Drew University











































Drew University

Drew University shield.svg
Former names

Drew Theological Seminary (1867–1928)
Motto
δωρεὰν ἐλάβετε, δωρεὰν δότε
Motto in English

"Freely ye have received, freely give." (from Matthew 10:8 KJV)
Type
Private
Established
1867 (1867)
Religious affiliation

United Methodist Church[1]
Endowment
$172.2 million (2016)[2]
President
MaryAnn Baenninger
Academic staff

244
Administrative staff

345
Students
2,113[3]
Undergraduates
1,417[4]
Postgraduates
696[3]
Location
Madison, New Jersey, U.S.
Coordinates: 40°45′40″N 74°25′37″W / 40.761°N 74.427°W / 40.761; -74.427
Campus
186 acres (0.75 km2) wooded, Suburban
Colors
Blue and Green[5]
         
Nickname
Rangers
Sporting affiliations

NCAA Division III, ECAC, Landmark Conference, IHSA
Website
www.drew.edu

Drew University logo.svg

Drew University is a private university in Madison, New Jersey. Drew has been nicknamed the "University in the Forest" because of the serenity of its wooded 186-acre (75 ha) campus. As of fall 2017, more than 2,000 students were pursuing degrees at the university's three schools.[3]


In 1867, financier and railroad tycoon Daniel Drew purchased an estate in Madison to establish a theological seminary to train candidates for Christian ministry. The seminary later expanded to offer an undergraduate liberal arts curriculum in 1928 and graduate studies in 1955. The College of Liberal Arts, serving 1,417 undergraduate students, offers strong concentrations in the natural sciences, social sciences, languages and literatures, humanities and the arts, and in several interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary fields. The Drew Theological School, the third-oldest of thirteen Methodist seminaries affiliated with the United Methodist Church,[6] currently enrolls 436 students preparing for careers in the ministry and the academic study of theology.[3]


The Caspersen School of Graduate Studies, enrolling 351 graduate students, offers master's and doctoral degrees in a variety of specialized and interdisciplinary fields.[3]


While affiliated with the Methodist faith, Drew University makes no religious demands of its students. Many of the Theological School's students and faculty are Methodists, students of all faiths are admitted to study at any program within the university. The United Methodist Church's General Commission on Archives and History is located on campus; the Commission maintains an archive of Methodist records and artifacts from the 19th century to the present.[citation needed]




Contents





  • 1 Campus


  • 2 History

    • 2.1 From estate to seminary (1832–1928)


    • 2.2 As a liberal arts college (1928–1990)


    • 2.3 Drew University today (1990–present)



  • 3 Academics

    • 3.1 Accreditation and affiliations


    • 3.2 Undergraduate programs


    • 3.3 Graduate programs


    • 3.4 Theological degree programs


    • 3.5 Rose Memorial Library and Methodist Archives



  • 4 Student life

    • 4.1 A cappella


    • 4.2 Theater


    • 4.3 Theme houses


    • 4.4 Residence halls


    • 4.5 Athletics


    • 4.6 Media



  • 5 Notable people


  • 6 Gallery


  • 7 See also


  • 8 References

    • 8.1 Notes


    • 8.2 Citations



  • 9 Further reading


  • 10 External links




Campus




The Bowne Memorial Gateway


Drew University is located in Madison, New Jersey, a borough approximately 25 miles (40 km) west of New York City.[7] Known as "the Rose City" because of its rose-cultivating industry in the nineteenth century, Madison is an affluent commuter town in New Jersey's Morris County.[7] It is connected with the northern section of the state and Midtown Manhattan through the NJ Transit's Morris & Essex Lines.[7][8] The university hosts the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, an independent professional theatre company;[9] the Charles A. Dana Research Center for Scientists Emeriti; and the archives of the United Methodist Church managed by its General Commission on Archives and History.[citation needed]


The university sits on the former estate of William Gibbons (1794–1852), a southern gentleman who owned the New York–New Jersey steamboat business that became famous from the Gibbons v. Ogden case,[a] and who pieced together a 95-acre (38 ha) estate in Madison, New Jersey in 1832. He named his holdings "The Forest",[11][12] which gives Drew its nickname of the "University in the Forest". The following year, Gibbons commissioned the design and construction of a Greek revival antebellum-style residence that was completed in 1836. In 1867, financier and railroad tycoon Daniel Drew (1797–1879) purchased Gibbons' estate from his descendants for $140,000.[13][14] Drew, a devout Methodist, donated the estate to the church to establish a Methodist theological seminary.[13][14] The estate's mansion would be renamed "Mead Hall" in honor of Drew's wife, Roxanna Mead.[13]


Several motion pictures, TV productions, and music videos have used Drew University as a filming location. The campus has been featured in films such as So Fine (1981),[15]Deconstructing Harry (1997),[16]The Family Stone (2005),[17]Spinning into Butter (2008),[18]The Incredible Hulk (2008);[19] and in television programs such as The Sopranos[20] and Friday Night Lights.[21]


Drew's academic buildings feature a mix of Greek Revival, Collegiate Gothic, and neoclassical architecture on a 186-acre (75 ha) campus that is a serene, wooded oasis in the middle of a bustling suburban town. The campus features the Drew Forest Preserve, an 80-acre (32 ha) expanse that was recently restored with the planting of 1,100 native trees and shrubs by the university community and volunteer assistance from pharmaceutical manufacturer Pfizer (a large, local employer), the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the New Jersey Audubon Society.[22] The university's campus also features the Florence and Robert Zuck Arboretum, named for two botany faculty members, containing a mixture of native and non-native trees, plants and two small glacial ponds supporting populations of turtles, goldfish, catfish, and muskrats, and various species of birds including migratory fowl such as Canada geese, ducks, and herons.[22][23]


The preserve and arboretum both provide a natural laboratory for the instruction of students in the study of biology and life sciences and for research, but is also open to the public by appointment.[22] According to the New Jersey chapter of the Audubon Society, the arboretum and forest preserve is "important for groundwater recharge and runoff reduction within the Passaic River watershed and the Buried Valley Aquifer System".[22]



History




Mead Hall was purchased by Daniel Drew in 1867, who donated it to start a Methodist theological seminary.



From estate to seminary (1832–1928)


In 1866, Daniel Drew approached church leaders during the Methodist Centenary Celebration with an offer to build, equip, and endow a theological seminary near New York City.[24] Drew asked that his pastor, John McClintock (1814–1870), be appointed lead the seminary as its first president.[24] Instruction began under the direction of McClintock as both president and professor of practical theology after the first students were admitted in 1867.[24] Drew is the third-oldest of thirteen Methodist seminaries affiliated with the United Methodist Church.[6]


Drew offered professional training for candidates to the ministry augmented by "an opportunity for a broad culture through the study of the humanities."[25] The seminary attracted a faculty that made influential contributions to Methodist theology and biblical scholarship, including James Strong (1822–1894), a professor of exegetical theology, collaborated with McClintock on the ten-volume Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature (1867–1881), and researched, compiled, and published Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible (1890) during his tenure at the seminary.[26] Writings on early church theology and Christian practice were translated into Chinese for use by foreign missions.[27]



As a liberal arts college (1928–1990)




The faculty of Drew Theological Seminary, circa 1880–1890


Throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Drew Theological Seminary educated and trained hundreds of Methodist ministers. It began to expand its role with the addition of a course of study for women in 1920 when it established a "College of Missions."[28] This course would be renamed the "College of Religious Education and Missions" in 1929 but was short-lived.[28]


In 1928, Drew Theological Seminary accepted a gift of $1.5 million from brothers Arthur J. Baldwin (1868–1939) and Leonard D. Baldwin (1866–1933) to establish an undergraduate liberal arts college. The Baldwins were successful attorneys who were raised on a farm in Cortland, New York. Both brothers attended Cornell University.[29][30][31] They established a law firm with former New Jersey governor John Griggs spanning "varied interests in lumbering, manufacturing, transportation, and other enterprises that ranged from owning the Grosvenor Hotel in New York City to Arthur's legal counseling for the rising McGraw-Hill publishing empire."[29][31] The Baldwins became acquainted with the seminary's president, Ezra Squier Tipple, who "welcomed the brothers to his prominent New York City Methodist Church when they came to Manhattan."[29] Leonard Baldwin eventually became a trustee of the seminary in 1919.[29] The donation originally consisted of $500,000 to build a college building, and $1,000,000 in the form of Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company (A&P) stock. However, the Baldwins exchanged the stock with a gift of cash in October 1928.[29]




The courtyard of Brothers College, built 1928


In their modesty and in recognition of their sibling affection, the Baldwins asked that it be named "Brothers College."[29] The theological seminary then changed its name to "Drew University" to reflect its expanded role.[10] Brothers College, later renamed as the "College of Liberal Arts", opened in September 1928 with its first class of 12 students.[29] Brothers College would incorporate the women's program and become coeducational in 1942 during World War II when school officials recognized that the military draft and war effort would reduce the all-male student body.[28] Drew offered admission to United States Navy personnel through the V-12 Navy College Training Program. Drew was one of 131 colleges and universities nationally that took part in the program which offered students a path to a naval officers' commission.[32]


Drew began offering graduate-level education in 1912. The university expanded its graduate education programs focusing in religious studies in 1955 with the establishment of the Graduate School, the third of Drew's degree-granting entities. Four years later, it would expand the curriculum into other areas of the humanities. The Graduate School was renamed as the "Caspersen School of Graduate Studies" after a pledge of $5,000,000 in 1999 by financier Finn M. W. Caspersen (1941–2009) and his wife (and Drew alumna) Dr. Barbara Morris Caspersen.[28][33]




Samuel W. Bowne Hall


During the 1970s, the College also established, with generous assistance from the Mellon Foundation, a now widely imitated freshman seminar program. It allows first-year students to participate, with faculty who also serve as their academic advisers, in intensive study of a topic of hopefully mutual interest. Interdisciplinary study became a focus of the curriculum as well, with the creation of majors in behavioral studies, neuroscience and Russian Studies, and minors in such fields as American studies, arts administration and museology, business management, dance, public health and writing.


In 1984, psychology professors Philip Jensen and Richard Detweiler led an effort to provide a personal computer and application software to all incoming freshman, a program referred to as the "Computer Initiative". Drew was the first liberal arts college to have such a requirement.[citation needed] The Computer Initiative differentiates Drew from other liberal arts colleges, and continues to this day. As a result, Drew has considerably fewer public computing labs than comparable schools its size, utilizing the centrally-managed student laptops for instructional and general-purpose computing use.



Drew University today (1990–present)




A class session held outdoors


After serving two terms as New Jersey's 48th governor, Thomas Kean (b. 1935) was appointed as Drew's tenth president in 1990. He would serve for 15 years before retiring in 2005.[34] As president, Kean raised Drew's profile, overseeing fundraising efforts that tripled the size of the university's endowment, adding new faculty in African, Asian, Russian, and Middle Eastern Studies, significantly increased opportunities for students to study abroad, increased applications from prospective students, and committed more than $60 million to construction of new buildings and renovation of older buildings—principally student residence halls.


After Kean's retirement, the trustees selected Robert Weisbuch, former president of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, as Drew's eleventh president in 2005. He served for seven years, and stepped down in June 2012.[35] Under Weisbuch's direction, Drew became SAT-optional. From 2006 to 2013, applicants were allowed to submit a graded high school essay instead of SAT or ACT scores.[36] In 2013, the university reinstated the SAT (or ACT) as an admission requirement.[37]


Dr. MaryAnn Baenninger became the President of Drew University in July 2014, after serving 10 years as the President of the College of Saint Benedict.[38] She succeeds Dr. Vivian A. Bull, a former economics professor and associate dean of the College at Drew and former President of Linfield College, who served as Drew's interim president from 2012 to 2014.[39]


The 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was shared by Dr. William Campbell, a research fellow at Drew University, for his work developing a drug that treats parasitic diseases.[40]


Undergraduate tuition, room and board for the 2017–18 academic year was $62,000 (excluding books, personal expenditures, and health insurance), making Drew among the most expensive private universities in New Jersey.[41] In September 2017, the school announced that it was cutting the list price of its tuition for the 2018-19 school year by 20%, from $48,300 to $36,600, as part of an effort to make the school more appealing to prospective students who had been deterred by the sticker price, which had been one of the state's highest.[42]



Academics



Accreditation and affiliations


Drew University is accredited by the Commission on Higher Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools with approval granted to offer undergraduate and graduate degree programs and professional or post-graduate certificates. Drew was first accredited in 1932 and its accreditation was reaffirmed after a recent review concluded in 2011.[43] Since 1938, the theological seminary at Drew has been accredited by the Commission on Accrediting of the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada.[44][45]


All of the university's programs are approved and accredited by the General Board of Higher Education and Ministry and the University Senate of the United Methodist Church.[1][46] Drew is one of 119 institutions that are members of the National Association of Schools and Colleges of The United Methodist Church (NASCUMC). Drew is also a member of the American Council on Education,[47]Council of Graduate Schools,[48]Association of American Colleges and Universities,[49] and the Council for Advancement and Support of Education.[50]



Undergraduate programs



Students at Drew University.jpg


Drew University offers programs leading to the traditional undergraduate degree of Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) through its College of Liberal Arts. Traditional core liberal arts courses are required of Drew students within a general education curriculum that allows them to shape an individual academic program. Drew's programs emphasize depth, independent research, experiential learning, and collaborative teaming. A declared minor is required in the general education program, and students choose from structured disciplinary and interdisciplinary offerings, or may design a minor course of study, subject to faculty approval. The university provides undergraduate major concentrations in 31 academic areas and minor concentrations in 24 additional areas.[51]


Below is a list of key programs available to undergraduate students:



  • Semester on Wall Street: an 8-credit program where 20 students attend classes twice a week in New York City at St. John's University, located in the Financial District. Students have guest lecturers from the various banks, organizations, and financial agencies.[52]


  • Semester on the United Nations: an 8-credit program where 20 students attend classes twice a week in New York City in the Church Center, directly across from UN Headquarters. Students have guest lecturers from the UN Secretariat and NGOs, and attend meetings of the UN General Assembly.[53]


  • Research Institute for Scientists Emeriti (RISE): selected students engage in research under the supervision of retired industrial scientists.[54]


  • Drew Summer Science Institute: an on-campus summer program that pairs approximately 15 Drew students with faculty mentors for an intensive experience working full-time on a research project.[55]


  • New York Semester on Contemporary Art: an 8-credit program where students meet weekly to discuss timely issues, and then visit New York City art museums two days a week.[56]


  • London Semester: a 16-credit program where students explore political and social change in Great Britain.[57]


Graduate programs


Graduate education has taken place at Drew University since 1912. Initially, graduate education was limited to theology, and was conducted through the Theological School. In 1955, the Graduate School was established to take responsibility for the academic study (i.e., non-ministerial) of religion at the graduate level and allow for the development of new graduate programs. In 1999, to honor the generous gift made by Barbara and Finn Caspersen, the school was renamed the Caspersen School of Graduate Studies.[58]


In 2006, the Graduate Division of Religion (GDR), which includes programs in biblical studies and early Christianity, historical studies, religion & society, and theological & philosophical studies, was moved from the Graduate School to the Theological School. The transition was made to reflect current trends in the academic study of religion. In 2006, the school created a Master of Arts in Teaching (M.A.T.) program,[59] and in 2009, a Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) in Poetry program was established by Anne Marie Macari.[60]


The Graduate School currently offers 9 degrees.[61]



Theological degree programs




A statue of Francis Asbury (1745–1816), one of the first two Methodist bishops whose travels spread Methodism across the United States and launched the Second Great Awakening


Drew Theological School admitted its first students in 1867. Until the 1950s, the school was known as the Drew Theological Seminary, and most students sought a Bachelor of Divinity (B.D.) degree, which was considered the standard for becoming a minister in an established church. Occasionally, the seminary did issue other degrees, such a Master of Arts or a Doctor of Theology (Th.D.) to students engaged in the graduate study of religion.[62] Starting in 1920 women were admitted as students, and most notably Olive Winchester was issued a Doctor of Theology in 1925, and became the first female ordained minister in Great Britain.[63]


The school is often noted for its strong ties to Korean Methodism. The Rev. Henry Appenzeller, a graduate of the Theological School, became the first Christian missionary to Korea. He worked to establish the Korean Methodist Church, schools and universities, and he translated the Bible into Korean. As a result of his work and his connection to Drew, the Theological School's matriculating class includes many students from South Korea.


One of the 13 official seminaries of the United Methodist Church, the Theological School prepares those pursuing ministry in the United Methodist Church. The student body also includes students preparing for ministry in other Christian denominations, and those from other faith communities.


Six different degrees are currently offered.[44][45]



Rose Memorial Library and Methodist Archives


Built in 1938 with funds donated by Lenox S. Rose, the Rose Memorial Library houses the university's library collections offering 558,000 bound volumes, more than 378,000 microforms, 10,000 periodical titles in electronic database subscriptions, and about 2,700 periodical subscriptions in paper form. The facility also includes a media resource center and learning center. The library has been designated a selective depository for U.S. government publications in accordance with the Federal Depository Library Program. Drew also maintains collections of official documents from the United Nations and the state of New Jersey. There are over 400,000 documents in the collection.[64][65]


Drew University houses the United Methodist Archives and History Center administered by the United Methodist Commission on Archives and History. This collection is among the most comprehensive collections of Methodist books, documents and artifacts in the world offering insight into eighteenth- and nineteenth-century English and American religious and cultural history.[64][66]


The library's special collections include a collection of books, manuscripts, artifacts and papers of Nebraska-born author Willa Cather (1873–1947). This collection, which is regarded as the best collection of Cather's papers assembled in the United States, was given to the university by several donors, including Frederick B. Adams, former director of the Pierpont Morgan Library; Earl and Achsah Brewster, longtime friends of Cather; violinist Yehudi Menuhin; and by Finn and Barbara Caspersen.[67][68][69]



Student life


Drew University offers a wide range of extracurricular activities. Key activities are listed below.



A cappella


Drew has three a cappella groups: 36 Madison Avenue (all male), All of the Above (co-ed), and On a Different Note (all female). Concerts are held regularly throughout the year, with major concerts occurring at the beginning, middle, and end of each semester. Every winter, each group goes on tour, traveling north or south in the United States to various schools, nursing homes, and community centers.



Theater


The Princeton Review ranks Drew as having the No. 5 theatre program in the United States.[70] Drew has two theatres, the F. M. Kirby Shakespeare Theatre, home to the Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey, and the Thomas Kean Blackbox Theatre, located in the Dorothy Young Center.



Theme houses


Drew offers an alternative living community called "theme houses". The theme houses produce many of the major campus wide events that take place every year, and also hold many theme parties that occur throughout the semester. The four theme houses on campus are



WoCo: A Feminist House – a house for those interested in intersectional feminist issues


Spirituality House – a multi-faith house for those interested in topics related to spirituality and lawful and spiritually enhancing means of encouraging spiritual enlightenment through self-stimulation.


Music Theme House - a house for those interested in music, either as a hobby or a career goal.


International House – a diverse house created to join people together from around the globe.


Residence halls


Drew University has a total of 17 Residence halls for those who wish to live on their campus. These halls are used by Graduate, Theological and Undergraduate students. There are 12 halls used exclusively by undergraduate students which are: Asbury, Baldwin, Brown, Foster, Haselton, Hoyt, Hurst, McClintock, McLendon, Riker, Tolley and Welch. The Halls used only by Graduate or Theological students are Tipple and Wendel. All students have the ability to live in Eberhardt or the Townhouses which are home to three theme houses. Holloway now houses offices on the first floor and the upper floors are used as temporary housing for visiting groups.



Athletics


Originally known as "The Circuit Riders" in honor of their Methodist origins, Drew's sports teams are known as the Rangers and compete in the NCAA's Division III. The Rangers field 20 teams (11 female, 9 male) in 12 varsity sports. Drew is a member of the Landmark Conference for men's and women's basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis, baseball, field hockey and softball. The Rangers compete as an independent in men's and women's fencing, which compete in the Mid-Atlantic Collegiate Fencing Association (MACFA),[71] the National Intercollegiate Women's Fencing Association (NIWFA) and the Eastern Women's Fencing Conference (EWFC), and co-ed equestrian, which competes in the Intercollegiate Horse Show Association (IHSA).[72] Drew offers many club teams including ultimate frisbee and Drew's women's and men's rugby teams, which are part of the collegiate division of the Metropolitan New York Rugby Football Union. Drew has several intramural sports programs.




























Sport
Men or Women
BaseballMen
BasketballBoth
Cross CountryBoth
EquestrianWomen
FencingBoth
Field HockeyWomen
GolfBoth
LacrosseBoth
SoccerBoth
SoftballWomen
SwimmingBoth
TennisBoth


Media



  • The Acorn: Student-run weekly newspaper that has been operating on-campus since November 1928.


  • WMNJ: Student-run radio station at Drew University.


  • Insanity's Horse: Student-run literary and arts journal.


Notable people



In the university's 146-year history, Drew's faculty and alumni have taken leading roles in the ministry and missions of the United Methodist Church and other Christian denominations, in spiritual instruction, in academia, in public service, and in the professional world.
Drew's faculty, starting with John McClintock and James Strong—especially with his magnum opus, Strong's Concordance[26]—to recent faculty members including philosopher Robert S. Corrington, the founder of "ecstatic naturalism";[73] ethics professor Thomas C. Oden, the founder of paleo-orthodoxy,[74] and Leonard Sweet, a leader in the emerging church movement, have continued to impact Christian theology and spiritual scholarship.[27] Other faculty have included lexicographer Robert L. Chapman, editor of the fourth and fifth editions of Roget's Thesaurus;[75]Ira Progoff, a psychotherapist, developed the Intensive Journal Method, and researcher of depth psychology;[76] and Irish history scholar Christine Kinealy.[77]William Campbell, research fellow in Drew's RISE institute, was awarded the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.[78]


According to the UMC, Drew's seminary now has more than 3,500 alumni and alumnae "in 45 states and 18 foreign countries, including 21 bishops of The United Methodist Church."[27] Among these alumni: Henry G. Appenzeller (B.D. 1885) was the first Methodist missionary to Korea and fostered a relationship between Korea, the church, and Drew that endures to this day;[27], Peter Deunov (1892), Bulgarian philosopher and spiritual teacher, and Olive Winchester (Th.D. 1925), a Church of the Nazarene theologian, was the first female ordained minister in Great Britain.[79][80]Frederick Brown Harris (1912) was twice the Chaplain of the United States Senate.[81][82]


Alumni include popular historian and journalist John T. Cunningham (B.A. 1938);[83]Craig Stanford (B.A. 1978), a biology and anthropology professor and director of the Jane Goodall Research Center at the University of Southern California;[84] and Jeff Smith (M.Div. 1965), minister, cookbook author, host of The Frugal Gourmet a television program that aired from 1973 to 1997.[85] Several Drew alumni have had careers in public service, including Nathaniel Raymond (B.A. 1999), human rights advocate involved in investigations into the Dasht-i-Leili massacre;[86][87]Holly Bakke (B.A. 1973), an attorney who served as New Jersey Commissioner of Banking and Insurance (2002–05);[88][89]Peter Verniero (B.A. 1981), a former New Jersey Attorney General and New Jersey Supreme Court justice;[90][91] and Thomas J. Aquilino, Jr. (B.A. 1962), a federal judge on the United States Court of International Trade.[92]



Gallery



See also


  • List of colleges and universities in New Jersey

  • List of botanical gardens in the United States

  • Lectionary 301


References



Notes




  1. ^ William was the son and heir of Thomas Gibbons,[10] appellant in Gibbons v. Ogden, 22 U.S. (9 Wheat) 1, 16 L.Ed. 23 (1824).




Citations




  1. ^ ab United Methodist Church – General Board of Higher Education and Ministry. United Methodist Church Affiliated Institutions. Retrieved October 12, 2013.


  2. ^ "2016 Endowment Market Value and Change" (PDF). 


  3. ^ abcde Drew University. "About the University". Retrieved October 12, 2013.


  4. ^ http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/drew-university-2603


  5. ^ Drew University Visual Identity and Messaging Guide (PDF). October 10, 2017. Retrieved February 10, 2018. 


  6. ^ ab General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of the United Methodist Church. United Methodist Theological Schools. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  7. ^ abc Caldwell, Dave. "Living in Madison, N.J.; A Town Right Out of Central Casting" in The New York Times (June 15, 2008). Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  8. ^ New Jersey Transit. New Jersey Transit Rail: Morris & Essex Line Schedule (as of October 13, 2013). Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  9. ^ Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey. Directions – Parking. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  10. ^ ab Drew University. Key People in Drew History. Retrieved October 23, 2013.


  11. ^ New Jersey Historical Society. Manuscript Group 1302, Gibbons Family (Savannah, GA and Madison, NJ). Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  12. ^ Esposito, Frank J. The Madison Heritage Trail: An Intimate History of a Community in Transition (The Madison Bicentennial Heritage Committee: Madison, New Jersey, 1985), 61-62, 83-84.


  13. ^ abc Drew University. "A Brief History of Mead Hall". Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  14. ^ ab Cunningham, John T. Images of America: Madison (Dover, New Hampshire: Arcadia Publishing, 1998), 19, 31.


  15. ^ Internet Movie Database (IMDb). "So Fine" (1981) Filming Locations. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  16. ^ Internet Movie Database (IMDb). "Deconstructing Harry" (1997) Filming Locations. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  17. ^ Internet Movie Database (IMDb). "The Family Stone" (2005) Filming Locations. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  18. ^ Internet Movie Database (IMDb). "Spinning into Butter" (2008) Filming Locations. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  19. ^ Internet Movie Database (IMDb). "The Incredible Hulk" (2008) Filming Locations. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  20. ^ Drew's Mead Hall appeared in an episode of the HBO drama series The Sopranos titled College (1x05), where it substituted for Maine's Bates College, Colby College, and Bowdoin College, according to The Sopranos Location Guide and specifically Filming locations for "College". Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  21. ^ Several locations on campus, including Asbury Hall and S.W. Bowne Hall appeared in an episode of Friday Night Lights titled "New York, New York" (3x08) which first aired on November 19, 2008. See Internet Movie Database (IMDb). Friday Night Lights: New York, New York. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  22. ^ abcd Parke, John. Stewardship Blog: "Reforestation and a Partnership Grows at Drew University", New Jersey Audubon Society (June 10, 2011). Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  23. ^ Drew University. Buildings & Campus Locations: Zuck Arboretum. Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  24. ^ abc Drew University. Presidents of Drew University: John McClintock. Retrieved October 13, 2013. Adapted from Joy, James Richard (editor). The Teachers of Drew, 1867-9142, A Commemorative Volume issued on the occasion of the 75th Anniversary of the Founding of Drew Theological Seminary, October 15, 1942 (Madison, New Jersey: Drew University, 1942).


  25. ^ Gilman, Daniel Coit; Peck, Harry Thurston; and Colby, Frank Moore. New International Encyclopædia/Drew Theological Seminary "Drew University" in The New International Encyclopædia (1905).


  26. ^ ab Drew University. "James Strong, A.B., A.M., S.T.D., LL.D., Professor of Exegetical Theology, 1868-1894". Retrieved October 13, 2013. Adapted from Joy, James Richard (editor). The Teachers of Drew, 1867-9142, A Commemorative Volume issued on the occasion of the 75th Anniversary of the Founding of Drew Theological Seminary, October 15, 1942 (Madison, New Jersey: Drew University, 1942).


  27. ^ abcd General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of the United Methodist Church. Drew University, The Theological School (2013). Retrieved October 13, 2013.


  28. ^ abcd Drew University. A Short History of Drew University, citing Cunningham, John T. University in the Forest: The Story of Drew University 3rd Edition (Florham Park, New Jersey: Afton Publishing, 2002). Retrieved October 23, 2013.


  29. ^ abcdefg Cunningham, John T. "Baldwin Brothers and Brothers College" originally published in Drew Magazine (Winter 1999). Retrieved October 23, 2013. Cunningham states they studied law at Columbia, but no other source substantiates that.


  30. ^ Allen, E.P. (compiler). Cornell Legal Directory. 3rd Edition (March 1903) (Cooperstown, New York: Crist, Scott & Parshall, 1903), 22. lists them both as graduated with an A.B. in 1892. Leonard was admitted to the New York bar in 1892; Arthur in 1894.


  31. ^ ab Knox, Herman W. (editor). Who's Who in New York: A Biographical Dictionary of Prominent Citizens of New York City and State. Seventh Edition, 1917–1918. (New York: Who's Who Publications, Inc., 1918), 44, 46.


  32. ^ Herge, Henry C. "Appendix D: Navy V-12 and NROTC Units" in Navy V-12. (Nashville, Tennessee: Turner Publishing Company, 1996), 12:48.


  33. ^ Associated Press Staff. "Financier Finn Caspersen found dead" in Newsday (September 9, 2009). Retrieved October 26, 2013.


  34. ^ "Former N.J. Governor Tom Kean To Replace Condoleezza Rice As Rutgers Commencement Speaker". newyork.cbslocal.com. May 5, 2014. Retrieved February 10, 2018. 


  35. ^ "Drew University president stepping down from post"


  36. ^ Fuchs, Marek. "No.2 Pencil Optional: Drew Snubs the SAT" in The New York Times (September 25, 2005). Retrieved August 25, 2013.


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  40. ^ https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/2015/campbell-facts.html


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  43. ^ Middle States Commission on Higher Education. Institution Directory: Drew University and Statement of Accreditation Status: Drew University. Retrieved October 16, 2013. Drew's accreditation will be reviewed on a standard timetable with its next Self-Study Evaluation in 2020–2021, and is required to submit a Periodic Review Report in 2016.


  44. ^ ab Drew University. See the section on "Accreditation" at Theological School Admissions – Degree Program Information. Retrieved October 16, 2013.


  45. ^ ab The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada – The Commission on Accrediting. Member Schools: Drew University Theological School. Retrieved October 17, 2013. Drew's accreditation is scheduled for a comprehensive evaluation in 2020–2021 for renewal.


  46. ^ General Board of Higher Education and Ministry of the United Methodist Church. University Senate Approved Seminaries. Retrieved October 27, 2013.


  47. ^ American Council on Education. Members and Associates Directory. Retrieved October 27, 2013.


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  51. ^ "Majors & Minors". Drew University. Retrieved January 20, 2018. 


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  58. ^ "Policies & Regulations – Caspersen School of Graduate Studies – Drew University". Drew University. Retrieved January 25, 2013. 


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  60. ^ Katie Chambers (September 26, 2008). "Poetry makes it home at Drew". Drew Acorn. 


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  63. ^ "Women, the Church and Ministry: Celebrating 100 years of women's ordination in the UK". Manchester Wesley Research Centre. Retrieved January 25, 2013. 


  64. ^ ab Drew University. Policies and Regulations. Retrieved November 23, 2013.


  65. ^ Drew University. Library: Government Documents. Retrieved November 23, 2013.


  66. ^ General Commission on Archives and History of the United Methodist Church. United Methodist Archives and History Center of the United Methodist Church. Retrieved November 23, 2013.


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  68. ^ Heise, Jennifer and Marks, Lucy. Drew Special Collections and University Archives: Willa Cather Collection. Retrieved November 23, 2013.


  69. ^ Murphy, John Joseph, and Skaggs, Merrill Maguire (editors), Willa Cather: New Facts, New Glimpses, Revisions (Cranbury, New Jersey: Rosemont Publishing and Printing Group, 2008), 260ff.


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  72. ^ "Official Website of the Intercollegiate Horse Show Association". Retrieved February 17, 2013. 


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  74. ^ Drew University. Thomas C. Oden, Henry Anson Buttz Professor of Theology and Ethics. Retrieved October 31, 2013. See also his works: The Rebirth of Orthodoxy: Signs of New Life in Christianity (New York: HarperOne, 2002), ISBN 0-06-009785-X; and Requiem: A Lament in Three Movements (Nashville, Tennessee: Abingdon Press, 1995 ), 130, ISBN 0-687-01160-4.


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  76. ^ Progroff Intensive Journal Program for Self-Development. Dr. Ira Progoff: Creator of the Intensive Journal Program (1921–1998). Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  77. ^ Drew University. Faculty: Christine Kinealy. Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  78. ^ https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/medicine/laureates/2015/campbell-facts.html


  79. ^ "First ordained Scottish women to be celebrated at conference", NCN News (April 4, 2012). Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  80. ^ Riley, John E. From Sagebrush to Ivy: The Story of Northwest Nazarene College 1913–1988 (Nampa, Idaho: Northwest Nazarene College, 1988), 72.


  81. ^ Who Was Who in America: With World Notables - Page 309


  82. ^ Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches - Page 346


  83. ^ James, George. "In Person; The New Jersey Chronicles", The New York Times (May 10, 1998). Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  84. ^ University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. Craig Britton Stanford: Professor of Biological Sciences and Anthropology, Co-Director. Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  85. ^ Dizon, Kristin Dizon. "Jeff Smith, 1939–2004: The 'Frugal Gourmet' was TV's original celebrity chef", Seattle Post-Intelligencer (July 9, 2004). Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  86. ^ Risen, James. "U.S. Inaction Seen After Taliban P.O.W.'s Died", The New York Times (July 10, 2009); and Smith, James F. "NY Times probe cites PHR's Afghan work", The Boston Globe (July 10, 2009). Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  87. ^ Harvard Humanitarian Initiative. "Nathaniel A. Raymond" (archived website) (2010). Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  88. ^ "Department Heads Since 1948" in Manual of the Legislature of New Jersey (Newark: Skinder-Strauss Associates), 522, 526. ISBN 1-57741-355-5


  89. ^ Kean University. "Ms. Holly Bakke, Esq., Trustee" at About Kean – Leadership & Governance – Board of Trustees – Members. Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  90. ^ Sills Cummis & Gross P.C. Peter G. Verniero, Member. Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  91. ^ State of New Jersey – Department of Law and Public Safety – Office of Attorney General. Peter G. Verniero, Attorney General, 1996–1999. Retrieved October 31, 2013.


  92. ^ Federal Judicial Center. Biographical Directory of Federal Judges: Aquilino, Thomas Joseph Jr.. Retrieved October 31, 2013.



Further reading


  • Cunningham, John (2002). University in the Forest: The Story of Drew University (third edition). ISBN 0-89359-017-7.


External links





  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

  • Drew Athletics website


  • Wikisource-logo.svg "Drew Theological Seminary". New International Encyclopedia. 1905. 






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