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Charles William Eliot

Charles William Eliot (March 20, 1834 – August 22, 1926) was an American academic who was president of Harvard University from 1869 to 1909, the longest term of any Harvard president.[1] A member of the prominent Eliot family of Boston, he transformed Harvard from a respected provincial college into America's preeminent research university. Theodore Roosevelt called him "the only man in the world I envy."[2]

Charles William Eliot
Eliot c. 1904
21st President of Harvard University
In office
1869–1909
Preceded byThomas Hill
Succeeded byA. Lawrence Lowell
Personal details
Born(1834-03-20)March 20, 1834
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedAugust 22, 1926(1926-08-22) (aged 92)
Northeast Harbor, Maine, U.S.
Spouse(s)Ellen Derby Peabody (1858–1869)
Grace Mellen Hopkinson (1877–1924)
ChildrenCharles Eliot
Samuel A. Eliot II
Alma materHarvard College
ProfessionProfessor, university president
Signature

Early life and education edit

Charles Eliot was a scion of the wealthy Eliot family of Boston. He was the son of politician Samuel Atkins Eliot[1] and his wife Mary (née Lyman), and was the grandchild of banker Samuel Eliot and merchant Theodore Lyman of the Lyman Estate. He was one of five siblings and the only boy. Eliot graduated from Boston Latin School in 1849 and from Harvard University in 1853. He was later made an honorary member of the Hasty Pudding.

Although he had high expectations and obvious scientific talents, the first fifteen years of Eliot's career were less than auspicious. He was appointed Tutor in Mathematics at Harvard in the fall of 1854, and studied chemistry with Josiah P. Cooke.[3] In 1858, he was promoted to Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Chemistry. He taught competently, wrote some technical pieces on chemical impurities in industrial metals, and busied himself with schemes for the reform of Harvard's Lawrence Scientific School.

But his real goal, appointment to the Rumford Professorship of Chemistry, eluded him. This was a particularly bitter blow because of a change in his family's economic circumstances—the financial failure of his father, Samuel Atkins Eliot, in the Panic of 1857. Eliot had to face the fact that "he had nothing to look to but his teacher's salary and a legacy left to him by his grandfather Lyman." After a bitter struggle over the Rumford chair, Eliot left Harvard in 1863. His friends assumed that he would "be obliged to cut chemistry and go into business in order to earn a livelihood for his family." But instead, he used his grandfather's large legacy and a small borrowed sum to spend the next two years studying the educational systems of the Old World in Europe.

Studies of European education edit

Eliot's approach to investigating European education was unusual. He did not confine his attention to educational institutions, but explored the role of education in every aspect of national life. When Eliot visited schools, he took an interest in every aspect of institutional operation, from curriculum and methods of instruction through physical arrangements and custodial services. But his particular concern was with the relation between education and economic growth:

I have given special attention to the schools here provided for the education of young men for those arts and trades which require some knowledge of scientific principles and their applications, the schools which turn out master workmen, superintendents, and designers for the numerous French industries which demand taste, skill, and special technical instruction. Such schools we need at home. I can't but think that a thorough knowledge of what France has found useful for the development of her resources, may someday enable me to be of use to my country. At this moment, it is humiliating to read the figures which exhibit the increasing importations of all sorts of manufactured goods into America. Especially will it be the interest of Massachusetts to foster by every mean in her power the manufactures which are her main strength.[4]

Eliot understood the interdependence of education and enterprise. In a letter to his cousin Arthur T. Lyman, he discussed the value to the German chemical industry of discoveries made in university laboratories. He also recognized that, while European universities depended on government for support, American institutions would have to draw on the resources of the wealthy. He wrote to his cousin:

Every one of the famous universities of Europe was founded by Princes or privileged classes—every Polytechnic School, which I have visited in France or Germany, has been supported in the main by Government. Now this is not our way of managing these matters of education, and we have not yet found any equivalent, but republican, method of producing the like results. In our generation I hardly expect to see the institutions founded which have produced such results in Europe, and after they are established they do not begin to tell upon the national industries for ten or twenty years. The Puritans thought they must have trained ministers for the Church and they supported Harvard College—when the American people are convinced that they require more competent chemists, engineers, artists, architects, than they now have, they will somehow establish the institutions to train them. In the meantime, freedom and the American spirit of enterprise will do much for us, as in the past ....[5]

While Eliot was in Europe, he was again presented with the opportunity to enter the world of active business. The Merrimack Mills, one of the largest textile mills in the United States, tendered him an invitation to become its superintendent. In spite of the urgings of his friends and the attractiveness of what for the time was the enormous salary of $5000 (plus a good house, rent free), Eliot, after giving considerable thought to the offer, turned it down. One of his biographers speculated that he surely realized by this time that he had a strong taste for organizing and administration. This post would have given it scope. He must have felt, even if dimly, that if science interested him, it was not because he was first and last a lover of her laws and generalizations, not only because the clarity and precision of science was congenial, but because science answered the questions of practical men and conferred knowledge and power upon those who would perform the labors of their generation.

During nearly two years in Europe he had found himself as much fascinated by what he could learn concerning the methods by which science could be made to help industry as by what he discovered about the organization of institutions of learning. He was thinking much about what his own young country needed, and his hopes for the United States took account of industry and commerce as well as the field of academic endeavor. To be the chief executive officer of a particular business offered only a limited range of influence; but to stand at the intersection of the realm of production and the realm of knowledge offered considerably more.

Crisis in American colleges edit

In the 1800s, American colleges, controlled by clergymen, continued to embrace classical curricula that had little relevance to an industrializing nation. Few offered courses in the sciences, modern languages, history, or political economy — and only a handful had graduate or professional schools.[6][7]

As businessmen became increasingly reluctant to send their sons to schools whose curricula offered nothing useful — or to donate money for their support, some educational leaders began exploring ways of making higher education more attractive. Some backed the establishment of specialized schools of science and technology, like Harvard's Lawrence Scientific School, Yale's Sheffield Scientific School, and the newly chartered Massachusetts Institute of Technology, about to offer its first classes in 1865. Others proposed abandoning the classical curriculum, in favor of more vocational offerings.

Harvard was in the middle of this crisis. After three undistinguished short-term clerical Harvard presidencies in a ten-year period, Boston's business leaders, many of them Harvard alumni, were pressing for change — though with no clear idea of the kinds of changes they wanted.

 
Eliot around the time of his arrival at MIT

On his return to the United States in 1865, Eliot accepted an appointment as Professor of Analytical Chemistry at the newly founded Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In that year, an important revolution occurred in the government of Harvard University. The board of overseers had hitherto consisted of the governor, lieutenant-governor, president of the state senate, speaker of the house, secretary of the board of education, and president and treasurer of the university, together with thirty other persons, and these other persons were elected by joint ballot of the two houses of the state legislature.

An opinion had long been gaining ground that it would be better for the community and the interests of learning, as well as for the university, if the power to elect the overseers were transferred from the legislature to the graduates of the college. This change was made in 1865, and at the same time the governor and other state officers ceased to form part of the board. The effect of this change was to greatly strengthen the interest of the alumni in the management of the university, and thus to prepare the way for extensive and thorough reforms. Shortly afterward Dr. Thomas Hill resigned the presidency, and after a considerable interregnum Eliot succeeded to that office in 1869.[3]

Harvard presidency edit

Early in 1869, Eliot had presented his ideas about reforming American higher education in a compelling two-part article, "The New Education," in The Atlantic Monthly, the nation's leading journal of opinion. "We are fighting a wilderness, physical and moral," Eliot declared in setting forth his vision of the American university, "for this fight we must be trained and armed."[8] The articles resonated powerfully with the businessmen who controlled the Harvard Corporation. Shortly after their appearance, merely 35 years old, he was elected as the youngest president in the history of the nation's oldest university.

Eliot's educational vision incorporated important elements of Unitarian and Emersonian ideas about character development, framed by a pragmatic understanding of the role of higher education in economic and political leadership. His concern in "The New Education" was not merely curriculum, but the ultimate utility of education. A college education could enable a student to make intelligent choices, but should not attempt to provide specialized vocational or technical training.

Although his methods were pragmatic, Eliot's ultimate goal, like those of the secularized Puritanism of the Boston elite, was a spiritual one. The spiritual desideratum was not otherworldly. It was embedded in the material world and consisted of measurable progress of the human spirit towards mastery of human intelligence over nature — the "moral and spiritual wilderness." While this mastery depended on each individual fully realizing his capacities, it was ultimately a collective achievement and the product of institutions which established the conditions both for individual and collective achievement. Like the Union victory in the Civil War, triumph over the moral and physical wilderness and the establishment of mastery required a joining of industrial and cultural forces.

While he proposed the reform of professional schools, the development of research faculties, and, in general, a huge broadening of the curriculum, his blueprint for undergraduate education in crucial ways preserved — and even enhanced — its traditional spiritual and character education functions. Echoing Emerson, he believed that every individual mind had "its own peculiar constitution." The problem, both in terms of fully developing an individual's capacities and in maximizing his social utility, was to present him with a course of study sufficiently representative so as "to reveal to him, or at least to his teachers and parents, his capacities and tastes." An informed choice once made, the individual might pursue whatever specialized branch of knowledge he found congenial.[6]

But Eliot's goal went well beyond Emersonian self-actualization for its own sake. Framed by the higher purposes of a research university in the service of the nation, specialized expertise could be harnessed to public purposes. "When the revelation of his own peculiar taste and capacity comes to a young man, let him reverently give it welcome, thank God, and take courage," Eliot declared in his inaugural address. He further stated:

Thereafter he knows his way to happy, enthusiastic work, and, God willing, to usefulness and success. The civilization of a people may be inferred from the variety of its tools. There are thousands of years between the stone hatchet and the machine-shop. As tools multiply, each is more ingeniously adapted to its own exclusive purpose. So with the men that make the State. For the individual, concentration, and the highest development of his own peculiar faculty, is the only prudence. But for the State, it is variety, not uniformity, of intellectual product, which is needful.[9]

On the subject of educational reform, he declared:

As a people, we do not apply to mental activities the principle of division of labor; and we have but a halting faith in special training for high professional employments. The vulgar conceit that a Yankee can turn his hand to anything we insensibly carry into high places, where it is preposterous and criminal. We are accustomed to seeing men leap from farm or shop to court-room or pulpit, and we half believe that common men can safely use the seven-league boots of genius. What amount of knowledge and experience do we habitually demand of our lawgivers? What special training do we ordinarily think necessary for our diplomatists? — although in great emergencies the nation has known where to turn. Only after years of the bitterest experience did we come to believe the professional training of a soldier to be of value in war. This lack of faith in the prophecy of a natural bent, and in the value of a discipline concentrated upon a single object, amounts to a national danger.[10]

Under Eliot's leadership, Harvard adopted an "elective system" which vastly expanded the range of courses offered and permitted undergraduates unrestricted choice in selecting their courses of study — with a view to enabling them to discover their "natural bents" and pursue them into specialized studies. A monumental expansion of Harvard's graduate and professional school and departments facilitated specialization, while at the same time making the university a center for advanced scientific and technological research. Accompanying this was a shift in pedagogy from recitations and lectures towards classes that put students' achievements to the test and, through a revised grading system, rigorously assessed individual performance.

 
With Booker Washington and other dignitaries

Eliot's reforms did not go without criticism. His own kinsman Samuel Eliot Morison in his tercentenary history of Harvard gave an opinion that is rare among historians:

It was due to Eliot's insistent pressure that the Harvard faculty abolished the Greek requirement for entrance in 1887, after dropping required Latin and Greek for freshman year. His and Harvard's reputation, the pressure of teachers trained in the new learning, and of parents wanting ‘practical’ instruction for their sons, soon had the classics on the run, in schools as well as colleges; and no equivalent to the classics, for mental training, cultural background, or solid satisfaction in after life, has yet been discovered. It is a hard saying, but Mr. Eliot, more than any other man, is responsible for the greatest educational crime of the century against American youth—depriving him of his classical heritage.[11]

By contrast recent scholars such as Richard M. Freeland, emphasize that Eliot appreciated how Harvard needed to modernize:

Eliot believed that the traditional college, with its rigid curriculum and preoccupation with "virtue and piety," had become irrelevant to producing successful leaders for the industrial, urban nation of the late nineteenth century. Influenced by his observations of German universities, Eliot saw that conditions favored academic institutions dedicated to the secular achievements of the intellect, places that would nurture contemporary thinking on socially significant subjects and enable ambitious, talented men to demonstrate their abilities. The former objective required a faculty composed less of faithful teachers than of productive scholars for whom the campus would provide the conditions for creative work. The latter implied a shift of focus from undergraduate, liberal education to graduate work in the most important professional fields.[12]

Opposition to football and other sports edit

During his tenure, Eliot opposed football and tried unsuccessfully to abolish the game at Harvard. In 1905, The New York Times reported that he called it "a fight whose strategy and ethics are those of war", that violation of rules cannot be prevented, that "the weaker man is considered the legitimate prey of the stronger" and that "no sport is wholesome in which ungenerous or mean acts which easily escape detection contribute to victory."[13]

He also made public objections to baseball, basketball, and hockey. He was quoted as saying that rowing and tennis were the only clean sports.[14]

Eliot once said:

[T]his year I'm told the team did well because one pitcher had a fine curve ball. I understand that a curve ball is thrown with a deliberate attempt to deceive. Surely this is not an ability we should want to foster at Harvard.[15]

Attempted acquisition of MIT edit

During his lengthy tenure as Harvard's leader, Eliot initiated repeated attempts to acquire his former employer, the fledgling Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and these efforts continued even after he stepped down from the presidency.[16][17] The much younger college had considerable financial problems during its first five decades, and had been repeatedly rescued from insolvency by various benefactors, including George Eastman, the founder of Eastman Kodak Company. The faculty, students, and alumni of MIT often vehemently opposed merger of their school under the Harvard umbrella.[18] In 1916, MIT succeeded in moving across the Charles River from crowded Back Bay, Boston to larger facilities on the southern riverfront of Cambridge, but still faced the prospect of merger with Harvard,[19] which was to begin "when the Institute will occupy its splendid new buildings in Cambridge."[20] However, in 1917, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court rendered a decision that effectively cancelled plans for a merger,[17] and MIT eventually attained independent financial stability. During his life, Eliot had been involved in at least five unsuccessful attempts to absorb MIT into Harvard.[21]

Personal life edit

On October 27, 1858, Eliot married Ellen Derby Peabody of Salem Massachusetts (1836–1869) in Boston at Kings Chapel. Ellen was the daughter of Ephraim Peabody (1807-1856) and Mary Jane Derby (1807-1892), great-great-granddaughter of Elias Hasket Derby (1739-1799), and the sister of architect Robert Swain Peabody.[22] They had four sons, one of whom, Charles Eliot (November 1, 1859 – March 25, 1897) became an important landscape architect, responsible for Boston's public park system. He married Mary Yale Pitkin, granddaughter of Rev. Cyrus Yale, members of the Yale family of Yale University.[23] Another son, Samuel Atkins Eliot II (August 24, 1862 – October 15, 1950) became a Unitarian minister who was the longest-serving president of the American Unitarian Association (1900–1927) and was the first president granted executive authority of that organization.

 
"Blueberry Ledge" – Eliot's cottage in Northeast Harbor, designed by Peabody & Stearns

The Nobel Prize-winning poet T.S. Eliot was a cousin and attended Harvard from 1906 through 1909, completing his elective undergraduate courses in three instead of the normal four years, which were the last three years of Charles' presidency.[24]

After Ellen Derby Peabody died at the age of 33 of tuberculosis, Eliot married a second wife in 1877, Grace Mellen Hopkinson (1846–1924). This second marriage did not produce any children. Grace was a close relative of Frances Stone Hopkinson, wife of Samuel Atkins Eliot II, Charles's son.

Eliot retired in 1909, having served 40 years as president, the longest term in the university's history, and was honored as Harvard's first president emeritus. He lived another 17 years, dying in Northeast Harbor, Maine, in 1926, and was interred in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Legacy edit

Under Eliot, Harvard became a worldwide university, accepting its students around America using standardized entrance examinations and hiring well-known scholars from home and abroad. Eliot was an administrative reformer, reorganizing the university's faculty into schools and departments and replacing recitations with lectures and seminars. During his forty-year presidency, the university vastly expanded its facilities, with laboratories, libraries, classrooms, and athletic facilities replacing simple colonial structures. Eliot attracted the support of major donors from among the nation's growing plutocracy, making it the wealthiest private university in the world.

Eliot's leadership made Harvard not only the pace-setter for other American schools, but a major figure in the reform of secondary school education. Both the elite boarding schools, most of them founded during his presidency, and the public high schools shaped their curricula to meet Harvard's demanding standards. Eliot was a key figure in the creation of standardized admissions examinations, as a founding member of the College Entrance Examination Board.

As leader of the nation's wealthiest and best-known university, Eliot was necessarily a celebrated figure whose opinions were sought on a wide variety of matters, from tax policy (he offered the first coherent rationale for the charitable tax exemption) to the intellectual welfare of the general public.

President Eliot edited the Harvard Classics, which together are colloquially known as his Five Foot Shelf[25] and which were intended at the time to suggest a foundation for informed discourse, "A good substitute for a liberal education in youth to anyone who would read them with devotion, even if he could spare but fifteen minutes a day for reading."[26]

Eliot was an articulate opponent of American imperialism.

During his tenure as Harvard's president he denied women's demands to be allowed the same educational opportunities as men. In response to these demands he was quoted as saying "the world “(knows) next to nothing about the natural mental capacities of the female sex.”" Regardless of Eliot's opposition, women were able to find educational instruction through the Harvard Annex where they could receive instruction from Harvard faculty. Within a decade this program grew to 200 female students, and resulted in the creation of Radcliffe College. In the aftermath of the formation of the college, Eliot, with reservations, countersigned the degrees of women who attend Radcliffe certifying the degrees received by these students are equivalent in everyway to those received by students at Harvard. He still maintained that there must be a separation of the sexes when it came to education.[27][28]

While Eliot was president of Harvard many firsts happened when it came to the education of African Americans. Richard Theodore Greener was the first African American to graduate from Harvard. W.E.B. Du Bois was the first African American to earn a PhD from Harvard's Sociology Department, and from Harvard overall. Also, during his presidency, Eliot saw the hiring of Harvard's first African American faculty member George F. Grant. Yet, despite these changes Eliot continued to believe in racial segregation, anti-miscegenation, and eugenics.[28]

Unlike his successor, A. Lawrence Lowell, Eliot opposed efforts to limit the admission of Jews and Roman Catholics.[29][30] At the same time, Eliot was radically opposed to labor unions, fostering a campus climate where many Harvard students served as strikebreakers; he was called by some "the greatest labor union hater in the country."[31]

Charles Eliot was a fearless crusader not only for educational reform, but for many of the goals of the progressive movement—whose most prominent figurehead was Theodore Roosevelt (Class of 1880) and most eloquent spokesman was Herbert Croly (Class of 1889).

Eliot was also involved in philanthropy. In 1908 he joined the General Education Board, in 1913 served on the International Health Board, and served as a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation from 1914 to 1917. Helped found the Institute for Government Research (Brookings Institution) and serving as trustee. Acted as a founding trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace from its beginning in 1910 until 1919. Was an incorporator of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in 1870, and a trustee. Between 1908 and 1925 he served as the chairman of the Museum's Special Advisory Committee on Education. Served as vice president for the National Committee for Mental Hygiene from 1913 till his death.[32] Accepted election to be the first president of the American Social Hygiene Association. In 1902 became vice president of the National Civil Service Reform League, and in 1908 president of the league.[33]

In celebration of President Eliot's 90 birthday, congratulations came in across the world and notably from two American Presidents. Woodrow Wilson said of him, “No man has ever made a deeper impression of the educational system of a country than President Eliot has upon the educational system of America,” while Theodore Roosevelt exclaimed, “He is the only man in the world I envy.”[2]

Upon his death in 1926, The New York Times published a full-page interview that Eliot had given as he neared the end of his life,[34] including excerpts from his writings on education, religion, democracy, labor, woman, and Americanism.[35]

Former Harvard President, Economics Professor, and Secretary of Treasury Lawrence Summers now holds the Charles W. Eliot Emeritus University Professor position at Harvard University.[36]

Inscriptions composed by Charles W. Eliot edit

Over one hundred inscriptions were composed by President Eliot, placed on buildings ranging from schools, churches, public buildings, memorial tablets, numerous monuments, and to the Library of Congress.[37]

ON THESE HEIGHTS
DURING THE NIGHT OF MARCH 4 1776,
THE AMERICAN TROOPS BESIEGING BOSTON
BUILT TWO REDOUBTS,
WHICH MADE THE HARBOR AND TOWN
UNTENABLE BY THE BRITISH FLEET AND GARRISON.
ON MARCH 17 THE BRITISH FLEET
CARRYING 11000 EFFECTIVE MEN
AND 1000 REFUGES,
DROPPED DOWN TO NANTASKET ROADS
AND THENCEFORTH
BOSTON WAS FREE,
A STRONG BRITISH FORCE
HAD BEEN EXPELLED
FROM ONE OF THE UNITED AMERICAN COLONIES

(Evacuation Monument - Dorchester Heights Monument, Boston, Massachusetts, 1902)

TO THE MEN OF BOSTON
WHO DIED FOR THEIR COUNTRY
ON LAND AND SEA IN THE WAR
WHICH KEPT THE UNION WHOLE,
DESTROYED SLAVERY AND MAINTAINED THE CONSTITUTION.
THE GRATEFUL CITY
HAS BUILT THIS MONUMENT,
THAT THEIR EXAMPLE MAY SPEAK
TO COMING GENERATIONS

(Soldiers and Sailors Monument (Boston), Boston Common, Massachusetts, 1877)

Monuments and memorials edit

 
Eliot Mountain Memorial Plaque

Eliot House, one of the seven original residential houses for undergraduates at the college, was named in honor of Eliot and opened in 1931.[38] Charles W. Eliot Middle School in Altadena, California, Eliot Elementary School in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Charles William Eliot Junior High School (now Eliot-Hine Middle School) in Washington, DC were named in his honor. In 1940 the United States Postal Service issued a stamp in Eliot's honor as part of their Famous Americans Issue.[39] Asteroid (5202) Charleseliot is named in his honor. [40] Eliot Mountain was named in honor of the lifelong academic who summered on Mount Desert Island, Maine, and was a key figure in the creation of Acadia National Park.[41][42][43]

Honors and degrees edit

Books edit

  • The Training for an Effective Life (1915)
  • Educational Reform: Essays and Addresses (1901)
  • The Conflict between Individualism and Collectivism in a Democracy (1910)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Eliot, Charles William" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 274.
  2. ^ a b "Harvard Square Library".
  3. ^ a b Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Eliot, Samuel Atkins" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton. Most of this article, which starts out with a discussion of his father, is about Charles W. Eliot.
  4. ^ James, Henry (1930). Charles W. Eliot, president of Harvard University, 1869-1909, Volume 1. AMS Press. p. 130.
  5. ^ James, Henry (1930). Charles W. Eliot, president of Harvard University, 1869-1909, Volume 1. AMS Press. p. 147.
  6. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on January 24, 2018. Retrieved January 24, 2018.
  7. ^ "The Institute on Religion and Public Life". January 1991.
  8. ^ Charles W. Eliot, "The New Education," Atlantic Monthly, XXIII, Feb. (Part II in Mar.) 1869.
  9. ^ "Inaugural Address as the President of Harvard College," October 19, 1869 in Charles W. Eliot, Educational Reform: Essays and Addresses (New York: The Century Co.: 1901), pp. 12-13.
  10. ^ Id. at 11-12.
  11. ^ Samuel Eliot Morison, Three Centuries of Harvard 1636–1936 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1946), 359.
  12. ^ Richard M. Freeland, Academia's golden age (Oxford University Press, 1992). p. 19
  13. ^ "President Eliot on Football." The School Journal, Volume 70, United Education Company, New York, Chicago, and Boston, February 18, 1905, p.188.
  14. ^ "ELIOT AGAINST BASKET BALL.; Harvard President Says Rowing and Tennis Are the Only Clean Sports". The New York Times. November 28, 1906. Retrieved August 9, 2008.
  15. ^ McAfee, Skip. "Quoting Baseball: The Intellectual Take on Our National Pastime" NINE: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture, Volume 13, Number 2, Spring 2005, pp. 82-93
  16. ^ Marcott, Amy (October 25, 2011). . MIT Technology Review. Archived from the original on September 11, 2015.
  17. ^ a b . Founding & Early Years. Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. Archived from the original on March 8, 2013. Retrieved April 23, 2013.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on October 27, 2005. Retrieved November 23, 2005.
  19. ^ "Tech Alumni Holds Reunion. Record attendance, novel features. Cooperative plan with Harvard announced by Pres. Maclaurin. Gov. Walsh Brings Best Wishes of the State". Boston Daily Globe. January 11, 1914. p. 117.
    Maclaurin quoted: "in future Harvard agrees to carry out all its work in engineering and mining in the buildings of Technology under the executive control of the president of Technology, and, what is of the first importance, to commit all instruction and the laying down of all courses to the faculty of Technology, after that faculty has been enlarged and strengthened by the addition to its existing members of men of eminence from Harvard's Graduate School of Applied Science."
  20. ^ "Harvard-Tech Merger. Duplication of Work to be Avoided in Future. Instructors Who Will Hereafter be Members of Both Faculties". Boston Daily Globe. January 25, 1914. p. 47.
  21. ^ Alexander, Philip N. "MIT-Harvard Rivalry Timeline". MIT Music and Theater Arts News. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved July 7, 2014.
  22. ^ Fred Savage, The Cottage Builder November 9, 2021, at the Wayback Machine – Jaylene B. Roths, p.40
  23. ^ Rodney Horace Yale (1908). "Yale genealogy and history of Wales. The British kings and princes. Life of Owen Glyndwr. Biographies of Governor Elihu Yale". Archive.org. Milburn and Scott company. pp. 312–313-468-469.
  24. ^ Bush, Ronald. . Modern American Poetry. Archived from the original on June 27, 2014. Retrieved March 14, 2012.
  25. ^ Five Foot Shelf
  26. ^ "open culture".
  27. ^ "About The Institute: History: Radcliffe: From College to Institute". Harvard Radcliffe Institute. President and Fellows of Harvard College. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
  28. ^ a b "Charles Eliot". Eliot House. The President and Fellows of Harvard College. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
  29. ^ Marsha Graham Synnott, The Half-Opened Door: Discrimination and Admissions at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton, 1900-1970, Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1979.
  30. ^ Eliot, Charles William, 1834-1926. Papers of Charles William Eliot. inventory July 11, 2010, at the Wayback Machine General Correspondence Group 3, 1921-1925, bulk 1921-1923, Box 77, Harvard University Library.
  31. ^ Stephen H. Norwood, "The Student as Strikebreaker: College Youth and the Crisis of Masculinity in the Early 20th Century", Journal of Social History, Winter 1994.
  32. ^ "Mental Health America".
  33. ^ James, Henry (1930). Charles W. Eliot, president of Harvard University, 1869-1909, Volume II. AMS Press. pp. 185–188.
  34. ^ "Dr. Eliot: The Man and His work in Review". The New York Times. August 29, 1926. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
  35. ^ "Dr. Eliot Pointed Way to Right Living: Some of His Views on Education, Religion and Democracy". The New York Times. August 29, 1926. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
  36. ^ "University Professorships". Harvard University. The President and Fellows of Harvard College. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
  37. ^ The Presidents and Fellows of Harvard College (1934). Inscriptions Written by Charles William Eliot. Harvard University Press. pp. 22, 27.
  38. ^ . eliot.harvard.edu. Archived from the original on January 1, 2012. Retrieved January 25, 2012.
  39. ^ Petersham, Maud; Petersham, Miska (1947). America's Stamps. New York: The Macmillan Company. p. 106.
  40. ^ http://www.minorplanetcenter.net/iau/ECS/MPCArchive/2015/MPC_20150702.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  41. ^ "Eliot Mountain".
  42. ^ "National Park Service".
  43. ^ Goldstein, Judith (1992). Tragedies and Triumphs: Charles W. Eliot, George B. Dorr, and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. and the Founding of Acadia National Park. Somesville, Maine: Port in A Storm Bookstore.
  44. ^ American Library Association. Honorary Membership.
  45. ^ "Gold Medal for Dr. Eliot" (PDF). The New York Times.
  46. ^ "American Academy Honors Educator's Work for Literature" (PDF). The New York Times.
  47. ^ "American Academy of Arts and Letters".
  48. ^ Henry James (1930). Charles W. Eliot, President of Harvard University 1869-1909. p. Appendix G.

References edit

  • Hugh Hawkins. (1972). Between Harvard and America: The Educational Leadership of Charles W. Eliot. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. online
  • Henry James. (1930). Charles W. Eliot — President of Harvard, 1869–1909. Cambridge, MA: Houghton Mifflin.
  • Samuel Eliot Morison. (1936). Three Centuries of Harvard. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Samuel Eliot Morison (ed.). (1930). The Development of Harvard University, 1869–1929. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • "Football is a fight, says President Eliot. Harvard's Head Vigorously Attacks the Game. Strong Prey on the Weak. Conditions Governing the Sport Dr. Eliot Describes as Hateful & Mean; Wants $2,500,000 Endowment." The New York Times, February 2, 1905, p. 6. Quoted material is verbatim from the Times, but reported by the Times as indirect quotations from Eliot.

External links edit

Academic offices
Preceded by President of Harvard University
1869–1909
Succeeded by

charles, william, eliot, march, 1834, august, 1926, american, academic, president, harvard, university, from, 1869, 1909, longest, term, harvard, president, member, prominent, eliot, family, boston, transformed, harvard, from, respected, provincial, college, i. Charles William Eliot March 20 1834 August 22 1926 was an American academic who was president of Harvard University from 1869 to 1909 the longest term of any Harvard president 1 A member of the prominent Eliot family of Boston he transformed Harvard from a respected provincial college into America s preeminent research university Theodore Roosevelt called him the only man in the world I envy 2 Charles William EliotEliot c 190421st President of Harvard UniversityIn office 1869 1909Preceded byThomas HillSucceeded byA Lawrence LowellPersonal detailsBorn 1834 03 20 March 20 1834Boston Massachusetts U S DiedAugust 22 1926 1926 08 22 aged 92 Northeast Harbor Maine U S Spouse s Ellen Derby Peabody 1858 1869 Grace Mellen Hopkinson 1877 1924 ChildrenCharles EliotSamuel A Eliot IIAlma materHarvard CollegeProfessionProfessor university presidentSignature Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Studies of European education 3 Crisis in American colleges 4 Harvard presidency 4 1 Opposition to football and other sports 4 2 Attempted acquisition of MIT 5 Personal life 6 Legacy 6 1 Inscriptions composed by Charles W Eliot 6 2 Monuments and memorials 6 3 Honors and degrees 6 4 Books 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education editCharles Eliot was a scion of the wealthy Eliot family of Boston He was the son of politician Samuel Atkins Eliot 1 and his wife Mary nee Lyman and was the grandchild of banker Samuel Eliot and merchant Theodore Lyman of the Lyman Estate He was one of five siblings and the only boy Eliot graduated from Boston Latin School in 1849 and from Harvard University in 1853 He was later made an honorary member of the Hasty Pudding Although he had high expectations and obvious scientific talents the first fifteen years of Eliot s career were less than auspicious He was appointed Tutor in Mathematics at Harvard in the fall of 1854 and studied chemistry with Josiah P Cooke 3 In 1858 he was promoted to Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Chemistry He taught competently wrote some technical pieces on chemical impurities in industrial metals and busied himself with schemes for the reform of Harvard s Lawrence Scientific School But his real goal appointment to the Rumford Professorship of Chemistry eluded him This was a particularly bitter blow because of a change in his family s economic circumstances the financial failure of his father Samuel Atkins Eliot in the Panic of 1857 Eliot had to face the fact that he had nothing to look to but his teacher s salary and a legacy left to him by his grandfather Lyman After a bitter struggle over the Rumford chair Eliot left Harvard in 1863 His friends assumed that he would be obliged to cut chemistry and go into business in order to earn a livelihood for his family But instead he used his grandfather s large legacy and a small borrowed sum to spend the next two years studying the educational systems of the Old World in Europe Studies of European education editEliot s approach to investigating European education was unusual He did not confine his attention to educational institutions but explored the role of education in every aspect of national life When Eliot visited schools he took an interest in every aspect of institutional operation from curriculum and methods of instruction through physical arrangements and custodial services But his particular concern was with the relation between education and economic growth I have given special attention to the schools here provided for the education of young men for those arts and trades which require some knowledge of scientific principles and their applications the schools which turn out master workmen superintendents and designers for the numerous French industries which demand taste skill and special technical instruction Such schools we need at home I can t but think that a thorough knowledge of what France has found useful for the development of her resources may someday enable me to be of use to my country At this moment it is humiliating to read the figures which exhibit the increasing importations of all sorts of manufactured goods into America Especially will it be the interest of Massachusetts to foster by every mean in her power the manufactures which are her main strength 4 Eliot understood the interdependence of education and enterprise In a letter to his cousin Arthur T Lyman he discussed the value to the German chemical industry of discoveries made in university laboratories He also recognized that while European universities depended on government for support American institutions would have to draw on the resources of the wealthy He wrote to his cousin Every one of the famous universities of Europe was founded by Princes or privileged classes every Polytechnic School which I have visited in France or Germany has been supported in the main by Government Now this is not our way of managing these matters of education and we have not yet found any equivalent but republican method of producing the like results In our generation I hardly expect to see the institutions founded which have produced such results in Europe and after they are established they do not begin to tell upon the national industries for ten or twenty years The Puritans thought they must have trained ministers for the Church and they supported Harvard College when the American people are convinced that they require more competent chemists engineers artists architects than they now have they will somehow establish the institutions to train them In the meantime freedom and the American spirit of enterprise will do much for us as in the past 5 While Eliot was in Europe he was again presented with the opportunity to enter the world of active business The Merrimack Mills one of the largest textile mills in the United States tendered him an invitation to become its superintendent In spite of the urgings of his friends and the attractiveness of what for the time was the enormous salary of 5000 plus a good house rent free Eliot after giving considerable thought to the offer turned it down One of his biographers speculated that he surely realized by this time that he had a strong taste for organizing and administration This post would have given it scope He must have felt even if dimly that if science interested him it was not because he was first and last a lover of her laws and generalizations not only because the clarity and precision of science was congenial but because science answered the questions of practical men and conferred knowledge and power upon those who would perform the labors of their generation During nearly two years in Europe he had found himself as much fascinated by what he could learn concerning the methods by which science could be made to help industry as by what he discovered about the organization of institutions of learning He was thinking much about what his own young country needed and his hopes for the United States took account of industry and commerce as well as the field of academic endeavor To be the chief executive officer of a particular business offered only a limited range of influence but to stand at the intersection of the realm of production and the realm of knowledge offered considerably more Crisis in American colleges editIn the 1800s American colleges controlled by clergymen continued to embrace classical curricula that had little relevance to an industrializing nation Few offered courses in the sciences modern languages history or political economy and only a handful had graduate or professional schools 6 7 As businessmen became increasingly reluctant to send their sons to schools whose curricula offered nothing useful or to donate money for their support some educational leaders began exploring ways of making higher education more attractive Some backed the establishment of specialized schools of science and technology like Harvard s Lawrence Scientific School Yale s Sheffield Scientific School and the newly chartered Massachusetts Institute of Technology about to offer its first classes in 1865 Others proposed abandoning the classical curriculum in favor of more vocational offerings Harvard was in the middle of this crisis After three undistinguished short term clerical Harvard presidencies in a ten year period Boston s business leaders many of them Harvard alumni were pressing for change though with no clear idea of the kinds of changes they wanted nbsp Eliot around the time of his arrival at MITOn his return to the United States in 1865 Eliot accepted an appointment as Professor of Analytical Chemistry at the newly founded Massachusetts Institute of Technology In that year an important revolution occurred in the government of Harvard University The board of overseers had hitherto consisted of the governor lieutenant governor president of the state senate speaker of the house secretary of the board of education and president and treasurer of the university together with thirty other persons and these other persons were elected by joint ballot of the two houses of the state legislature An opinion had long been gaining ground that it would be better for the community and the interests of learning as well as for the university if the power to elect the overseers were transferred from the legislature to the graduates of the college This change was made in 1865 and at the same time the governor and other state officers ceased to form part of the board The effect of this change was to greatly strengthen the interest of the alumni in the management of the university and thus to prepare the way for extensive and thorough reforms Shortly afterward Dr Thomas Hill resigned the presidency and after a considerable interregnum Eliot succeeded to that office in 1869 3 Harvard presidency editEarly in 1869 Eliot had presented his ideas about reforming American higher education in a compelling two part article The New Education in The Atlantic Monthly the nation s leading journal of opinion We are fighting a wilderness physical and moral Eliot declared in setting forth his vision of the American university for this fight we must be trained and armed 8 The articles resonated powerfully with the businessmen who controlled the Harvard Corporation Shortly after their appearance merely 35 years old he was elected as the youngest president in the history of the nation s oldest university Eliot s educational vision incorporated important elements of Unitarian and Emersonian ideas about character development framed by a pragmatic understanding of the role of higher education in economic and political leadership His concern in The New Education was not merely curriculum but the ultimate utility of education A college education could enable a student to make intelligent choices but should not attempt to provide specialized vocational or technical training Although his methods were pragmatic Eliot s ultimate goal like those of the secularized Puritanism of the Boston elite was a spiritual one The spiritual desideratum was not otherworldly It was embedded in the material world and consisted of measurable progress of the human spirit towards mastery of human intelligence over nature the moral and spiritual wilderness While this mastery depended on each individual fully realizing his capacities it was ultimately a collective achievement and the product of institutions which established the conditions both for individual and collective achievement Like the Union victory in the Civil War triumph over the moral and physical wilderness and the establishment of mastery required a joining of industrial and cultural forces While he proposed the reform of professional schools the development of research faculties and in general a huge broadening of the curriculum his blueprint for undergraduate education in crucial ways preserved and even enhanced its traditional spiritual and character education functions Echoing Emerson he believed that every individual mind had its own peculiar constitution The problem both in terms of fully developing an individual s capacities and in maximizing his social utility was to present him with a course of study sufficiently representative so as to reveal to him or at least to his teachers and parents his capacities and tastes An informed choice once made the individual might pursue whatever specialized branch of knowledge he found congenial 6 But Eliot s goal went well beyond Emersonian self actualization for its own sake Framed by the higher purposes of a research university in the service of the nation specialized expertise could be harnessed to public purposes When the revelation of his own peculiar taste and capacity comes to a young man let him reverently give it welcome thank God and take courage Eliot declared in his inaugural address He further stated Thereafter he knows his way to happy enthusiastic work and God willing to usefulness and success The civilization of a people may be inferred from the variety of its tools There are thousands of years between the stone hatchet and the machine shop As tools multiply each is more ingeniously adapted to its own exclusive purpose So with the men that make the State For the individual concentration and the highest development of his own peculiar faculty is the only prudence But for the State it is variety not uniformity of intellectual product which is needful 9 On the subject of educational reform he declared As a people we do not apply to mental activities the principle of division of labor and we have but a halting faith in special training for high professional employments The vulgar conceit that a Yankee can turn his hand to anything we insensibly carry into high places where it is preposterous and criminal We are accustomed to seeing men leap from farm or shop to court room or pulpit and we half believe that common men can safely use the seven league boots of genius What amount of knowledge and experience do we habitually demand of our lawgivers What special training do we ordinarily think necessary for our diplomatists although in great emergencies the nation has known where to turn Only after years of the bitterest experience did we come to believe the professional training of a soldier to be of value in war This lack of faith in the prophecy of a natural bent and in the value of a discipline concentrated upon a single object amounts to a national danger 10 Under Eliot s leadership Harvard adopted an elective system which vastly expanded the range of courses offered and permitted undergraduates unrestricted choice in selecting their courses of study with a view to enabling them to discover their natural bents and pursue them into specialized studies A monumental expansion of Harvard s graduate and professional school and departments facilitated specialization while at the same time making the university a center for advanced scientific and technological research Accompanying this was a shift in pedagogy from recitations and lectures towards classes that put students achievements to the test and through a revised grading system rigorously assessed individual performance nbsp With Booker Washington and other dignitariesEliot s reforms did not go without criticism His own kinsman Samuel Eliot Morison in his tercentenary history of Harvard gave an opinion that is rare among historians It was due to Eliot s insistent pressure that the Harvard faculty abolished the Greek requirement for entrance in 1887 after dropping required Latin and Greek for freshman year His and Harvard s reputation the pressure of teachers trained in the new learning and of parents wanting practical instruction for their sons soon had the classics on the run in schools as well as colleges and no equivalent to the classics for mental training cultural background or solid satisfaction in after life has yet been discovered It is a hard saying but Mr Eliot more than any other man is responsible for the greatest educational crime of the century against American youth depriving him of his classical heritage 11 By contrast recent scholars such as Richard M Freeland emphasize that Eliot appreciated how Harvard needed to modernize Eliot believed that the traditional college with its rigid curriculum and preoccupation with virtue and piety had become irrelevant to producing successful leaders for the industrial urban nation of the late nineteenth century Influenced by his observations of German universities Eliot saw that conditions favored academic institutions dedicated to the secular achievements of the intellect places that would nurture contemporary thinking on socially significant subjects and enable ambitious talented men to demonstrate their abilities The former objective required a faculty composed less of faithful teachers than of productive scholars for whom the campus would provide the conditions for creative work The latter implied a shift of focus from undergraduate liberal education to graduate work in the most important professional fields 12 Opposition to football and other sports edit During his tenure Eliot opposed football and tried unsuccessfully to abolish the game at Harvard In 1905 The New York Times reported that he called it a fight whose strategy and ethics are those of war that violation of rules cannot be prevented that the weaker man is considered the legitimate prey of the stronger and that no sport is wholesome in which ungenerous or mean acts which easily escape detection contribute to victory 13 He also made public objections to baseball basketball and hockey He was quoted as saying that rowing and tennis were the only clean sports 14 Eliot once said T his year I m told the team did well because one pitcher had a fine curve ball I understand that a curve ball is thrown with a deliberate attempt to deceive Surely this is not an ability we should want to foster at Harvard 15 Attempted acquisition of MIT edit During his lengthy tenure as Harvard s leader Eliot initiated repeated attempts to acquire his former employer the fledgling Massachusetts Institute of Technology and these efforts continued even after he stepped down from the presidency 16 17 The much younger college had considerable financial problems during its first five decades and had been repeatedly rescued from insolvency by various benefactors including George Eastman the founder of Eastman Kodak Company The faculty students and alumni of MIT often vehemently opposed merger of their school under the Harvard umbrella 18 In 1916 MIT succeeded in moving across the Charles River from crowded Back Bay Boston to larger facilities on the southern riverfront of Cambridge but still faced the prospect of merger with Harvard 19 which was to begin when the Institute will occupy its splendid new buildings in Cambridge 20 However in 1917 the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court rendered a decision that effectively cancelled plans for a merger 17 and MIT eventually attained independent financial stability During his life Eliot had been involved in at least five unsuccessful attempts to absorb MIT into Harvard 21 Personal life editOn October 27 1858 Eliot married Ellen Derby Peabody of Salem Massachusetts 1836 1869 in Boston at Kings Chapel Ellen was the daughter of Ephraim Peabody 1807 1856 and Mary Jane Derby 1807 1892 great great granddaughter of Elias Hasket Derby 1739 1799 and the sister of architect Robert Swain Peabody 22 They had four sons one of whom Charles Eliot November 1 1859 March 25 1897 became an important landscape architect responsible for Boston s public park system He married Mary Yale Pitkin granddaughter of Rev Cyrus Yale members of the Yale family of Yale University 23 Another son Samuel Atkins Eliot II August 24 1862 October 15 1950 became a Unitarian minister who was the longest serving president of the American Unitarian Association 1900 1927 and was the first president granted executive authority of that organization nbsp Blueberry Ledge Eliot s cottage in Northeast Harbor designed by Peabody amp StearnsThe Nobel Prize winning poet T S Eliot was a cousin and attended Harvard from 1906 through 1909 completing his elective undergraduate courses in three instead of the normal four years which were the last three years of Charles presidency 24 After Ellen Derby Peabody died at the age of 33 of tuberculosis Eliot married a second wife in 1877 Grace Mellen Hopkinson 1846 1924 This second marriage did not produce any children Grace was a close relative of Frances Stone Hopkinson wife of Samuel Atkins Eliot II Charles s son Eliot retired in 1909 having served 40 years as president the longest term in the university s history and was honored as Harvard s first president emeritus He lived another 17 years dying in Northeast Harbor Maine in 1926 and was interred in Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge Massachusetts Legacy editUnder Eliot Harvard became a worldwide university accepting its students around America using standardized entrance examinations and hiring well known scholars from home and abroad Eliot was an administrative reformer reorganizing the university s faculty into schools and departments and replacing recitations with lectures and seminars During his forty year presidency the university vastly expanded its facilities with laboratories libraries classrooms and athletic facilities replacing simple colonial structures Eliot attracted the support of major donors from among the nation s growing plutocracy making it the wealthiest private university in the world Eliot s leadership made Harvard not only the pace setter for other American schools but a major figure in the reform of secondary school education Both the elite boarding schools most of them founded during his presidency and the public high schools shaped their curricula to meet Harvard s demanding standards Eliot was a key figure in the creation of standardized admissions examinations as a founding member of the College Entrance Examination Board As leader of the nation s wealthiest and best known university Eliot was necessarily a celebrated figure whose opinions were sought on a wide variety of matters from tax policy he offered the first coherent rationale for the charitable tax exemption to the intellectual welfare of the general public President Eliot edited the Harvard Classics which together are colloquially known as his Five Foot Shelf 25 and which were intended at the time to suggest a foundation for informed discourse A good substitute for a liberal education in youth to anyone who would read them with devotion even if he could spare but fifteen minutes a day for reading 26 Eliot was an articulate opponent of American imperialism During his tenure as Harvard s president he denied women s demands to be allowed the same educational opportunities as men In response to these demands he was quoted as saying the world knows next to nothing about the natural mental capacities of the female sex Regardless of Eliot s opposition women were able to find educational instruction through the Harvard Annex where they could receive instruction from Harvard faculty Within a decade this program grew to 200 female students and resulted in the creation of Radcliffe College In the aftermath of the formation of the college Eliot with reservations countersigned the degrees of women who attend Radcliffe certifying the degrees received by these students are equivalent in everyway to those received by students at Harvard He still maintained that there must be a separation of the sexes when it came to education 27 28 While Eliot was president of Harvard many firsts happened when it came to the education of African Americans Richard Theodore Greener was the first African American to graduate from Harvard W E B Du Bois was the first African American to earn a PhD from Harvard s Sociology Department and from Harvard overall Also during his presidency Eliot saw the hiring of Harvard s first African American faculty member George F Grant Yet despite these changes Eliot continued to believe in racial segregation anti miscegenation and eugenics 28 Unlike his successor A Lawrence Lowell Eliot opposed efforts to limit the admission of Jews and Roman Catholics 29 30 At the same time Eliot was radically opposed to labor unions fostering a campus climate where many Harvard students served as strikebreakers he was called by some the greatest labor union hater in the country 31 Charles Eliot was a fearless crusader not only for educational reform but for many of the goals of the progressive movement whose most prominent figurehead was Theodore Roosevelt Class of 1880 and most eloquent spokesman was Herbert Croly Class of 1889 Eliot was also involved in philanthropy In 1908 he joined the General Education Board in 1913 served on the International Health Board and served as a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation from 1914 to 1917 Helped found the Institute for Government Research Brookings Institution and serving as trustee Acted as a founding trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace from its beginning in 1910 until 1919 Was an incorporator of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in 1870 and a trustee Between 1908 and 1925 he served as the chairman of the Museum s Special Advisory Committee on Education Served as vice president for the National Committee for Mental Hygiene from 1913 till his death 32 Accepted election to be the first president of the American Social Hygiene Association In 1902 became vice president of the National Civil Service Reform League and in 1908 president of the league 33 In celebration of President Eliot s 90 birthday congratulations came in across the world and notably from two American Presidents Woodrow Wilson said of him No man has ever made a deeper impression of the educational system of a country than President Eliot has upon the educational system of America while Theodore Roosevelt exclaimed He is the only man in the world I envy 2 Upon his death in 1926 The New York Times published a full page interview that Eliot had given as he neared the end of his life 34 including excerpts from his writings on education religion democracy labor woman and Americanism 35 Former Harvard President Economics Professor and Secretary of Treasury Lawrence Summers now holds the Charles W Eliot Emeritus University Professor position at Harvard University 36 Inscriptions composed by Charles W Eliot edit Over one hundred inscriptions were composed by President Eliot placed on buildings ranging from schools churches public buildings memorial tablets numerous monuments and to the Library of Congress 37 ON THESE HEIGHTS DURING THE NIGHT OF MARCH 4 1776 THE AMERICAN TROOPS BESIEGING BOSTON BUILT TWO REDOUBTS WHICH MADE THE HARBOR AND TOWN UNTENABLE BY THE BRITISH FLEET AND GARRISON ON MARCH 17 THE BRITISH FLEET CARRYING 11000 EFFECTIVE MEN AND 1000 REFUGES DROPPED DOWN TO NANTASKET ROADS AND THENCEFORTH BOSTON WAS FREE A STRONG BRITISH FORCE HAD BEEN EXPELLED FROM ONE OF THE UNITED AMERICAN COLONIES Evacuation Monument Dorchester Heights Monument Boston Massachusetts 1902 TO THE MEN OF BOSTON WHO DIED FOR THEIR COUNTRY ON LAND AND SEA IN THE WAR WHICH KEPT THE UNION WHOLE DESTROYED SLAVERY AND MAINTAINED THE CONSTITUTION THE GRATEFUL CITY HAS BUILT THIS MONUMENT THAT THEIR EXAMPLE MAY SPEAK TO COMING GENERATIONS Soldiers and Sailors Monument Boston Boston Common Massachusetts 1877 Monuments and memorials edit nbsp Eliot Mountain Memorial PlaqueEliot House one of the seven original residential houses for undergraduates at the college was named in honor of Eliot and opened in 1931 38 Charles W Eliot Middle School in Altadena California Eliot Elementary School in Tulsa Oklahoma Charles William Eliot Junior High School now Eliot Hine Middle School in Washington DC were named in his honor In 1940 the United States Postal Service issued a stamp in Eliot s honor as part of their Famous Americans Issue 39 Asteroid 5202 Charleseliot is named in his honor 40 Eliot Mountain was named in honor of the lifelong academic who summered on Mount Desert Island Maine and was a key figure in the creation of Acadia National Park 41 42 43 Honors and degrees edit 1857 Fellow American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1869 LL D Williams College LL D Princeton University 1870 LL D Yale University 1871 Member American Philosophical Society 1873 Member Massachusetts Historical Society 1879 American Library Association Honorary Membership 44 1902 LL D Johns Hopkins University 1903 Officer Legion of Honor France 1904 Corresponding Member Academy Moral and Political Science Institute of France 1908 Grand Officer Order of the Crown of Italy 1909 Imperial Order of the Rising Sun 1st class Royal Order of Merit of the Prussian Crown 1st class Fellow Royal Society of Literature England LL D Tulane University LL D University of Missouri LL D Dartmouth College LL D Harvard University MD hon Harvard University 1911 Ph D hon University of Breslau 1914 Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy LL D Brown University 1915 Gold Medal American Academy of Arts and Letters 45 46 47 1919 Order of the Crown of Belgium 1923 Grand Cordon of the Order of St Sava Serbia LL D Boston University Civic Forum Medal of Honor New York 1924 Roosevelt Medal for Distinguished Service Commander of the Legion of Honor France LL D University of the State of New York 48 Books edit The Training for an Effective Life 1915 Educational Reform Essays and Addresses 1901 The Conflict between Individualism and Collectivism in a Democracy 1910 See also editHistory of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Lawrence Scientific SchoolNotes edit a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Eliot Charles William Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 274 a b Harvard Square Library a b Wilson J G Fiske J eds 1900 Eliot Samuel Atkins Appletons Cyclopaedia of American Biography New York D Appleton Most of this article which starts out with a discussion of his father is about Charles W Eliot James Henry 1930 Charles W Eliot president of Harvard University 1869 1909 Volume 1 AMS Press p 130 James Henry 1930 Charles W Eliot president of Harvard University 1869 1909 Volume 1 AMS Press p 147 a b Rediscovering the Bourgeoisie Higher Education and Governing Class Formation in the United States 1870 1914 PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 24 2018 Retrieved January 24 2018 The Institute on Religion and Public Life January 1991 Charles W Eliot The New Education Atlantic Monthly XXIII Feb Part II in Mar 1869 Inaugural Address as the President of Harvard College October 19 1869 in Charles W Eliot Educational Reform Essays and Addresses New York The Century Co 1901 pp 12 13 Id at 11 12 Samuel Eliot Morison Three Centuries of Harvard 1636 1936 Cambridge Harvard University Press 1946 359 Richard M Freeland Academia s golden age Oxford University Press 1992 p 19 President Eliot on Football The School Journal Volume 70 United Education Company New York Chicago and Boston February 18 1905 p 188 ELIOT AGAINST BASKET BALL Harvard President Says Rowing and Tennis Are the Only Clean Sports The New York Times November 28 1906 Retrieved August 9 2008 McAfee Skip Quoting Baseball The Intellectual Take on Our National Pastime NINE A Journal of Baseball History and Culture Volume 13 Number 2 Spring 2005 pp 82 93 Marcott Amy October 25 2011 The Harvard Institute of Technology How alumni rallied for an independent MIT MIT Technology Review Archived from the original on September 11 2015 a b Gordon McKay Patent Pending The Founding of Practical Science at Harvard Founding amp Early Years Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Archived from the original on March 8 2013 Retrieved April 23 2013 National Selection Committee Ballot Power of the NSC Archived from the original on October 27 2005 Retrieved November 23 2005 Tech Alumni Holds Reunion Record attendance novel features Cooperative plan with Harvard announced by Pres Maclaurin Gov Walsh Brings Best Wishes of the State Boston Daily Globe January 11 1914 p 117 Maclaurin quoted in future Harvard agrees to carry out all its work in engineering and mining in the buildings of Technology under the executive control of the president of Technology and what is of the first importance to commit all instruction and the laying down of all courses to the faculty of Technology after that faculty has been enlarged and strengthened by the addition to its existing members of men of eminence from Harvard s Graduate School of Applied Science Harvard Tech Merger Duplication of Work to be Avoided in Future Instructors Who Will Hereafter be Members of Both Faculties Boston Daily Globe January 25 1914 p 47 Alexander Philip N MIT Harvard Rivalry Timeline MIT Music and Theater Arts News Massachusetts Institute of Technology Retrieved July 7 2014 Fred Savage The Cottage Builder Archived November 9 2021 at the Wayback Machine Jaylene B Roths p 40 Rodney Horace Yale 1908 Yale genealogy and history of Wales The British kings and princes Life of Owen Glyndwr Biographies of Governor Elihu Yale Archive org Milburn and Scott company pp 312 313 468 469 Bush Ronald T S Eliot s Life and Career Modern American Poetry Archived from the original on June 27 2014 Retrieved March 14 2012 Five Foot Shelf open culture About The Institute History Radcliffe From College to Institute Harvard Radcliffe Institute President and Fellows of Harvard College Retrieved April 12 2023 a b Charles Eliot Eliot House The President and Fellows of Harvard College Retrieved April 12 2023 Marsha Graham Synnott The Half Opened Door Discrimination and Admissions at Harvard Yale and Princeton 1900 1970 Westport CT Greenwood Press 1979 Eliot Charles William 1834 1926 Papers of Charles William Eliot inventory Archived July 11 2010 at the Wayback Machine General Correspondence Group 3 1921 1925 bulk 1921 1923 Box 77 Harvard University Library Stephen H Norwood The Student as Strikebreaker College Youth and the Crisis of Masculinity in the Early 20th Century Journal of Social History Winter 1994 Mental Health America James Henry 1930 Charles W Eliot president of Harvard University 1869 1909 Volume II AMS Press pp 185 188 Dr Eliot The Man and His work in Review The New York Times August 29 1926 Retrieved March 21 2015 Dr Eliot Pointed Way to Right Living Some of His Views on Education Religion and Democracy The New York Times August 29 1926 Retrieved March 21 2015 University Professorships Harvard University The President and Fellows of Harvard College Retrieved April 12 2023 The Presidents and Fellows of Harvard College 1934 Inscriptions Written by Charles William Eliot Harvard University Press pp 22 27 Eliot House History of Eliot House eliot harvard edu Archived from the original on January 1 2012 Retrieved January 25 2012 Petersham Maud Petersham Miska 1947 America s Stamps New York The Macmillan Company p 106 http www minorplanetcenter net iau ECS MPCArchive 2015 MPC 20150702 pdf bare URL PDF Eliot Mountain National Park Service Goldstein Judith 1992 Tragedies and Triumphs Charles W Eliot George B Dorr and John D Rockefeller Jr and the Founding of Acadia National Park Somesville Maine Port in A Storm Bookstore American Library Association Honorary Membership Gold Medal for Dr Eliot PDF The New York Times American Academy Honors Educator s Work for Literature PDF The New York Times American Academy of Arts and Letters Henry James 1930 Charles W Eliot President of Harvard University 1869 1909 p Appendix G References editHugh Hawkins 1972 Between Harvard and America The Educational Leadership of Charles W Eliot New York NY Oxford University Press online Henry James 1930 Charles W Eliot President of Harvard 1869 1909 Cambridge MA Houghton Mifflin Samuel Eliot Morison 1936 Three Centuries of Harvard Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Samuel Eliot Morison ed 1930 The Development of Harvard University 1869 1929 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Football is a fight says President Eliot Harvard s Head Vigorously Attacks the Game Strong Prey on the Weak Conditions Governing the Sport Dr Eliot Describes as Hateful amp Mean Wants 2 500 000 Endowment The New York Times February 2 1905 p 6 Quoted material is verbatim from the Times but reported by the Times as indirect quotations from Eliot External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Charles William Eliot nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Charles W Eliot nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Charles William Eliot Brief biography Columbia Encyclopedia 6th Edition 2001 Works by Charles William Eliot at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Charles William Eliot at Internet Archive Works by Charles William Eliot at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Texts of some of Eliot s most important writings along with interpretive texts Newspaper clippings about Charles William Eliot in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWAcademic officesPreceded byThomas Hill President of Harvard University1869 1909 Succeeded byA Lawrence Lowell Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Charles William Eliot amp oldid 1207413182, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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