Online Encyclopedia

IOWA CITY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 736 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

See also:
IOWA CITY  , a city and the county-seat of Johnson county,
See also:
Iowa, U.S.A., on Iowa
See also:
river, about 120 M . E. of
See also:
Des Moines . Pop . (1890) 7016; (1900) 7987, of whom 1355 Were
See also:
foreign born; (1905) 8497; (1910) 10,091 . It is served by two branches of the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific railroad, and by the Iowa City & Cedar Rapids Interurban railway (electric), of which it is a
See also:
terminus . The ground on which the city is built forms an amphitheatre surrounded for the most
See also:
part by hills and bluffs . Iowa City is the seat of the state university of Iowa, of Iowa City Academy, of the library of the State
See also:
Historical Society and of the state Sanatorium for the Treatment of
See also:
Tuberculosis . The university, organized in 1847, and occupying the old State Capitol grounds, is an integral part of the public school
See also:
system of the state, and is under the control of a board of regents, consisting of the governor, the superintendent of public instruction and eleven members, elected—one from each congressional district—by the General Assembly . The university's preparatory department was opened in 1855 and continued until 1879; the first collegiate session was in 1856-1857, but during 1858-186o the collegiate department was closed . The institution embraces a college of liberal arts (186o), with a school of
See also:
political and ' As
See also:
lieutenant-governor, Newbold serves for the unexpired portion of the
See also:
term to which Kirkwood was elected; Kirkwood resigned on the 1st of
See also:
February 1877, having been chosen
See also:
United States senator.social science (r9oo)—which offers courses in commerce, administration,
See also:
modern
See also:
history and
See also:
practical philanthropy—and a school of
See also:
education, first opened in 1907, to train secondary and college teachers and school principals and superintendents; a college of law (1868); a college of
See also:
medicine (1870), including a training school for nurses (1897); a college of homoeopathic medicine (1877), including a nurses' training school (1894); a college of dentistry (1882); a college of
See also:
pharmacy (1885); a graduate college; a college of applied science (1903), with courses in
See also:
civil, electrical,
See also:
mechanical,
See also:
mining, municipal and sanitary
See also:
engineering and courses in chemistry; a summer school for teachers and librarians and a university extension department . Affiliated with the university is a school of
See also:
music . The university's income is derived from the proceeds of invested funds and lands originally given by the United States, from permanent appropriations by the state and from the proceeds of a one-fifth mill tax to be used for buildings alone .

In 1907-1908 the institution had 28 buildings (including the old State Capitol, built in 1840), a teaching and administrative force of nearly 200 members and 2315 students, of whom 1082 were in the college of liberal arts; the university library had about 65,000 volumes (25,000 were destroyed by

fire in 1897), and the university law library, 14,000 volumes; and the
See also:
total income of the university was about $611,000 . In 1908 the library of the State Historical Society of Iowa, housed in the Hall of the Liberal Arts of the university, numbered about 40,000 volumes . Iowa City has a considerable variety of small manufacturing establishments . In 1839 Iowa City was selected as the site for the seat of government of the newly created Territory of Iowa . The legislature met for the first time in 1841 and continued to hold its sessions here until 1857, when Des Moines, on account of its more central position, was made the capital .

End of Article: IOWA CITY
[back]
IOWA
[next]
IPAI OF ICIGL

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.