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College
Timeline
1839-1864
| 1864-1889 | 1889-1914
| 1914-1939 | 1939-1964
| 1964-1989 | 1989-present
1839
Normal School opens in Lexington with Cyrus Peirce as principal.
Model School opens in a single room.
1840 First class of twenty-five women graduate,
including Mary Swift Lamson, teacher to Laura Bridgeman and a
founder of the YMCA in Boston (1867); and Rebecca Pennell Dean,
first woman professor in the U.S. (Antioch, 1853).
1842 Samuel J. May becomes principal and
conducts the first survey of schools hiring Normal graduates.
1844 Normal School moves to West Newton and
Cyrus Peirce returns as principal.
1845 Designated State Normal School.
1849 Eben Stearns is appointed principal.
1850 First printed diplomas are issued.
Lucretia Crocker, first woman supervisor of the Boston Public
School (1876-1886) graduates.
1853
Normal School moves to present site on Bare Hill in Framingham.
The motto "Live to Truth" is inscribed in black and
gold lettering in the new building. Anna C. Brackett, first
woman named as principal of a normal school (1861) graduates.
1854 Model School is closed.
1855 George Bigelow is named principal.
1868 Annie Johnson is named
principal, the first woman to serve as head of a Massachusetts
Normal School.
1867 Model school is re-established, the only
one in the state, and Maria Eaton, first professor of Chemistry
at Wellesley College (1877) graduates.
1869 First expansion of campus with
construction of a boarding hall. Advanced course for high school
teachers and principal authorized.
1875 Ellen Hyde, class of 1862, is named
principal.
1881
Olivia Davidson, co-founder with Booker T. Washington (and later
his wife) of Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, graduates.
1886 Crocker Hall is built and named in honor
of Lucretia Crocker.
1888 Ellen Hyde and the students have
electricity installed in the dormitory at their own expense.
1889 May Hall (named for
Abby May, first woman to be named Official Visitor to Framingham
for the Board of Education) is completed and opened in time for the
Semi-Centennial Celebration.
1890 Water from South Framingham Water Company
introduced to all the buildings, ending chronic water shortage
problems.
1893 High School diploma required for admission
to the Normal School, the culmination of a long effort by
Johnson and Hyde.
1896 The children of Framingham Center Village
are assigned to the Normal School Practice School. Portia,
daughter of Booker T. Washington, lives with Mary C. Moore
(class of 1872 and teacher) and attends the Normal Practice
School. Power plant constructed.
1898 Boston Normal School of Cookery is
transferred to the Framingham Normal School and the Household
Arts Department is established. Henry Whittemore is named as
principal. The Advanced four-year program is closed.
1899
First Household Arts students graduate.
1900 On
the occasion of its bicentennial, the Town of Framingham adopted
its town seal, which, in recognition of the College's importance
to the Town, included an image of May Hall.
1901 Tunnels constructed between Crocker and
May for electrical wires and drainage pipes.
1902 Wells Hall constructed (razed 1962).
1908 The Quill, forerunner of the Dial Yearbook
is published.
1909 Senior Class day initiated.
1914 The old dormitory,
Normal Hall, burns and construction begins on a new dormitory to
be named for Cyrus Peirce.
1917 James Chalmers is appointed principal.
1920 Horace Mann Hall is completed. Practice
School becomes Training School.
1922 First Bachelor of Science in Education
degrees are awarded. Library collection is organized under the
Dewey decimal system by a professional librarian.
1926 First official Dean of Women, Edith A.
Savage, is appointed.
1930 Francis A. Bagnall is named is appointed
principal.
1932 The Normal School name is changed to State
Teachers College at Framingham. Bagnall's title is changed to
President. First issue of the Gatepost is published.
1934
First May Day celebration.
1935 Martin F. O'Connor is appointed president.
1936
New seal, incorporating old, is designed for the College. Dwight
Hall is completed.
1938 First senior investiture ceremony.
Hurricane severely damages Crocker and May Halls.
1939 Centennial is
celebrated. Martin F. O'Connor composes the Framingham State
College hymn for the celebration.
1942 College is accredited by the American
Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.
1949 Household Arts changed to Home Economics.
1955 Gym and auditorium added to Dwight.
1956 Division of Continuing Education is
established.
1959 College empowered to grant Bachelor of
Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees. Bement Hall adjacent to
Horace Mann Hall purchased for dormitory.
1960 School officially receives title of State
College at Framingham.
1961 D. Justin McCarthy is appointed president.
Authorization is granted to award the Master of Education
degree.
1962 Dedication of O'Connor Hall. Beginning of
new degree programs in English and History. Bement Hall becomes
the President's House.
1963
Completion of Mary Hemenway Home Economics and Science Building.
1964 Male students are
enrolled for the first time. The 125th Anniversary is
celebrated.
1968 Dorothy Larned Residence Hall is
completed. Master of Science in Education approved.
1969 Henry Whittemore Library is completed.
College acquires the Ecumenical Center. M.A. and M.S. degrees
are approved.
1970 Christa Corrigan McAuliffe, Challenger
astronaut, teacher and native of Framingham, graduates.
1972 A new
and expanded curriculum is adopted, offering a wide range of
liberal arts and sciences programs.
1973 New buildings for the campus: Corinne Hall
Towers, Linsley Hall, Foster Hall, and Hemenway Annex.
1974 The College establishes a strong
partnership with the new Danforth Museum, Framingham, after
playing a significant role in the Museum's foundation.
1976 Justin McCarthy College Center is
completed.
1983 Renovation of May Hall.
1985 Paul F. Weller is appointed president.
The Arts & Humanities Series is initiated, bringing a wide
range of speakers and artistic performance to
campus.
1986 The
Christa Corrigan McAuliffe Center for Teaching Excellence is
established in order to continue the educational mission of
Christa McAuliffe.
1989 College celebrates its
150th Anniversary.
1996 Raymond N. Kieft is appointed president.
1997 The
Marion Scherner Leonhard Multimedia Lab opens.
1998 The
first technology classrooms, with distance-learning and
state-of-the-art instructional technology capabilities, open.
1999 Helen L. Heineman is appointed first woman
President. New
athletic facility is under construction. Ecumenical Center is
undergoing restoration.
2000 The
renovated Ecumenical and Cultural Center opens. The
Town of Framingham is awarded an honorary Doctor of Public
Administration degree to mark the occasion of the Town's
tercentennial and the special relationship between the College
and the Town.
2001 The new Athletic and
Recreation Center opens.
2002 Kiplinger Magazine
ranks Framingham State College as one of the top 100 public
colleges in the United States, and one of the top five public
colleges in New England. Framingham State College becomes
the first public college in New England to require wireless
laptop computers of incoming students.
2003 College celebrates
150 years in Framingham. The Arthur M. Doyle Technology
Center is dedicated.
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