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Timeline

Timeline 1903-1929Timeline 1930-1949Timeline 1950-1969Timeline 1960-1969Timeline 1970-1979Timeline 1980-1989Timeline 1990-2003

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College of Education timeline: 1903-29

Special thanks to Greta Rey for pulling together the list of events for this timeline.

1900

  • In existence are the following: State Normal School at Ypsilanti, Central State Normal School at Mt. Pleasant, Northern State Normal School at Marquette.
1901
  • Governor vetoes bill passed by legislature creating a fourth normal school
1903
  • May 27. Governor Bliss signs bill providing for establishment of Western State Normal School.
  • Jun. 23. Civic leaders offer State Board of Education incentives to locate new institution in Kalamazoo.
  • Aug. 28. State Board of Education selects Kalamazoo as site for new Normal School.
  • Oct. 19. Kalamazoo voters authorize city to borrow $70,000 to build and operate the new school.
  • Nov. 27. State Board of Education selects Prospect Hill as campus site.
Vine Street School and College Building1904
  • Apr. 1. Dwight Bryant Waldo selected by State Board of Education as “principal” of Western State Normal School.
  • May 16. Work begins on grading land on Prospect Hill.
  • May 19. Waldo announces creation of the Rural School Department. Ernest Burnham heads the department and develops it into a model program that is nationally recognized.
  • Jun. 27. Western’s first session (six weeks summer) enrolls 117 students, who attend classes in the Kalamazoo High School Building.
  • Sept. 26. First fall term begins.
  • Sept. Training School begins with grades one, two and four. Grades one and two housed in the Methodist Church House, grade four on the third floor of the YMCA.
  • Oct. 10. Men’s Athletic Association created.
  • Oct. 12. Beginning of the Rural Sociology Seminar.
1905
  • Jan. 18. The Rural Sociology Seminar constitution adopted.
  • Jan. 25. Western State Normal Athletic Association’s organization completed. Open to all male students interested in team sports. A girls’ basketball team also exists.
  • Feb. Orchestra organized.
  • Apr. 6. Chapter of Young Women’s Christian Association started at Western.
  • Spring 1905-09. Training School’s classes housed in the city’s new Vine Street School.
  • Spring 1905. Training School adds grades three, five and six.
  • Jun. 22. Western’s first commencement. Granting of life teaching certificates to five students and three-year rural teaching certificates to four students.
  • Summer 1905. Extension program initiated. Summer classes for teachers working for extension of life certificates.
  • Sept. 1. Administrative offices moved from Kalamazoo College building into newly constructed Administration Building (central portion of East Hall).
  • Sept. Department of Art established. Domestic Economy and Manual Training departments absorb the Drawing Department.
  • Oct. 24. Men students form the Riley Literary Society.
  • Nov. 21. Women students form the Amphictyon (literary) Society.
  • Nov. 23. Administration (and classroom) Building dedicated. Department of Manual Training remains housed in a city school building.
1906
  • Department of Expression is spinoff of English Department. Renamed Speech Department in 1908.
1907
  • Seven students complete life certificates for teaching, through extension program.
  • Language Department divides into German and Latin Departments.
  • Rural Education Department holds first rural progress day for residents of area rural communities. Conducted continuously until 1940.
1908
  • Jun. 22. Gymnasium and classroom building dedicated (north section of present East Hall).
  • Jun. Railroad (trolley) dedicated. In use until 1947.
  • Sept. Model one-room school opens in Kalamzoo district #2 (Oakwood), where rural education students observe a Western-appointed teacher in action.
  • Manual Training Department renamed Manual Arts Department.
  • State of Michigan appropriates $60,000 for a training school building.
1909
  • Art RoomCampus Training School Building completed (south section of present East Hall).
  • Training School adds seventh grade.
  • Physical Training Department divided into Physical Education for Men and Physical Education for Women.
  • Domestic Science Department and Art Departments divided.
1910
  • Training School adds eighth grade.
1911
  • Western State Normal SchoolRural Education Department inaugurates regular conference on campus of county school commissioners (superintendents).
  • Normal High School begins with grade 9 (later named State High School, then University High School)
1912
  • High school students will now be part of the Training School and will use their own high school classrooms, separate from college classrooms..
1914
  • Western offers a course in commerce. Three years later in has grown to be the Commerce Department.
  • The Department of Handwriting is established but offers no college credit. It continues until 1940.
  • Athletics fields developed between Asylum Road ( Oakland Drive) and Michigan Central Railroad tracks.
1915
  • The German Department is renamed Modern Language Department, as French is introduced. In 1919 it introduces Spanish.
1917
  • State Board of Education authorizes state normal schools to offer third year of work in preparation for life certificates and Western requires it.
  • Terms "major" and "minor" officially introduced into curriculum.
  • Sept. Rural Education uses a model one-room school on Michigan Avenue, replacing the Oakwood school. In use until 1924.
1918
  • State Board of Education grants degree privileges to state’s normal schools and Western begins to offer four-year bachelor’s degrees.
  • Oct. Completion of U.S. Government barracks for use by Student Army Training Corps.
  • Nov. 11. World War I ends.
  • Dec. 21. Student Army Training Corps disbanded. Government deeds barracks to Western, which uses the building for classrooms until it is razed in June, 1953.
1919
1920
  • Two-year course in physical education for men introduced.
1921
  • Sept. Manual Training Building completed.
  • Industrial Arts Department renamed Manual Arts Department.
1922
  • Rural Education
Click on the timeline at the top of the page for more historical events.
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