APPENDIX E
 
INSTITUTIONAL COMPARISONS
 
KING'S COLLEGE, 1754-1776
INTERWAR COLLEGIATE COMPARISONS
1.1 The Order of Founding of American Colonial Colleges 5.1 Columbia College Freshman Class by Religion, Fall 1921
1.2 Colonial Colleges by Enrollments, 1775 5.2 Princeton Classes of 1921 and 1930 by Religion
1.3 Colonial Colleges by % of Graduates Going into the Ministry, 1769-1775 5.3 Columbia College Freshman Class by Religion, Fall 1933
  5.4 Columbia College Freshman Class by Religion, Fall 1935
EARLY COLUMBIA COLLEGE, 1784-1857 5.5 Princeton Freshman Classes by Religion, 1923-1933
5.6 Harvard Freshmen in 1920s by Religious Self-Identification
2.1 Colonial Colleges by Signers of the Declaration of Independence 5.7 Columbia and Princeton Freshmen by Parent's Education, 1921
2.2 The Order of College Founding in New York, 1754-1865 5.8 Columbia and Princeton Freshmen by Father's Occupation, 1921
2.3 Enrollments at Leading New England and New York Colleges, 1826-27 5.9 Columbia and Princeton Freshmen by Collegiate Preparation, 1921
2.4 Enrollments at Leading American Colleges, 1838-39  
2.5 Enrollments at Leading New England and New York Colleges, 1855-56 COLUMBIA AND THE COMPETITION
2.6 Graduates of American Colleges in Dictionary of American Biography, 1770-1840
"Good in classics, weak in sciences; very few distinguished graduates..."
EARLY COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY, 1858-1900

 

"The Recent Difficulties at Columbia College,"
  Christian Examiner (Boston) July, 1854
3.1 Graduates Produced by Universities from Their Founding to 1880  
3.2 Leading American Producers of PhDs, 1861-1900 STUDENTS
6.1 Educational Origins of Guggenheim Fellows. 1920-2002
COLUMBIA IN THE 20th CENTURY, 1900-2003
6.2 Educational Origins of the Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1920-2002
6.3 Educational Origins of Medalists of the Institute of Medicine, 1920-2002
4.1 College Enrollment as a Percentage of All Enrollments at Major American Universities, 1904

6.4 Educational Origins of American Nobel Laureates, 1920-2002

4.2 Leading American Producers of PhDs (All Fields), 1920-1974 6.5 Educational Origins of Fellows of the National Academy of Sciences, 1920-2002
4.3 Leading American Producers of PhDs (Physical and Biological Sciences), 1920-1974 6.6 Educational Origins of the Fellows of the American Philosophical Society, 1920-2002
4.4 Leading American Producers of PhDs among Women, 1920-1974 6.7 Educational Origins of MacArthur Fellows, 1920-2002
   
. FACULTY
. 6.8 1000 Men of Science by Place of Undergraduate Study,1906
6.9 1000 Men of Science by Place of Graduate Study, 1906
6.10 1000 Men of Science by Employing Institution, 1906
6.11 Overall Standing of American Graduate Departments in the Arts and Sciences, 1925
6.12 Rating of All American Universities Judged to Have More Than Five Departments of High Excellence, 1935
6.13 Overall Standing of American Graduate Departments in the Arts and Sciences, 1957
6.14 Rating of Columbia Arts & Sciences Departments, 1966
6.15 Rating of Columbia Arts & Sciences Departments, 1970
6.16 Ratings of Select Professional Schools by Faculty Peers, 1977
6.17 Rating of Select Graduate Departments by Faculty Quality, 1982
6.18 Ratings of Seven Major Graduate Schools, 1925-1982
6.19 Rating of Columbia Graduate Departments, 1992-1993
6.20 Nobel Laureates by Employing University at Time of Prize Announcement, through 2002 [Excel file]
6.21 Current Members of the National Academy of Sciences by Employing Univiersities, July 2003
For comments, ram31@columbia.edu  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

r