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International
House Berkeley was part of a larger "International House movement", founded
by Harry Edmonds who, as a young man working for the New York YMCA in
1909, had a chance meeting with a Chinese student. Edmond's casual "good
morning" on the steps of the Columbia University library provoked the
response: "I've been in New York three weeks, and you are the first person
who has spoken to me." Inspired by this experience, Edmonds decided to
investigate the situation of foreign students in New York City. With the
funding and support of John D. Rockefeller, Jr., the first International
House opened in New York in 1924.
Due to the success of International House New York, Edmonds and Rockefeller decided to extend the idea. Berkeley, California was selected because the Bay Area was the American point of entry from Asia and claimed the largest number of foreign students on the West Coast. When the idea of International House was first proposed to the Berkeley community in the 1920s, there was considerable resistance. There was resistance to men and women living under one roof; there was hostility to foreigners; and the notion that people of color would live with "whites" in an integrated setting was, to many, simply incredible. International House Berkeley officially opened on August 18, 1930. It was the largest student housing complex in the Bay Area and the first coeducational residence west of the Mississippi. The world
has changed radically since 1930, yet International House is more relevant
than ever. In our increasingly global society, the ability to understand
other cultures -- and one's own culture through other's perspectives
-- is crucial to meeting the challenges of an ever-shrinking, interdependent
world.
Enjoy the revised "Informal History" brochure in PDF format. Learn more about International House In The News. |
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