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Through the Years at Florida Atlantic University
| 1950s |
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1955 |
The Florida Legislature authorizes
establishment of Florida’s fifth public university
in the southeastern section of the state.
Boca Raton banker Thomas F. Fleming
Jr. immediately begins working to secure a vacated
U.S. Army airbase in his small Palm Beach County town
as the site of the new university. |
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1956 |
Boca Raton Town Clerk William H.
Lamb sends a letter to the State Board of Control
affirming that “the Town is vitally interested
in the location of the proposed new State University”
and is willing to deed 1,250 acres of the airbase
to the state “for University purposes only.”
The Civil Aeronautics Administration,
heavily lobbied by Fleming through his friends U.S.
Senator George Smathers and U.S. Congressman Paul
Rogers, supports this action. |
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1957 |
The Board of Control unanimously
endorses Tom Fleming’s proposal to establish
the new university in Boca Raton, disappointing proponents
of sites in other locations, including Broward County
and the Florida Panhandle. |
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| 1960s |
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1960 |
The Florida Board of Education
approves building the university in Boca Raton, but
the Panhandle-controlled State Legislature refuses
to provide the necessary funding.
The Board of Control mandates that
the community must raise at least $100,000 to cover
start-up expenses. |
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1961 |
The Florida Legislature passes
an act dated July 15, 1961, authorizing establishment
of the new university. Opening is set for September
1964.
Farris Bryant, newly elected Governor
of Florida, calls for $25 million in bonds to build
the new university at Boca Raton and improve the physical
facilities at the state’s other four public
universities. The bond issue survives a court challenge
and is approved.
The Brumbaugh Report, prepared by
a Board of Control committee chaired by Dr. J.A. Brumbaugh,
is issued. It calls for innovative thinking in the
planning of the new university, which it says could
pioneer a new model of higher education nationally.
The report envisions an institution that would take
full advantage of rapidly developing television and
computer technology while serving juniors, seniors
and graduate students exclusively, in partnership
with community colleges. |
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1962 |
Tom Fleming organizes the fund-raising Endowment
Corporation for a University in Boca Raton under
the rallying cry “Boca U. in ’62, Open
the Door in ’64.” This grassroots group
raises $300,000 to pay architects’ fees, salaries
and other expenses associated with launching the
new university. Fleming himself makes the first
donation, pledging one percent of three years’
worth of the pre-tax earnings of the First Bank
and Trust Company of Boca Raton, which he heads.
The bonds proposed by Governor Bryant are sold,
providing $5.3 million to construct “Boca
U.”
The Board of Control selects Florida Atlantic University
as the name of the new university. Rejected names
include Bryant State University (to honor Governor
Bryant), Sunshine State University and A-OK University
(a reference to a catch-phrase used by U.S. astronauts,
who were then based at Cape Canaveral, Florida,
about 150 miles north of Boca Raton).
At the same meeting, the Board of Control names
Dr. Kenneth Rast Williams the first president of
FAU, taking him from Dade County Junior College
(now Miami-Dade Community College), where he was
also founding president.
Dr. Williams and a handful of administrative staff
move into the Army airbase’s old fire station
to begin their work.
Governor Bryant officiates the University’s
groundbreaking ceremony on December 8, 1962. The
event is attended by about 2,000 people.
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1964 |
Florida Atlantic University opens
on September 14, 1964 – six days behind schedule
because of Hurricane Cleo, which leaves $100,000 in
flood and wind damage in its wake. The first university
in the nation to offer only upper-division and graduate
work, FAU welcomes an initial student body of 867,
well below the expected 2,000-plus. Degree programs
are offered through five colleges: the College of
Business, the College of Education, the College of
Humanities, the College of Science and the College
of Social Science. Original buildings include the
Library, the Learning Resources Building, the Sanson
Science Building and General Classrooms South.
U.S. President Lyndon Baines Johnson
dedicates the University on October 25, 1964. During
the Sunday afternoon dedication ceremony, attended
by about 15,000 people, he accepts the first honorary
doctorate awarded by FAU.
Dr. Williams is formally inaugurated
as the University’s first president on November
12, 1964. At the same ceremony, Tom Fleming receives
the University’s first Distinguished Service
Award for the central role he played in getting FAU
established, and Governor Bryant receives the second
honorary doctorate presented by the University.
FAU’s first theatrical presentation,
a readers’ theatre production of Franz Schneider’s
Last Letters from Stalingrad, is staged at Marymount
College’s Founders Hall Auditorium. |
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1965 |
The first FAU commencement ceremony
is held on April 24, 1965, at the First Presbyterian
Church of Boca Raton. Thirty students receive degrees.
FAU introduces the nation’s
first degree program in ocean engineering.
Algonquin and Modoc Halls, the University’s
first two student residence halls, open. All six of
the original residence halls have names that honor
Native American tribes.
The cafeteria opens.
Dan Mica, a future U.S. congressman,
becomes the first president of FAU’s student
body. |
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1966 |
The Humanities Building, which
includes the 504-seat University Theatre, opens.
Mohave and Naskapi student residence
halls open.
The Administration Building opens. |
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1967 |
The name of the Endowment Corporation
for a University in Boca Raton is changed to the Florida
Atlantic University Foundation, Inc.
The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools elects
FAU to regular membership and grants full accreditation
to all of the University’s programs.
Mrs. Lucy Henderson endows the Alexander
D. Henderson University School, a K-12 laboratory
school affiliated with the College of Education. Her
gift honors the memory of her late husband.
FAU wins its first athletic championship
when the water ski club team takes first place in
the 21st Southern Annual Water Ski Tournament at Cypress
Gardens. |
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1968 |
Sekoni and Seminole student residence
halls open.
The Alexander D. Henderson University
School opens.
FAU initiates the Faculty Scholars
program, which allows academically gifted high school
graduates to enroll at the University and complete
bachelor’s degree programs in two or three years.
Twenty-two students are in the first Faculty Scholars
cohort. |
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1969 |
The Board of Regents (successor
body to the Board of Control) approves an intercollegiate
athletics program at FAU. The teams become known as
the Owls.
The University holds its first Honors
Convocation, presenting the first Distinguished Teacher
of the Year Award to political science professor Dr.
Douglas Gatlin.
Faculty speakers address students
during an outdoor rally on War Moratorium Day as opposition
to the war in Vietnam grows among college students
nationwide. |
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