english_james_fairfield_jr
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| english_james_fairfield_jr [2023/05/16 15:57] – bant06 | english_james_fairfield_jr [2023/10/26 15:17] (current) – [James Fairfield English, Jr.] bant07 | ||
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| James Fairfield English, Jr. (1927--2020) served as [[presidents|president]] of Trinity College from 1981 to 1989. | James Fairfield English, Jr. (1927--2020) served as [[presidents|president]] of Trinity College from 1981 to 1989. | ||
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| English was born in Putnam, Connecticut on February 15, 1927. His father, the Reverend James Fairfield English, graduated from Trinity in 1916 and received an [[honorary_degrees|honorary Doctor of Divinity]] from the College in 1944. English himself attended high school at the Loomis Chaffee School before enlisting in the U.S. Army in 1944. He was assigned a Japanese language program and upon its completion, he served in the 441st Counter Intelligence Detachment in Japan. | English was born in Putnam, Connecticut on February 15, 1927. His father, the Reverend James Fairfield English, graduated from Trinity in 1916 and received an [[honorary_degrees|honorary Doctor of Divinity]] from the College in 1944. English himself attended high school at the Loomis Chaffee School before enlisting in the U.S. Army in 1944. He was assigned a Japanese language program and upon its completion, he served in the 441st Counter Intelligence Detachment in Japan. | ||
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| After his return from the army, English attended Yale for his B.A. and Cambridge University for his M.A., both in English. He then earned an LL.B. from the University of Connecticut School of Law where he later served as a faculty member for a period of time before taking a job at the Connecticut Bank and Trust Company in 1951. He quickly rose in position at the bank, serving as president and then CEO and Chairman of the Board. | After his return from the army, English attended Yale for his B.A. and Cambridge University for his M.A., both in English. He then earned an LL.B. from the University of Connecticut School of Law where he later served as a faculty member for a period of time before taking a job at the Connecticut Bank and Trust Company in 1951. He quickly rose in position at the bank, serving as president and then CEO and Chairman of the Board. | ||
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| In 1984, English approved Trinity joining a library consortium with Wesleyan University and Connecticut College that lasted through 2023 (when it was subsumed by another consortium). Known as the CTW Library Consortium, the collections of all three libraries are available in one searchable online catalog. The CTW allows students and patrons of one school to utilize the resources of the other nearby schools. In 1986, Trinity adopted writing and mathematics proficiency requirements that students would have to complete, starting with the Class of 1992. The five-part distribution requirement was also introduced under English in 1987. Students were asked to complete at least one course from the humanities, arts, social sciences, natural sciences, and numerical or symbolic reasoning. This new requirement replaced the more open curriculum guidelines set in 1969. English commented that "the current generation of students would benefit if their freedom were tempered by the introduction of some degree of structure into the non-major course of study." | In 1984, English approved Trinity joining a library consortium with Wesleyan University and Connecticut College that lasted through 2023 (when it was subsumed by another consortium). Known as the CTW Library Consortium, the collections of all three libraries are available in one searchable online catalog. The CTW allows students and patrons of one school to utilize the resources of the other nearby schools. In 1986, Trinity adopted writing and mathematics proficiency requirements that students would have to complete, starting with the Class of 1992. The five-part distribution requirement was also introduced under English in 1987. Students were asked to complete at least one course from the humanities, arts, social sciences, natural sciences, and numerical or symbolic reasoning. This new requirement replaced the more open curriculum guidelines set in 1969. English commented that "the current generation of students would benefit if their freedom were tempered by the introduction of some degree of structure into the non-major course of study." | ||
| - | English put in a place a three-year funding campaign called " | + | English put in a place a three-year funding campaign called " |
| English decided to retire in 1989 at the age of 62. Following his eight years at Trinity, English remained connected to nearby communities, | English decided to retire in 1989 at the age of 62. Following his eight years at Trinity, English remained connected to nearby communities, | ||
| Nine days later on June 11, Isabelle English died at age 88. During her husband' | Nine days later on June 11, Isabelle English died at age 88. During her husband' | ||
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| + | ===== Preceded By ===== | ||
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| + | [[lockwood_theodore_d|Theodore Davidge Lockwood ’48, H’81]] | ||
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| + | ===== Succeeded By ===== | ||
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| + | [[gerety_tom|Tom Gerety]] | ||
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english_james_fairfield_jr.1684252658.txt.gz · Last modified: by bant06
