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THE HISTORY OF FRAMINGHAM STATE COLLEGE
Framingham State College began in a building, still standing today, on
the corner of Lexington Common on July 3, 1839. It had as its mission
the training of teachers, and was the first state-supported normal
school (a school which trains teachers) in the United States of
America. Twice it outgrew its accommodations, moving first to West
Newton and then to its present location on Bare Hill in Framingham in
1853. From the beginning, the Normal School met the challenge of being
the first model by educating teachers who were in demand for the common
schools of Massachusetts and, indeed, for schools throughout the nation.
From the first class, Normal School graduates participated in the new
field of education for the blind and the deaf. They traveled to the
South and to the West to teach in schools being established for Blacks
and Native Americans, and they went as missionaries to distant lands.
From 1848 to 1898 Framingham also conducted an advanced program for
women who aspired to careers in high school and college teaching, school
administration, law and medicine, opening unprecedented educational and
career opportunities for these women. There were principals, professors,
doctors, and writers among the early graduates, and women who
participated in the suffrage and temperance movements; indeed, in all of
the significant educational and social reforms of the nineteenth
century. At the close of the nineteenth century, the first teachers of
the household arts were graduated from a new program at Framingham,
laying the foundation for studies in nutrition and food science, as well
as clothing and textiles.
The student body increased steadily during the twentieth century and
with it the size of the campus and the number of buildings. New programs
and courses marked the increasingly professional character of the
education offered, while extracurricular organizations were formed to
enrich student life. In 1932 the Massachusetts Normal Schools became the
State Teachers Colleges, and in 1960 they became State Colleges with a
mandate to develop liberal arts curricula. Framingham, which had served
only women, become coeducational in 1964. The College has continued to
add departments such as Economics, Sociology, and Psychology, as well as
career-orientated programs in Computer Science, Communications, Business
Administration, and Nursing, among others, to increase the options for
students and to meet the needs of the Commonwealth.
Today, Framingham State College is situated on a beautiful 73-acre
campus in the suburban town of Framingham. The College’s location in the
economically vibrant Metro West area affords many opportunities for
students and graduates alike. Approximately 6150 full- and part-time
students with 22 bachelor’s degree programs and 21 master’s degree
programs are enrolled at the College.
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