Difference between revisions of "Nicholas Murray Butler"

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==See also==
 
==See also==
 
 
*''[[Nicholas Miraculous]]'', a biography of Butler by Columbia [[English]] professor [[Michael Rosenthal]]
 
*''[[Nicholas Miraculous]]'', a biography of Butler by Columbia [[English]] professor [[Michael Rosenthal]]
  
  
 
{{succession|preceded=[[Seth Low]]|succeeded=[[Dwight D. Eisenhower]]|office=President of Columbia University|years=[[1902]]-[[1945]]}}
 
{{succession|preceded=[[Seth Low]]|succeeded=[[Dwight D. Eisenhower]]|office=President of Columbia University|years=[[1902]]-[[1945]]}}
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[[Category:University presidents|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
 
[[Category:University presidents|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
[[Category:History|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
 
 
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
 
[[Category:Columbia College alumni|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
[[Category:GSAS alumni|Butler]]
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[[Category:GSAS alumni|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
 
[[Category:Former professors|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
 
[[Category:Former professors|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
 
[[Category:Philosophy professors|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
 
[[Category:Philosophy professors|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]
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[[Category:Class of 1882|Butler, Nicholas Murray]]

Revision as of 11:44, 25 March 2008

See also Wikipedia's article about "Nicholas Murray Butler".
Nicholas Murray Butler

Nicholas Murray Butler CC 1882 MA 1883 PhD 1884 was the ruler of Columbia for over four decades (1902-1945). Accused of suppressing professorial dissent to two world wars, attempting to turn Columbia into the preserve of elite WASPs, trying to erase Columbia College by privileging grad schools, and conferring legitimacy upon Nazi Germany.

He also won a Nobel Peace Prize and was a candidate for Vice President of the United States. Butler Library and the Butler Medal are named after him.

While a student at Columbia, Mr. Butler was a member of Psi Upsilon and the Peithologian Society. He studied philosophy during his time at the university, and after a brief jaunt through Europe, joined the faculty as a philosophy professor in 1885.

See also


Preceded by
Seth Low
President of Columbia University 
1902-1945
Succeeded by
Dwight D. Eisenhower