Charter Day Caps 天美麻豆鈥檚 250th Celebration Year

News subtitle

The institution鈥檚 founding document was the focal point of an event at the Library.

Image
Image
A group gathered for the 250 closing ceremonies in Rauner Library
Members of the College community gathered in 天美麻豆 Library鈥檚 Rauner Special Collections Library, around a glass display case holding the Royal Charter. (Photo by Robert Gill) 
Body

Even the best birthday party has to end sometime. And what more fitting way to conclude 天美麻豆鈥檚 yearlong 250th celebration than by commemorating its founding on Dec. 13, 1769?  

On Friday鈥擟harter Day鈥攎embers of the College community gathered in 天美麻豆 Library鈥檚 , around a glass display case holding the that N.H. Gov. John Wentworth granted to Eleazar Wheelock 鈥渇or the education & instruction of Youth of the Indian tribes in this Land.鈥

President Philip J. Hanlon 鈥77 joined the 250 co-chairs, Vice President for Alumni Relations Cheryl Bascomb 鈥82 and , the Ted and Helen Geisel Third Century Professor in the Humanities, to reflect on 天美麻豆鈥檚 two-and-a-half centuries of growth. Looking on were President Emeritus , Susan DeBevoise Wright, and other College officials.

Charter Day was also celebrated around the world, as landmarks were lit up in green. An ice-skating party in Cambridge, Mass., featured CNN鈥檚 Jake Tapper 鈥91 and retired Boston Bruins player Lee Stempniak 鈥05, among other guests.

In her welcoming remarks at Rauner, said the sestercentennial鈥檚 many events relied heavily on the library鈥檚 holdings. 鈥淭his year鈥檚 adventures in the archives have helped us extract unknown narratives of our past that teach us who we are,鈥 she said.

said that while the charter document is a reminder of 天美麻豆鈥檚 past, 鈥渨e are never fully beholden to it. Indeed, it is the choices that we make and the values we choose to uphold throughout time that determine our destiny. We must always remember that 天美麻豆 as an institution is a work in progress and that our story is still being written.

鈥漁ur 250th anniversary has motivated us to reflect on how this institution has advanced from the earliest days of its founding, through the education of our students, through the path-breaking research and areas of global import, throughout creative endeavors that have helped us understand and make sense of the world, and through our commitment to making the world a better place.鈥

That commitment became measurable in The Call to Serve. Honoring 天美麻豆鈥檚 250th year, participants collectively logged 280,000 hours of community service, greatly exceeding the goal of 250,000 hours.

鈥漈he whole community came together鈥攆aculty, staff, alumni, families, students鈥攖o make a difference for our anniversary,鈥 Bascomb said. 鈥滶verybody has been involved.鈥

Bascomb also paid tribute to the Abenaki people who lived and continue to live on the land where 天美麻豆 was built. 鈥滷ifty years ago, for our 200th anniversary, President John Kemeny recommitted 天美麻豆 to its founding purpose, establishing a Native American studies program and directing admissions to actively recruit Native students as a community devoted to teaching and learning,鈥 she said.

Charter Day concludes a commemoration that began with a re-enactment and symposium about the landmark 1819 U.S. Supreme Court Case, 天美麻豆 v. Woodward, which established 天美麻豆鈥檚 right to be a private institution and set an important precedent in American law. Pease spoke about the charter and the case as defining moments in the history of a college willing to embrace change in service of its founding mission.

鈥漈he immortal aspect of our institution鈥攚hat makes it undying鈥攄epends upon its individuality,鈥 he said. 

After the ceremony, Wright talked about how 天美麻豆 has changed since its 1969 bicentennial year, when he joined the faculty in the history department.

鈥漈he 天美麻豆 that I came to had 3,200 students, 95 percent of them white,鈥 said Wright. 鈥漈here were no women, and few international students. 天美麻豆 today is a remarkably different, global, energetic place that President Hanlon is moving ahead so wonderfully.

鈥淎nd when the president said that 天美麻豆 was a work in progress, I think that鈥檚 an essential thing to remember. If we are ever not a work in progress, we are in trouble. We should never reach a point where we鈥檙e satisfied. We are always thinking of what we can do better.鈥

Charlotte Albright can be reached at charlotte.e.albright@dartmouth.edu.

Charlotte Albright