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Located
in Salt Lake City, Westminster College, originally a mission
school of the Presbyterian Church, is a significant part
of Utah's history and educational heritage. It first opened
in 1875 with sixty-three pupils but grew in spurts to
approximately 2,000 student enrollments today. The present
campus, located at 1300 East and 1700 South in the Sugar
House district, is situated on twenty-seven acres of land
and includes fourteen major buildings. Emigration Creek
winds through the south end of the property making it
one of the most attractive campuses in the state.
The
college was first known as the Presbyterian Preparatory
School and offered instruction from kindergarten through
high school. Three rooms in the old Presbyterian Church
at 200 South and 200 East housed the first classes. The
curriculum included reading, writing, and arithmetic,
as well as Latin, Greek and higher mathematics. From this
humble beginning, the school has now emerged as a four-year
liberal arts college, fully independent, nondenominational,
privately funded and functioning under its own board of
directors. It also offers graduate (master's level) programs
in business and education.
The
founder and first teacher was Dr. John M. Coyer. Students
paid a tuition of $30.00. In l882 the first class was
graduated from the "Collegiate Institute" (high school).
Coyer was followed in l885 by Dr. J.F. Millspaugh who
increased enrollment to 3l9. However, when Dr. Millspaugh
became Salt Lake City School Superintendent many of the
students followed him to the local public schools. At
this point, the institute dropped the lower grades and
featured a college prep "academy" curriculum (high school)
only.
This
institution, as was true of most early schools, was plagued
by lack of funds, hard times and high costs. Survival
and growth was largely due to the devotion of the staff,
who remained at their posts even during lean times when
part of their salaries were paid "in kind" (food and groceries).
In l895, in return for a $50,000 gift, the school was
renamed The Sheldon Jackson College; in l902 the named
finally became Westminster College. At this time, twenty-one
acres of the present campus were purchased. Many graduates
of the Collegiate Institute, eight to ten persons per
year, went on to success at universities and graduate
schools in the East. This history of success was evidence
of the excellence of the academic program.
Courses
at the junior college level were added to the Collegiate
Institute in l897. Fourteen college students enrolled
paying $35.00 per year for tuition. At the end of a twelve-year
effort, lack of funds and students caused college level
courses to be suspended in l909.
Converse
Hall, the first building on the new campus, was completed
in l906. Over the years other buildings have been added,
the most impressive of which was the million dollar addition
to the Science Building. Classwork at the downtown facilities
continued until l9ll when the new campus in Sugar House
was sufficiently completed.
The
suspension of college level courses lasted for five years.
In l9l4 the first two years of college work were again
offered. Since that time, college enrollments have steadily
risen. Most of the graduates in the early years were in
public school teaching. The approach of World War II caused
a drop in registrations, but the vacant dorms were soon
occupied in l943 with a detachment of U.S. Army pilot
cadets who lived at Westminister College but took pre-flight
ground school at the University of Utah. This same year
the Utah legislature made a requirement that school teachers
had to have a bachelors degree.
In
order to provide this, Westminster followed to become
a four-year college. With this change an internal movement
to make the college interdenominational, and later a secular
school, was started. At the end of the war enrollment
was l7l. The first baccalaureate graduates received diplomas
in l946. LDS students accounted for l6 percent of the
student body in l960 but have increased to 44 percent
at present.
Many
veterans funded by the G.I. Bill came to the campus, enlarging
the student body to 3l8 in l949. This was the year the
Northwest Accrediting Association visited the campus giving
full accreditation (with a few conditions) to Westminster
as a four-year institution. Academic programs were expanded,
summer school was added in 1955, a science curriculum
in l957 and a registered nurses' program in l966. In l982
masters' degrees in business and education were offered.
Student tuition was increased in 1960 to $600 per year,
with 5ll enrollments that year.
A
sports program at the college had a checkered history.
Football was suspended in l960, but reintroduced five
years later; and finally withdrawn again in l979. On the
other hand intercollegiate soccer continues.
Beginning
in l964, funding started from the U.S. government in the
form of educational building grants. In l982 a major faculty
reorganization put the college on a solid financial footing.
The Presbyterian church formally ended its ownership of
the college in l974. The college currently has an annual
budget of $l2 million, with tuition charges of $8,000
per student each year. Students from thirty-seven states
and twenty-three foreign countries are now enrolled in
the school, which is recognized as an excellent liberal
arts college and a valued part of Utah's educational community.
Lynn
M. Hilton and Hope A. Hilton
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