Columbia College, Columbia University: Difference between revisions
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*'''[[Frederick Augustus Porter Barnard]]''' (president 1864-1888), founder of [[Barnard College]] |
*'''[[Frederick Augustus Porter Barnard]]''' (president 1864-1888), founder of [[Barnard College]] |
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*'''[[Seth Low]]''' (president 1888-1896), first President of [[Columbia University]], [[Mayor of New York City]] |
*'''[[Seth Low]]''' (president 1888-1896), first President of [[Columbia University]], [[Mayor of New York City]] |
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*'''[[John Howard Van Amringe]]''' (dean 1896-1910) |
*'''[[John Howard Van Amringe]]''' (dean 1896-1910), mathematician |
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*'''[[Frederick P. Keppel]]''' (dean 1910-1917) |
*'''[[Frederick P. Keppel]]''' (dean 1910-1917) |
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*'''[[Herbert Hawkes]]''' (dean 1918-1943) |
*'''[[Herbert Hawkes]]''' (dean 1918-1943), mathematician |
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*'''[[Harry Carman]]''' (dean 1943-1950), historian |
*'''[[Harry Carman]]''' (dean 1943-1950), historian |
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*'''[[Lawrence H. Chamberlain]]''' (dean 1950-1958) |
*'''[[Lawrence H. Chamberlain]]''' (dean 1950-1958) |
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*'''[[Peter Pouncey]]''' (dean 1972-1976), author and classicist |
*'''[[Peter Pouncey]]''' (dean 1972-1976), author and classicist |
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*'''[[Arnold Collery]]''' (dean 1977-1982) |
*'''[[Arnold Collery]]''' (dean 1977-1982) |
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*'''[[Robert Pollack (biologist)|Robert Pollack]]''' (dean 1982-1989) |
*'''[[Robert Pollack (biologist)|Robert Pollack]]''' (dean 1982-1989), biologist |
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*'''[[Jack Greenberg (lawyer)|Jack Greenberg]]''' (dean 1989-1993), civil rights lawyer, argued the [[Brown v. Board of Education]] case before the [[U.S. Supreme Court]] |
*'''[[Jack Greenberg (lawyer)|Jack Greenberg]]''' (dean 1989-1993), civil rights lawyer, argued the [[Brown v. Board of Education]] case before the [[U.S. Supreme Court]] |
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*'''[[Steven Marcus]]''' (dean 1993-1995) |
*'''[[Steven Marcus]]''' (dean 1993-1995) |
Revision as of 02:39, 6 December 2006
Columbia College | |
File:Columbia cc.gif | |
Established | 1754 |
School type | Private |
Dean | Austin Quigley |
Location | New York, New York, USA |
Enrollment | ca. 4,100 |
Homepage | www.college.columbia.edu |
Columbia College is the main undergraduate college at Columbia University, situated on the university's main campus of Morningside Heights in the Borough of Manhattan in the City of New York. It was founded in 1754 as King's College by Royal Charter of King George II of Great Britain. Columbia College is the oldest institution of higher learning in the state of New York and the fifth oldest in the United States. The college is highly selective in its admissions, having admitted 9.6% of 17,148 applicants--or 1,653 students--for the class of 2010. Columbia College therefore has the third lowest acceptance rate in the top 50 universities ranked by US News & World Report, behind only Yale College and Harvard College.
History
Columbia College was founded as King’s College by royal charter of King George II of England in the colony of New York in 1754. Due in part to the influence of Church of England religious leaders, a site in New York near Trinity Church, Wall Street on the island of Manhattan was selected.
Samuel Johnson was chosen as the college’s first president and was also the college’s first (and for a time only) professor. During this period, classes and examinations, both oral and written, were conducted entirely in Latin.
18th Century
In 1767, the college established a medical college, now known as the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, which was the first medical school to grant the Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree in America.
Due to the American Revolution, instruction was suspended from 1776 until 1784, but by the beginning of the war, the college had already educated some of the nation’s foremost political leaders. Even at this young age, ‘’King‘s College‘’ had already educated Alexander Hamilton, who served as military aide to General George Washington, then as the first Secretary of the United States Treasury and author of most of the Federalist Papers; John Jay, the first chief justice of the United States Supreme Court; Robert Livingston, one of the five men who with Thomas Jefferson drafted the Declaration of Independence; and Gouverneur Morris, who authored the actual text of the United States Constitution. Hamilton's first experience with the military came while a student during the summer of 1775, after the outbreak of fighting at Boston. Along with Nicholas Fish, Robert Troup, and a group of other students from King's, he joined a volunteer militia company called the "Hearts of Oak" and achieved the rank of Lieutenant. They adopted distinctive uniforms, complete with the words "Liberty or Death" on their hatbands, and drilled under the watchful eye of a former British officer in the graveyard of the nearby St. Paul's Chapel. In August of 1775, while under fire from HMS Asia, the Hearts of Oak (a.k.a. the "Corsicans") participated in a successful raid to seize cannon from the Battery, becoming an artillery unit thereafter. Ironically, in 1776 Captain Hamilton would engage in the Battle of Harlem Heights, which took place on and around the site that would later become home to his Alma Mater over a century later.

With the sucessful completion of the American Revolutionary War in 1783, the domestic situation was stable enough for the college to resume classes in 1784. With the new nation's independence from Great Britain, the name of the institution was changed from King’s College to Columbia College, the name by which the institution continues to be known today. The renamed and reorganized college, free from its associatin with the Church of England, students from a variety of denominations came to Columbia as a response to its growing reputation as one of the finest institutions of higher learning in the new nation.
19th Century
After a brief period of being housed in another lower Manhattan building on Park Place near the current location of New York City Hall, in 1857 the college moved to 49th Street and Madison Avenue in Manhattan.
During the college’s forty years at this location, in addition to granting the Bachelor of Arts and Doctor of Medicine degrees, the faculties of the college were expanded to include the Columbia Law School (founded 1858), the Columbia School of Mines (founded 1864, now known as the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science). The Columbia School of Mines awarded the first Ph.D. from Columbia in 1875.
At this time, Columbia College was now not only the name of the original undergraduate college founded as King’s College, but it also encompassed all of the other colleges and schools of the institution. (Though technically known as the "School of Arts," the undergraduate division was often called "The College proper" to avoid confusion.) After Seth Low became president of Columbia College in 1890, he advocated the division of the individual schools and colleges into their own semi-autonomous entities under the central administration of the university. The complexity of managing the institution had been further increased when Barnard College for Women became affiliated with Columbia in 1889 followed by Teachers College of Columbia University in 1891. Also by this time, graduate faculties issuing the Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) degree in philosophy, political science, and the natural sciences had also developed.

Thusly, in 1896, the trustees of Columbia College, under the guidance of Seth Low, approved a new name for the university as a whole, Columbia University in the City of New York. At this point, the name Columbia College returned to being used solely to refer to the original undergraduate college, founded as King’s College in 1754 and renamed Columbia College in 1784.
In addition to reclaiming the identity of Columbia College and making it focus of the newly rearranged Columbia University, Low was also responsible for the monumental relocation of the university to its current location a top a hill in Morningside Heights in uptown Manhattan. A tract for the campus was purchased which extended from 114th St. to 120th St. between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue.
Charles McKim of McKim, Mead, and White was selected to design the new campus, which was to be patterned after the buildings of the Italian Renaissance. While most American universities at this point had followed more medieval and Gothic styles of architecture, the neoclassical style of the new Columbia University campus was to meant to reflect the institution’s roots in the Enlightenment and the spirit of intellectual discovery of the period. Columbia College and the Columbia University as a whole relocated to the new campus in 1897.
20th Century
The academic history of traditions of Columbia College clearly had their beginnings in the classical education of the Enlightenment, and in this mold, the college’s famous Core Curriculum was officially recognized and codified in 1919 with John Erskine's first seminar on the great books of the western tradition. Also in 1919, a course entitled ‘’War and Peace’’ was required of all Columbia College students in addition to the Great Books Honors Seminar.
During the 1960s, Columbia College, like many others across the United States, experienced unrest and turmoil due to the ongoing civil rights movement and opposition to the Vietnam War. In April of 1968, over 1,000 students forcefully occupied five campus buildings in protest to the proposed expansion of the university’s campus into Morningside Park. University officials wished to build new gymnasium facilities in the park, which while located directly adjacent to the university, is separated by a steep cliff. The location of the park in the middle of Harlem, which was at that time an economically disadvantaged neighborhood was perhaps the primary objection of the student protesters to the proposed expansion plan. After five days, the functions of the university were brought to a halt, and the students were forcibly removed by the New York Police Department. As a result of the student protests, the university president Grayson L. Kirk retired, classified research projects on campus were abruptly ended, and the proposed expansion plans were canceled. While academics and admissions selectivity at ‘’Columbia College’’ remained strong through the late 1960s and 1970s, the university as a whole experienced financial difficulties.
In the 1980s and 1990s, the university experienced a drastic increase in gifts and endowment growth. Due to the leadership of university presidents Michael Sovern and George Rupp, many of Columbia College’s facilities were extensively expanded and renovated. The number of residence halls was increased to accommodate all Columbia College students for all four years of the undergraduate education. Hamilton Hall, the primary academic building of Columbia College has undergone an extensive renovations, and the college’s athletic facilities, located at Baker Field on Manhattan's far northern tip at 218th St., were renovated and expanded.
Milstein Library
Within Butler Library, the university’s main library and the home to over 2 million volumes of the university’s humanities collection which recently underwent an extensive 4 year renovation, a generous gift from Philip L. Milstein allowed for the creation of The Philip L. Milstein Family College Library, a specialized collection of some 100,000 volumes concentrated in history, literature, philosophy, and the social sciences and especially designed to complement the curriculum of Columbia College. The collection of the Columbia University Libraries consists of over 9.2 million volumes held in 25 specialized libraries altogether.
Columbia College today
Academics
Columbia College is known for its rigorous Core Curriculum, a series of mandatory classes and distribution requirements that form the heart of Columbia College students' academic experience. The Core has changed slightly over the years, but students are currently required to take the following:
Course | Semesters Required |
---|---|
Literature Humanities
A seminar surveying the great works of Western literature |
2 |
Contemporary Civilization
A seminar surveying the great works of Western philosophy |
2 |
Art Humanities
A seminar surveying the great works of Western art |
1 |
Music Humanities
A seminar surveying the great works of Western music |
1 |
University Writing
A seminar designed to inculcate university-level writing skills |
1 |
Foreign Language
A distribution requirement intended to instill at least an intermediate level of a foreign language |
4 |
Frontiers of Science
A lecture and seminar course designed to instill "scientific habits of mind" |
1 |
Other Science
A distribution requirement over any scientific disciplines |
2 |
Major Non-Western Cultures
A distribution requirement meant to complement the perceived Eurocentric biases of the other Core classes |
2 |
Physical Education | 2 (only one unit each) |
Students are also required to pass a swimming test before receiving their diploma. Most students graduate within four years with a Bachelor of Arts degree.
Campus
Most of the College's facilities are located on Columbia University's Morningside Heights campus, especially in Hamilton Hall, which houses its administrative and admissions offices, as well as the directors of the Core Curriculum.
Students at Columbia College are guaranteed housing for four years. Residence halls, which also house undergraduate students of Columbia's engineering school, are either located within or are within a few blocks of the main campus. First year students are housed in John Jay, Carman, Wallach, Hartley and Furnald Halls.
Governance
The Dean of Columbia College, since 1995, is Austin E. Quigley.The students of Columbia College elect the Columbia College Student Council (CCSC) to serve as their primary representative, advocate, and liaison to the Columbia University community, including its administration, faculty, alumni and students, as well as to the public.
Notable alumni and attenders

The following list contains alumni and attendees of Columbia College, including those of its predecessor, King's College, only. For a full list of people associated with Columbia University as a whole, please see the list of Columbia University people.
An asterisk (*) indicates an attendee who did not graduate.
- John Jay (1764), President of the Continental Congress; first Chief Justice of the United States; Federalist Papers contributor; first US Secretary of Foreign Affairs under the Articles of Confederation; architect of Jay's Treaty with Great Britain
- Robert Livingston (1764), a writer of the US Declaration of Independence; second US Secretary of Foreign Affairs; negotiator of the Louisiana Purchase
- Egbert Benson (1765), delegate to the Continental Congress and United States Congressman
- Gouverneur Morris (1768), represented Pennsylvania in the Continental Congress; authored large sections of the United States Constitution; United States Ambassador to France
- Alexander Hamilton* (1778), Revolutionary War officer and aide de camp to George Washington; Federalist Papers architect and most prolific contributor; first United States Secretary of the Treasury
Academics
- Charles Anthon (1815), classical scholar and translator
- Robert Emory (1831), president of Dickinson College
- Henry Drisler (1839), classical scholar and acting president of Columbia College
- James H. Mason Knox (1842), president of Lafayette College
- William Milligan Sloane (1868), historian, president of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and organizer of first U.S. Olympic team
- Brander Matthews (1871), first professor of dramatic literature in the United States
- Harry Thurston Peck (1881), literary critic and editor of The Bookman
- Nicholas Murray Butler (1882), president of Columbia University, chairman of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and Nobel Peace Prize winner
- Alfred L. Kroeber (1896), pioneering cultural anthropologist
- John Erskine (1900), Great Books pioneer
- Edward Sapir (1904), linguist and co-creator of the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis
- Parker Thomas Moon (1913), professor and managing editor of the Political Science Quarterly
- Benjamin Graham (1914), economist who pioneered "value investing"
- Mortimer Adler* (1923), philosopher
- Meyer Schapiro (1924), art historian
- Joseph Campbell (1925), mythologist
- Lionel Trilling (1925), literary critic
- Jacques Barzun (1927), cultural historian
- Carl E. Schorske (1936), cultural historian and winner of the 1981 Pulitzer Prize for History
- Quentin Anderson (1937), cultural historian and literary critic
- Wm. Theodore de Bary (1941), East Asian studies expert and provost of Columbia
- Richard Heffner (1946), professor and host of The Open Mind
- Fritz Stern (1946), Seth Low Professor of History Emeritus; pre-eminent in German studies
- Mario Laserna Pinzón (1948), Colombian diplomat and educator; founded the Universidad de Los Andes
- Jerry Fodor (1956), philosopher
- Robert Nozick (1959), libertarian philosopher
- Stephen Joel Trachtenberg (1959), president of the University of Hartford and of George Washington University
- Robert Pollack (1961), biologist
- Joel Moses (1962), provost of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Eric Foner (1963), pre-eminent historian of Reconstruction
- Mike Wallace (1964), historian and winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for History for Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898
- Jay Winter (1966), World War I specialist at Yale University
- Paul Starr (1970), co-founder of The American Prospect and winner of the 1984 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction
- Sean Wilentz (1972), historian and winner of the Bancroft Prize; chair of American Studies at Princeton University
Actors
- Ralph Morgan (1904), co-founder of Actors Equity and first president of the Screen Actors Guild
- James Cagney* (1922), winner of the Academy Award for his portrayal of George M. Cohan in Yankee Doodle Dandy
- Cornel Wilde* (1933), star of The Greatest Show on Earth, Beach Red, and Academy Award nominee for A Song to Remember
- Dolph Sweet (1948), appeared in Another World and Gimme a Break!
- Sorrell Booke (1949), played Boss Hogg in The Dukes of Hazzard
- George Segal (1955), star of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, Ship of Fools and Just Shoot Me!
- Brian Dennehy (1960), winner of the Tony Award for Death of a Salesman
- Ben Stein (1966), host of Win Ben Stein's Money; speechwriter for former US President Richard M. Nixon
- Richard Thomas* (1973), star of The Waltons
- Mario Van Peebles (1978), star of Heartbreak Ridge and Sonny Spoon
- Dan Futterman (1989), actor and screenwriter, starred in The Birdcage and wrote Capote
- Matthew Fox (1990), star of Party of Five and Lost
- Cara Buono (1993), star of Third Watch
- Jean Louisa Kelly (1994), star of Mr. Holland's Opus
- Amanda Peet (1994), star of Jack and Jill and Studio 60
- Maggie Gyllenhaal (1998), indie-film actress
- Jake Gyllenhaal* (2000), star of Brokeback Mountain, Jarhead, and Donnie Darko
- Anna Paquin* (2003), winner of the Academy Award for The Piano
- Rider Strong (2004), star of Boy Meets World
- Julia Stiles (2005), star of Save the Last Dance and Mona Lisa Smile
- Max Minghella (2009), appeared in Syriana and Art School Confidential
- Spencer Treat Clark (2010), appeared in Gladiator, Mystic River, and Unbreakable
Artists and architects
- James Renwick, Jr. (1836), Gothic Revival architect who designed St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York and the Smithsonian Institution Building in Washington, DC
- Rockwell Kent* (1907), illustrator
- Isamu Noguchi* (1926), sculptor
- Charles Alston (1929), artist
- Ad Reinhardt (1935), Abstract Expressionist artist and critic
- Charles Saxon (1940), cartoonist
- Robert A. M. Stern (1960), traditionalist architect
Athletes
- Eddie Collins (1907), baseball player for the Chicago White Sox and member of the Baseball Hall of Fame
- Lou Gehrig* (1925), legendary first baseman for the New York Yankees and member of the Baseball Hall of Fame
- Cliff Montgomery (1934), led the Columbia Lions football team to victory in the Rose Bowl
- Sid Luckman (1939), legendary Chicago Bears quarterback
- Paul Governali (1943), football player for the Boston Yanks and New York Giants
- Jack Molinas (1953), NBA player for the Fort Wayne Pistons
- George Starke (1971), offensive lineman for the Washington Redskins
- Vitas Gerulaitis* (1975), champion tennis player
- Gene Larkin (1984), member of the Minnesota Twins 1987 and 1991 World Series championship teams
- Marcellus Wiley (1997), football player for the Buffalo Bills, San Diego Chargers and Dallas Cowboys
Businessmen
- William Backhouse Astor, Sr. (1811), son of John Jacob Astor
- John Jacob Astor III (1839), son of William Backhouse Astor, Sr.
- William Backhouse Astor, Jr. (1849), son of William Backhouse Astor, Sr. and husband of Caroline Webster Schermerhorn Astor, co-founder of The Four Hundred
- Stuyvesant Fish (1871), president of the Illinois Central Railroad
- Ward Melville (1909), creator of Thom McAn shoes
- Armand Hammer (1919), chairman of Occidental Petroleum
- Nathan S. Ancell (1929), co-founder of Ethan Allen
- John Kluge (1937), chairman of Metromedia
- Alfred Lerner (1955), chairman of MBNA Bank and owner of the Cleveland Browns
- Frank Lorenzo (1961), chairman of Eastern Airlines
- Jerry Speyer (1962), founding partner of Tishman Speyer
- Robert Kraft (1963), owner of the New England Patriots
- Mark Willes (1963), president of General Mills and publisher of the Los Angeles Times
Journalists, critics, and commentators
- John L. O'Sullivan (1831), journalist who coined the term "Manifest Destiny"
- Francis Pharcellus Church (1859), editorial writer for the New York Sun and author of Yes, Virginia, There is a Santa Claus
- Gustav Kobbé (1877), opera scholar and music critic of the New York Herald
- Simeon Strunsky (1900), literary editor of the New York Evening Post and editorial writer for The New York Times
- Randolph Bourne (1912), antiwar essayist and public intellectual
- Herbert Matthews (1922), New York Times foreign correspondent who first reported Fidel Castro alive in the Sierra Maestra
- Clifton Fadiman (1925), book critic for The New Yorker and judge for the Book of the Month Club
- James Wechsler (1935), editor of The New York Post
- Ralph de Toledano (1938), conservative commentator
- Ralph J. Gleason (1938), music critic for the San Francisco Chronicle and co-founder of Rolling Stone
- Lucien Carr (1946), editor for United Press International
- Norman Podhoretz (1950), editor of Commentary Magazine and author of Making It
- Jules Witcover (1951), columnist, The Baltimore Sun
- Robert Gottlieb (1952), editor of The New Yorker
- Roone Arledge (1952), sportscaster, creator of Monday Night Football and head of ABC News
- Max Frankel (1952), Pulitzer Prize winning editor of the New York Times
- Martin Gottfried (1955), critic, author, and biographer
- Chet Forte (1957), first director of Monday Night Football
- Robert Lipsyte (1957), host of The Eleventh Hour on PBS; correspondent for ABC News and the New York Times
- Leon Wieseltier (1974), literary editor, The New Republic
- Michael Musto (1978), gossip columnist for The Village Voice
- Tim Page (1979), music critic of The Washington Post and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Criticism
- Matthew Cooper (1984), Time magazine White House correspondent and defendant in the Valerie Plame investigation
- Claire Shipman (1986), ABC News correspondent
- Neil Strauss (1991), music critic and best-selling author
- Alexis Glick (1994), television news anchorwoman
- Anne Kornblut (1994), Washington correspondent for the New York Times
- Gideon Yago (2000), MTV News correspondent
Legal and judicial figures
- Samuel Blatchford (1837), associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
- Benjamin Cardozo (1889), associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court
- Arthur Garfield Hays (1902), counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union and lawyer in the Scopes Trial
- Frank Hogan (1924), District Attorney of New York City
- Jack Greenberg (1945), civil rights lawyer who argued the Brown v. Board of Education case before the United States Supreme Court
- Roy Cohn (1946), attorney and counsel to Sen. Joseph McCarthy
- Robert Abrams (1960), Bronx Borough President and New York State Attorney General
- José A. Cabranes (1961), judge on the US Court of Appeals; first Puerto Rican to sit in a US District Court
- Michael B. Mukasey (1963), U.S. district court judge, presided over trials of Omar Abdel Rahman and El Sayyid Nosair
- Joel Klein (1967), assistant Attorney General of the United States; Chancellor of the New York City Department of Education
- Nicholas G. Garaufis (1969), U.S. district court judge and former chief counsel of the Federal Aviation Administration
- William Barr (1971), Attorney General of the United States
Military leaders
- Stephen Kearny (1812), Conqueror of California in the Mexican-American War
- Charles Wilkes (1818), leader of the United States Exploring Expedition to survey the Pacific Ocean; instigator of the Trent Affair during the American Civil War
- Alfred Thayer Mahan* (1858), president, U.S. Naval War College and author of The Influence of Sea Power Upon History
Musicians, composers, and lyricists
- Roy Webb (1910), composer for Notorious and Abe Lincoln in Illinois
- Oscar Hammerstein II (1916), lyricist for Show Boat, Oklahoma! and The King and I, among other Broadway musical hits
- Howard Dietz (1917), director of publicity for MGM and lyricist for Dancing in the Dark
- Lorenz Hart (1918), lyricist for Pal Joey and other Broadway musical hits
- Richard Rodgers* (1923), composer and collaborator with Lorenz Hart and Oscar Hammerstein II; wrote music for Carousel, The Sound of Music, and Victory at Sea, among many others
- Orrin Keepnews (1943), jazz record producer and winner of the 1988 Grammy Award for Best Album Notes
- Dick Hyman (1948), musical director for Arthur Godfrey; composer or arranger for Hannah and Her Sisters and The Purple Rose of Cairo; Emmy Award winner
- John Corigliano (1959), winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Music and Academy Award for Best Original Score
- Edward Kleban (1959), lyricist for A Chorus Line
- Charles Wuorinen (1961), serialist composer and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Music for Time's Encomium
- Art Garfunkel (1965), singer for Simon and Garfunkel
- Jon Bauman (1969), "Bowzer" of Sha Na Na
- Emanuel Ax (1970), concert pianist
- Phil Schaap (1972), Charlie Parker authority and multiple Grammy Award winner for engineering, production, and album notes
- Gil Shaham (1993), violinist
- R. Luke DuBois (1997), composer
- Lauryn Hill* (1997), member of The Fugees
- Orli Shaham (1997), pianist
Playwrights, screenwriters, and directors
- Herman Mankiewicz (1917), drama critic for The New Yorker and co-winner of the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for Citizen Kane
- Sidney Buchman (1923), screenwriter for Mr. Smith Goes to Washington and winner of the Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay for Here Comes Mr. Jordan
- Alvah Bessie (1924), screenwriter for Objective, Burma! and one of the Hollywood Ten
- Joseph Mankiewicz (1928), Academy Award-winning writer and director of All About Eve and A Letter to Three Wives
- Ben Maddow (1930), screenwriter for The Asphalt Jungle
- Albert Maltz (1930), screenwriter for Destination Tokyo and one of the Hollywood Ten
- I.A.L. Diamond (1941), screenwriting partner of Billy Wilder; co-author of Some Like It Hot; co-winner of the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for The Apartment
- Terrence McNally (1960), playwright; author of Kiss of the Spider Woman and Ragtime (musical)
- Brian DePalma (1962), director of Scarface, The Untouchables and Carrie
- Jim Jarmusch (1975), writer/director of the Coffee and Cigarettes series
- Bill Condon (1976), winner of the Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay for Gods and Monsters
- Tony Kushner (1978), winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and Tony Award for Angels in America
- Michael Lehmann (1978), director of Heathers, 40 Days and 40 Nights, The Truth About Cats and Dogs and Hudson Hawk
Political and diplomatic leaders
- Richard Varick (1776), Mayor of New York City and American Revolutionary War figure; aide-de-camp of Benedict Arnold and private secretary of George Washington
- DeWitt Clinton (1786), Governor of New York who initiated the construction of the Erie Canal
- Daniel D. Tompkins (1795), Vice President of the United States; Governor of New York
- Peter Dumont Vroom (1808), U.S. Minister to Prussia and Governor of New Jersey
- John Slidell (1810), Confederate minister to France and a central figure of the Trent Affair during the American Civil War
- William F. Havemeyer (1823), three-time Mayor of New York City
- Hamilton Fish (1827), US Secretary of State; Governor of New York; United States Senator from New York
- Abram Stevens Hewitt (1842), Mayor of New York City and father of the New York City Subway system
- Jacob Augustus Geissenhainer (1858), United States Congressman from New Jersey
- Seth Low (1870), Mayor of New York City and president of Columbia University
- Robert Anderson Van Wyck (1871), first Mayor of New York City to preside over all five boroughs
- James W. Gerard (1890), United States Ambassador to Germany
- John Purroy Mitchel (1899), Mayor of New York City
- Pixley ka Isaka Seme (1906), founder and president of the African National Congress
- Wellington Koo (1909), President of the Republic of China and China's ambassador to the United States
- William Langer (1910), United States Senator and Governor of North Dakota
- Arthur F. Burns (1925), Chairman of the Federal Reserve and U.S. Ambassador to West Germany
- Harold Brown (1945), U.S. Secretary of Defense and president of the California Institute of Technology
- Mario Laserna Pinzón (1948), Colombian diplomat and educator; founded the Universidad de Los Andes
- Bernard Nussbaum (1958), White House counsel under Bill Clinton
- Johan Jorgen Holst (1960), Norwegian Minister of Defence and Foreign Affairs; heavily involved with the Oslo Accords
- Dick Morris (1967), political strategist and advisor to President Bill Clinton and Mexican President Felipe Calderon
- Judd Gregg (1969), United States Senator from New Hampshire; Governor of New Hampshire; United States Congressman
- Jerrold Nadler (1969), United States Congressman from New York
- Dov Zakheim (1970), advisor to the US Presidential administrations of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush
- Dore Gold (1975), Israeli political advisor and diplomat
- Toomas Hendrik Ilves (1975), President of Estonia
- Christopher Dell (1978), career diplomat; current US ambassador to Tanzania
- Jim McGreevey (1978), Governor of New Jersey
- James Rubin (1982), State Department official under the administration of US President Bill Clinton; spokesman for the presidential campaigns of Wesley Clark and John Kerry; Sky News anchorman
- George Stephanopoulos (1982), senior advisor to U.S. President Bill Clinton's administration and ABC News personality
- Barack Obama (1983), United States Senator from Illinois
- Eric Garcetti (1992), member of the Los Angeles City Council
Publishers
- Alfred Harcourt (1904) and Donald Brace (1904), founders of Harcourt Brace
- Alfred A. Knopf (1912), founder and chairman of Alfred A. Knopf
- George T. Delacorte Jr. (1913), founder of Dell Publishing
- Arthur Hays Sulzberger (1913), publisher of The New York Times
- Bennett Cerf (1920), founder of Random House
- Richard L. Simon (1920) and M. Lincoln Schuster (1921), founders of Simon and Schuster
- Robert Giroux (1936), chairman of Farrar, Straus and Giroux
- Ian Ballantine (1938), founder of Ballantine Books
- Jason Epstein (1949), editorial director of Random House and co-founder of the New York Review of Books
- Arthur Ochs Sulzberger (1951), publisher of The New York Times
- Louis Rossetto (1971), founder and publisher of Wired magazine
- John R. MacArthur (1978), president and publisher of Harper's magazine
Religious figures
- Benjamin Moore (1768), second bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York and president of Columbia College
- Jackson Kemper (1809), first missionary bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America
- Benjamin Treadwell Onderdonk (1809), fourth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York
- Stephen Samuel Wise (1892), rabbi and Zionist leader
- Thomas Merton (1938), Trappist monk, writer, humanist; author of The Seven Storey Mountain
- Michael Lerner (1964), liberal rabbi and editor of Tikkun magazine
Scientists and inventors
- John Stevens (1768), builder of the first oceangoing steamboat in the United States
- Horatio Allen (1823), imported the Stourbridge Lion, first successful steam locomotive to run in the United States
- Oliver Wolcott Gibbs (1841), chemist
- William Barclay Parsons (1879), chief engineer of the New York City Subway system
- Michael Pupin (1879), physicist
- Michael Heidelberger (1909), immunologist
- Hermann Joseph Muller (1910), geneticist and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Konrad Lorenz (1926), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- Norman Foster Ramsey, Jr. (1935), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics
- Robert Marshak (1936), president of the American Physical Society and president of the City College of New York
- Julian Schwinger (1936), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics; posited the Schwinger effect
- Barry Commoner (1937), environmentalist
- Robert Jastrow (1944), astronomer
- Joshua Lederberg (1944), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- John Backus (1949), inventor of the Fortran programming language
- Robert Neil Butler (1949), president of the International Longevity Center and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction
- Leon Cooper (1951), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics
- Melvin Schwartz (1953), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics
- Roald Hoffman (1958), winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry
- Niles Eldredge (1965), collaborator of Stephen Jay Gould and curator of the Department of Invertebrates at the American Museum of Natural History
- Richard Axel (1967), winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for studying the operations of the olfactory system
Spies
- William Joseph Donovan (1905), head of the Office of Strategic Services, predecessor to the Central Intelligence Agency
- Whittaker Chambers* (1924), Soviet spy and accuser of Alger Hiss
- Nathaniel Weyl (1931), operative in the Ware group of Soviet spies in the United States
- Victor Perlo (1933), leader of the Perlo group of Soviet spies in the United States
Writers
- Clement Clarke Moore (1798), purported author of A Visit From St. Nicholas
- Charles Fenno Hoffman (1825), poet, translator, and editor
- Evert Augustus Duyckinck (1835), literary biographer
- Joyce Kilmer (1908), poet and author of Trees
- Paul Gallico* (1919), author of The Poseidon Adventure
- Louis Zukofsky* (1922), modernist poet
- Corey Ford* (1923), humorist
- Henry Morton Robinson (1923), author of The Cardinal
- Cornell Woolrich (1923), mystery writer and author of Rear Window
- Herman Wouk (1934), author of War and Remembrance and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for The Caine Mutiny
- John Berryman (1936), winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
- Robert Lax (1938), minimalist poet
- Walter Farley (1941), author of The Black Stallion and its many sequels
- Gerald Green (1942), wrote Holocaust and The Last Angry Man
- Jack Kerouac* (1944), Beat generation author of On the Road
- Walter Wager (1944), mystery writer
- Allen Ginsberg (1948), Beat generation poet; author of Howl
- John Hollander (1950), poet, MacArthur Fellow and winner of the Bollingen Prize
- Richard Howard (1951), translator and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry
- Ralph Schoenstein (1953), humorist
- Robert Silverberg (1956), science fiction writer
- Phillip Lopate (1964), essayist and fiction writer
- Steven Millhauser (1965), novelist and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for Martin Dressler: The Tale of an American Dreamer
- David Shapiro (1968), poet
- Paul Auster (1970), postmodern writer; author of The New York Trilogy, Moon Palace, and the Brooklyn Follies
- David Lehman (1970), poet
- David Rakoff (1986), comedic essayist
Miscellaneous
- James Lenox (1818), bibliophile, founder of the Lenox Library, later incorporated into the New York Public Library
- John Lloyd Stephens (1822), explorer, archaeologist, Special Ambassador to Central America, and president of the Panama Railroad
- Vincent Sardi, Jr. (1937), proprietor of Sardi's
- Arnold Friedman, subject of the documentary Capturing the Friedmans
- John Giorno (1958), subject of Andy Warhol's first movie, Sleep
- Edwin Schlossberg (1967), husband of Caroline Kennedy
- Ted Gold* (1968), student activist, leader of the Students for a Democratic Society and member of the violent Weatherman group
- Mark Rudd* (1969), president of Students for a Democratic Society and member of the Weather Underground
- David Kaczynski (1970), brother of Unabomber Theodore Kaczynski
- Timothy Greenfield-Sanders (1974), photographer
- Peter Bacanovic (1984), Martha Stewart's stockbroker involved in the ImClone scandal.
Notable faculty
The list below refers exclusively to faculty of Columbia College, from its inception as King's College through the creation of Columbia University in the 1890s. The College faculty remained independent until the early 1990s, when it was dissolved completely into the larger Columbia University faculty. For a complete list of notable university faculty, please see the List of Columbia University people.
This list is incomplete.
Presidents and Deans of Columbia College
- Samuel Johnson (president 1754-1763), first President of King's College and exponent of Anglicanism
- Myles Cooper (president 1764-1775)
- Benjamin Moore (president 1775-1776 and 1801-1810), bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York
- George Clinton (chancellor 1784-1787), Vice President of the United States and Governor of New York
- William Samuel Johnson (president 1787-1800), Founding Father of the United States
- William Alexander Duer (president 1829-1842), judge
- Henry Drisler (acting president 1867 and 1888-9; faculty 1857-1894), classicist
- Frederick Augustus Porter Barnard (president 1864-1888), founder of Barnard College
- Seth Low (president 1888-1896), first President of Columbia University, Mayor of New York City
- John Howard Van Amringe (dean 1896-1910), mathematician
- Frederick P. Keppel (dean 1910-1917)
- Herbert Hawkes (dean 1918-1943), mathematician
- Harry Carman (dean 1943-1950), historian
- Lawrence H. Chamberlain (dean 1950-1958)
- John G. Palfrey (dean 1958-1962)
- David Truman (dean 1962-1967), political scientist
- Carl Hovde (dean 1968-1972)
- Peter Pouncey (dean 1972-1976), author and classicist
- Arnold Collery (dean 1977-1982)
- Robert Pollack (dean 1982-1989), biologist
- Jack Greenberg (dean 1989-1993), civil rights lawyer, argued the Brown v. Board of Education case before the U.S. Supreme Court
- Steven Marcus (dean 1993-1995)
- Austin Quigley (dean 1995-present)
18th century
- James Kent (1793-1798), first professor of law in the United States
19th century
- Charles Anthon (1820-1867), classicist
- John Burgess, founder of modern political science
- Nicholas Murray Butler (1887-1902), Nobel Peace Prize winner, US Presidential candidate and President of Columbia University
- Lorenzo Da Ponte (1825; 1827-1838), librettist for the operas of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
- Oliver Wolcott Gibbs, chemist
- Harry Thurston Peck, literary critic and editor of The Bookman
20th century
- Quentin Anderson, professor of English
- Jacques Barzun, cultural historian
- Charles A. Beard, historian and author of An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution
- Eric Bentley, dramatic critic
- James McKeen Cattell, psychologist
- Arthur Danto, philosopher and art critic for The Nation
- Wm. Theodore de Bary, East Asian studies expert
- John Erskine, developed the Great Books program
- Eric Foner, DeWitt Clinton Professor of History and pre-eminent historian of Reconstruction
- Milton Friedman, winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics
- Richard Hofstadter, DeWitt Clinton Professor of History and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for History
- Robert Jastrow, astronomer
- C. Wright Mills, sociologist
- Sidney Morgenbesser, philosopher
- I.I. Rabi, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics
- James Rainwater, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics
- Arnold Rampersad, professor of English with specialty in black studies
- Meyer Schapiro, pioneering art historian
- Joel Elias Spingarn, literary critic
- Lionel Trilling, literary critic
- Mark Van Doren, Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and critic
- William Vickrey, winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics
See also
- Great Books, Educational perennialism, Mortimer Adler, John Erskine (educator): context for the Contemporary Civilization curriculum