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History of Emory University : ウィキペディア英語版
History of Emory University
(詳細はNewton County contemplated the establishment of a new town and college. The town was called Oxford after the school's prestigious British cousin,〔 which graduated the two founders of Methodism, John and Charles Wesley. The college was named after John Emory, an American Methodist bishop who inspired people
.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=History & Traditions Overview )
Events preceding the chartering of Emory College began in 1783, when the Georgia State legislature provided for the founding of "a college or seminary of learning." However, general support of education in Georgia was meager until the 1830s, when an educational fad in Germany inspired Georgia Methodists to create a school for manual labor.〔 At the Georgia Methodist Conference in 1834, a preacher known as "Uncle Allen" Turner suggested that Georgia Methodists should develop their own school rather than support Randolph-Macon in Virginia.〔English, Thomas H. ''Emory University 1915–1965: A Semicentennial History'' (Atlanta: Emory University, 1966).〕 As a result, the Manual Labor School was created in Covington, Georgia in 1835.
On December 10, 1836, the Georgia General Assembly granted the Georgia Methodist Conference a charter to Emory College, named for John Emory, a popular bishop who had presided at the 1834 conference but had died in a carriage accident in 1835.〔 Two years after the chartering, the college opened its doors, and on September 17, 1838, the college's first president, Ignatius Alphonso Few, and three faculty members welcomed fifteen freshmen and sophomores.〔
For the duration of the nineteenth century, Emory College was a constricting academic environment. By signing their names into the ''Matriculation Book'', students were bound to obey the "Laws and Statutes of the College", which bound students to their rooms during study hours, and forbade them from leaving the town limits without the president's consent and engaging in immoral activities.〔 Until the presidency of Warren Candler in the 1890s, Emory prohibited intercollegiate sports. He thought the practice "evil, only evil, and that continually", his principle objection being the cost of intercollegiate athletic programs, the temptation of gambling, and the distraction from academics.〔 However, he was not unalterably opposed to athletics, and during his presidency he raised funds for the first gymnasium at Emory and oversaw the creation of the nation's first model intramural program.
Emory College was closed briefly during the Civil War. In the autumn of 1861, every student left to fight, and the college's trustees closed for the duration. During the war, the college's buildings saw duty both as a Confederate hospital and Union headquarters.〔 When Emory reopened in January 1866, the school's library was destroyed and its small endowment was depleted.〔 Only with the aid of a state G.I. Bill could students afford to resume their education.
In the years following the Civil War, Emory, along with the rest of the South, struggled to overcome financial devastation.〔
The first step toward financial stability came in 1880, when Emory President Atticus G. Haygood preached a Thanksgiving Day sermon expressing gratitude for the end of slavery captured the attention of George Seney, a Brooklyn banker and Methodist. Seney gave Emory College $5,000 to repay its debts, $50,000 for construction, and $75,000 to establish a new endowment.〔 Over the years, Seney invested more than a quarter-million dollars into Emory College, helping to erect the administration building in Oxford that bears his name.
Under the direction of President Haygood's direction, Emory College began to offer many technical and professional subjects in addition to courses required for degrees.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=A Sesquicentennial Timeline: 1833-1987 )〕 By the turn of the century, Emory had evolved its traditional liberal arts program into a broad curriculum encouraging students to pursue degrees in science, study in theology and law, and even learning and expertise in technology and tool craft. The technology department was launched by President Isaac Stiles Hopkins, a polymath professor at Emory College, who was later convinced by state legislators to become the first president of what is now the Georgia Institute of Technology.〔
==Move to DeKalb County==

In 1914, after a long struggle between the Vanderbilt University Board of Trust and the bishops of the Methodist Episcopal Church South over control of the university, the Board of Trust won a decision in the Tennessee State Supreme Court. The church subsequently severed its relationship with the university and forged plans to create a new Methodist university in the Southeast with a school of theology. The General Conference decided to charter one university east of the Mississippi River, and one to the river's west (Southern Methodist University).〔(Vanderbilt University and Southern Methodism ) by Frank Gulley, prodigy.net. Retrieved February 20, 2008.〕
It was Asa Griggs Candler, the founder of The Coca-Cola Company and brother to former Emory President Warren Candler, who persuaded the church to build the new university in DeKalb County, and to make Emory the nucleus.〔 He endowed the school with one million dollars and a gift of 75 acres (304,000 m²) of land in the newly emerging Druid Hills community, located northeast of downtown Atlanta in DeKalb County.〔 The campus is less than a mile from the current Atlanta city limits. For Asa's generosity, the campus library at the east end of the quadrangle—recently restored to its original 1920s appearance—was named after him.
In light of these developments, Emory College was rechartered by DeKalb County on January 25, 1915, as Emory University.〔 Within three months of Asa's endowment, in September 1914, the first unit of the university—the school of theology—had begun classes.〔 Henry Hornbostel was chosen to design many of the buildings on Emory University's new campus. His designs incorporated local stone and materials, including marble and red terracotta tile, which established the institution's unique architectural character. By September 1919, Emory University had created a school of law, medicine, business, and graduate studies. In time, schools of nursing and dentistry would join the university, although the dental school has since been closed and replaced with a school of public health.〔 Doctoral studies at Emory University were established in 1946, and the school has continued to strengthen its graduate and professional schools since. In 1949, Alben Barkley returned to Emory to receive an honorary LLD degree and give the commencement address, the first Emory event to be televised.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Emory University Commencement | A History of Commencement at Emory )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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