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Robert E. L. Strider

Robert E. L. Strider
Robert E L Strider II.jpg
17th President of Colby College
In office
1960–1979
Preceded by J. Seelye Bixler
Succeeded by William R. Cotter
Personal details
Born (1917-04-08)April 8, 1917
Wheeling, West Virginia
Died November 28, 2010(2010-11-28) (aged 93)
Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts
Alma mater Harvard University

Robert E. L. Strider (April 8, 1917 – November 28, 2010) was the 17th President of Colby College, Maine, United States, from 1960 to 1979.

Born in Wheeling, West Virginia, Strider was the son of the Rev. Robert E.L. Strider, later the third bishop of the Diocese of West Virginia; and Mary Holroyd Strider, who died at his birth. Valedictorian of his class at the Linsly Military Institute, young Strider studied at Episcopal High School (Alexandria, Virginia) in Alexandria, Virginia before entering Harvard University, where he graduated, cum laude, in 1939.

At the onset of World War II, Strider served as an ensign and then lieutenant in Navy communications, stationed in Washington, D.C. After his discharge, in 1946 he joined the English department at Connecticut College, and completed his Harvard doctorate in 1950.

Strider came to Colby in 1957 as dean of faculty, and in 1960, at the age of 42, succeeded Julius Seelye Bixler as Colby's 17th president. During his Colby presidency, he prevailed as an academic leader and introduced a number of lasting curricular innovations, including the now widely imitated January Program of Independent Study. He led the college to residential co-education and broadened the curriculum to include foreign study opportunities, interdisciplinary studies and non-Western and black studies. In 1962, the Ford Foundation chose Colby as one of 18 "centers of academic excellence" and awarded the college a two-for-one matching grant of $1.8 million, an amount nearly six times greater than any gift the college had ever received.

Strider's professional positions included the presidency of the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (1966) and the chairmanship of the Association of American Colleges and Universities (1974). He was also a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. In the 1980s, he chaired a governor's commission to study the University of Maine. Strider served as Colby's president for 20 years, at the time the longest presidential tenure in the college's history.


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