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French Influence in American Institutions of Higher Learning, 1784–1825

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

Roland G. Paulston*
Affiliation:
Teachers College Columbia University Team with the United States Aid Mission to Peru

Extract

During a period of several decades before and after the American Revolution, France played an influential if not formative role in numerous attempts to create a new American higher learning. After independence, the English college model, dominant for well over a century, no longer inspired or satisfied a small but influential group who demanded republican form and content in higher education as in government. It was to France, the protector of the revolution, that these leading Americans looked for a continuation of inspiration and example in their attempts to found institutions of higher education befitting, to use Seymour Lipset's term, the first new nation.

Type
Europe and America I
Copyright
Copyright © 1968 by New York University 

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References

Notes

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54. Ibid. Google Scholar

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58. Letter to Carr, Peter, September 7, 1814, as quoted in Arrowood, op. cit. , p. 75. (Italics mine.) Google Scholar

59. Elson, Ruth Miller, Guardians of Tradition (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1964). See particularly Chapter 5, “Nations and Nationality.” Google Scholar