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Nicholas
Murray Butler (April 2, 1862-December 7, 1947) was an educator and university
president; an adviser to seven presidents and friend of statesmen in foreign
nations; recipient of decorations from fifteen foreign governments and
of honorary degrees from thirty-seven colleges and universities; a member
of more than fifty learned societies and twenty clubs; the author of a
small library of books, pamphlets, reports, and speeches; an international
traveler who crossed the Atlantic at least a hundred times; a national
leader of the Republican Party; an advocate of peace and the embodiment
of the «international mind» that he frequently spoke about. He was called
Nicholas Miraculous Butler by his good friend Theodore Roosevelt; the
epithet was so perfect that, once uttered, it could not be forgotten.
Born in Elizabeth, New Jersey, this son of Henry L. Butler, a manufacturer,
and Mary Murray Butler, daughter of Nicholas Murray, a clergyman and author,
began his career with a brilliant record as a student. In 1882, at the
age of twenty, he received his bachelor's degree, in 1883, a master's
degree, in 1884, a doctorate - all from Columbia College; in 1885 he studied
in Paris and in Berlin where he began a lifelong friendship with
Elihu
Root, who was also destined to become a Nobel peace laureate. In the fall
of 1885, he accepted an appointment on the staff of the Department of
Philosophy at Columbia College, which in 1896 became Columbia University.
And so began a professional association that was to last for sixty years.
From the first, Butler distinguished himself as an educational administrator.
Within four years he gave administrative form to his philosophical theory
of pedagogy by establishing an institute which, later affliated with Columbia,
became known as Teachers College. He founded the Educational Review and
edited it for thirty years, wrote reports on state and local educational
systems, served as a member of the New Jersey Board of Education from
1887 to 1895, participated in the formation of the College Entrance Examination
Board. He was named acting president of Columbia University in 1901 and
president in 1902, retaining that position until retirement in October,
1945.
Under his presidency, Columbia University made phenomenal growth. It became
a major university. All graduate studies were enormously expanded; the
scope of professional training was enlarged to include new schools such
as those of journalism and dentistry; the student body was increased from
4,000 to 34,000 and the faculty by a like ratio; the plant was enlarged
by a construction program that averaged a new building each year, and
the endowment kept pace; the professorial salaries were increased enough
to attract many of the world's leading scholars to the teaching and research
staff.
Butler moved in the realm of politics as easily as he did in that of education.
He was a delegate to the Republican convention for the first time in 1888
and for the last in 1936. Butler, Root, William Howard Taft, and
Theodore
Roosevelt constituted a powerful political quartet in the early years
of the century. Breaking with the others in 1912, Roosevelt ran for the
presidency as the candidate of the Progressive Party, which drew most
of its strength from Republicans, against the nominees of the constituted
party: Taft for the presidency and Butler for the vice-presidency. By
splitting the national vote, they permitted the Democrat, Woodrow Wilson,
to win the election. In 1916 Butler failed in his attempt to secure the
Republican presidential nomination for Root and in 1920 and 1928 failed
to secure it for himself.
Meanwhile, Butler sought to unite the world of education and that of politics
in a struggle to achieve world peace through international cooperation.
He was chairman of the Lake Mohonk Conferences on International Arbitration,
which met periodically from 1907 to 1912, and was appointed president
of the American branch of International Conciliation, an organization
founded by another Nobel peace laureate, d'Estournelles de Constant. His
association with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace was a
fruitful one of thirty-five years. Influential in persuading Andrew Carnegie
to establish the Endowment in 1910 with a gift of $ 10,000,000, he served
as head of the Endowment's section on international education and communication,
founded the European branch of the Endowment, with headquarters in Paris,
and held the presidency of the parent Endowment from 1925 to 1945.
Butler married twice.
His first wife, whom he married in 1887 and by whom he had one daughter,
died in 1903; he remarried in 1907. When Butler became almost totally
blind in 1945 at the age of eighty-three, he resigned the demanding posts
he still held. He died two years later.
In 1940, Butler completed
his autobiography with the publication of the second volume of Across
the Busy Years. Both in size and in title it is peculiarly appropriate.
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