Showing posts with label Columbia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Columbia. Show all posts

Saturday, October 7, 2017

BIRTH | Oct 7 – Helen Clark MacInnes

Helen Clark MacInnes
On this day in 1907 was born in Glasgow the novelist Helen Clark McInnes. She wrote realistic, tight stories about espionage, starting with several novels set in World War II Europe.

Her first novel, Above Suspicion (1941), was about a husband and wife who are recruited to locate a British agent who is missing in Nazi-controlled territory. The book was made into a movie in 1943.

The story was inspired by the wartime work of Gilbert Highet, a fellow alumnus of Glasgow University whom she married in 1932.  The couple began by jointly translating books from German. Highet was an Oxford classicist based at Balliol and St John's. He played a great role in popularizing the classics in the mid-twentieth century. I was a big fan of several of his books. 

He obtained a one-year appointment as a Professor of Classics at Columbia in 1937, and was offered a tenured position in 1938. He and his wife became naturalized Americans. He was a frequent speaker at the New York Oxford-Cambridge Boat Race Dinner.

MacInnes wrote more than 20 spy novels over her 40-year career. Her approach was to frighten the reader by the difficult options faced by her characters:
In my stories, suspense is not achieved by hiding things from the reader. The question is, when is the event going to take place and how can you stop it? A reader may know everything, but still be scared stiff by the situation.
She died in New York in 1985.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

YOUNG AMERICA: The American Universities at 1776 (Updated May 16, 2018)

John Harvard, Cambridge man,
dissenting minister.
When Harvard opened for students in 1642 (it was founded six years before), only 50,000 people lived in Britain's American  colonies.

Yet at the time of the American Revolution more than 130 years later, the colonies had a free population of about 2 million and a slave population of about 300,000, plus children of the slaves who were not at the time counted.

So the colonies grew more than 40-fold during these pre-Revolutionary years of Harvard's existence.

By the end of those 130 years of the colonial era, ten institutions of higher education were founded and nine were open for business, the very first plan for a university being still-born.

Using their modern names, and in order of foundation, the nine institutions that were opened by 1776 are:  Harvard (Massachusetts), William and Mary (Virginia), Yale (Connecticut), Princeton (New Jersey), U. Pennsylvania (Pa.), Columbia (New York), Brown (Rhode Island), Rutgers (New Jersey) and Dartmouth (New Hampshire):
  • Four of the universities are in New England – Harvard, Yale, Brown and Dartmouth. 
  • Two of the other five are in New Jersey, the only colony to have two universities – Princeton and Rutgers. 
  • The remaining three are in New York (Columbia), Pennsylvania (U. Penn.) and Virginia (William & Mary).
Two of the universities – Rutgers and William & Mary – are now public research universities, i.e., they are operated by the states of New Jersey and Virginia. The others are the seven private Ivy League universities.

The Colonies vs. The Mother Country

Having nine institutions of higher education in eight of the thirteen colonies by the time of the Revolution was quite impressive, when one considers that as of 1832, more than half a century after the American Revolution, England still had only two universities, Oxford and Cambridge.

Scotland, however, had five universities in four locations–St Andrews (the first university, in Fife), Glasgow, Aberdeen, Marischal (also in Aberdeen) and Edinburgh.

The First American Colonial Universities - Harvard, William & Mary, Yale

Three threads sum up the religious orientation of the early universities in the American colonies:

1. One church, orthodoxy (Roman Catholicism).
2. An alternative orthodoxy (Church of England).
3. Rejection of both (Dissenters).

Harvard was founded by dissenting ministers, especially from Cambridge. William & Mary was created primarily for Anglicans. Yale was for created for dissenters from the new orthodoxy at Harvard.

Because Harvard was first in line, it tended to influence the universities that followed. Stephen Trachtenberg, former president of The George Washington University and a former Churchill Traveling Scholar at Nuffield College, Oxford, argues that John Dunster's having come to Harvard from Cambridge at a time when they had a four-year undergraduate program meant that Harvard and then other universities required four years for the B.A. degree.

Oxford and Cambridge later reduced the time for the B.A. to three years for most subjects (Greats is still a four-year program), but American universities were by then wedded to the four-year degree.

By and large, Oxford men were Roman Catholics or orthodox Anglicans.  Cambridge men were dissenters, including dissenters from the original dissenters. Among the exceptions was Alexander Whitaker, a Cambridge alumnus who was an Anglican and who paved the way for the first effort to create a university. Unfortunately, it failed.

Henricus College would have created the first university in the colonies. It was planned in Henrico (named after James I's son Henry) for Varina, Virginia, in 1618, 18 years before Harvard was created. Cambridge-born alumnus of Trinity College, Cambridge (and son of much-admired William Whitaker, Protestant scholar and Master of St. John's College, Cambridge) Alexander Whitaker (1585–1616) paved the way for this plan through his active work in the Virginia Colony in 1611-1616. Coming from Anglican parishes in the north of England, he established two churches near Virginia's Jamestown colony. He baptized Pocahontas, creating the illusion that it would be easy to bring the native Americans into the church. James I was initially enthusiastic about the plan for a university at Henrico, Va. with the idea of providing a place to teach both Anglican and Puritan seminarians and to convert the local Indians to Christianity. An area of 10,000 acres on the side of a river was picked out for the campus. However, the idea was still-born. Before it had any students, the Indians targeted for conversion decided to fight back. They laid waste Henrico with a deadly attack in 1622. The king lost his enthusiasm. The colony of Virginia lost its charter. The university idea was ended in 1624.

Harvard was the first durable university, founded by a Cambridge alumnus (Emmanuel College), John Harvard, who donated his library and some money to create the first colonial college that still survives. John Harvard was born to a butcher (married to a woman from Stratford-upon-Avon) in Southwark, a borough of London. Many of John Harvard's family were wiped out by the plague. He emigrated to Boston and served as a dissenting minister. Harvard College was formed in 1636 and was at first called "New College". In 1638, John Harvard was on his deathbed with tuberculosis, he bequeathed his 320-volume library and half his estate to the college. The college was then gratefully renamed after him. It was envisioned as a place dedicated to educating dissenting (Puritan and other) ministers. It opened for teaching and degree-granting in 1642.

Rev. Dr. James Blair 
William & Mary was the second enduring university. It was named after the two co-regents, William III of Orange and his wife, James II's eldest daughter Mary II, who were brought in by Parliament in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 to replace Catholic James II of England (last of the Stuart monarchs), and put an end to any plans for another Catholic resurgence in the monarchy. A new university in Virginia was again promoted, this time by Dr. James Blair, a Church of Scotland and subsequently a Church of England adherent, educated at the Universities of Aberdeen and Edinburgh. He founded the university at  Middle Plantation, later named Williamsburg in honor of the king. It was founded as planned in 1693 and Dr. Blair served as its president from 1693 to 1743, a 50-year term of office for a college president that one source says has been matched by only one other person in the history of the United States. William & Mary is now a public research university, operating under the oversight of the State of Virginia.

Yale was founded, like Cambridge University, as a refuge for teachers and students troubled by trends in the university they left. The initial step by the Colony of Connecticut to create an institution to train ministers, future politicians and others was passed in 1701, probably because Connecticut was subject to different laws and customs. The initial Yale Fellows, led by James Pierpoint, were all alumni of Harvard - ten Congregationalist ministers who jointly contributed books to create the first Yale library. The first diploma was granted in 1702. The major impetus for the endowment of Yale came from Harvard's sixth (and largely absentee) president Increase Mather, a staunch Puritan who alienated some by being involved in the Salem witch trials and others by then urging restraint. Mather was concerned that the clergy on the Harvard faculty were relaxing their Puritan standards and hoped that Yale would maintain Calvinist religious orthodoxy. In 1718, Increase's son Cotton Mather contacted a Welshman, Elihu Yale to ask him for financial help. Eli Yale had made a fortune while trading in India for the East India Company and gave the university 417 books, nine bales of goods sold for £560, and a portrait of King George I.  The university in return took Yale's name in the hope of further gifts that, alas in the end, did not ensue, in perhaps the first recorded Major Disappointment in a university's Major Gifts campaign.

The Next Three Universities, Founded in the 1740s

Princeton was the first university founded in New Jersey, originally as "the College of New Jersey", in 1746 (it was renamed in 1896). It started teaching a year later and gave its first degree a year after that. It was sponsored by Presbyterians but educated students for ministries in many religions. Its impetus was the Great Awakening, which can be said to have originated from the Oxford "Holy Club" of Charles Wesley and then John Wesley. George Whitefield arrived at Pembroke College, Oxford, in 1732, a provincial youth with a West Country accent (for example, it is recorded that he pronounced “Christ” as “Chroist”). He described himself as coming from the tap-room of the family inn. Whitefield had heard of the “Holy Club” before he arrived, and open-hearted Charles Wesley included him. Charles became Whitefield's chief Oxford mentor. In 1736, steely John Wesley entrusted the newly ordained Whitefield with the oversight of the Oxford methodists, while he went with Charles to Georgia. (In 1739, Whitefield returned the favor.) Whitefield soon became as famed as the Wesleys and is given equal billing as the leading inspiration of the worldwide evangelical Great Awakening. This spirit took shape in Pennsylvania in Log College in Bucks County, founded by Presbyterian Minister William Tennent in 1726. The seven founders of the College of New Jersey were Log College participants, all Yale Presbyterians except for one who attended Harvard. They asked Governor Lewis Morris for a charter and he, being Anglican and a Loyalist, refused it.  When Governor Morris died, John Hamilton became Acting Governor, and he, being somewhat more liberal, provided the charter. Aaron Burr, Sr. turned the evangelical ideals of the College's founders into a reality during his presidency, from 1748 to 1757.

The University of Pennsylvania was founded as an Anglican institution in a state founded by an Oxford-educated Quaker, William Penn. It was originally called the "College of Philadelphia".

Columbia University, originally called "King's College" because it claims a royal charter, was founded in 1754. It was intended for Anglican ministers but was charged with a policy of religious liberty. The impetus for the creation of Columbia was in part that evangelicals across the river had formed the college that was later called Princeton. In 1746 an act was passed by the general assembly of New York to raise funds for the this purpose. In 1751, the assembly appointed ten New York residents, seven of whom were members of the Church of England, to direct state lottery proceeds towards the foundation of a college. Classes were initially held in July 1754 and were presided over by the college's first president, Dr. Samuel Johnson, who was the only instructor of eight students.

The Final Three Universities, Founded in the 1760s

Brown University was founded by Baptists in 1764, but its trustees were required to come from a balanced portfolio of religions, including Anglicans. The Governor of Rhode Island, Roger Williams, was a Cambridge graduate. Rhode Island was a haven for dissenting ministers who were expelled by the Puritan leadership of Massachusetts for straying from Puritan dogma. In 1763, The Reverend James Manning, a Baptist minister, an alumnus of Princeton (as it would be called), was sent to Rhode Island by the Philadelphia Association of Baptist Churches to found the college. At the same time, local Congregationalists were working toward a similar end. Former colonial governors of Rhode Island Stephen Hopkins and Samuel Ward were involved. The college's charter was granted in the form of an Act passed by Rhode Island's General Assembly. The college was called Brown after a a gift from Nicholas Brown, Jr. The charter required that the makeup of the board of 36 trustees include, 22 Baptists, five Friends, four Congregationalists, and five Church of England members.

Rutgers was created in 1766. Originally chartered as Queen's College, Rutgers was renamed in appreciation of Col. Henry Rutgers, a New York City landowner, whose gift allowed the college to reopen after financial insolvency. Rutgers was originally a private male-only liberal arts college affiliated with the Dutch Reformed Church.  It was named as the state's sole land-grant college in 1864 under the Morrill Act.  It evolved into a coeducational public research university after being designated "The State University of New Jersey" by the New Jersey Legislature in 1945 and 1956. It is one of only two colonial colleges that later became public universities, the other being William & Mary.

Dartmouth College was created as a Puritan (Congregational) college in 1769 by Eleasar Wheelock, a Congregational minister. New Hampshire itself was founded in part by Cambridge alumnus John Wheelwright, whose dissenting religious views forced him to leave Massachusetts.  Dartmouth went through a long period of difficulties and found its feet in the early 20th century.

Monday, May 20, 2013

R.I.P.: Peter V. Darrow (1950-2013)


Peter V. Darrow (1950-2013)
Peter V. Darrow of New York City and Sag Harbor, NY died on May 19, 2013, after a long battle with cancer. 

He was a partner in DLA Piper's Finance practice in New York City. He traveled frequently for the firm to Mexico and other Central and South American countries to handle complex financial transactions for large companies in Latin America. 

Mr. Darrow was born in Detroit to Charlotte Noble Felheim and Peter P. Darrow on Sept. 7, 1950, Mr. Darrow grew up in Ann Arbor. 


He graduated from Columbia College, having been President of the Columbia College chapter of Alpha Delta Phi fraternity ("AD"). He led the effort by the chapter's alumni group to acquire the AD house from Columbia in the 1990's.  

He received a B.Phil. degree from Trinity College, Oxford in 1974 and remained active in alumni affairs, incorporating Trinity Society USA as a charity. 

With friends from Trinity, starting in 2005, he has helped expand the Cambodia Trust, a charity that maintains rural clinics in Cambodia that provide free artificial limbs to those maimed by land mines. At the time of his death, Peter was chairman of the board of the Cambodia Trust.

He was also a board member of Everyone Wins, a national childhood literacy and mentoring nonprofit organization. Once a week he used to read to elementary school children during his lunch period.

He graduated from Michigan Law School in 1978, where he was a member of the Law Review
Prior to joining DLA Piper, Mr. Darrow was a partner at Mayer Brown & Platt in its New York Office.
Peter Darrow with his wife Denise Seegal in c. 2011.
Mr. Darrow was a highly experienced finance and securities lawyer who focused on capital markets financing, acquisition and leveraged financing, structured financing, project and infrastructure financing, debt restructuring and liability management transactions, particularly in Latin America and other emerging markets.
Chambers Latin America 2009 describes Mr. Darrow as "an extremely smart guy who's always a pleasure to work with." Chambers Banking and Finance in Latin America 2009 calls him "the standout partner for debt capital markets in Brazil and Mexico." Chambers USA: America's Leading Lawyers for Business lists him for his Latin American Investment practice. In 2010 it noted he "is highly regarded for his expertise in representing underwriters in high-yield bonds transactions; he also handles a steady flow of M&A and securities work". 

In 2011, Chambers said, "Clients look to him as a trusted, commercially minded adviser", and in 2012, Chambers said of his Latin America work: "He understands the region and has very strong credentials." Mr. Darrow is also listed in the Legal 500 Latin America 2012, in Guide to the World's Leading Capital Market Lawyers and in The International Who's Who of Capital Markets Lawyers.

He was admitted to the New York bar and was a member of the American Bar Association, Section of Corporation, Business and Banking Law.
His publications include A Greek Odyssey: Greece's sovereign debt restructuring and its impact on holders of Greek bonds and  Will 2012 Bring More Debt Restructuring for Latin American Companies?, He was co-author of "US Equity Markets for Foreign Issuers: Public Offerings and Rule 144A Placements of American Depositary Receipts," a Merrill Corp. publication, 2008; Co-author, "The US High Yield Bond Market," International Business Transactions with Brazil, 2008; "Restructuring Corporate Debt in Latin America," and "How to Restructure Debt in Latin America," International Financial Law Review, 2003; Co-author, "Private Equity Investment in Latin America," Latin American Law and Business Report, 2000; Co-author, "Restructuring Strategies for Mexican Eurobond Debt," Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business, 1995. 

Mr. Darrow was an avid rower. He began rowing with Columbia's lightweight rowing team in 1968. Thirty years later, he organized a reunion of the team to compete in the Head of the Charles Regatta in Cambridge, Mass., a tradition they maintained for several years. He enthusiastically supported the small Sag Harbor rowing club. Last year, he raised funds to purchase a new rowing shell for Columbia's women's crew team. He christened it the "Denise V. Seegal" in honor of his wife.

Denise, his wife of five years, survives him. (Peter and his previous wife of 20 years, Leni Darrow, divorced in 2003.) Denise is a fashion executive with more than 30 years in the industry. He is survived as well by his two children from his prior marriage - a daughter, Meredith, who works as an art adviser in Los Angeles and New York City, and his son Peter Jr., who is an MBA student in Boston.

He is also survived by his brother Duncan Darrow and Duncan's wife Wendy. After their mother died of cancer in 2001, Peter and his brother established Fighting Chance, a free-of-charge cancer resource center for residents on the East End of Long Island. In lieu of flowers, the family has requested donations be made to Fighting Chance - Free Cancer Counseling Center, Box 1358, Sag Harbor, NY 11963.

A memorial service was held at All Souls Unitarian Church, 1157 Lexington Ave.,at 80th Street, New York City, at 4 pm on Wednesday, May 29.

Comment: Peter took over from me the job of bringing Trinity College alumni in the USA together for fun and funds. I met Denise Seegal through my wife Alice Tepper Marlin, who is like Denise a member of Women's Forum in New York. We were all attending a viewing of the installation of Christo's "Gates" project in February 2005 (7,503 orange "gates" stretching up through Central Park) from an apartment on Central Park South. We introduced Peter to Denise not long afterwards and they were married soon after that.

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