, quantitative reasoning, visual and performing arts, international perspectives, and difference, power, and inequity. A small writing-intensive course, called a first-year seminar, is also required.[33] The most popular majors, by 2021 graduates, were:[34]

Political Science and Government (82)
Econometrics and Quantitative Economics (61)
Biology/Biological Sciences (30)
Biochemistry (28)
Neuroscience (25)
English Language and Literature (25)
Mathematics (25)

In 1990, the Bowdoin faculty voted to change the four-level grading system to the traditional A, B, C, D, and F system.[35] The previous system, consisting of high honors, honors, pass, and fail, was devised primarily to de-emphasize the importance of grades and to reduce competition.[36] In 2002, the faculty decided to change the grading system so that it incorporated plus and minus grades. In 2006, Bowdoin was named a "Top Producer of Fulbright Awards for American Students" by the Institute of International Education.[37]

Other notable Bowdoin faculty include (or have included): Edville Gerhardt Abbott, Charles Beitz, John Bisbee, Paul Chadbourne, Thomas Cornell, Kristen R. Ghodsee, Eddie Glaude, Joseph E. Johnson, Richard Morgan, Elliott Schwartz, Kenneth Chenault, and Scott Sehon.

Rankings

In the 2021 edition of the U.S. News & World Report rankings, Bowdoin was ranked tied for 6th best overall among liberal arts colleges in the United States, tied at 11th for "Best Undergraduate Teaching", 12th in "Best Value Schools", and tied at 29th for "Most Innovative".[42]

In the 2019 Forbes college rankings, Bowdoin was ranked 26th overall among 650 universities, liberal arts colleges, and service academies and 6th among private liberal arts colleges.[43]

Bowdoin College is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education.[44]

Bowdoin was ranked first among 1,204 small colleges in the U.S. by Niche in 2017.[45][46]

Based on students' SAT scores, Bowdoin is tied with Williams for 5th in Business Insider's smartest liberal arts colleges, with an average score of 1435 for math and critical reading combined.[47] Among all colleges, it is tied with Brown, Carnegie Mellon, and Williams for 22nd.[48]

The college was ranked 5th in the country by Washington Monthly in 2019 based on its contribution to the public good, as measured by social mobility, research, and promoting public service.[49]

In 2006, Newsweek described Bowdoin as a "New Ivy", one of a number of liberal arts colleges and universities outside of the Ivy League, and it has also been dubbed a "Hidden Ivy".[50]

Student life

 
Hubbard Hall, once the college's library.

Bowdoin's dining services have been ranked #1 among all universities and colleges nationally by Princeton Review in 2004, 2006, 2007, 2011, 2013, 2014, and 2016,[51] with The New York Times reporting: "If it weren't for the trays, and for the fact that most diners are under 25, you'd think it was a restaurant."[52]

Bowdoin uses food from its organic garden in its two major dining halls, and every academic year begins with a lobster bake outside Farley Fieldhouse.[53]

Recalling his days at Bowdoin in a 2005 interview, Professor Richard E. Morgan (class of 1959) described student life at the then-all-male school as "monastic" and noted that "the only things to do were either work or drink". This is corroborated by the Official Preppy Handbook, which in 1980 ranked Bowdoin the number two drinking school in the country, behind Dartmouth. These days, Morgan observed, the college offers a far broader array of recreational opportunities: "If we could have looked forward in time to Bowdoin's standard of living today, we would have been astounded."[54]

Since abolishing Greek fraternities in the late 1990s, Bowdoin has switched to a system in which entering students are assigned a "college house" affiliation correlating with their first-year dormitory. While six houses were originally established following the construction of two new dorms, two were added effective in the fall of 2007, and one added in the fall of 2019, bringing the current total to eight: Baxter, Quinby, MacMillan, Howell, Helmreich, Reed, Burnett, and Boody-Johnson. The college houses are physical buildings around campus that host parties and other events throughout the year. Those students who choose not to live in their affiliated house retain their affiliation and are considered members throughout their Bowdoin career. Before the fraternity system was abolished in the 1990s, all the Bowdoin fraternities were co-educational (except for one unrecognized sorority and two unrecognized all-male fraternities).[citation needed]

Bowdoin's chapter of Phi Beta Kappa was founded in 1825. Those who have been inducted to the Maine chapter as undergraduates include Nathaniel Hawthorne (1825), Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1825), Robert E. Peary (1877), Owen Brewster (1909), Harold Hitz Burton (1909), Paul Douglas (1913), Alfred Kinsey (1916), Thomas R. Pickering (1953), and Lawrence B. Lindsey (1976).[citation needed]

Clubs

 
The Orient, the college newspaper.

The largest student group on campus is the Outing Club, which leads canoeing, kayaking, rafting, camping, and backpacking trips throughout Maine.[55] One of the school's two historic rival literary societies, The Peucinian Society, has recently been revitalized from its previous form. The Peucinian Society was founded in 1805.[56] This organization counts such people as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain amongst its former members. The other, the now-defunct Athenian Society, included Nathaniel Hawthorne and Franklin Pierce as members. These literary and intellectual societies were the dominant groups on campus before they declined in popularity after the rise of Greek fraternities.[citation needed]

Bowdoin competes in the Standard Platform League of RoboCup as the Northern Bites, where teams compete with five autonomous Aldebaran Nao robots. Bowdoin won the world championship in RoboCup 2007, beating Carnegie Mellon University, and finished 2nd in the 2015 US Open.[57][58]

Media and publications

Bowdoin's student newspaper, The Bowdoin Orient, is the oldest continuously published college weekly in the United States.[59] The Orient was named the second-best tabloid-sized college weekly at a Collegiate Associated Press conference in March 2007 and the best college newspaper in New England by the New England Society of News Editors in 2018.[60][61]

The school's literary magazine, The Quill, was published between 1897 and 2015. The Bowdoin Globalist, an international news, culture, and politics magazine affiliated with the Global21 organization of college magazines, has been publishing since 2012. The Bowdoin Globalist transitioned to a digital-only platform in 2015 and changed its name to The Bowdoin Review. The college's radio station, WBOR, has been operating since the early 1940s. In 1999, The Bowdoin Cable Network was formed, producing a weekly newscast and several student-created shows per semester.[62]

A cappella

Six a cappella groups are on campus.[63]

The Meddiebempsters and the Longfellows are all-male, Miscellania is all-female, BOKA and Ursus Verses are co-ed, and Bear Tones's singers are "female and treble voices".[citation needed]

 
Studzinski Recital Hall.

The Longfellows are the newest all-male group. Founded in 2004, they trace their roots to the historic class of 1825 at Bowdoin, which graduated Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. In 2011, they won their quarterfinal of the International Collegiate Championship of A Cappella, advancing them to the semifinals as the only all-male group. The same year, they were in the final round of selection to be on NBC's "The Sing Off". In 2010 and again in 2013, they sang the national anthem at a Boston Celtics game. They have performed all over Maine and the Northeast.[citation needed]

The Meddiebempsters are the oldest of Bowdoin's six a cappella groups. Founded in the spring of 1937, the Meddies performed in USO shows after World War II.[64]

Miscellania is the oldest all-female a cappella group at Bowdoin College. Miscellania was founded in 1972 as the female counterpart to the Meddiebempsters, shortly after women were admitted to Bowdoin. Since then, Miscellania has grown to be a part of the tradition of a cappella at Bowdoin College. Distinguishable by their black dresses, Miscellania has performed all over Maine and the Northeast, as well as down the East Coast on longer tours, and Aruba.[citation needed]

Bear Tones, founded in 2016, is Bowdoin's most-recently formed a cappella group, and is open to male and female singers of all treble voices.[citation needed]

Environmental record

Bowdoin College signed onto the American College and University President's Climate Commitment in 2007.[65] The college followed through with a carbon neutrality plan released in 2009, with 2020 as the target year for carbon neutrality. According to the plan, general improvements to Maine's electricity grid will account for 7% of carbon reductions, commuting improvements will account for 1%, and the purchase of renewable energy credits will account for 41%. The college intends to reduce its carbon emissions 28% by 2020, leaving the remaining 23% for new technologies and more renewable energy credits.[66] The plan includes the construction of a solar thermal system, part of the "Thorne Solar Hot Water Project"; cogeneration in the central heating plant (for which Bowdoin received $400,000 in federal grants); lighting upgrades to all campus buildings; and modern monitoring systems of energy usage on campus.[67] In 2017 the college was on track to meet the 28% own source reduction target, and efforts have continued in the areas of energy conservation, efficiency upgrades and transitioning to lower carbon fuel sources.[68] Bowdoin's facilities are heated by an on-campus heating plant that burns natural gas.[69] In February 2013, the college announced that 1.4% of its endowment is invested in the fossil fuel industry. The disclosure was in response to students' calls to divest these holdings.[70]

Between 2002 and 2008, Bowdoin College decreased its CO2 emissions by 40%. It achieved that reduction by switching from #6 to #2 oil in its heating plant, reducing the campus set heating point from 72 to 68 degrees, and by adhering to its own Green Design Standards in renovations.[71] In addition, Bowdoin runs a single stream recycling program, and its dining services department has begun composting food waste and unbleached paper napkins.[72] Bowdoin received an overall "B−" grade for its sustainability efforts on the College Sustainability Report Card 2009 published by the Sustainable Endowments Institute.[73]

In 2003, Bowdoin committed to achieving LEED-certification for all new campus buildings.[74] The college has since completed construction on Osher and West residency halls, the Peter Buck Center for Health & Fitness, the Sidney J. Watson Arena, 216 Maine Street, and 52 Harpswell all of which have attained LEED, Silver LEED or Gold LEED certification. The new dorms partially use collected rainwater as part of an advanced flushing system.[74]

Campus

Brunswick main campus

Bowdoin College's main campus in Brunswick ranges over an area of 215 acres (87 ha) and includes 120 buildings, some of which date back to the 18th century. Prominent buildings on the campus include the college's oldest building, Massachusetts Hall, the Parker Cleaveland House, and the Harriet Beecher Stowe House. The campus has two museums. The Bowdoin College Museum of Art is located in the Walker Art Building, while the Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum is situated in Hubbard Hall.[75]

 
The main Quad of Bowdoin College in the middle of autumn.

Other properties

The 118-acre (48 ha) Schiller Coastal Studies Center is located 8 miles (13 km) south of Orr's Island in Harpswell, Maine.[76]

Bowdoin College operates the Bowdoin Scientific Station on Kent Island in the Bay of Fundy in New Brunswick.[77]

Athletics

 
Hubbard Grandstand in 1912, built in 1904 at Whittier Field.
 
Before a match between Bowdoin and Williams at Watson Arena, built in 2009

Organized athletics at Bowdoin began in 1828[78] with a gymnastics program established by the "father of athletics in Maine,"[79] John Neal. In the proceeding years, Neal agitated for more programs, and himself taught bowling, boxing, and other sports.[80]

Bowdoin College teams are known as the Polar Bears. They compete as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III level, primarily competing in the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC), of which they were a founding member in 1971.

The mascot for all Bowdoin College athletic teams is the Polar bear, generally referred to in the plural, i.e., "The Polar Bears." The school colors are black and white. The fight song, Forward The White, was composed by Kenneth A. Robinson, class of 1914.[81]

The college's rowing club competes in the Colby-Bates-Bowdoin Chase Regatta annually. The field hockey team are four-time NCAA Division III National Champions; winning the title in 2007 (defeating Middlebury College), 2008 (defeating Tufts University), 2010 (defeating Messiah College), and 2013 (defeating Salisbury University).[82] The men's tennis team won the 2016 NCAA Division III Championship after defeating Emory University in Kalamazoo, Michigan.[83][84]

Principal athletic facilities include Whittier Field (capacity: 9,000), Morrell Gymnasium (1,500), Sidney J. Watson Arena (2,300), Pickard Fields, and the Buck Center for Health and Wellness. Bowdoin students compete in 30 varsity sports and several club and intramural teams.[citation needed]

Notable alumni

Notable Bowdoin alumni include (by year of graduation):

Bowdoin graduates have led all three branches of the American federal government, including both houses of Congress. Franklin Pierce (1824) was America's fourteenth President; Melville Weston Fuller (1853) served as Chief Justice of the United States; Thomas Brackett Reed (1860) was twice elected Speaker of the House of Representatives; and Wallace H. White, Jr. (1899) and George J. Mitchell (1954) both served as Majority Leader of the United States Senate.

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External links

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website

bowdoin, college, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Bowdoin College news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bowdoin College ˈ b oʊ d ɪ n listen BOH din is a private liberal arts college in Brunswick Maine When Bowdoin was chartered in 1794 Maine was still a part of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts The college offers 34 majors and 36 minors as well as several joint engineering programs with Columbia Caltech Dartmouth College and the University of Maine 4 5 Bowdoin CollegeMottoUt Aquila Versus Coelum Latin Motto in EnglishAs an eagle towards the skyTypePrivate liberal arts collegeEstablishedJune 24 1794 228 years ago 1794 06 24 AccreditationNECHEAcademic affiliationsAnnapolis GroupOberlin GroupCLACCBB ConsortiumSpace grantEndowmentUS 2 72 billion 2021 1 PresidentClayton RoseAcademic staff228 2 Students1 951 Fall 2021 LocationBrunswick Maine US43 54 31 N 69 57 46 W 43 90861 N 69 96278 W 43 90861 69 96278 Coordinates 43 54 31 N 69 57 46 W 43 90861 N 69 96278 W 43 90861 69 96278CampusSuburban 207 acres 84 ha 3 NewspaperThe Bowdoin OrientColorsBlack and White NicknamePolar BearsSporting affiliationsNCAA Division III NESCACMascotPolar bearWebsitewww wbr bowdoin wbr eduThe college was a founding member of its athletic conference the New England Small College Athletic Conference and the Colby Bates Bowdoin Consortium an athletic conference and inter library exchange with Bates College and Colby College Bowdoin has over 30 varsity teams and the school mascot was selected as a polar bear in 1913 to honor Robert Peary a Bowdoin alumnus who led the first successful expedition to the North Pole 6 Between the years 1821 and 1921 Bowdoin operated a medical school called the Medical School of Maine 7 The main Bowdoin campus is located near Casco Bay and the Androscoggin River In addition to its Brunswick campus Bowdoin owns a 118 acre 48 ha coastal studies center on Orr s Island 8 and a 200 acre 81 ha scientific field station on Kent Island in the Bay of Fundy 9 Contents 1 History 1 1 Founding and 19th century 1 2 20th century 1 3 21st century 2 Admissions 3 Academics 3 1 Rankings 4 Student life 4 1 Clubs 4 1 1 Media and publications 4 1 2 A cappella 5 Environmental record 6 Campus 6 1 Brunswick main campus 6 2 Other properties 7 Athletics 8 Notable alumni 9 References 10 External linksHistory EditFounding and 19th century Edit Bowdoin College c 1845 Lithograph by Fitz Hugh Lane Bowdoin College was chartered in 1794 by the Massachusetts State Legislature and was later redirected under the jurisdiction of the Maine Legislature 10 It was named for former Massachusetts governor James Bowdoin whose son James Bowdoin III was an early benefactor 11 At the time of its founding it was the easternmost college in the United States as it was located in Maine citation needed Bowdoin began to develop in the 1820s a decade in which Maine became an independent state as a result of the Missouri Compromise and graduated U S President Franklin Pierce The college also graduated two literary philosophers the writers Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow both of whom graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1825 Pierce and Hawthorne began an official militia company called the Bowdoin Cadets 12 From its founding Bowdoin was known to educate the sons of the political elite and catered very largely to the wealthy conservative from the state of Maine 13 During the first half of the 19th century Bowdoin required of its students a certificate of good moral character as well as knowledge of Latin and Ancient Greek geography algebra and the major works of Cicero Xenophon Virgil and Homer 14 View of the campus from Coles Tower Harriet Beecher Stowe started writing her influential anti slavery novel Uncle Tom s Cabin in Brunswick while her husband was teaching at the college and Brigadier General and Brevet Major General Joshua Chamberlain a Bowdoin alumnus and professor was present at the surrender of the Army of Northern Virginia at Appomattox Court House in 1865 Chamberlain a Medal of Honor recipient who later served as governor of Maine adjutant general of Maine and president of Bowdoin fought at Gettysburg where he was in command of the 20th Maine in defense of Little Round Top Major General Oliver Otis Howard class of 1850 led the Freedmen s Bureau after the war and later founded Howard University Massachusetts Governor John Andrew class of 1837 was responsible for the formation of the 54th Massachusetts and William P Fessenden 1823 and Hugh McCulloch 1827 both served as Secretary of the Treasury during the Lincoln Administration However the college s involvement in the Civil War was mixed as Bowdoin had many ties to slave labor and the Confederacy citation needed With strained slave relations between political parties President Franklin Pierce appointed Jefferson Davis as his Secretary of War and the college awarded the soon to be President of the Confederacy an honorary degree The Jefferson Davis Award was given to a student who excelled in legal studies after a donation was given to the college by the United Daughters of the Confederacy 15 The award however was discontinued in 2015 with the current college president citing it as inappropriate because it was named after someone whose mission was to preserve and institutionalize slavery 16 President Ulysses S Grant too was given an honorary degree from the college in 1865 Seventeen Bowdoin alumni attained the rank of brigadier general during the Civil War including James Deering Fessenden and Francis Fessenden Ellis Spear class of 1858 who served as Chamberlain s second in command at Gettysburg and Charles Hamlin class of 1857 son of Vice President Hannibal Hamlin citation needed 20th century Edit Bowdoin included the Medical School of Maine from 1821 to 1921 Although Bowdoin s Medical School of Maine closed its doors in 1921 7 it produced Augustus Stinchfield who received his M D in 1868 and became one of the co founders of the Mayo Clinic in Rochester Minnesota In 1877 the college would go on to graduate the infamous Charles Morse the American banker who established a near monopoly of the ice business in New York which directly led to the financial Panic of 1907 17 Another scientific alumnus is the controversial entomologist turned sexologist Alfred Kinsey class of 1916 citation needed The college went on to educate and eventually graduate Arctic explorers Robert E Peary class of 1877 and Donald B MacMillan class of 1898 Robert Peary named Bowdoin Fjord and Bowdoin Glacier after his alma mater 18 Peary led the first successful expedition to the North Pole in 1908 and MacMillan a member of Peary s crew explored Greenland Baffin Island and Labrador in the schooner Bowdoin between 1908 and 1954 Bowdoin s Peary MacMillan Arctic Museum 19 honors the two explorers and the college s mascot the polar bear was chosen in 1913 to honor MacMillan who donated a statue of a polar bear to his alma mater in 1917 citation needed Wallace H White Jr class of 1899 served as Senate Minority Leader from 1944 to 1947 and Senate Majority Leader from 1947 to 1949 George J Mitchell class of 1954 served as Senate Majority Leader from 1989 to 1995 before assuming an active role in the Northern Ireland peace process 20 and William Cohen class of 1962 spent twenty five years in the House and Senate before being appointed Secretary of Defense in the Clinton Administration citation needed In 1970 the college became one of a very limited number of liberal arts colleges to make the SAT optional in the admissions process and in 1971 after nearly 180 years as a small men s college Bowdoin admitted its first class of women Bowdoin also phased out fraternities in 1997 replacing them with a system of college owned social houses 21 In 1970 Bowdoin began competing in the Colby Bates Bowdoin Consortium with Bates and Colby The consortium became both an athletic rivalry and an academic exchange program The three schools have produced numerous athletic competitions most notably a football championship game and the Chase Regatta citation needed 21st century Edit In 2001 Barry Mills class of 1972 was appointed as the fifth alumnus president of the college citation needed On January 18 2008 Bowdoin announced that it would eliminate loans for all new and current students receiving financial aid replacing those loans with grants beginning with the 2008 2009 academic year 22 President Mills stated Some see a calling in such vital but often low paying fields such as teaching or social work With significant debt at graduation some students will undoubtedly be forced to make career or education choices not based on their talents interests and promise in a particular field but rather on their capacity to repay student loans As an institution devoted to the common good Bowdoin must consider the fairness of such a result 22 In February 2009 following a US 10 million donation equivalent to 12 63 million in 2021 by Subway Sandwiches co founder and alumnus Peter Buck class of 1952 the college completed a 250 million capital campaign Additionally the college has also recently completed major construction projects on the campus including a renovation of the college s art museum and a new fitness center named after Peter Buck 23 On July 1 2015 Clayton Rose succeeded Mills as president 24 Admissions EditThe acceptance rate for the class of 2023 was 8 9 percent The applicant pool consisted of 9 332 candidates up from 9 081 for the class of 2022 25 Class Admission Statistics Class 2027 2026 2025 2024 2023Applicants 10 966 9 376 9 325 9 402 9 332Admits 850 862 822 861 845Selectivity 7 75 9 2 8 8 9 2 9 1 Matriculants 500 TBA 508 517 464 499SAT scores TBA 1340 1540 1320 1520 1330 1510 1330 1520U S News amp World Report classifies Bowdoin as most selective 26 Of enrolling students 89 are in the top 10 of their high school graduating class 27 Although Bowdoin does not require the SAT in admissions all students must submit a score upon matriculation The middle 50 SAT range for the verbal and math sections of the SAT is 660 750 and 660 750 respectively numbers of only those submitting scores during the admissions process The middle 50 ACT range is 30 33 28 The April 17 2008 edition of The Economist noted Bowdoin in an article on university admissions So called almost Ivies such as Bowdoin and Middlebury also saw record low admission rates this year 18 each It is now as hard to get into Bowdoin says the college s admissions director as it was to get into Princeton in the 1970s 29 Many students apply for financial aid and around 85 of those who apply to receive aid Bowdoin is a need blind and no loans institution 22 While a significant portion of the student body hails from New England including nearly 25 from Massachusetts and 10 from Maine recent classes have drawn from an increasingly national and international pool The median family income of Bowdoin students is 195 900 with 57 of students coming from the top 10 of highest earning families and 17 5 from the bottom 60 30 Although Bowdoin once had a reputation for homogeneity both ethnically and socioeconomically a diversity campaign has increased the percentage of students of color in recent classes to more than 31 31 In fact admission of minorities goes back at least as far as John Brown Russwurm 1826 Bowdoin s first African American college graduate and the third African American graduate of any American college 32 Academics Edit Bowdoin Chapel during the winter semester Course distribution requirements were abolished in the 1970s but were reinstated by a faculty majority vote in 1981 due to an initiative by oral communication and film professor Barbara Kaster She insisted that distribution requirements would ensure students a more well rounded education in a diversity of fields and therefore present them with more career possibilities The requirements of at least two courses in each of the categories of natural sciences mathematics social and behavioral sciences humanities fine arts and foreign studies including languages took effect for the class of 1987 and have been gradually amended since then Current requirements require one course each in natural sciences quantitative reasoning visual and performing arts international perspectives and difference power and inequity A small writing intensive course called a first year seminar is also required 33 The most popular majors by 2021 graduates were 34 Political Science and Government 82 Econometrics and Quantitative Economics 61 Biology Biological Sciences 30 Biochemistry 28 Neuroscience 25 English Language and Literature 25 Mathematics 25 dd In 1990 the Bowdoin faculty voted to change the four level grading system to the traditional A B C D and F system 35 The previous system consisting of high honors honors pass and fail was devised primarily to de emphasize the importance of grades and to reduce competition 36 In 2002 the faculty decided to change the grading system so that it incorporated plus and minus grades In 2006 Bowdoin was named a Top Producer of Fulbright Awards for American Students by the Institute of International Education 37 Other notable Bowdoin faculty include or have included Edville Gerhardt Abbott Charles Beitz John Bisbee Paul Chadbourne Thomas Cornell Kristen R Ghodsee Eddie Glaude Joseph E Johnson Richard Morgan Elliott Schwartz Kenneth Chenault and Scott Sehon Rankings Edit Academic rankingsLiberal arts collegesU S News amp World Report 38 6Washington Monthly 39 5NationalForbes 40 26THE WSJ 41 44In the 2021 edition of the U S News amp World Report rankings Bowdoin was ranked tied for 6th best overall among liberal arts colleges in the United States tied at 11th for Best Undergraduate Teaching 12th in Best Value Schools and tied at 29th for Most Innovative 42 In the 2019 Forbes college rankings Bowdoin was ranked 26th overall among 650 universities liberal arts colleges and service academies and 6th among private liberal arts colleges 43 Bowdoin College is accredited by the New England Commission of Higher Education 44 Bowdoin was ranked first among 1 204 small colleges in the U S by Niche in 2017 45 46 Based on students SAT scores Bowdoin is tied with Williams for 5th in Business Insider s smartest liberal arts colleges with an average score of 1435 for math and critical reading combined 47 Among all colleges it is tied with Brown Carnegie Mellon and Williams for 22nd 48 The college was ranked 5th in the country by Washington Monthly in 2019 based on its contribution to the public good as measured by social mobility research and promoting public service 49 In 2006 Newsweek described Bowdoin as a New Ivy one of a number of liberal arts colleges and universities outside of the Ivy League and it has also been dubbed a Hidden Ivy 50 Student life Edit Hubbard Hall once the college s library Bowdoin s dining services have been ranked 1 among all universities and colleges nationally by Princeton Review in 2004 2006 2007 2011 2013 2014 and 2016 51 with The New York Times reporting If it weren t for the trays and for the fact that most diners are under 25 you d think it was a restaurant 52 Bowdoin uses food from its organic garden in its two major dining halls and every academic year begins with a lobster bake outside Farley Fieldhouse 53 Recalling his days at Bowdoin in a 2005 interview Professor Richard E Morgan class of 1959 described student life at the then all male school as monastic and noted that the only things to do were either work or drink This is corroborated by the Official Preppy Handbook which in 1980 ranked Bowdoin the number two drinking school in the country behind Dartmouth These days Morgan observed the college offers a far broader array of recreational opportunities If we could have looked forward in time to Bowdoin s standard of living today we would have been astounded 54 Since abolishing Greek fraternities in the late 1990s Bowdoin has switched to a system in which entering students are assigned a college house affiliation correlating with their first year dormitory While six houses were originally established following the construction of two new dorms two were added effective in the fall of 2007 and one added in the fall of 2019 bringing the current total to eight Baxter Quinby MacMillan Howell Helmreich Reed Burnett and Boody Johnson The college houses are physical buildings around campus that host parties and other events throughout the year Those students who choose not to live in their affiliated house retain their affiliation and are considered members throughout their Bowdoin career Before the fraternity system was abolished in the 1990s all the Bowdoin fraternities were co educational except for one unrecognized sorority and two unrecognized all male fraternities citation needed Bowdoin s chapter of Phi Beta Kappa was founded in 1825 Those who have been inducted to the Maine chapter as undergraduates include Nathaniel Hawthorne 1825 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1825 Robert E Peary 1877 Owen Brewster 1909 Harold Hitz Burton 1909 Paul Douglas 1913 Alfred Kinsey 1916 Thomas R Pickering 1953 and Lawrence B Lindsey 1976 citation needed Clubs Edit The Orient the college newspaper The largest student group on campus is the Outing Club which leads canoeing kayaking rafting camping and backpacking trips throughout Maine 55 One of the school s two historic rival literary societies The Peucinian Society has recently been revitalized from its previous form The Peucinian Society was founded in 1805 56 This organization counts such people as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain amongst its former members The other the now defunct Athenian Society included Nathaniel Hawthorne and Franklin Pierce as members These literary and intellectual societies were the dominant groups on campus before they declined in popularity after the rise of Greek fraternities citation needed Bowdoin competes in the Standard Platform League of RoboCup as the Northern Bites where teams compete with five autonomous Aldebaran Nao robots Bowdoin won the world championship in RoboCup 2007 beating Carnegie Mellon University and finished 2nd in the 2015 US Open 57 58 Media and publications Edit Bowdoin s student newspaper The Bowdoin Orient is the oldest continuously published college weekly in the United States 59 The Orient was named the second best tabloid sized college weekly at a Collegiate Associated Press conference in March 2007 and the best college newspaper in New England by the New England Society of News Editors in 2018 60 61 The school s literary magazine The Quill was published between 1897 and 2015 The Bowdoin Globalist an international news culture and politics magazine affiliated with the Global21 organization of college magazines has been publishing since 2012 The Bowdoin Globalist transitioned to a digital only platform in 2015 and changed its name to The Bowdoin Review The college s radio station WBOR has been operating since the early 1940s In 1999 The Bowdoin Cable Network was formed producing a weekly newscast and several student created shows per semester 62 A cappella Edit Six a cappella groups are on campus 63 The Meddiebempsters and the Longfellows are all male Miscellania is all female BOKA and Ursus Verses are co ed and Bear Tones s singers are female and treble voices citation needed Studzinski Recital Hall The Longfellows are the newest all male group Founded in 2004 they trace their roots to the historic class of 1825 at Bowdoin which graduated Henry Wadsworth Longfellow In 2011 they won their quarterfinal of the International Collegiate Championship of A Cappella advancing them to the semifinals as the only all male group The same year they were in the final round of selection to be on NBC s The Sing Off In 2010 and again in 2013 they sang the national anthem at a Boston Celtics game They have performed all over Maine and the Northeast citation needed The Meddiebempsters are the oldest of Bowdoin s six a cappella groups Founded in the spring of 1937 the Meddies performed in USO shows after World War II 64 Miscellania is the oldest all female a cappella group at Bowdoin College Miscellania was founded in 1972 as the female counterpart to the Meddiebempsters shortly after women were admitted to Bowdoin Since then Miscellania has grown to be a part of the tradition of a cappella at Bowdoin College Distinguishable by their black dresses Miscellania has performed all over Maine and the Northeast as well as down the East Coast on longer tours and Aruba citation needed Bear Tones founded in 2016 is Bowdoin s most recently formed a cappella group and is open to male and female singers of all treble voices citation needed Environmental record EditThis section may contain academic boosterism which primarily serves to praise or promote the subject and may be a sign of a conflict of interest Please improve this article by removing peacock terms weasel words and other promotional material May 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Bowdoin College signed onto the American College and University President s Climate Commitment in 2007 65 The college followed through with a carbon neutrality plan released in 2009 with 2020 as the target year for carbon neutrality According to the plan general improvements to Maine s electricity grid will account for 7 of carbon reductions commuting improvements will account for 1 and the purchase of renewable energy credits will account for 41 The college intends to reduce its carbon emissions 28 by 2020 leaving the remaining 23 for new technologies and more renewable energy credits 66 The plan includes the construction of a solar thermal system part of the Thorne Solar Hot Water Project cogeneration in the central heating plant for which Bowdoin received 400 000 in federal grants lighting upgrades to all campus buildings and modern monitoring systems of energy usage on campus 67 In 2017 the college was on track to meet the 28 own source reduction target and efforts have continued in the areas of energy conservation efficiency upgrades and transitioning to lower carbon fuel sources 68 Bowdoin s facilities are heated by an on campus heating plant that burns natural gas 69 In February 2013 the college announced that 1 4 of its endowment is invested in the fossil fuel industry The disclosure was in response to students calls to divest these holdings 70 Between 2002 and 2008 Bowdoin College decreased its CO2 emissions by 40 It achieved that reduction by switching from 6 to 2 oil in its heating plant reducing the campus set heating point from 72 to 68 degrees and by adhering to its own Green Design Standards in renovations 71 In addition Bowdoin runs a single stream recycling program and its dining services department has begun composting food waste and unbleached paper napkins 72 Bowdoin received an overall B grade for its sustainability efforts on the College Sustainability Report Card 2009 published by the Sustainable Endowments Institute 73 In 2003 Bowdoin committed to achieving LEED certification for all new campus buildings 74 The college has since completed construction on Osher and West residency halls the Peter Buck Center for Health amp Fitness the Sidney J Watson Arena 216 Maine Street and 52 Harpswell all of which have attained LEED Silver LEED or Gold LEED certification The new dorms partially use collected rainwater as part of an advanced flushing system 74 Campus EditBrunswick main campus Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2021 Bowdoin College s main campus in Brunswick ranges over an area of 215 acres 87 ha and includes 120 buildings some of which date back to the 18th century Prominent buildings on the campus include the college s oldest building Massachusetts Hall the Parker Cleaveland House and the Harriet Beecher Stowe House The campus has two museums The Bowdoin College Museum of Art is located in the Walker Art Building while the Peary MacMillan Arctic Museum is situated in Hubbard Hall 75 The main Quad of Bowdoin College in the middle of autumn Other properties Edit The 118 acre 48 ha Schiller Coastal Studies Center is located 8 miles 13 km south of Orr s Island in Harpswell Maine 76 Bowdoin College operates the Bowdoin Scientific Station on Kent Island in the Bay of Fundy in New Brunswick 77 Athletics EditMain article Bowdoin Polar Bears Hubbard Grandstand in 1912 built in 1904 at Whittier Field Before a match between Bowdoin and Williams at Watson Arena built in 2009 Organized athletics at Bowdoin began in 1828 78 with a gymnastics program established by the father of athletics in Maine 79 John Neal In the proceeding years Neal agitated for more programs and himself taught bowling boxing and other sports 80 Bowdoin College teams are known as the Polar Bears They compete as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA Division III level primarily competing in the New England Small College Athletic Conference NESCAC of which they were a founding member in 1971 The mascot for all Bowdoin College athletic teams is the Polar bear generally referred to in the plural i e The Polar Bears The school colors are black and white The fight song Forward The White was composed by Kenneth A Robinson class of 1914 81 The college s rowing club competes in the Colby Bates Bowdoin Chase Regatta annually The field hockey team are four time NCAA Division III National Champions winning the title in 2007 defeating Middlebury College 2008 defeating Tufts University 2010 defeating Messiah College and 2013 defeating Salisbury University 82 The men s tennis team won the 2016 NCAA Division III Championship after defeating Emory University in Kalamazoo Michigan 83 84 Principal athletic facilities include Whittier Field capacity 9 000 Morrell Gymnasium 1 500 Sidney J Watson Arena 2 300 Pickard Fields and the Buck Center for Health and Wellness Bowdoin students compete in 30 varsity sports and several club and intramural teams citation needed Notable alumni EditMain article List of Bowdoin College people Franklin Pierce 14th President of the United States Nathaniel Hawthorne novelist Henry Wadsworth Longfellow poet Robert Peary explorer who claims to be the first person to reach the North Pole Reed Hastings co founder of Netflix William P Fessenden former U S Secretary of the Treasuery Paul Adelstein actor William Cohen 20th U S Secretary of Defense and former U S Senator Joshua Chamberlain Brigadier general in the Union Army Oliver Otis Howard Major General in the Union Army Melville Fuller 8th Chief Justice of the United States Pat Meehan former U S Representative Lawrence B Lindsey Member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors George J Mitchell former Senate Majority Leader Ed Lee former Mayor of San Francisco Harold Hitz Burton former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States Thomas Brackett Reed former Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Augustus Stinchfield co founder of Mayo Clinic Alfred Kinsey biologist and sexologistNotable Bowdoin alumni include by year of graduation U S Secretary of Treasury U S Representative amp U S Senator from Maine William Pitt Fessenden 1824 U S President Franklin Pierce 1824 Poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow 1825 Novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne 1825 Journalist and Republic of Maryland governor John Brown Russwurm 1826 85 Medical missionary to the Batticotta Seminary Nathan Ward Mayor of Oakland California 1867 1869 and founding Regent of the University of California 1868 1874 Samuel Merritt 1844 Joshua Young Unitarian minister presided over funeral of John Brown 1845 Civil War general Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain 1852 Philosopher minister and academic Charles Carroll Everett 1850 Civil War general Oliver Otis Howard 1850 Chief Justice of the U S Supreme Court Melville Fuller 1853 U S Speaker of the House Thomas Brackett Reed 1860 Civil War general Thomas W Hyde Medal of Honor recipient author founder of Bath Iron Works 1861 Mayo Clinic co founder Dr Augustus Stinchfield 1868 Physicist Edwin Hall 1875 Freelan Oscar Stanley inventor of the Stanley Steamer and builder of the Stanley Hotel 1877 Arctic explorer Admiral Robert Peary 1877 Cravath Swaine amp Moore Presiding Partner Hoyt Augustus Moore 1895 Gold mine owner entrepreneur investor and philanthropist Sir Harry Oakes 1896 Chairman and later Secretary General of the Shanghai Municipal Council Stirling Fessenden 1896 Arctic explorer Donald B MacMillan 1898 Business leader and President Manufacturers Trust Company Harvey Dow Gibson 1902 US Senator Paul H Douglas 1913 Pulitzer Prize winning poet Robert P T Coffin 1915 Sex researcher Alfred Kinsey 1916 Pulitzer Prize winning journalist Hodding Carter 1927 Film and television actor Gary Merrill 1937 Congressional Medal of Honor recipient Everett P Pope who displayed conspicuous gallantry during the Battle of Peleliu 1941 Recipient of two Silver Stars Andrew Haldane who was killed in action during the Battle of Peleliu 1941 M A S H creator H Richard Hornberger 1945 Businessman and philanthropist Bernard Osher 1948 Businessman and independent financial consultant Raymond S Troubh 1950 Co founder of the Subway sandwich chain Peter Buck 1952 U S Ambassador to the United Nations Thomas R Pickering 1953 U S Senator George Mitchell 1954 President and chairman of the board of L L Bean Leon Gorman 1956 Chairman and CEO of Ted Bates Worldwide Donald M Zuckert 86 U S Senator and Secretary of Defense William Cohen 1962 Award winning photographer Abelardo Morell 1971 Senior judge of the US District Court for the District of Maine John A Woodcock Jr 1972 American Express CEO Kenneth Chenault 1973 Harlem Children s Zone President and CEO Geoffrey Canada 1974 Alvin Hall financial adviser author and media personality 1974 San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee 1974 Investor Stanley Druckenmiller 1975 Economist and former Governor of the Federal Reserve Lawrence B Lindsey 1975 NBC News Senior Legal and Investigative Correspondent Cynthia McFadden 1978 Senior Managing Director of The Blackstone Group John Studzinski 1978 Olympic gold medalist Joan Benoit Samuelson 1979 Barclays CEO Jes Staley 1979 Yahoo Finance Editor in Chief Andrew E Serwer 1981 Netflix founder and CEO Reed Hastings 1983 HBO Academy Award winning producer Kary Antholis 1984 Fashion designer and entrepreneur Ruthie Davis 1984 Prison Break and Private Practice actor Paul Adelstein 1991 Composer writer and musician DJ Spooky 1992 Pulitzer Prize winning author Anthony Doerr 1995 New York Times Justice Department reporter Katie Benner 1999 Poet critic and performer Claudia La Rocco 2000 General Manager New York Mets Jared Porter 2003 Comedian Hari Kondabolu 2004 Civil rights activist DeRay Mckesson 2007 New York State Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani 2014 The Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich 2014 Tennessee House of Representatives Member Justin J Pearson 2017 Bowdoin graduates have led all three branches of the American federal government including both houses of Congress Franklin Pierce 1824 was America s fourteenth President Melville Weston Fuller 1853 served as Chief Justice of the United States Thomas Brackett Reed 1860 was twice elected Speaker of the House of Representatives and Wallace H White Jr 1899 and George J Mitchell 1954 both served as Majority Leader of the United States Senate References Edit Bowdoin Releases FY 2021 Endowment Results Bowdoin College September 27 2021 Retrieved October 15 2021 Common Data Set 2020 2021 PDF Bowdoin College Retrieved October 15 2021 Bowdoin College U S News amp World Report 2018 Archived from the original on September 10 2018 Retrieved September 10 2018 Engineering Dual Degree Options Archived from the original on December 21 2017 Retrieved December 12 2017 Departments and Programs Bowdoin College www bowdoin edu Archived from the original on December 16 2018 Retrieved December 16 2018 To the Pole The New York Times Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved December 16 2016 a b Medical School of Maine Historical Records and Files 8 2 library bowdoin edu Archived from the original on December 18 2017 Retrieved June 6 2017 The Bowdoin Coastal Studies Center Bowdoin edu March 1 2011 Archived from the original on August 4 2011 A description of Kent Island Bowdoin edu Archived from the original on August 4 2011 Retrieved March 24 2011 Historical Sketch Bowdoin College Retrieved 2022 02 11 The Charter of Bowdoin College Office of the President www bowdoin edu Archived from the original on 2016 03 25 Retrieved 2016 01 12 Wallner Peter A Spring 2005 Franklin Pierce and Bowdoin College Associates Hawthorne and Hale PDF Historical New Hampshire New Hampshire Historical Society 24 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 08 17 John J Pullen Joshua Chamberlain A Hero s Life and Legacy Stackpole Books 1999 ISBN 9780585283463 pg 60 James Grant Mr Speaker The Life and Times of Thomas B Reed Simon amp Schuster 2011 ISBN 978 1416544944 pg 9 Maine 04011 c 2022 Orient The Bowdoin Jefferson Davis award discontinued The Bowdoin Orient Retrieved 2022 02 11 Bowdoin to Discontinue Annual Academic Award in the Name of Jefferson Davis Bowdoin News community bowdoin edu Archived from the original on February 22 2016 Retrieved 2016 02 23 Druett Joan 2000 She Captains Heroines and Hellions of the Sea Simon and Schuster p 304 ISBN 978 0 7432 1437 7 Retrieved December 17 2008 Robert E Peary Northward over the Great Ice a narrative of life and work along the shores and upon the interior ice cap of northern Greenland in the years 1886 and 1891 1897 with a description of the little tribe pp 393 394 Website of the Peary MacMillan Arctic Museum Academic bowdoin edu 2010 11 18 Archived from the original on 2001 08 28 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Former U S Sen George Mitchell diagnosed with leukemia August 21 2020 Krantz Laura 2017 07 30 Harvard looks to Bowdoin as model in eradicating frats but its decision had mixed results The Boston Globe Archived from the original on 2017 09 03 Retrieved 2017 07 31 a b c Story posted January 24 2008 2008 01 24 Bowdoin Eliminates Student Loans While Vowing to Maintain its Com Campus News Bowdoin Bowdoin edu Archived from the original on 2011 06 03 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Trustees meeting focuses on finances The Bowdoin Orient The Bowdoin Orient Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2016 04 16 Chase Sam 2015 07 02 Rose plans to listen and learn in early days of presidency The Bowdoin Orient Retrieved 2015 09 05 About the Class of 2023 Bowdoin Retrieved 2020 10 01 Bowdoin College Best College US News Colleges usnews rankingsandreviews com 2012 09 24 Archived from the original on October 9 2012 Retrieved 2012 09 28 Bowdoin College Statistics College Prowler Archived from the original on 2011 07 08 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Class of 2013 Profile Bowdoin Admissions Bowdoin edu 2009 08 20 Archived from the original on 2011 06 28 Retrieved 2011 03 24 University admissions Accepted The Economist 2008 04 17 Archived from the original on June 29 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Aisch Gregor Buchanan Larry Cox Amanda Quealy Kevin 18 January 2017 Economic diversity and student outcomes at Bowdoin The New York Times Retrieved 9 August 2020 College Search Bowdoin College Collegesearch collegeboard com Archived from the original on December 7 2008 Retrieved 2012 09 28 Charles C Calhoun A Small College in Maine 200 Years of Bowdoin published by the college in 1993 ISBN 0 916606 25 2 The Bowdoin Curriculum Bowdoin College www bowdoin edu Archived from the original on May 20 2019 Retrieved 2019 09 03 Bowdoin College nces ed gov U S Dept of Education Retrieved January 24 2023 Campus Life Bowdoin Students Angered By Vote to Change Grading System The New York Times 1990 04 15 ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on March 7 2016 Retrieved 2019 09 03 Campus Life Bowdoin Students Angered By Vote to Change Grading System The New York Times 1990 04 15 Archived from the original on March 7 2016 Retrieved February 6 2017 Bowdoin Orient article on Bowdoin producing Fulbright Scholars Orient bowdoin edu 2006 01 27 Archived from the original on 2010 06 30 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Best Colleges 2021 National Liberal Arts Colleges U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 24 2020 2021 Liberal Arts Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved September 9 2021 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2022 Forbes Retrieved September 13 2022 Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022 The Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 Bowdoin College Rankings U S News amp World Report 2021 Retrieved October 1 2020 America s Top Colleges Forbes Archived from the original on September 22 2019 Retrieved September 23 2019 Maine Institutions NECHE New England Commission of Higher Education retrieved May 26 2021 The Best College in America Is in a Tiny Town in Maine October 20 2016 Archived from the original on November 27 2016 Retrieved December 7 2016 2017 Best Liberal Arts Colleges in America Archived from the original on January 30 2017 Retrieved December 7 2016 The 600 Smartest Colleges In America Business Insider Archived from the original on June 22 2015 Retrieved June 23 2015 1 339 U S Colleges Ranked By Average Student Brainpower PDF Psychologytoday com Retrieved December 2 2017 2018 Liberal Arts College Rankings Washington Monthly May 12 2019 Archived from the original on August 5 2019 Retrieved September 23 2019 Newsweek Web Exclusive Aug 21 2006 25 New Ivies The nation s elite colleges these days include more than Harvard Yale and Princeton Why It s the tough competition for all the top students That means a range of schools are getting fresh bragging rights 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Retrieved 7 December 2016 Walton Marsha Dogged determination leads to RoboCup victory CNN Archived from the original on August 8 2016 Retrieved 7 December 2016 Maine League of Historical Societies and Museums 1970 Doris A Isaacson ed Maine A Guide Down East Rockland Me Courier Gazette Inc p 177 Bowdoin Brief Orient takes national newspaper award Orient bowdoin edu 2007 04 06 Archived from the original on 2010 07 08 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Bowdoin Orient Wins Regional College Journalism Award Bowdoin News Archive Archived from the original on October 29 2019 Retrieved 2019 10 29 The Bowdoin Cable Network Bcn bowdoin edu 2009 01 01 Archived from the original on 2008 07 03 Retrieved 2011 03 24 A cappella council convenes selects The Bowdoin Orient Archived from the original on 7 January 2014 Retrieved 7 January 2014 Race Peter 1987 Meddiebempsters History And may the music echo long 1937 1987 pp 17 30 ML200 8 B73 M44 1987 Bowdoin College Commits to Climate Neutral Campus Bowdoin College Archived from the original on March 22 2013 Retrieved 31 March 2013 A Blueprint for Carbon Neutrality in 2020 PDF Bowdoin College Archived from the original PDF on 24 February 2012 Retrieved 31 March 2013 Bowdoin On Track To Meet Carbon Neutrality Goal Campus News Bowdoin Bowdoin 2011 02 03 Archived from the original on March 15 2011 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Annual Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory Update for FY 2017 PDF September 20 2017 Archived PDF from the original on November 7 2017 Annual Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory Update for FY 2012 PDF Bowdoin College Retrieved 31 March 2013 permanent dead link Casey Garrett 8 February 2013 1 4 percent of College s endowment invested in fossil fuels The Bowdoin Orient Archived from the original on 19 April 2013 Retrieved 31 March 2013 What We re Doing Bowdoin College Archived from the original on August 28 2009 Retrieved 2009 06 05 Waste Management Bowdoin College Archived from the original on October 12 2008 Retrieved 2009 06 05 Bowdoin College Green Report Card 2009 Greenreportcard org 2007 06 30 Archived from the original on April 17 2009 Retrieved 2011 03 24 a b LEED Certification Bowdoin Sustainability Bowdoin edu 2009 09 22 Archived from the original on 2011 06 28 Retrieved 2011 03 24 Campus and Buildings Bowdoin College Retrieved 2021 10 15 Schiller Coastal Studies Center Bowdoin College Retrieved 2021 10 15 Kent Island Bowdoin College Retrieved 2021 10 15 Sears Donald A 1978 John Neal Boston Massachusetts Twayne Publishers p 106 ISBN 9780805772302 Barry William D May 20 1979 State s Father of Athletics a Multi Faceted Figure Maine Sunday Telegram Portland Maine p 1D Barry William D May 20 1979 State s Father of Athletics a Multi Faceted Figure Maine Sunday Telegram Portland Maine p 2D Bowdoin Football Forward the White Bowdoin Retrieved October 15 2021 Forward the White was a poem written in 1913 by Kenneth A Robinson of the Class of 1914 Bowdoin PDF Bowdoin Archived PDF from the original on September 3 2019 Retrieved 2019 09 03 Wednesday s Maine college roundup Bowdoin men s tennis team wins NCAA crown Portland Press Harold Portland Press Harold May 25 2016 Archived from the original on June 30 2016 Retrieved May 26 2016 NESCAC National Champions New England Small College Athletic Conference Retrieved October 15 2021 James Winston 2010 The Struggles of John Brown Russwurm New York New York University Press pp 25 90 ISBN 978 0 8147 4289 1 Donald M Zuckert 1956 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bowdoin College Wikisource has original text related to this article Bowdoin College Wikiquote has quotations related to Bowdoin College Official website Official athletics website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bowdoin College amp oldid 1150687822, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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