University of Minnesota. Home page.
Institute of Technology
Inventing Tomorrow

Historical milestones

Education and research in science, mathematics, and technology have been an integral part of the University of Minnesota for nearly 150 years. Although IT was founded in 1935, its roots extend to the University's infancy.

1851 U of M founded as a preparatory school
1858 Minnesota becomes 32nd U.S. state
1862 U.S. Congress passes the Morrill Act, which establishes the federal land-grant university system
1869 U of M reorganized as a land-grant university, with math professor and Civil War army engineer William Watts Folwell as its first president
1870 Math department established in the School of Science, Literature, and the Arts
1872 Minnesota Geological Survey established
1874 Geology and geophysics department established
1884 College of Engineering organized
1888 School of Mines established
1889 Physics department established Pillsbury Hall completed
1891 Electrical engineering department established
1892 Astronomy department established
1893 Chemistry department established
1894 Math department established in the College of Engineering
1898 Mechanical engineering department established
1909 Biosystems and agricultural engineering department established
1910 Civil engineering department established
1911 Experimental Engineering Building completed
1912 Main Engineering Building completed (renamed Lind Hall in 1975)
1913 Agricultural Engineering Building completed
1914 Chemistry Building completed (renamed Smith Hall in 1971) First Engineering Day celebrated on St. Patrick's Day; this annual celebration (which eventually became Engineering Week in the 1950s and then IT Week in the 1980s) has been held continuously for nearly 80 years
1918 Minnesota Technolog, IT's student magazine, debuts
1919 Chemical engineering department established
1924 Old Electrical Engineering Building and Main Library completed (library was renamed Walter Library in 1959)
1927 Former faculty member Arthur Compton wins the Nobel Prize in physics
1928 Physics Building completed (renamed Tate Laboratory of Physics in 1965)
1929 Aerospace engineering and mechanics established
1935 Institute of Technology created by consolidating engineering, architecture, mines, and chemistry in one collegiate unit Samuel Lind named the new college's first dean
1938 Vincent Hall and St. Anthony Falls Laboratory completed
1939 Alumnus Ernest Lawrence (Physics '23) wins the Nobel Prize for developing the cyclotron
1940 Professor Alfred O. C. Nier (Electrical Engineering '31) establishes that uranium 235 is responsible for slow fission in uranium
1946 Professor E.W. Davis develops the first of many processes for converting taconite rock into commercial iron ore
1948 Mechanical Engineering Building and Akerman Hall completed
1949 Chemical Engineering Building completed (renamed Amundson Hall in 1970)
1956 Alumnus Walter Brattain (Physics '27), former faculty member John Bardeen, and William Shockley win the Nobel Prize for inventing the transistor
1957 Mines and Metallurgy Building completed (annexed to Amundson Hall in 1970)
1958 Earl Bakken (Electrical Engineering '48) designs the first battery-operated heart pacemaker
1961 Melvin Calvin (Chemistry '35) wins the Nobel Prize for his work in photosynthesis using Carbon 14
1962 President O. Meredith Wilson launches a major University reorganization: College of Science, Literature, and the Arts becomes the College of Liberal Arts Geology and astronomy departments transferred from SLA to IT School of Physics and Astronomy established
1963 Wilson's reorganization continues: mathematics departments from CLA and IT merge, becoming the School of Mathematics in IT
1970 School of Mines and Metallurgy abolished; its programs are transferred to the newly reconfigured departments of chemical engineering and materials science and civil engineering Computer science and engineering department established
1971 Kolthoff Hall completed UNITE Instructional Television debuts
1972 Seymour Cray (Electrical Engineering '49) founds Cray Research and leads development of supercomputers Former faculty member John Bardeen wins his second Nobel prize in physics, for the development of the theory of superconductivity
1975 Astronaut Donald K. “Deke Slayton (Aero '49) commands Apollo-Soyuz space mission
1977 Former faculty member John Van Vleck and two others win the Nobel Prize in physics for contributions to the understanding of the behavior of electrons in magnetic, noncrystalline solid materials.
1983 Civil Engineering Building completed, extending seven stories below ground
1987 Center for the Development of Technological Leadership established
1988 Electrical Engineering/Computer Science Building completed on the site of the old Experimental Engineering Building Newton Horace Winchell School of Earth Sciences dedicated in honor of Winchell, the founder of the Minnesota Geological Survey
1989 School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture separates from IT, becoming the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
1997 Basic Sciences/Biomedical Engineering completed IT Center for Educational Programs established to develop and administer enrichment programs for K-12 students, including the U of M Talented Youth Mathematics Program, established in 1981
1998 Digital Technology Center established UNITE begins offering courses via streaming video over the Internet
2000 Biomedical engineering department established George T. Piercy Molecular Materials Wing of Amundson Hall completed
2001 Alumnus Daniel McFadden (Physics '57, Behavioral Sciences Ph.D. '62) and University of Chicago economist James Heckman earned the Nobel Prize in economics for their contributions to microeconometrics Renovation and expansion of Mechanical Engineering Building completed
2002 Walter Library reopens after a two-year renovation and restoration IT becomes a five percent partner in the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT), which will be the most powerful on Earth