Institutional history :
Note: Six of the eight Ivy League universities consider their founding dates to be simply the date that they received their charters and thus became legal corporations with the authority to grant academic degrees. Harvard University uses the date that the legislature of the Massachusetts Bay Colony formally allocated funds for the creation of a college. Harvard was chartered in 1650, although classes had been conducted for approximately a decade by then. The University of Pennsylvania's founding date is discussed in the footnote above. "Religious affiliation" refers to financial sponsorship, formal association with, and promotion by, a religious denomination. All of the institutions in the Ivy League are private (Cornell includes both private and state-supported schools) and are no longer associated with any religion.
Origin of the name "Planting the
ivy" was a customary class day ceremony at many colleges in the 1800s. In 1893, an alumnus told
The Harvard Crimson, "In 1850, class day was placed upon the University Calendar ... the custom of planting the ivy, while the ivy oration was delivered, arose about this time." At Penn, graduating seniors started the custom of planting ivy at a university building each spring in 1873 and that practice was formally designated as "
Ivy Day" in 1874. Ivy planting ceremonies are recorded at
Yale University,
Simmons College, and
Bryn Mawr College among other schools. Princeton's "Ivy Club" was founded in 1879. The first usage of
Ivy in reference to a group of colleges is from sportswriter
Stanley Woodward (1895–1965). The first known instance of the term
Ivy League appeared in
The Christian Science Monitor on February 7, 1935. Several sportswriters and other journalists used the term shortly later to refer to the older colleges, those along the northeastern seaboard of the United States, chiefly the nine institutions with origins dating from the
colonial era, together with the
United States Military Academy (West Point), the
United States Naval Academy, and a few others. These schools were known for their long-standing traditions in intercollegiate athletics, often being the first schools to participate in such activities. At this time, none of these institutions made efforts to form an athletic league. A common
folk etymology attributes the name to the
Roman numeral for four (), asserting that there was such a sports league originally with four members. The
Morris Dictionary of Word and Phrase Origins helped to perpetuate this belief. The supposed " League" was formed over a century ago and consisted of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and a fourth school that varies depending on who is telling the story. However, it is clear that Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, and Yale met on November 23, 1876, at the so-called Massasoit Convention to decide on uniform rules for the emerging game of American football, which rapidly spread.
Pre–Ivy League Seven out of the eight Ivy League schools are
Colonial Colleges: institutions of higher education founded prior to the
American Revolution. Cornell, the exception to this commonality, was founded immediately after the
American Civil War. These seven colleges served as the primary institutions of higher learning in
British America's
Northern and
Middle Colonies. During the colonial era, the schools' faculties and founding boards were largely drawn from other Ivy League institutions. Also represented were British graduates from the
University of Cambridge, the
University of Oxford, the
University of St. Andrews, and the
University of Edinburgh. The influence of these institutions on the founding of other colleges and universities is notable. This included the Southern public college movement which blossomed in the decades surrounding the turn of the 19th century when Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia established what became the flagship universities of their respective states. In 1801, a majority of the first board of trustees for what became the
University of South Carolina were Princeton alumni. They appointed
Jonathan Maxcy, a Brown graduate, as the university's first president.
Thomas Cooper, an Oxford alumnus and University of Pennsylvania faculty member, became the second president of the South Carolina college. The founders of the
University of California came from Yale, hence
Berkeley's colors are
Yale Blue and California Gold.
Stanford University has, since its earliest days, been nicknamed the "Cornell of the West": more than half of Stanford's initial faculty, as well as its first two presidents, had connections to Cornell as alumni or faculty. Samuel Jones, the Baptist minister from Philadelphia who rewrote Brown's original charter (itself written by future Yale College president
Ezra Stiles) was a graduate of the
College of Philadelphia. The majority of the Ivy League schools have identifiable
Protestant roots. Harvard, Yale, and Dartmouth all held early associations with the
Congregationalists. Princeton was financed by
New Light Presbyterians, though originally led by a Congregationalist. Brown was founded by Baptists, though the university's charter stipulated that students should enjoy "full liberty of conscience." Columbia was founded by Anglicans, who composed 10 of the college's first 15 presidents. Penn and Cornell were officially nonsectarian, though Protestants were well represented in their respective founding. In the early nineteenth century, the specific purpose of training Calvinist ministers was handed off to
theological seminaries, but a denominational tone and religious traditions including compulsory chapel often lasted well into the twentieth century. "Ivy League" is sometimes used as a way of referring to an elite class, even though institutions such as Cornell University were among the first in the United States to reject racial and gender discrimination in their admissions policies. This dates back to at least 1935. Novels and memoirs attest this sense, as a social elite; to some degree independent of the actual schools.
History of the athletic league 19th century team, posing with the 1876 Centennial
Regatta trophy vs.
Yale game played using
rugby rules In 1870, the nation's first formal athletic league was created in 1870 with the formation of the
Rowing Association of American Colleges (RAAC), composed exclusively of Ivy League universities. RAAC hosted a national championship in rowing from 1870 to 1894. The first
Harvard vs Yale rugby football contest was held in 1875, two years after the inaugural
Princeton–Yale rugby football contest. Harvard athlete Nathaniel Curtis challenged
Yale's captain, William Arnold to a rugby-style game. Program for the "Foot Ball Match", Harvard v Yale, the first intercollegiate game. It is considered the first rugby game between Ivy League teams. The game was played at
Hamilton Park, a venue in
New Haven, Connecticut (located at the intersection of Whalley Avenue and West Park Avenue). The two teams played with 15 players (rugby) on a side instead of 11 (soccer) as Yale would have preferred. In 1881,
Penn,
Harvard College,
Haverford College, Princeton University (then known as College of New Jersey), and Columbia University (then known as Columbia College) formed The
Intercollegiate Cricket Association, which
Cornell University later joined. Penn won The Intercollegiate Cricket Association championship 23 times, including 18 solo victories and three shared with Haverford and Harvard, one shared with Haverford and Cornell, and one shared with just Haverford, during the 44 years that the Intercollegiate Cricket Association existed from 1881 through 1924. In 1895, Cornell, Columbia, and Penn founded the
Intercollegiate Rowing Association, which remains the oldest collegiate athletic organizing body in the US. To this day, the IRA Championship Regatta determines the national champion in rowing and all of the Ivies are regularly invited to compete. A basketball league was later created in 1902, when Columbia, Cornell, Harvard, Yale, and Princeton formed the
Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League; they were later joined by Penn and Dartmouth.
20th century In 1906, the organization that eventually became the
National Collegiate Athletic Association was formed, primarily to formalize rules for the emerging sport of football. But of the 39 original member colleges in the NCAA, only two of them (Dartmouth and Penn) later became Ivies. In February 1903, intercollegiate wrestling began when Yale accepted a challenge from Columbia, published in the Yale News. The dual meet took place prior to a basketball game hosted by Columbia and resulted in a tie. Two years later, Penn and Princeton also added wrestling teams, leading to the formation of the student-run Intercollegiate Wrestling Association, now the
Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association (EIWA), the first and oldest collegiate wrestling league in the US. Though schools now in Ivy League (such as Yale and Columbia) played against each other in the 1880s, it was not until 1930 that Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Penn, Princeton and Yale formed the
Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League; they were later joined by Harvard, Brown, Army and Navy. Before the formal establishment of the Ivy League, there was an "unwritten and unspoken agreement among certain Eastern colleges on athletic relations". The earliest reference to the "Ivy colleges" came in 1933, when
Stanley Woodward of the
New York Herald Tribune used it to refer to the eight current members plus Army. Part of the editorial read as follows: The Ivies have been competing in sports as long as intercollegiate sports have existed in the United States. Rowing teams from Harvard and Yale met in the first sporting event held between students of two U.S. colleges on
Lake Winnipesaukee,
New Hampshire, on August 3, 1852. Harvard's team, "The Oneida", won the race and was presented with trophy black walnut oars from then-presidential nominee General
Franklin Pierce. The proposal to create an athletic league did not succeed. On January 11, 1937, the athletic authorities at the schools rejected the "possibility of a
heptagonal league in football such as these institutions maintain in basketball, baseball and track." However, they noted that the league "has such promising possibilities that it may not be dismissed and must be the subject of further consideration."
Integration of athletic competition in the Ivy League (seated second from right) may have been the
first African-American to play major league baseball. The integration of athletics followed a similar pattern to the overall integration of the Ivy League's in the 19th and early 20th century. There was no active policy that would discriminate against incorporating Black student athletes into the athletic coalition. Harvard has the earliest record of breaking the color barrier in athletics after recruiting
William Henry Lewis to their
football team in 1892. Dartmouth followed suit, with Black athletes integrating onto their football teams in 1904. Brown integrated their football team shortly after, in 1916. Cornell added the first Black athlete to their football team in 1937. point winner. Left to right: Guy Haskins, R.C. Folwell, T.R. Moffitt,
John Baxter Taylor, Jr., the first Black athlete in the U.S. to win a gold medal in the Olympics,
Nathaniel Cartmell, and J.D. Whitham (seated) Penn had Black students on their track and field team as early as 1903 (
John Baxter Taylor, Jr., the first Black athlete in the U.S. to win a gold medal in the Olympics) and a Black student was named captain of the track team in 1918. Columbia's track and field team would be integrated in 1934. Basketball would become integrated at Yale in 1926, at Princeton in 1947.
Post–World War II In 1945 the presidents of the eight schools signed the first
Ivy Group Agreement, which set academic, financial, and athletic standards for the
football teams. The principles established reiterated those put forward in the Harvard-Yale-Princeton presidents' Agreement of 1916. The Ivy Group Agreement established the core tenet that an applicant's ability to play on a team would not influence admissions decisions: In 1954, the presidents extended the Ivy Group Agreement to all intercollegiate sports, effective with the 1955–56 basketball season. This is generally reckoned as the formal formation of the Ivy League. As part of the transition, Brown, the only Ivy that had not joined the EIBL, did so for the 1954–55 season. A year later, the Ivy League absorbed the EIBL. The Ivy League claims the EIBL's history as its own. Through the EIBL, it is the oldest basketball conference in Division I. (1901) at Harvard, originally part of Radcliffe College, which was fully integrated with Harvard in 1999 As late as the 1960s many of the Ivy League universities' undergraduate programs remained
open only to men, with Cornell the only one to have been coeducational from its founding (1865) and Columbia being the last (1983) to become coeducational. Before they became coeducational, many of the Ivy schools maintained extensive social ties with nearby
Seven Sisters women's colleges, including weekend visits, dances and parties inviting Ivy and Seven Sisters students to mingle. This was the case not only at
Barnard College and
Radcliffe College, which are adjacent to Columbia and Harvard, but at more distant institutions as well. The movie
Animal House includes a satiric version of the formerly common visits by Dartmouth men to Massachusetts to meet
Smith and
Mount Holyoke women, a drive of more than two hours. As noted by Irene Harwarth, Mindi Maline, and Elizabeth DeBra, "The '
Seven Sisters' was the name given to Barnard, Smith, Mount Holyoke,
Vassar,
Bryn Mawr,
Wellesley, and Radcliffe, because of their parallel to the Ivy League men's colleges." In 1983, following the admission of women to Columbia College, Columbia University and Barnard College entered into an athletic consortium agreement by which students from both schools compete together on Columbia University women's athletic teams, which replaced the women's teams previously sponsored by Barnard. team in the annual
Harvard–Yale Regatta, 2007 When Army and Navy departed the Eastern Intercollegiate Baseball League in 1992, nearly all intercollegiate competition involving the eight schools became united under the Ivy League banner. The major exception is hockey, with the Ivies that sponsor hockey—all except Penn and Columbia—members of ECAC Hockey. Wrestling was a second exception through the 2023-24 academic calendar; up until that point the Ivies that sponsor wrestling—all except Dartmouth and Yale— were members of the
Eastern Intercollegiate Wrestling Association. The Ivy League was the first athletic conference to respond to the
COVID-19 pandemic by shutting down all athletic competition in March 2020, leaving many Spring schedules unfinished. The Fall 2020 schedule was canceled in July, and winter sports were canceled before Thanksgiving. Following the
Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, the Ivy League Conference committed itself to uphold "diversity, equity, and inclusion," to combat racism and homophobia. At Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, and Princeton there are Black Student Athlete groups and other
affinity groups that are dedicated to ensuring their organizations are committed to anti-racism and anti-homophobia. In 2023, two former Brown University basketball players sued the Ivy League alleging that by denying athletic scholarships, the 1954 "Ivy League Agreement" is anticompetititive and violates antitrust laws. ==Academics==