Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York
The Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York is the governing board of Columbia University in New York City. Founded in 1754, it is sometimes referred to as the Columbia Corporation. The Trustees of Columbia University is a 501(c)3 and the owner of the property and real assets of the university.[1] Affiliates of the university, which include Barnard College, Jewish Theological Seminary, Teachers College, and Union Theological Seminary, are separate legal entities.
The board of trustees was originally composed of ex officio members including officials from the New York colonial government, crown officials, and various Protestant ministers from the city. Following the college's resuscitation following the American Revolutionary War, it was placed under the control of the Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York, and the university would finally come under the control of a private board of trustees in 1787. The board is notable for having administered the Pulitzer Prize from the prize's establishment until 1975.
As of May 2025, the trustees consists of 21 members and is co-chaired by David Greenwald and Jeh Johnson.[2]
Structure and function
The board is governed by a maximum of 24 trustees, including the president of the university, who serves ex officio. Six of the 24 candidates are nominated from a pool of candidates selected by the Columbia Alumni Association. Another six are nominated by the board in consultation with the University Senate. The remaining 12 are nominated by the trustees through an internal process.[3] The board elects its own chair; the first woman to serve as chair, and the first to chair the governing board of any Ivy League university, was Gertrude Michelson, elected in 1989.[4] The term of office for the trustees is six years and trustees serve for no more than two consecutive terms.[3]
The trustees have met in a dedicated room in Low Memorial Library since 1897.[5] They select the President, oversee all faculty and senior administrative appointments, monitor the budget, supervise the endowment, and protect university property.[6] The board of trustees holds the exclusive power to grant degrees, including, by memoranda of understanding, to the affiliated institutions of Barnard College and Teachers College. As with most governing boards of private universities, the deliberations of the trustees are confidential. The trustees also oversaw the Pulitzer Prizes until 1975, when authority over the prizes was devolved to a separate board.[7]
History
King's College
The board of trustees was originally established in 1754 as the board of governors of King's College with 41 members, replacing the ten-member Lottery Commission appointed by the New York Assembly to oversee lottery funds allocated to the establishment of the college.[8] The board of governors originally included several ex officio members, including, crown officials, members of the colonial government, and ministers of various Protestant denominations:[9]
- the Archbishop of Canterbury
- the First Lord of Trade
- the Governor of the Province of New York
- the senior member of the Governor's Council
- the five justices of the Supreme Court of Judicature of the Province of New York
- the Secretary of the Province of New York
- the Attorney General of the Province of New York
- the Speaker of the General Assembly of New York
- the Treasurer of the Province of New York
- the Mayor of New York City
- the Rector of Trinity Church
- the Senior Minister of the Collegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch Church
- the Minister of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of St. Matthew
- the Minister of the Église Française du Saint-Esprit
- the Minister of the First Presbyterian Church
- the President of King's College
A further twenty-four individuals were named in the charter, serving without terms with their successors to be selected by subsequent governors. College faculty were not provided seats ex officio on the board of governors, at variance with contemporary practice at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, where the faculty was engaged in the governance of their colleges, but was very much in line with practice of other colonial colleges governed by external boards.[10]
The charter permitted Protestants to serve as governors but excluded Roman Catholics and Jews. Only three members would be Anglicans: the Archbishop of Canterbury, the rector of Trinity Church, and the President of Columbia University, and they were offset by four ex officio members selected from New York's Dutch Reformed Church, French Protestant church, Lutheran Church, and Presbyterian Church.[10] In practice, the board was dominated by Anglicans, members of the Trinity Church, and the Dutch Reformed Church. Of the fifty-nine men who served as governors, only three ex officio members were not from the Anglican or Dutch Reformed churches.
More than half of the fifty-nine New Yorkers who served as governor made their livings as merchants. The next most common occupation among the governors was law (20 percent), followed by ministers (16 percent), and there was only one doctor.[11] The governors met 102 times in 22 years and most meetings were attended by around fifteen governors. A quarter of the governors attended fewer than ten meetings, and another half were absent, leaving a core of sixteen governors. Academic matters such as faculty appointments, the curriculum, and admissions requirements were overseen by degree-bearing ministers, while governors drawing from the city's mercantile and legal ranks oversaw financial matters such as construction of collegiate buildings or the salary of the college steward. This informal division of duties survived the reorganization of the King's College into Columbia College and persisted into the 1960s.[12]
In terms of politics, the ratio of Loyalists to Patriots during the American Revolution among the governors was more than eight to one.[13] The college was severely affected by the revolutionary war, which forced the college to shut down for eight years and a number of governors fled to Canada and the West Indies.
Columbia College
In 1784, it became the Board of Regents of Columbia College after the former King's College was reinstated. The 1784 charter also stipulated that eight of the seats on the board should be held by ranking state officials ex officio, with the remaining 24 regents to be appointed, two each, from the state's 12 counties, with only three places reserved for New York City residents. The number of regents was subsequently expanded to 33 by the New York State Legislature, with 20 of them residents of New York City, including a mix of prominent politicians and clergymen such as John Jay, Samuel Provoost, Leonard Lispenard, Gershom Mendes Seixas, and John Daniel Gros.[8]
It was renamed in a new 1787 charter as the Trustees of Columbia College in the City of New York, and the college was relieved of its duties as a state institution, returning to earlier status as a privately governed college serving the city. None of the college's trustees were to be state officials, and all replacements were to be elected by incumbent board members.[8] Only until 1908 did the board start accepting alumni nominations.
Columbia University
The board arrived at its final name of The Trustees of Columbia University in the City of New York by an order from the Supreme Court of New York on July 17, 1912, 16 years after Columbia College was renamed as Columbia University.[14]
Although the trustees usually approve faculty recommendations for hiring and dismissal of Columbia faculty, in some cases they have taken a more direct role. Notably, in 1917 they fired psychologist James McKeen Cattell for his anti-war and anti-conscription views, a case significant in the history of academic freedom.[15][16]
1968 protests
The trustees have been blamed for the violent suppression of protestors in the Columbia University protests of 1968, after they instructed the university administration to call in the police against the protestors and later lauded the police for their efforts.[17] The 1968 Cox Commission Report—which found that the ineffective or lacking channels of communication between the university's administration, faculty, and students created the conditions for the protests—led to the establishment of the Columbia University Senate.[18] On April 8, 1969 students and faculty overwhelmingly supported the creation of the University Senate in a campus-wide referendum.[19] In 1973, the trustees adopted the Rules of University Conduct.[19][20][21]
In 2001, the trustees were accused of pressuring the university to water down its sexual misconduct policy, and the director of the Office of Sexual Misconduct Prevention and Education resigned in protest, claiming that the trustees had directed her not to discuss the policy changes.[22]
Internal disagreements do not often spill out into public, although a notable exception to this occurred in 2012, when trustee José A. Cabranes published a dissenting opinion on the status of Columbia College and its core curriculum within the university, in a column in Columbia's student newspaper, the Columbia Daily Spectator.[23]
Gaza Solidarity Encampment
During the Gaza Solidarity Encampment (17–April 30, 2024), part of the broader protest movement demanding that Columbia disinvest from Israel during the Gaza genocide, the board of trustees announced that it "strongly" supported[24] then-university-president Minouche Shafik days after the New York Police Department was summoned to arrest approximately 100 student demonstrators and after House Republicans Mike Johnson and Virginia Foxx called for her resignation.[25] After students re-established the Gaza Solidarity Encampment on the opposite lawn, a group of 21 Democrats of the United States House of Representatives suggested that the trustees resign if they were unwilling to call in the NYPD to arrest student protestors again.[26] The Barnard-Columbia chapter of the American Association of University Professors drafted a “Resolution of Censure of President Shafik, her Administration, and the Co-chairs of the Board of Trustees.”[27]
According to Timothy Kaufman-Osborn, "Columbia is legally organized as an autocratic corporation whose foremost imperative is to guarantee the security of the property held in its name" and the administration's decision to issue interim suspensions to student protesters and invite the NYPD onto campus to then arrest them en masse for trespassing was a decision made in order to maintain its "commitment to amass and secure its privatized property."[28]
According to an October 2024 report from the Committee on Education & the Workforce of the US House of Representatives,[29] co-chairs of the board of trustees, David Greenwald and Claire Shipman, as well as chair emeritus Jonathan Lavine, were in discussion over what punishments the university should impose on student protesters.[30][31] The report revealed that Executive Vice President for University Life Dennis Mitchell "had spoken with Greenwald for 'two and a half hours,' going over the status of 'every single one of our disciplinary cases'."[30][29] According to the Association of Legal Advocates and Attorneys, The Legal Aid Society, for which Greenwald also serves as treasurer and board member, shielded Greenwald and issued "an organizational response that downplayed police violence and abandoned its victims."[32]
Settlement with the Trump administration
In March of 2025, the Trump administration, citing what it called widespread antisemitism at Columbia, cut $400 million in federal funding to the university and issued a list of demands it considered "preconditions for formal negotiations," to which Columbia agreed.[33] On March 28, co-chair Claire Shipman became acting president, replacing interim president Katrina Armstrong.[34] Three weeks later, Shipman announced that the University Senate would be subject to review following the Trump administration's demands regarding student discipline.[35]
On July 23, 2025, the board of trustees formalized a settlement with the Trump administration in which Columbia would pay the federal government $221 million and accept various demands from the Trump administration, including adopting the IHRA definition of antisemitism; punishing student demonstrators with expulsions, degree revocations, and multi-year suspensions; and reviewing the university's Middle East studies programs.[36][37][38][39] Critics of the settlement have called the government's actions "extortion" and Columbia's actions "capitulation."[40][41][42]
Current trustees
The board consists of the following 21 members as of April 2025:[43]
| Name | Columbia Degree(s) | Occupation |
|---|---|---|
| David Greenwald (Co-chair) | JD 1983 | former chairman of Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson |
| Jeh Johnson (Co-chair) | JD 1982 | partner at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, United States Secretary of Homeland Security from 2013 to 2017[44] |
| Abigail Black Elbaum (Vice Chair) | BA 1992, MBA 1994 | co-founder and principal of Ogden CAP Properties |
| Mark Gallogly (Vice Chair) | MBA 1986 | co-managing partner and founder of Centerbridge Partners |
| Victor Mendelson (Vice Chair) | BA 1989 | co-president and director of HEICO |
| Dean Dakolias (Vice Chair) | BS 1989 | co-CIO of the credit funds group at Fortress Investment Group |
| Kathy Surace-Smith (Vice Chair) | JD 1984 | Senior Vice President at NanoString Technologies |
| Claire Shipman | BA 1986, MIA 1994 | acting President of Columbia University; senior national correspondent for Good Morning America |
| Andrew F. Barth | BA 1983, MBA 1985 | former chairman of Capital Guardian Trust Company |
| Duchesne Drew | BA 1989 | President of Minnesota Public Radio |
| Keith Goggin | MS 1991 | market maker on NYSE |
| James Gorman | MBA 1987 | Former CEO of Morgan Stanley 2010-2024 |
| Kikka Hanazawa | BA 2000 | social entrepreneur |
| Adam Pritzker | BA 2008 | co-founder and chairman of General Assembly |
| Julissa Reynoso | JD 2001 | Former ambassador of the United States to Spain from 2022 to 2024 |
| Jonathan Rosand | BA 1989, MD 1994 | Professor of Neurology at Harvard Medical School |
| James Scapa | BS 1978 | CEO of Altair |
| Shoshana Shendelman | MA 2003, MSc 2004, PhD 2005 | Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Chair of the Board of Directors at Applied Therapeutics |
| Fermi Wang | MS 1989, PhD 1991 | CEO and co-founder of Ambarella Inc. |
| Shirley Wang | MBA 1993 | founder and CEO of Plastpro Inc |
| Alisa Amarosa Wood | BA 2001, MBA 2008 | Co-Chief Executive Officer of KKR Private Equity Conglomerate LLC |
Notable past trustees
The following people have served as trustees in the past:[45]
Pulitzer Prizes
The trustees ceded direct oversight of the Pulitzer Prizes in 1975.[71] Before that period, the trustees occasionally overruled the awarding of prizes. An early example of this occurred in 1921, when the trustees overruled the jury recommendation and awarded the fiction prize to Edith Wharton for The Age of Innocence instead of Sinclair Lewis for Main Street.[72] A similar controversy ensued in 1962, when the trustees overruled the jury's choice of W. A. Swanberg's Citizen Hearst, a biography of William Randolph Hearst, apparently because they thought that Hearst was not dignified enough to be the subject of the award.[73] The trustees instead chose to give no award in that category that year.[74][75]
References
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- ^ a b "Organization and Governance of the University". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ Daniels, Lee A. (June 21, 1989). "Columbia Trustee Head: A Low-Key Trailblazer". Education. The New York Times. p. B7.
- ^ "Who Owns Columbia? The University Trustees, Of Course". Columbia Daily Spectator. March 27, 2013.
- ^ "The Trustees of Columbia University | Office of the Secretary of the University". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ Bates, J. Douglas (1991). The Pulitzer Prize: The Inside Story of America's Most Prestigious Award. Carol Publishing Group. p. 115. ISBN 9781559720700.
- ^ a b c McCaughey, Robert (2003). Stand, Columbia A History of Columbia University. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13008-0. OCLC 1020285655.
- ^ Officers and Graduates of Columbia College: Originally the College of the Province of New York Known as King's College. General Catalogue, 1754-1894. New York. 1894. p. 11.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b McCaughey (2003), p. 23. sfnp error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFMcCaughey2003 (help)
- ^ McCaughey (2003), p. 40. sfnp error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFMcCaughey2003 (help)
- ^ McCaughey (2003), p. 25. sfnp error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFMcCaughey2003 (help)
- ^ McCaughey (2003), p. 45. sfnp error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFMcCaughey2003 (help)
- ^ "Columbia College - Timeline". Columbia College. Retrieved 2025-03-22.
- ^ Gruber, Carol Signer (September 1972). "Academic freedom at Columbia University, 1917-1918: The Case of James McKeen Cattell". AAUP Bulletin. 58 (3): 297–305. doi:10.2307/40224603. JSTOR 40224603.
- ^ Sokal, Michael M. (2009). "James McKeen Cattell, Nicholas Murray Butler, and academic freedom at Columbia University, 1902–1923". History of Psychology. 12 (2): 87–122. doi:10.1037/a0016143.
- ^ Bradley, Stefan M. (2010). Harlem vs. Columbia University: Black Student Power in the Late 1960s. University of Illinois Press. p. 98. ISBN 9780252090585.
- ^ "Columbia University Libraries Online Exhibitions | 1968: Columbia in Crisis". exhibitions.library.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2025-06-04.
- ^ a b "Columbia University Libraries Online Exhibitions | 1968: Columbia in Crisis". exhibitions.library.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2025-05-07.
- ^ "Columbia Daily Spectator 8 April 1969 — Columbia Spectator". spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2025-05-07.
- ^ McCaughey, Robert A. (2003). Stand, Columbia: a history of Columbia University in the City of New York, 1754-2004. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-13008-0.
- ^ Brownstein, Andrew (July 6, 2001). "A Battle of Wills, Rights, and P.R. at Columbia: University rethinks judicial code after civil-liberties group uses 'guerrilla warfare' to attack it". Inside Higher Education.
- ^ Kiley, Kevin (April 3, 2012). "A Core Question: A trustee's critical column in Columbia's student paper challenges the notion that private university trustees should speak with a unified voice". Inside Higher Education.
- ^ "Statement from the Board of Trustees | Office of the Secretary". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2026-02-19.
- ^ Kaufman-Osborn, Timothy V. (2025-04). "Why Columbia University Dismantled the Gaza Solidarity Encampment". Theory & Event. 28 (2): 217–237. doi:10.1353/tae.2025.a956275. ISSN 1092-311X.
{{cite journal}}: Check date values in:|date=(help) - ^ Sforza, Lauren (2024-04-29). "Democrats call on Columbia board to end protest encampment or resign". The Hill. Retrieved 2024-05-03.
- ^ Forgash, Emily. "AAUP drafts 'resolution of censure' against Shafik, administration following NYPD sweep". Columbia Daily Spectator. Retrieved 2026-02-20.
- ^ Kaufman-Osborn, Timothy V. (April 2025). "Why Columbia University Dismantled the Gaza Solidarity Encampment". Theory & Event. 28 (2): 217–237. doi:10.1353/tae.2025.a956275. ISSN 1092-311X.
- ^ a b Committee on Education & the Workforce, U.S. House of Representatives (31 October 2024). "Antisemitism on College Campuses Exposed" (PDF).
- ^ a b Huddleston, Sarah. "Columbia's production of disciplinary cases in congressional subpoena raises privacy concerns". Columbia Daily Spectator. Retrieved 2026-02-19.
- ^ Karam, Esha. "The House committee's report on antisemitism, annotated". Columbia Daily Spectator. Retrieved 2026-02-19.
- ^ "LAS Shielded Board Member Who Enabled Police Brutality". ALAA. Retrieved 2026-02-26.
- ^ "Columbia University agrees to Trump demands in effort to restore federal funding". NBC News. March 21, 2025. Retrieved April 24, 2025.
- ^ Banerjee, Isha. "Armstrong steps down as interim Columbia president, Shipman assumes presidency". Columbia Daily Spectator. Retrieved 2026-02-20.
- ^ Banerjee, Isha. "Shipman delivers updates on ongoing federal negotiations, senate review at University Senate plenary". Columbia Daily Spectator. Retrieved 2025-05-07.
- ^ Moody, Josh. "Columbia Settles With Trump Administration". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 2026-02-19.
- ^ Davis, Spencer. "Columbia will pay $221 million in deal with Trump administration to resume federal funding". Columbia Daily Spectator. Retrieved 2026-02-12.
- ^ "Columbia University agrees to Trump demands in effort to restore federal funding". NBC News. March 21, 2025. Retrieved April 24, 2025.
- ^ "What the Columbia Settlement Really Means". Knight First Amendment Institute. Retrieved 2026-02-12.
- ^ Speri, Alice (2025-07-24). "'Extortion': Columbia University's deal with White House met with mixed reactions". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2026-01-28.
- ^ Bose, Meghnad (2025-04-15). "Nobel Winner Joseph Stiglitz Denounces Columbia's Apparent Capitulation to Trump". The Intercept. Retrieved 2026-02-03.
- ^ Khalidi, Rashid (2025-03-25). "Does Columbia still merit the name of a university?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2026-02-04.
- ^ "Board of Trustees | Office of the Secretary". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2025-04-06.
- ^ "Jeh Johnson Named Co-Chair of Board of Trustees | Office of the Secretary". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2025-05-05.
- ^ "The Trustees Emeriti | Office of the Secretary of the University". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "José A. Cabranes | Office of the Secretary of the University". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ Palladino, Lisa (Summer 2016). "William V. Campbell '62, TC'64, Former Trustees Chair, Lions Coach, Silicon Valley Adviser". Columbia College Today. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
- ^ Columbia Business School (2013-08-02). "Jerome A. Chazen '50". The Jerome A. Chazen Institute for Global Business. Archived from the original on 2021-05-02. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Cloherty Named Trustee at Teachers College". www.columbia.akadns.net. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "4 Alumni Given Journalism's Highest Honors". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ a b c "Columbia Daily Spectator 13 February 1957 — Columbia Spectator". spectatorarchive.library.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2021-07-14.
- ^ "Stephen Friedman Elected Chair of Columbia Trustees". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Benjamin Horowitz | Office of the Secretary of the University". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Press Release: New Trustees Named". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Mark E. Kingdon | Office of the Secretary of the University". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Anna Kazanjian Longobardo". Civil Engineering and Engineering Mechanics. 2017-06-27. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Amb. Donald F. McHenry". ISD. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Charles Li '91 Returns to Columbia Law School to Discuss World Economic Prospects". www.law.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2022-01-28.
- ^ Duhigg, Charles (2015-01-14). "G.G. Michelson, Macy's Executive Who Broke Glass Ceilings, Dies at 89". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on January 14, 2015. Retrieved 2021-05-16.
- ^ "Philip Milstein Elected Trustee of Columbia University". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Trustees Elect Japan Business Executive, Alum". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Vikram Pandit | Office of the Secretary of the University". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ ExlService Holdings (2018-10-02). "EXL Announces $150 Million Strategic Investment from The Orogen Group" (Press release). Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ Butler, Nicholas Murray (October 3, 1940). "Columbia University in this World Crisis" (PDF). Retrieved October 2, 2021.
- ^ "Arnold Relman, Former NEJM Editor and P&S Grad, Dies". Columbia University Irving Medical Center. 2014-06-18. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Jonathan D. Schiller | Office of the Secretary of the University". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Press Release: Jerry I. Speyer, Lionel Pincus to Share Chairmanship of Trustees of Columbia University for Next Two Years". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Joan Spero | Columbia SIPA". www.sipa.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "Faye Wattleton | Office of the Secretary of the University". secretary.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
- ^ "United Way of New York City President & CEO Sheena Wright to Serve as Deputy Mayor for Strategic Initiatives in Incoming Adams Administration". United Way of New York City. 2021-12-20. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
- ^ "Pulitzer Prizes Awarded 2 Biofraphers and Albee; Contrasting Biographies of Jefferson and Robert Moses, and Albee Play Win Pulitzers". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2025-04-03.
- ^ Oehlschlaeger, Fritz H. (November 1979). "Hamlin Garland and the Pulitzer Prize controversy of 1921". American Literature. 51 (3): 409–414. doi:10.2307/2925396. JSTOR 2925396.
- ^ www.nytimes.com
- ^ "Hail to the Loser". The Press. Time. May 18, 1962.
- ^ Kihss, Peter (May 8, 1962). "Columbia Trustees Block Pulitzer Prize for 'Hearst'; Speculation on Motive". The New York Times.
External links
- Official website
- "Trustees Of Columbia University". Internal Revenue Service filings. ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer.