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Northwestern Oklahoma State
University History
Established 1897
In 1895, only two years after the opening of the
Cherokee Outlet, the first bill to establish a normal school at Alva was
introduced in the territorial legislature. The first effort was defeated;
however, the next legislature passed a bill establishing the Northwestern
Territorial Normal School at Alva, the second such school in Oklahoma Territory.
In a meeting
on August 8, 1897, a newly-formed Board of Regents for Normal Schools named
James E. Ament of Illinois as Northwestern's first president. He and two
teachers, Mary DeLisle and Sarah Bosworth, comprised the first faculty.
Until a building
to house the new college could be constructed, the classes were held in
the Congregational Church. The school opened on September 20, 1897, with
an enrollment of 58 students. Enrollment reached 166 students by the end
of the first year.
By the fall of
1899, the first building, The Castle on the Hill, had been completed and
the school was transferred to its present site. The cost of construction
of the first building was underwritten by a number of private citizens,
since no appropriation for this building had been passed by the legislature
when construction began.
From its normal
school beginning, Northwestern in 1919 was expanded into a four-year teachers college and was designated at that
time as Northwestern State Teachers College. A further major change in
the nature and function of the institution came in 1939, when the college
was authorized to grant degrees in liberal arts, as well as education.
The name was changed to Northwestern State College.
In 1941, a constitutional
amendment established the present Oklahoma State System of Higher Education
and provided for the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education. All state-supported
colleges and universities were placed under the authority of the board
in matters regarding curriculum, standards of education and finances. Within
the framework of the system, the six regional colleges, including Northwestern,
were placed directly under the governance of the Board of Regents of Oklahoma
Colleges.
In 1951, the
Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education authorized Northwestern to
offer courses, transferable to the University of Oklahoma and Oklahoma
State University,
applying toward a master's degree in education. Beginning
with the summer term of 1954, Northwestern was authorized to institute
a fifth-year program in education leading to a Master of Education degree.
In 1978, a fifth-year inter-disciplinary sociology and psychology program
leading to a Master of Behavioral Science degree was approved. A nursing
program leading to a Bachelor of Science in Nursing degree was established
in the fall of 1981. On August 16, 1974, the name of
Northwestern State College was changed to Northwestern Oklahoma
State University. During its first century, Northwestern has evolved from
a normal school preparing teachers for the rural schools and small towns
of northwest Oklahoma, into a dynamic institution offering high levels
of education and training in numerous vocational pursuits.
As Northwestern prepared to enter its second century, the university expanded
its presence in the area. In the spring of 1996, the Second Session of
the 45th Oklahoma Legislature passed House Bill 2164, creating Northwestern
campuses in Enid and Woodward. These campuses offered their first classes
during the 1996-97 academic year.
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Dr. Janet Cunningham,
President of Northwestern since 2006
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