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Rutgers University–Camden

Coordinates:39°56′56″N75°07′26″W / 39.949°N 75.124°W /39.949; -75.124
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Public university in Camden, New Jersey, US
This article is about Rutgers University's campus in Camden, New Jersey. For the university as a whole, seeRutgers University. For other uses of "Rutgers", seeRutgers (disambiguation).

Rutgers University–Camden
Former names
South Jersey Law School (1926–1927)
College of South Jersey (1927–1950)
Rutgers College of South Jersey (1950–1970)[1]
MottoSol iustitiae et occidentem illustra
Motto in English
Sun of righteousness, shine upon the West also.
TypePublicresearch university
EstablishedMarch 21, 1926; 99 years ago (1926-03-21)
Academic affiliations
Space-grant
Endowment$603 million (2010, systemwide)[2]
ChancellorAntonio D. Tillis[3]
PresidentWilliam F. Tate IV
Academic staff
254[4]
Administrative staff
430[4]
Students6,158[4]
Undergraduates4,497[4]
Postgraduates1,661[4]
Location,
U.S.
CampusUrban/suburban
Alma MaterOn the Banks of the Old Delaware
Colors Scarlet
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division III
New Jersey Athletic Conference
MascotScarlet Raptors
Websitecamden.rutgers.edu
Map

Rutgers University–Camden is aregional campus ofRutgers University—apublic land-grantresearch university—located inCamden, New Jersey. Founded in 1926 as the South Jersey Law School, Rutgers–Camden began as an amalgam of the South Jersey Law School and the College of South Jersey. It is the southernmost of the three regional campuses of Rutgers—the others being located inNew Brunswick andNewark.[5] It isclassified among "R2: Doctoral Universities – High research activity".[6] In 2024 the school was ranked 48th among the top public universities and 98th among national universities byUS News and World Report.[7]

History

[edit]

Rutgers University-Camden was founded in 1926 as The College of South Jersey and South Jersey Law School by a group of South Jersey lawyers led byCollingswood mayor Arthur Armitage.[citation needed] The campus joined the Rutgers University system in 1950, becoming Rutgers University-Camden and Rutgers Law School-Camden. Since the merger the campus has expanded its footprint in the Cooper Grant and Downtown/University District neighborhoods in Camden.

The Black Student Unity Movement of Rutgers-Camden was founded in 1969 by a group of Black students at the school.[8] Whileracial segregation in public education was deemed unconstitutional by the decision inBrown v. Board of Education, universities still had policies in place that caused de facto segregation.[9] On February 10, 1969, three students from the Black Student Unity Movement interrupted a political science class that was taking place on Rutgers-Camden's campus and dispersed papers that listed the movement's demands.[10] Some demands listed by the Black Student Unity Movement were "that all racist faculty be removed from the university, an Urban Education Department be established, and that the new library addition be named afterPaul Robeson".[11] The movement was unable to get their demands met by Rutgers University immediately, but in 1991, Paul Robeson Library was established on the Rutgers-Camden campus.[12]

Walt Whitman Statue at its new location on Rutgers University-Camden campus

In 2012, there was a proposal for the campus to merge with Rowan University. Due to a large opposition movement led by faculty, staff, students and alumni, the proposal was defeated.[13]

On June 20, 2020, students of Rutgers University–Camden created a petition that called for "the removal of the Walt Whitman statue which stands tall in the middle of our campus."[14]Walt Whitman was an American poet and writer, who purchased a house in Camden in 1864, where he wrote his defining work, "Leaves of Grass".[15] In some of his works, Walt Whitman referred to Black individuals as "baboons" and "wild brutes" and had utilized a racial slur against Black people. Many Black intellectuals have called for these comments to be discussed at the same time as praise of Walt Whitman.[16]Rutgers University-Camden addressed the concerns proposed in the petition by hosting virtual meetings with community members, university faculty, students, and historians.[17] In 2021, the statute of Walt Whitman was moved from in front of the Rutgers University–Camden campus center to a garden space on campus and included contextualization of the complex history.[18]

Academics

[edit]

Rutgers–Camden isaccredited by theMiddle States Commission on Higher Education.[19] It has nearly 40 majors and 50 minors plus special programs, an Honors College, hands-on research with faculty mentors, study abroad, internships, civic learning, and various graduate and advanced professional programs. Theacademic year follows a 4-4 schedule of two four-coursesemesters, fall and spring. During the winter study term, students study various courses outside of typical curriculum for 3 weeks in January. Rutgers students often take the winter study term to pursue internships or work on intensive research projects.

Graduate and professional programs

[edit]

The Graduate School offers 14 programs granting master's degrees in severalliberal arts disciplines including history, English literature, languages, and creative writing, as well as advanced degrees in the biological, chemical, computer, and mathematical sciences, nursing, psychology, social work, political science and public policy, andDoctoral programs in Childhood Studies, Computational Biology, and Public Affairs with emphasis on community development. An MBA program is offered through the Rutgers School of Business-Camden.

Visual and Performing Arts

[edit]
RU-Camden-campus walk

The Rutgers–Camden Center for the Arts provides performances, exhibitions, education programs, and community projects. The Fine Arts Building on the Rutgers–Camden campus houses the Walter K. Gordon Theater, Black Box Theater, and the Stedman Gallery. The Gordon Theater is the home venue for the Collingswood-basedSymphony in C.

Rutgers School of Business–Camden

[edit]
Main article:Rutgers School of Business – Camden

The Rutgers School of Business is accredited by theAssociation to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB).

Rutgers Law School

[edit]

TheRutgers Law School is a center of legal education, with two campuses—in Camden and Newark. Its faculty is internationally recognized in a number of fields including constitutional, criminal, health, and corporate law.[citation needed] Its alumni are leading members of the bar in public and private practice settings throughout the nation.[citation needed] The school is well represented among the state and federal judiciary.[citation needed] The law school is a member of the Association of American Law Schools and is on the list of approved schools of the American Bar Association. It offers a three-year course of study for full-time students and a four-year, part-time program leading to the awarding of the Juris Doctor degree."[20]

Rutgers School of Nursing–Camden

[edit]

The Rutgers School of Nursing–Camden offers curricula that integrate nursing knowledge and clinical practice, including baccalaureate programs for traditional students, registered nurse students, and second-degree students; a doctor of nursing practice program; and certification in school nursing and wound ostomy continence nursing.

Libraries

[edit]

ThePaul Robeson Library develops and maintains access to materials that support undergraduate and graduate coursework and research. A designated Federal Depository for the First U.S. Congressional District, the library serves as a public resource for the citizens of New Jersey. Library faculty deliver comprehensive support for reference and research questions in their subject areas. Through the Paul Robeson Library, the Rutgers–Camden community may access the global resources of the Rutgers University Library System. The Robeson library also serves as the academic library for students and faculty at the Camden campuses ofCamden County College andRowan University.[21][22]

The Law Library is one of New Jersey's largest law libraries. It serves as a research facility for law students, legal practitioners, and the general public. The Law Library houses a collection of over 440,000 books and other materials, and the collection is comprehensive in its holdings of American, English, Canadian, and foreign legal periodicals. The Law Library is located on three floors of the Law School Building. A selective federal depository, the Rutgers–Camden Law Library hosts numerous online collections of public documents related to federal and New Jersey courts.[23]

Campus

[edit]

Dorms and student housing

[edit]
330 Cooper

Undergraduate and graduate dorms are located at Third and Cooper Streets, and a graduate residence hall is located at 330 Cooper Street.[24] The twelve-story residence hall is the tallest building on campus. Many students live off campus in Camden'sCooper Grant neighborhood, inPhiladelphia, or in surrounding suburbs such asCollingswood andHaddonfield.

Alumni House

[edit]
Rutgers Alumni House, Cooper Street

The Rutgers Alumni House is located at 312 Cooper Street, in a historic mansion built in 1809, and serves the alumni of all four Rutgers University campuses.[25]

Writers House

[edit]

The Rutgers Writers House is located at 305 Cooper Street, in a house historically known as the Dr. Henry Genet Taylor House.[26] The house is home to the university's MFA in Creative Writing Program, as well as the journalsCooper Street andStoryQuarterly. The Writers House hosts writers, scholars, and others for various programs.[27]

Rutgers-Camden Center for the Arts

[edit]

North of the campus green, The Rutgers-Camden Center for the Arts houses the Stedman Art Gallery, the Gordon Theater, and the Black Box theater.

Mid-Atlantic Regional Center for the Humanities

[edit]

Rutgers-Camden is home to the Mid-Atlantic Regional Center for the Humanities (MARCH), a public humanities learning and professional center which publishes the Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia, hosts fellowships, and sponsors research projects on the Mid-Atlantic region.

Transportation services

[edit]
Cooper Street–Rutgers University station

Regional rail access to the university is provided by thePATCO Speedline—theCity Hall station is located two blocks from center campus—and theCooper Street–Rutgers University station of theRiver Line. TheWalter Rand Transportation Center, a few blocks from campus, which provides access to severalNJ Transit bus lines. Additionally, the seasonally operatedRiverLink Ferry running between Camden and Philadelphia has a stop at the nearbyAdventure Aquarium.

As a service to students of the university, the Rutgers–Camden Police Department provides "a walking security escort for individuals to their vehicles, campus housing, the PATCO Hi-Speed Line station at 5th and Market Sts., and the Walter Rand Transportation Center on Broadway".[28] The campus also runs shuttle buses with stops throughout the campus.

Athletics

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See also:List of college athletic programs in New Jersey, USA § Division III
Rutgers-Camden athletics logo

The Rutgers–Camden's athletic teams are called theScarlet Raptors. The university is a member in theDivision III level of theNational Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), primarily competing in theNew Jersey Athletic Conference (NJAC) for most of its sports since the 1985–86 academic year;[29] except men's golf and women's volleyball, which the NJAC does not sponsor either. In those two sports, the Scarlet Raptors are members of theUnited East Conference (UEC) for men's golf and theEastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) for women's volleyball.

Rutgers–Camden competes in 17 intercollegiate varsity sports (8 for men and 9 for women). Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, tennis and track & field (indoor and outdoor); women's sports include basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, baseball, tennis, track & field (indoor and outdoor) and volleyball.

In 2006, Rutgers–Camden earned its first NCAA Division IIInational championship when the softball team defeated top-ranked and two-time defending championSt. Thomas (Minn.), 3–2. Rutgers–Camden set program marks with a 47–5 record and a 29-game winning streak.

In 2012 and 2013, Rutgers–Camden student-athlete Tim VanLiew won back-to-backNCAA Men's Division III Outdoor Track and Field Championships in thejavelin. He won his first title on May 26, 2012, with a throw of 67.19 meters (220.4 ft) at Claremont–Mudd–Scripps in Claremont, California. Nearly a year to the day of his first title, he not only defended his national javelin title, but he did so in record-breaking fashion. VanLiew's throw of 75.55 meters (247.9 ft) set the all-time NCAA Division III record for the new javelin, while shattering the NCAA Championship record, the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse stadium mark, and VanLiew's old Rutgers–Camden program record in the process.

Rutgers–Camden's men's soccer team went a school-record 37 consecutive games without a loss, a record that spanned the 2012 and 2013 seasons. The team compiled a 32–0–5 record during that time, the eighth-longest streak in NCAA Division III men's soccer history. The team earned a trip to theNCAA Division III National Championship for the first time in program history by defeating Loras College, 3–2, in overtime on Dec. 6, 2013, in San Antonio, Texas. The unbeaten streak came to an end on Dec. 7, 2013, in a 2–1 double-overtime loss to Messiah College in the NCAA Division III National Championship. The men's soccer team won three consecutive NJAC titles and in 2013 finished ranked No. 3 in the D3soccer.com Top 25 and No. 4 in the NSCAA national poll.

Student life

[edit]

Student body

[edit]
The Law Bridge atRutgers Law School's student center

Approximately 6,600 undergraduate and graduate students attend Rutgers–Camden. Nearly 600 students live on campus. Renowned for its commitment for diversity, the student body is made up of students from 29 states and 33 countries. There are many clubs that represent various ethnic and racial groups, various religious denominations, political beliefs, and an LGBTQ club. There have been over 43,000 graduates as of 2016[30]

Student media

[edit]
  • The Gleaner independent weekly newspaper; includes Features, Arts & Entertainment, Commentary, Weekly Word, Comics/Horoscope, Sports
  • WCCR-Camden Internet-based radio station[31]

Scholarly journals and publications

[edit]

Notable alumni

[edit]
See also:List of Rutgers University people

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Historic Overview of Rutgers-Camden".Rutgers Camden. www.rutgers.edu. Retrieved30 October 2023.
  2. ^"U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2010 Endowment Market Value and Percentage Change in Endowment Market Value from FY 2009 to FY 2010"(PDF). National Association of College and University Business Officers and Commonfund Institute. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 17 July 2012. Retrieved28 January 2011.
  3. ^Sepanic, Mike (April 27, 2021)."Antonio D. Tillis, Noted Scholar and Higher Education Leader, to Become Chancellor of Rutgers University–Camden".rutgers.edu (Press release). Retrieved5 August 2021.
  4. ^abcde"2010–2011 Factbook"(PDF). Rutgers University. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 2011-08-27. RetrievedAugust 14, 2011.
  5. ^"Rutgers University─Camden".Camden.rutgers.edu. Retrieved2012-07-06.
  6. ^"Carnegie Classifications Institution Lookup".carnegieclassifications.iu.edu. Center for Postsecondary Education. Retrieved13 September 2020.
  7. ^"Rutgers University-Camden".US News and World Report.
  8. ^Illingworth, Shaun; Jones, Roy L. (16 August 2021)."An Interview With Roy L. Jones for the Rutgers Oral History Archives". Retrieved19 April 2024.
  9. ^Hinrichs, Peter (2024)."An Empirical Analysis of Racial Segregation in Higher Education".Education Finance and Policy.19 (2):218–251.doi:10.1162/edfp_a_00394.ISSN 1557-3060.
  10. ^Allen, Steven (13 February 1969)."An End to Isolation?".Courier-Post. p. 13.ProQuest 1917690783. Retrieved19 April 2024.
  11. ^Movement (BSUM), Black Student Unity (1969-02-10)."Black Student Unity Movement demands at Rutgers-Camden".scarletandblack.rutgers.edu. Retrieved2024-04-22.
  12. ^"About Robeson Library | Rutgers University Libraries".libraries.rutgers.edu. Retrieved2024-04-22.
  13. ^"The Rutgers-Rowan (Non-)Merger: An Avoidable Legal Debacle".Rutgers Policy Journal. 24 February 2017.
  14. ^Rodas, Steven (24 June 2020)."Petition Asks for Removal of Walt Whitman Statue from Rutgers-Camden, Another to Uncover Mosaic".TAPinto Camden. Retrieved28 April 2024.
  15. ^Trethan, Phaedra."Whitman@200: What does Walt mean to Camden?".Courier-Post. Retrieved2024-05-07.
  16. ^Halley, Catherine (2019-04-17)."Should Walt Whitman Be #Cancelled?".JSTOR Daily. Retrieved2024-05-07.
  17. ^Rodas, Steven (22 October 2022)."Rutgers-Camden Hears Public on Controversial Mosaic, Walt Whitman Statue".TAPinto Camden. Retrieved28 April 2024.
  18. ^Writer, Carly Mayberry (2021-07-12)."Protested Walt Whitman Statue to Be Relocated on Rutgers-Camden campus".Newsweek. Retrieved2024-05-07.
  19. ^[1]Archived May 4, 2009, at theWayback Machine
  20. ^"About Rutgers Law". Retrieved8 May 2012.
  21. ^Everts, Bart."Research Guides: Rowan University at Camden: Home".Libguides.rowan.edu. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  22. ^Everts, Bart."Research Guides: Camden County College at Camden: Home".Libguides.rutgers.edu. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  23. ^"Libraries | Rutgers University─Camden".Camden.rutgers.edu. Retrieved2012-07-06.
  24. ^"Rutgers-Camden Housing".Housing.camden.rutgers.edu. Retrieved9 May 2012.
  25. ^"Home - Office of the Chancellor".Nbchancellor.rutgers.edu. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  26. ^"Near Whitman House, A Queen Anne Revival For Writers - Hidden City Philadelphia".Hiddencityphila.org. 18 November 2015. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  27. ^"Writers House".Writershouse.camden.rutgers.edu. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  28. ^"Rutgers-Camden Security Escort Services". Retrieved2013-10-02.
  29. ^Rutgers–Camden official athletics website Retrieved on 2017-01-10.
  30. ^"Facts & Figures | Rutgers University–Camden". Camden.rutgers.edu. May 9, 2016. Retrieved2016-05-09.
  31. ^"WCCR Rutgers Camden". Wccr.camden.rutgers.edu. Archived fromthe original on July 18, 2012. Retrieved2012-07-06.
  32. ^"Cooper Street Journal - Educate! Smart Is Great".Cooperstreetjournal.com. Retrieved19 May 2019.
  33. ^"Mickle Street Review".Micklestreet.rutgers.edu. Retrieved2018-07-30.
  34. ^"Home | Journal of Law & Public Policy".Rutgerspolicyjournal.org. Retrieved2018-07-30.
  35. ^"Welcome to the Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion".Lawandreligion.com. Retrieved2012-07-06.
  36. ^"Welcome to the Rutgers Law Journal | Rutgers Law Journal".Lawjournal.rutgers.edu. Archived fromthe original on 2012-07-23. Retrieved2012-07-06.
  37. ^"StoryQuarterly – The Literary Magazine at Rutgers–Camden".Storyquarterly.camden.rutgers.edu. Retrieved2018-07-30.
  38. ^"Prominent Philly Power Players Sue China over the Coronavirus". 21 April 2020.
  39. ^"Rutgers Law Holds First Annual Judge Leonard I. Garth Appellate Moot Court Competition Presided over by u.s. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito"

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