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Berkeley: Departments and Programs
Landscape
Architecture and Environmental Planning
Latin American Studies Program
Law
Legal Studies Program
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
Program
Librarianship
Linguistics
Logic and the Methodology of Science Program
Landscape Architecture
and Environmental Planning
In 1913, Thomas Forsyth Hunt, then dean of
the College of Agriculture, took the first positive step in the
establishment of what became the Department of Landscape Architecture.
Hunt was a ruralist in every sense of the word--interested in the
social as well as the economic life of people. As one factor in
his broad and farsighted program, Hunt recognized the desirability
of developing in the minds of young people an appreciation of aesthetics
as they might be applied to improve the rural home and community.
He therefore requested that a division be established in the Department
of Agriculture with a program of teaching and of public service
directed toward this end. He chose the name, Division of Landscape
Gardening and Floriculture, and brought John William Gregg from
the faculty of Pennsylvania State College to head the division and
direct the program. Facilities consisted of rooms in Agriculture
Hall and two small greenhouses in the area east of Giannini Hall.
This provided reasonably good space for drafting, instruction in
plant propagation and culture, and the study of plant materials.
While the emphasis in this early period was upon
problems of the rural home and community, the problems of the expanding
urban population were clearly seen, and at an early date instruction
in landscape architecture in the broadest sense was developed. The
Announcement of Courses for 1915-1916 listed some 12 courses,
two of which were graduate courses related to civic art and town
planning. Instruction in floriculture and other purely agricultural
studies eventually was shifted to other departments, and the curriculum
was expanded to include courses in descriptive geometry, art, engineering,
and architecture, as well as botany, genetics, and other agricultural
sciences. The name of the department changed from Division of Landscape
Gardening and Floriculture, to Division of Landscape Design (Department
of Agriculture), to Department of Landscape Architecture (College
of Environmental Design).
Over the years there was more and more emphasis
on the study of the city and suburban areas, the open spaces of
the city, and the outdoor recreational needs of all people. There
was also considerable attention focused on national and state parks,
national forest, and wild lands generally. This trend toward study
of urban design problems on one hand and problems of the regional
landscape on the other continued to the point that by 1965 the graduate
student could choose one or the other area of emphasis.
In 1955, Mrs. Beatrix Farrand gave her Reef Point
Library to the department. This library was described by the University
librarian as the best subject library that had ever come to the
University. In 1957, Mrs. Anson Blake deeded her 11-acre property
to the University for use by the Department of Landscape Architecture
as a laboratory for teaching and research. This was a rapidly developing
and important facility.
The department enjoyed steady growth and development.
By the mid-1960s, student enrollment stood at 85 undergraduate and
25 graduate students; the faculty complement was ten, with some
joint appointments in city and regional planning and in architecture.
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Latin American Studies Program
There is no history currently available
for this program.
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Law
See Colleges and Schools, School
of Law.
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Legal Studies Program
There is no history currently available
for this program.
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Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Studies
Program
There is no history currently available
for this program.
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Linguistics
From the foundation of the University at
Berkeley, instruction was offered by language departments in various
phases of the history and description of languages. From 1901 to
1906 a Department of Linguistics under Chairman Benjamin Ide Wheeler
offered courses, and in 1904 conferred the Ph.D. on Pliny Goddard
(dissertation on the Hupa language). Thereafter, through the initiative
of Alfred L. Kroeber, the Department of Anthropology added work
in recording and describing unwritten languages, and in tracing
their genetic relations. In 1940, instruction in some of these subjects
was consolidated by several appointments in linguistics. The linguistics
courses were offered in the Departments of Classics and Oriental
Languages. In 1947, a group in linguistics offered a Ph.D. degree
in linguistics. An M.A. degree was added in 1948. The department
was re-established in 1952. An undergraduate major was offered beginning
in 1959-60.
After 1952, the department built up its course
offerings as its enrollment and teaching staff grew. In 1964-65,
undergraduate majors numbered 48 and graduate majors 57. The faculty
consisted, in part, of full-time appointments, and, in part, of
appointments shared with other departments; beginning in 1965-66,
appointments of the latter type became the exception. Faculty in
this year numbered 12.
The curriculum at the undergraduate level inducted
the student into an understanding of the diversity of languages,
of their nature as instruments of communication and as structured
systems, and of their history as changing systems. The graduate
student learned the techniques of analyzing structures descriptively
and of tracing their histories. He was trained in the history of
linguistic theories. Students at all levels were required to attain
a knowledge, more or less expert, of a number of languages, especially
those of Western civilization, but preferably including others from
outside this group. Many doctoral dissertations were descriptions
or comparative accounts of native languages of the Americas, Africa,
or Asia. By the 1960s there were additions to the curriculum in
such subjects as mechano-linguistics (e.g., machine translation),
experimental phonetics, and dialectology.
At the time the department was founded in 1952,
it was entrusted with a research project entitled Survey of California
Indian Languages. It was judged that the University's peculiarly
local obligation to the world of knowledge lay in providing descriptions
of the state's many aboriginal languages and in initiating comparative
linguistic work that would lead to a reconstruction of the human
prehistory of California and, by implication, of much of the American
continent. The survey at the same time provided a highly valued
research opportunity for graduate students in the department.
A large part of the 41 volumes (as of 1965) of
the University of California Publications in Linguistics
was based on survey research by faculty and graduate students. This
series of publications also reflected the department's interests
in South and Southeast Asia, the Pacific, romance philology, and
various aspects of Indo-European studies. The University's strength
in these fields of linguistics was amply recognized by the reviewers.
In 1964, the Linguistic Atlas of the Pacific Coast,
established earlier in the Department of English, was transferred
to linguistics. Results of this survey of English dialects in California
and Nevada were correlated with what is known about American settlement
history and patterns of westward migration. source
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Logic and the Methodology of Science Program
There is no history currently available
for this program.
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