Home
- Introductory Note
- Index
- Chapter 1: A University Dream That Failed
- Chapter 2: Hamilton versus Rochester
- Chapter 3: The Year of Decisions: 1850
- Chapter 4: A College Opens
- Chapter 5: Portrait of a President
- Chapter 6: A Critical Decade
- Chapter 7: The Civil War Era
- Chapter 8: Continuity and Growth
- Chapter 9: University Gallery
- Chapter 10: The End of an Age
- Chapter 11: Hill and the Interregnum
- Chapter 12: Collegians and Graduates in the 'Nineties
- Chapter 13: Enter the Ladies
- Chapter 14: Rhees of Rochester
- Chapter 15: Widening Horizons
- Chapter 16: Men and Women
- Chapter 17: Sunshine and Shadow
- Chapter 18: The Birth of a Music Center
- Chapter 19: Voices of Music
- Chapter 20: Shaping the Medical Center
- Chapter 21: Sons of Aesculapius
- Chapter 22: Oak Hill Becomes the River Campus
- Chapter 23: The Changing College
- Chapter 24: Beyond the Curriculum
- Chapter 25: Hail, Farewell, Hail
- Chapter 26: The Depression Decade
- Chapter 27: Undergraduates and Graduates in the 'Thirties
- Chapter 28: Music and Medicine in the 1930's
- Chapter 29: The Impact of Pearl Harbor
- Chapter 30: Education for Victory
- Chapter 31: Women, Music and Medicine in Wartime
- Chapter 32: Valentine: The Last Phase
- Chapter 33: The First Century Ends
- Chapter 34: The Coming of de Kiewiet
- Chapter 35: Reunion of the Colleges
- Chapter 36: River Campus Panorama
- Chapter 37: In Pursuit of Excellence
- Chapter 38: Undergraduate Life Beside the Genesee
- Chapter 39: The Eastman School -- The Postwar Years
History of the University of Rochester, 1850-1962, by Professor Arthur J. May
Upon his retirement in 1964 after almost 40 years of teaching European history at the University of Rochester, Professor Arthur J. May was appointed University Historian to write a history of the University.
He and his two research assistants had nearly completed the first draft at the time of his sudden and unexpected death in June 1968. The assistants finished researching and writing two more chapters before the office closed the next year.
The manuscript draft, thorough and detailed, was too long to publish as a single volume. But to make it more immediately useful, Karl S. Kabelac of the library staff was employed in 1971 to create an index to it. This index has greatly added to its usefulness, and can be accessed below.
Several years later, Lawrence E. Klein, UR 1971, was employed to abridge the manuscript to book length. This abridged version was then published in 1977. Copies of the book are available in the University of Rochester library collections.
The volume as published does not contain the footnotes. Thus the original manuscript draft has continued to be useful, both for the fact that it contains much information not in the published volume, and the fact that it has the footnotes. These footnotes are invaluable for anyone wishing to research more deeply into many aspects of the University's history.
A researcher using the footnotes, though, has to be aware that Dr. May did not footnote individual facts, but rather footnoted one or more paragraphs at a time. Thus in using the manuscript, one sometimes has to study a footnote to decide which of the several citations in the footnote relates to the particular fact one is interested in pursuing.
Finally, today's readers of this history are urged to remember that Professor May -- born in 1899 -- was a man of his times, and he sometimes expressed a different view of the role of women at the University, and other subjects, than we are accustomed to.