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Reference
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Cambridge History
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Later National Literature, Part III
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Scholars
> The French Influence; Quesnay
The Later Eighteenth Century; Ezra Stiles
Du Ponceau
CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
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INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
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BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVIII. Later National Literature, Part III.
XXV.
Scholars
.
§ 4. The French Influence; Quesnay.
The time, ripe for change, soon began to feel new tendencies away from English and toward Continental culture. As early as 1778, the Chevalier Quesnay de Beaurepaire was encouraged by John Page, Lieutenant-Governor of Virginia, to establish at Richmond a French Academy of the Arts and Sciences, and by 1786 he had obtained from a number of prominent Virginians and Baltimoreans a subscription amounting to sixty thousand francs. Quesnay had in mind the highest special training of American students in the arts and sciences; he planned solely for the completion of the education of young men after they have graduated from college."
10
Among the supporters of this proposal for the first graduate school in America was Thomas Jefferson, then resident in Paris; it is contemporaneous with his own plan (1779) to develop William and Mary College into a true university by modernizing its curriculum. The Academy proposed to institute schools in foreign languages, design, architecture, painting, sculpture, and engraving, as well as in the natural sciences; similarly, of the eight professorships proposed by Jefferson for the expanded William and Mary College, four were distinctly humanistic.
4
Quesnays plan for the Academy fell through because the French Revolution withdrew from it his countrys attention and support; Jeffersons plan for the extension of William and Mary developed at length into his foundation of the University of Virginia; and the curriculums proposed for these earlier schools became the basis of the genuinely humanistic curriculum and the advanced university organization of that institution. Moreover, the organization by schools or subjects instead of by college classes is believed by historians of education to have suggested to George Ticknor the idea of the departmental and of the elective system, so far as he was able to introduce them at Harvard.
5
Note 10
. See Benjamin Rushs scheme of a national university (1788),
American Museum,
IV,
442 ff. (so G. W. Spindler,
Karl Follen,
94 and note).
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CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
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INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Later Eighteenth Century; Ezra Stiles
Du Ponceau
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