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The False Dawn of the State University

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Extract

In the state university, Henry Pritchett once claimed, we find, “a conception of education from the standpoint of a whole people.…” If, he continued, “our American democracy were today called to give proof of its constructive ability, the State University and the public school which it crowns would be the strongest evidence of its fitness which it could offer.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1961, University of Pittsburgh Press 

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References

Notes

1. Quoted in Adams, Charles K., State Aid to Higher Education: An Address Delivered at the Twenty-Second Anniversary of The Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, 1898).Google Scholar

2. Burgess, John W., Reminiscences of an American Scholar (New York, 1934), 357–58.Google Scholar

3. Adams, passim. Google Scholar

4. Hofstadter, Richard and Metzger, Walter P., The Development of Academic Freedom in the United States (New York, 1955), 364.Google Scholar

5. Bryce, James, University and Historical Addresses (New York, 1913), 170.Google Scholar

6. Ibid., 163.Google Scholar

7. Jackson Turner, Frederick, The Frontier in American History (New York, 1920), 283.Google Scholar

8. Foerster, Norman, The American State University (Chapel Hill, 1937), 3.Google Scholar

9. Turner, 283.Google Scholar

10. Ibid., 284.Google Scholar

11. For the following information on the situation in South Carolina I am largely indebted to Dumas Malone, The Public Life of Thomas Cooper (New Haven, 1926); and Daniel Walker Hollis, University of South Carolina, I, South Carolina College (Columbia, S. C., 1951).Google Scholar

12. Censor, “An Appeal to the State,” quoted in Malone, 339.Google Scholar

13. Malone, 265.Google Scholar

14. Hollis, 115.Google Scholar

15. Ibid., 161.Google Scholar

16. Ibid., 164.Google Scholar

17. Ibid., 175.Google Scholar

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23. Ibid., 19.Google Scholar