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  1. Welcome Ezra Stiles College Class of 2028! Congratulations! We feel proud to call you Stilesians! Each entering class expands our horizons and enriches our traditions of friendship and collective learning. Ezra Stiles College will be your home base as you begin your journey through college.

  2. Ezra Stiles College is one of the fourteen residential colleges at Yale University, built in 1961 and designed by Eero Saarinen. The college is named after Ezra Stiles, the seventh President of Yale. Architecturally, it is known for its lack of right angles between walls in the living areas.

  3. Ezra Stiles College is named to honor the memory of Ezra Stiles, Yale Class of 1746, an eminent American theologian, lawyer, scientist, and philosopher, who served as the seventh President of Yale from 1778 to 1795.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ezra_StilesEzra Stiles - Wikipedia

    Ezra Stiles (10 December [ O.S. 29 November] 1727 – May 12, 1795) [1] [2] was an American educator, academic, Congregationalist minister, theologian, and author. He is noted as the seventh president of Yale College (1778–1795) and one of the founders of Brown University.

  5. 8. Sept. 2023 · In 2016, Yale University installed a plaque in the residential Ezra Stiles College that acknowledges Stiles’s involvement in slavery and indentured servitude and honors the memories of Newport, Jacob, and Aaron. The text concludes with a statement that ought to guide how we approach studying Stiles and others whose affluence ...

  6. Founders of the Connecticut Academy of Arts & Sciences: Five-Minute Profiles. Ezra Stiles 1727-1795. Presented by Ernest I. Kohorn, MChir, FRCS. Ezra Stiles was born in 1727 in North Haven, Connecticut, the son of the Rev. Isaac Stiles. He graduated from Yale College in 1746.

  7. Ezra Stiles College. In the year 1776, the Declaration of Independence was signed, and Samuel Hopkins, Stiles' colleague in Newport, Rhode Island, published his anti-slavery pamphlet, A Dialogue Concerning the Slavery of the Africans.