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University of Mary Hardin-Baylor company history timeline

1845

On February 1, 1845, a charter was granted by the 9th Congress of the Republic of Texas, approved by President Anson Jones at Washington-on-the-Brazos, and the long awaited Baptist university became a reality.

Classes began in May, 1846, in a small wooden building on a hillside at Independence in Washington County. Its original charter was granted by the Republic of Texas (prior to statehood) in 1845 as the female department of Baylor University.

1846

Classes began in May, 1846, in a small wooden building on a hillside at Independence in Washington County.

1851

In 1851, under the same charter, a Female Department and a Male Department were created, ending co-education.

1866

In 1866, the Female Department obtained a separate charter and its own board of trustees.

1886

Both colleges were relocated in 1886 to their permanent homes in Central Texas: the women's division relocated to Belton, where operations continued as Baylor Female College, and the men's division moved to Waco, merged with coeducational Waco University, and continued as Baylor University.

1893

The Cottage Home System, the first work-study program for women in a college west of the Mississippi, was instituted on the new Belton campus in 1893 by Elli Moore Townsend, wife of the serving president.

1905

In 1905, a permanent residence hall for the Cottage Home System was built by the residents themselves.

1925

In 1925, enrollment peaked at 2,372, which forced the college to start a costly building project.

In 1925, Baylor Female College was renamed Baylor College for Women.

1929

That, in addition to a devastating campus fire in 1929, required immediate construction of even more buildings, and with the help of the Great Depression, brought the college to the edge of bankruptcy.

1934

In gratitude, the college changed its name to Mary Hardin–Baylor College in 1934.

1968

In 1968, the Scott and White College of Nursing, named for the Scott and White Memorial Hospital located in nearby Temple, became a part of Mary Hardin–Baylor College.

1971

Mary Hardin–Baylor College once again became fully coeducational in 1971.

1978

With the inauguration in 1978 of its first graduate program, a master of education, the college achieved status as a university with five schools: Arts and Sciences, Creative Arts, Business, Education, and Nursing.

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Founded
1845
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Headquarters
Belton, TX
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University of Mary Hardin-Baylor may also be known as or be related to UNIVERSITY OF MARY HARDIN-BAYLOR, University Of Mary Hardin-baylor, University of Mary Hardin, Baylor and University of Mary Hardin-Baylor.