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UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA , a See also: state institution for higher See also: education, situated at See also: Charlottesville among the See also: foot-hills of the Blue See also: Ridge Mountains
.
Its buildings, arranged around
a large rectangular See also: lawn and erected from a See also: plan prepared by See also: Thomas Jefferson, are noted for their architectural effect
.
At the
See also: head of the lawn is the Rotunda, modelled after the See also: Roman See also: Pantheon and now containing the university library; and at the foot of the lawn are three See also: modern recitation and laboratory buildings
.
On the sides are grouped buildings for each individual professor and dormitories for students
.
There are also a See also: chapel, a gymnasium, a hospital, and on the See also: summit of See also: Mount Jefferson See also: Hill, a mile
See also: south-west of the campus, is the M'Cormick See also: Observatory
.
The university comprises twenty-six See also: independent See also: schools, but the courses of instruction given in these are so co-ordinated as to See also: form six departments: two academic—the See also: college and the department of graduate studies; and four professional—law, See also: medicine, See also: engineering and See also: agriculture
.
The institution owns 522 acres of See also: land, has productive endowment funds amounting to $1,978,000, and receives from the state an See also: annual appropriation of $8o,000
.
It is governed by a rector, chosen by and from nine visitors, and a See also: board of visitors appointed by the governor and two visitors ex officio, the state See also: superintendent of public instruction and the president of the university; and the corporate name of the university is " The Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia." In 1904 Edwin See also: Anderson Alderman (b
.
1861) was elected president
.
In 1910 the faculty and
See also: officers numbered no,
the students (men only) 803, and the number of volumes in the See also: libraries 88,000
.
The university traces its beginning to an See also: act of the legislature in See also: January 1803 for incorporating the " Trustees of See also: Albemarle See also: Academy." In 1814, before the site of this proposed institution had been chosen, Thomas Jefferson was elected a trustee, and under his influence the legislature, in See also: February 1816, authorized the establishment of Central College in lieu of Albemarle Academy
.
The corner-See also: stone of Central College was laid in
See also: October 1817, and Jefferson, who was rector of its board of trustees, evolved a plan for its development into the university of Virginia
.
The legislature, thanks to the efforts of See also: Joseph See also: Carrington Cabell, a close See also: personal friend of Jefferson, adopted the plan in 1818 and 1819, and seven independent schools—ancient See also: languages, modern languages, See also: mathematics, natural philosophy, moral philosophy, chemistry and medicine—were opened to students in See also: March 1825; a school of
See also: law was opened in 1826
.
In 1837 the School of Medicine became a department of three individual schools; and in 185o the School of Law became a department of two schools
.
After the gift of $500,000 by Andrew See also: Carnegie therg were established in 1909 the Andrew Carnegie School of Engineering, the See also: James
See also: Madison School of Law, the James See also: Monroe School of See also: International Law, the James See also: Wilson School of
See also: Political See also: Economy, the Edgar Allan See also: Poe School of See also: English and the Walter See also: Reed School of Pathology
.
Under Jefferson's plan only two degrees were granted : " Graduate," to any student who had completed the course of any one school; and " See also: Doctor" to a graduate in more than one school who had shown See also: powers of research
.
But in 1831 for the Doctor's degree the faculty substituted, following See also: British See also: custom, the degree of Master of Arts
.
The college now grants the degrees of " Bachelor of Arts," " Cultural Bachelor of Science " and " Vocational Bachelor of Science "; the Department of Graduate Studies, the degrees of " Graduate in a School," " Master of Arts," " Master of Science " and " Doctor of Philosophy "; the Department of Law, the degree of " Bachelor of See also: Laws "; the Department of Medicine, the degree of " Doctor of Medicine "; the Department of Engineering, she degrees of " See also: Civil Engineer," " See also: Mechanical Engineer," " Electrical Engineer," " See also: Mining Engineer " and " Chemical Engineer "; and the Department of Agriculture, the degree of " Bachelor of Science in Agriculture."
See J
.
S
.
See also: Patton, Jefferson, Cabell and the University of Virginia (New See also: York, 1906)
.
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