While in the American colonies Cooper floated several grandiose schemes that were never realized:
The American Bishoprics Cooper was reportedly more enamored with the Southern colonies than New York, and frequently took to "rambles" there. Desiring to resettle there, he proposed to his ecclesiastical superiors, in both 1768 and 1774, that two Anglican sees be established in North America, and that he be appointed bishop of the more southernly one.
The American University Though he was in the thrall of King's College's governors during much of his tenure, Cooper had novel plans for the fledgling institution. He proposed that the
Colonial Colleges be merged into an "American University", the structure of which would be similar to
Oxford or
Cambridge. Under this scheme, the constituent colleges, including
Harvard,
Yale, and the College of New Jersey (later
Princeton), would remain quasi-independent but would be controlled by King's, which would be elevated to university status and sanctioned as the only degree-granting institution in the colonies. Although Cooper obtained the support of the King's College Governors for the plan and left for England with a delegation to persuade
King George III of its virtues and ask for his sanction in the form of a royal charter, neither Parliament nor the governing bodies of the other colleges ever took Cooper's plan seriously. ==Revolution and flight==