ESTABLISHMENT AND HISTORY
Tennessee Technological University was established by an act of the General
Assembly in 1915 and opened its doors to students the following year. The
University began operation on the campus which had belonged to Dixie College, a
private institution founded in 1911. The purchase of the Dixie campus property
and the erection of two dormitories, East and West Halls, were funded by Putnam
County and the city of Cookeville. Since then, the growth of the institution has
been closely interwoven with the development of the Upper Cumberland region.
From 1916 to 1924, Tennessee Polytechnic Institute offered work only on a
high school and junior college level. By 1929, however, the Tennessee Board of
Education had authorized a complete college program, and the first class of
four-year graduates received their baccalaureate degrees in June.
In 1938 the instructional program was reorganized into two main divisions:
the Arts and Sciences and the Professional and Technical Subjects. These
divisions were renamed schools nine years later. In 1949, the administrative
structure was expanded into five schools consisting of Arts and Sciences,
Agriculture and Home Economics (now Agriculture and Human Ecology), Business
Administration, Education, and Engineering. In 1950, the department of Military
Science was added and in 1951 commissioned its first class of officers. The
Graduate School program was authorized in 1958. The five undergraduate schools
were designated as colleges in 1965, when Tennessee Polytechnic Institute gained
university status and changed its name to Tennessee Technological University. In
1980, the School of Nursing began classes. In 2001, the School of
Interdisciplinary Studies and Extended Education was established. Since 1972, the University has been
governed by the Tennessee Board of Regents.
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