1784 Legislature
granted 40,000 acres and named Board of
Trustees for University of Georgia
1785 Legislature adopted UGA charter
1801 Franklin College of Arts and
Sciences held first classes
1803 Demosthenian Society was founded
1804 First commencement exercises were
held and first honorary degrees awarded 1811 Trustees
suspended institution for several months
1816 President Brown and other professors
resigned under pressure from trustees,
and the university was again dissolved
until January 1, 1817
1820 Phi
Kappa Society was founded by J. H.
Lumpkin
1830 UGA
began receiving a fixed annual
appropriation as support from the state
1833
Botanical Garden was founded
1834
Alumni Society was organized
1842
Legislature stopped providing annual
appropriation; UGA remained "private
in support and public in control"
until 1875
1854
William Terrell gave university $20,000
to establish a department of agriculture
1859
Trustees accepted plan to expand and
reorganize UGA into several schools
(medical school, law school, agriculture
school, engineering school) and
authorized granting of the following
degrees: Bachelor of Arts, Master of
Arts, Bachelor of Laws, Doctor of
Medicine, Doctor of Philosophy, Doctor of
Divinity, and Doctor of Laws. This was an
effort to change UGA's status from a
small classical college to a true
university.
Lumpkin
Law School was established
1864-66
University
was closed during Civil War
1866 First
social fraternity (Sigma Alpha Epsilon)
was organized
Trustees
authorized establishment of School of
Civil Engineering
State of
Georgia received grant of land under
Morrill Act of 1862
1869 AB
curriculum was reduced from four to two
years; junior and senior years became
elective
1870
Master of Arts became an earned degree,
based on a prescribed course of study on
campus
1872 By
executive order, UGA was designated the
state's land-grant institution
State
College of Agriculture and the Mechanic
Arts opened for operation as a department
of the university
1874
Medical College of Georgia at Augusta
became Medical Department of UGA
1878
Trustees adopted changes in degree
programs, abandoning the elective in
favor of a fixed curriculum for each
program. Instead of one degree (AB) in
Arts and Sciences, there would be three
(Bachelor of Arts, with emphasis on Latin
and Greek; Bachelor of Science, requiring
only one classical language; Bachelor of
Philosophy, stressing modern languages).
Three degrees were possible in the
Agricultural College: Bachelor of
Agriculture, Bachelor of Engineering,
Bachelor of Chemistry.
1881
General Assembly abolished tuition fees
for all students
1883
Bachelor of Philosophy degree was
discontinued
1885
School of Technology in Atlanta was
established as a branch of UGA
1888
Trustees adopted resolution for
establishment of Experiment Station
1889 Board
of Trustees was reorganized to include
one member from each congressional
district, two from Athens, and four from
the state at large
1891 State
Normal School was established at Athens
as a branch of UGA; became Georgia State
Teachers College in 1927
1892
Intercollegiate athletics were introduced
to university; first football game was
against Mercer
1901 By
act of the General Assembly, UGA began
receiving regular maintenance
appropriations from the state
1903
School of Pharmacy was established
First
summer school sessions were held
1905
Certification by accredited high schools
replaced written examination as
requirement for admission to UGA
1906
Passage of Conner Act established
separate board of trustees for College of
Agriculture
School of
Forest Resources established
1908 A
& M College was divided into College
of Science and Engineering and College of
Agriculture
College of
Education was founded
1910
Graduate School was established by W. H.
Bocock
1912
School of Commerce (later College of
Business Administration) was founded
1915
School of Journalism was established
1918 Board of Trustees adopted resolution
admitting women to university for the
junior and senior years only
1931
University System of Georgia was
organized under Board of Regents
1932 State
College of Agriculture and State Teachers
College merged officially with UGA; all
engineering was transferred to Georgia
Tech; School of Commerce at Georgia Tech
came to the Athens campus
1933
School of Home Economics was founded
1938
University of Georgia Press was
established
1940
George Foster Peabody awards established
1942
Athens became site of one of U.S. Navy's
five pre-flight schools
UGA lost
accreditation with Southern Association
of Colleges and Secondary Schools because
of political interference
1943
University System regained full
accreditation, and a new, constitutional
Board of Regents was created
1945
Georgia Museum of Art was founded
1946
College of Veterinary Medicine was
re-established by regents
1947 Georgia
Review began publication
1949 All
agricultural activities (College of
Agriculture, Experiment Station, and
Extension Service) were combined under
one dean
1953
Kellogg Foundation bestowed a grant for
establishing Georgia Center for
Continuing Education
1954
Institute of Law and Government (now the
Institute of Government) was founded
Marine
Institute was established
1960
Honors Program began
1961 UGA
became racially integrated
Institute
of Community and Area Development and
Institute of Ecology were established
1964
School of Social Work began operations
Institute
of Higher Education was established
1965
Institute of Continuing Legal Education
in Georgia was founded
1966 First
"Study Abroad" program was
conducted
1968
Institute of Natural Resources began
operations
1969 Rural
Development Center was established
School of
Environmental Design was formed
1970
Institute for Behavioral Research was
established
1972
Rising Junior Test was adopted as a
graduation requirement
1974
Special Studies program was implemented
statewide, and standard minimum SAT score
was established as a requirement for
admission to any system institution
1976
Institute for Natural Products Research
was established
1977 Rusk
Center for International and Comparative
Law was dedicated
UGA Small
Business Development Center was
established
School of
Accounting was established in College of
Business Administration
Geochronology
Lab became Center for Applied Isotope
Studies
1978
School of Home Economics became College
of Home Economics
Institute
of Continuing Judicial Education and
Gerontology Center were established
Black
Alumni Association was founded
UGA
Research Foundation was established
1980 UGA
accorded sea-grant college status
Center for
Global Policy Studies was established
1981
Survey Research Center was founded
1982
School of Music was established within
College of Arts and Sciences; School of
Journalism was designated a professional
school
Research
Center in Crime and Delinquency and
Center for Insurance Education and
Research were established
1983
School of Pharmacy became College of
Pharmacy
Associate
degree program was established in
cooperation with Athens Area
Vocational-Technical School
Institute
for Business and Learning Disabilities
Adult Clinic were established
1984
National Center for Leadership
Development in Adult and Continuing
Education and Lifelong Learning was
established
1984-85
University
celebrated bicentennial of its founding
1985
Complex Carbohydrate Research Center was
established
1986
Center for Simulational Physics, Center
for Environmental Biotechnology, Center
for Marketing Studies, Center for
Research in Nitrogen Fixation and
Metalloenzyme Catalysis, and Center for
Latin American Studies were established
1987
Center for East-West Trade Policy and
Center for Computational Quantum
Chemistry were established
1988
Center for Remote Sensing and Mapping
Science was established
School of
Journalism and Mass Communication became
College of Journalism and Mass
Communication
1989 Dowden Center for Telecommunication
Studies and Himan Brown Audio Production
Center were established
1990 College of Home Economics became the
College of Family and Consumer Sciences;
Center for
International Mass Communication Training
and Research became James M. Cox, Jr.
Center for International Mass
Communication Training and Research;
James M. Cox, Jr. Institute for Newspaper
Management Studies was established;
Institute for African American Studies
was approved
1991
College of Agriculture became the College
of Agricultural and Environmental
Sciences; School of Forest Resources
became the Daniel B. Warnell School of
Forest Resources; College of Business
Administration became the C. Herman and
Mary Virginia Terry College of Business
1992 The Computational Center for
Molecular Structure and Design and the
Center for Soybean Improvement were
established
1993 The
Center for Food Safety and Quality
Enhancement, the National Reading
Research Center, the National UV-B
Monitoring Center, and the Southeastern
Center for Applied Cognitive Aging
Research were established
1994
School of Ecology was established within
the Franklin College of Arts and
Sciences; environmental literacy
requirement instituted for all
undergraduates
Artificial
Intelligence Center and Coca-Cola Center
for International Business were
established
Over $200
million in construction planned or in
progress
UGA chosen as site of Olympic soccer and
volleyball for 1996 Summer Games
1995 The
Bernard B. and Eugenia A. Ramsey Student
Physical Activities Center and the School
of Music Building and Performing Arts
Center opened
The Center
for East-West Trade Policy was renamed
the Center for International Trade and
Security
The Center for Global Policy Studies was
renamed the Center for the Study of
Global Issues
1996 UGA host to three competitions in
the Centennial Olympic Games
New
Georgia Museum of Art officially opened
Sources:
E.M. Coulter's College Life in the
Old South; R.P. Brooks' The
University of Georgia Under
Sixteen
Administrations, 1785-1955;
President's Annual Reports, The
University of Georgia.
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