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  1. Welcome to Timothy Dwight College – home of the Red Lions! We are the residential college closest to downtown New Haven and the city’s arts district and your best home away from home!

  2. Timothy Dwight College, commonly abbreviated and referred to as "TD", is a residential college at Yale University named after two presidents of Yale, Timothy Dwight IV and his grandson, Timothy Dwight V. The college was designed in 1935 by James Gamble Rogers in the Federal-style architecture popular during the elder Timothy Dwight's ...

  3. Timothy Dwight College, a residential college of Yale University, is named after two university presidents, Timothy Dwight IV and Timothy Dwight V, who both left a lasting legacy at Yale. It is commonly known as TD. James Gamble Rogers designed this tenth college in 1935 in the Federal-Style architecture (which was popular during the presidency ...

  4. The Timothy Dwights were two of Yale’s most illustrious presidents. Timothy Dwight the elder was the grandson of Jonathan Edwards, the Yale-educated, former president of Princeton. Born in 1752, the elder Timothy was said to be a remarkably precocious child.

  5. Under Timothy Dwight, Yale College began its long transformation from an regional institution training clergy to a nationally renowned institution of higher education. John Calhoun had thrived under the watchful tutelage of President Timothy Dwight, his "mentor" (66). As the institution grew and its fame spread, Dwight took it down a ...

  6. 31 de mar. de 2022 · Timothy Dwight College, established in 1935 and the tenth residential college of Yale, is the place I call home during my time at Yale. Although its Federal-Style architecture and location give it a bad reputation among undergraduates, from my wholly unbiased perspective, Timothy Dwight College is the best residential college at Yale.

  7. In 1765, at the age of thirteen, Dwight nervously faced his college entrance examiners and displayed, to the great pleasure of his hearers, his grasp of Tully, Virgil and the Greek Testament; his ability to write Latin prose; his understanding of arithmetic; and that he had a “suitable testimony of a blameless life and conversation.”