Columbia University President Profiles


1754-1800

Portrait of Samuel Johnson

Samuel Johnson, 1696-1772
Term of Office: 1754-1763

When the vestrymen of New York City's Trinity Church resolved to establish an “Episcopal College” in the City, they turned to Anglican minister Samuel Johnson, a well-known colonial scholar and Yale graduate to lead the effort.

Portrait of Myles Cooper

Myles Cooper, 1735-1785
Term of Office: 1763-1775

An Anglican minister and Oxford University graduate, Myles Cooper, under the recommendation of the Archbishop of Canterbury, was appointed professor of moral philosophy and assistant to the president in 1762.

Portrait of Benjamin Moore

Benjamin Moore, 1748-1816
Term of Office: 1775-1776 (president pro tempore)

Following the sudden departure of President Myles Cooper, the Board of Governors, with Cooper's recommendation, appointed King's College graduate Reverend Benjamin Moore ('68 KC) president pro tempore.

Portrait of William Johnson

William Samuel Johnson, 1727-1819
Term of Office: 1787-1800

After the Revolutionary War and the establishment of the United States of America, the newly reorganized Columbia College Trustees elected as its third president, William Samuel Johnson, the Yale educated son of the College's first president, Samuel Johnson.


1801-1850

Portrait of Charles Wharton

Charles H. Wharton, 1748-1833
Term of Office: 1801

Following the retirement of William Samuel Johnson, the Columbia College Trustees elected the Reverend Dr. Charles Henry Wharton, Rector of St. Mary's Church, Burlington, N.J., president on May 25, 1801.

Portrait of Benjamin Moore

Benjamin Moore, 1748-1816
Term of Office: 1801-1811

On December 31, 1801, The Right Reverend Benjamin Moore, rector of Trinity Church and bishop of New York, as well as previously president pro tempore (1775-1776) of King's College, was elected Columbia College's fifth president.

Portrait of William Harris

William Harris, 1765-1829
Term of Office: 1811-1829

William Harris, a Harvard graduate and Episcopalian minister, was elected president in conjunction with the appointment of Columbia College’s first provost, a newly created office to which John Mitchell Mason, a Presbyterian minister, was elected.

Portrait of William Duer

William Alexander Duer, 1780-1858
Term of Office: 1829-1842

A lawyer and jurist of note in New York State, William A. Duer had held many offices, both judicial and political, previous to accepting the presidency of Columbia College.

Portrait of Nathaniel Moore

Nathaniel Fish Moore, 1782-1872
Term of Office: 1842-1849

Nathaniel Fish Moore, nephew of former Columbia president Benjamin Moore, was a lawyer by training but preferred the quiet seclusion of the scholar's life, and in 1820 accepted the position of professor of Greek and Latin in Columbia College.


1851-1900

Portrait of Charles King

Charles King, 1789-1867
Term of Office: 1849-1864

A politician and newspaper publisher, Charles King was elected president of Columbia College at age 60.  Although King was in no way an educator, his administration was marked by significant progress and expansion.

Portrait of Frederick Barnard

Frederick A. P. Barnard, 1809-1889
Term of Office: 1864-1889

Elected Columbia College’s tenth president was Yale educated physicist and Episcopalian minister, Frederick A.P. Barnard.


1901-1950

Portrait of Seth Low

Seth Low, 1850-1916
Term of Office: 1890-1901

Columbia College trustee and former Brooklyn Mayor, Seth Low was elected Columbia's eleventh president, leading the College through further expansion and change.

Portrait of Nicholas Butler

Nicholas Murray Butler, 1862-1947
Term of Office: 1902-1945

Serving as president for forty-three years, Nicholas Murray Butler has the distinction of being the longest serving president in the history of Columbia University.

Portrait of Frank Fackenthal

Frank D. Fackenthal, 1883-1968
Term of Office: 1945-1948 (acting president)

Following the resignation of Nicholas Murray Butler, Provost Frank D. Fackenthal was named acting president.

Photograph of Dwight Eisenhower

Dwight D. Eisenhower, 1890-1969
Term of Office: 1948-1953

Former commanding general of the American forces in Europe and supreme commander of the Allied Expeditionary Force during World War II, Dwight D. Eisenhower was Columbia University’s thirteenth president.


1951-2000

Portrait of Grayson Kirk

Grayson Kirk, 1903-1997
Term of Office: 1953-1968

A Columbia University professor and provost, Grayson Kirk was elected president following Dwight D. Eisenhower’s departure for the White House and officially installed on June 2, 1953.

Portrait of Andrew Cordier

Andrew W. Cordier, 1901-1975
Term of Office: 1968-1969 (acting president); 1969-1970 (president)

Following the upheaval of the 1968 protests and the resignation of President Grayson Kirk, Andrew W. Cordier, a former United Nations diplomat and dean of the School of International Affairs, was appointed acting president August 23, 1968.

Portrait of William McGill

William J. McGill, 1922-1997
Term of Office: 1970-1980

Prior to taking the Columbia University presidency, William J. McGill, educated at Fordham and Harvard Universities, had been chancellor of the University of California, San Diego and a professor of psychology at Columbia University, where he was also chair of the psychology department between 1961-1963.

Portrait of Michael Sovern

Michael I. Sovern, 1931-2020
Term of Office: 1980-1993

A Columbia University graduate, former faculty member, dean and provost, Michael I. Sovern was Columbia’s first Jewish president.

Portrait of George Rupp

George Rupp, 1942-
Term of Office: 1993-2002

The Princeton, Yale and Harvard educated author and Presbyterian minister, George Rupp, had previously presided over Rice University and served as dean of the Harvard Divinity School before accepting the presidency at Columbia.


2001-Current

Portrait of Lee Bollinger

Lee C. Bollinger, 1946-
Term of Office: 2002-2023

Lee C. Bollinger became Columbia University’s 19th president in 2002 and, at the time he stepped down in 2023, was the longest serving Ivy League president. Under his leadership, Columbia redefined what it means to be a great research university in the 21st century, distinguished by comprehensive academic excellence, an innovative and sustainable approach to global engagement, two of the largest capital campaigns in the history of higher education, and the institution’s most ambitious campus expansion in over a century.


Nemat "Minouche" Shafik

Minouche Shafik, 1962-
Term of Office: 2023-2024

Nemat (Minouche) Shafik became the 20th president of Columbia University on July 1, 2023. She is a distinguished economist who for more than three decades has served in senior leadership roles across a range of prominent international and academic institutions.

Shafik resigned as president in August 2024.

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katrina-armstrong

Katrina Armstrong
Term of Office: 2024-2025 (interim)

Katrina Armstrong, MD, is interim president of Columbia University. She also leads Columbia University’s health and biomedical sciences campus, serving since 2022 as chief executive officer of Columbia University Irving Medical Center. She is executive vice president for Health and Biomedical Sciences for Columbia University and the Harold and Margaret Hatch Professor of the University.

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