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Pierson College

Pierson College
Residential college at Yale University
Piersonshield.png
Coat of arms of Pierson College
Location 261 Park Street
Coordinates 41°18′35″N 72°55′57″W / 41.309735°N 72.932504°W / 41.309735; -72.932504Coordinates: 41°18′35″N 72°55′57″W / 41.309735°N 72.932504°W / 41.309735; -72.932504
Motto Ad augusta per angusta (Latin)
Motto in English Through trial to triumph
Established 1933
Named for Abraham Pierson
Colors Black, gold
Sister college Lowell House
Head Stephen Davis
Dean June Chu
Undergraduates 496 (2013-2014)
Mascot Knights
Called Piersonites, Pierson-Knights
Website www.yale.edu/pierson/

Pierson College is a residential college at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Opened in 1933, it is named for Abraham Pierson, a founder and the first rector of the Collegiate School, the college later known as Yale. With just under 500 undergraduate members, Pierson is the largest of Yale's residential colleges by number of students.

Yale built the Pierson College buildings in the Georgian or "Georgian Revival" architectural style. These include a prominent tower, inspired by that of Philadelphia's Independence Hall. It is one of the eight original residential colleges bequeathed by Edward Harkness and designed by James Gamble Rogers.

In 2004, Yale completed a yearlong renovation of Pierson as part of a campaign to rehabilitate all twelve colleges. Major changes included the reconfiguration of existing suites and rooms, the move of the Dean's office, the addition of a new residential building, Upper Court. Most significantly, the renovation joined the basements of Pierson its adjacent and rival residential college, Davenport, giving the colleges common facilities.

The courtyard was home to George Rickey's kinetic sculpture, "Two Planes Vertical—Horizontal II" for many years, but the sculpture has now been moved to the courtyard of the Yale University Art Gallery.

Abraham Pierson was born in Southampton, Long Island in 1646 and was an early student at Harvard College. After many years as a Congregational minister in Newark, New Jersey, he assumed the pulpit in Killingworth, Connecticut in 1694. While presiding there, he and five other ministers established the third college in the American colonies, the Collegiate School, in 1701. Pierson was elected its first rector, but unable to leave his position in Killingworth, he taught courses from his parsonage in present-day Clinton. Pierson died in his sixth year as Yale's rector, in 1707.


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