He ran Harvard for forty years and gave American students the right to choose what they studied.
Charles William Eliot was born in Boston on March 20, 1834, into a prominent New England family. He graduated from Harvard in 1853, taught mathematics and chemistry there, traveled to Europe to study educational systems, and returned to accept a professorship at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In early 1869, he published a two-part essay in The Atlantic Monthly titled "The New Education," arguing that American colleges needed to broaden their curricula beyond classical studies.1
The essay caught the attention of Harvard's governing board. In October 1869, at thirty-five years old, Eliot was inaugurated as the youngest president in Harvard's history. He would hold the position for forty years, longer than any other Harvard president.2
Eliot's most consequential reform was the elective system. Before his presidency, Harvard students followed a prescribed classical curriculum with little choice. Eliot proposed that students should be free to select courses based on their own interests and aptitudes. By 1884, he had extended some choice even to freshmen. By the 1890s, the elective system at Harvard was nearly unrestricted.3
The elective system produced the college major. If students could choose what to study, they needed a framework for organizing those choices into a coherent program. Specialization followed freedom, and both became structural features of American higher education.
Eliot's influence extended beyond Harvard. In 1892, the National Education Association appointed him chairman of the Committee of Ten, charged with standardizing what American high schools should teach. The committee's 1893 report recommended four courses of study, all emphasizing rigorous academic preparation, and rejected the idea that different curricula should be offered to students based on whether they planned to attend college.4
Under Eliot, Harvard's enrollment grew from roughly 1,000 to 3,000 students, the faculty expanded from 49 to 278 members, and the endowment rose from 2.3 million to 22.5 million dollars.5 Woodrow Wilson, at Eliot's ninetieth birthday celebration, said of him that no one had ever made a deeper impression on the educational system of a country. Eliot died at Northeast Harbor, Maine, on August 22, 1926.6