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University of King's College

The University of King's College is a public liberal arts university in Halifax, Nova Scotia.[5] Established in 1789, it is the oldest chartered university in Canada, and the oldest English-speaking university in the Commonwealth outside of the United Kingdom.[6] The university is regarded for its Foundation Year Program (FYP), an undergraduate curriculum designed to comprehensively study a variety of intellectual developments—past and present—through great books and ideas.[7] It is also known for its upper-year interdisciplinary programs, particularly in contemporary studies, early modern studies, and the history of science and technology. In addition, the university has a journalism school that attracts students from across the world for its intensive graduate programs in journalism, writing, and publishing.[8][9]

University of King's College
MottoDeo Legi Regi Gregi (Latin)
Motto in English
For God, Law, King, People
TypePublic university
Established1789; 235 years ago (1789)
Endowment$51.4 million
ChancellorDebra Deane Little[1]
PresidentWilliam Lahey[2]
Vice-presidentSarah Clift[3]
VisitorSandra Fyfe ex officio as the Anglican Bishop of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island
Academic staff
64
Students914[4]
Undergraduates865
Postgraduates49
Address
44°38′15″N 63°35′43″W / 44.63750°N 63.59528°W / 44.63750; -63.59528
CampusUrban, 5-acre (2.02 ha)
ColoursBlue   and White  
AffiliationsDalhousie University, AUCC, CUP.
Websitewww.ukings.ca

The university was founded by royal charter in Windsor, Nova Scotia as the King's Collegiate School in 1788, but the school moved to its current location in Halifax after a fire destroyed a large portion of the original university in 1920.[6][10] The relocation was made possible with the help of Dalhousie University, which has since maintained a joint Faculty of Arts and Sciences with King's. As a result, this has provided students at King's with full access to Dalhousie’s facilities and services. Furthermore, students from King’s and Dalhousie can enrol in courses offered at either institution as both campuses are located adjacent to each other. Despite this academic partnership, the University of King's College remains independent under its own charter.[11]

History edit

Late 18th century and 19th century edit

King's College traces its origins to the King's College of New York City.[12] On 31 October 1754, King George II of Great Britain issued the charter for King's College within New York City, establishing it as the oldest institution of higher learning in the state of New York and the fifth-oldest in the United States.[13] In 1776, during the eruption of the American Revolutionary War, studies at the university halted for the subsequent eight years. During this period, the college's library was looted, and its sole building was requisitioned for use as a military hospital first by American and then British forces.[14][15] When Patriots took over the university, Bishop Charles Inglis, the rector of Trinity Church, led the flight of Loyalists to Windsor, Nova Scotia.

In 1788, the resettled Anglican loyalists founded the King's Collegiate School in Windsor and named it for King George III of Great Britain.[16] In the following year, the University of King's College emerged from the collegiate while an act was passed for "the permanent establishment and effectual support of a college at Windsor," and £400 per annum was granted towards its maintenance.[17] The college opened in 1790,[18] and received a royal charter from King George III in 1802,[6] becoming Canada's first English-speaking, degree-granting university. Even though the University of New Brunswick traces its history to another King's College, this one at Fredericton, established in 1785, it did not initially receive degree-granting powers through a Royal Charter until 1827. Similarly, McGill University traces its origins to 1801 but did not receive a Royal Charter until 1821.[19]

 
In 1891, King's chapel acquires the oldest (c. 1663) Anglican chalice in Canada[20]

Windsor was chosen as the location of the college, as it was described at the time as "a cherished semi-rural retreat for generations of Nova Scotians."[21] Prior to European settlement, the Mi'kmaq occupied the land, called Pesaquid, for more than 10,000 years.[1] In the 16th century, the land was taken from the Mi'kmaq by French colonists, who then named the area Pisiguit as part of the colony of Acadia. British colonists later took over the land from the French, as part of a larger conflict in the Seven Years' War. The founders of King's College, representing the political and financial elite of these British colonists, had only been in the area since the 1750s, with the construction of Fort Edward and the expulsion of the Acadians, beginning in 1755.

A significant reason for the establishment of King's College was to discourage white, Anglican colonial males from studying in the United States, so as to guard against the influence of American Republicanism and maintain loyalty to the British Crown.[21]

The founding of a College or Seminary of learning on a liberal plan in that province [Nova Scotia] where youth may receive a virtuous education and can be qualified for the learned professions, is, we humbly conceive, a member of great consequence, as it would diffuse religious literature, loyalty, and good morals among His Majesty's subjects there. If such a seminary is not established the inhabitants will have no means of educating their sons at home, but will be under the but will necessity of sending them for that purpose either to Great Britain…or else some of the states of this continent, where they will soon imbibe principles that are unfavourable to the British Constitution.[21]

On this, the Archbishop of Nova Scotia and a founder of the college, Charles Inglis, was quite clear:

...one of the principle motives for pushing [the college] forward was to prevent the importation of American Divines and American politics into the province. Unless we have a seminary here, the youth of Nova Scotia will be sent for their education to the Revolted Colonies—the inevitable consequences would be a corruption of their religious and political principle. [21]

Maintaining British English as the dominant language in the colony was another significant reason for the college, as was made clear by the college's founders:

A very principal object of the new institution would be accomplished by assimilating the manner of the rising generation to those of the parent state . . . to teach the genuine use, practice and pronunciation of the English language, which in distant colonies is apt to degenerate, and that the purity of the language, undebased by local or national accents and solecisms, is undeniably to be found in the Kingdom of England.[21]

These ideas continued during the development and appointments of the college's board, principals, and faculty. Influence in the development of the college came from the highest levels, both in Nova Scotia, including the first Bishop of Nova Scotia, and in England, through the Archbishop of Canterbury, and King George III. The first Board of Governors include the colony's Governor, the Lieutenant Governor, the Chief Justice, the Secretary of the colony, the Speaker of the House of Assembly, the Attorney General, and the Solicitor General.[21]

The university was modelled on older English universities which were generally residential, tutorial, and closely tied to the Church of England.[22] Only white, British males could attend the college, and with its Anglican affiliation, these students, during the 19th century, were required to adhere to the 39 Articles of the Anglican Church. As a result, significant groups were barred from attending, including the Mi'kmaq, Francophones, Roman Catholics, other Protestant sects, and enslaved peoples, including those owned by the founders[23] of the town of Windsor.

Other facts edit

Upon discovering the chalice and paten of St. Peter's Anglican Church (West LaHave, Nova Scotia) were being sold in Halifax, Senator William Johnston Almon purchased them and donated them to the King's College Chapel (1891). The chalice is reported to be the oldest Anglican chalice in Canada, dated to c. 1663.[24][20]

The Town of Windsor assert that students at King's College invented ice hockey c. 1800 on Long Pond adjacent to the campus. (A similar game developed, perhaps independently, in Kingston, Ontario several years later which has led to occasional confusion about the sport's origins.[citation needed])

The noted Canadian poet Sir Charles G. D. Roberts taught at King's College from 1885 to 1895.[25]

Early and mid-20th century edit

 
A view of the A&A, North Pole Bay, and Cochran Bay from across the Quad in a spring fog

On February 5, 1920, a fire consumed many of the university’s buildings. Although the cause of the blaze is still unknown, legend states it was caused by students playing with matches in a dormitory. Due to frozen fire hydrants at the time of the event, the blaze could not be put out and a majority of the 28-hectare campus burned to the ground.[26]

In 1922, the Carnegie Foundation offered a conditional grant to rebuild King's College. Among the provisions were that King's College was to be rebuilt in Halifax, the capital of Nova Scotia, and that it was to enter into an association with Dalhousie University.[27] The partnership required King's to pay the salaries of select Dalhousie professors, who, in return, would help manage King's College.[27] In addition, students at King's would be permitted to study at Dalhousie, while Dalhousie students would be permitted to study at King's with the exception of divinity; the granting of all other degrees outlined in the 1802 charter was to be temporarily halted.[27] The conditions were in hope that one day all of Nova Scotia's universities would merge into a single body, much like the University of Toronto. As consolidation was a way to strengthen a small and financially insecure institution, King's College accepted the funding and relocated to the northwest corner of Dalhousie's Studley Campus, at the intersection of Oxford Street and Coburg Road. Alongside the move, the institution renamed itself “University of King's College”. Other universities in Halifax similarly did not follow through with the Carnegie Foundation's merger plan.

In the formative years of King's College, many more types of degrees were offered than the institution offers today; for example, the University of New Brunswick Faculty of Law traces its history to the "King's College Law School" that was established in 1892 by King's College (in Windsor). While the University of King's College has never lost nor relinquished interest in these granting powers, they are held in abeyance due to agreements with the University of King's College's partner, Dalhousie University, as part of the agreement to allow the portion of Dalhousie's campus to be used by the University of King's College. In addition, professional education in the 19th century expanded beyond the traditional fields of theology, law, and medicine — thus, graduate training based on the German model of specialized course work and the completion of a research thesis was introduced at the school.

In 1923, the former site of King's College in Windsor was designated a National Historic Site.[28]

When World War II broke out, King's was requisitioned by the military for the training of naval officers between 1941 and 1945.[27] King's functioned as a "stone frigate", providing a facility for navigation training before officers were sent to their ships. This role is highlighted in the 1943 Hollywood feature film, Corvette K-225, a part of which was filmed on the University campus. The academic life of the College carried on during those years elsewhere in Halifax, aided by Dalhousie University and the United Church's Pine Hill Divinity Hall. In reflection of this naval past, the student bar on campus is known as the HMCS King's Wardroom, often referred to as "The Wardroom" or "The Wardy".

During the war, the Germans would occasionally broadcast names of Allied ships they had sunk. As ships had to keep radio silence, these reports could not be verified, and it was suspected that many were false. Allies circulated lists of non-active ships in the hopes of feeding the Germans misinformation; when the Germans broadcast that they had sunk HMCS King's, their ruse was exposed.[citation needed]

After the war, the campus was returned to the University. The policy of university education initiated in the 1960s responded to population pressure and the belief that higher education was a key to social justice and economic productivity for individuals and for society.[5]

Late 20th century and 21st century edit

 
University of King's College in Autumn with Castine Way along the foreground

Until the spring of 1971, the university granted graduate theological degrees as well as undergraduate degrees. In the same year, the Faculty of Divinity was moved to Pine Hill, where it was formally amalgamated into the Atlantic School of Theology, an ecumenical venture with the United Church of Canada and the Roman Catholic Church. While this new institution now grants its own degrees, King's holds in abeyance its rights to grant divinity credentials and still continues to grant annual honorary degrees.

In 1972, King's faculty and alumni created the Foundation Year Program, a first-year great books course that would count for four of a student's five first-year credits. The program consisted of six sections from The Ancient World to The Contemporary World, in which students would read the work of major philosophers, poets, historians and scientists, receive lectures from a range of experts in all these areas, write critical papers and engage in small-group discussion and tutorials. The program initially had 30 students; it now draws almost 300 a year, most of whom live in residence on campus. Many of those who taught in the program in its early days were colleagues and students of the philosopher James Doull, who exercised a considerable degree of influence on the program in its formative stages. In 1989, Doull was awarded an honorary doctorate by the university.

In 1977, King's introduced two Bachelor of Journalism programs: a four-year honours degree and a one-year compressed degree for students who already hold a bachelor's degree.

In 1989, a campus library building was erected to commemorate the bicentennial of the university.[29] It replaced a smaller library in the Arts and Administration building. The library has won numerous architectural awards. In 2000, the same architect designed the school's New Academic Building. In 2001, additional residence rooms were added in the basement of Alexandra Hall to accommodate some of the new students. Residence can currently accommodate 274 students, and nearly all on-campus living spaces are reserved for FYP students, though some spaces are reserved for upper-year students. All buildings on the present campus are celebrated reconstructions and derivations of the buildings of the original 1789 campus in Windsor, Nova Scotia. A system of tunnels connects the residences to the other buildings of the campus, a feature particularly common to North American universities.

The King's Library houses an impressive collection not only of rare Anglican church documents, but also a vast collection of original artwork, Renaissance and medieval books, and extensive archival material of relevance both to the history of Nova Scotia and the university. It also has some ancient artifacts, along with the Weldon Collection of fine imported china. Many of the rare books stem from the original, private collection of university founder, Charles Inglis. Recently, the blueprints for the buildings of the current campus were consulted in the library to restore the famed cupola crowning the A&A Building to its original 1920s condition.

In 1993, King's created the Contemporary Studies program. In 1999, King's launched the Early Modern Studies program. In 2000, King's commenced the History of Science and Technology program.[6] Each of these programs can constitute one component of a jointly conferred combined honours degree with Dalhousie. The Upper Year Program, like the Foundation Year Program, place a strong emphasis on historical contextualized, interdisciplinary study as opposed to traditional university departmentalization.

Today, there are over 1,000 students at King's, which represents significant growth over enrolment in the 1960s and 1970s. Its first-year class is made up mainly of Foundation Year Program students. In 2001, the FYP class was 274 students, with slightly over a hundred of these students coming from Ontario. The growing number of students from out of province reflects King's growing academic reputation and its transformation from a small, local college to a nationally acclaimed university. However, King's maintains strong ties to its host city and province and the number of Nova Scotians attending King's rose 23 per cent between 1994 and 2004.[citation needed]

The largest ever FYP class was in 2004 with 309 students. However, the administration has resolved to cap future classes at just under 300.[citation needed] With improved retention rates, the school's population looks to stabilize at around 1,200 in future years. The number of students leaving after first year has dropped significantly since the introduction of the upper year inter-disciplinary programs.

King's' transformation from a small college catering mainly to local Anglican students into a more intellectually cosmopolitan university with a strong national profile has been a resounding success. In terms of teaching quality, King's has been placed in the same academic league as top Canadian research universities like McGill and Toronto. One recent academic commentator summed up King's growing renown for its quality of teaching and eccentric student culture by remarking "If there is a Harvard of the North, it’s more likely King’s than McGill — although a better analogy would be a cross between Harry Potter’s Hogwarts and Camp Wanapitei in Temagami." The new programs, combined with a rigorous set of academic expectations and a cooperative academic culture, have proven a hit with high achieving high school students. Conservative estimates put the entrance average of first year King's students at 87%, or a strong A in Canadian high school marks.[30]

In October 2003, Dr. William Barker was installed as president and vice-chancellor, replacing Dr. Colin Starnes. Dr. Barker and the rest of the university administration have declared that King's has grown as much as it can and should. They describe the coming years as "a time of consolidation", with a focus on retention and development of new programs.

The university's growth has changed some King's traditions. Formal meals, with Latin grace and academic gowns, formerly held at regular intervals, were suspended from 2001 until 2003. Only with the arrival of Dr. Barker were they reinstated. They now take place on the first Wednesday of every month.

In July 2006, the King's Student Union founded the King's Co-op Bookstore; it stocks every title on the FYP Reading List, as well as all necessary books for King's other courses and a number of Dalhousie courses and general interest fiction and non-fiction. The bookstore is a student-owned co-operative which functions separately from both the student union and the university.

King's College administration has not avoided controversy. After the Sodexo cleaning staff unionized in 2004, the housekeeping contract was awarded to a different company during the summer. The King's Student Union had been involved in encouraging the workers to unionize in order to improve their working conditions, and there were strenuous objections to the awarding of the new contract.

The University of King’s College's arms were registered with the Canadian Heraldic Authority on August 15, 2007.[31]

Academics edit

 
The Arts & Administration Building

Since 1972, King's has been offering its Foundation Year Program (FYP) for undergraduate students, an intensive survey course of history, philosophy, and literature in the Western tradition. The core texts[32] program has been described by the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada as having "a national reputation for excellence as an alternative first-year of undergraduate studies",[33] and is regarded as a prototype for similar liberal arts programs elsewhere. The Canadian news magazine Maclean's likewise reflected this view in a discussion of small, specialized undergraduate programs in Canada, expressing "it's unlikely that any of the other programs would exist if not for the Foundation Year at King's".[34] In 2008 and 2009, the FYP program was ranked first in Canada by the National Survey of Student Engagement.

King's students take the FYP in their first year, then choose a specific degree program to pursue in their final three years. Furthermore, the college offers First-Year Interest Groups (FIGs), which are small study groups meant to supplement student learning in the FYP as well as the individual’s academic interests; these are open to students from any program and generally consist of tutorials, study sessions, and social events. Because of King’s affiliation with Dalhousie, it is common for students at King's to take some classes for their major and/or minor through Dalhousie University. With the exception of the journalism program, King's students graduate with joint degrees from both institutions. King's students are also eligible to complete these degrees in any subject from Dalhousie's Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences or Faculty of Science.

The specialized Contemporary Studies Program (CSP), the Early Modern Studies Program (EMSP), and the History of Science and Technology Program (HOST) are offered jointly with Dalhousie University as combined honours degrees requiring a second honours discipline. If the students decide to do a King's subject as their primary honours subject, they are required to write an honours thesis, varying in length from program to program. A Bachelor of Journalism program is offered as either a four-year honours degree or an intensive one-year program to students already holding a bachelor's degree. King's College and Dalhousie University also jointly offer a 10-month Master of Journalism program[35] and a two-year limited residency Master of Fine Arts degree in Creative Nonfiction program.[36]

Student life edit

Traditions edit

Once every two months, formal meals are held. Students wearing traditional academic gowns are led into the meal hall by a bagpiper. Once they have found their seat, a Latin grace is said. Afterwards, the catered meal begins. These meals were formerly held at regular intervals, but were suspended from 2001 until 2003. They were reinstated during the presidency of William Barker at his behest.

The UKing's Literary Society (formerly the Haliburton Society), a student-run literary society, has hosted discussions concerning poetry and prose since 1884. The society remains the longest-standing university literary society throughout the Commonwealth of Nations and North America.[37] The society took its original name from the Canadian politician Thomas Chandler Haliburton. It adopted its current name in 2020, as a result of a long-standing controversy over Haliburton's pro-slavery views.[38]

Residence edit

The residences are built in the Georgian style typical of the original campus. Each "bay", as the original residences were termed in Windsor, is modelled on the system of 'staircases' at England's Oxford University. Each has also been named with a seemingly ironic moniker: North Pole Bay sits atop the university's boiler rooms, and is arguably the warmest location on campus; Chapel Bay is named after the campus chapel, but is located the furthest distance from it; Radical Bay originally housed the refined, quiet divinity students; Middle Bay, which was named for its location as it is between Chapel and Radical, is named ironically as being the only non-ironic name; in addition, there is Cochran Bay, named after the first president of the College, William Cochran, and is the closest to the campus chapel.

Often residence-wide parties, known as 'bay parties,' occurred, but were cancelled for in 2003. However, there was a brief a revival during the 2005-2006 school year, with both Radical Bay and Cochran Bay hosting several highly successful events. In place of this tradition, each Bay now organizes a themed-event on campus during different times of the school year.

Another consequence of increased enrolment has been a more unbalanced composition of the residences. Traditionally, students from all years of study have lived in residence, but increasingly, very few upper year students continue to live on campus, thus making way for more first years. In 2006, Alexandra Hall, traditionally the all-women's residence, was made co-ed for the first time with rooms in the basement alternating between male and female occupants as well as one wing of the first floor becoming all-male. In addition, two of the five bays were re-converted to co-ed living spaces in 2006.

Tuition edit

The current Arts tuition for a full, 15-credit hour semester at the University of King's College is $3,541.20 CAD. This cost is subject to change from semester to semester. A single, 3-credit hour course in Winter 2023 was reimbursed to students at the cost of $819.75 CAD.

There are separate fees for student services, residence, and meal plans. Some of these are not required to be paid by all students. The following table are the Fall 2023/2024 costs for a domestic student taken from the Dalhousie Online portal 'Student Records - Account Detail by Term."

Tuition - Arts $3,867.75
Health Service Fee $40.08
King's 7 Full Day Meal Plan $2,259.00
Single Room-Bays 4th Floor $3,980.00
Medical Campus Response Team $2.50
King's Administration Fee $17.46
King's College Fee $38.25
King's Athletic Fee Term 10 $135.37
King's Facility Renewal Fee $145.87
Fitness Facility Renewal Fee $90.00
KSU Health & Dental Insurance $351.60
King's Student Union Fee FT $166.70
King's Bus Pass Fee $170.22
Society - Arts $8.00

International students pay higher prices, with one student paying a sum total of $35,348.14 for the Fall 2022/Winter 2023 Semester while living in the North Pole Bay residence.

Annual events edit

Alex Fountain Memorial Lecture edit

Since 2011, an annual memorial lecture is given by an individual chosen each year by the student body. After a nomination process at the beginning of the winter semester, a long list of twenty is narrowed to a short list of ten by student election. The short list is then prioritized by a student committee, which includes the program directors and president.[39] The lecture is free, open to the public, and concludes in a question and answer period.[40] Previous lecturers and lectures include Michaëlle Jean on 'Building Social Change Locally and Globally',[41] Charles Taylor on 'Is Democracy in Danger?', Michael Ondaatje on 'Mongrel art: A discussion of literature and its neighbours', Jan Zwicky on 'What Meaning Is and Why It Matters', and Tanya Tagaq on 'Climate, culture, and collaboration', as well as Canadian author Joseph Boyden.

The event is held in memorial after Alex Fountain, a student who died by suicide on 22 August 2009 at the age of 20. His family donated $1 million to the mental health program at the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre, as well as additional contributions to other mental health programs at Dalhousie University, the IWK Health Centre and Capital Health.[42] In addition, they founded the lecture series.

Athletics edit

King's is a member of the Atlantic Colleges Athletic Association (ACAA). The Varsity athletics teams at the University of King's College are named the Blue Devils.[43] Sporting teams include men's and women's basketball, soccer, badminton and rugby, and women's volleyball.[44]

People edit

List of presidents edit

  • William Cochran (1789–1804)
  • Thomas Cox (1804–1805)
  • Charles Porter (1805–1836)
  • George McCawley (1836–1875)
  • John Dart (1875–1885)
  • Isaac Brock (1885–1889)
  • Charles E. Willets (1889–1904)
  • Ian Hannah (1904–1906)
  • C. J. Boulden (1906–1909)
  • T. W. Powell (1909–1914)
  • Charles E. Willets (Acting President, 1914–1916)
  • T. S. Boyle (1916–1924)
  • A. H. Moore (1924–1937)
  • A. Stanley Walker (1937–1953)
  • H. L. Puxley (1954–1963)
  • H. D. Smith (1963–1969)
  • F. Hilton Page (Acting President, 1969–1970)
  • J. Graham Morgan (1970–1977)
  • John Godfrey (1977–1987)
  • Marion G. Fry (1987–1993)
  • Colin Starnes (1993–2003)
  • William Barker (2003–2011)
  • Anne Leavitt (2011–2012)
  • George Cooper (2012–2016)[1]
  • William Lahey (2016–present)[45]

Notable current and former faculty edit

  • Michael Bishop - Author of The Endless Theory of Days and Scholar of French Contemporary. Director of Editions VVV Editions
  • George Bain - Director of the School of Journalism, 1979–85
  • Wayne Hankey - Carnegie Professor and Chair of the Classics department at Dalhousie, 2001-2015
  • Robert D. Crouse - Chair of Classics department at Dalhousie, co-founder of Dionysius
  • Sir Charles G. D. Roberts - prominent member of the group known as the Confederation Poets
  • Henry How - Chemist and mineralogist, described two minerals new to science: howlite and mordenite
  • Dean Jobb - Associate Professor of Journalism, former reporter and editor for The Chronicle Herald
  • Kim Kierans - Vice president (2010–2017), former director of the King's School of Journalism, and writer/editor for CBC Radio One
  • Stephen Kimber - Rogers Communications Chair in Journalism, prominent journalist and columnist for The Daily News
  • Daniel Brandes - Director of the Foundation Year Program, and author of Nietzsche, Arendt, and the Promise of the Future and Fackenheim on Self-Making, Divine and Human
  • Gordon McOuat - former Director of the History of Science and Technology Program
  • Susan Newhook - Assistant Professor of Journalism and researcher, reporter and editor for CBC from 1980 to 1998
  • Samuel Henry Prince - Founder of the Dalhousie School of Social Work, and author of Catastrophe and Social Change.
  • Stephen Snobelen - Director of the History of Science and Technology Program; Featured in BBC documentary Newton: The Dark Heretic
  • Walter Stewart - Director of the School of Journalism
  • Kelly Toughill - Director of the King's School of Journalism and former Deputy Executive Editor of the Toronto Star
  • Fred Vallance-Jones - Associate Professor of Journalism and former Investigative reporter at The Hamilton Spectator and CBC Radio
  • Laura Penny - Author of Your Call Is Important To Us: The Truth About Bullshit and More Money Than Brains: Why School Sucks, College is Crap, and Idiots Think They're Right

Notable alumni edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Debra Deane Little, Chancellor". www.ukings.ca.
  2. ^ "William Lahey, President & Vice-Chancellor". www.ukings.ca.
  3. ^ "Sarah Clift | University of King's College". University of Kings College | Halifax, Nova Scotia. 29 August 2016.
  4. ^ "Full-time plus Part-time Enrollment" (PDF). Association of Atlantic Universities. 2016-10-01. Retrieved 2017-01-20.
  5. ^ a b Roper, Henry. "Aspects of the History of a Loyalist College: King's College, Windsor, and Nova Scotian Higher Education in the Nineteenth Century." Anglican and Episcopal History 61 (1991).
  6. ^ a b c d Cheryl Bell. "University of King's College". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
  7. ^ "University of King's College". University Study.
  8. ^ Alex Ballingall. "Where wannabe journalists are flocking". Macleans.ca.
  9. ^ Heather Feagan. "Mastering the art of authoring a book". Atlanticbookstoday.ca/.
  10. ^ Henry Yule Hind (1890). King's College, Windsor, Nova Scotia.
  11. ^ "Purple Book" (PDF). University of King's College. 2014. pp. 17–26. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
  12. ^ A History of Columbia University, 1754–1904. New York: Macmillan. 1904. ISBN 1402137370.
  13. ^ "A Brief History of Columbia". Columbia University. 2011. Retrieved 2011-04-14.
  14. ^ Schecter, Barnet (2002). The Battle for New York: The City at the Heart of the American Revolution. Walker & Company. ISBN 978-0-8027-1374-2.
  15. ^ McCullough, David (2005). 1776. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-2671-4.
  16. ^ Brown, Thomas J. (1922), Nova Scotia Place Names (PDF), p. 155, retrieved 13 August 2023
  17. ^ Burpee, Lawrence Johnstone; Doughty, Arthur G. "The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Makers of Canada: Index and Dictionary of Canadian History". gutenberg.org.
  18. ^ John George Bourinot (February 17, 1881). The Intellectual Development of the Canadian People, A historical review. House of Commons, Ottawa: Project Gutenberg. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  19. ^ Roper, Henry (December 1991). "Aspects of the History of a Loyalist College: King's College, Windsor and Nova Scotian Higher Education in the 19th Century". Anglican and Episcopal History. 60 (4): 443–459. JSTOR 42610538. Retrieved 29 September 2022. See note 2, p.443
  20. ^ a b The Communion Silver in the Chapel of Kings College, Halifax, NS. Public Archives of Nova Scotia
  21. ^ a b c d e f Vroom, F. W. (1941). King’s College: A chronicle—1789–1939: Collections and recollections, “Gather up the fragments that remain, that nothing be lost.”. Halifax, NS: Imperial Publishing Company. p. 37.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  22. ^ . The Canadian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 2009-08-21.
  23. ^ Whitfield, Harvey Amani (2016). North to Bondage. Toronto: UBC Press. pp. 40–41. ISBN 9780774832298.
  24. ^ F W Vroom. Old Communion Plate in Kings College" Acadiensis. Vol. 3 January 1903.
  25. ^ John Coldwell Adams, "Sir Charles G.D. Roberts," Confederation Voices, Canadian Poetry, UWO, Web, March 2, 2011.
  26. ^ http://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=16276&pid=0 King's College National Historic Site of Canada
  27. ^ a b c d "History". University of King's College. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
  28. ^ King's College. Canadian Register of Historic Places. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
  29. ^ . ukings.ca. Archived from the original on 2015-09-06.
  30. ^ The Walrus Magazine » Education » Student Failure » Failure to Fail 2012-02-13 at the Wayback Machine
  31. ^ "University of King's College". Register of Arms, Flags and Badges. The Governor General of Canada. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  32. ^ "https://www.coretexts.org/". Retrieved 2023-10-03. {{cite web}}: External link in |title= (help)
  33. ^ The Directory of Canadian University – University of King's College 2010-06-21 at the Wayback Machine
  34. ^ . Maclean's. Archived from the original on May 27, 2012.
  35. ^ . ukings.ca. Archived from the original on 2015-04-18.
  36. ^ "Master of Fine Arts in Creative Nonfiction".
  37. ^ "Groups & Societies". University of King's College. Retrieved March 24, 2019.
  38. ^ "UKing's Literary Society: turning the page on Haliburton". The Watch Magazine. Retrieved August 19, 2020.
  39. ^ "'What Meaning Is and Why It Matters': 4th Annual Alex Fountain Memorial Lecture by Jan Zwicky - King's College, Halifax". mqup.ca.
  40. ^ "Fountain Memorial Lecture". watchmagazine.ca.
  41. ^ University of King's College. "ISSUU - Tidings Winter 2011 by University of King's College". Issuu.
  42. ^ "Couple give $1 million in son's memory". The Chronicle Herald.
  43. ^ . NEXT Network. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2015-06-27.
  44. ^ "Varsity Sports". ukings.ca.
  45. ^ "William Lahey named King's next President and Vice-Chancellor". www.ukings.ca. Retrieved 2016-07-29.
  46. ^ Eaton, Arthur Wentworth (1891). "Chapter XI. King's College". The Church of England in Nova Scotia and the Tory Clergy of the Revolution. New York: Thomas Whittaker. Retrieved 1 June 2011.

Further reading edit

  • Roper, Henry. "Aspects of the History of a Loyalist College: King's College, Windsor, and Nova Scotian Higher Education in the Nineteenth Century". Anglican and Episcopal History 61 (1991).
  • Vroom, Fenwick Williams. King's College: A Chronicle, 1789-1939.
  • DeWolf, Mark. All the King's Men: The Story of a Colonial University (1972)
  • Kinghorn, Alexander Manson. University of King’s College Halifax, Nova Scotia : The Overseas Commonwealth’s Oldest University (1965)

External links edit

  • Official website
  • King's Student Union
  • King's College National Historic Site of Canada

university, king, college, other, uses, king, college, disambiguation, public, liberal, arts, university, halifax, nova, scotia, established, 1789, oldest, chartered, university, canada, oldest, english, speaking, university, commonwealth, outside, united, kin. For other uses see King s College disambiguation The University of King s College is a public liberal arts university in Halifax Nova Scotia 5 Established in 1789 it is the oldest chartered university in Canada and the oldest English speaking university in the Commonwealth outside of the United Kingdom 6 The university is regarded for its Foundation Year Program FYP an undergraduate curriculum designed to comprehensively study a variety of intellectual developments past and present through great books and ideas 7 It is also known for its upper year interdisciplinary programs particularly in contemporary studies early modern studies and the history of science and technology In addition the university has a journalism school that attracts students from across the world for its intensive graduate programs in journalism writing and publishing 8 9 University of King s CollegeMottoDeo Legi Regi Gregi Latin Motto in EnglishFor God Law King PeopleTypePublic universityEstablished1789 235 years ago 1789 Endowment 51 4 millionChancellorDebra Deane Little 1 PresidentWilliam Lahey 2 Vice presidentSarah Clift 3 VisitorSandra Fyfe ex officio as the Anglican Bishop of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward IslandAcademic staff64Students914 4 Undergraduates865Postgraduates49AddressHalifax Nova Scotia44 38 15 N 63 35 43 W 44 63750 N 63 59528 W 44 63750 63 59528CampusUrban 5 acre 2 02 ha ColoursBlue and White AffiliationsDalhousie University AUCC CUP Websitewww wbr ukings wbr caThe university was founded by royal charter in Windsor Nova Scotia as the King s Collegiate School in 1788 but the school moved to its current location in Halifax after a fire destroyed a large portion of the original university in 1920 6 10 The relocation was made possible with the help of Dalhousie University which has since maintained a joint Faculty of Arts and Sciences with King s As a result this has provided students at King s with full access to Dalhousie s facilities and services Furthermore students from King s and Dalhousie can enrol in courses offered at either institution as both campuses are located adjacent to each other Despite this academic partnership the University of King s College remains independent under its own charter 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Late 18th century and 19th century 1 1 1 Other facts 1 2 Early and mid 20th century 1 3 Late 20th century and 21st century 2 Academics 3 Student life 3 1 Traditions 3 2 Residence 3 3 Tuition 3 4 Annual events 3 4 1 Alex Fountain Memorial Lecture 3 5 Athletics 4 People 4 1 List of presidents 4 2 Notable current and former faculty 4 3 Notable alumni 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editLate 18th century and 19th century edit King s College traces its origins to the King s College of New York City 12 On 31 October 1754 King George II of Great Britain issued the charter for King s College within New York City establishing it as the oldest institution of higher learning in the state of New York and the fifth oldest in the United States 13 In 1776 during the eruption of the American Revolutionary War studies at the university halted for the subsequent eight years During this period the college s library was looted and its sole building was requisitioned for use as a military hospital first by American and then British forces 14 15 When Patriots took over the university Bishop Charles Inglis the rector of Trinity Church led the flight of Loyalists to Windsor Nova Scotia In 1788 the resettled Anglican loyalists founded the King s Collegiate School in Windsor and named it for King George III of Great Britain 16 In the following year the University of King s College emerged from the collegiate while an act was passed for the permanent establishment and effectual support of a college at Windsor and 400 per annum was granted towards its maintenance 17 The college opened in 1790 18 and received a royal charter from King George III in 1802 6 becoming Canada s first English speaking degree granting university Even though the University of New Brunswick traces its history to another King s College this one at Fredericton established in 1785 it did not initially receive degree granting powers through a Royal Charter until 1827 Similarly McGill University traces its origins to 1801 but did not receive a Royal Charter until 1821 19 nbsp In 1891 King s chapel acquires the oldest c 1663 Anglican chalice in Canada 20 Windsor was chosen as the location of the college as it was described at the time as a cherished semi rural retreat for generations of Nova Scotians 21 Prior to European settlement the Mi kmaq occupied the land called Pesaquid for more than 10 000 years 1 In the 16th century the land was taken from the Mi kmaq by French colonists who then named the area Pisiguit as part of the colony of Acadia British colonists later took over the land from the French as part of a larger conflict in the Seven Years War The founders of King s College representing the political and financial elite of these British colonists had only been in the area since the 1750s with the construction of Fort Edward and the expulsion of the Acadians beginning in 1755 A significant reason for the establishment of King s College was to discourage white Anglican colonial males from studying in the United States so as to guard against the influence of American Republicanism and maintain loyalty to the British Crown 21 The founding of a College or Seminary of learning on a liberal plan in that province Nova Scotia where youth may receive a virtuous education and can be qualified for the learned professions is we humbly conceive a member of great consequence as it would diffuse religious literature loyalty and good morals among His Majesty s subjects there If such a seminary is not established the inhabitants will have no means of educating their sons at home but will be under the but will necessity of sending them for that purpose either to Great Britain or else some of the states of this continent where they will soon imbibe principles that are unfavourable to the British Constitution 21 On this the Archbishop of Nova Scotia and a founder of the college Charles Inglis was quite clear one of the principle motives for pushing the college forward was to prevent the importation of American Divines and American politics into the province Unless we have a seminary here the youth of Nova Scotia will be sent for their education to the Revolted Colonies the inevitable consequences would be a corruption of their religious and political principle 21 Maintaining British English as the dominant language in the colony was another significant reason for the college as was made clear by the college s founders A very principal object of the new institution would be accomplished by assimilating the manner of the rising generation to those of the parent state to teach the genuine use practice and pronunciation of the English language which in distant colonies is apt to degenerate and that the purity of the language undebased by local or national accents and solecisms is undeniably to be found in the Kingdom of England 21 These ideas continued during the development and appointments of the college s board principals and faculty Influence in the development of the college came from the highest levels both in Nova Scotia including the first Bishop of Nova Scotia and in England through the Archbishop of Canterbury and King George III The first Board of Governors include the colony s Governor the Lieutenant Governor the Chief Justice the Secretary of the colony the Speaker of the House of Assembly the Attorney General and the Solicitor General 21 The university was modelled on older English universities which were generally residential tutorial and closely tied to the Church of England 22 Only white British males could attend the college and with its Anglican affiliation these students during the 19th century were required to adhere to the 39 Articles of the Anglican Church As a result significant groups were barred from attending including the Mi kmaq Francophones Roman Catholics other Protestant sects and enslaved peoples including those owned by the founders 23 of the town of Windsor Other facts edit Upon discovering the chalice and paten of St Peter s Anglican Church West LaHave Nova Scotia were being sold in Halifax Senator William Johnston Almon purchased them and donated them to the King s College Chapel 1891 The chalice is reported to be the oldest Anglican chalice in Canada dated to c 1663 24 20 The Town of Windsor assert that students at King s College invented ice hockey c 1800 on Long Pond adjacent to the campus A similar game developed perhaps independently in Kingston Ontario several years later which has led to occasional confusion about the sport s origins citation needed The noted Canadian poet Sir Charles G D Roberts taught at King s College from 1885 to 1895 25 Early and mid 20th century edit nbsp A view of the A amp A North Pole Bay and Cochran Bay from across the Quad in a spring fogOn February 5 1920 a fire consumed many of the university s buildings Although the cause of the blaze is still unknown legend states it was caused by students playing with matches in a dormitory Due to frozen fire hydrants at the time of the event the blaze could not be put out and a majority of the 28 hectare campus burned to the ground 26 In 1922 the Carnegie Foundation offered a conditional grant to rebuild King s College Among the provisions were that King s College was to be rebuilt in Halifax the capital of Nova Scotia and that it was to enter into an association with Dalhousie University 27 The partnership required King s to pay the salaries of select Dalhousie professors who in return would help manage King s College 27 In addition students at King s would be permitted to study at Dalhousie while Dalhousie students would be permitted to study at King s with the exception of divinity the granting of all other degrees outlined in the 1802 charter was to be temporarily halted 27 The conditions were in hope that one day all of Nova Scotia s universities would merge into a single body much like the University of Toronto As consolidation was a way to strengthen a small and financially insecure institution King s College accepted the funding and relocated to the northwest corner of Dalhousie s Studley Campus at the intersection of Oxford Street and Coburg Road Alongside the move the institution renamed itself University of King s College Other universities in Halifax similarly did not follow through with the Carnegie Foundation s merger plan In the formative years of King s College many more types of degrees were offered than the institution offers today for example the University of New Brunswick Faculty of Law traces its history to the King s College Law School that was established in 1892 by King s College in Windsor While the University of King s College has never lost nor relinquished interest in these granting powers they are held in abeyance due to agreements with the University of King s College s partner Dalhousie University as part of the agreement to allow the portion of Dalhousie s campus to be used by the University of King s College In addition professional education in the 19th century expanded beyond the traditional fields of theology law and medicine thus graduate training based on the German model of specialized course work and the completion of a research thesis was introduced at the school In 1923 the former site of King s College in Windsor was designated a National Historic Site 28 When World War II broke out King s was requisitioned by the military for the training of naval officers between 1941 and 1945 27 King s functioned as a stone frigate providing a facility for navigation training before officers were sent to their ships This role is highlighted in the 1943 Hollywood feature film Corvette K 225 a part of which was filmed on the University campus The academic life of the College carried on during those years elsewhere in Halifax aided by Dalhousie University and the United Church s Pine Hill Divinity Hall In reflection of this naval past the student bar on campus is known as the HMCS King s Wardroom often referred to as The Wardroom or The Wardy During the war the Germans would occasionally broadcast names of Allied ships they had sunk As ships had to keep radio silence these reports could not be verified and it was suspected that many were false Allies circulated lists of non active ships in the hopes of feeding the Germans misinformation when the Germans broadcast that they had sunk HMCS King s their ruse was exposed citation needed After the war the campus was returned to the University The policy of university education initiated in the 1960s responded to population pressure and the belief that higher education was a key to social justice and economic productivity for individuals and for society 5 Late 20th century and 21st century edit nbsp University of King s College in Autumn with Castine Way along the foregroundUntil the spring of 1971 the university granted graduate theological degrees as well as undergraduate degrees In the same year the Faculty of Divinity was moved to Pine Hill where it was formally amalgamated into the Atlantic School of Theology an ecumenical venture with the United Church of Canada and the Roman Catholic Church While this new institution now grants its own degrees King s holds in abeyance its rights to grant divinity credentials and still continues to grant annual honorary degrees In 1972 King s faculty and alumni created the Foundation Year Program a first year great books course that would count for four of a student s five first year credits The program consisted of six sections from The Ancient World to The Contemporary World in which students would read the work of major philosophers poets historians and scientists receive lectures from a range of experts in all these areas write critical papers and engage in small group discussion and tutorials The program initially had 30 students it now draws almost 300 a year most of whom live in residence on campus Many of those who taught in the program in its early days were colleagues and students of the philosopher James Doull who exercised a considerable degree of influence on the program in its formative stages In 1989 Doull was awarded an honorary doctorate by the university In 1977 King s introduced two Bachelor of Journalism programs a four year honours degree and a one year compressed degree for students who already hold a bachelor s degree In 1989 a campus library building was erected to commemorate the bicentennial of the university 29 It replaced a smaller library in the Arts and Administration building The library has won numerous architectural awards In 2000 the same architect designed the school s New Academic Building In 2001 additional residence rooms were added in the basement of Alexandra Hall to accommodate some of the new students Residence can currently accommodate 274 students and nearly all on campus living spaces are reserved for FYP students though some spaces are reserved for upper year students All buildings on the present campus are celebrated reconstructions and derivations of the buildings of the original 1789 campus in Windsor Nova Scotia A system of tunnels connects the residences to the other buildings of the campus a feature particularly common to North American universities The King s Library houses an impressive collection not only of rare Anglican church documents but also a vast collection of original artwork Renaissance and medieval books and extensive archival material of relevance both to the history of Nova Scotia and the university It also has some ancient artifacts along with the Weldon Collection of fine imported china Many of the rare books stem from the original private collection of university founder Charles Inglis Recently the blueprints for the buildings of the current campus were consulted in the library to restore the famed cupola crowning the A amp A Building to its original 1920s condition In 1993 King s created the Contemporary Studies program In 1999 King s launched the Early Modern Studies program In 2000 King s commenced the History of Science and Technology program 6 Each of these programs can constitute one component of a jointly conferred combined honours degree with Dalhousie The Upper Year Program like the Foundation Year Program place a strong emphasis on historical contextualized interdisciplinary study as opposed to traditional university departmentalization Today there are over 1 000 students at King s which represents significant growth over enrolment in the 1960s and 1970s Its first year class is made up mainly of Foundation Year Program students In 2001 the FYP class was 274 students with slightly over a hundred of these students coming from Ontario The growing number of students from out of province reflects King s growing academic reputation and its transformation from a small local college to a nationally acclaimed university However King s maintains strong ties to its host city and province and the number of Nova Scotians attending King s rose 23 per cent between 1994 and 2004 citation needed The largest ever FYP class was in 2004 with 309 students However the administration has resolved to cap future classes at just under 300 citation needed With improved retention rates the school s population looks to stabilize at around 1 200 in future years The number of students leaving after first year has dropped significantly since the introduction of the upper year inter disciplinary programs King s transformation from a small college catering mainly to local Anglican students into a more intellectually cosmopolitan university with a strong national profile has been a resounding success In terms of teaching quality King s has been placed in the same academic league as top Canadian research universities like McGill and Toronto One recent academic commentator summed up King s growing renown for its quality of teaching and eccentric student culture by remarking If there is a Harvard of the North it s more likely King s than McGill although a better analogy would be a cross between Harry Potter s Hogwarts and Camp Wanapitei in Temagami The new programs combined with a rigorous set of academic expectations and a cooperative academic culture have proven a hit with high achieving high school students Conservative estimates put the entrance average of first year King s students at 87 or a strong A in Canadian high school marks 30 In October 2003 Dr William Barker was installed as president and vice chancellor replacing Dr Colin Starnes Dr Barker and the rest of the university administration have declared that King s has grown as much as it can and should They describe the coming years as a time of consolidation with a focus on retention and development of new programs The university s growth has changed some King s traditions Formal meals with Latin grace and academic gowns formerly held at regular intervals were suspended from 2001 until 2003 Only with the arrival of Dr Barker were they reinstated They now take place on the first Wednesday of every month In July 2006 the King s Student Union founded the King s Co op Bookstore it stocks every title on the FYP Reading List as well as all necessary books for King s other courses and a number of Dalhousie courses and general interest fiction and non fiction The bookstore is a student owned co operative which functions separately from both the student union and the university King s College administration has not avoided controversy After the Sodexo cleaning staff unionized in 2004 the housekeeping contract was awarded to a different company during the summer The King s Student Union had been involved in encouraging the workers to unionize in order to improve their working conditions and there were strenuous objections to the awarding of the new contract The University of King s College s arms were registered with the Canadian Heraldic Authority on August 15 2007 31 Academics edit nbsp The Arts amp Administration BuildingSince 1972 King s has been offering its Foundation Year Program FYP for undergraduate students an intensive survey course of history philosophy and literature in the Western tradition The core texts 32 program has been described by the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada as having a national reputation for excellence as an alternative first year of undergraduate studies 33 and is regarded as a prototype for similar liberal arts programs elsewhere The Canadian news magazine Maclean s likewise reflected this view in a discussion of small specialized undergraduate programs in Canada expressing it s unlikely that any of the other programs would exist if not for the Foundation Year at King s 34 In 2008 and 2009 the FYP program was ranked first in Canada by the National Survey of Student Engagement King s students take the FYP in their first year then choose a specific degree program to pursue in their final three years Furthermore the college offers First Year Interest Groups FIGs which are small study groups meant to supplement student learning in the FYP as well as the individual s academic interests these are open to students from any program and generally consist of tutorials study sessions and social events Because of King s affiliation with Dalhousie it is common for students at King s to take some classes for their major and or minor through Dalhousie University With the exception of the journalism program King s students graduate with joint degrees from both institutions King s students are also eligible to complete these degrees in any subject from Dalhousie s Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences or Faculty of Science The specialized Contemporary Studies Program CSP the Early Modern Studies Program EMSP and the History of Science and Technology Program HOST are offered jointly with Dalhousie University as combined honours degrees requiring a second honours discipline If the students decide to do a King s subject as their primary honours subject they are required to write an honours thesis varying in length from program to program A Bachelor of Journalism program is offered as either a four year honours degree or an intensive one year program to students already holding a bachelor s degree King s College and Dalhousie University also jointly offer a 10 month Master of Journalism program 35 and a two year limited residency Master of Fine Arts degree in Creative Nonfiction program 36 Student life editTraditions edit Once every two months formal meals are held Students wearing traditional academic gowns are led into the meal hall by a bagpiper Once they have found their seat a Latin grace is said Afterwards the catered meal begins These meals were formerly held at regular intervals but were suspended from 2001 until 2003 They were reinstated during the presidency of William Barker at his behest The UKing s Literary Society formerly the Haliburton Society a student run literary society has hosted discussions concerning poetry and prose since 1884 The society remains the longest standing university literary society throughout the Commonwealth of Nations and North America 37 The society took its original name from the Canadian politician Thomas Chandler Haliburton It adopted its current name in 2020 as a result of a long standing controversy over Haliburton s pro slavery views 38 Residence edit The residences are built in the Georgian style typical of the original campus Each bay as the original residences were termed in Windsor is modelled on the system of staircases at England s Oxford University Each has also been named with a seemingly ironic moniker North Pole Bay sits atop the university s boiler rooms and is arguably the warmest location on campus Chapel Bay is named after the campus chapel but is located the furthest distance from it Radical Bay originally housed the refined quiet divinity students Middle Bay which was named for its location as it is between Chapel and Radical is named ironically as being the only non ironic name in addition there is Cochran Bay named after the first president of the College William Cochran and is the closest to the campus chapel Often residence wide parties known as bay parties occurred but were cancelled for in 2003 However there was a brief a revival during the 2005 2006 school year with both Radical Bay and Cochran Bay hosting several highly successful events In place of this tradition each Bay now organizes a themed event on campus during different times of the school year Another consequence of increased enrolment has been a more unbalanced composition of the residences Traditionally students from all years of study have lived in residence but increasingly very few upper year students continue to live on campus thus making way for more first years In 2006 Alexandra Hall traditionally the all women s residence was made co ed for the first time with rooms in the basement alternating between male and female occupants as well as one wing of the first floor becoming all male In addition two of the five bays were re converted to co ed living spaces in 2006 Tuition edit The current Arts tuition for a full 15 credit hour semester at the University of King s College is 3 541 20 CAD This cost is subject to change from semester to semester A single 3 credit hour course in Winter 2023 was reimbursed to students at the cost of 819 75 CAD There are separate fees for student services residence and meal plans Some of these are not required to be paid by all students The following table are the Fall 2023 2024 costs for a domestic student taken from the Dalhousie Online portal Student Records Account Detail by Term Tuition Arts 3 867 75Health Service Fee 40 08King s 7 Full Day Meal Plan 2 259 00Single Room Bays 4th Floor 3 980 00Medical Campus Response Team 2 50King s Administration Fee 17 46King s College Fee 38 25King s Athletic Fee Term 10 135 37King s Facility Renewal Fee 145 87Fitness Facility Renewal Fee 90 00KSU Health amp Dental Insurance 351 60King s Student Union Fee FT 166 70King s Bus Pass Fee 170 22Society Arts 8 00International students pay higher prices with one student paying a sum total of 35 348 14 for the Fall 2022 Winter 2023 Semester while living in the North Pole Bay residence Annual events edit Alex Fountain Memorial Lecture edit Since 2011 an annual memorial lecture is given by an individual chosen each year by the student body After a nomination process at the beginning of the winter semester a long list of twenty is narrowed to a short list of ten by student election The short list is then prioritized by a student committee which includes the program directors and president 39 The lecture is free open to the public and concludes in a question and answer period 40 Previous lecturers and lectures include Michaelle Jean on Building Social Change Locally and Globally 41 Charles Taylor on Is Democracy in Danger Michael Ondaatje on Mongrel art A discussion of literature and its neighbours Jan Zwicky on What Meaning Is and Why It Matters and Tanya Tagaq on Climate culture and collaboration as well as Canadian author Joseph Boyden The event is held in memorial after Alex Fountain a student who died by suicide on 22 August 2009 at the age of 20 His family donated 1 million to the mental health program at the Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre as well as additional contributions to other mental health programs at Dalhousie University the IWK Health Centre and Capital Health 42 In addition they founded the lecture series Athletics edit King s is a member of the Atlantic Colleges Athletic Association ACAA The Varsity athletics teams at the University of King s College are named the Blue Devils 43 Sporting teams include men s and women s basketball soccer badminton and rugby and women s volleyball 44 People editList of presidents edit William Cochran 1789 1804 Thomas Cox 1804 1805 Charles Porter 1805 1836 George McCawley 1836 1875 John Dart 1875 1885 Isaac Brock 1885 1889 Charles E Willets 1889 1904 Ian Hannah 1904 1906 C J Boulden 1906 1909 T W Powell 1909 1914 Charles E Willets Acting President 1914 1916 T S Boyle 1916 1924 A H Moore 1924 1937 A Stanley Walker 1937 1953 H L Puxley 1954 1963 H D Smith 1963 1969 F Hilton Page Acting President 1969 1970 J Graham Morgan 1970 1977 John Godfrey 1977 1987 Marion G Fry 1987 1993 Colin Starnes 1993 2003 William Barker 2003 2011 Anne Leavitt 2011 2012 George Cooper 2012 2016 1 William Lahey 2016 present 45 Notable current and former faculty edit Michael Bishop Author of The Endless Theory of Days and Scholar of French Contemporary Director of Editions VVV Editions George Bain Director of the School of Journalism 1979 85 Wayne Hankey Carnegie Professor and Chair of the Classics department at Dalhousie 2001 2015 Robert D Crouse Chair of Classics department at Dalhousie co founder of Dionysius Sir Charles G D Roberts prominent member of the group known as the Confederation Poets Henry How Chemist and mineralogist described two minerals new to science howlite and mordenite Dean Jobb Associate Professor of Journalism former reporter and editor for The Chronicle Herald Kim Kierans Vice president 2010 2017 former director of the King s School of Journalism and writer editor for CBC Radio One Stephen Kimber Rogers Communications Chair in Journalism prominent journalist and columnist for The Daily News Daniel Brandes Director of the Foundation Year Program and author of Nietzsche Arendt and the Promise of the Future and Fackenheim on Self Making Divine and Human Gordon McOuat former Director of the History of Science and Technology Program Susan Newhook Assistant Professor of Journalism and researcher reporter and editor for CBC from 1980 to 1998 Samuel Henry Prince Founder of the Dalhousie School of Social Work and author of Catastrophe and Social Change Stephen Snobelen Director of the History of Science and Technology Program Featured in BBC documentary Newton The Dark Heretic Walter Stewart Director of the School of Journalism Kelly Toughill Director of the King s School of Journalism and former Deputy Executive Editor of the Toronto Star Fred Vallance Jones Associate Professor of Journalism and former Investigative reporter at The Hamilton Spectator and CBC Radio Laura Penny Author of Your Call Is Important To Us The Truth About Bullshit and More Money Than Brains Why School Sucks College is Crap and Idiots Think They re RightNotable alumni edit Rich Aucoin Canadian indie rock musician Kathryn Borel writer editor radio producer Margaret Sibella Brown bryologist Ryan Hemsworth producer and DJ William Johnston Almon Matthew Murphy of The Super Friendz influential Canadian rock band of the 90s James Calbert Best journalist and Canadian Diplomat Frederick Borden Canadian Minister of Militia and Defence from 1896 1911 Ben Caplan folk musician Amor de Cosmos 1825 1897 Premier of British Columbia 1872 1874 Darrell Dexter Nova Scotia Premier 2009 2013 Jay Ferguson and Patrick Pentland of Sloan Lionel Avard Forsyth president of the Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation Simon Gibbons Canada s first Inuit priest Trevor Greene writer journalist Canadian veteran wounded in the war in Afghanistan and subject of the documentary Peace Warrior Darren Greer winner of the 2015 Thomas Head Raddall Award for his novel Just Beneath My Skin Thomas Chandler Haliburton author John Hamm Nova Scotia Premier 1999 2006 Sir John Eardley Inglis 1814 1862 in charge of the British forces at the Siege of Lucknow 46 Martine L Jacquot author journalist and academic Amber MacArthur internet media personality Julianne MacLean novel writer Russell MacLellan Nova Scotia Premier 1997 1999 Stephen Blackwood founding President of Ralston College Stephen Marche author of Raymond amp Hannah David McGuffin CBC Africa correspondent H R Milner lawyer and businessman Chancellor from 1957 to 1963 Stephanie Nolen Africa correspondent for The Globe and Mail and author of 28 Stories of AIDS in Africa Roland Ritchie Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada Cuthbert Aikman Simpson Dean of Christ Church and Regius Professor of Hebrew at Oxford University Johanna Skibsrud author of The Sentimentalists 2010 Scotiabank Giller Prize winner Thomas Suther Bishop of Aberdeen Miriam Toews winner 2004 Governor General s Award for Fiction for her novel A Complicated Kindness Al Tuck folksinger Augustus Welsford one of two soldiers whose heroic deaths at the Siege of Sevastopol during the Crimean War are marked by the Welsford Parker Monument in Halifax s Old Burying Ground Millefiore Clarkes PEI filmmakerSee also edit nbsp Canada portalList of Anglo Catholic churches Royal eponyms in Canada List of oldest universities in continuous operation Higher education in Nova Scotia List of universities in Nova Scotia Canadian university scientific research organizations List of National Historic Sites in Nova ScotiaReferences edit a b Debra Deane Little Chancellor www ukings ca William Lahey President amp Vice Chancellor www ukings ca Sarah Clift University of King s College University of Kings College Halifax Nova Scotia 29 August 2016 Full time plus Part time Enrollment PDF Association of Atlantic Universities 2016 10 01 Retrieved 2017 01 20 a b Roper Henry Aspects of the History of a Loyalist College King s College Windsor and Nova Scotian Higher Education in the Nineteenth Century Anglican and Episcopal History 61 1991 a b c d Cheryl Bell University of King s College The Canadian Encyclopedia University of King s College University Study Alex Ballingall Where wannabe journalists are flocking Macleans ca Heather Feagan Mastering the art of authoring a book Atlanticbookstoday ca Henry Yule Hind 1890 King s College Windsor Nova Scotia Purple Book PDF University of King s College 2014 pp 17 26 Retrieved March 23 2019 A History of Columbia University 1754 1904 New York Macmillan 1904 ISBN 1402137370 A Brief History of Columbia Columbia University 2011 Retrieved 2011 04 14 Schecter Barnet 2002 The Battle for New York The City at the Heart of the American Revolution Walker amp Company ISBN 978 0 8027 1374 2 McCullough David 2005 1776 Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 2671 4 Brown Thomas J 1922 Nova Scotia Place Names PDF p 155 retrieved 13 August 2023 Burpee Lawrence Johnstone Doughty Arthur G The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Makers of Canada Index and Dictionary of Canadian History gutenberg org John George Bourinot February 17 1881 The Intellectual Development of the Canadian People A historical review House of Commons Ottawa Project Gutenberg a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Roper Henry December 1991 Aspects of the History of a Loyalist College King s College Windsor and Nova Scotian Higher Education in the 19th Century Anglican and Episcopal History 60 4 443 459 JSTOR 42610538 Retrieved 29 September 2022 See note 2 p 443 a b The Communion Silver in the Chapel of Kings College Halifax NS Public Archives of Nova Scotia a b c d e f Vroom F W 1941 King s College A chronicle 1789 1939 Collections and recollections Gather up the fragments that remain that nothing be lost Halifax NS Imperial Publishing Company p 37 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link University The Canadian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 2009 08 21 Whitfield Harvey Amani 2016 North to Bondage Toronto UBC Press pp 40 41 ISBN 9780774832298 F W Vroom Old Communion Plate in Kings College Acadiensis Vol 3 January 1903 John Coldwell Adams Sir Charles G D Roberts Confederation Voices Canadian Poetry UWO Web March 2 2011 http www historicplaces ca en rep reg place lieu aspx id 16276 amp pid 0 King s College National Historic Site of Canada a b c d History University of King s College Retrieved March 23 2019 King s College Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved 10 March 2013 About the Library ukings ca Archived from the original on 2015 09 06 The Walrus Magazine Education Student Failure Failure to Fail Archived 2012 02 13 at the Wayback Machine University of King s College Register of Arms Flags and Badges The Governor General of Canada Retrieved March 24 2019 https www coretexts org Retrieved 2023 10 03 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code title code help The Directory of Canadian University University of King s College Archived 2010 06 21 at the Wayback Machine Where everybody knows your name Maclean s Archived from the original on May 27 2012 Master of journalism ukings ca Archived from the original on 2015 04 18 Master of Fine Arts in Creative Nonfiction Groups amp Societies University of King s College Retrieved March 24 2019 UKing s Literary Society turning the page on Haliburton The Watch Magazine Retrieved August 19 2020 What Meaning Is and Why It Matters 4th Annual Alex Fountain Memorial Lecture by Jan Zwicky King s College Halifax mqup ca Fountain Memorial Lecture watchmagazine ca University of King s College ISSUU Tidings Winter 2011 by University of King s College Issuu Couple give 1 million in son s memory The Chronicle Herald University of King s College NEXT Network Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2015 06 27 Varsity Sports ukings ca William Lahey named King s next President and Vice Chancellor www ukings ca Retrieved 2016 07 29 Eaton Arthur Wentworth 1891 Chapter XI King s College The Church of England in Nova Scotia and the Tory Clergy of the Revolution New York Thomas Whittaker Retrieved 1 June 2011 Further reading editRoper Henry Aspects of the History of a Loyalist College King s College Windsor and Nova Scotian Higher Education in the Nineteenth Century Anglican and Episcopal History 61 1991 Vroom Fenwick Williams King s College A Chronicle 1789 1939 DeWolf Mark All the King s Men The Story of a Colonial University 1972 Kinghorn Alexander Manson University of King s College Halifax Nova Scotia The Overseas Commonwealth s Oldest University 1965 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to University of King s College Official website King s Student Union King s College National Historic Site of Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title University of King 27s College amp oldid 1200783443, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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