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Abbott Lawrence Lowell

 
Abbott Lawrence Lowell

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Abbott Lawrence Lowell



 
 
Abbott Lawrence Lowell (January 1, 1856–January 6, 1943) was a U.S. educator, historian, and President of Harvard University
President of Harvard University

The President is the chief academic administration of Harvard University. Ex officio the chairman of the Harvard Corporation, he or she is appointed by and is responsible to the other members of that body, who delegate to him or her the day-to-day running of the university....
 (1909–33).

Abbott's siblings included poet Amy Lowell
Amy Lowell

Amy Lawrence Lowell was an United States poet of the imagist school from Brookline, Massachusetts who posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1926....
, astronomer Percival Lowell
Percival Lowell

Percival Lawrence Lowell was a businessman, author, mathematician, and astronomer who fueled speculation that there were Martian canal on Mars , founded the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, Arizona, and formed the beginning of the effort that led to the discovery of Pluto 14 years after his death....
 (Harvard 1876), and early activist for prenatal care Elizabeth Lowell Putnam
Elizabeth Lowell Putnam

Elizabeth Lowell Putnam was born in Brookline, Massachusetts in the late 19th century, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Lowell of Boston. Elizabeth grew up on her families estate, which later be called Sevenels for the seven Lowells which comprised her family, including her brothers Abbott Lawrence Lowell and Percival Lowell and...
. They were the great-grandchildren of John Lowell
John Lowell

Hon. John Lowell , born in Newburyport, Massachusetts; the son of Rev. John Lowell and Sarah Champney. John Lowell was a respected lawyer, selectman, jurist, delegate to Congress, and federal judge....
 (Harvard 1760) and, on their mother's side, the grandchildren of Abbott Lawrence
Abbott Lawrence

Abbott Lawrence was a prominent United States businessman, politician, and philanthropist. He founded Lawrence, Massachusetts.Born in Groton, Massachusetts, the son of Revolutionay War officer Samuel Lawrence , Abbott Lawrence attended Groton Academy, Upon his graduation in 1808, Lawrence became an apprentice to his brother, Amos Lawrence...
. As well as great-great nephew of Francis Cabot Lowell.






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Abbott Lawrence Lowell (January 1, 1856–January 6, 1943) was a U.S. educator, historian, and President of Harvard University
President of Harvard University

The President is the chief academic administration of Harvard University. Ex officio the chairman of the Harvard Corporation, he or she is appointed by and is responsible to the other members of that body, who delegate to him or her the day-to-day running of the university....
 (1909–33).

Abbott's siblings included poet Amy Lowell
Amy Lowell

Amy Lawrence Lowell was an United States poet of the imagist school from Brookline, Massachusetts who posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1926....
, astronomer Percival Lowell
Percival Lowell

Percival Lawrence Lowell was a businessman, author, mathematician, and astronomer who fueled speculation that there were Martian canal on Mars , founded the Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, Arizona, and formed the beginning of the effort that led to the discovery of Pluto 14 years after his death....
 (Harvard 1876), and early activist for prenatal care Elizabeth Lowell Putnam
Elizabeth Lowell Putnam

Elizabeth Lowell Putnam was born in Brookline, Massachusetts in the late 19th century, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Lowell of Boston. Elizabeth grew up on her families estate, which later be called Sevenels for the seven Lowells which comprised her family, including her brothers Abbott Lawrence Lowell and Percival Lowell and...
. They were the great-grandchildren of John Lowell
John Lowell

Hon. John Lowell , born in Newburyport, Massachusetts; the son of Rev. John Lowell and Sarah Champney. John Lowell was a respected lawyer, selectman, jurist, delegate to Congress, and federal judge....
 (Harvard 1760) and, on their mother's side, the grandchildren of Abbott Lawrence
Abbott Lawrence

Abbott Lawrence was a prominent United States businessman, politician, and philanthropist. He founded Lawrence, Massachusetts.Born in Groton, Massachusetts, the son of Revolutionay War officer Samuel Lawrence , Abbott Lawrence attended Groton Academy, Upon his graduation in 1808, Lawrence became an apprentice to his brother, Amos Lawrence...
. As well as great-great nephew of Francis Cabot Lowell. In retrospect, he is a controversial figure because of his racist, anti-semitic, and homophobic policies for Harvard while president.

A life in public

This scion of a famous family was second son of Augustus Lowell and Katherine Bigelow Lowell, and born in Brookline, MA. The Lowells, a prominent Boston family, named their Brookline estate Sevenels for the fact that there were 7 children in their family.

Lowell graduated from Noble and Greenough School
Noble and Greenough School

The Noble and Greenough School, commonly known as Nobles, is a coeducational, nonsectarian day and boarding school for students in grades seven through twelve....
 in 1873 and went on to attend Harvard College
Harvard College

Harvard College is the undergraduate section and oldest school of Harvard University, a private university in the United States founded in 1636 by the Massachusetts legislature....
. He graduated in 1877 with highest honors in mathematics, and from Harvard Law School
Harvard Law School

Harvard Law School is one of the professional graduate schools of Harvard University. Located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, it is the United States' oldest law school in continuous operation....
 in 1880. He practiced law from 1880 to 1897 in partnership with his cousin, Francis Cabot Lowell, with whom he wrote Transfer of Stock in Corporations (1884).

Lowell also wrote Essays on Government (1889), Governments and Parties in Continental Europe (2 vols., 1896), Colonial Civil Service (1900; with an account by H. Morse Stephens of the East India College at Haileybury
Haileybury and Imperial Service College

Haileybury and Imperial Service College, , is a British independent school founded in 1862. It is a co-educational boarding school enrolling pupils at 11+, 13+ and 16+....
), and The Government of England (2 vols., 1908).

In 1897, Lowell became lecturer, and in 1898, professor of government at Harvard.

Lowell succeeded his father as Trustee of the Lowell Institute
Lowell Institute

Lowell Institute, an educational foundation in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A., providing for free public lectures, and endowed by the bequest of $237,000 left by John Lowell, Jr....
 in 1900. And in 1909, he succeeded Charles William Eliot
Charles William Eliot

Charles William Eliot was an United States academic who was selected as Harvard University president in 1869. He transformed the provincial college into the preeminent American research university....
 as president of the university. In the same year, he became president of the American Political Science Association
American Political Science Association

The American Political Science Association is an professional association of political science students and scholars in the United States. Founded in 1903, it publishes three academic journals ....
.

Lowell's election as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters reflects the regard in which he was held in his own lifetime.

Head of Harvard

Lowell served as president of Harvard University from 1909 to 1933 (24 years), a span only surpassed by his predecessors Charles William Eliot
Charles William Eliot

Charles William Eliot was an United States academic who was selected as Harvard University president in 1869. He transformed the provincial college into the preeminent American research university....
 (40 years) and Edward Holyoke
Edward Holyoke

Edward Holyoke was an early American clergyman, and the 9th President of Harvard College....
 (32).

As president, Lowell continued pressing for the evolution of "concentrations" (Harvard's name for academic major
Academic major

An academic major, major concentration, concentration, or simply major is mainly a United States and Canada term for a college or university student's main field of specialization during his or her undergraduate studies which would be in addition to, and may incorporate portions of, a core curriculum....
s), which he had begun to develop while still a professor. His predecessor, Charles W. Eliot, had replaced the single standardized undergraduate course with a plethora of electives; Lowell encouraged, and eventually required, students to concentrate the bulk of their studies in one academic field. Although headed in very different directions, both Eliot's reforms and Lowell's had wide impact on higher education throughout the US.

Lowell is remembered for establishing the Harvard Extension School
Harvard Extension School

Harvard Extension School , one of the twelve degree-granting schools of Harvard University, was founded by university President A. Lawrence Lowell in 1910....
 and creating Harvard College's residential house system
Residential college

A residential college is an organisational pattern for a division of a university that places academic activity in a community setting of students and faculty, usually at a halls of residence and with shared meals, the college having a degree of autonomy and a federalism relationship with the overall university....
 (see Harvard College#House system
Harvard College

Harvard College is the undergraduate section and oldest school of Harvard University, a private university in the United States founded in 1636 by the Massachusetts legislature....
), which today remains a central part of the undergraduate experience. He also co-founded the Harvard Society of Fellows
Harvard Society of Fellows

The Harvard Society of Fellows is a collection of luminaries selected by Harvard University to be given special honors, upon whom distinctive academic and intellectual opportunities are bestowed....
.

Among the new campus buildings of Lowell's tenure is the President's House
President's House (Harvard)

President's House, found at 17 Quincy Street, served as a residence for Harvard University President of Harvard University until 1971, when Derek Bok moved his family to Elmwood ....
 (today Loeb House) at 17 Quincy Street, which Lowell commissioned from his cousin Guy Lowell
Guy Lowell

Guy Lowell , United States architect, was the son of Mary Walcott and Edward Jackson Lowell, and a member of Boston, Massachusetts well-known Lowell family....
 (Harvard 1892); it remained the residence of succeeding Harvard Presidents until 1971.

Critical re-appraisal

Lowell's contributions to Harvard and to American society have been revisited in the years since his death. Many have denounced Lowell for a wide variety of actions and statements which reflected his apparent bigotry towards homosexuals, women, Jews, African-Americans, and other ethnic minorities.

In 2005, a small group of students, calling themselves the Lowell Liberation Front, lobbied unsuccessfully to have two likenesses removed from Lowell House
Lowell House

Lowell House is one of the twelve undergraduate residential houses at Harvard University for sophomores, juniors, and seniors. Named for the prominent Lowell family, it was built in 1930 as part of Harvard President Abbott Lawrence Lowell's drive to provide housing for all Harvard students....
, a Harvard house named for Lowell's family.

Opposed Brandeis nomination to US Supreme Court

In 1916, after President Woodrow Wilson
Woodrow Wilson

Thomas Woodrow Wilson was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States. A devout Presbyterianism and leading intellectual of the Progressive Era, he served as President of Princeton University of Princeton University from 1902 to 1910, and then as the Governor of New Jersey from 1911 to 1913....
 nominated Louis Brandeis
Louis Brandeis

Louis Dembitz Brandeis was an American lawyer, Supreme Court Justice, advocate of privacy, and developer of the Brandeis Brief in Muller v. Oregon....
 for the Supreme Court, Lowell and others sought to block his confirmation by claiming that Brandeis was a radical Zionist, even though he was not a practicing Jew. Brandeis aggressively outmaneuvered his detractors by mounting his own opposition research efforts, including a carefully constructed chart that exposed the social and financial connections of the group, mostly from Boston's Back Bay. Brandeis sent the chart to Walter Lippman at the New Republic
New Republic

New Republic may refer to:* The New Republic, an American political commentary magazine* The New Republic , an 1878 satirical novel by William Hurrell Mallock...
 who penned an editorial condemning "the most homogeneous, self-centered, and self-complacent community in the United States." Brandeis was confirmed after four months of hearings, in a Senate vote of 47-22.

Opposed clemency for Sacco and Vanzetti

Lowell's involvement in the trial and execution of Sacco and Vanzetti
Sacco and Vanzetti

Ferdinando Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were two Italian-born laborers and Anarchism who were trial , convicted and Electric chair on August 23, 1927 in Massachusetts, United States for the 1920 armed robbery and murder of a pay-clerk and a security guard in Braintree, Massachusetts, U.S....
 has also been a source of controversy. The guilt or innocence of these two men, convicted of murder, had become a cause célèbre and in 1927 the governor of Massachusetts in considering clemency appointed an advisory committee with Lowell as chairman.

One author describes the result thus: "The committee...concluded that the trial and judicial process had been just, 'on the whole', and that clemency was not warranted. It only fueled controversy over the fate of the two men, and Harvard, because of Lowell's role, became stigmatized, in the words of one of its alumni, as 'Hangman's House.'"

Supported quota for Jewish enrollment at Harvard

During his presidency, Lowell became disturbed by the rising number of Jewish students at Harvard. As documented in Jerome Karabel's 2005 book The Chosen, Lowell thus urged Harvard to adopt a 15-percent admissions quota on Jewish students, warning "the summer hotel that is ruined by admitting Jews meets its fate because they drive away the Gentiles, and then after the Gentiles have left, they leave also." The initiative met with strong opposiion from Felix Frankfurter
Felix Frankfurter

Felix Frankfurter was an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States....
 and others and was subsequently defeated.

Supported racial segregation at Harvard

In a 1922 letter to a black undergraduate, Lowell confirmed that he would not be permitted to live in the freshman dormitories: "I am sure you will understand why, from the beginning, we have not thought it possible to compel men of different races to reside together."

Expelled homosexual students


A 2002 article by Amit R. Paley in focused on Lowell's role in a secret Harvard "court" that expelled eight students and one philosophy Ph.D. candidate for being homosexual or associating with homosexuals. Two of the expelled students, Cyril Wilcox and Ernest Cummings, committed suicide that year. Another, Keith Smerage, killed himself 10 years later.

This compelled Harvard President Lawrence Summers
Lawrence Summers

Lawrence Henry "Larry" Summers is an American economist and the head of the White House's National Economic Council for President Barack Obama....
 to reflect, more than 80 years after the fact: "These reports of events long ago are extremely disturbing. They are part of a past that we have rightly left behind." Summers apologized, saying "I want to express our deep regret for the way this situation was handled, as well as the anguish the students and their families must have experienced eight decades ago." He continued, "Whatever attitudes may have been prevalent then, persecuting individuals on the basis of sexual orientation is abhorrent and an affront to the values of our university. We are a better and more just community today because those attitudes have changed as much as they have."

See also

  • Lowell family
    Lowell family

    The Lowell family settled on the North Shore at Cape Ann after they arrived in Boston on June 23, 1639. The patriarch, Percival Lowle , described as a "solid citizen of Bristol", determined at the age of 68 that the future was in the New World....
  • First Families of Boston
  • Lowell Institute
    Lowell Institute

    Lowell Institute, an educational foundation in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A., providing for free public lectures, and endowed by the bequest of $237,000 left by John Lowell, Jr....


External links

  • is available for free download at Google Books.