Katana VentraIP

Yale College

Yale College is the undergraduate college of Yale University. Founded in 1701, it is the original school of the university. Although other Yale schools were founded as early as 1810, all of Yale was officially known as Yale College until 1887, when its schools were confederated and the institution was renamed Yale University. It is ranked as one of the top colleges in the United States.[3][4][5][6][7]

For the college in Wales, see Yale College, Wrexham.

Former name

The Collegiate School

אורים ותמים‎ (Hebrew; ʾÛrîm wə-Tummîm)

Light and truth

1701 (1701)

6,092 (2020)[1]

75,021[b][2]

Originally established to train Congregationalist ministers, the college began teaching humanities and natural sciences by the late 18th century. At the same time, students began organizing extracurricular organizations: first literary societies, and later publications, sports teams, and singing groups. By the middle of the 19th century, it was the largest college in the United States. In 1847, it was joined by another undergraduate school at Yale, the Sheffield Scientific School, which was absorbed into the college in 1956. These merged curricula became the basis of the modern-day liberal arts curriculum, which requires students to take courses in a broad range of subjects, including foreign language, composition, sciences, and quantitative reasoning, in addition to electing a departmental major in their sophomore year.


The most distinctive feature of undergraduate life is the school's system of residential colleges, established in 1932, and modeled after the constituent colleges of English universities. Undergraduates live in these colleges after their freshman year, when most live on the school's Old Campus.

The novel Aunt Phillis's Cabin by Mary Henderson Eastman is partially set in Yale College in the 1850s.[49]

anti-Tom

In the American TV series , Rory Gilmore attends Yale College, choosing it over Harvard.

Gilmore Girls

(1766). The annals or history of Yale-college. John Hotchkiss and B. Mecom. Retrieved March 23, 2014.

Clap, Thomas

Holden, Reuben A. (1967). Yale: A Pictorial History. New Haven: Yale University Press.  9780300005653.

ISBN

Kabaservice, Geoffrey (2004). The Guardians: Kingman Brewster, His Circle, and the Rise of the Liberal Establishment. New York: Henry Holt.  9780805067620.

ISBN

Kelley, Brooks Mather (1999). (2nd ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300078435.

Yale: A History

(1952). Yale College, An Educational History (1871–1921). New Haven: Yale University Press.

Pierson, George W.

(1955). Yale: The University College (1921–1937). New Haven: Yale University Press.

Pierson, George W.

Soares, Joseph (2007). The Power of Privilege: Yale and America's Elite Colleges. Stanford University Press.  9780804756389.

ISBN

Warch, Richard (1973). School of the Prophets: Yale College, 1701–1740. New Haven: Yale University Press.  9780300016055.

ISBN

Welch, Lewis Sheldon; (1899). Yale, her campus, class-rooms, and athletics. Boston: L. C. Page and Company. Retrieved March 23, 2014.

Camp, Walter

Official website

hosts the memoir of the first Chinese-American graduate of an American university (Yale 1854).

The Yung Wing Project