Williams College

Williams College is a small private liberal arts college located in Williamstown, Massachusetts. As of 2004, the undergraduate enrollment was approximately 2,000 students. Fraternities were phased out beginning in 1962. Coeducation was adopted in 1970. There are three academic curricular divisions (humanities, sciences, social sciences), 24 departments, 31 majors, and small masters programs in art history and development economics. The student:faculty ratio is 8:1. The academic year consists of two four-course semesters plus a one-course January term. Williamstown is located in the Berkshires in northwestern Massachusetts, 145 miles from Boston and 165 miles from New York City. The College sits at the foot of Mount Greylock. When Henry David Thoreau visited 1844, he remarked that "It would be no small advantage if every college were thus located at the base of a mountain."

Contents

History

Williams College was chartered in 1793 with funds from the will of Colonel Ephraim Williams.

In 1806 a student prayer meeting gave rise to the American Foreign Mission Movement. In August of that year five students met in the maple grove of Sloan's Meadow to pray. A thunderstorm drove them to the shelter of a haystack, and the fervor of the ensuing meeting inspired them to take the gospel abroad. The students went on to build the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, the first American organization to send missionaries overseas. The Haystack Monument near Mission Park on the Williams Campus commemorates the meeting.

By 1815, Williams had only two buildings and fifty-eight students, and was in serious financial trouble. On November 10, 1818, nine of the twelve Williams College trustees voted for a resolution stating that:

"Resolved, that it is expedient to remove Williams College to some more central part of the State whenever sufficient funds can be obtained to defray the necessary expenses incurred and the losses sustained by removal, and to secure the prosperity of the college, and when a fair prospect shall be presented of obtaining for the institution the united support and patronage of the friends of literature and religion in the western part of the Commonwealth, and when the General Court shall give their assent to the measure."

In February, 1820, a petition to the Massachusetts legislature to this effect was defeated, and the college was not moved.

In 1821, Williams College President Zephaniah Swift Moore, who had accepted his position believing that the college would move east, abandoned Williams. He took fifteen students with him, and assumed the first Presidency of Amherst College. Story has it that Moore also took portions of the Williams College library. Though plausible, this account is unsubstantiated, and was declared false in 1995 by Williams College President Harry Payne. Moore died just two years later after founding Amherst, and was succeeded by Heman Humphrey, a trustee of Williams College.

Williams played Amherst College in the first intercollegiate baseball game in 1859 and continued on to pioneer many areas of academia and education. Williams' website has a list of "firsts" (http://www.williams.edu/home/about_firsts.php) and a more detailed history (http://www.williams.edu/home/about_history.php).

Distinguishing features

School colors and origins thereof

Williams' primary school color is purple.

The story goes that at the Williams-Harvard baseball game in 1869, spectators, watching from carriages, had trouble telling the teams apart (there were no uniforms) so one of the onlookers bought ribbons from a nearby millinery store to pin on Williams' players. The only color available was purple. The buyer was Jennie Jerome (later Winston Churchill's mother) whose family summered in Williamstown.

Williams' other color is gold, purple's complementary color, which is why most team uniforms and paraphernalia have purple and a form of gold or yellow as the two dominant colors.

Purple cow

The Williams college mascot is a purple cow, possibly derived from Gelett Burgess's nonsense poem:

I never saw a purple cow
Nor do I hope to see one;
But I can tell you, anyhow,
I'd rather see than be one.

Another possible source of the mascot is the color of the surrounding mountains, which often appear purple in the light of the setting sun (but which don't really resemble cows).

Alma mater

Williams claims the first alma mater song written by an undergraduate, "The Mountains," which was written by Washington Gladden class of 1859.

Williams trivia

At the end of every semester since 1966, the Williams College radio station has hosted an all-night, 8-hour trivia contest. Teams of students, alumni, professors and others compete to answer questions on any number of subjects, identify songs, and perform a variety of unnecessary tasks. The winning team's only prize is the obligation to create and host the following semester's contest. It is the oldest continuous competition of its sort in the United States. Further history and details are available at an archival website (http://wso.williams.edu/orgs/trivia/).

Alumni society

Williams has the oldest existing Alumni Society of any academic institution in the United States, and may have the oldest alumni organization in the world. The Alumni Society was founded during the "Amherst crisis" in 1821, when Williams College President Zephaniah Swift Moore left Williams. Graduates of Williams formed the Alumni Society to insure that Williams would not have to close, and raised enough money to insure the survival of the school.

In the years since the Amherst Crisis the generosity of alumni has made Williams one of the wealthiest educational institutions in the United States, with an endowment of over $1 billion. On a per student basis, this is over 0.5% (one half of one percent) more than Amherst's endowment: Williams' endowment is an enormous $545,000 per student, while Amherst's endowment is a paltry $542,000 per student.

The society of alumni owns and maintains Williams Club, located on 24 East 39th Street in Manhattan.

Notable alumni

Academics

Artists and entertainers

Businessmen/women

  • Herbert A. Allen, Jr. 1962. President and Chief Executive Officer of Allen & Company, a privately held investment firm and host of a storied annual media conference in Sun Valley, Idaho.
  • Steve Case 1980, founder and former CEO of America Online.
  • Chuck Fruit 1969, Chief Marketing Officer and Senior Vice President of Coca-Cola.
  • Robert I. Lipp 1960, Chairman and CEO of Travelers Property Casualty Corp.
  • Bo Peabody 1994, founder of Tripod (sold to Lycos in 1998 for $64 million) and Chairman of Village Ventures.
  • Joseph L. Rice, founder of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc., one of the oldest and most respected private equity investment firms in the world (and Trustee Emeritus of Williams College)

Curators and Museum Directors (aka the Williams art mafia)

Many were trained and deeply inspired by S. Lane Faison, who headed the art history department at Williams from 1940 to 1969.

Government officials and political notables

Judiciary and Legal

Science, Technology, and Engineering

Sports

A list of Williams' Olympians is available at the Williams Sports Info (http://www.williams.edu/athletics/olympians.php) website.

Writing and Journalism

  • Dominick Dunne 1949, author.
  • Ed Larson 1974, 1998 (http://www.pulitzer.org/year/1998/history/) Pulitzer Prize winner in History for Summer for the Gods: The Scopes Trial and America's Continuing Debate Over Science and Religion.
  • Tim Layden 1978, Sports Illustrated writer.
  • Jay McInerney 1976, author of Bright Lights, Big City.
  • Bethany McLean 1992, author of The Smartest Guys in the Room, on the collapse of Enron.
  • Hedrick Smith 1955, 1974 Pulitzer Prize winner in international reporting.
  • Charles Webb 1961, author of the book upon which The Graduate was based. (Supposedly, Williams College is the alma mater of Dustin Hoffman's character.)

Sports

The school's sports teams are called the Ephmen, or the Ephs. They participate in the NCAA's Division III and the New England Small College Athletic Conference. Williams has had tremendous success winning the NACDA Director's Cup, also known as the Sears Cup.

Williams is one of the "Little Three", along with Wesleyan and Amherst.

Williams has a traditional rivalry with Amherst College's Lord Jeffs. Williams and Amherst currently compete in 26 varsity sports and Williams sports a winning record vs. Amherst in 23. Amherst leads only in baseball and men's soccer while the two schools' women's soccer teams were tied, as of 11/6/2003.

Williams has played in the last two men's basketball Division III national championship games, winning the title in March 2003.

Academic reputation


Williams is currently ranked #1 on U.S. News and World Report's ranking of liberal arts colleges, and has ranked first in the academic reputation category each year that U.S. News has produced a survey.

Williams ranked fifth, after Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Stanford, in a 2004 Wall Street Journal survey of the "feeder schools" to the top five business, law, and medical schools in the country.

External links



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