Georgetown University College of Arts & Sciences

The Georgetown University College of Arts & Sciences (CAS) is a college of Georgetown University, a private Jesuit research university in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington, D.C.. It is the oldest and largest undergraduate school at Georgetown, and, until the founding of the School of Medicine in 1850, was the only higher education division of the university. In 1821, it granted its first graduate degrees, though the graduate portion has since been separated as the Georgetown University Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. From 1990 to 2022, it was named Georgetown College.[2]

Georgetown University College of Arts & Sciences
A vertical oval-shaped black and white design with a bald eagle whose wings are spread and who is grasping a globe and a cross with its claws. Around the seal are leaves and the numbers 17 and 89 appear on either side.
Seal of Georgetown University
Former name
Georgetown College
(1789– ,1990–2022)
TypePrivate college
Established1789; 235 years ago (1789)
Parent institution
Georgetown University
AffiliationRoman Catholic (Jesuit)
DeanRosario Ceballo
Students3,566 (2021)[1]
Location,
United States

38°54′32.1″N 77°4′20.2″W / 38.908917°N 77.072278°W / 38.908917; -77.072278
CampusUrban
Websitecollege.georgetown.edu

The current dean of the college is Rosario Ceballo, who assumed the position in 2022. The college enrolls over 3,500 students in 30 academic majors within 23 departments.[3]

History

From 1789 until the founding of the School of Medicine in 1850, Georgetown College was the only secondary school at what became Georgetown University. Robert Plunkett, the first president of Georgetown, oversaw the division of the school into three parts, "college", "preparatory", and "elementary". Elementary education was eventually dropped by Patrick Francis Healy, and preparatory eventually separated as Georgetown Prep.[4]

The White-Gravenor Hall houses most of the college's staff and faculty offices, including the Office of the Dean[5]

Over the years many schools have broken off of the College. The Graduate School of Arts and Sciences first broke off in 1855, but rejoined the college organization following the downturn in admissions caused by the American Civil War, until reestablishment in 1891. The School of Languages and Linguistics, itself organized out of the School of Foreign Service in 1949, was collapsed into the College in 1995, as the Faculty of Languages and Linguistics, though it maintains its separate programs.[6]

Degrees

The college offers Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degree programs.

List of deans and prefects of studies

From 1811 to 1931, Georgetown College was led by a prefect of studies. Since 1931, it has been led by a dean. The following people have led the college:

Deans and prefects of studies
No.NameYearsRef.
Prefects of Studies
1Giovanni Antonio Grassi SJ1811–1817[7]
2Roger Baxter SJ1819–1824[7]
3William Feiner SJ1825–1826[7]
4James Neill SJ1826–1827[7]
5Peter Walsh SJ1827–1828[7]
6Thomas F. Mulledy SJ1829–1831[7]
7William Grace SJ1831–1833[7]
8Thomas F. Mulledy SJ1833–1837[7]
9William McSherry SJ1837–1839[7]
10George Fenwick SJ1840–1841[7]
11James A. Ryder SJ1841–1843[7]
12George Fenwick SJ1843–1845[7]
13Thomas F. Mulledy SJ1845–1848[7]
14James A. Ryder SJ1848–1851[7]
15Charles H. Stonestreet SJ1851–1852[7]
16Bernard A. Maguire SJ1852–1853[7]
17Francis Knackstedt SJ1853–1854[7]
18Bernard A. Maguire SJ1854–1858[7]
19John Early SJ1858–1865[7]
20Bernard A. Maguire SJ1866–1867[7]
21Joseph O'Callaghan SJ1867–1868[7]
22Patrick F. Healy SJ1868–1880[7]
23William Whiteford SJ1880–1881[7]
24James A. Doonan SJ1881–1882[7]
25James B. Becker SJ1882–1883[7]
26Edward I. Devitt SJ1883–1886[7]
27James A. Doonan SJ1886–1888[7]
28J. Havens Richards SJ1888–1898[7][8]
29James P. Fagan SJ1898–1901[8]
30John A. Conway SJ1901–1903[8]
31W. G. Read Mullan SJ1903–1905[8]
32Charles Macksey SJ1905–1909[8]
33John B. Creeden SJ1909–1918[8]
34Edmund A. Walsh SJ1918[8]
35W. Coleman Nevils SJ1918–1922[8]
36William T. Tallon SJ1922–1924[8]
37Louis J. Gallagher SJ1924–1926[8]
38Robert A. Parsons SJ1926–1928[8]
39R. Rush Rankin SJ1928–1931[8]
Deans
1John J. McLaughlin SJ1931–1932[8]
2Vincent J. Hart SJ1932–1933[8]
3George F. Strohaver SJ1933–1934[8]
4John E. Grattan SJ1934–1942[8]
5Stephen F. McNamee SJ1942–1946[8]
6Charles L. Coolahan SJ1946–1949[8]
7Edward G. Jacklin SJ1949–1951[8]
8Brian A. McGrath SJ1951–1957[8]
9Joseph A. Sellinger SJ1957–1964[9]
10Thomas R. Fitzgerald SJ1964–1966[9]
11Royden B. Davis SJ1966–1989[9]
12Robert B. Lawton SJ1989–1999[9]
13Jane Dammen McAuliffe1999–2008[9]
14Chester Gillis2008–2017[10]
15Christopher Celenza2017–2020[11]
16Rosario Ceballo2022–present[12]

References

Citations

Sources