Cooper, Lane, 1875-1959

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Lane Copper was born in New Brunswick, NJ, on Dec.14, 1875; attended Rutgers College 1892-1896. After graduation, he briefly attended the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, then transferred to Yale University, where he received his Master's degree in English in 1898. He returned to Rutgers College, completing another Master's degree in 1899, followed by a Ph.D. in English philology in 1902 from Leipzig University in Germany. Taught English language and literature at Cornell University from 1902 until his retirement in 1943. Among his published works are : CONCORDANCE TO WORDSWORTH (1911), TWO VIEWS OF EDUCATION (1922), and EVOLUTION AND REPENTENCE (1935). He died on Nov.27, 1959 in Lansing, New York.

From the description of Papers of Lane Cooper, 1881-1958. (Rutgers University). WorldCat record id: 232648320

Professor of English language and literature, Cornell University.

From the description of Lane Cooper papers, 1881-1959. (Cornell University Library). WorldCat record id: 63934806

Lane Cooper, eminent scholar, teacher and writer, was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey on December 14, 1875, the youngest of five children born to Jacob and Mary Linn Cooper. Two of the children born of this marriage died in their youth, Elizabeth (Bessie) and Theodore Woolsey. Lane Cooper's older brothers, William J. (1868-1941), a mechanical engineer with the Pennsylvania Railroad, and Drury Walls (1872-1957), a patent lawyer and a director of International Business Machines Corporation, as well as director of Republic Steel Corporation, were both successful in their own right. Jacob Cooper, Lane's father, reared in poverty on a farm in Southern Ohio, managed through heroic efforts to attain a doctorate from the University of Berlin (1854) and Master's degree from Yale in 1855. As Professor of Greek and Philosophy at Rutgers College, he was considered to be one of the most impressive academic figures of his day. Lane inherited his father's hunger for learning, and both were governed throughout their lives by a passion for knowledge.

An exemplary grammar school student at Bayard Street School (1886-1887), Lane Cooper received the Reward of Merit (1886) in addition to attaining perfect attendance and excellence in deportment. When he graduated from Rutgers College Preparatory School in 1892, he gave the commencement program oration. While attending Rutgers College (1892-1896), he received the Hart Prize in British Literature (1894) for his essay on Alexander Pope; the John Parker Memorial Prize for Mental Philosophy; the Upson Prize in American Literature for his essay on Nathaniel Hawthorne; the Appleton Memorial Prize in Moral Philosophy (1895); and the Classical Prize in Logic for his essay entitled, Does the Content of Logic Correspond with the Content of Existence? (1896). He became a member of Phi Beta Kappa during his college years and maintained an active role in his fraternity, Delta Phi, throughout his life. An athlete at Rutgers College, Lane held track records and retained an interest in this sport; in fact, he delighted to extreme old age in acting as inspector at intercollegiate contests. At the commencement ceremonies for his own graduation in 1896, Lane was excused from speaking in order to deliver the Rhetorical Honor Oration.

After graduating from Rutgers in 1896, Lane Cooper studied medicine for a year at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University. Finding that medicine was not suited to his interests, he transferred to the Yale Graduate School to study English Literature under Albert Stanburrough Cook and received a Masters degree in 1898. Cook had been a former student of Jacob Cooper, Lane's father, at Rutgers College. Despite differences in their ages, Jacob, Lane and A.S. Cook developed both personal and professional attachments that lasted all their lives. Lane considered the teachings of his father and A.S. Cook to be the most influential in effecting his life.

Lane Cooper taught school for a year (1898-1899) at St. James School in Washington County, Maryland, but decided his preference was to teach at the collegiate level. He returned to Rutgers College and obtained a Masters degree in 1899. He then attended Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universitat in Berlin and Universitat von Leipzig (1899-1902), where he earned a Ph.D. degree in English philology. For his dissertation, he wrote The Prose Poetry of Thomas de Quincey in German and in English. His class notebooks, written in German, English and French, attest to his linguistic abilities. While in Berlin, he studied under Alois Brandl and, in Leipzig, under R.P. Wulker. Later in life, he expressed a sense of gratitude to the geographer, Fredrich Ratzel, another influential teacher during his studies at Leipzig. During the summers, he traveled extensively to Zurich, France, and Greece visiting museums and libraries. He kept notes on archaeological digs, his impressions and the people he met.

In the spring of 1902, Lane returned to the United States and accepted an instructorship at Cornell University under James Morgan Hart. Encouraged by Hart, he developed a course in Wordsworth that led to his studies of the poet and eventually to the writing of the Concordance to Wordsworth (1911) which resulted in universal acclaim of scholars. Lane Cooper gained successive distinctions throughout his years at Cornell. He became an Assistant Professor in 1906, a Professor in 1915, and, in 1927, Chair of his own department, which he called The Comparative Study of Literature. He retained the title of Professor of the English Language and Literature, and he continued to train graduate students for the teaching of English. He served as John Wendell Anderson Professor of English from 1941 to 1943, when he became Professor Emeritus.

Throughout his career, Lane Cooper never took a sabbatical and often taught summer sessions as visiting professor at the University of Illinois (1914), Stanford University (1918), and the University of California (1919). In 1921, Rutgers bestowed upon him an Honorary degree of Doctor of Letters, and Wesleyan bestowed the Doctor of Humane Letters upon him in 1943.

In a summary of his life, which appeared in Necrology of the Faculty of Cornell University, 1959-1960 written by several of his former students, Lane Cooper was described as "a man of imposing presence and sedate carriage, he made an immediate impression by his fine and glancing eyes, beneath a domed forehead and in later years, silvered auburn hair, and by a resonant voice that penetrated with an edge of tension." He invested everything he did with an aura of importance and radiated interest and was seen to enhance the value of life. It has been written that he possessed a "magnetism" in his personality.

He was above all a teacher, considered to be one of the "greatest of his generation in America." He was adept at bringing students of "rather indifferent equipment to a high sense of the value of literature, learning and of a disciplined mind." He was mainly committed to the search for superior students for whom he could encourage and "urge forward with missionary zeal" to develop themselves through higher studies. Lane Cooper believed that an effective teacher must also be a productive scholar, thus he kept up a stream of publications throughout his career. He authored twenty seven books and nearly 200 articles (many of which were culled from the courses he taught), and he wrote essays and addresses on educational, moral and literary subjects. Two Views of Education (1922) and Evolution and Repentance (1935) and Late Harvest (1952), culled from a long series of essays and addresses, were published in collective volumes and reflect his views. His concordances of Wordsworth, Boethius, and the Latin Poems of Milton have been considered indispensable tools of scholarship. Recognizing that many students were failing to gain an adequate knowledge of Latin and Greek, he developed a course and produced for it a translation of Aristotle's Poetics, and Aristotle's Rhetoric, in addition to a number of dialogues of Plato. Other courses he developed include: a course in Middle English; a course in Principles of Literary Critics; a course in Dante in English; a course I Methods based on Boeckh, in German; a seminary course in Chaucer; and, in his later years, the General Reading course.

Lane Cooper never married. He retired after 41 years of teaching, thereafter devoting his time to his farm in the Town of Lansing. Prior to his death on November 27, 1959, he created a will, which included a document that made the residuary estate The Lane Cooper Fund in The New York Community Trust. The memorial came into existence in 1960. His wish was that income from the fund would provide the scholarship for "young students of superior character, attainments and promise, preferably young men . . . who aspire to become teachers in higher institutions of learning, of those subjects which are called the 'humanities'." It was his expressed hope that his estate would foster the memory, aims, and attainments of his father, Jacob Cooper, and of his cherished friend, A.S. Cook. The first six commemorative scholarships that have been established include two each at Cornell, Rutgers and Yale, the three universities where these men are memorialized.

A profound testimony to the memory of Lane Cooper by his former students can be seen on the campus of Cornell University, where the Lane Cooper Window is located on the south side of Sage Chapel. Saint Boethius (c.475-525), is depicted in this stained glass memorial. The window bears the following quotation from the Psalms, which was selected as "reflecting" Lane Cooper's temperament": "Light is sown for the righteous and gladness for the upright in heart."

From the guide to the Guide to the Papers of Lane Cooper, 1881-1958, (Rutgers University Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Strunk, William, 1869-1946. William Strunk papers, 1891-1933. Cornell University Library
referencedIn McGinn, Donald Joseph. Donald Joseph McGinn papers, 1922-1970. Cornell University Library
creatorOf Cooper, Lane, 1875-1959. Papers of Lane Cooper, 1881-1958. Rutgers University
referencedIn Lane Cooper papers, 1881-1959. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.
referencedIn James Morgan Hart papers, 1856-1916. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.
referencedIn Hutton, James, 1902-. James Hutton papers, [ca.1904]-1993. Cornell University Library
referencedIn Conger, George Perrigo, 1884-1960. George Perrigo Conger papers, 1903-1960. Cornell University Library
referencedIn Baldwin, Dane Lewis. Dane Lewis Baldwin papers, 1895-1937. Cornell University Library
creatorOf Cooper, Lane, 1875-1959. [Publications]. Cornell University Library
creatorOf Guide to the Papers of Lane Cooper, 1881-1958 Rutgers Special Collections and University Archives
creatorOf Cooper, Lane, 1875-1959. Lane Cooper papers, 1881-1959. Cornell University Library
referencedIn Hart, J. M. (James Morgan), 1839-1916. James Morgan Hart papers, 1856-1916. Cornell University Library
referencedIn Katz, Solomon, 1909-. Solomon Katz papers, 1975-1985. Cornell University Library
referencedIn Otto Kinkeldey papers, 1902-1966. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.
referencedIn Kinkeldey, Otto, 1878-1966. Otto Kinkeldey papers, 1902-1966. Cornell University Library
referencedIn Edward Kennard Rand correspondence and other papers, 1900-1945. Houghton Library
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Agassiz, Louis, 1807-1873. person
associatedWith Aristotle person
associatedWith Aristotle. person
associatedWith Baldwin, Dane Lewis. person
associatedWith Caplan, Harry, 1896-1980. person
associatedWith Concordance Society. corporateBody
associatedWith Conger, George Perrigo, 1884-1960. person
associatedWith Cook, Albert S. (Albert Stanburrough), 1853-1927. person
associatedWith Cooper, Drury. person
associatedWith Cooper family. family
associatedWith Cooper, Jacob. person
associatedWith Cooper, Jacob, 1830-1904. person
associatedWith Cooper, Mary L. person
associatedWith Cooper, Mary Linn person
associatedWith Cooper, Mary Linn. person
associatedWith Cooper, Will. person
associatedWith Cornell University corporateBody
associatedWith Cornell University. English Dept. corporateBody
associatedWith Cornell University. Lane Cooper Scholarship Fund. corporateBody
associatedWith Greenbie, Marjorie Latta Barstow, 1891- person
associatedWith Hart, J. M. (James Morgan), 1839-1916. person
associatedWith Hutton, James, 1902- person
associatedWith J. M. (James Morgan) Hart, 1839-1916. person
associatedWith Katz, Solomon, 1909- person
associatedWith Kinkeldey, Otto, 1878-1966. person
associatedWith Lane, Cooper 1875-1959. person
associatedWith Liddle, Ralph A. person
associatedWith McGinn, Donald Joseph. person
associatedWith New York Community Trust. Lane Cooper Fund. corporateBody
associatedWith Osgood, Charles Grosvenor, 1871-1964. person
associatedWith Phillips, Caroline Whipple. person
correspondedWith Rand, Edward Kennard, 1871-1945 person
associatedWith Rutgers College corporateBody
associatedWith Strunk, William, 1869-1946. person
associatedWith Wordsworth, William, 1770-1850 person
associatedWith Yale University corporateBody
Place Name Admin Code Country
Europe
Subject
Education
Aesthetics
College teachers
English language
English literature
Europe
Greek drama (Comedy)
Literary style
Literature
Literature
Poetry
Poetry
Rhetoric, Ancient
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1875-12-14

Death 1959-11-27

Americans

English

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