About Haas

 

History of Haas


The visionary concept of a College of Commerce at the University of California was first proposed in an 1883 commencement address by Arthur Rodgers, a Berkeley graduate and well-traveled businessman.


He stirred his audience, inspired the governor, and set in motion ideas that, 15 years later, would create the nation's first college of commerce at a public university.


At the time of Rodgers' commencement address, the university itself was only 15 years old. It owed its existence to the gold rush pioneers and the preachers and teachers who had followed them west. Their collective vision for a College of California predated even the admission of California as a state in 1850.


This is the history of the first 100 years of the Haas School of Business, 1898-1998 (2.6 MB, PDF format; Acrobat Reader required).

 

 

Past Haas School Deans

 

1898-1916

Carl Copping Plehn
1916-1924 Henry Rand Hatfield
1924-1928 Stuart Daggett
1928-1934 Henry Francis Grady
1934-1936 E.T. Grether
1937-1941 Robert Calkins
1941-1961 E.T. Grether
1961-1966 John W. Cowee
1966-1976 Richard Holton
1976-1982 Earl F. Cheit
1982-1990 Raymond Miles
1990-1991 Earl F. Cheit
1991-1998 William A. Hasler
1998-2001 Laura D'Andrea Tyson
2002 Benjamin E. Hermalin
2002-2004 Tom Campbell
2004-2005 Rich Lyons
2005-2008 Tom Campbell
2008-present Rich Lyons