<p>In 1925, it was big10 schools not ivy dominate US college ranking</p>
<p>1925 American University Rankings</p>
<p>In 1925 Raymond Hughes, the president of Iowa State College, conducted “A Study of the Graduate Schools of America” for the Association of American Colleges. He ranked graduate programs in 24 subjects by surveying faculty. Others quickly turned his departmental rankings into overall institutional rankings based on how many top-rated departments a school had.</p>
<p>Overall Ranking 1925:</p>
<p>1) University of Chicago (B1G)</p>
<p>2) Harvard (Ivy)</p>
<p>3) Columbia (Ivy)</p>
<p>4) Yale (Ivy)</p>
<p>5) Wisconsin (B1G)</p>
<p>6) Princeton (Ivy)</p>
<p>7) Johns Hopkins</p>
<p>8) Michigan (B1G)</p>
<p>9) California (Berkeley) (PAC12)</p>
<p>10) Cornell (Ivy)</p>
<p>11) Illinois (B1G)</p>
<p>12) Pennsylvania (Ivy)</p>
<p>13) Minnesota (B1G)</p>
<p>14) Stanford (PAC12)</p>
<p>15) Ohio State (B1G)</p>
<p>16) Iowa (B1G)</p>
<p>17) Bryn Mawr</p>
<p>18) Caltech</p>
<p>19) MIT</p>
<p>20) Northwestern (B1G)</p>