Lawrence University

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Short description: Liberal arts college and music conservatory in Appleton, Wisconsin
Lawrence University
Lawrence University of Wisconsin seal.svg
Former names
  • Lawrence College (1913–1964)
  • Lawrence Institute (1847–1849)
Motto"Light! More Light!"
"Veritas est lux"
Motto in English
"Truth Is Light"
TypePrivate liberal arts college
Established1847; 177 years ago (1847)
Academic affiliations
  • Oberlin Group
  • CLAC
  • Annapolis Group
  • Associated Colleges of the Midwest
  • Space-grant
Endowment$487 million (2021)[1]
PresidentLaurie Carter
Administrative staff
164 faculty[2]
Students1,555 undergraduates (fall 2013)[2]
Location
Appleton
,
Wisconsin
,
United States

[ ⚑ ] : 44°15′40″N 88°24′00″W / 44.261°N 88.400°W / 44.261; -88.400
CampusUrban: 84 acres (34 ha)
Björklunden: 425 acres (172 ha)
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division III – Midwest Conference
Websitewww.lawrence.edu
Lawrence University of Wisconsin logo.svg
Appleton is located in Wisconsin
Appleton
Appleton
Location in Wisconsin

Lawrence University is a private liberal arts college and conservatory of music in Appleton, Wisconsin. Founded in 1847, its first classes were held on November 12, 1849. Lawrence was the second college in the U.S. to be founded as a coeducational institution.

History

Lawrence's first president, William Harkness Sampson, founded the school with Henry R. Colman, using $10,000 provided by philanthropist Amos Adams Lawrence, and matched by the Methodist church. Both founders were ordained Methodist ministers, but Lawrence was Episcopalian. The school was originally named Lawrence Institute of Wisconsin in its 1847 charter from the Wisconsin Territorial Legislature, but the name was changed to Lawrence University before classes began in November 1849.[3][4] Its oldest extant building, Main Hall, was built in 1853.[5] Lawrence University was the second coeducational institution in the country.[6]

Lawrence's first period of major growth came during the thirty-year tenure (1894―1924) of alumnus Samuel G. Plantz as president, when the student body quadrupled, from 200 to 800.

From 1913 until 1964, it was named Lawrence College, to emphasize its small size and liberal arts education focus. The name returned to Lawrence University when it merged with Milwaukee-Downer College. The state of Wisconsin then purchased the Milwaukee-Downer property and buildings to expand the campus of the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. Initially, the university designated two entities: Lawrence College for Men and Downer College for Women. This separation has not lasted in any material form, though degrees are still conferred "on the recommendation of the Faculty of Lawrence and Downer Colleges" and the university by-laws still make the distinction.

The Lawrence Conservatory of Music, usually referred to as "the Con", was founded in 1874. Lawrence offers three degrees: a Bachelor of Arts, a Bachelor of Music and a Bachelor of Musical Arts. It also offers a five-year dual degree program, where students can receive both B.A. and B.Mus. degrees.

First-year Studies (formerly named Freshman Studies) at Lawrence is a mandatory two-term class, in which all students study the same selected 11 classic works of literature, art, and music, the list varying from year to year. President Nathan M. Pusey is credited with initiating the program in 1945, although Professor Waples chaired the Freshman Studies Committee and was responsible for implementing the program. The program continues to this day, despite being temporarily suspended in 1975.[7]

Lawrence University is part of the Oberlin Group, a consortium of liberal arts college libraries.

Milwaukee-Downer traditions

Main Hall is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is an Appleton landmark.

The traditions and heritage of Milwaukee-Downer are woven into the Appleton campus, from the grove of hawthorn trees (called Hawthornden) between Brokaw and Colman halls, to the sundial on the back of Main Hall, to the bestowing upon each class a class color and banner.

Presidents

Lawrence Memorial Chapel

University presidents

  • 1849–1853 William Harkness Sampson, principal
  • 1853–1859 Edward Cooke, president
  • 1859–1865 Russell Zelotes Mason, president
  • 1865–1879 George McKendree Steele, president
  • 1879–1889 Elias DeWitt Huntley, president
  • 1883–1889 Bradford Paul Raymond, president
  • 1889–1893 Charles Wesley Gallagher, president
  • 1893–1894 L. Wesley Underwood, acting president
  • 1894–1924 Samuel G. Plantz, president
  • 1925–1937 Henry Merritt Wriston, president
  • 1937–1943 Thomas Nichols Barrows, president
  • 1944–1953 Nathan Marsh Pusey, president
  • 1954–1963 Douglas Maitland Knight, president
  • 1963–1969 Curtis William Tarr, president
  • 1969–1979 Thomas S. Smith, president
  • 1979–2004 Richard Warch, president
  • 2004–2013 Jill Beck, president
  • 2013–2021 Mark Burstein, president
  • 2021–present ((As of 2023)) Laurie Carter, president[8]

Presidents of Milwaukee-Downer College

  • 1895–1921 Ellen Sabin
  • 1921–1951 Lucia Russell Briggs
  • 1951–1964 John Johnson

Academics

Seeley G. Mudd Library contains over 420,000 volumes

The student/faculty ratio at Lawrence is 9:1.[9]

The college offers majors in most of the liberal arts. The school also offers the option of interdisciplinary areas of study and allows students to design their own majors. Lawrence grants Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Music degrees, with a double degree possible. Lawrence offers a number of cooperative degree programs in areas such as engineering, health sciences and environmental studies.[clarification needed]

All students are required to take First-Year Studies during their first two trimesters, which introduces students to broad areas of study and provides a common academic experience for the college. Known as Freshman Studies until 2021, the program was established in 1945, and aside from a brief interruption in the mid-1970s it has remained a consistent fixture of the school's liberal arts curriculum.[10] Lawrence's First-Year Studies program focuses on a mixture of Great Books and more contemporary, influential works, which include non-fiction books, fiction books, and various other types of works, such as paintings, photographs, musical recordings, and the periodic table of the elements. Readings are replaced every few years, with the exception of Plato's Republic, which has been included on the list since 1945.[11]

Conservatory of Music

The Lawrence University Conservatory of Music was founded in 1874 and has been a part of Lawrence University ever since. The Conservatory offers Bachelor of Music degrees in Performance, Theory/Composition, Music Education, and a five-year double degree option that grants both a BM degree from the Conservatory and a BA degree from the College. Approximately 25% of the Lawrence student body, or 350 students, is in the Conservatory. The Conservatory has three choirs, two bands, two jazz ensembles, a symphony orchestra, an improvisation collective, five world music ensembles, and numerous chamber music groups.

The Conservatory offers also a Bachelor of Musical Arts, primarily—but not exclusively—for students whose interest is in other than Western Classical Music; students take 3/4 of their classes in Music, and 1/4 in other subjects.

Academic affiliation

Lawrence is a member of the Associated Colleges of the Midwest, an academic consortium of 14 liberal arts colleges in the Midwest and Colorado which coordinates several off-campus study programs in a large number of countries as its primary activity.

Campus

The 84-acre (34 ha) campus is located in downtown Appleton, divided into two parts by the Fox River. The academic campus is on the north shore of the river, and the major athletic facilities (including the 5,000-seat Banta Bowl) are on the southeast shore. Lawrence also has a 425-acre (1.7 km2) northern estate called Björklunden (full name: Björklunden vid sjön), which serves as a site for retreats, seminars, concerts, and theatrical performances. It contains a chapel for weddings. Donald and Winifred Boynton of Highland Park, Illinois, donated the property in Door County to Lawrence in 1963.

Campus development

In the mid-1980s, the Physics Department built a $330,000 small laser laboratory (known as the "laser palace"), which includes 800 5 mW small lasers and more than 500 mirrors.

In 2009, Lawrence opened the Richard and Margot Warch Campus Center, a gathering place for students, faculty, staff, alumni, and guests from the Fox Cities community.[12] The 107,000-square-foot (9,900 m2) building is situated on the Fox River on the site of the former Hulburt House. The Warch Campus Center includes a cinema, campus dining services, campus mailboxes, and various meeting and event spaces. The building has earned a LEED Gold certification for meeting sustainability goals in energy conservation, environmental friendliness, and green building.

Student body

Hiett Hall, a dormitory

Lawrence enrolls about 1,500 students. The total enrollment in academic year 2010–11 was 1,566 students,[13] the largest student body in Lawrence University's history. Over 75% of the students identify as white,[13] about 12% are international students,[9] and about 25% of students study in the conservatory of music. In the fall of 2014, a quarter of the incoming class were domestic students of color.[14]

Lawrence students have been named Rhodes Scholars seven times. Since 1976, 57 students and nine faculty have received Fulbright Scholarships. Since 1969, 73 students have been named Watson Fellows.[15]

Student traditions

At the beginning of every academic year in September, incoming freshmen arrive a week before returning students to partake in Welcome Week. During Welcome Week, various activities are planned in order to help the incoming class get to know one another and to help them acclimate to college life.[16] During the first night of Welcome Week, students and their parents attend the President's Welcome, which concludes with the traditional matriculation handshake, where every member of the incoming class shakes hands and exchanges words with the university's president.[16]

During the fall term, the on-campus fraternity Beta Theta Pi hosts the annual Beach Bash. For this event, the brothers of ΒθΠ shovel approximately 14 tons of sand into the fraternity house basement,[17] and install a boardwalk and a lifeguard station that doubles as a DJ booth.This tradition was skipped in 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[18]

During spring term, Lawrence hosts a music festival, LU-aroo (a play on words on the popular music festival Bonnaroo). Held on the quad, the festival features many talented student bands, both from the college and the conservatory.[19] In 2016, the musician The Tallest Man on Earth played at the festival.[20]

Media

The student newspaper, The Lawrentian, has been published for over a century.

Lawrence had a radio station, WLFM, from 1955 (broadcasting beginning in 1956) through 2005.

Athletics

Lawrence Vikings
Logo
UniversityLawrence University
ConferenceMidwest Conference
Northern Collegiate Hockey Association (hockey only)
NCAADivision III
Athletic directorJason Imperati
LocationAppleton, Wisconsin
Varsity teams21
Football stadiumBanta Bowl (5,255)
Basketball arenaAlexander Gymnasium
Baseball stadiumWhiting Field[21]
NicknameVikings (1926)[22]
Fight song"Go, Lawrence, Go"[22]
ColorsNavy and White
         
Websitewww.lawrence.edu/athletics/

Lawrence University's intercollegiate athletic teams, known as the Vikings since 1926,[22] compete in the Midwest Conference in National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, fencing, football, golf, ice hockey, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis, and track & field; women's sports include basketball, cross country, fencing, golf, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field, and volleyball.

In 2005–06, the men's basketball team was ranked first in Division III for much of the season, after starting the season unranked.[23] The Vikings were the only undefeated team in all divisions of college basketball for the last six weeks of the season, ending with a record of 25–1. Star forward Chris Braier won the Josten's Award as the top player in the country for both playing ability and community service.[24] Coach John Tharp was named Division III Midwest Coach of the Year.[25] Beginning in 2004, Lawrence qualified for the Division III national tournament in five of the next six years (2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009).[23] Their best result was in 2004, advancing to the quarterfinals (Elite 8), but fell to eventual national champion Wisconsin–Stevens Point by a point in overtime at Tacoma, Washington.[26]

In 2011, Lawrence's men's cross country team won the Midwest Conference championships for the first time since 1985, beating Grinnell College and ending its 14-year winning streak.

Recognition

Lawrence was ranked 63rd on the 2022-2023 U.S. News: List of Best U.S. National Liberal Arts Colleges and 35th in its best-value schools list.[27]

Notable faculty

  • William Chaney, historian
  • Richard N. Current, historian
  • Estelí Gomez, soprano
  • William H. Riker, political scientist
  • Charles B. Schudson, judge
  • Fred Sturm, jazz composer and musician
  • Arthur Thrall, artist
  • Harry Dexter White, economist, first U.S. Director of IMF (1946–47), and Soviet informant
  • John Holiday, opera singer, music professor, and finalist on season 19 of The Voice.
  • Peter N. Peregrine, renowned anthropologist and archaeologist


Notable alumni

  • James Sibree Anderson, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Martha Bablitch, judge of the Wisconsin Court of Appeals
  • John Miller Baer, 1909, Congressman from North Dakota[28]
  • William Baer, Assistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division
  • Melvin Baldwin, Congressman from Minnesota[29]
  • Charles A. Barnard, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Sam Barry, college basketball and baseball coach (attended)[30]
  • Myrt Basing, NFL player[31]
  • Jennifer Baumgardner, 1992, feminist writer and activist[32]
  • Lisle Blackbourn, 1925, NFL head coach[33]
  • Champ Boettcher, NFL player[34]
  • Thomas Boyd, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Alexander Brazeau, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Webster E. Brown, Congressman from Wisconsin (attended)[35]
  • Bonnie Bryant, 1968, author of children's books[36]
  • Louis B. Butler Jr., 1973, associate justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court[36]
  • Thomas Callaway, Actor and Interior Designer
  • Robert A. Collins, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Julia Colman (1828–1909), American temperance educator, activist, editor, writer
  • Charles Rankin Deniston, Wisconsin State Representative
  • James Dinsdale, Wisconsin State Representative
  • William Diver, 1942, linguist and founder of the Columbia School of Linguistics
  • Pawo Choyning Dorji, 2006, filmmaker and photographer
  • William Draheim, Wisconsin State Senator
  • Paul Driessen, 1970, author and lobbyist[37]
  • Dale Duesing, 1967, operatic baritone[36]
  • Siri Engberg, curator, Walker Art Center[38]
  • Cynthia Estlund, 1978, law professor and author[39]
  • Edna Ferber, author and playwright (attended)[40]
  • James A. Frear, Congressman from Wisconsin (attended)[41]
  • Earle W. Fricker, Wisconsin State Representative
  • William Fuller, 1975, poet and senior vice president and chief fiduciary officer of Northern Trust Corporation[42]
  • Dominic Fumusa, 1991, actor[43][44]
  • John Rankin Gamble, 1872, Congressman from South Dakota[45]
  • Robert J. Gamble, 1874, Congressman from South Dakota[46][47]
  • Ed Glick, NFL player (attended)[48]
  • Walter Samuel Goodland, governor of Wisconsin (attended)[49]
  • Suzanne Graff, actress
  • Michael P. Hammond, 1954, chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts[47]
  • Lorena Hickok, confidante of Eleanor Roosevelt (attended)[50]
  • Earnest Hooton, 1903, physical anthropologist[51]
  • John D. Huber, Columbia University political scientist
  • Thomas R. Hudd, Congressman from Wisconsin (attended)[52]
  • Frank W. Humphrey, 1881, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Bruce Iglauer, founder of Alligator Records
  • Lester Johnson, Congressman from Wisconsin
  • Zachary Scot Johnson, 2001, singer-songwriter and creator of Thesongadayproject[53]
  • Jeffrey Jones, 1968, actor[54]
  • Kaja Kallas, 1999, Prime Minister of Estonia
  • Scott Klug, 1975 former congressman from Wisconsin[47]
  • Peter Kolkay, bassoonist
  • Eddie Kotal, National Football League player
  • Takakazu Kuriyama, Japanese ambassador to the United States (attended)[55]
  • Barbara Lawton, 1987, Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin (2001–2011)[36]
  • Fred Lerdahl, 1965, composer and music theorist[47]
  • John A. Luke Jr., 1971, CEO of MeadWestvaco[56]
  • Harry N. MacLean, 1964, true crime author[57]
  • Momodu Maligie, 2004, Minister of Water Resources for Sierra Leone
  • William H. Markham, Wisconsin State Senator
  • John McDonald, NFL player
  • James H. McGillan, mayor of Green Bay, Wisconsin
  • James Merrell, 1975, professor of history at Vassar College[47]
  • John S. Mills, U.S. Air Force major general[58]
  • Terry Moran, 1982, chief White House correspondent for ABC News[36]
  • David Mulford, 1969, United States Ambassador to India (2004–2009)[36]
  • William F. Nash, Wisconsin State Senator
  • George Allen Neeves, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Tom Neff, 1975, CEO and founder of The Documentary Channel[56]
  • Justus Henry Nelson, missionary in the Amazon (attended)[59]
  • Garth Neustadter, 2011 Emmy winner, Outstanding Music Composition for a Series[60]
  • Angelia Thurston Newman, poet, author, lecturer
  • Roger Nicoll, 1963, neuroscientist at UCSF
  • Jessica Nelson North, 1917, author[47]
  • Arnold C. Otto, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Rip Owens, NFL player (attended)[61]
  • Alice Peacock, 1992 singer-songwriter[62]
  • Charles Pettibone, Wisconsin State Senator
  • Cindy Regal, 2001, experimental physicist
  • Scott Reppert, 1983, player for Lawrence's football team[47]
  • Eben Eugene Rexford, author of works on gardening (attended)[47]
  • Carl W. Riddick, member of the U.S. House of Representatives from the Second District of Montana[63]
  • Josh Sawyer, video game designer at Obsidian Entertainment[64]
  • Melvin H. Schlytter, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Campbell Scott, 1983, actor[36]
  • Michael Shurtleff, 1942, casting director, author[47]
  • Eric Simonson, 1982, Oscar-winning writer–director[47]
  • Red Smith, 1926, MLB player, NFL player and assistant coach, head coach of the Georgetown Hoyas football team and Wisconsin Badgers football team[47]
  • Janet Steiger, 1961, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission[47]
  • Thomas A. Steitz, 1962, Sterling Professor of Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry at Yale University, 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry laureate[47]
  • Heidi Stober, 2000, operatic soprano
  • Fred Sturm, 1973, jazz composer and arranger[62]
  • William T. Sullivan, Wisconsin State Representative
  • Gladys Taber (1899–1980), author
  • Anton R. Valukas, 1965, U.S. attorney, author of the Valukas Report
  • Madhuri Vijay, 2009, novelist, author of The Far Field
  • James Franklin Ware, 1871, legislator
  • William Warner, U.S. Senator from Missouri (attended)[65]
  • Iva Bigelow Weaver, soprano and music educator based in Milwaukee
  • Alexander B. Whitman, Wisconsin State Senator
  • George W. Wolff, Wisconsin State Representative and Senator
  • Tom Zoellner, 1991, author, journalist
  • Al Zupek, 1944, NFL player[47]


See also

  • List of NCAA fencing schools

References

  1. As of June 30, 2021. U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2021 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY20 to FY21 (Report). National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA. February 18, 2022. https://www.nacubo.org/-/media/Nacubo/Documents/research/2021-NTSE-Public-Tables--Endowment-Market-Values--REVISED-February-18-2022.ashx. Retrieved February 20, 2022. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 As of Fall 2013. "Lawrence University 2013 Profile". Lawrence University. http://www.lawrence.edu/mfhe/www_dept_ora/Everyone/MI13-138%20LU%20Profile%202013_2.pdf. 
  3. "Lawrence History | Lawrence University". Lawrence.edu. http://www.lawrence.edu/library/archives/history.shtml. 
  4. See also Charles Breunig’s book, A Great and Good Work: A History of Lawrence University, 1847–1964.
  5. Council of Independent Colleges, "Main Hall", Historic Campus Architecture Project.
  6. "President Mark Burstein". http://www.lawrence.edu/admissions/about/president. 
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