CornellSun.com Topic

Goldwin Smith

Building Up the Humanities

Oct 26, 2011

President Skorton's announcement that the University would construct a new humanities building demonstrated Cornell's commitment to the field at a time when many were beginning to have their doubts.

Goldwin Smith’s Anti-Semitism Fuels Anger

Danielle Davis  —  Apr 30, 2009

New light has recently been shed on the character of one of Cornell’s jeweled alumni and benefactors: Goldwin Smith, as revealed through his own and others’ writing, was an influential anti-semite.

Professors Glenn Altschuler, american studies, and Isaac Kramnick, government, verified these findings in a co-authored Cornell Alumni Magazine article last month.

Smith was a renowned intellect and professor at Oxford University at the time of Cornell’s inception. He left his post in 1868 to help launch Cornell’s humanities department and teach English and constitutional history, giving the new University instant credibility.

It was in Toronto, Canada, where Smith moved after only three years in Ithaca, that he became publicly active in expressing his anti-semitic views.

Univ. May Influence Future of Canadian Farmers’ Market

Danielle Davis  —  Apr 1, 2009

A 137-year-old farmers’ market in the small city of Orillia, Canada might lose its land, and Cornell University may be the only actor able to save it. As a result of an 1872 covenant drawn by Mr. Goldwin Smith, Patrick Kehoe, a concerned Orillia resident, is now appealing to Cornell to become the “Guardian of the Covenant.”

Syndicate content