List of presidents of Rutgers University: Difference between revisions
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| 17 || bgcolor="red"|— || [[Edward J. Bloustein]]<br />(1925–1989) || (1971–1989)↑ ||<li>B.A. [[New York University]]</li><li>[[Bachelor of Philosophy|B.Phil.]] [[University of Oxford]]</li><li>LL.B. [[Cornell Law School|Cornell University]]</li><li>Ph.D. [[Cornell University]]</li> || Law professor, university president. |
| 17 || bgcolor="red"|— || [[Edward J. Bloustein]]<br />(1925–1989) || (1971–1989)↑ ||<li>B.A. [[New York University]]</li><li>[[Bachelor of Philosophy|B.Phil.]] [[University of Oxford]]</li><li>LL.B. [[Cornell Law School|Cornell University]]</li><li>Ph.D. [[Cornell University]]</li> || Law professor, university president. |
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| 18 || bgcolor="red"|— || [[Francis Leo Lawrence]]<br />(1937–2013) || (1990–2002) || <li>B.A. [[St. Louis University]] (1959)</li><li>Ph.D., [[Tulane University]] (1962)</li> || <li>An author of several books on French classical drama, baroque poetry, and works of [[Molière]], taught at Tulane for over 30 years as Professor of French and Italian Literature, held administrative posts as academic vice president, provost, and dean of the graduate school.</li><li>Through RUNet2000 Project, realized goal of fully-wired campus, and using technology to transform teaching, research and outreach</li><li>Raised $600,000,000 in capital campaign</li><li>Built new academic facilities for Mason Gross School of the Arts, the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, and the Rutgers-Newark Center for Law and Justice</li> |
| 18 || bgcolor="red"|— || [[Francis Leo Lawrence]]<br />(1937–2013) || (1990–2002) || <li>B.A. [[St. Louis University]] (1959)</li><li>Ph.D., [[Tulane University]] (1962)</li> || <li>An author of several books on French classical drama, baroque poetry, and works of [[Molière]], taught at Tulane for over 30 years as Professor of French and Italian Literature, held administrative posts as academic vice president, provost, and dean of the graduate school.</li><li>Through RUNet2000 Project, realized goal of fully-wired campus, and using technology to transform teaching, research and outreach</li><li>Raised $600,000,000 in capital campaign</li><li>Built new academic facilities for Mason Gross School of the Arts, the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, and the Rutgers-Newark Center for Law and Justice</li><li>Resigned from presidency in 2002, and returned to teaching as a University Professor.</li> |
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| 19 || bgcolor="red"|— || [[Richard L. McCormick|Richard Levis McCormick]]<br />(b. 1947) || (2002–2012) || <li>B.A., [[Amherst College]] (1969)</li><li>Ph.D., Yale University (1976)</li> || History |
| 19 || bgcolor="red"|— || [[Richard L. McCormick|Richard Levis McCormick]]<br />(b. 1947) || (2002–2012) || <li>B.A., [[Amherst College]] (1969)</li><li>Ph.D., Yale University (1976)</li> || <li>Taught at Rutgers as Professor of History (1976–1992, including three years as Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences; Vice Chancellor and Provost at [[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]] (1992–1995); President of the [[University of Washington]] (1995–2002)</li><li>Launched $1 billion fundraising campaign; reorganized undergraduate education New Brunswick campus into School of Arts and Sciences and School of Environmental and Biological Sciences; began statewide process to merge nearly all of [[University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey]] into Rutgers; announced plans to redevelop Piscataway's Livingston Campus into a professional schools</li><li>Resigned from presidency in 2012, and plans to return to Rutgers' history faculty as a University Professor.</li> |
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| 20 || bgcolor="red"|— || [[Robert L. Barchi|Robert Lawrence Barchi]]<br />(b. 1946) || (2012–present) || <li>[[Bachelor of Science|B.S.]] [[Georgetown University]] (1968)</li><li>Ph.D., [[University of Pennsylvania]] (1972)</li><li>[[Doctor of Medicine|M.D.]], University of Pennsylvania (1973)</li> || <li>A board-certified physician and neuroscientist<ref name="BarchiRutgersToday2012">Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Office of Media Relations. [http://news.rutgers.edu/news-releases/2012/04/robert-l-barchi-name-20120410#.Uhu-30zD9jo "Robert L. Barchi Named 20th President of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey: Barchi to take helm of Rutgers on Sept. 1, after successful tenures as Thomas Jefferson University president, University of Pennsylvania provost"] (news release) in ''Rutgers Today'' (11 April 2012). Retrieved 26 August 2013.</ref></li> |
| 20 || bgcolor="red"|— || [[Robert L. Barchi|Robert Lawrence Barchi]]<br />(b. 1946) || (2012–present) || <li>[[Bachelor of Science|B.S.]] [[Georgetown University]] (1968)</li><li>Ph.D., [[University of Pennsylvania]] (1972)</li><li>[[Doctor of Medicine|M.D.]], University of Pennsylvania (1973)</li> || <li>A board-certified physician and neuroscientist<ref name="BarchiRutgersToday2012">Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Office of Media Relations. [http://news.rutgers.edu/news-releases/2012/04/robert-l-barchi-name-20120410#.Uhu-30zD9jo "Robert L. Barchi Named 20th President of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey: Barchi to take helm of Rutgers on Sept. 1, after successful tenures as Thomas Jefferson University president, University of Pennsylvania provost"] (news release) in ''Rutgers Today'' (11 April 2012). Retrieved 26 August 2013.</ref></li> |
Revision as of 02:31, 29 August 2013

The President of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (informally called Rutgers University) /ˈrʌtɡərz/ is the chief administrator of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Rutgers was founded by clergymen affiliated with the Dutch Reformed Church in 1766 as Queen's College and was the eighth-oldest of nine colleges established during the American colonial period. Before 1956, Rutgers was a small liberal arts college and became a full university in 1924 with the offering of graduate degree programs and the establishment of professional schools. Today, Rutgers is a public research university with three campuses in the state located in New Brunswick and Piscataway, Newark, and Camden. The state's flagship university with approximately 65,000 students and employing 20,000 faculty and staff members, Rutgers is the largest institution for higher education in New Jersey.
Since 1785, twenty men have served as the institution's president, beginning with the Reverend Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh, a Dutch Reformed clergyman who was responsible for establishing the college.[1][2] Before 1930, most of the university's presidents were clergymen affiliated with Christian denominations in the Reformed tradition (either Dutch Reformed, Presbyterian, or German Reformed).[2][3] Two presidents were alumni of Rutgers College—the Rev. William H. S. Demarest (Class of 1883) and Philip Milledoler Brett (Class of 1892).[4][5] The current president is Dr. Robert L. Barchi (b. 1946), a neuroscientist and physician who has served in this position since 2012.[6][7][8]
The president serves in an ex officio capacity as a presiding officer within the University's 59-member Board of Trustees and its eleven-member Board of Governors,[9] and is appointed by these boards to oversee day-to-day operations of the University across its three campuses. He is charged with implementing "board policies with the help and advice of senior administrators and other members of the university community."[10] The president is responsible only to those two governing boards—there is no oversight by state officials. Frequently, the president also occupies a professorship in his academic discipline and engages in instructing students.
History

Chartered as Queen's College on 10 November 1766, Rutgers is the eighth-oldest college in the United States and one of the nine Colonial Colleges founded before the American Revolution.[11][12] Rutgers is one of only two colonial colleges that later became public universities.[13] The college was founded by clergymen from the Dutch Reformed Church and chartered to "for the education of youth in the learned languages, liberal and useful arts and sciences, and especially in divinity; preparing them for the ministry and other good offices."[14][15][16] In the early days of Queen's College, the trustees wrote to the church's leadership in Amsterdam and at the University of Utrecht to seek candidates for the position of president.[11] In their correspondence, they expressed a wish that a prospective college president possess the following characteristics:[11]
- (1) he was to fill the office of professor of theology,
- (2) to oversee the instruction in languages through tutors until professors could be secured,
- (3) to do more or less the work of a minister on the Lord’s Day,
- (4) to be a man of tried piety,
- (5) to be attached to the Constitution of the Netherlands Church,
- (6) to be a man of thorough learning,
- (7) to be good natured,
- (8) to be free and friendly in conversation,
- (9) to be master of the English language, and
- (10) to be pleased to lecture on Marckii Medulla Theologiae Christianae.[a]
Its early history, Rutgers was closely allied with the Dutch Reformed Synod of New York which oversaw financial transactions and early selections of professors for Queen's College and the New Brunswick Theological Seminary.[17] The Rev. John Henry Livingston (1746–1825), who served as the college's fourth president and was responsible for establishing the New Brunswick Theological Seminary, was instrumental in raising funds to support the school after several years of being closed resulting from economic difficulties. Just before his death, Livingston raised enough donations and support to place the school on more stable financial footing, including arranging for a generous donation in 1825 from Colonel Henry Rutgers (1745–1830), a wealthy landowner and former Revolutionary War officer from New York City. The trustees of the school renamed the school in honour of Colonel Rutgers in that year.
Rutgers College developed into a private liberal arts college, and expanded its role in research and instruction in agriculture, engineering, and science when it was named as the state's land-grant college in 1864 under the Morrill Act of 1862.[15] It evolved into a full-fledged university with the introduction of graduate education and further expansion.[15] Now unaffiliated with any religious entity, Rutgers was designated as New Jersey's state university by New Jersey Legislature in laws enacted in 1945 and 1956.[15][18] Within these years, Rutgers absorbed the University of Newark to become its Rutgers–Newark campus (in 1946), and merged the College of South Jersey and South Jersey Law School to create its Rutgers–Camden campus in 1950.[19]
While Rutgers College only admitted male students through most of its history, in 1918, Rutgers created the New Jersey College for Women, later called Douglass College which granted degrees to women. Rutgers became fully coeducational in 1970. Douglass remained one of several undergraduate liberal arts residential colleges at the University and granted degrees until 2007 when these separate faculties were merged to create one undergraduate School of Arts and Sciences. Today, it endures as a residential community at Rutgers that aims to provide opportunities for women to reside in single-sex residence halls, to participate in women-centered organizations and to develop leadership skills.
Today, on its three campuses (New Brunswick–Piscataway, Newark, Camden), Rutgers serves 58,788 students (2012) and offers more than 100 distinct bachelor, 100 master, and 80 doctoral and professional degree programs across 175 academic departments, 29 degree-granting schools and colleges.[20][21] Rutgers is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools and is member of the Committee on Institutional Cooperation[22] and Association of American Universities[23] (a consortium of the top 62 most elite research universities in the United States and Canada), and the Universities Research Association[24] (an international consortium of 86 universities in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Japan, and Italy).
Presidents of Rutgers University
The following twenty individuals have served as president of Rutgers University from the creation of the office in 1785 to the present. Those marked with their names in bold had graduated from Rutgers. Those marked with "↑" died in office. Where years don't overlap there was a gap of a few months while a suitable candidate was found, this usually occurred when someone died in office, or left unexpectedly to accept another position.
Presidents of Queen's College (1785–1825)
# | Portrait | College President | Years in office | Education[2][3] | Previous occupations(s)[2][3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ![]() |
Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh (1735–1790) |
(1785–1790)↑ | ||
2 | ![]() |
William Linn (1752–1808) |
(1791–1795) | ||
3 | ![]() |
Ira Condict (1764–1811) |
(1795–1810) | ||
4 | File:Livingston001a.jpg | John Henry Livingston (1746–1825) |
(1810–1825)↑ |
Presidents of Rutgers College (1825–1924)
# | Portrait | College President | Years in office | Education[2][3] | Previous occupations(s)[2][3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
5 | File:Milledoler.jpg | Philip Milledoler (1775–1852) |
(1825–1840) | ||
6 | File:Hasbrouck.jpg | Abraham Bruyn Hasbrouck (1791–1879) |
(1840–1850) | Lawyer, Member of the U.S. House of Representatives | |
7 | ![]() |
Theodore Frelinghuysen (1787–1862) |
(1850–1862)↑ | United States Senator, New Jersey Attorney General, 1844 Whig vice-presidential candidate | |
8 | — | William Henry Campbell (1808–1890) |
(1862–1882) | Itinerant preacher, School Principal, Professor of Oriental Languages and "Belles Lettres" | |
9 | File:Gates-001a.jpg | Merrill Edward Gates (1848–1922) |
(1882–1890) | School principal | |
10 | ![]() |
Austin Scott (1848–1922) |
(1891–1906) | Historian, Professor of History, Political Economy, and Constitutional Law, and | |
11 | — | William Henry Steele Demarest (1863–1956) |
(1906 – 1924) | Dutch Reformed minister, Professor of Ecclesiastical History and Church Government |
Presidents of Rutgers University (1924–1945)
# | Portrait | College President | Years in office | Education[2][3] | Previous occupations(s)[2][3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
12 | ![]() |
John Martin Thomas (1869–1952) |
(1925–1930) | Presbyterian minister, college president | |
13 | — | Philip Milledoler Brett (1871–1960) |
(1930–1931) | Corporate attorney | |
14 | — | Robert Clarkson Clothier (1885–1970) |
(1932–1951) | The Wall Street Journal reporter, publishing company manager, government bureaucrat, school headmaster. |
Presidents of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey (1945–present)
# | Portrait | College President | Years in office | Education[2][3] | Previous occupations(s)[2][3] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
14 | — | Robert Clarkson Clothier (1885–1970) |
(1932–1951) | The Wall Street Journal reporter, publishing company manager, government bureaucrat, school headmaster. | |
15 | — | Lewis Webster Jones (1899–1975) |
(1951–1958) | Professor of Economics | |
16 | — | Mason Welch Gross (1911–1977) |
(1959–1971) | Professor of Philosophy, university administrator, television quiz show personality | |
17 | — | Edward J. Bloustein (1925–1989) |
(1971–1989)↑ | Law professor, university president. | |
18 | — | Francis Leo Lawrence (1937–2013) |
(1990–2002) | ||
19 | — | Richard Levis McCormick (b. 1947) |
(2002–2012) | ||
20 | — | Robert Lawrence Barchi (b. 1946) |
(2012–present) |
References
Notes
- ^ This would be the Johannis Marckii Christianae Theologiae Medulla Didactico-Elenetica, an exegetic and pedagogic work on Dutch Reformed theology written by Johannes van Marck (1655–1731), professor of divinity at Leiden University (1689–1731), and revised by Willem van Irhoven (1698–1760), a professor of theology and later Rector of the University of Utrecht. First published in 1719 in Latin, the title can be rendered from Latin into English as "Johannes van Marck's The Inner Substance (or Pith or Marrow) of Christian Theology.
- ^ a b c Princeton University was chartered as the "College of New-Jersey" (Collegii Nova-Caesarea) in 1756. While early sources frequently refer to the school as "Princeton College" or the "College at Princeton", it was never an official name. The school became known as Princeton University when the trustees voted to change the name effective in 1896.
Citations
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Rutgers Leaders, Rutgers History: Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh - Queen’s College President, 1786 to 1790. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Frusciano, Thomas J. "Leadership on the Banks: Rutgers' Presidents, 1766–2004", in The Journal of the Rutgers University Libraries LIII(1) (June 1991).
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Rutgers Leaders, Rutgers History: Past Presidents. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Rutgers Leaders, Rutgers History: William Henry Steele Demarest - Rutgers President, 1906 to 1924. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Rutgers Leaders, Rutgers History: Philip M. Brett - Rutgers Acting President, 1930 to 1931. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Office of Media Relations. "Robert L. Barchi Named 20th President of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey: Barchi to take helm of Rutgers on Sept. 1, after successful tenures as Thomas Jefferson University president, University of Pennsylvania provost" (news release) in Rutgers Today (11 April 2012). Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ McGlone, Peggy. "Robert Barchi is named Rutgers University president" in The Star-Ledger (11 April 2012). Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Office of the President. About President Barchi - Biography. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Governing Boards: Board of Trustees Membership Listing, 2013–2014 and Governing Boards: Board of Governors Membership Listing, 2013–2014. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. About Rutgers: Vision and Continuity - Leadership and Governance. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ a b c Stoeckel, Althea. "Presidents, professors, and politics: the colonial colleges and the American revolution", Conspectus of History (1976) 1(3):45–56.
- ^ Chapter XXIII. Education. § 13. Colonial Colleges in The Cambridge History of English and American Literature. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1907–1921; online edition, 2000).
- ^ Note: The other colonial college—the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia—became a state institution by acts of the Virginia legislature in 1888 and 1906. See: Godson, Susan H.; Johnson, Ludwell H.; and Sherman, Richard B. The College of William and Mary: A History. (Williamsburg, Virginia: King and Queen Press, 1994), passim.
- ^ Hageman, Howard G. Two Centuries Plus: The Story of the New Brunswick Seminary. (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdsman Publishing Company, 1984), 13.
- ^ a b c d Frusciano, Thomas J. (University Archivist). From "Seminary of Learning" to Public Research University: A Historical Sketch of Rutgers University. Rutgers University Libraries. Retrieved 17 August 2006.
- ^ A Charter for Queen's College in New Jersey (1770) in Special Collections and University Archives, Archibald S. Alexander Library, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
- ^ Demarest, David D. Centennial of the Theological Seminary of the Reformed Church in America, formerly the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, 1784-1884. (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Board of Publication of the Reformed Church in America, 1885), passim; and Hageman, Howard G. Two Centuries Plus: The Story of the New Brunswick Seminary. (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdsman Publishing Company, 1984), passim.
- ^ New Jersey State Legislature. "P.L. 1945, ch. 49, p. 115" and "P.L. 1956, ch. 61" now enshrined as N.J.S.A. 18A:65-1 et seq.
- ^ State of New Jersey - Commission on Higher Education. Closed & Renamed New Jersey Colleges & Universities (2009). Retrieved 18 August 2013.
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Office of Institutional Research and Academic Planning (OIRAP). "2012-2013 Rutgers Fact Book". Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Office of Undergraduate Admissions. Getting to Know Rutgers. Retrieved 17 August 2013.
- ^ Committee on Institutional Cooperation / The Big Ten Conference. "The CIC Welcomes Maryland and Rutgers to Membership" (news release). 5 December 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
- ^ Association of American Universities, AAU. Retrieved 6 August 2006
- ^ Universities Research Association, Inc. Universities (Members). Retrieved 26 August 2013.
- ^ Centennial, Presbytery of Newton 1817–1917: an adjourned meeting, in the First Presbyterian Church, Washington, N.J.. (Easton, Pennsylvania: Easton Printing Company, 1917), 85.
- ^ Steele, Richard Holloway. Historical discourse delivered at the celebration of the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the First Reformed Dutch Church, New Brunswick, N.J., October 1, 1867. (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Consistory, 1867), 87.
- ^ Pickersgill, Harold E.; Wall, John Patrick. History of Middlesex County, New Jersey: 1664-1920 (New York: Lewis Publishing Company, 1921), 3335–336.
- ^ Demarest, David D. Centennial of the Theological Seminary of the Reformed Church in America, formerly the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church, 1784-1884. (New Brunswick, New Jersey: Board of Publication of the Reformed Church in America, 1885), 83–91.
- ^ a b Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - Office of Media Relations. "Robert L. Barchi Named 20th President of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey: Barchi to take helm of Rutgers on Sept. 1, after successful tenures as Thomas Jefferson University president, University of Pennsylvania provost" (news release) in Rutgers Today (11 April 2012). Retrieved 26 August 2013.