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Title McMaster University. Volume 2, The early years in Hamilton 1930-1957 / Charles M. Johnston
Published Montreal [Quebec] : Published for McMaster University by McGill-Queen's University Press, 2015

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Description 1 online resource (xvi, 330 pages)
Series ACUP E-Book
Contents Cover; CONTENTS; ILLUSTRATIONS; PREFACE; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; Prologue; 1 Establishing the new campus; 2 The troubled thirties; 3 Another wartime; 4 Crossroads; 5 Emergency years; 6 Hamilton College; 7 New directions; 8 The long game; Epilogue; APPENDIX; NOTES; A NOTE ON SOURCES; INDEX; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; U; V; W; Y
Summary McMaster University was established in 1887 as a trust to the Baptist constituency of central Canada. This second volume of the university's history chronicles its transformation from a modest university college into an important university. It is the story of survival through the Depression and the Second World War to eventual emergence as a recognized scientific research centre and of how this role, never envisaged at the time when arts and theology were McMaster's chief concerns, dictated the university's divorce from its original Baptist sponsors. McMaster's move to Hamilton in 1930 coincided with the Depression, a catastrophe that haunted the university throughout the decade, thwarting new programs, forcing economies, and shattering the hopes entertained for the institution during the 1920s. This chastening interlude was followed by war, which further curbed development and created serious financial and enrolment problems, but the war also spurred scientific research, particularly in nuclear physics. Funds for science were sought outside the Baptist constituency, but to be eligible for them a new and separate institution had to be formed, so in 1948 Hamilton College was incorporated and affiliated with McMaster. Members of the arts faculty were disturbed by the growing stress on science, and the university's attempts to strengthen arts and theology in the 1950s so threatened to overtax its resources that McMaster was forced to seek state aid for its entire operation. In 1957, McMaster was reorganized as a private non-denominational institution, eligible for public funding. Its days as a Baptist university came to an end. Charles Johnston pays tribute to those dedicated and resourceful administrators who, through depression, war, and ideological conflicts, provided the expertise essential to the survival and growth of McMaster. This volume, like its predecessor and successor, will be of interest to anyone concerned with the cultural and intellectual growth of the nation
Notes Originally published in 1981 for McMaster University by University of Toronto Press
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Notes Print version record
Subject McMaster University -- History
SUBJECT McMaster University fast
Subject EDUCATION -- Higher.
EDUCATION -- Organizations & Institutions.
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Johnston, Charles M., 1926- Early years in Hamilton, 1930-1957
ISBN 9780773584228
0773584226
9780773582682
0773582681
Other Titles Early years in Hamilton 1930-1957