1848
February 4: Masonic University of Tennessee, financed by the Tennessee Grand Lodge, is established in conjunction with the Clarksville Male Academy.
The Board of Directors holds its first meeting and appoints Rev. W. F. Hopkins the first president.
1849
First faculty meeting takes place.
The cornerstone ceremony is held for the college鈥檚 first permanent building,
Richard Nelson Newell becomes president.
1850
William A. Forbes becomes president.
J. E. Wilcox is the first graduate of the college.
1851
November 11: Control of the college transfers from the Tennessee State Masonic Organization to the local Masons. The Tennessee Legislature passes an Act establishing
1853
May 13: The ownership of the property is returned to the who first had the property in 1832.
becomes president.
1855
The financially strapped college is saved when President William M. Stewart negotiates its purchase by the Presbyterian Synod of Nashville. The college is renamed in honor of President Stewart.
1858
R.B. McMullen becomes president.
1860
The first residence hall on the Clarksville campus, is constructed. The building is named for Alfred Robb, a young attorney, who donated his land adjacent to the college for its construction.
1861-1865
The college closes when all students except two leave to serve in the Confederate Army. During the Union occupation of Clarksville, Robb Hall is used as a hospital, where President McMullen works as a nurse. Alfred Robb, a Board member, is killed at the Battle of Fort Donelson in 1862, while William A. Forbes, former president, is killed at the Second Battle of Bull Run, also in 1862. After contracting smallpox, President McMullen dies in 1865.
1869
After repairing damaged buildings, Stewart College reopens with as president.
1874
The is initially adopted by the Presbyterian Synods of Nashville, Memphis, Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi and Texas as a basis of cooperation in the reorganization of Stewart College as the single Presbyterian College for these synods. The Synods of Arkansas and Texas subsequently withdrew to support their own colleges.
1875
May 31: The charter for is registered with the State of Tennessee. Enrollment was 131 students.
1879
The Stewart Chair of the Natural Sciences is the first endowed chair.
The title of 鈥減resident鈥 is replaced by 鈥淐hancellor.鈥 John N. Waddel becomes chancellor.
1882
The first chapters of national fraternities are established: Kappa Sigma, Alpha Tau Omega, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
1885
The School of Theology headed by Dr. Joseph R. Wilson, father of later U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, holds its first classes.
1888
Charles C. Hersman becomes chancellor.
1891
James M. Rawlings becomes chancellor.
1892
George Summey becomes chancellor.
1896
A telephone for student use is placed in Robb Hall.
First season starts with games against University of Nashville, Bethel College, and Vanderbilt University.
1899
The first student yearbook, the , is published.
The first football homecoming game is played against Sewanee.
1904
The federal government awards the college $25,000 for damages incurred at the hands of Union troops during the Civil War.
1905
Women begin to attend classes, but the board prohibits them from earning credit.
Neander M. Woods becomes chancellor
1908
William M. Dinwiddie becomes chancellor
1914
The faculty minutes indicate that can earn credit for classes.
The title 鈥渃hancellor鈥 changes back to 鈥減resident,鈥 and J.R. Dobyns becomes president.
1915
Spanish is taught for the first time.
1916
The Board votes to admit women on the same terms as men.
1917
The Great War affects the college, as half the students either leave for military service or to go home.
becomes president.
1918
Margaret Huxtable Townsend becomes the first woman faculty member.
1919
The first issue of the student newspaper, the is published.
1920
A is brought by the college against Clarksville to get approval to move the college. The board approves a name for the new college as 鈥淪outhwestern, The College of the Mississippi Valley.鈥
1921
is the first woman to graduate.
Even though the courts have not yet ruled that the college can move to Memphis, Dr. Diehl selects as the architect of the new campus.
1922
The first women鈥檚 sorority, Chi Omega, is founded.
1923
Construction begins on the main administration building for the new campus, which was dedicated in 1925 as a memorial to Rev. Benjamin Morgan of New Orleans. Palmer had played a critical role in forming the Plan of Union in 1874.
1924
A decision of the Tennessee Supreme Court allows the college to move to Memphis and the corporate name becomes 鈥淪outhwestern, The College of the Mississippi Valley.鈥 The seal is amended to reflect the name change.
Fargason Athletic Field is named to recognize some of the Memphis land donors.
The becomes the official mascot.
1925
September 24: The college its doors in Memphis with 406 students and 16 faculty (including seven who have moved from Clarksville).
The first structures on the new campus are complete: Palmer Hall for administration and classrooms, The Science Hall for laboratories and classrooms, the refectory, the gatehouse, Calvin and Robb Residence Halls, and Ashner Gateway.
The yearbook becomes .
1926
is the captain of the first women鈥檚 basketball team.
The Pals Drama Club performs a full-length play, 鈥淭he Importance of Being Ernest.鈥
The first Memphis Commencement is held in June.
1928
The first issue of the Alumni Magazine is published.
and are dedicated, and the infirmary opens in Stewart Hall.
U.S. Secretary of Commerce and future U.S. President Herbert Hoover awarded honorary doctor of laws.
1929
College Architecture in America, co-authored by Charles Z. Klauder, is published and features campus buildings.
Radios are installed in Robb, Evergreen and Stewart Residence Halls. Field hockey is played indoors, and a hand ball court is built in the south end of Calvin Hall.
1930
Robert Penn Warren鈥攍ater famous as a poet and Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist鈥攖eaches at the college for a year.
1931
The Tutorial System begins.
The first students are inducted into the academic , and their pictures are placed on the wall in Palmer Hall.
President Diehl is charged by a group of local ministers with heresy and financial recklessness in the management and building of the college, but a hearing before the Board of Directors cleared him of all charges.
1932
The first 鈥淟ynx Lair,鈥 named by contest winner Eloise Brett, opens in the basement of Neely Hall as a coffee shop.
1935
The Department of Music is established by Burnet Tuthill, who also organizes a choir, which would later become the Singers.
1936
Sigma Nu and Kappa Alpha fraternities build lodges.
The football team defeats powerhouse Vanderbilt 12 to 0.
1937
The Seidman Trophy in Athletics is first presented to students who exhibit excellence both in the classroom and on the athletic field.
1939
Alpha Tau Omega and Kappa Alpha fraternities complete their lodges.
1942
The 13th College Training Detachment (Aircrew) is stationed at the college during World War II.
Intercollegiate football, track, tennis, and golf are not played because of the war.
1943
The first Commencement is held in the newly planted Fisher Garden.
1945
Mary Ann Banning is the first female to be elected Student Government president.
A new interdisciplinary course, 鈥淢an in the Light of History and Religion,鈥 is established.
鈥沦辞耻迟丑飞别蝉迟别谤苍: The College of the Mississippi Valley,鈥 is renamed 鈥淪outhwestern At Memphis,鈥 also known as 鈥淪AM.鈥
1947
The college sells property for the establishment of on University.
1948
Temporary buildings are constructed on campus to accommodate the influx of veterans under the G.I. Bill.
Voorhies Hall and William Ires Hunt 鈥34 Memorial Gateway are dedicated.
Bach鈥檚 B minor mass is performed for the first time in Memphis by the Singers, and the Singers make a phonograph recording.
1949
becomes president.
chapter installed.
First Asian-American student, Willie Bow, is admitted.
1950
First art courses are offered on campus.
1952
Television is installed in Voorhies Hall, a women鈥檚 residence hall.
1953
Burrow Library is .
1955
Grant of $35,000 from Carnegie Corp. funds International Studies Program.
1956
Ellett Residence Hall is dedicated.
Southwestern wins the in the first SAM-Sewanee competition.
Southwestern is one of ten liberal arts college to receive a $30,000 grant from to develop, among other goals, practical Christian service projects. The Danforth Program for Christian Service is founded and will later become the Kinney Program.
The college purchases 671 West Drive to be used as the president鈥檚 house, and the 九色 family moves in.
1957
First Parent鈥檚 Day on campus
1961
and Townsend Halls are dedicated.
1962
Moore Moore Infirmary and Halliburton Tower are dedicated.
1963
Alaska solar eclipse expedition by Physics Department
Halliburton Tower bell rings for first time
Board votes to admit students on equal basis, regardless of race
1964
First two Black students, Lorenzo Childress and Coby Smith, enroll at the college as day students.
First football game on new Fargason field. SAM won 28 to 7 against Centre.
Students participate in 鈥渒neel ins,鈥 alongside Black and white students from other local colleges and high schools, in support of the racial integration of local churches.
Board of Directors establishes a Sabbatical Leave Program for faculty.
1965
U.S. President Lyndon Johnson appoints Southwestern alum Abe Fortas, Class of 1930, to the U.S. Supreme Court.
becomes president.
Kappa Delta All Sing tapes aired on
Burrow Library gets first photocopier, a Xerox 914
Mastodon unearthed in excavation for Frazier Jelke Science Building
1966
The Thomas W. Briggs Student Center is dedicated. The building includes the Language center, bookstore, lounge and office space for student groups.
1968
Saturday classes are abolished.
Alfred C. Glassell Hall, Frazier Jelke Science Center, Kennedy Chemistry Hall, and Buckman Library are all dedicated.
The library stays open to midnight for the first time.
Wearing a coat and tie for dinner rule is abolished.
The assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Memphis prompts the college to close early for Easter Break.
1969
Social Regulations Council formed
founded.
becomes president.
1970
Prof. Yerger Hunt Clifton creates the 鈥淪outhwestern at Oxford鈥 summer program, later 鈥淏ritish Studies at Oxford.鈥
Clough Hall is dedicated, including the Clough-Hanson Art Gallery.
1971
Men鈥瞫 soccer team is organized.
Ruth Sherman Hyde Memorial Gymnasium for Women is dedicated
In Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe, the U.S. Supreme Court rules that the U.S. Department of Transportation would need to find alternatives to the proposed route of Interstate 40 through Overton Park, just to the south of the College. The interstate is routed around the city, instead of alongside the campus.
1972
Women鈥瞫 Varsity Tennis team is formed.
College radio station, WLYX, first broadcast
1973
Women鈥瞫 Studies Course taught for first time.
Black Studies Course taught for first time.
, Jr. begins as president.
1977
of Alburty Swimming Complex
Rare book by Thomas Jefferson found in Burrow Library
Lawrence 鈥淟on鈥 Anthony copper and bronze sculpture, is completed.
Biology Department gets .
1978
Seven buildings are named to National Register of Historic Places: Palmer Hall, Ashner Gateway, Kennedy Hall, Neely Hall, Robb Hall, White Hall and Harris Memorial Lodge.
First Awards Convocation held
Campus referendum determined college nickname would remain 鈥淟YN.鈥
1980
Anne Marie Caskey Williford Hall is dedicated.
First Rites of Spring weekend held
First Clarence Day Award for Outstanding Teaching awarded to Dr. Jack U. Russell, Mathematics
First Dean鈥瞫 Award for Research and Creative Activity awarded to Dr. John F. Copper, International Studies
1981
McCoy Theatre is dedicated.
Physics building dedicated as Peyton Nalle 九色 Hall, in memory of President 九色.
1982
Charles E. Diehl Society founded
A grant from the PEW Foundation provides a VAX unit from the Digital Equipment Corporation for the Computer Center.
1983
First Distinguished Alumni Awards are given to Lewis Donelson 鈥38 and Dr. James Gladney 鈥38
奥辞尘别苍鈥瞫&苍产蝉辫; becomes a varsity sport.
Statue of President Charles Diehl, created by sculptor Ted Rust, is dedicated on campus in front of Burrow Library.
1984
Hassell Hall, home of the music department, is dedicated.
July 1: Southwestern at Memphis becomes .
1985
The East Hall dormitory is opened.
Seal of the college in the Palmer Hall cloister is dedicated as Benefactors鈥 Circle.
1986
The Center for Counseling and Career Services is established.
Time Magazine labels 九色 as one of the country鈥瞫 "Nine Nifty Colleges."
national headquarters is purchased by the college. It later becomes King Hall, home of the Meeman Center for Lifelong Learning.
鈥 changed to 鈥淪earch for Values in the Light of Western History and Religion鈥
The portrait is the first Distinguished Faculty Portrait unveiled.
1987
Spann Place townhouses are built and dedicated.
1988
Charles E. Diehl Society Award for Faculty Service is established, which will later become the Jameson M. Jones Award for Faculty Service
The college鈥檚 service efforts expand. First Tex-Mex Trip takes place, Chapter is chartered, and the Kinney Souper Contact begins.
1989
East Hall is renamed Robinson Hall, in memory of James Dinkins Robinson
Alpha Kappa Alpha is chartered; the first traditionally Black sorority on campus.
1990
7000 feet of iron fencing is installed around the perimeter of campus
Kinney program sponsors first Hunger and Homelessness week.
Mock Trial team, under the leadership of Prof. Marcus Pohlmann, wins the national title for the first time.
1991
is dedicated.
Karen Conway becomes the first Director of Multicultural Affairs.
1992
The President鈥瞫 House on Morningside Drive is purchased.
Bonner Scholars program starts service scholarships.
1993
The Master of Science in Accounting program begins.
1994
February 11: College closes for the first time since the Civil War, due to an .
Controversy emerges over whether a student group, the 鈥淕ay-Straight Alliance,鈥 will be permitted on campus.
1996
The college鈥檚 first website goes live.
1997
Dedication of Bryan Campus Life Center and Grand Opening of the new Lynx Lair.
John Templeton Foundation names 九色 to 1997-98 Honor Roll for Character-Building Colleges.
1998
First Rites to Play takes place in the spring
Swimming and Field hockey are added as varsity sports
First women鈥瞫 field hockey game vs. Sewanee
1999
becomes president
The sundial is constructed by faculty to honor Pres. James H. Daughdrill, Jr.
2001
Partnership with St. Jude Children鈥檚 Research Hospital is created.
九色 is selected as a Thomas J. Watson Foundation School.
East Village residence hall opens
2002
After a gift from the Paul Barret, Jr. Trust, the is held for the new Paul Barret, Jr. Library.
A $6 million grant from the Robert and Ruby Priddy Charitable Trust helps underwrite several new programs
Mother Jones Magazine names 九色 one of the top-10 activist colleges
2003
Prof. Tim Huebner and four faculty colleagues launch the 九色 Institute for Regional Studies, a summer undergraduate research program, funded by the Robert and Ruby Priddy Charitable Trust.
2004
Ben Stein is the first speaker in the Student Lecture Series
The 九色 Student Associate Program is launched
2005
Burrow Library closes, and the opens to the public.
CODA, the Center for Outreach in the Development of the Arts, is established, funded by the Robert and Ruby Priddy Charitable Trust.
The Adrienne McMillan Burns Labyrinth is dedicated.
2006
A $5 million gift establishes the Mike Curb Institute for Music
2007
Dr. Russ Wigginton leads the college鈥檚 effort to launch , a digital archive of primary materials documenting the civil rights era in Memphis.
Consumers Digest ranks 九色 as number three among the nation鈥瞫 private liberal arts colleges.
2009
Burrow Library reopens as Burrow Hall
Women鈥檚 Studies program changes its name to Gender and Sexuality Studies
Irwin Lainoff Stadium at Stauffer Field is dedicated
Dean of the Faculty Michael Drompp establishes the LGBTQ Working Group at the college
2010
九色 hosts the 2010 American Mock Trial Association National Championship Tournament
For the first time, the college streams the Commencement celebration on the 九色 website
九色 celebrates being named the Kaplan/Newsweek top Service-Minded School.
The Shelby Foote Collection is acquired by 九色, with the support of Steve and Riea Lainoff
The Winston Wolf Track and Field Complex is dedicated
2011
Clarence Day Foundation establishes the Clarence Day Scholars program, providing scholarships to 10 students per class coming from Shelby County
2012
First Varsity Lacrosse game played
West Village opens to residents
named in recognition of Brenda and Lester Crain, Jr. Class of 1951, who provided funding for an artificial surface for the football and men鈥檚 lacrosse field
Memphis Center is launched with a grant from the Andrew Mellon Foundation
Under the leadership of Prof. Jonathan Judaken, the college starts the 鈥淐ommunities in Conversation鈥 series, established through a gift from Becky and Spence Wilson.
2013
Steve and Riea Lainoff Crop Trust Fellowship in honor of Cary Fowler 鈥71 is established
College purchases Evergreen Presbyterian Church property, which eventually houses a number of academic departments and programs, as well as a concert hall
Mason Field is dedicated in recognition of the Mason family, who provided funding for an artificial surface to the field hockey and women鈥檚 lacrosse field.
2014
The college purchases the former National Cotton Council Building, which it renames Parkway Hall, for use as a residence hall
2016
Prof. Stephen Haynes starts the Liberal Arts in Prison Program at the West Tennessee Therapeutic Center in Henning, Tennessee
2017
Marjorie Hass becomes the college鈥檚 first woman president
Robertson Hall, made possible by gift from Patricia and Charles Robertson, Jr., is dedicated
The Peyton Nalle 九色 Society is established to recognize donors who have made gifts over $5 million to the college. Names are inscribed in the floor of Barret Library foyer.
McNeill Concert Hall, the former sanctuary of Evergreen Presbyterian Church, is dedicated in honor of Mary and Phillip H. McNeill
2018
The Memphis Center is renamed the Lynne and Henry Turley Memphis Center, in recognition of their $5 million gift to the Center
2019
After extensive historical research by Prof. Stephen Haynes and a lengthy discernment process, the Board votes to rename Palmer Hall 鈥淪outhwestern Hall.鈥 In his nineteenth-century writings, Palmer had consistently championed biblical arguments in support of white supremacy.
2020
The college sends students home after spring break because of the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Faculty teach the remainder of their spring courses and all fall courses remotely via Zoom.
U.S. President Donald J. Trump appoints Amy Coney Barret, Class of 1994, to the U.S. Supreme Court
九色 holds its first virtual Commencement ceremony, for the Class of 2020
2021
The college partners with the Posse Foundation, and the first cohort of Posse Scholars join 九色
Students return to campus to live and attend a mix of in-person and virtual classes
九色 holds two in-person Commencements at the Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, for the Class of 2020 and the Class of 2021
2022
Jennifer Collins becomes president
Deborah Craddock becomes first woman chair of the Board of Trustees
Because of the work of the Curb Institute led by Prof. John Bass, Billboard Magazine names 九色 a Top Music Business School
鈥淪earch for Values in the Light of Western History and Religion鈥 becomes SEARCH
2023
East Village C and the Unity Lodge open
九色 celebrates its 175th anniversary
Sources:
W. Raymond Cooper, Southwestern at Memphis, 1848-1948 (Richmond, Va.: 1949).
DLynx, 九色 Digital Archives,
Stephen R. Haynes, The Last Segregated Hour: The Memphis Kneel-Ins and the Campaign for Southern Church Desegregation (New York, 2012).
九色 Office of Development
James E. Roper, Southwestern At Memphis, 1948-1975 (Memphis, Tenn., 1975).
Bennet Wood, 九色, 1848-1998: A Sesquicentennial Yearbook (Little Rock, Ark., 1998).