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Berkeley: Departments and Programs
Demography
Design
Development Studies Program
Dutch Studies Program
Demography
There is no history currently available
for this department.
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Design
As early as 1911, instruction was being offered
in courses in domestic art, specifically in textiles and "household
design of primitive peoples." Another arrangement was sought in
1914 with the appointment of a committee on home economics under
the chairmanship of Jessica Peixotto of the Department of Economics.
Professors Myer E. Jaffa, William C. Hays, Charles G. Hyde, and
Mr. Eugen Neuhaus were members of the department. The committee
was ably seconded by the Dean of Women, Lucy Ward Stebbins, whose
report to President Wheeler in 1914 argued the case for the professional
instruction of university women above the mere vocational level
in fields such as nutrition and decorative art. The result was a
Department of Home Economics in two divisions, household art, as
it came to be called, and household science. This arrangement continued
for four years from 1915 to 1919. The first instructor designated
for household art was Mary E. Patterson, who had joined the faculty
in 1914. Beginning in 1919, the department assumed separate status
and was known under the title Department of Household Art until
1939. For the next quarter of a century it was known as the Department
of Decorative Art. In 1964, the department received its designation
and was transferred from the College of Letters and Science to the
College of Environmental Design. It retained certain ties with Letters
and Science, such as offering an undergraduate major in this college.
Throughout its history the department devoted
the larger part of its interest to design. Instruction in the lower
division, which had for years included the practical study of clothing,
turned more emphatically toward general theory of design in the
years immediately preceding the second world war. Since that time
studio work in several materials was expanded and more extensive
historical work in numerous areas was offered. Development culminated
in a balance between the theoretical and practical studies in the
curriculum. Graduate instruction leading to the M.A. degree was
offered from the department's inception.
The core staff in the department in the 1920s
consisted of Mary F. Patterson, who served as chairman for some
15 years, and Hope M. Gladding. With the appointment of anthropologist
Lila M. O'Neale as associate professor in 1932, the department began
a continuing association with the University's Department and Museum
of Anthropology. In the late 1930s, Lucretia Nelson and Winfield
S. Wellington joined the department. After the war, the members
who achieved the professorship were Mary Dumas, Anna H. Gayton,
Lea Miller, Charles E. Rossbach and Herwin Schaefer. Willard V.
Rosenquist and Peter H. Voulkos served as associate professors.
Professors Nelson, Rossbach and Wellington served as chairmen during
a period of the expansion of the department to 17 members and of
corresponding growth in the curriculum. Over the years the department
also developed a considerable collection in textiles, ceramics,
glass and other materials.
In 1964-65, the department began to turn even
more intensively toward the design field in the framework of the
new college. Karl Aschenbrenner of the Department of Philosophy
served as acting chairman during this transitional year. After being
housed for many years in a redwood frame building overlooking the
women's playing fields, the department settled into quarters in
Wurster Hall. source
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Development Studies Program
There is no history currently available
for this program.
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Dutch Studies Program
There is no history currently available
for this program.
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