More than 175 years ago, Albert
Gallatin, the distinguished statesman who served as secretary of the treasury
under Presidents Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, declared his intention to
establish "in this immense and fast-growing city ... a system of rational
and practical education fitting for all and graciously opened to all."
Founded in 1831, New York University is now one of the largest private
universities in the United States. Of the more than 3,000 colleges and
universities in America, New York University is one of only 60 member
institutions of the distinguished Association of American Universities.
From a student body of 158 during
NYU's very first semester, enrollment has grown to more than 40,000 students attending
18 schools and colleges at five major centers in Manhattan and in sites in
Africa, Asia, Europe, and South America. Today, students come from every state
in the union and from 133 foreign countries. The faculty, which initially
consisted of fourteen professors and lecturers (among them artist and inventor
Samuel F. B. Morse), now totals over 3,100 full-time members whose research and
teaching encompasses the humanities, the sciences, and the social sciences; the
law; medicine; business; education; the fine arts, studio art, and the
performing and cinematic arts; music; social work; public administration; the
ancient world; and continuing and professional studies. With more than 2,500
courses offered the University awards more than 25 different degrees. Although
overall the University is large, the individuals schools and colleges are
small- to moderate-sized units—each with its own traditions, programs, and
faculty – and there are many communities to be found within the NYU community
based on interests, activities, and shared experiences.
The center of NYU is its
Washington Square campus in the heart of Greenwich Village. One of the city's
most creative and energetic communities, the Village is a historic neighborhood
that has attracted generations of writers, musicians, artists, and
intellectuals. NYU, in keeping with its founder’s vision, is “in and of the
city”: the University – which has no walls and no gates – is deeply intertwined
with New York City, drawing inspiration from its vitality.
In addition to its Manhattan
locations, the University is also located in Brooklyn with the second oldest
school of engineering and technology in the country, and has research
facilities, notably the Nelson Institute of Environmental Medicine, in Sterling
Forest, near Tuxedo, New York.
And NYU has established itself as
the first global network university, with a comprehensive liberal arts campus
in Abu Dhabi – the first to be operated abroad by a major U.S. research
university – and other sites for study and research in Accra, Ghana; Berlin,
Germany; Buenos Aires, Argentina; Florence, Italy; London, England; Madrid,
Spain; Paris, France; Prague, the Czech Republic; Shanghai, China; and Tel
Aviv, Israel, among other locations.
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