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UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 126 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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UNIVERSITY OF

CHICAGO  , one of the
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great educational institutions of the
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United States, established under Baptist auspices in the city of Chicago, and opened in 1892.2 Though the president and two-thirds of the trustees are always
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Baptists, the university is non-sectarian except as regards its divinity school . An immense ambition and the extraordinary organizing ability shown by its first president, William R . Harper, deter-
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mined and characterized the remarkable growth of the university's first decade of activity . The grounds include about 140 acres . Of these about 6o acres—given in
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part by Marshall Field and laid out by Frederick Law Olmsted—border the Midway Plaisance, connecting Washington and Jackson parks . On these grounds the main part of the university stands . The buildings are mostly of grey
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limestone, in
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Gothic style, and grouped in quadrangles . The Mitchell tower is a shortened
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reproduction of Magdalen tower, Oxford, and the University
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Commons, Hutchinson Hall, is a duplicate of Christ Church hall, Oxford . Dormitories accommodate about a fifth of the students . The quadrangles include clubs, dining halls, dormitories, gymnasiums, assembly halls, recitation halls, laboratories and
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libraries . In the first college
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year, 1892-1893, there were 698 students; in that of 1907-1908 there were 5038,3 of whom 2186 were
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women . There are faculties of arts, literature, science, divinity,'
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medicine (organized in 1901), law (1902),
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education, and commerce and administration .

The astronomical

department, the Yerkes
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Observatory, is located on William's
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Bay, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin, about 65 m. from Chicago . It has the largest refracting
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telescope in the
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world (clear aperture 40 in.,
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focal length about 61 ft.) . The Chicago Institute, founded and endowed by Mrs Anita McCormick Blaine as an
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independent normal school, became a part of the university in 1901 . The school of education, as a whole, brings under university influence hundreds of children from
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kindergarten age upwards to young manhood and womanhood, apart from the university classes proper . Chicago was the second university of the country to give its pedagogical department such scope in the union of theory and practice . The nucleus of the library (450,000 volumes in 19o8) was
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purchased in Berlin soon after the university's organization, in one great collection of 175,000 volumes . Scholarly research has been fostered in every possible way, and the university press has been active in the publication of various departmental series and the following
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periodicals.—Biblical World,
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American Journal of
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Theology, American Journal of Semitic
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Languages and Literatures, American Journal of
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Sociology, Journal of
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Political
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Economy,
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Modern
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Philology, Classical Philology, Classical Journal, Journal of Geology, Astrophysical Journal, Botanical
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Gazette, Elementary School Teacher and School Review . The courses in the College of Commerce and 2 A small Baptist college of the same name—established in 1855 on
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land given by S . A . Douglas—went out of existence in 1886 . a If, however, the
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total is reckoned on the basis of nine months of residence the figure for 1907-1708 would-be 3202 . The Divinity School has a graduate department and three under graduate departments, doing
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work in
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English, in Danish and
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Norwegian, and in
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Swedish .

Allied with the Divinity School of the University is the " Disciples' Divinity

House " (1894), a theological school of the Disciples of Christ . Administration
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link the university closely with
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practical
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life . In extension work the university has been active from the beginning, instruction being given not only by lectures but by correspondence (a novel and unique feature among American
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universities); in the decade 1892-1902, 1715 persons were prepared by the latter method for matriculation in the university (11.6 % of the total number of matriculants in the decade) . Extension lectures were given in twenty-two states . At Chicago the work of the university is continuous throughout the year: the " summer quarter " is not as in other American
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schools a supplement to the teaching year, but an integral part; and it attracts the teachers of the
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middle western states and of the south . In the work of the first two years, known together as the Junior College, men and women are in the main given
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separate instruction; but in the Senior College years unrestricted co-education prevails . Students are mainly controlled by self-government in small groups (" the house
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system ") . Relations with " affiliated " (private) colleges and
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academies and " co-operating " (public) high-schools also
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present interesting features . The value of the
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property of the university in 1908 was about $25,578,000 . Up to the 3oth of
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June 1908 it had received from gifts actually paid $29,651,849, of which $22,712,631 were given by John D . Rockefeller .. The value of buildings in 1908 was $4,508,202, of grounds $4,406,191, and of productive funds $14,186,235 .

Upon the

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death of President Harper, Harry Pratt Judson (b . 1849), then head professor of political science and dean of the faculties of arts, became acting president, and on the loth of
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January 1907 he was elected president . See the Decennial Publications of the University (since 1903), especially vol. i. for details of
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history and administration .

End of Article: UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
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