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    • February 2, 1819

      • The attempt by the New Hampshire legislature to convert Dartmouth into a state-run university was not finally defeated until February 2, 1819, when the United States Supreme Court upheld Dartmouth's charter of 1769.
      archive.dartmouthalumnimagazine.com/article/1969/02/01/the-unsung-hero-of-the-dartmouth-college-case
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  2. The new college was moved to Durham, New Hampshire, in 1891, and later became known as the University of New Hampshire. [ 29 ] Dartmouth emerged onto the national academic stage at the turn of the 20th century.

  3. Dartmouth was the subject of a landmark U.S. Supreme Court case in 1819 (Dartmouth College v. Woodward) in which the College prevailed against the State of New Hampshire, which sought to amend Dartmouth's charter.

  4. 5 days ago · The college’s actual founding dates from 1769, when England’s King George III approved a charter drawn up by Governor John Wentworth of the Province of New Hampshire. The college was established the following year when Wheelock erected a single log hut in the New Hampshire wilderness.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Therefore, what I am going to do is to talk to you about three main events in the history of Dartmouth: first, the founding of the College by Eleazar Wheelock in l769; second the refounding by Daniel Webster in the winning of the Dartmouth College Case in l8l9; and third, the shaping of the modern Dartmouth by President William Jewett Tucker at...

  6. Sep 26, 2010 · In 1771, Levi Frisbie, Samuel Gray, Sylvanus Ripley, and John Wheelock all became the College’s first graduates. Dartmouth has produced a class every year since, the only American college to do so, as the Revolution, the War of 1812, and other skirmishes periodically disrupted studies at other institutions.

  7. After having been removed as president by Dartmouth’s Board of Trustees in 1815, John Wheelock persuaded the governor of New Hampshire to amend the College’s charter to make the College a public institution governed by the state legislature. “Dartmouth University” was born.

  8. In 1819, Dartmouth College was the subject of the historic Dartmouth College case, in which the State of New Hampshire's 1816 attempt to amend the College's royal charter to make the school a public university was challenged.