Yale University Is Founded

Yale University Is Founded

On October 9, 1701, the local assembly of the British colony of Connecticut chartered the Collegiate School of Connecticut. At first this new school, formed by a group of clergymen, was located in the town of Killingworth. In 1716 it relocated to New Haven and was renamed Yale College in order to honor its benefactor, Elihu Yale. Today Yale College is Yale University, a world-famous institution of higher learning.

Originally, most of the students at the college lived in the homes of the founding clergymen-teachers, scattered among many towns in the colony of Connecticut. In 1716 the founders began to build in New Haven but soon realized that they needed more money than could be raised locally. Jeremiah Dummer, the colony's agent in England, was interested in the school and asked Yale, who was already known as a philanthropist, for assistance. Cotton Mather, a teacher at the school, most likely appealed to Yale as well. Yale agreed and made a generous gift, and in return the school was named Yale College.

Yale College became Yale University in 1887. In addition to its undergraduate facilities, the university consists of a number of professional and graduate divisions, including those devoted to medicine, law, art and architecture, music, and drama.