DARTMOUTH COLLEGE
'Dartmouth College' is a private, coeducational university located in Hanover, New Hampshire, in the United States. It is a member of the Ivy League and is one of the nine colonial colleges founded before the American Revolution.[5]
Founded in 1769 by Eleazar Wheelock, with funds partially raised by the efforts of a Native American preacher named Samson Occom, it is the ninth-oldest college in the United States and the seventh-wealthiest in terms of funds per student.[6][7] In addition to its liberal arts undergraduate program, Dartmouth has medical, engineering, and business schools, as well as 21 graduate programs in the arts and sciences; hence it would tend to be called a university in standard American usage.[7] For the sake of tradition—in part stemming from the legacy of the landmark Dartmouth College Case—and to emphasize the central importance accorded to undergraduate education, however, it is called "Dartmouth College",[6] instead of "Dartmouth University." With a total enrollment of 5,753 (4,078 of whom are undergraduates), Dartmouth is the smallest school in the Ivy League. It is incorporated as ''Trustees of Dartmouth College''.[10]
In 2005 Booz Allen Hamilton selected Dartmouth College as one of the "World's Ten Most Enduring Institutions," recognizing its ability to overcome crises that threatened its survival (most famously ''Trustees of Dartmouth College v. Woodward'').[11] Dartmouth alumni are famously involved in their college, from Daniel Webster to the many donors in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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History
Baker Memorial Library at Dartmouth College
Dartmouth was the final colonial college given a royal charter when King George III granted its charter in 1769, mostly as a result of the efforts of Eleazar Wheelock, a Puritan minister, and his patron, Royal Governor John Wentworth. (Queen's College, now Rutgers University, was granted a charter slightly earlier but did not begin operation until after Dartmouth.)
Dartmouth's original purpose was to provide for the Christianization, instruction, and education of "Youth of the Indian Tribes in this Land...and also of English Youth and any others."[6] Ministers Nathaniel Whittaker and Samson Occom (an early Native American clergyman) raised funds for the college in England through an English trust among whose benefactors and trustees were prominent English statesmen, including King George III's future Secretary of State for the Colonies in North America, William Legge, 2nd Earl of Dartmouth, for whom Dartmouth College is named. The fundraising was meant to support Wheelock's ongoing Connecticut institution of 1754, Moor's Indian Charity School,[13] but Wheelock instead applied most of the funds to the establishment of Dartmouth College. Wheelock established a collegiate department within Moor's Charity School in 1768 that he moved to Hanover with the rest of the school in 1770.[14] The College granted its first degrees in 1771, obtaining a seal to affix on them in 1773. Dejected and betrayed, Samson Occom went on to form his own community of New England Indians called Brothertown Indians in Oneida country in upstate New York.[6]
In 1819, Dartmouth College was the subject of the historic Dartmouth College case, in which the State of New Hampshire's 1816 attempt to amend the College's royal charter to make the school a public university was challenged. An institution called Dartmouth University occupied the college buildings and began operating in Hanover in 1817, though the College continued teaching classes in rented rooms nearby.[6] Daniel Webster, an alumnus of the class of 1801, presented the College's case to the Supreme Court of the United States, which found the amendment of Dartmouth's charter to be an illegal impairment of a contract by the state and reversed New Hampshire's takeover of the College. Webster concluded his peroration with the famous and frequently-quoted words,
: ''It is, Sir, as I have said, a small college. And yet there are those who love it.''[6]
Many individuals at Dartmouth were active in the early abolitionist movement in New England and founded the nearby Noyes Academy 1835 which was an experimental integrated school.
Dartmouth was a men's college until 1972, when women were first admitted as full-time students and undergraduate degree candidates.[18] At about the same time, the college adopted its unique "Dartmouth Plan", described by some commentators as "a way to put 4,000 students into 3,000 beds."[18] Also known as the "D-Plan", it is a schedule of year-round operation, designed to allow an increase in the enrollment (with the addition of women) without enlarging campus accommodations. The year is divided into four terms corresponding with the seasons; students are required to be in residence during their freshman year, sophomore year summer term, and senior year. Although new dormitories have been built since, the number of students has also increased and the D-Plan remains in effect.
Dartmouth's motto is "Vox Clamantis in Deserto". The Latin motto is literally translated as "The voice of one crying in the wilderness", but the College administration often translates the phrase as "A voice crying in the wilderness", which, while not technically correct in Latin grammar, attempts to translate the synecdoche of the phrase. The motto, chosen by Eleazar Wheelock, is a reference to the Christian Bible's John the Baptist as well as to the college's location on what was once the frontier of European settlement.[20] Richard Hovey's ''Men of Dartmouth'' was elected as the best of all the songs of the College in 1896, and today it serves as the school's alma mater, although the lyrics and title have since been changed to be gender-neutral.
The screenplay for the film ''National Lampoon's Animal House'' was cowritten by Chris Miller (A.B. 1963) and is based loosely on a series of fictional stories he wrote in 1974 about his fraternity days at Dartmouth. In a CNN interview, John Landis said the movie was "based on Chris Miller's real fraternity at Dartmouth," Alpha Delta.[21] In an interview with ''The Dartmouth,'' Miller said that at least one incident in the film—one in which a Delta Tau Chi brother skis down the stairs as the band plays "Shout"—occurred at an Alpha Delta party at Dartmouth.[22] The movie was filmed at the University of Oregon.[23]
Presidents (the Wheelock Succession)
| • The Rev. Eleazar Wheelock | (1769–1779) |
| • John Wheelock, 1771 | (1779–1815) |
| • The Rev. Francis Brown, 1805 | (1815–1820) |
| • The Rev. Daniel Dana, 1788 | (1820–1821) |
| • The Rev. Bennet Tyler | (1822–1828) |
| • The Rev. Nathan Lord | (1828–1863) |
| • The Rev. Asa Dodge Smith, 1830 | (1863–1877) |
| • The Rev. Samuel Colcord Bartlett, 1836 | (1877–1892) |
| • The Rev. William Jewett Tucker, 1861 | (1893–1909) |
| • Ernest Fox Nichols | (1909–1916) |
| • Ernest Martin Hopkins, 1901 | (1916–1945) |
| • John Sloan Dickey, 1929 | (1945–1970) |
| • John George Kemeny, 1981A | (1970–1981) |
| • David Thomas McLaughlin, 1954 & T '55 | (1981–1987) |
| • James Oliver Freedman, 1998A | (1987–1998) |
| • James E. Wright, 1964A | (1998– ) |
Academics
Until it burned in 1904, Dartmouth Hall (first built in 1784) was the oldest building on Dartmouth's campus. (It was rebuilt the following year, shown here.)[24]
Dartmouth, with 4,078 undergraduate students, is one of the most selective educational institutions in the world. For the Class of 2010, 13,933 students applied for a little over 1,000 places in the class, and only 15.4% of applicants were admitted. Median SAT scores lie within the low 700s for each subject, and about 90% of the members of the Class of 2011 graduated in the top ten percent of their high school class. 30% of the members of the Class of 2011 graduated as valedictorian, and 10% as salutatorian.[25]
Integral to the undergraduate college are three graduate schools, Dartmouth Medical School (1797), Thayer School of Engineering (1867)—which also serves as the undergraduate department of engineering sciences—and Tuck School of Business (1900). With these graduate programs, conventional American usage would accord Dartmouth the label of "Dartmouth University"; but because of historical and nostalgic reasons (such as ''Dartmouth College v. Woodward''), the school uses the name "Dartmouth ''College''" for the entire institution.
Academic reputation
In 2007, Dartmouth was ranked eleventh among undergraduate programs at national universities by ''U.S. News and World Report''.[25] However, since Dartmouth is ranked in a category for national research universities, some have questioned the fairness of the ranking given the College's emphasis on undergraduate education.[27][28] The 2006 Carnegie Foundation classification[29] listed Dartmouth as the only majority-undergraduate, arts-and-sciences focused institution in the country that also had some graduate coexistence and very high research activity.[30]
Mission Statement and Core Values
In 2007, the Dartmouth Board of Trustees approved and published a revised mission statement that represents the ideology of the school.
Dartmouth operates according to the following set of six core values:[31]
★ Dartmouth expects academic excellence and encourages independence of thought within a culture of collaboration.
★ Dartmouth faculty are passionate about teaching our students and are at the forefront of their scholarly or creative work.
★ Dartmouth embraces diversity with the knowledge that it significantly enhances the quality of a Dartmouth education.
★ Dartmouth recruits and admits outstanding students from all backgrounds, regardless of their financial means.
★ Dartmouth fosters lasting bonds among faculty, staff, and students, which encourage a culture of integrity, self-reliance, and collegiality and instill a sense of responsibility for each other and for the broader world.
★ Dartmouth supports the vigorous and open debate of ideas within a community marked by mutual respect.
The administration has been criticized for allegedly failing to adhere to the college's fourth core value, having yet to enact a need-blind admission policy for international students.[32][33]
Honor Principle
Dartmouth has a well-established Honor Principle that binds all students to be responsible for each other's learning. Exams are not proctored, take-home exams are common, and students are entrusted with the responsibility not to cheat. "On February 1, 1962, a majority vote of the student body adopted the principle that 'all academic activities will be based on student honor' and thereby accepted the responsibility, individually and collectively, to maintain and perpetuate the principle of academic honor."[34]
Board of Trustees
Main articles: Board of Trustees of Dartmouth College
Dartmouth is governed by a Board of Trustees. The board includes the College president and the state governor (both ''ex officio''), eight trustees appointed by the board itself (Charter Trustees), and eight elected trustees (Alumni Trustees).[35] The alumni trustees are nominated for board appointment by members of the Association of Alumni of Dartmouth College, a body created in 1854 that represents over 60,000 alumni. Alumni Trustees are nominated by the Alumni Council or by alumni petition and an election is held and the winner appointed to the board by all Trustees. In September 2007, it was announced that the Board's size will be expanded from 18 to 26 by adding eight Charter Trustee seats.[36]
Facilities
Hopkins Center for the Creative and Performing Arts
Main articles: Hopkins Center for the Arts
The Hopkins Center ("the Hop") houses the College's drama, music, film, and studio arts departments, as well as a woodshop, pottery studio, and jewelry studio which are open for use by students and faculty. The building was designed by the famed architect Wallace Harrison, who later modeled Manhattan’s Lincoln Center front façade after the Hopkins Center.[37] Facilities include two recital halls and one large auditorium. It is also the location of all student mailboxes ("Hinman boxes") and the Courtyard Café dining facility. The Hop is connected to the Hood Museum of Art, North America's oldest museum in continuous operation, and the Loew Auditorium, where films are screened. The Hopkins Center is an important New Hampshire performance venue.
Nelson A. Rockefeller Center for Public Policy and the Social Sciences
The Nelson A. Rockefeller Center is a center for interaction and discussion on public policy. Dedicated in 1983, the center stands in tribute to Nelson A. Rockefeller (Class of 1930). Known on campus as 'Rocky,' the Center provides students, faculty and community-members opportunities to discuss and learn about public policy, law, and politics. Sponsoring lunch and dinner discussions with prominent faculty and visitors, the Center aides provides close interaction and discussion.[38]
The Rockefeller Center has established a Public Policy minor at Dartmouth and an exchange program on political economy with Keble College at the University of Oxford. In addition, the Center provides grants to students engaged in public-policy research and/or activities.[39]
The Rockefeller Center's Policy Research Shop is a program that provides research upon the request of elected policy makers and their legislative staff throughout the year. The Center hires students to work under the direction of faculty members, who then produce reports that are typically between 5–15 pages long. The intent is to produce useful information in a timely fashion so that the information can be used in legislative deliberations.[40]
The John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding
The John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding was established in 1982 to honor Dartmouth's twelfth president (1945–70), John Sloan Dickey. The purpose of the Dickey Center is to "coordinate, sustain, and enrich the international dimension of liberal arts education at Dartmouth."[41] The Dickey Center also several student-run organizations, such as the Dartmouth World Affairs Council (WAC) or the War & Peace Fellows, which foster undergraduates' awareness of international affairs.[42] Several grants and awards are also administered by the Dickey Center, including the prestigious Chase Peace Prize, conferred annually to the senior thesis that contributes most significantly to an understanding of the causes of peace and war.[43]
Housing clusters
Main articles: Dartmouth College residential communities
As opposed to ungrouped dormitories or residential colleges as employed at such institutions as The University of Chicago and Yale, Dartmouth has several housing clusters located throughout campus. The College experienced a slight housing crunch due to the unusually high yield of the class of 2005. Partially as a result, the College erected temporary housing, and two new dormitory clusters were completed in the fall of 2006. Also since 2006, the College guaranteed housing for students during their sophomore year, in addition to their freshman year.
Athletics
As of 2004, Dartmouth College hosts 34 varsity sports: sixteen for men, sixteen for women, and coeducational sailing and equestrian programs. This places it among the top United States colleges and universities in this regard. In addition, there are twenty-three club sports and twenty-four intramural sports.
Nickname, symbol, and mascot
Keggy posing on the Dartmouth College Green with Baker Memorial Library in the background.
Since the 1920s, the Dartmouth College athletic teams have been known by their unofficial nickname "The Big Green." The nickname is based on students' adoption of a shade of forest green ("Dartmouth Green") as the school's official color in 1866, leading to the nickname "The Green" soon after. Until the early 1970s, teams were also known as the "Indians," and athletic uniforms bore a representation of an Indian warrior's head. That representation and similar images, called collectively "the Indian Symbol," as well as the practice of a cheerleader dressing in Indian costume to serve as a mascot during games, came under criticism. During the early 1970s the Trustees declared the "use of the [Indian] symbol in any form to be inconsistent with present institutional and academic objectives of the College in advancing Native American education."[44] Some alumni and a minority of students, as well as the conservative student newspaper, ''The Dartmouth Review'', have sought to return the Indian symbol to prominence, but no team has worn the symbol on its uniform in decades. (Representations of Native Americans do remain on the Dartmouth College Seal, the Dartmouth Coat of Arms (see above), and the weather vane of Baker Library.)
Various student initiatives have been undertaken to adopt a new mascot, but none has garnered sufficient support from students or alumni to become "official." One proposal devised by the college humor magazine, the ''Dartmouth Jack-O-Lantern'', was Keggy the Keg, an anthropomorphic beer keg who makes occasional appearances at college sporting events, but Keggy has only received approval from the student government.[45] In November 2006, after an absence of several years, student government attempted to revive the "Dartmoose" as a potential replacement mascot.[46] This occurred following renewed controversy surrounding the former Indian mascot.
Varsity teams
Main articles: Dartmouth College athletic teams
Dartmouth's varsity athletic teams compete in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I, in the eight-member Ivy League conference. Some teams also participate in the Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC). Dartmouth athletes compete in 34 varsity sports. In addition to the traditional American team sports (football, basketball, baseball and ice hockey), Dartmouth competes in many others including track and field, sailing, tennis, rowing, soccer, skiing, and lacrosse. Many are highly competitive at the national level, earning berths into NCAA championships and tournaments.
As is mandatory amongst all Ivy League, Dartmouth College does not offer athletic scholarships. Despite this restriction, it is home to many student athletes. As many as three-quarters of Dartmouth undergraduates participate in some form of athletics, and one-quarter of Dartmouth students play a varsity sport at some point during their undergraduate years. The percentage of varsity athletes and varsity sports are thus disproportionately greater than at many much larger colleges in the country.
In addition to varsity sports, Dartmouth students may also participate in several club sports, such as rugby, water polo, figure skating, men's volleyball, ultimate frisbee and cricket. These teams generally perform well in their respective regional and national competitions. The figure skating team has performed particularly well in recent years, winning the national championship in each of the past four consecutive seasons.
Venues
Dartmouth hosts many athletic venues.
Dartmouth's Memorial Field.
Attached to Alumni Gym is the Spaulding Pool. Spaulding Pool is a 10 by 25 yard pool constructed during 1919 and 1920 and designed by Rich & Mathesius, Architects. The Spaulding Pool is one of the oldest continuously operating pools in the United States. The pool's interior walls feature original encaustic tiles designed by noted ceramist Leon Victor Solon, although a later mezzanine housing locker rooms has obscured some of the designs. The pool has seating for several hundred spectators. Both pools are currently used by the Men's and Women's Varsity Swim Teams, as well as a host of other programs within the college.
The College also maintains the Memorial Field football stadium, Edward Leede Arena (basketball), and Rupert C. Thompson Arena (hockey and figure skating), as well as a rowing boat house on the Connecticut River and a tennis complex. The Boss Tennis Complex was recently awarded national tennis center of the year.
Dartmouth's original sports field was the Green, where students played cricket during the late eighteenth century and Old Division Football during the 1800s; some intramural games still take place there.
Student life
In 2006, the Princeton Review ranked Dartmouth third in its ''Quality of life'' category, and sixth for having the ''Happiest Students.''[47]
Student groups
Main articles: Dartmouth College student groups
Robinson Hall houses many of the College's student-run organizations, including the Dartmouth Outing Club. The building is a designated stop along the Appalachian Trail
Greek life
Main articles: Dartmouth College Greek organizations
Dartmouth College is host to many Greek organizations and a large percentage of the undergraduate student body is active in Greek life. In 2000, nearly half of the undergraduate student body belonged to a fraternity, sorority, or coeducational Greek house. First year students are not allowed to join Greek organizations, however, so the actual fraction of Dartmouth students that become active in Greek life during their studies at the College exceeds half of the student body. Dartmouth College was among the first institutions of higher education to desegregate fraternity houses in the 1950s, and was involved in the movement to create coeducational Greek houses in the 1970s. In the early 2000s, campus-wide debate focused on whether or not the Greek system at Dartmouth should become "substantially coeducational," but most houses retain single-sex membership policies. The college has an additional classification of social/residential organizations known as undergraduate societies. These organizations are not part of the official Greek system, but serve a similar role on campus.
Technology
Technology plays an important role in student life, as Dartmouth has been ranked as one of the most technologically-advanced colleges in the world (as in ''Newsweek's'' ranking of "Hottest for the Tech-Savvy"[49]). BlitzMail, the campus e-mail network, plays a tremendous role in social life, as students tend to use it for communication in lieu of cellular phones or instant messaging programs.[50] Although there are more than 12,000 computers available for use on campus, student reliance on BlitzMail (known colloquially as "Blitz," which functions as both noun and verb) has led to computer terminals being installed all around campus, so that students can check their "blitz" in between classes or while away from their rooms.[51]
Dartmouth was also notable as the first Ivy League institution to offer entirely ubiquitous wireless internet access. With over 1,300 wireless access points, the wireless network is available throughout all college buildings as well as in most public outdoor spaces.[52] Other technologies being pioneered include college-wide Video-on-Demand and VoIP rollouts.[53][52]
Native Americans at Dartmouth
The charter of Dartmouth College, granted to Eleazar Wheelock in 1769, proclaims that the institution was created "for the education and instruction of Youth of the Indian Tribes in this Land in reading, writing and all parts of Learning ... as well as in all liberal Arts and Sciences; and also of English Youth and any others."[55] The funds for Dartmouth College were raised primarily by the efforts of a Native American named Samson Occom.
While Dartmouth's students since have mainly been white, the college still claims to have a long history of involvement with Indian education. In 1970 the school established Native American academic and social programs as part of a "new dedication to increasing Native American enrollment."[55]
Wheelock, a Congregationalist dedicated to converting Indians to Christianity, was head of Moor's Indian Charity School (1753) prior to establishing Dartmouth. It was this institution that Mohegan preacher Samson Occom raised money for; Occom was bitterly disappointed to see Wheelock transform it into an English college.[6]
Traditions
Main articles: Dartmouth College traditions
Dartmouth is home to a variety of traditions and celebrations:
★ 'Homecoming' and 'Dartmouth Night': Each fall term, a bonfire is constructed by the freshman class, a tradition stemming from the late 1800s. Freshman run around the bonfire in accordance with their class year (e.g. the class of 2009 ran 109 laps).
★ 'Winter Carnival': Started in 1909 by the Dartmouth Outing Club to promote winter sports, this celebration includes a snow sculpture on the Green and a variety of outdoor events. Winter Carnival was the subject of the 1939 motion picture comedy ''Winter Carnival'', starring Ann Sheridan.
★ 'Green Key Weekend': The spring Green Key Weekend began in the 1920s with a formal function related to the Green Key Society, but the importance of the Society in the weekend is largely diminished. Green Key is today a weekend devoted to campus parties and celebration.
★ 'Tubestock': Tubestock was an unofficial summer tradition in which the sophomore class used wooden rafts and inner tubes to float on the Connecticut River. Begun in 1986, Tubestock met its demise in 2006 when Hanover town ordinances and a lack of coherent student protest conspired to defeat the popular tradition.
★ 'Fieldstock': The class of 2008, during their summer term on campus in 2006, attempted to replace the now-defunct Tubestock with Fieldstock. The student government coordinated with the college to organize a day of events in the Bema (a raised platform of stone from which orators in ancient Greece addressed the citizens and courts of law, now a tongue-in-cheek acronym for Big Empty Meeting Area) and on the Green, including a free barbecue, live music, and the revival of the 1970s and 1980s tradition of racing homemade chariots around the Green. Unlike Tubestock, Fieldstock was college funded and supported, though whether or not it becomes a true college tradition will depend on whether the class of 2009 chooses to hold it again in the summer of 2007.
★ 'DOC trips': Prior to matriculation, the Dartmouth Outing Club sponsors four-day outing trips for incoming students. Each trip concludes at the Moosilauke Ravine Lodge.
★ 'Dartmouth Pow-Wow': A two-day ceremony is marked by traditional dancing, crafts, music and art, held every spring since 1973. The Pow-Wow is organized by the student group Native Americans at Dartmouth.
Alumni
Main articles: List of Dartmouth College alumni
Notable graduates and students at Dartmouth include:
★ Salmon P. Chase – Chief Justice of the United States
★ Robert Frost – poet who won four Pulitzer Prizes
★ Theodor Seuss Geisel – the children's author better known as Dr. Seuss
★ Henry Paulson, Jr. – current U.S. Secretary of the Treasury; former Chief Executive Officer of Goldman Sachs
★ Nelson Rockefeller – Former Vice President of the U.S.
★ Fred Rogers – American educator, minister, songwriter and television host
★ Daniel Webster – U.S. Senator from Massachusetts and U.S. Secretary of State
Seal
Dartmouth College received a royal charter on December 13, 1769 through New Hampshire's colonial governor John Wentworth. The charter required a seal that was to be:
Nevertheless, on March 13, 1770, founder Eleazar Wheelock wrote the trustees of the English fund that was supporting the college (rather than the American trustees of the institution itself, as the charter stipulated) to suggest that his
The English trustees, including Lord Dartmouth, did not take up the suggestion. Evidence exists that they were annoyed with Wheelock's acquisition of a charter for a college; they were under the impression that the funds under their control were to be used to support Wheelock's efforts at educating and Christianizing Native Americans at Moor's Indian Charity School at Lebanon, Connecticut.[58] Wheelock then designed a seal for his college bearing a striking resemblance to the seal of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, a missionary society founded in London in 1701, in order to maintain the illusion that his college was more for mission work than for higher education. Wheelock arranged for Nathaniel Hurd, a Boston silversmith, to engrave the seal. Hurd had engraved many coats of arms and appears in a John Singleton Copley portrait of ca. 1765 with two books, one of which is ''A Display of Heraldry'' by John Guillim (1610).[59] Wheelock wrote to Governor Wentworth on May 22, 1772, 'I hope that Mr Hurd will have the College Seal compleated by Commencement.'[60] The seal (a single-sided "female" die used to form impressions in wax) was ready by Commencement of 1773, and Portsmouth resident and former Chief Justice and Treasurer of the Province of New Hampshire George Jaffrey donated it to the college. The trustees officially accepted the seal on August 25, 1773, describing it as:
Former College Librarian William Woodward hid the seal from Dartmouth's officers along with the charter and four account books after the state of New Hampshire purported to take over the operation of Dartmouth College (and purported to make Woodward Treasurer of Dartmouth University). The Dartmouth College Case named Woodward as the defendant and technically sought to recover the items that he had hidden.[61] The college's success in the Supreme Court returned the seal to its possession and extinguished the University.
In 1876, the college switched from having its seal impress wax to having it impress paper. This required a second, "male" die to fit under the original. The seal design was also carved in sandstone on the exterior of Rollins Chapel in 1886 and in wood on the interior of Commons in 1901.
On October 28, 1926, the trustees affirmed the charter's reservation of the seal for official corporate documents alone. The College Publications Committee under Ray Nash commissioned typographer W. A. Dwiggins to create a line-drawing version of the seal in 1940 that saw widespread use.
Dwiggins' design was modified during 1957 to change the date from "1770" to "1769," to accord with the date of the College Charter. The trustees commissioned a new set of dies with a date of "1769" to replace the old dies, now badly worn after almost two hundred years of use. The 1957 design continues to be used under trademark number 2305032.[62]
Other insignia
Shield
On October 28, 1926, the Trustees approved a "Dartmouth College Shield" for general use. Artist and engraver W. Parke Johnson designed this emblem on the basis of the shield that is depicted at the center of the original seal. This design does not survive. On June 9, 1944 the trustees approved another coat of arms based on the shield part of the seal, this one by Canadian artist and designer Thoreau MacDonald. That design was used widely and, like Dwiggins' seal, had its date changed from "1770" to "1769" around 1958. That version continues to be used under trademark registration number 3112676 and others.
College designer John Scotford made a stylized version of the shield during the 1960s, but it did not see the success of MacDonald's design.[63] The shield appears to have been used as the basis of the shield of the Dartmouth Medical School, and it has been reproduced in sizes as small as a few nanometers across.[64] The design has appeared on Rudolph Ruzicka's Bicentennial Medal (Philadelphia Mint, 1969) and elsewhere. It appears most commonly in public in the form of a negative rendering on emergency-phone lampposts around Dartmouth's campus.
The Arms of William Legge, Second Earl of Dartmouth
Although an institution's adoption of the arms of its founder is not strictly appropriate, it is frequently done; Legge was not the founder of Dartmouth College, but he is its namesake, and the school has repeated his arms on several occasions. The 1830s banner of the Dartmouth Phalanx militia unit depicted Legge's arms, as did a nineteenth-century sign for the privately-owned Dartmouth Hotel. The 1920s College Flag depicts the arms, as do an early-century edition of ''The Dartmouth College Song Book'' and a 1960s banner hanging in Alumni Hall.
See also
★ Ivy League
★ List of Dartmouth College faculty
Notes
1. 'Keggy' makes an awaited return Brent Butler
2. Moose tops mascot survey Jessica Spradling
3. Mascot debate returns to agenda Allison Forbes
4. Dartmouth News - Impressive returns reported for Dartmouth endowment in fiscal 2006-07
5. Dartmouth - About Dartmouth - Facts It is the smallest of the Ivies resembling a prestigious elite liberal arts college with university-level research programs
6. A Dartmouth History Lesson for Freshman
7. Dartmouth - About Dartmouth - Facts
8. Dartmouth - About Dartmouth - Facts
9. A Dartmouth History Lesson for Freshman
10. Trustees of Dartmouth College
11. Booz Allen Hamilton Lists the World's Most Enduring Institutions
12. A Dartmouth History Lesson for Freshman
13. Eleazar Wheelock's Two Schools
14. Dick Hoefnagel with Virginia L. Close, ''Eleazar Wheelock and the Adventurous Founding of Dartmouth. College'' (Hanover, N.H.: Durand Press for Hanover Historical Society, 2002).
15. A Dartmouth History Lesson for Freshman
16. A Dartmouth History Lesson for Freshman
17. A Dartmouth History Lesson for Freshman
18. Dartmouth College
19. Dartmouth College
20. Bartlett Hall’s Wheelock Memorial Window
21. Interview with John Landis
22. Alpha Delta Lawn Party is centerpiece of Green Key
23. Oregon University Archives
24. Dartmo.: Notes toward a Catalog of the Buildings and Landscapes of Dartmouth College
25. America's Best Colleges
26. America's Best Colleges
27. Dartmouth Ranked Tenth Best College Steven Menash
28. College ranks ninth for six years running Linzi Sheldon
29. The Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education
30. Classifications: Dartmouth College
31. Dartmouth's Mission Statement
32. Internat’l students seek need-blind admissions
33. College’s prestige needs blind aid
34. Dartmouth's Honor Principle
35. Dartmouth Trustees vote to expand size of board
36. Board adds 8 seats, ends century-old parity William Schpero
37. The Hopkins Center Turns 40
38. About the Rockefeller Center
39. Student Opportunities
40. Policy Research Shop
41. The John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding
42. The War and Peace Fellows Program
43. Chase Peace Prize
44. The 'Big Green' Nickname
45. Keggy the Keg
46. First SA meeting draws crowd Allie Lowe
47. The Princeton Review, ''Best 361 Colleges, 2006 (College Admissions Guides) (Paperback)'' (New York, NY.: Princeton Review Press, August 23, 2005).
48. About Us
49. America's 25 Hot Schools Barbara Kantrowitz
50. Cell phones make inroads on Blitz-centric College campus Jennifer Garfinkel
51. The Basics About Dartmouth
52. Wireless Network Facts Susan Knapp
53. Phones, television and computers converge at Dartmouth Susan Knapp
54. Wireless Network Facts Susan Knapp
55. About the Native American Program
56. About the Native American Program
57. A Dartmouth History Lesson for Freshman
58. Notes from the Special Collections: The Dartmouth College Seal
59. John Singleton Coppley, Portrait of Nathaniel Hurd, c. 1765, at the Cleveland Museum of Art
60. Journey to Hanover, 1771 Dick Hoefnagel
61. Trustees of Dartmouth College vs. Woodward, 17 U.S. 518 (1819)
62. United States Patent and Trademark Office
63. A Proposal for a Heraldic Coat of Arms for Dartmouth College
64. Nanometer Pattern Generation System: Dartmouth Seal
References
★ Dartmouth College:Off the Record, , Scott L., Glabe, College Prowler, 2005, ISBN 1-59658-038-0
★ Forever Green: The Dartmouth College Campus—An arboretum of Northern Trees, Molly K. Hughes, Susan Berry, , , Enfield Books, 2000, ISBN 1-893598-01-2
★
External links
★ Dartmouth College
★ Dartmouth College News
★ Dartmo.: The Buildings of Dartmouth College
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