The
City College of the City University of New York
(known more commonly as the City College of New
York or simply City College,
CCNY, or colloquially as City) is
a senior college of the City
University of New York (CUNY), in New York City
. It is also the oldest of the City
University's twenty-three institutions of higher learning.
City
College's thirty-five acre Manhattan
campus along Convent Avenue from 130th Street to
141st Street is on a hill overlooking Harlem
; its
neo-Gothic campus was mostly designed by
George Browne Post, and many of
its buildings are landmarks.
CCNY was the first free public institution of higher education in
the United States and also for many years has been considered the
flagship campus of the CUNY public university system.
History
Early history - 19th century
The City College of New York was originally founded as the Free
Academy of the City of New York in 1847. by wealthy businessman and
president of the Board of Education
Townsend Harris. A combination prep school
and college, it would provide children of immigrants and the poor
access to free higher education based on academic merit
alone.
The Free Academy was the first of what would become a system of
municipally-supported colleges.
Hunter College
, the second, was founded as a women's institution
in 1870. Brooklyn College
, the third, was established as a coeducational
institution in 1930.
In 1847, New York State Governor
John Young had given permission to the
Board of Education to found the Free Academy, which was ratified in
a statewide referendum. Founder
Townsend
Harris proclaimed, "Open the doors to all… Let the children of
the rich and the poor take their seats together and know of no
distinction save that of industry, good conduct and
intellect."
Dr.
Horace Webster, a West Point
graduate, was the first president of the Free Academy. On the
occasion of The Free Academy's formal opening, January 21, 1849,
Webster said:
The experiment is to be tried, whether the children of
the people, the children of the whole people, can be educated; and
whether an institution of the highest grade, can be successfully
controlled by the popular will, not by the privileged
few.
In 1847, a curriculum was adopted which had nine main fields:
mathematics, history, language, literature, drawing, natural
philosophy, experimental philosophy, law, and political economy.
The Academy's first graduation took place in 1853 in Niblo's Garden
Theatre, a large theater and opera house on Broadway, near Houston
Street at the corner of Broadway and Prince Street.
Even in its early years, the Free Academy showed tolerance for
diversity, especially in comparison to its urban neighbor, Columbia
College, which then wasn't much more than a finishing school for
wealthy young gentlemen. The Free Academy had a framework of
tolerance that extended beyond the admission of students from every
social stratum. In 1854, Columbia's trustees denied
Oliver Wolcott Gibbs, a distinguished
chemist and scientist, a faculty position because of Gibbs's
religious beliefs. He was a Unitarian. Gibbs was a professor and
held an appointment at the Free Academy since 1848. (In 1863, Gibbs
went on to an appointment at Harvard University, the Rumsford
Professorship in Chemistry, where he had a distinguished career. In
1873, he was awarded an honorary degree from Columbia with a
unanimous vote by its Trustees with the strong urging of
President Barnard.) Later
in the history of CCNY, in the early 1900s, President John H.
Finley gave the College a more secular orientation by abolishing
mandatory chapel attendance. This change occurred at a time when
more Jewish students were enrolling in the College.
In 1866, the Free Academy, a men's institution, was renamed the
College of the City of
New York. In 1929, the College of the City of New York became
the City College of New York. Finally, the institution became known
as the City College of the
City University of New York when
CUNY was formally established as the umbrella institution for New
York City's municipal-college system in 1961. The names City
College of New York and City College, however, remain in general
use.
With the name change in 1866, lavender was chosen as the College's
color. In 1867, the academic senate, the first student government
in the nation, was formed. Having struggled over the issue for ten
years, in 1895 the New York State legislature voted to let the
College build a new campus. A four-square block site was chosen,
located in Manhattanville, within the area which was enclosed by
the North Campus Arches; the College, however, quickly expanded
north of the Arches (see below).
Like President Webster, the second president of City College was a
West Point graduate. The second president, General
Alexander S. Webb, assumed office in 1869. One of the
Union's heroes at Gettysburg, General Webb was the commander of the
Philadelphia Brigade. When the Union Army repulsed the Confederates
at Cemetery Hill, General Webb played a central role in the battle.
Coddington wrote about Webb's conduct during Pickett's Charge:
"Refusing to give up, [Webb] set an example of bravery and
undaunted leadership for his men to follow...." In 1891, while
still president of City College, he was awarded the Congressional
Medal of Honor for heroism at Gettysburg. In 1899,
Delta Sigma Phi was founded at City College.
[382819]
The College's curriculum under Webster and Webb combined classical
training in Latin and Greek with more practical subjects like
chemistry, physics, and engineering. One of the outstanding
Nineteenth Century graduates of City College was the Brooklyn-born
George Washington
Goethals, who put himself through the College in three years
before going on to West Point. He later became the chief engineer
on the Panama Canal. General Webb was succeeded by
John Huston Finley in 1903. Finley
relaxed some of the West Point-like discipline that characterized
the College, including compulsory chapel attendance.
Sigma Alpha Mu was founded at CCNY in 1909 as
a fraternity for Jewish men.
[382820]
20th century
Education courses were first offered in 1897 in response to a city
law that prohibited the hiring of teachers who lacked a proper
academic background. The School of Education was established in
1921. The college newspaper,
The Campus, published its
first issue in 1907, and the first degree-granting evening session
in the United States was started. Separate Schools of Business and
Civic Administration and of Technology (Engineering) were
established in 1919. Students were also required to sign a loyalty
oath. In 1947, the College celebrated its centennial year, awarding
honorary degrees to
Bernard Baruch
(class of 1889) and
Robert F.
Wagner (class of 1898). A 100 year
time capsule was buried in North Campus.
Until 1929, City College had been an all-male institution; it was
in 1930 that CCNY first admitted women, but only to graduate
programs. In 1951, the entire institution became
coeducational.
In the years when top-flight private schools were restricted to the
children of the
Protestant Establishment, thousands of brilliant
individuals (including Jewish students) attended City College
because they had no other option.
CCNY's academic excellence and status as a
working-class school earned it the titles "Harvard
of the Proletariat", the
"poor man's Harvard", and "Harvard-on-the-Hudson".
Even today, after three decades of controversy over its academic
standards, no other public college has produced as many
Nobel laureates who have studied and graduated
with a degree from a particular public college. CCNY's official
quote on this is "Nine Nobel laureates claim CCNY as their Alma
Mater, the most from any public college in the United States."
This
should not be confused with Nobel laureates who teach at a public
university; UC Berkeley
boasts 19.
In its heyday of the 1930s through the 1950s, CCNY became known for
its political
radicalism. It
was said that the old CCNY cafeteria in the basement of Shepard
Hall, particularly in alcove 1, was the only place in the world
where a fair debate between
Trotskyists
and
Stalinists could take place. Being
part of a political debate that began in the morning in alcove 1,
Irving Howe reported that after some
time had passed he would leave his place among the arguing students
in order to attend class. When he returned to the cafeteria late in
the day, he would find that the same debate had continued but with
an entirely different cast of students.
Alumni who were at City College in the mid-20th
century said that City College in those days made UC Berkeley in
the 1960s look like a school of conformity.
The municipality of New York was considerably more conformist than
CCNY students and faculty. The Philosophy Department, at the end of
the 1939-1940 academic year, invited the British mathematician and
philosopher
Bertrand Russell to
become a professor at CCNY. Members of the Catholic Church
protested Russell’s appointment. A woman named Jean Kay filed suit
against the Board of Higher Education to block Russell’s
appointment on the grounds that his views on marriage and sex would
adversely affect her daughter’s virtue, although her daughter was
not a CCNY student. Russell wrote “a typical American witch-hunt
was instituted against me.” Kay won the suit, but the Board
declined to appeal after considering the political pressure
exerted. Also see the
the
Bertrand Russell Case.
Russell took revenge in the preface of the first edition of his
book
An Inquiry into Meaning and Truth, which was
published by the Unwin Brothers in the UK (the preface was not
included in the U.S. editions). In a long précis that detailed
Russell’s accomplishments including medals awarded by Columbia
University and the Royal Society and faculty appointments at
Oxford, Cambridge, UCLA, Harvard, the Sorbonne, Peking (the name
used in that era), the LSE, Chicago, and so forth, Russell added,
“Judicially pronounced unworthy to be Professor of Philosophy at
the College of the City of New York.”
Many City College alumni served in the U.S. Armed Forces during the
Second World War. A total of 310 CCNY alumni were killed in the
War. Prior to World War II, a large number of City College
alumni—relative to alumni of other U.S. colleges—volunteered to
serve on the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War. Thirteen
CCNY alumni were killed in Spain.
In 1945, Professor William E. Knickerbocker, Chairman of the
Romance Languages Department, was accused of anti-semitism by four
faculty members. They claimed that “for at least seven years they
have been subjected to continual harassment and what looks very
much like discrimination ....” by Knickerbocker. Four years later
Knickerbocker was again accused of anti-semitism, this time for
denying honors to high-achieving Jewish students. About the same
time, Professor William C. Davis of the Economics Department was
accused by students of maintaining a racially segregated dormitory
at Army Hall. Professor Davis was the dormitory’s administrator.
CCNY students, many of whom were World War II veterans, launched a
massive strike in protest against Knickerbocker and Davis. The
New York Times called the event "the first general strike
at a municipal institution of higher learning." Also see the
Knickerbocker Case.
CCNY is the only team in men's
college basketball history to win both
the
National Invitation
Tournament and the
NCAA
Tournament in the same year, 1950. However, this accomplishment
was overshadowed by a
point
shaving scandal in which seven CCNY basketball players were
arrested, in 1951, for taking money from gamblers to affect the
outcome of games. The scandal led to the decline of CCNY from a
national powerhouse in Division I basketball to a member of
Division III and damaged the national profile of college basketball
in general.
In 1955, a City College student named Alan A. Brown founded the
economics honor society, Omicron Chi Epsilon. The purpose of the
society was to confer honors on outstanding economics students,
organize academic meetings, and publish a journal. In 1963, Omicron
Chi Epsilon merged with Omicron Delta Gamma, the other economics
honor society, to form
Omicron
Delta Epsilon, the current academic honor society in
economics.
During a 1969 takeover of South campus, under threat of a riot,
African American and
Puerto Rican activists and their white
allies demanded, among other policy changes, that City College
implement an aggressive
affirmative
action program. At some point, campus protesters began
referring to CCNY as "Harlem University." The administration of the
City University at first balked at the demands, but instead, came
up with an
open admissions or
open-access program under which any graduate of a New York City
high school would be able to matriculate either at City College or
another college in the CUNY system. Beginning in 1970, the program
opened doors to college to many who would not otherwise have been
able to attend college. The program, however, came at the cost of
City College's and the University's academic standing as well as
New York City's fiscal health.
City College began charging tuition in 1976. By the 1990s, CCNY
stopped admitting and offering remedial classes to students who did
not meet its academic entrance requirements. CUNY then enrolled
less well prepared students in its community colleges.
CCNY's new Frederick Douglass Debate Society defeated Harvard and
Yale at the "Super Bowl" of the American Parliamentary Debate
Association in 1996. In 2003, the College's
Model UN Team was awarded as an Outstanding
Delegation at the National Model United Nations (NMUN) Conference,
an honor that it would repeat for four years in a row.
The U.S. Postal Service issued a postcard commemorating CCNY's
150th Anniversary, featuring Shepard Hall, on Charter Day, May 7,
1997.
21st century

Engineering School
The
City University of New
York began recruiting students for the University Scholars
program in the fall 2000, and admitted the first cohort of
undergraduate scholars in the fall 2001. CCNY was one of five CUNY
campuses, on which the program was initiated. The newly admitted
scholars became undergraduates in the college's newly formed Honors
Program. Students attending the CCNY Honors College are awarded
free tuition, a cultural passport that admits them to New York City
cultural institutions for free or at sharply reduced prices, a
notebook computer, and an academic expense account that they can
apply to such academic-related activities as study abroad. These
undergraduates are also required to attend a number of specially
developed honors courses. In 2007 CUNY initiated the
Macaulay Honors College. Both the
CCNY Honors Program and the CCNY chapter of the Macaulay Honors
College are run out of the CCNY Honors Center.
In October
2005, Dr. Andrew Grove, a 1960 graduate
of the Engineering School in Chemical Engineering, and co-founder of
Intel
Corporation, donated $26 million to the Engineering
School, which has since been renamed the Grove School of
Engineering. It is the largest donation ever given to the
City College of New York.
In 2009, the School of Architecture moved into the former 'Y'
Building. The 'Y' building had been gutted and completely remodeled
under the design direction of architect
Rafael Viñoly. Also in 2009, school was
renamed the Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture in
honor of the $25 million gift the Spitzers gave to the
school.
Campus history

The Free Academy at Lexington Avenue
and 23rd Street in New York City in the 1800s.

The main City College building,
Shepard Hall, looking West from St. Nicholas Avenue to Shepard
Hall's main entrance on St. Nicholas Terrace (1907)
Downtown
City
College was originally situated in downtown Manhattan
, in the Free Academy Building, which was CCNY's
home from 1849 to 1907. The building was designed by
James Renwick, Jr. and was
located at Lexington Avenue and 23rd Street. According to some
sources, it was the first Gothic Revival college building on the
East Coast.
Renwick's building was demolished in 1928,
and replaced in 1930 with a 16-story structure that is part of the
present-day Baruch
College
campus.
North Campus
CCNY then moved to its current location in the upper Manhattan
village of Manhattanville in 1906, when the classical neo-Gothic
campus was erected.
This new campus was designed by
George Browne Post.
According to CCNY's published history, "The Landmark neo-Gothic
buildings of the North Campus Quadrangle were designed by the noted
architect George Browne Post. They are superb examples of English
Perpendicular Gothic style and are among the first buildings, as an
entire campus, to be built in the U.S. in this style.
Groundbreaking for the Gothic Quadrangle buildings took place in
1903".
The original neo-Gothic buildings on the new upper Manhattan campus
were:
- Shepard Hall, standing on its own, across the street from the
campus quadrangle on Convent Avenue
- Baskerville Hall
- Compton Hall
- Harris Hall
- Wingate Hall

Shepard Hall tower, seen from
Harlem
Shepard Hall, the largest building and the centerpiece of the
campus, was modeled after a Gothic cathedral plan with its main
entrance on St. Nicholas Terrace. It has a large chapel assembly
hall called "The Great Hall" which has a mural painted by
Edwin Blashfield called "The
Graduate".
Harris Hall, named in the original architectural plans as "the
Sub-Freshman Building", housed City College's preparatory high
school,
Townsend Harris High
School, from 1906 until it moved in 1930 downtown to the School
of Business.
Wingate Hall was named for George Wood Wingate (Class of 1858), an
attorney and promoter of physical fitness. It served as the
College's main gymnasium between 1907 and 1972.
Baskerville Hall for many years housed the Chemistry Department,
was also known as the Chemical Building, and had one of the largest
original lecture halls on the campus, Doremus lecture hall.
Compton Hall was originally designed as the Mechanical Arts
Building.
Five of these new Gothic campus buildings opened in 1906. The
sixth, Goethals Hall, was completed in 1930.
The new building was
named for George Washington
Goethals, the CCNY civil engineering alumnus who, as mentioned
above in the section on the history of the College, went on to
become the chief engineer of the Panama Canal
. Goethals Hall housed the School of
Technology (engineering) and adjoins the Mechanical Arts Building,
Compton Hall.

A stone grotesque on a CCNY building
from 1906, holding a model of Shepard Hall.
The six Gothic buildings are connected by a tunnel, which closed to
public use in 1969.
Six hundred
grotesques on the original
Gothic buildings represent the practical and the fine arts.
The North Campus Quadrangle contains four great arches on the main
avenues entering and exiting the campus:
- the Hudson Gate on Amsterdam Avenue
- the George Washington Gate at 138th Street and Convent
Avenue
- the Alexander Hamilton Gate at the northern edge of Convent
Avenue
- the Peter Stuyvesant Gate at St. Nicholas Terrace.
Lewisohn Stadium (demolished)
In the early 1900s, after most of the Gothic campus had been built,
CCNY President John H. Finley wanted the College to have a stadium
because the existing facilities for the College’s athletic teams
were inadequate. New York City did not provide the money needed to
build a stadium; however, the municipal government donated to the
College two city blocks south of the campus which were open park
land. Finley’s wish for a stadium moved forward when in 1912
businessman and philanthropist
Adolph
Lewisohn expressed interest in financing construction of the
stadium. Lewisohn donated $75,000 for the stadium’s construction
and Finley commissioned architect
Arnold W. Brunner to design
Lewisohn Stadium, which was influenced by
Finley's memories of a small rock-hewn theatre in the Trastevere
section of Rome.

The former Adolph Lewisohn Stadium,
now the site of the North Academic Center (1915)
Lewisohn Stadium was built as a 6,000-seat stadium, with thousands
more seats available on the infield during concerts, and was
dedicated on May 29, 1915, two years after Dr. Finley had left his
post at the College and Dr.
Sidney
Edward Mezes had become CCNY's fourth president. The stadium's
dedication was enhanced by a performance of "
The Trojan Women", produced by Granville
Barker and Lillian McCarthy. College graduation services were held
in Lewisohn for many years.
Other Demolished Buildings
A separate library building was not in the original plan for the
1906 campus, so in 1937, a free-standing library was built north of
the 140th Street Arches. The Bowker/Alumni Library stood at the
present site of the Steinman Engineering building until 1957.
The
Hebrew Orphan
Asylum was erected in 1884 on
Amsterdam Avenue between 136th and 138th
Street, and was designed by William H. Hume. It was already there
when City College moved to upper Manhattan. When it closed in the
1940s, the building was used by City College to house members of
the U.S. Armed Forces assigned to the
Army Specialized Training
Program (ASTP). From 1946 to 1955, it was used as a dormitory,
library, and classroom space for the College. It was called "Army
Hall" until it was demolished in 1955 and 1956.
In 1946, on the North Campus, CCNY purchased a former Episcopal
orphanage on 135th Street and Covent Avenue, and renamed it Klapper
Hall, after Paul Klapper (Class of 1904) Professor and the Dean of
School of Education and who was later the first president of Queens
College/CUNY (1937-1952). Klapper Hall was red brick in Georgian
style and it served until 1983 as home of the School of
Education.
Postwar Buildings
Steinman Hall, which houses the School of Engineering, was erected
in 1962 on the north end of the campus, on the site of the Bowker
Library and the Drill Hall to replace the facilities in Compton
Hall and Goethals Hall, and was named for
David Barnard Steinman (CCNY Class of
1906), a well known civil engineer and bridge designer.
In 1963, the Administration Building was erected on the North
Campus across from Wingate Hall. It houses the College's
administration offices, including the President's, Provost's and
the Registrar's offices. It was originally intended as a warehouse
to store the huge number of records and transcripts of students
since 1847. In early 2007, the Administration Building was formally
named The Howard E. Wille Administration Building, in honor of
Howard E. Wille, class of 1955, a distinguished alumnus and
philanthropist.
In 1971, the Marshak Science Building was completed on the site of
the former Jasper Oval, an open space previously used as a football
field. The building was named after
Robert Marshak, renowned physicist and
president of CCNY (1970-1979). The Marshak building houses all
science labs and adjoins the Mahoney Gymnasium and its athletic
facilities including a swimming pool and tennis courts.
In the 1970s, construction of the massive North Academic Center
(NAC) was initiated. It was completed in 1984, and replaced
Lewisohn Stadium and Klapper Hall. The NAC building houses hundreds
of classrooms, two cafeterias, the Cohen Library, student lounges
and centers, administrative offices, and a number of computer
installations. Designed by architect
John Carl Warnecke, the building has
received criticism for its lack of design and outsize scale in
comparison to the surrounding neighborhood.
Within the NAC, a student lounge space was created outside the
campus bookstore, and murals celebrating the history of the campus
were painted on the doors of the undergraduate
Student Government. Founded in 1869, it
claims to be the oldest continuously operating student government
organization in the country.
The first floor of the Administration Building was given a
postmodern renovation in 2004. The first floor
houses the admissions office and the registrar's office. The upper
floors house the offices of the president and provost.
The
New York
Landmarks Preservation Commission made the North Campus
Quadrangle buildings and the College Gates official landmarks in
1981. The buildings in the Quadrangle were put on the State and
National Register
of Historic Places in 1984. In the summer of 2006, the historic
gates on Convent Avenue were restored.
South Campus

1920's aerial view of the old South
Campus of City College, bought in 1953 from Manhattanville College
of the Sacred Heart.
The photo is taken from the south looking northeast.
In 1953, CCNY bought the campus of the
Manhattanville College of the Sacred
Heart (which, on a 1913 map, was shown as The Convent of the
Sacred Heart), which added a south section to the campus. This
expanded the campus to include many of the buildings in the area
between 140th Street to 130th Street, from St. Nicholas Terrace in
the east to
Amsterdam Avenue in the
west.
Former buildings of the Manhattanville College campus to be used by
CCNY were re-named for City College's purposes: Stieglitz Hall,
Downer Hall, Wagner Hall, the prominent Finley Student Center which
contained the very active Buttenweiser Lounge, Eisner Hall, Park
Gym, Mott Hall, and others.
Generally, the South Campus of CCNY, as a result of this expansion,
contained the liberal arts classes and departments of the College.
The North Campus, also as a result of this expansion, generally
housed classes and departments for the sciences and engineering, as
well as Klapper Hall (School of Education), and the Administration
Building.
In 1957, a new library building was erected in the middle of the
campus, near 135th Street on the South Campus, and named Cohen
Library, after
Morris Raphael
Cohen, an alumnus (Class of 1900) and celebrated professor of
the College from 1912 to 1938. The library was moved some decades
later to the North Academic Center on the North Campus.
In the 1970s, many of the old buildings of the South Campus were
demolished, some which had been used by the Academy of The Sacred
Heart. The buildings remaining on the South Campus at this time
were the Cohen Library (later moved into the North Academic
Center), Park Gym (now the Structural Biology Research
Centerref>http://www.nysbc.org/), Eisner Hall (built in 1941 by
Manhattanville College of the Sacred Heart as a library, later
remodeled and housed CCNY's Art Department and named for the
Chairman of the Board of Higher Education in the 1930s), the Schiff
House (former President's residence, now a child care center), Mott
Hall (formerly the English Department, now a New York City
Department of Education primary school).

Annotated 1950s aerial view of the
main part of the old South Campus of City College, with many former
CCNY buildings marked with their names.
(Click on photo to enlarge)
Some of the buildings which were demolished at that time were
Finley Hall (housed The Finley Student Center, student activities
center, originally built in 1888-1890 as Manhattanville Academy's
main building, and purchased in 1953 by City College), Wagner Hall
(housed various social science and liberal arts departments and
classes, originally built as a dormitory for Manhattanville
Academy, and was named in honor of Robert F. Wagner Sr., member of
the Class of 1898, who represented New York State for 23 years in
the United States Senate), Stieglitz Hall, and Downer Hall, amongst
others.
New buildings were erected on the South Campus, including Aaron
Davis Hall in 1981, and the Herman Goldman sports field in 1993. In
August 2006, the College completed the construction of a 600-bed
dormitory, called "The Towers" There are plans to rename The Towers
after a distinguished alumnus or donor.
The building that formerly housed Cohen Library will become the new
home for the School of Architecture, with the renovation headed by
architect
Rafael Viñoly—the Cohen
Library moved to the NAC building. Near the 133rd Street gate, a
new science building is under construction in order to relieve
pressure from Marshak Hall, which had a beam collapse in 2005. Part
of this project is the elimination of the Herman Goldman sports
field, a controversial move which will dramatically alter the South
Campus.
Campus location
The College is located between West 130th and West 141st Street in
Manhattan, along Convent Avenue and St. Nicholas Terrace, between
Amsterdam and St. Nicholas Avenues. The campus is served by:
College seal and medal logo
The design of the three-faced college seal took its roots in the
19th century when Professor Charles Anthon was inspired by views of
Janus, the Roman god of
beginnings, whose two faces connect the past and the future. He
broadened this image of Janus in three faces to show the student,
and consequently, knowledge, developing from childhood through
youth into maturity. It was redesigned again in 1947 by Professor
Albert D'Andrea for the college's Centennial Medal.
In 2003, the college decided to create a logo distinct from its
seal, with the stylized text "the City College of New York."
Rankings
- City
College was ranked by Shanghai Jiao Tong University
as 89-117 nationally and 203-304 internationally in
2007 and 115-139 nationally, 303-401 internationally in
2008. It should be noted however that the study focuses
heavily on institutions with strong hard science backgrounds, as
the rating is based on a number of factors including articles
published in scientific journals and Nobel laureates.
Popular culture
Film
- Love Story
(1970) - The Harvard graduation was in the Great Hall in CCNY's
Shepard Hall.
- Bananas (1971) - the
character Nancy, who is taking signatures for a petition in
Fielding Mellish's apartment building, is a student at CCNY
- Serpico (1973) - Al
Pacino's character has a meeting at Lewisohn Stadium, which also
shows the Marshak building and North Campus at the time.
- Fast Break (1979) -
Gabe Kaplan's character, David Greene, wears a City College
sweatshirt during the movie.
- Wall Street (1987) -
Michael Douglas's character, Gordon Gekko, tells Bud Fox (played by
Charlie Sheen) that his accomplishments are "not bad for a City
College boy. I bought my way in; now all these Ivy League schmucks
are sucking my knee caps."
- Crossing Delancey
(1988) - Sam is wearing a City College of New York sweater when
playing handball
- Cocktail (1988) - the
character Brian Flanagan was studying business at CCNY
- Reversal of Fortune
(1989) - The CCNY campus was used to depict Harvard for this 1990
movie. Many of the scenes taking place in the law school, including
the office of Professor Alan M.
Dershowitz and several classroom
scenes, were filmed in late 1989 at the CCNY School of
Architecture, located in Shepard Hall.
- The Substance of
Fire (1996) - Scenes in the publishing firm run by Isaac
Geldhart (Mr. Ron Rifkin's character), a Holocaust survivor, were
shot in Shepard Hall.
- Habit (1997) - A horror film by
Larry Fessenden. Scenes at the
beginning of the film take place at City College as well as St.
Nicholas Park behind CCNY.
- The Royal
Tenenbaums (2001) - Shepard Hall's tower can be seen in
the opening montage of this film as the young Richie Tenenbaum
releases his eagle. Much of the film was shot at or near CCNY.
- 25th Hour (2002) - Most
scenes were shot in Shepard Hall, when Monty Brogan (Mr. Edward
Norton's character) visits (and reminisces about the past) his old
high school and friend Jacob Elinsky (Mr. Philip Seymour Hoffman's
character) who teaches at a fancy private high school.
Television shows
- Law & Order -
various scenes from Law & Order have been filmed on
the City College campus.
- Gossip Girl - Some scenes
from the Gossip Girl show have been filmed on the City
College campus.
Literature
- Woody Allen - Sidney Kugelmass, the
protagonist of Allen's short story "The Kugelmass Episode," is
stated to be a professor of humanities at CCNY.
Presidents
- Horace Webster, 1847-1869
- General Alexander S. Webb, 1869-1902
- John H. Finley, 1903-1913
- Sidney Edward Mezes,
1914-1927
- Frederick Robinson,
1927-1938
- Harry N. Wright, 1941-1952
- Buell G. Gallagher, 1953-1969
- Robert Marshak, 1970-1979
- Bernard W. Harleston, 1981-1992
- Yolanda T. Moses, 1993-1999
- Gregory H. Williams, 2001- 2009
(source:
The Adolph Lewisohn Plaza of Honor website
- archived copy)
Distinguished alumni and other notables associated with the
College
Notes
- CUNY's list of its 23 institutions
- CCNY campus map which shows the lower section
extending to 130th St. where the new Towers dormitory is, and up
north to 141st St. where Steinman Hall ends and CCNY Alumni House
stands.
- "... the founding, in 1847, of the Free Academy, the very first
free public institution of higher education in the nation.", Baruch
College history website. [1]
- Rudy,Willis, The College of the City of New York: A History
1847-1947, City College Press 1949. Also issued as a thesis by
Columbia University. Reprinted in 1977 by the Arno Press.
- Traub, James. City on a Hill: Testing the American Dream at
City College. Addison-Wesley, 1984.
- Association
of the Bar of the City of New York, Report of the Commission on
the Future of CUNY: Part I Remediation and Access: To Educate the
"Children of the Whole People", 1999. [2]
- http://www.musicals101.com/bwaypast4.htm#Niblo's
- Cf. Bender, pp. 271-273
- Cf. Bender, p. 273, footnotes.
- Cf. Bender, pp. 291-292
- Minutes, Trustees, Board of Higher Education, 1929, p. 194
- Subway College, in Time magazine,
October 28, 1946.
- Coddington, Edwin B. The Gettysburg campaign; a study in
command, Scribner's, 1984.
- see article Nobel Prize
laureates by university affiliation
- http://www1.ccny.cuny.edu/advancement/pr/presskit/
-
http://www1.ccny.cuny.edu/advancement/pr/presskit/nobel/index.cfm
- "Arguing
the World" - PBS documentary, 1997.
- "Finding My Way to the Alcoves" - Joseph
Dorman, film director of "Arguing the World".
- Bertrand Russell, The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell:
The Middle Years: 1914-1944. Bantam, 1969, p. 320.
- Thom Weidlich. Appointment Denied: The Inquisition of
Bertrand Russell. Prometheus Books, 2000.
- Memorial plaques providing the numbers and honoring those who
gave their lives can be found in the second floor rotunda of the
NAC building on the CCNY campus.
- Morris Freedman, The Knickerbocker Case, Commentary,
August 1945.
- This Wiki writer’s personal communication with a 1949 student
striker, 1989.
- Explosion: 1951 scandals threaten college
hoops
- Omicron Delta Epsilon - The International Economics
Honor Society
- Reitano, Joanne R., "The Restless City: A Short History of New York
from Colonial Times to the Present", CRC Press, 2006. ISBN
0415978491. Cf. page 176.
- James Traub, City on a Hill: Testing the American Dream at
City College, Addison-Wesley: 1994.
- Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture at the City
College of New York.[3]
- Hughes, C. J. (April 22, 2009). City College’s Architecture
School Snares $25 Million Gift. Architectural Record.
[4]
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/freeacademy.html
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/images/full/Fletcher'sNYCpage.jpg
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/images/full/CCNYpostcard3.jpg
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/public_safety/ccny-convent-old.jpg
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/public_safety/Graphics/panoramic.jpg
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/images/full/CCNYpostcard16.jpg
- http://www.nycago.org/Organs/NYC/img/CCNY_GreatHallInt.jpg
- Weiner, Mina Rieur, (editor), Edwin Howland Blashfield:
Master American Muralist, New York : W.W. Norton, 2009. ISBN
9780393732818
- "New Book on Edwin Blashfield features CCNY
Mural", Press Release, City College of New York, Thursday, Sep
17, 2009
- http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/public_safety/harris-hall.jpg
- http://www.liberty-stone.com/Images/wingate.jpg
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/aboutus/campus/campuspictssmall/wingatehall.jpg
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/public_safety/wingate-shepard-postcard.jpg
- http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/public_safety/BASKERVILLE.GIF
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/images/full/CCNYpostcard15.jpg
- http://www.lhparch.com/images/renovations/cghall.gif
-
http://www1.cuny.edu/portal_ur/news/cuny_matters/april_06/images/architectural_janus_top.jpg
-
http://www1.cuny.edu/portal_ur/news/cuny_matters/archives/2006/cm_legislative_lowres.pdf
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/public_safety/138-gates-amsterdam-people.jpg
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/images/full/CCNYpostcard12.jpg
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/bowker.html
- http://www.sah.org/oldsite06012004/aame/bioh.html#87
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/armyhall.html
-
http://134.74.21.9:81/FMRes/FMPro?-db=archivesphoto.fp5&-format=ZFormVw.htm&-lay=Web&-max=1&-skip=11&-token=25&-find
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/images/klapperhall_06-over.gif
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/modelbuild.html
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/aboutus/campus/campuspictssmall/adminwithsondra.jpg
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/dsc6.html
- "Administration Building Named for Howard E. Wille, ‘55",
138@Convent, CCNY newsletter, Volume 2, n.1, February 1, 2007,
Office of Communications of The City College of New York.
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/public_safety/ccny-athletic-old.jpg
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/images/street.gif
-
http://www.ccny.cuny.edu/aboutus/campus/campuspictssmall/sciencebuildingfrombpark2.jpg
- http://www.mazeartist.com/usgmurals.htm
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/airview.html
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/southcampus1.html
- http://www.motthall.org/
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/johnhfinley.html
-
http://origin.admin.ccny.cuny.edu/library/exhibitions/lostworld/images/wagnerhall_07.gif
- CCNY
Towers website
- Photos of the residence hall at the City College of
NY
- http://www1.ccny.cuny.edu/images/CCNY_logo_4.gif
- "The Academic Ranking of World Universities" -
2007, published by the Institute of Higher Education, Shanghai Jiao
Tong University
See also
References
- Bender, Thomas, New York Intellect: A History of
Intellectual Life in New York City, from 1750 to the Beginnings of
Our Own Time, Knopf, 1987. ISBN 0394550269
- Howe, Irving, A Margin of Hope: An Intellectual
Autobiography, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1982. ISBN
0-15-157138-4. Cf. Chapter 3, "City College and Beyond",
pp. 61-89
- Paul David Pearson, The City College of New York: 150 years
of academic architecture, 1997.
- Sandra S. Roff, et al., From the Free Academy to Cuny: Illustrating Public Higher
Education in New York City, 1847-1997, 2000.
- Willis Rudy, College of the City of New York
1847-1947, The City College Press, 1949. Reprinted in 1977 by
the Arno Press.
- James Traub, City on a Hill: Testing the American Dream at
City College, Addison-Wesley: 1994.
- Sydney C. Van Nort, The City College of New York,
Arcadia Press, February 2007. ISBN 0738549304.
External links