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Hopper College

Calhoun College
Residential college at Yale University
Calhoun College shield.png
Coat of arms of Calhoun College
University Yale University
Location 189 Elm Street
Coordinates 41°18′36″N 72°55′38″W / 41.309974°N 72.927241°W / 41.309974; -72.927241Coordinates: 41°18′36″N 72°55′38″W / 41.309974°N 72.927241°W / 41.309974; -72.927241
Nickname Hounies, HounDogs, The Inferno
Motto E Pluribus Hounum (Latin)
Motto in English Out of many, one Houn.
Established 1933
Named for John C. Calhoun
Architect John Russell Pope
Colors Black, navy blue, gold
Sister college Kirkland House, Harvard
Pembroke College, Oxford
Head Julia Adams
Dean April Ruiz
Undergraduates 425 (2013–2014)
Website www.yale.edu/calhoun

Calhoun College is a residential college of Yale University. It was opened in 1933 as one of the original eight undergraduate residential colleges endowed by Edward Harkness. The building was designed by John Russell Pope. The college is named after John C. Calhoun, but it is to be renamed in honor of Grace Hopper in 2017.

Calhoun, a US Vice President and 1804 graduate of Yale College, was an advocate of slaveholding and states' rights. Since the 1960s, Calhoun's white supremacist beliefs and pro-slavery leadership have prompted calls to rename the college or remove its tributes to Calhoun. In 2016, the Yale Corporation chose to retain Calhoun as the college's namesake, but on February 11, 2017, following a report by a new Committee to Establish Principles on Renaming, Yale president Peter Salovey announced that this decision was reversed, and the name of the college would be changed to honor Grace Hopper, also a Yale graduate.

In 1641, John Brockston established a farm on the plot of land that is now Calhoun College. After the Revolutionary War an inn was constructed that would later become the meeting place of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. From 1863 until 1931 the land was home to the Yale Divinity School, which was housed in three buildings known as West Divinity Hall, Marquand Chapel, and East Divinity Hall. After Yale President James Rowland Angell announced the residential college plan in 1930, the Divinity School campus was demolished and a new campus built at the top of Prospect Hill, where it currently stands.


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