PrincetonUniversity
A Princeton Profile 1997-98

A Princeton Time Line

 

1696  Town of Princeton settled.

1746  College of New Jersey founded in Elizabeth, New Jersey, by the Presbyterian Synod. Jonathan Dickinson appointed first president.

1747  College moves to Newark under President Aaron Burr, Sr.

1748  Present charter granted in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

1753  Nathaniel and Rebeckah FitzRandolph and others deed 10 acres in Princeton to the College.

1756  Nassau Hall completed; College of New Jersey moves from Newark to Princeton.

1757  Jonathan Edwards becomes third president.

1759  Samuel Davies installed as fourth president.

1761  Samuel Finley becomes fifth president.

1768  The Reverend John Witherspoon of Scotland installed as sixth president.

1769  American Whig Debating Society formed.

1770  Cliosophic Debating Society formed.

1776  President Witherspoon signs the Declaration of Independence.

1777  George Washington drives the British from Nassau Hall.

1783  Continental Congress meets in Nassau Hall, which served as a capitol of the United States from June until November.

1795  Samuel S. Smith becomes seventh president.

1812  Ashbel Green installed as eighth president.

1823  James Carnahan becomes ninth president.

1826  James Madison, Class of 1771 and former president of the United States, becomes the first president of the Alumni Association of the College of New Jersey.

1854  John Maclean, Jr. installed as tenth president.

1868  James McCosh of Scotland elected eleventh president.

1876  The Princetonian is published for the first time (still published daily by students during the academic year).

1883  Triangle Club (originally called Princeton College Dramatic Association) founded.

1888  Francis L. Patton becomes twelfth president; Princeton University Art Museum founded.

1893  Honor system established.

1896  Name officially changed to Princeton University.

1900  Graduate School established.

1902  Woodrow Wilson, Class of 1879, elected thirteenth president.

1905  President Wilson establishes system of preceptorials by junior faculty.

1906  Carnegie Lake created by Andrew Carnegie.

1912  John G. Hibben installed as fourteenth president.

1913  Graduate College dedicated.

1914  Palmer Stadium completed.

1919  School of Architecture established.

1921  School of Engineering established.

1928  Princeton University Chapel dedicated.

1930  School of Public and International Affairs established.

1933  Harold W. Dodds becomes fifteenth president; Albert Einstein becomes a life member of the Institute for Advanced Study, with an office on the Princeton campus.

1940  Program of Annual Giving established. Undergraduate radio station (then WPRU, now WPRB) founded.

1948  Firestone Library dedicated.

1951  Forrestal Campus established on U.S. Route 1; "Project Matterhorn" research in nuclear fusion begins there. In 1961 its name is changed to the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory.

1957  Robert F. Goheen installed as sixteenth president.

1962  $53 million fund-raising campaign, under President Robert F. Goheen, concludes. It exceeded its goal and raised $61 million.

1964  Ph.D. degree awarded to a woman for the first time.

1969  Trustees vote to admit women undergraduates.

1970  Council of the Princeton University Community (CPUC), a deliberative body of faculty, students, staff, and alumni, is established.

1971  Third World Center founded.

1972  William G. Bowen becomes seventeenth president.

1982  System of residential colleges established.

1986  A five-year "Campaign for Princeton" concludes under President William G. Bowen after raising $410.5 million.

1988  Harold T. Shapiro installed as eighteenth president.

1996  The University begins its 250th anniversary celebration, beginning on the eve of Alumni Day and ending with Commencement in 1997.

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