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In a letter to Virginia Governor Robert Brooke, George Washington explained his idea for a great "national university" to be established in the nation's capital city. Washington did not see this university in his lifetime, but approximately one hundred years later, in 1893, Washington's dream was realized when American University was chartered by an Act of the United States Congress.
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AU Timeline
1890
  • Methodist bishop John Fletcher Hurst buys some ninety acres of farmland on which to build a nonsectarian, national university.
1891
  • University is incorporated as "The American University" under laws of District of Columbia.
  • Bishop Hurst is elected chancellor.
1893
  • AU chartered by Act of Congress.
1896
1902
1907
1914
  • First class admitted (28 students, including 4 women).
1916
1917
  • AU's Board offers use of campus and facilities for war effort.
  • Campus turned intoCamp AU and Camp Leach.
1920
  • Downtown graduate schools opened on "F" Street, NW.
1922
1924
  • Chancellor's House (President's Building) is constructed.
1925
  • College of Arts and Sciences established, 75 students enrolled.
  • First women's dormitory opened (Mary Graydon Building).
  • AU organizes intercollegiate football team.
  • AU organizes intercollegiate women's and men's basketball teams.
  • Student newspaper, The American Eagle, is first published.
1926
  • Clendenen opened (gym, theatre, assembly hall).
  • Battelle Library opened.
  • First yearbook, The Aucola, is published.
1927
  • AU's Alumni Association is formed.
  • First undergraduate class of College of Liberal Arts graduates.
1929
  • First journalism student graduates.
1930
  • First men's dormitory opened (Hamilton House).
1933
  • Joseph M.M. Gray becomes sixth chancellor.
1934
  • School of Public Affairs organized.
1937
  • Board of Trustees votes to admit black students, making AU one of the first universities in a segregated city to do so.
1941
  • Paul Douglass becomes AU's seventh leader; title changes from chancellor to president.
1943
  • First university flag introduced; featuring the Lodestar, the flag was designed by art department chair Charles Watkins.
    University celebrates 50th anniversary.
1946
  • AU acquired World War II WAVE barracks (Leonard Learning Center) from the United States War Department; building is later renamed Cassell Center.
1947
  • Radio station WAMC (WVAU-AM) established.
1949
  • Washington College of Law merged with AU.
1952
  • Hurst Robins Anderson becomes AU's eighth president.
1954
  • Radio/television building opened.
1955
  • AU's new School of Business Administration, first in area, moved into McKinley.
1956
  • Yearbook is renamed The Talon.
1957
  • The first Tompkins addition to Battelle completed.
    School of Government and Public Administration established.
1958
  • School of International Service opened in its new building.
  • The Center for Technology and Administration established.
1960
  • Asbury Building completed.
1962
  • Watkins Art Building opened.
1963
  • First University Senate convenes.
1964
  • John Sherman Myers Law Building and second Tompkins addition to Battelle completed.
1965
  • Kay Spiritual Life Center opened.
  • Lucy Webb Hayes School of Nursing and College of Continuing
    Education established.
1966
  • Kreeger Music Building opened.
1967
  • Beeghly Chemistry Building opened.
1968
  • New Lecture Hall opened.
  • George H. Williams becomes AU's ninth president.
  • Kennedy Political Union (KPU), student-run lecture series is established.
  • Catherine H. Sweeney donates a house on Nebraska Avenue for president's residence.
1969
  • School of Government and Public Administration moved into new Ward Circle Building.
  • Downtown Center closed.
1972
  • College of Public and International Affairs established.
1973
  • Eagles' basketball team is invited to National Invitational Tournament.
1975
  • School of Education established.
  • Commuter plane hits WAMU radio tower and crashes into backyard of AU president William's residence on Nebraska Avenue.
1976
  • Joseph Sisco becomes AU's tenth president.
  • Cooperative education program begins.
1977
  • Alumni magazine, American, is first published.
1979
  • Jack and Dorothy Bender Library opened.
  • School of Business Administration is renamed Kogod College of Business Administration.
  • College of Public Affairs is renamed College of Public and International Affairs.
1980
  • Richard E. Berendzen becomes AU's eleventh president.
  • AU selected to serve as a host institution for Humphrey Fellows.
1981
  • New official university seal is adopted.
1982
  • New university logo is adopted.
1984
  • Center for Congressional and Presidential Studies establishes bi-annual Lobbying Institute.
  • Department of Communication becomes School of Communication under the wing of College of Arts and Sciences.
1985
  • AU's flag is redesigned.
    Clendenen razed.
1986
  • School of Communication establishes American Forum.
1987
  • Abbey Joel Butler Pavilion opens.
    AU purchases Immaculata School of Tenley Campus.
1988
  • Bender Arena opens.
  • College of Public and International Affairs dissolved; School of Government and Public Administration is renamed School of Public Affairs.
  • School of International Service becomes independent.
1991
  • Joseph Duffey becomes twelfth president.
  • Eric A. Friedheim Quadrangle is dedicated.
1993
  • School of Communication becomes independent.
1994
  • Benjamin Ladner becomes thirteenth president.
  • Washington Interns for Native Students (WINS) program established.
1995
  • AU's International Institute for Health Promotion hosts first annual Global Meeting.
1998
  • Center for Teaching Excellence (CTE) established.
  • Ward Building classrooms renovated to feature the latest technology, including multimedia ports and video projectors.
1999
  • Experimental College established.
  • Kogod College of Business Administration is renamed Kogod School of Business.
  • Kogod School of Business moved into its new home in the former Myers-Hutchins building.
  • AU links with Peace Corps to offer new Masters Degree.
  • Five year international management agreement signed with American University of Sharjah (United Arab Emirates).
2000
  • AU leaves Colonial Athletic Association to join Patriot League athletics conference.
  • AU receives Easter Island statue (Moai) as a gift from the Embassy of Chile.
2001
  • AU President Ladner's 15 Point Plan: "Ideas in Action, Action into Service" adopted by Board of Trustees.
  • WAMU celebrates station's 40th anniversary.
  • AU Atheltics snagged two Patriot League Championships and automatic berths in the NCAA tournaments for men's soccer and women's volleyball.
2002
  • AU Board of Trustees adopts University Wage Policy.
  • AU creates Emergency Management Procedures Manual.
  • Battelle Building renovated & becomes new home of the College of Arts and Sciences.
  • World Capitals program celebrates its 20th anniversary.
  • Mary Graydon Center renovated, now includes Cyber Café.
  • WAMU wins a 2002 D.C. Mayor’s Arts Award.
2003
  • Harold and Sylvia Greenberg Theatre opened.
  • The Katzen Arts Center project begins.
  • Bender Court dedicated to Pop Cassell.
  • School of International Service celebrated the 45th anniversary of its founding.
  • AnewAU capital campaign launched, with goal of raising $200 million to improve facilities, academic programs, and infrastructure.
  • Standard & Poor's and Moody's give AU "A" ratings for financial health.
2004
  • AU becomes First T-Mobile HotSpot Campus.
  • Jack I. and Dorothy G. Bender Library and Learning Resources Center celebrates its 25th anniversary.
  • WAMU 88.5 FM Receives $250,000 Bequest; Largest Gift in Station's History.
  • Talk show host Diane Rehm celebrated 25 years at WAMU 88.5, AU's public radio station.
  • AU Athletics teams win six Patriot League championships.
2005
  • AU administration helps to open ABTI-American University of Nigeria.
  • Washington College of Law dedicates Pence Law Library in honor of Robert F. Pence (JD/1971) and Susan Pence.
  • The Abroad at AU program is launched.
  • University College, an integrated academic/living experiencefor freshmen, begins its inaugural year.
  • The Katzen Arts Center, housing AU's visual and performing arts programs, opens.
  • Cornelius Kerwin (BA/1971) becomes interim president.
2006
  • Kay Spiritual Life Center celebrates its 40th anniversary.
  • Kogod School of Business celebrates 50 years of business education in the nation's capital.
  • AU has a Truman scholar, Marshall scholar, seven Fulbright scholars, and two Rhodes finalists, and leads the nation in Presidential Management Fellows for the second straight year.
    More than 15,000 admissions applications are received an all-time high.
  • The AU Museum, housed in the Katzen Arts Center, brought in 18,000 visitors in its first year of operation.
  • AU is designated a 2006 Truman Foundation Honor Institution, along with Emory University and MIT, for its support of students interested in public service careers.
  • 34 AU students received Presidential Management Fellowships, leading the nation for the second year in a row.
  • AU Abroad sites were expanded to include enclave & summer immersion programs.
  • AU advised and assisted ABTI/American University of Nigeria on acceptance of its first class of students.
2007
  • Construction on an expansion to the Kogod building begins.
  • AU assists the Brookings International Volunteer Initiative in a project designed to double numbers of U.S. volunteers working abroad.
  • The AnewAU capital campaign ends the 06-07 fiscal year at $140 million, toward the $200 million goal.
  • Athletics director Keith Gill joins AU after stints at the University of Oklahoma and NCAA.
  • Endowment reaches $378 million.
  • AU joins 300 universities worldwide in signing the Talloires Declaration, a pledge to promote environmental sustainabilityin its operations, policies, and courses.
  • AU begins the first phase of its web redesign project.
  • WAMU 88.5 has more than 575,900 listeners and is the leading public radio station for NPR news and information in the local area.
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spacer Bishop John Hurst
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1st Chancellor
 
A Brief History
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Through the vision of Methodist Bishop John Fletcher Hurst, the idea of a national university, an idea born with the nation itself, came into being.

The university trustees finally broke ground in 1896. Money was hard to come by so it took a long time to hire teachers and start holding classes. After more than two decades devoted to principally securing financial support, the first graduate students were admitted in 1914 and President Woodrow Wilson officially dedi-cated the university on May 27, 1914. The first degrees a master's de-gree in agricultural eco-nomics and two doctoral degrees in agricultural chemistry were award-ed in 1916.

As a national university, AU's mission was to pre-pare the public servants of the future to effectively serve their country. With this vision in mind, the university grew quickly during the 1920s. During the first ten years of operation, instruction was offered at the graduate level only in accordance with the original plan of the founders. Undergraduate programs were estab-lished in 1925. Since that date, both under-graduate and graduate degrees have been offer-ed by the University. These undergraduate programs were begun in order to train young people for public service.

Many of American's clas-ses were in government and political science. American opened its downtown graduate school at F Street, NW in 1920. In 1925 University Hall (now known as Mary Graydon Center) opened its doors as the school's first women's dormitory.

Throughout the 1930s the university struggled to remain open and functioning. Like the rest of the country, the Great Depression hit American University hard. The administrators, through the support of the Methodist Church, were able to keep the uni-versity open. The student population dwindled, however, because of the lack of people who were able to afford tuition.

By 1940 American had recovered and enroll-ment was back up to about 1,000 students. As the nation prepared to enter World War II in 1941, the university offered the campus to the War Department to aid in the war effort. Just as the campus had been used for training and chemical testing in World War I, the Navy used the campus for research and bomb defusing training (they did not use live bombs) during World War II. Offering the campus for military use was a fitting gesture for the university, since the land on which American Uni-versity is located was the site of the Union's Fort Gaines during the Amer-ican Civil War.

The period following World War II began a long and steady time of growth. University Pres-ident Hurst Robins Ander-son led the university through this tremendous time of development. The present structure of the University began to emerge during this per-iod. The Washington Se-mester Program was established in 1947. The Washington College of Law, founded in 1896 "primarily for women", merged with the university in 1949. The School of Business and the School of Interna-tional Service were added in 1955 and 1957, respectively.

The growth of the university during the 1950s and 1960s truly helped Amer-ican to become an institution dedicated to experiential learning. The new School of Government and Public Administra-tion (now called the School of Public Affairs), and the School of International Service gave more students ef-fective opportunities to use Washington, D.C., as a classroom. This philo-sophy, of using the nation's capital as a learning tool, is an inte-gral part of AU's history and overall philosophy.

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