* * Search the Gazette
 
Harvard shieldHarvard University Gazette Harvard University Gazette
* Harvard News Office | Photo reprints | Previous issues | Contact us | Circulation
Current Issue:
November 04, 2004


News
News, events, features

Science/Research
Latest scientific findings

Profiles
The people behind the university

Community
Harvard and neighbor communities

Sports
Scores, highlights, upcoming games

On Campus
Newsmakers, notes, students, police log

Arts
Museums, concerts, theater

Calendar
Two-week listing of upcoming events

Subscribe  xml button
Gazette headlines delivered to your desktop

 

 


HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES

This month in Harvard history

Nov. 6, 1770 - Rumblings of Revolution: Joseph Avery, Class of 1771, orates on "Oppression and Tyranny" before the Speaking Club.

Nov. 1791 - A writer in the Boston press accuses Harvard of poisoning students' minds with Edward Gibbon's monumental "History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" (1776-88). President Joseph Willard replies that far from even considering Gibbon, the College uses a text by French historian Abbé Millot. Nathaniel Ames, who left Harvard around 1812, recalls Millot's as "the most utterly worthless and contemptible work of that kind or any other extant."

Nov. 24, 1873 - Charles Sprague Sargent officially begins a 54-year term as first Director of the Arnold Arboretum (est. 1872). Sargent soon enlists the aid of pioneering landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted - then busy designing the Boston park system - to help him lay out the grounds.

Nov. 23, 1876 - Princeton convenes a meeting in Springfield, Mass., that results in the formation of the Intercollegiate Football Association (Princeton, Harvard, and Columbia). Yale decides not to join but does contribute to the development of the IFA's modified rugby rules.

- From the Harvard Historical Calendar, a database compiled by Marvin Hightower







Copyright 2007 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College