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С¸£Àûµ¼º½ College
С¸£Àûµ¼º½ History

Charles KeyesCharles Henry Keyes

Charles Henry Keyes, a well-known educator from Teachers College, Columbia University, became С¸£Àûµ¼º½'s first president in 1912. His vision and energy gave the school the momentum it needed to grow into something more than a hybrid college and vocational school. In 1922 Keyes fulfilled his avowed ambition of having the С¸£Àûµ¼º½ School of Arts chartered as С¸£Àûµ¼º½ College, a four-year degree-granting institution.

In addition to developing a liberal arts curriculum that became the basis for С¸£Àûµ¼º½'s present curriculum, Keyes pioneered the formation of a baccalaureate nursing program and began the more active shaping of a campus. By the time of his death in 1925, he had played a key role in acquiring several of the large Victorian homes overlooking Congress Park, which began to give the college a recognizable physical identity.

The Keyes Quadrangle (Howe, Rounds, and Wait halls and Jonsson Tower) is named for him.