McMaster University, Volume 1

The Toronto Years

By Charles M. Johnston
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773546462, 320 pages, September 2015
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773584211, September 2015

Description

The Toronto Years is the first of three volumes relating the history of McMaster University. It is not simply an institutional chronicle, which lists names for the record; it is a dramatic and colourful story that shows how the university grew out of earlier Baptist educational endeavours and describes its eventful first forty years, spent on the Bloor Street Campus in Toronto. McMaster University was established in 1887 as a trust of the Baptist constituency, which helped to ensure vital and ongoing financial support, but which also embroiled the school in the often bitter theological debates sweeping through the churches. In the 1920s, the struggle between modernism and fundamentalism threatened the university’s very existence. Fluctuating enrolment, wartime stresses, and education continually forced confrontations over the question of federation with the provincial university in Toronto. Charles Johnston describes the achievements of a small group of courageous and skilful administrators amid the conflicting currents of educational and religious development in Canada during a period when universities were the targets of traditional criticisms of urban values. This volume will be of interest to anyone concerned with the cultural and intellectual growth of the nation.

Reviews

“The interplay of English and American educational traditions, German biblical scholarship, and Canadian Baptist fundamentalism, leading back to the basic question of the compatibility of an educated and inspired ministry, sets the theme of this interesting institutional narrative.” Choice

“[A]n absorbing story, culturally, politically, and socially. I await Johnston’s second volume.” Randall Robertson, Quill & Quire

“Canadian history has been well served by a succession of authors who have portrayed the role of higher education in national development, and this addition to the genre of university history is no exception to the tradition. Effectively planned, thorough