Trumbull College

{{Short description|Residential college at Yale University}}

{{Infobox residential college

| name = Trumbull College

| type = Residential college at Yale University

| image = Trumbullshield.png

| image_size = 150px

| caption = Coat of arms of Trumbull College

| colors = Maroon and gold

| nickname = Trumbullians; bulls

| mascot = Bull

| motto_Latin = Fortuna favet audaci

| motto_English = Fortune favors the brave

| named_for = Jonathan Trumbull

| established = 1933

| sister_college = Cabot House

| dean = Surjit Chandhoke

| undergraduates = 407 (2016-2017)

| location = 241 Elm Street
New Haven, Connecticut 06511

|head=Fahmeed Hyder}}

Trumbull College is one of fourteen undergraduate residential colleges of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. The college is named for Jonathan Trumbull, governor of Connecticut from 1769 to 1784 and advisor and friend to General George Washington. A Harvard College graduate, Trumbull was the only colonial governor to support the American Revolution.

Opened in September 1933, Trumbull College is one of the eight Yale colleges designed by James Gamble Rogers and the only one funded by John W. Sterling. Its Collegiate Gothic buildings form the Sterling Quadrangle, which Rogers planned to harmonize with his adjacent Sterling Memorial Library.

History

File:MainCourtyardTrumbull.jpg at back]]

Trumbull is one of the University's nine original colleges. Unlike the other eight colleges, which were funded and endowed by Edward Harkness, funds for Trumbull came from university benefactor John W. Sterling. Yale originally planned to name the college after John C. Calhoun, a Yale graduate, U.S. vice president, and secessionist. In deference to Sterling being a Civil War veteran from Connecticut, the university agreed to name the college after Jonathan Trumbull and gave the name Calhoun to another residential college (now re-named Hopper College).{{cite web | url=http://digital.library.yale.edu/utils/getarticleclippings/collection/yale-ydn/id/18249/articleId/DIVL65/compObjId/18255/lang/en_US/dmtext/Trumbull!Sterling | date= 15 May 1941 | title=Civil War Caused Calhoun College to Change Names with Trumbull | publisher=Yale Daily News |access-date= 4 December 2016}}

File:Trumbull at night.jpg. The College spans the entire block shown, with Sterling Memorial Library forming the far side. The courtyards, from left to right, are Potty Court, Main Court, and Stone Court.]]

Before University President James Rowland Angell instituted the residential college system in 1931, the site that was to become Trumbull contained two free-standing dormitory buildings flanking the old gymnasium. James Gamble Rogers, architect of eight of Yale's colleges, considered the dormitories to be his magnum opus and inscribed the initials of the men who worked on the project on shield carvings along the outside of the buildings. The buildings are modeled after King's College, Cambridge.

The gym was torn down and the dormitories connected with a new building in the Collegiate Gothic style. The new building contained the Trumbull dining hall, common room, and library. A new dorm wing was constructed parallel to the originals and a faculty member's house (first known as the Master's House and since April 2016 as the Head of College House) was added. With the Sterling Memorial Library to the north, the buildings formed the Sterling Quadrangle. The buildings split the quadrangle into three separate courtyards — Alvarez (Main) Court, Potty Court, and Stone Court.

Although the construction techniques were modern, Rogers went to lengths to make the buildings appear centuries old. He had workers distress stone walls with acid. They intentionally broke some of the leaded glass windows and then repaired them with extra leading in the medieval fashion. They created niches for statuary and left them empty, as if the statues had been lost or destroyed over time. They varied the carving techniques used on the exterior stone, to suggest to the practiced eye that the work had been done by different carvers over many years.{{cite web | url=https://www.stonebusiness.us/?p=439 | title=Trumbull College, Yale University, New Haven, Conn. | date=8 September 2006 | access-date=27 August 2023}}

File:StoneCourtyard.jpg

Each residential college was to be headed by a senior faculty member serving as college master. The university chose the first masters to reflect a diverse range of disciplines. President Angell, a psychologist, was especially keen to have a scientist among them. He recruited Stanhope Bayne-Jones, a Yale College graduate and Dean of University of Rochester Medical School, to come to Yale as Trumbull's first master.{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XzYX_MduAG8C&q=stanhope%20bayne-jones&pg=PA138 | title=A History of Yale's School of Medicine: Passing Torches to Others | date=2002 | author=Gerald N. Burrow | page=138 | isbn=0300132883 | access-date=11 July 2014}}

Because Trumbull was pieced together using existing buildings, and on a small area of land, its original student rooms were older and amenities were less generous than those of some of its sister colleges. (The college has since been renovated and upgraded.) Still, the college's first faculty and students put the space to some creative uses. For example, Clements Fry, pioneering psychiatrist in the Department of University Health, opened a counseling office in a fourth-floor room off Stone Court.{{cite web | url=http://oculus.nlm.nih.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=oralhist;cc=oralhist;rgn=main;view=text;idno=2935106r | title=General Histories of Medicine Oral Histories: Stanhope Bayne-Jones | pages=351–52, 358 | access-date=12 July 2014}}{{cite web | url=http://doc.med.yale.edu/historical/collections/fry.html | title=Clements Collard Fry | access-date=12 July 2014 }} Students found space to put on plays and publish a college magazine.{{cite web | url=https://oculus.nlm.nih.gov/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=oralhist;cc=oralhist;idno=2935106r;seq=355 | title=General Histories of Medicine Oral Histories: Stanhope Bayne-Jones | pages=354 | access-date=10 Dec 2016}}

During World War II, Yale turned much of its campus over to the military for training. By 1943 Trumbull was one of only three colleges that continued to house undergraduates (Timothy Dwight and Jonathan Edwards were the others).{{cite web | url=http://yaledailynews.com/blog/2001/02/21/yale-an-arsenal-of-democracy-in-world-war-ii/ | date= 21 February 2001 | title=Yale: An arsenal of democracy in World War II | author=Jonathan Horn | publisher=Yale Daily News |access-date= 29 June 2014}}

In the first two decades of Yale's residential college system, students would apply for entry to their choice of college at the end of their freshman year. Although the university sought to give each college a diverse population, the colleges acquired reputations. Freshmen from wealthy families with social connections tended to shun Trumbull.{{cite web | url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1950/11/25/eli-colleges-outclass-houses-as-social/?page=single | title=Eli Colleges Outclass Houses as Social Centers | date=25 November 1950 | publisher=Harvard Crimson | access-date=30 June 2014}} As one chronicler of the university's history noted, "Calhoun and Davenport were strongly athletic and ‘white shoe,’ only engineers (it was whispered) congregated in Silliman and Timothy Dwight, and no one knew who lived in Trumbull."{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B2aDRhohtx8C&q=inauthor%3A%22Brooks%20Mather%20Kelley%22&pg=PA392 | title=Yale: A History | author=Brooks Mather Kelley | year=1974 | page=448 | publisher=Yale University Press | isbn=0300078439 | access-date=11 July 2014}} In other words, Trumbull maintained a reputation for housing serious students, many of whom were on scholarships. Some called Trumbull "the bursar's college." To overcome these social differences, the university began assigning most students to colleges randomly — beginning in 1954 at the end of the student's freshman year, and beginning in 1962 upon admission to Yale.

In 1968, Yale President Kingman Brewster announced a plan for admitting women to Yale and proposed that Trumbull be turned into housing for freshman women.{{cite web | url=http://digital.library.yale.edu/utils/getarticleclippings/collection/yale-ydn/id/9663/articleId/DIVL46/compObjId/9673/lang/en_US/dmtext/women%20coeducation | date= 15 November 1968 |title=Brewster Offers Coeducation Plan | publisher=Yale Daily News | access-date= 29 June 2014}} Brewster held a "stormy" meeting with Trumbull students, who would have been forced to vacate their college.{{cite web | url=http://www.thecrimson.com/article/1968/11/15/yale-will-admit-women-in-1969/ | date= 15 November 1968 | title=Yale Will Admit Women in 1969; May Have Coeducational Housing | publisher=Harvard Crimson| access-date= 29 June 2014}} In response to the protest, Brewster changed his plan and reserved one of the Old Campus dormitories for women. The Trumbull College Council passed a motion "vigorously endorsing with rampant enthusiasm" the revised proposal.{{cite web | url=http://digital.library.yale.edu/utils/getarticleclippings/collection/yale-ydn/id/9681/articleId/DIVL94/compObjId/9687/lang/en_US/dmtext/women%20coeducation | date = 19 November 1968 | title=College Councils Support Modified Coeducation Plan | publisher= Yale Daily News | access-date= 29 June 2014}}

File:TrumbullCollegeConstruction.JPG

Helen Brown Nicholas, wife of former Trumbull Master John Spangler Nicholas, died in 1972 and left the college a bequest to fund building of a chapel. Yale architecture professor Herbert Newman and his students designed the chapel, modifying an existing squash court in the Trumbull basement. It was dedicated in 1974.{{cite web | url=http://digital.library.yale.edu/utils/getarticleclippings/collection/yale-ydn/id/138243/articleId/MODSMD_ARTICLE2/compObjId/138251/lang/en_US/dmtext/Nicholas%20chapel | author=Mead Treadwell | date=23 September 1974 | title=Trumbull dedicates chapel; Squash court arises anew | publisher=Yale Daily News | access-date= 29 June 2014}} Frequently used as a theater, "Nick" Chapel remains in high demand by Yale students of all colleges.

The college was extensively remodeled during the 2005–2006 academic year, thanks in part to donations from the Alvarez family.{{cite web | url=http://giving.yale.edu/news/TC-rededication | title=Trumbull College Rededication Celebrated | access-date= 11 November 2014}} All dorm rooms and bathrooms were renovated, and the dining hall kitchen and the activity areas in the basement received comprehensive upgrades and modernization.

Student life

File:Bingham Hall shadows.JPG

Trumbull freshmen are housed in Bingham Hall along with students from Grace Hopper College. The dormitory's location on the southern corner of the Old Campus is site of the College House, Yale's first building in New Haven, and Osborn Hall, demolished in 1926 for Bingham Hall's construction. It is the only freshman dormitory with elevator access and contains a comparative literature library on its eighth story.

Trumbull College itself includes three courtyards, a buttery, dance studio, student kitchen, TV room, theatre, seminar room, art gallery, art studio, pottery studio, gym, music room, common room, computer rooms, library, dining hall, billiards and ping pong areas as well as a Head of College's House where many social activities are held.

Trumbull is the smallest of Yale's residential colleges, both in terms of students affiliated with the college and students housed in the college.[http://www.yale.edu/facebook Yale University Facebook (Log-in required)] {{webarchive |url=https://www.webcitation.org/5wTs6KLIV?url=http://www.yale.edu/facebook |date=February 14, 2011 }}

Faculty leaders

  • Fahmeed Hyder, professor of biomedical engineering at the Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science and professor of radiology and biomedical imaging at the Yale School of Medicine, was appointed to a five-year term as Head of College, beginning on July 1, 2023. Hyder's wife, Anita Sharif-Hyder, Associate Secretary for the University-Wide Committee on Sexual Misconduct, serves as Associate Head of College.
  • Surjit Chandhoke, lecturer and research scientist in the Molecular Cellular and Developmental Biology Department, is Dean of Trumbull College, living in the college and tracking students' academic progress as well as joining in many social activities. Before coming to Trumbull, she had been a long-term advisor to biology students.
  • Jorge Anaya (Assistant Director of Student Engagement at the Yale College Dean's Office), and Nils Rudi and Teresa Chahine (both professors at the Yale School of Management) are residential fellows in the college and often join students in activities.

College traditions

  • The phrase "We must consult Brother Jonathan" appears on the graduation certificates of the college.[http://trumbull.yalecollege.yale.edu/history/ "Trumbull College History"] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20140709133157/http://trumbull.yalecollege.yale.edu/history/ |date=2014-07-09 }}.

File:TCpotty court2008.jpg.]]

  • Cornhole is a game in which teams throw a series of four bean-bags across to the other team's board, scoring 1 point for each that remains on the board, 3 points if it falls through a hole in the middle. After both teams have gone, the difference between their points is taken, and that difference is awarded to the winning team. Trumbull's cornhole games appear during its Fall Rumble in Trumbull festival as well as in the spring during its Pamplona event.
  • The Trumbulletin was Trumbull's tabloid magazine and the oldest residential college publication at Yale. The tradition continues in a reduced electronic form as weekly dispatches from the head of college.
  • Rumble in Trumbull: Trumbullians combat with massive foam gloves. Favorite past Rumbles include Jews vs. Gentiles and various competitions among suites. Good things to eat and many games appear during Rumble in Trumbull.
  • Pamplona: Trumbullians celebrate the end of spring classes with food, music, competitions, and the Running of the Bulls.
  • Running of the Bulls is a raucous run through Cross Campus and Trumbull's traditional rival college, neighboring Berkeley. It usually occurs on the day of Pamplona.
  • Trumbull seniors annually paint the Potty Court Statue before graduation. The class of 2008 painted the statue to look like then-Yale College Dean Peter Salovey (who went on to serve as Yale's president from 2013 to 2024). The class of 2014 painted it to look like Harold, a golden retriever and former Trumdog who loved students.

Past traditions

File:PottyCourt.jpg

  • Potty Court Frisbee was a game popular in the 1970s and 1980s played in the Potty Court by two teams of two players each. The general idea was to stand on the low stone wall next to the wrought iron arch at one end of the courtyard and throw a frisbee through the twin arch at the other end, while the other team's two players tried to stop it. Defenders could stand on and lean out from the low stone wall, and could hang from the arch, but could not touch the walkway under the arch. The throws alternated between the teams.

A throw that went through the arch above the level of the stone wall scored one point. A throw that went through one of the two narrow gaps at the top of the arch's ironwork was a "grundl" and scored two points. To discourage defenders from committing to defense of the arch before the opponent threw, the thrower could also score a point for a shot that hit the wrought iron fencing next to the arch, but a "fence shot" had to hit the fence on the fly or off a wall, while a shot through the arch was allowed to bounce off the ground. The first team to get seven points won. Other than the frisbee, no equipment was required, although some players wore leather gloves to protect their hands from the wrought iron.{{cite web | url=http://digital.library.yale.edu/utils/getarticleclippings/collection/yale-ydn/id/11311/articleId/DIVL409/compObjId/11312/lang/en_US/dmtext/ | title=Bull and Frisbee at Yale | author=Alan Beller | publisher=Yale Daily News | date=7 May 1970 | page=4 | access-date=6 July 2014 }}

  • The Beer and Bicycle Race was a team biathlon event from the 1950s and '60s, briefly revived in the '70s. The first race, in 1952, staged by the Trumbull Beer and Bike Society, was an over 70-mile relay from Trumbull to Vassar College. Riders had to consume a quart of beer before passing the baton to the next member of their team (although some sources suggest the beer had to be consumed before riding). Prizes were awarded for fastest times and best rider costumes. The annual April event became the center of press attention, partying, and celebration, and grew to the point that authorities at Vassar banned it in 1957.{{cite web |url=http://vq.vassar.edu/issues/2012/02/vassar-yesterday/first-one-to-the-finish-line-gets-a-date.html |title=First One to the Finish Line Gets a Date! | author=Carrie Hojniki | publisher=Vassar Alumnae/i Quarterly | date=Spring–Summer 2012 |access-date=6 July 2014}}{{cite web |url=http://www.yale.edu/cycling/history/ |title=Yale Cycling |access-date=27 June 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140714202749/http://www.yale.edu/cycling/history/ |archive-date=2014-07-14 |url-status=dead }}{{cite web |url=http://www.ivy-style.com/bicycle-week-the-yale-vassar-bike-race.html |title=Ivy Style. Bicycle Week: The Yale-Vassar Bicycle Race |access-date=27 June 2014}} It continued for a while with a new destination, Connecticut College.{{cite web |url=http://yale64.org/news/alling.htm |title=Class News: Trumbull Beer and Bike Races 1961 - 1963 |access-date=27 June 2014}} In 1964, Trumbull ran it on a 45-mile course through nearby towns, ending back at the Yale Bowl.{{cite web | url=http://digital.library.yale.edu/utils/getarticleclippings/collection/yale-ydn/id/68016/articleId/DIVL107/compObjId/68024/lang/en_US/dmtext/ | author=John Rothchild | date=4 May 1964 | title=Trumbull Cyclists Chug, Pedal... Chug, Pedal... Chug | page=1 | publisher=Yale Daily News | access-date=6 July 2014 }} It seems to have faded away after that, although Trumbull re-staged it for a few years in the 1970s as a double round-trip race between Trumbull and Sleeping Giant State Park.
  • The Trumbull Crier, during the 1990s, was a student who made announcements during dinner from the balcony of the college dining hall. The Crier would begin the announcements with, "Moo-ye, Moo-ye, it's six o'clock in Trumbull College, and all is well!" The first Trumbull Crier was Jeremy Monthy (Class of 1995), who came up with the concept. He made and wore a tricorn hat fitted with bull horns.

Heads and Deans

class="wikitable"

! # !! Heads !! Term !! Dean !! Term

1Stanhope Bayne-Jones1932–1938Russell Inslee Clark Jr.1963–1965
2Charles Hyde Warren1938–1945Edwin Storer Redkey1965–1968
3John Spangler Nicholas1945–1963Paul Terry Magee1968–1971
4George deForest Lord1963–1966W. Scott Long1971–1974
5Ronald Myles Dworkin1966–1969C. M. Long (acting)1974–1975
6Kai Theodor Erikson1969–1973W. Scott Long1975–1978
7Robert John Fogelin1973–1976Robert A. Jaeger1978–1982
8Robert A. Jaeger (acting)1976–1977Mary Ramsbottom1982–1986
9Michael George Cooke1977–1982Peter B. MacKeith1986–1990
10Frank William Kenneth Firk1982–1987William Di Canzio1990–1998
11Harry B. Adams1987–1997Peter Novak1998–2001
12Janet B. Henrich1997–2002Laura King2001–2004
13Frederick J. Streets (acting)2002–2003Jasmina Beširević-Regan2004–2016
14Janet B. Henrich2003–2013
15Margaret S. Clark2013–2023Surjit Chandhoke2016– present
16Fahmeed Hyder2023–present

Notable alumni

Note: Records of the residential colleges of which graduates of Yale College were members are incomplete and not readily available.

{{Expand list|date=July 2009}}

  • Les Aspin (1960, History, the Arts, and Letters), United States Representative and Secretary of Defense
  • Chesa Boudin (2003),{{cite web |access-date=2020-05-07 |url=https://yaledailynews.com/blog/2003/02/21/humanitarian-acts-in-iraq-drop-sanctions/ |title=Humanitarian acts in Iraq? Drop sanctions |first1=CHESA |last1=BOUDIN

|first2=SARAH |last2=STILLMAN

|date= February 21, 2003 |quote=“Chesa Boudin is a senior in Trumbull College ...”}} leftist lawyer, San Francisco District Attorney

References

{{Reflist|30em}}