The Private
Colleges
The
abundance of literature concerning Yale University is not surprising;
but it is larger than it needs to be. To help sort out what is
worth looking at, researchers might limit themselves to the popular
account by Brooks Mather Kelley, Yale: A History (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1974) or the bibliographies in George M.
Pierson's definitive two-volume work, Yale College: An Educational
History, 1871-1921; and Yale: the University College
(New Haven: Yale University Press, 1952 and 1955). The early colonial
period is dealt with in scholarly detail by Richard Warch in School
of the Prophets Yale College 1701-1740 (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1973). See also biographies of Thomas Clap and Ezra Stiles
listed below.
Trinity
College has been superbly chronicled in Glenn Weaver's The
History of Trinity College (Hartford: the Trinity College
Press, 1967).
For
Wesleyan University:
Dutcher,
George Matthew. An Historical and Critical Survey of the Curriculum
of Wesleyan University and Related Subjects. Middletown: Wesleyan
University Press, 1948. Deals with the period 1831-1948.
Nicolson,
Frank Waiter, ed. Athletics at Wesleyan. Middletown: Wesleyan
University Alumni Council, 1938.
Pomeroy,
Karl Harrington. The Background of Wesleyan, A Study of Local
Conditions about the Time the College was Founded. Middletown:
Wesleyan University Press, 1942.
Price,
Carl Fowler. Wesleyan's First Century Middletown: Wesleyan
University Press, 1932.
Trinity,
Wesleyan, and Yale each gets a chapter in William L. Davis, ed.,
The New England States (Boston, 1897), vol II.
Connecticut
College, formerly Connecticut College for Women, is described
historically in Irene Nye, Chapters in the History of Connecticut
College During the First Three Administrations, 1911-1942
(New London: n. pub., 1943). See also Henry W Littlefield, "The
Role of the Private Community Colleges of Connecticut (1928-1958),"
Junior College Journal 29(0ctober, 1958). This is a summary
of his dissertation (Yale, 1954) by a one-time president of the
University of Bridgeport, formerly the Junior College of Connecticut.