The Man in the Ivory Tower by Stanley Brice Frost

The Man in the Ivory Tower by Stanley Brice Frost

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Summary

Frank Cyril James, Principal of McGill University from 1940-62, made important contributions not only to the growth and reputation of the university but also to the development of higher education in Canada.

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The Man in the Ivory Tower by Stanley Brice Frost

Tracing the course of a serendipitous career -- from a working-class home in London, England, where he was born shortly after the turn of the century, to his death there in 1973 -- the James story sheds light on student and professional life at the University of Pennsylvania in the 1920s, on economic and political changes in the US during the turbulent thirties, and on the development of the US banking industry in one of its most critical periods. James was invited to McGill to direct the School of Commerce but was almost immediately appointed Principal. He guided the university through the constricting years of war and, as chairman of the Advisory Committee on Reconstruction, made a major contribution to the ground-plan of Canada's national welfare system. During the post-war years he inspired McGill's response to the knowledge explosion of the forties and fifties and to the huge growth in demand for higher education. He also masterminded the successful endeavour of the National Conference to secure federal funding for all Canadian universities. A great traveller, James played a major role in the Association of Universities of the British Commonwealth, as well as in the International Association of Universities, of which he was elected President in 1960. As James' literary executor, Stanley Frost had privileged access to his private papers and has made full use of the opportunity to reveal the complexity of James' personality: his brilliance of mind, high ideals, and acute self-knowledge, as well as his deep-rooted sense of insecurity and his strange inhibitions in personal relationships. The privileged person in the Ivory Tower emerges in these pages as a very human one.
"clearly written, intelligent.. favourable without losing historical perspective." D.R. Owram, Department of History, University of Alberta.
SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9780773508033
ISBN 10 0773508031
Title The Man in the Ivory Tower
Author Stanley Brice Frost
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Hardback
Publisher McGill-Queen's University Press
Year published 1991-01-01
Number of pages 344
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.