# 3190b FDC - 2000 33c Celebrate the Century - 1980s: Musical Smash Cats
Celebrate the Century – 1980s
City: Kennedy Space Center, FL
Quantity: 6,000,000
Printed By: Ashton-Potter (USA) Ltd
Printing Method: Lithographed
Perforations: 11.5
Color: Multicolored
Birth Of Charles W. Eliot
Eliot came from a prominent family – his father was a politician and his grandfather was a banker. He attended Boston Latin School and Harvard University, graduating in 1853.
Eliot had a great talent for science and had high ambitions, though it would be several years before he could make a name for himself. In 1854, he was made Tutor in Mathematics at Harvard. Four years later, he was promoted to Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Chemistry. In his spare time, he studied ways to reform Harvard’s Lawrence Scientific School. Eliot’s main goal at the time was to get the Rumford Professorship of Chemistry. When he failed to earn that appointment, Eliot left Harvard in 1863.
Rather than start a business to support his family as many of his friends suggested, Eliot took a small amount of borrowed money to go to Europe for two years. His goal was to study the educational systems throughout Europe. One of Eliot’s main goals was to study the role of education in every aspect of the nation’s life.
During his years there, Eliot reorganized the school’s faculty into new schools and departments and greatly expanded facilities with new labs, libraries, and classrooms. The changes made at Harvard were soon replicated at other institutions and many high schools changed their curriculum to meet Harvard’s high standards. Eliot was also influential in the creation of standardized admissions exams and helped found the College Entrance Examination Board.
Additionally, Eliot pushed Harvard to become a premier center for scientific and technological research. He served as president for 40 years, longer than any other president in the school’s history. During that time, he reformed the university and empowered Harvard’s rise to the forefront of American institutions.
Celebrate the Century – 1980s
City: Kennedy Space Center, FL
Quantity: 6,000,000
Printed By: Ashton-Potter (USA) Ltd
Printing Method: Lithographed
Perforations: 11.5
Color: Multicolored
Birth Of Charles W. Eliot
Eliot came from a prominent family – his father was a politician and his grandfather was a banker. He attended Boston Latin School and Harvard University, graduating in 1853.
Eliot had a great talent for science and had high ambitions, though it would be several years before he could make a name for himself. In 1854, he was made Tutor in Mathematics at Harvard. Four years later, he was promoted to Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Chemistry. In his spare time, he studied ways to reform Harvard’s Lawrence Scientific School. Eliot’s main goal at the time was to get the Rumford Professorship of Chemistry. When he failed to earn that appointment, Eliot left Harvard in 1863.
Rather than start a business to support his family as many of his friends suggested, Eliot took a small amount of borrowed money to go to Europe for two years. His goal was to study the educational systems throughout Europe. One of Eliot’s main goals was to study the role of education in every aspect of the nation’s life.
During his years there, Eliot reorganized the school’s faculty into new schools and departments and greatly expanded facilities with new labs, libraries, and classrooms. The changes made at Harvard were soon replicated at other institutions and many high schools changed their curriculum to meet Harvard’s high standards. Eliot was also influential in the creation of standardized admissions exams and helped found the College Entrance Examination Board.
Additionally, Eliot pushed Harvard to become a premier center for scientific and technological research. He served as president for 40 years, longer than any other president in the school’s history. During that time, he reformed the university and empowered Harvard’s rise to the forefront of American institutions.