Northwestern
University was one of the early institutions to offer professional
and graduate-level study.
Although trustees
purchased land 12 miles north of Chicago for the main campus,
they also quickly moved to establish professional schools and
academic sites in Chicago. Four programs were started in the 19th
century, and others followed early in the 20th century.
The Medical School
began in 1859 and formally affiliated with the University in 1870
through an agreement with the Chicago Medical College, at 26th
Street and Prairie Avenue. In its first year, the school enrolled
75 students. Today, the Medical School serves 864 full-time students
with 963 full-time faculty.
In 1873, trustees
negotiated an agreement with the old University of Chicago, which
had had a law department for 10 years, to jointly operate the
Union College of Law located off Court House Square near today's
Richard J. Daley Center. It opened three years later with 54 students.
The School of Law has grown to 712 full-time students, with 62
full-time faculty.
The School of Pharmacy
was established in Chicago in 1886 with 62 students. It ceased
operation after the 1916-17 academic year with only 62 students.
The Dental School
was opened in Chicago in1887 with just nine students. It has 108
full-time students today, along with 28 full-time faculty. Trustees
voted in 1998 to close the school at the end of 2000-01 academic
year, citing difficulty in competing with public dental schools,
which receive as much as $60,000 per student annually in state
support.
Northwestern awarded
its first doctoral degree in 1896. The Graduate was organized
in 1910 and officially became the Graduate School in 1923 and
today is the largest graduate-level division, with 5,826 full-time
students and 1,203 full-time faculty, with classes on both campuses.
The School of Commerce,
forerunner to the Kellogg Graduate School of Management, opened
in 1908 as an evening program in Chicago with 255 students. In
1920, Northwestern established a full-time undergraduate program
in with a bachelor of science in commerce on the Evanston campus.
In1966, the faculty, recognizing the growing importance of MBA
programs, made the decision to discontinue it and focus on graduate
studies. Thirteen years later, the John L. and Helen Kellogg Foundation
made a gift of $10 million to Northwestern University and the
School was renamed the Kellogg Graduate School of Management.
Now based on the Evanston campus, Kellogg has 1,202 full-time
students and 150 full-time faculty.
Kellogg continues
to hold classes on the Chicago campus as does the School for Continuing
Studies, with a combined enrollment of 2,700 part-time students.
The School for
Continuing Studies, successor to University College, traces its
roots to 1903 when the College of Liberal Arts began to offer
evening courses for teachers on the Evanston campus. Thirty years
later, a new and more expansive program of evening undergraduate
studies was opened on the Chicago campus, under the name University
College.
During the post-World
War II years, University College offered both full- and part-time
college programs on the Chicago campus that lured many war veterans
to the classroom. It was the largest school at the time because
of the GI bill, with 15,000 full and part time students on Chicago
campus.
The School now offers
In addition to
those academic divisions, graduate-level study is also offered
by the School of Education and Social Policy, Robert R. McCormick
School of Engineering and Applied Science, Medill School of Journalism,
School of Speech and School of Music.
From 1902 to 1926
Northwestern University's professional schools were located in
or near Chicago's Loop. In 1920 Northwestern purchased approximately
8.5 acres for $1.5 million at Chicago Avenue and Lake Shore Drive
in Streeterville. University Architect James Gamble Rogers designed
the buildings erected there. Funding came from several donors
who lent their names to the buildings -- Wieboldt Hall, Levy Mayer
Hall of Law and the Montgomery Ward Medical and Dental Building.
All of the University's professional schools relocated to the
new campus in 1926.
The campus itself
was originally named the Alexander McKinlock Memorial Campus in
memory of donor George McKinlock's son, who died in World War
I. During the Depression. When McKinlock's financial losses prevented
him from continuing his promised support, the University forgave
his debt and, in 1937, officially changed the name to the Chicago
Campus.
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