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Paul van Dyke

Professor of Modern History

Centurion, 1900–1933

Born 25 March 1859 in New York (Brooklyn), New York

Died 30 August 1933 in Washington, Connecticut

Buried Princeton Cemetery, Princeton, New Jersey

Proposed by Arthur H. Scribner and George Alexander

Elected 7 April 1900 at age forty-one

Archivist’s Note: Brother of Henry van Dyke

Seconder of:

Century Memorial

Every one who knew Paul Van Dyke will remember first of all his unfailing friendliness, accompanied with the touch of dignity that was natural to him. Invariably good-humored and not in the least self-conscious, it was his personality quite as much as his literary and historical scholarship which made impression. But his qualities as a scholar were out of the ordinary. He was by instinct not only thorough in his methods, but surprisingly impartial in conclusions. That a writer with Van Dyke’s social antecedents should have entered thus sympathetically into the spirit of the French Renaissance was sufficiently interesting. But that he, a Calvinist clergyman, should have received from a Roman Catholic university its doctorate degree for his life of Ignatius Loyola, was in all respects unusual.

Alexander Dana Noyes
1934 Century Association Yearbook