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Colonial Colleges
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Wikipedia.org
Colonial Colleges (Wikipedia.org)

The colonial colleges are nine institutions of higher education chartered in the American Colonies before the American Revolution (1775-1783). These nine have long been considered together, notably in the survey of their origins in the 1907 The Cambridge History of English and American Literature. Although today most of these institutions refer to themselves as "universities", they are called "colonial colleges" partly because, at the time of the revolution, only Penn called itself a "university". Each had assumed the power to grant academic degrees, a power in Europe only held by universities; several were offering some graduate instruction. (See college for more on American usage of that word.)

The nine colonial colleges are listed below in order of foundation under the name by which they were known for the bulk of the colonial period. Also listed are the religious groups that were instrumental in each college's foundation and early history. In most cases the listed religious links, although often strong, were de facto rather than official. (At any rate, all have long since affirmed their secularity.) In addition to the religious/secular boundary, the line between state and private control was also far more blurred than today: as the distinction crystallized over time, some schools became fully independent and others part of their state's higher-education system.

Seven of the nine colonial colleges are part of the Ivy League athletic conference: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Penn, Columbia, Brown, and Dartmouth. (The eighth member of the Ivy League, Cornell University, was founded in 1865.) The two colonial colleges not in the Ivy League are both public universities—The College of William & Mary (in the Colonial Athletic Association) and Rutgers University, the state university of New Jersey (in the Big East Conference).

Institution (present name, where different) Colony Founded Chartered First Instruction, Degrees Primary Religious Influence
Harvard College (Harvard University) Massachusetts Bay Colony 1636 1650 Puritan
The College of William & Mary Colony and Dominion of Virginia 1693 1693 Church of England
Collegiate School (Yale University) Connecticut Colony 1701 1701 Puritan (Congregational)
Academy of Philadelphia (University of Pennsylvania) Province of Pennsylvania 1740 1755 1751 Nonsectarian
College of New Jersey (Princeton University) Province of New Jersey 1746 1746 1747 Presbyterian
King's College (Columbia University in the City of New York) Province of New York 1754 1754 Church of England
College of Rhode Island (Brown University) Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations 1764 1764 Baptist (No religious requirement for admissions)
Queen's College (Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey) Province of New Jersey 1766 1766 1771 Dutch Reformed
Dartmouth College Province of New Hampshire 1769 1769 1768, 1771 Puritan (Congregational)

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