Rhodes University Historical Background

By |

Rhodes University Historical Background

Rhodes University Historical Background – See Details Below:

History of Rhodes

Rhodes owes its unique character among South African universities to a combination of factors – historical, geographical, cultural and architectural. Its history is a chronicle of the people whose intellect, vision and courage created and sustained a university, often against seemingly insuperable odds. Successive generations of Rhodians, imbued with their independence of thought, have had an influence on southern Africa and world affairs out of all proportion to their small numbers.
In the beginning
University education in the Eastern Cape began in the college departments of four schools: St Andrew’s, Grahamstown; Gill College, Somerset East; Graaff-Reinet College; and the Grey Institute in Port Elizabeth. By the turn of the century only St Andrew’s and Gill still prepared candidates for the degree examinations of the University of the Cape of Good Hope. Limitations in staff, laboratory equipment and libraries made tuition inadequate. It was obvious that only a central university college could provide a satisfactory standard of university education.
Grahamstown, out of the mainstream of commercial and industrial life, seemed an unlikely choice for a university city, but local residents were strongly in favour of the idea. The chief obstacle was lack of funds. The South African War of 1899-1902 almost extinguished the project.
In December 1902 Josiah Slater, Member of Parliament for Albany and editor of the Graham’s Town Journal, called a meeting to try to rekindle public interest. He succeeded beyond all expectations, but enthusiastic promises of local and financial support were not enough. The newly-formed committee applied, unsuccessfully, to the Rhodes Trustees for the financial backing they needed.
Selmar Schonland, distinguished botanist and curator of Albany Museum, then tried a direct approach to one of the Rhodes Trustees, Dr Leander Starr Jameson.
Jameson, soon to be elected Member of Parliament for Albany and Prime Minister of the Cape Colony, promised £ 50 000 without consulting his fellow Trustees. At first they refused to confirm the grant; then, persuaded by Schonland, they made over De Beers Preference Shares to the value of £ 50 000 to Rhodes University College, founded by Act of Parliament on May 31, 1904.
The early years
The four St Andrew’s College professors, Arthur Matthews, George Cory, Stanley Kidd and GF Dingemans became founding professors of the Rhodes University College and Matthew’s outstanding survey class provided the nucleus of the Rhodes student body. The new university college prepared its students for the examinations of the University of the Cape of Good Hope.
At the beginning of 1905, Rhodes moved from cramped quarters at St Andrew’s to the Drostdy building, which it bought from the British Government. During 1905 seven new professors, including Schonland, joined the original four. One of the distinctive features which evolved early in Rhodes’ history was the tutorial system, adapted from the Oxbridge model. Each student was assigned to a staff member who took a personal interest in his or her work and welfare. As numbers increased, students were assigned tutors and tutorial groups within academic departments, providing a forum for the lively debate characteristic of a Rhodes education.
Expansion
The foundations of the Rhodes residential system were founded within a decade. Steadily growing student numbers put pressure on available accommodation in school hostels and ‘approved boarding houses’ as well as class and laboratory space in the motley collection of military buildings housing the college.
At this point, Baker and Kendall, the firm started by an architect of growing reputation, Herbert Baker, offered their services to the Council to draw plans for a new Rhodes. Their design won the competition held by the Council in 1910. Within five years a new Chemistry-Zoology block and the first residences for men and women, College and Oriel, were built to Baker and Kendall plans.
Moves by the South African College in Cape Town and the Victoria College in Stellenbosch to become autonomous universities began as early as 1905. The Rhodes Senate and Council quickly realised that an independent Cape Town University might threaten the still precarious existence of Rhodes. Fears were only allayed when Rhodes became a constituent college of the new University of South Africa in 1918.
By 1917 Rhodes’ finances had ebbed to the point where staff retrenchment became unavoidable. However, expansion was essential for survival. Increased post war subsidies, a government bond on all Rhodes property and further help from the Rhodes Trustees made possible the construction of the first part of the Baker Arts Block and more residences.
Hard Times
Sir John Adamson became first Master of Rhodes in 1925. Further loans and another government bond were negotiated and building continued. The first sign of trouble ahead was a sharp drop in enrolment between 1927 and 1929 and the full force of the Depression struck Rhodes amidships in 1931 and 1932.
Government grants were drastically reduced and De Beers did not declare a dividend in 1932. At the height of the crisis, Cullen Bowles, Professor of Classics, succeeded Adamson as Master.
Sudden national economic recovery in 1933 meant restored government subsidies and an end to staff salary cuts. Armed with grants from the government and the Rhodes Trustees, and loans from various municipalities, the Council went ahead with the building of more residences and the completion of the Baker main block and tower. Bowles retired in 1937, after seven stormy years as Master and 26 years at Rhodes. Professor John Smeath Thomas succeeded him.
At the end of 1938 the Carnegie Corporation made a Carnegie Library Fellowship available to train the first Rhodes Librarian, FG van der Riet. A substantial grant to buy books for the Rhodes Library followed.
Despite the outbreak of war, student numbers continued to rise. The ambitious building programme went on throughout the war and post war years with funds borrowed from the municipalities of Grahamstown, Port Elizabeth, East London, King William’s Town and Cape Town.
The day of reckoning
When the future of the University of South Africa came under review in 1947, Rhodes opted to become an independent university. However, £150 000 in free capital was needed for endowment. So, far from being available, Rhodes was soon forced to pledge its remaining De Beers Preference Shares to the bank as security against a soaring overdraft.
At this critical point, Dr Thomas Alty succeeded Smeath Thomas as master of a college owing £56 015. Alty’s courageous decision to ride out the storm was soon confirmed by events. Just as it seemed Rhodes was finally facing dissolution, the partners of a Grahamstown printing firm, Hugh and Vincent Grocott, knocked on Dr Alty’s door one evening and, almost apologetically, handed him a cheque for a considerable sum of money. Their gift seemed to act as a catalyst.
Birth of a university
The government and the Grahamstown City Council took steps to help extricate Rhodes from its predicament, and a insurance company lent the college £200 000 on favourable terms. When the Rhodes University Private Bill was passed in April 1949 an appeal for funds was launched. Response from the Rhodes Trustees, the directors of De Beers Consolidated Mines and numerous other public and private organisations and individuals was overwhelming. Soon £100 000 had been subscribed and further £50 000 was promised, with a £1 for each £1 donation pledged by the government.
Rhodes University was inaugurated on March 10, 1951. Sir Basil Schonland, son of Selmar Schonland became the first Chancellor of his alma mater, and Alty the first Vice Chancellor. In terms of the Rhodes University Private Act, the University College of Fort Hare was affiliated to Rhodes University.
This mutually beneficial arrangement continued until the government decided to disaffiliate Fort Hare from Rhodes. The Rhodes Senate and Council objected strongly to this, and to the Separate University Education Bill, which they condemned as interference with academic freedom. However, the two bills were passed, and Fort Hare’s affiliation to Rhodes came to an end in 1959.
Negotiations with the Port Elizabeth City Council culminated in the opening of the short-lived Port Elizabeth Division of Rhodes University in 1961. Rhodes withdrew from Port Elizabeth at the end of 1964 after the government decided to replace the Division with an independent, dual-medium University of Port Elizabeth.
Continued growth
James Hyslop succeeded Alty in 1963, at a time of rapid expansion which continued throughout the decade. Facilities at Rhodes were strained to the limit. When the Community of the Resurrection closed the Grahamstown Training College, the University was provided with a solution to the critical shortage of space. Negotiations began in 1971 to buy the Training College buildings and grounds and a number of adjacent buildings. The Law and Divinity Departments moved into the St Peter’s complex in 1975, followed by Education in 1977 and Music and Musicology in 1979.
Dr Derek Henderson, an Old Rhodian, succeeded Hyslop in October 1975, during the continuing development of the University.
Four St Peter’s residences, Canterbury, Winchester, Salisbury and Truro, were in university use by 1979. The beautiful chapel of St Mary and All the Angels, designed by Kendall, is now the Rhodes University Chapel. It was proclaimed a national monument in 1980. The deconsecrated Chapel of the Resurrection now houses the Rhodes University Museum.
The former mother house was restored with generous outside assistance and was re-opened as the Gold Fields Centre for English during its centenary month of July, 1992.
New buildings linking the University’s main quadrangles and the Library were formally opened in 1985. They included Geography, which completes the second quadrangle. With English, Geography and the existing Library it also forms a third quadrangle, to complete the development of the University’s central area.
Generous gifts from mining houses enabled the University to complete the Kimberley Hall complex by opening Gold Fields House in 1985 and De Beers House in 1988. A new residence, named Allan Gray House, in the Drostdy Hall complex was constructed as a result of a generous donation by Allan Gray Investments. It was opened to students in 1993. In addition, a new residence, called New House, was built in the Jan Smuts Hall complex, and was commissioned in 1994.
Despite steady growth, Rhodes is still as small university whose excellence is in part a product of its smallness. Over the years, the number of residences and halls has increased to accommodate about 4000 students with almost half the student population living in the 52 residences. Classes are still small enough to make individual tuition in tutorial groups feasible.
Dr David Woods, also an Old Rhodian, succeeded Henderson in May 1996. A review of academic departments and administrative divisions led to a “re-engineering” of Rhodes to take it into the next century, with Dr Seleem Badat being appointed as the first black Vice Chancellor of Rhodes University from June 2006 to July 2014. Dr Sizwe Mabizela took over the reins in 2014.
The future of Rhodes lies not in greater numbers, but in increasing academic excellence and building upon almost a century of academic achievement.

Quick Links:

1.Buffalo City TVET College Online Application

2.Buffalo City TVET College Application Form

3.Buffalo City TVET College Undergraduate Application Form

4.Buffalo City TVET College Online Undergraduate Application

5.Buffalo City TVET College Application Closing Date

6.Buffalo City TVET College Application Status

7.Buffalo City TVET College Online Application Status

COURSES

8.Buffalo City TVET College Courses Offered

FEES STRUCTURE, BURSARIES, AND SCHOLARSHIPS
9.Buffalo City TVET College Banking Details

10.Buffalo City TVET College Fees

11.Buffalo City TVET College NSFAS

12.Buffalo City TVET College Bursaries

13.Buffalo City TVET College Student Loans

14.Buffalo City TVET College NSFAS Application

PROSPECTUS

15.Buffalo City TVET College Prospectus

16.Buffalo City TVET College Undergraduate Prospectus

17.Buffalo City TVET College Postgraduate Prospectus

CONTACTS, LOCATION, AND CAMPUSES

18.Buffalo City TVET College Campus

19.Buffalo City TVET College Contact Address

ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS AND REGISTRATIONS 
20.Buffalo City TVET College Entry Requirements

21.Buffalo City TVET College Admission Requirements

22.Buffalo City TVET College Registration.

ACADEMICS
23.Buffalo City TVET College Tender

24.Buffalo City TVET College History

25.Buffalo City TVET College Mission and Vision

26.Buffalo City TVET College Examination

27.Buffalo City TVET College Faculties

28.Buffalo City TVET College Graduation Ceremony Date

29.Buffalo City TVET College Graduation List

30.Buffalo City TVET College Acceptance letter

31.Buffalo City TVET College Academic Calendar

32.Buffalo City TVET College Student Portal Login

33.Buffalo City TVET College Career

34.Buffalo City TVET College Job Vacancies

35.Buffalo City TVET College Blackboard Learn Login

See Also:

1.University of Pretoria Application Status

2.University of Pretoria Online Application Status

3.University of Pretoria Online Application

4.University of Pretoria Application Forms

5.University of Pretoria Undergraduate Application Form

6.University of Pretoria Postgraduate Application Form

7.University of Pretoria Undergraduate Online Application

8.University of Pretoria Postgraduate Online Application

COURSES
9. University of Pretoria Courses Offered

FEES STRUCTURE, BURSARIES AND SCHOLARSHIPS

10.University of Pretoria Application Fees

11. University of Pretoria Summer/Winter School Fees

12. University of Pretoria Bank Details

13.University of Pretoria Fees and Funding

14. University of Pretoria Undergraduate Fees

15. University of Pretoria Postgraduate Fees

16. University of Pretoria Residence Fees

17. University of Pretoria International Student Fees

18. University of Pretoria Postgraduate Registration Fee

19. University of Pretoria Scholarship

PROSPECTUS

20. University of Pretoria Prospectus.

21. University of Pretoria Undergraduate Prospectus

22. University of Pretoria Postgraduate prospectus

ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS AND REGISTRATIONS 

22. University of Pretoria Online Registration

23. University of Pretoria Registration

24. University of Pretoria International Student Registration

25. University of Pretoria Admission Requirements

26. University of Pretoria PHD Admission Requirements

CONTACTS, LOCATION AND CAMPUSES

27. University of Pretoria Distance Learning Contact

28. University of Pretoria Fees Office Contact Address

29. University of Pretoria Contact Address

30. University of Pretoria Campuses

ACADEMICS

31. University of Pretoria Student Portal Login

32. University of Pretoria Accommodation and Hostel

33. University of Pretoria Distance Learning

34. University of Pretoria Dormitory and Hostels

35. University of Pretoria Examinations

36. University of Pretoria Examination Results

37. University of Pretoria Faculties and Schools

38. When is University of Pretoria Open Day

39. Does University of Pretoria Offer Distance Learning

40. University of Pretoria Graduation Ceremony Date

41. University of Pretoria Graduation List

42. University of Pretoria Closing Date

43. University of Pretoria Acceptance Letter

44. University of Pretoria Career

45. University of Pretoria Job Vacancies

46. University of Pretoria Blackboard Learn Login

47. University of Pretoria Historical Background

48. University of Pretoria World Ranking

49. University of Pretoria Grade Calculator

50. University of Pretoria Examination Timetable

51. Apply at the University of Pretoria

 

See Also:

61.University of Cape Town UCT Term Dates

62.University of Cape Town UCT Academic Calendar Pdf

63.Does University of Cape Town UCT Offer Pharmacy

64.University of Cape Town UCT School of Nursing and Midwifery

65.University of Cape Town Contact Details

66.University of Cape Town Payment and Rebate Deadlines

67.University of Cape Town UCT Payment Methods

68.UCT Postgraduate International Students

69.University of Cape Town National Senior Certificate Requirements

70.University of Cape Town UCT Students Results

71.University of Cape Town UCT Course Timetable

72.University of Cape Town UCT Department Timetables

73.University of Cape Town UCT Venue Timetable

74.UCT Departmental Exam Timetable

75.University of Cape Town UCT Student Exam Timetable

76.University of Cape Town UCT Residences

77.University of Cape Town Accommodation

78.University of Cape Town UCT Student Housing

79.UCT Student Housing and Residence Life

80.University of Cape Town UCT Student Housing Application

81.UCT Off-Campus Student Accommodation Services OCSAS

82.University of Cape Town UCT Tier One Residences

83.University of Cape Town UCT Tier Two Residences

84.University of Cape Town UCT Tier Three Residences

85.University of Cape Town UCT Postgraduate Housing

86.University of Cape Town UCT Postgraduate Contacts

87.University of Cape Town UCT First Year Students

88.University of Cape Town UCT Orientation Leadership Training

89.University of Cape Town UCT Orientation Dates

90.University of Cape Town UCT Orientation Programmes

91.University of Cape Town UCT International Orientation

92.UCT Student Orientation & Advocacy Service SOAS

93.University of Cape Town UCT Curriculum and Course Changes

94.University of Cape Town UCT Exams

95.University of Cape Town UCT Graduation Ceremony Date

96.University of Cape Town UCT Graduation List

97.University of Cape Town UCT Third Term

98.University of Cape Town UCT Oracle PeopleSoft Sign in

99.University of Cape Town Faculties

100.University of Cape Town Grading System

Quick Check:

101.Apply at University of Stellenbosch

102.University of Stellenbosch Application Forms

103.University of Stellenbosch Online Application

104.University of Stellenbosch Undergraduate Application Forms

105.University of Stellenbosch Postgraduate Application Forms

106.University of Stellenbosch Application Status

107.University of Stellenbosch Online Application Status

COURSES

108.University of Stellenbosch Courses Offered

FEES STRUCTURE, BURSARIES AND SCHOLARSHIPS

109.University of Stellenbosch Postgraduate Fees

110.University of Stellenbosch Fees

110.University of Stellenbosch Banking Details

111.University of Stellenbosch ​​Bursaries and Loans

112.University of Stellenbosch Merit Bursaries

113.University of Stellenbosch Residence fees

114.University of Stellenbosch Registration Fees

115.University of Stellenbosch Application Fees

116.University of Stellenbosch NSFAS Application

117.University of Stellenbosch Late Registration Fees

Prospectus
118.University of Stellenbosch Prospectus

119.University of Stellenbosch Undergraduate Prospectus

120.University of Stellenbosch Postgraduate Prospectus

CONTACTS, LOCATION AND CAMPUSES

121.University of Stellenbosch Contact Address

122.Where University of Stellenbosch is Situated

ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS AND REGISTRATIONS

123.University of Stellenbosch Registration

124.University of Stellenbosch Late Registration

125.University of Stellenbosch Admission Requirements

ACADEMICS

126.University of Stellenbosch Readmission

127.University of Stellenbosch Acceptance Letter

128.University of Stellenbosch Career

129.University of Stellenbosch Job Vacancies

130.University of Stellenbosch Application Closing Date

131.University of Stellenbosch Blackboard Learn Login

132.University of Stellenbosch Graduation List

133.University of Stellenbosch Graduation Ceremony Date

134.University of Stellenbosch Faculties

135.University of Stellenbosch Opening Date

136.University of Stellenbosch Assessment and Examination

137.University of Stellenbosch Student Portal Login

138.University of Stellenbosch History

139.University of Stellenbosch Student Accommodation

140.University of Stellenbosch Residences Accommodation

141.University of Stellenbosch World Ranking

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *