Template:Duketime
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Duke University Timeline | |||
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1838 |
Brown’s Schoolhouse, a private subscription school, founded in Randolph county |
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1841 |
Methodists and Quakers organize Union Institute Academy |
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1851 |
State legislature grants rechartering of academy as Normal College |
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1859 |
Methodist Church provides financial support, formalizing name change to Trinity College |
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1871 |
First social organization on campus founded |
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1878 |
First women earn degrees |
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1881 |
First international student enrolls |
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1887 |
J.F. Crowell inaugurated as president |
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1892 |
Trinity moves to Durham, largely due to generosity of Washington Duke and Julian S. Carr |
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1894 |
J.F. Kilgo inaugurated as president; Washington Duke donates $300,000 for endowment |
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1900 |
Trinity becomes first white institution of higher education in the south to invite Booker T. Washington to speak; first Native American student graduates |
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1903 |
Bassett Affair |
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1922 |
Chronicle editors coin the term Blue Devils for athletic teams |
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1924 |
James B. Duke establishes the $40 million Duke Endowment, propelling the final name change to Duke University |
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1925 |
Original campus rebuilt with Georgian style buildings |
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1930 |
Majority of construction on the new Gothic style West Campus is complete |
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1938 |
Duke’s football team, dubbed the Iron Dukes, dominate their regular season opponents |
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1942 |
Duke hosts the Rose Bowl in Wallace Wade Stadium |
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1964 |
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. speaks to the university on the civil rights movement’s progress |
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1969 |
Terry Sanford, a former governor of North Carolina, is inaugurated as president; Perkins library complete |
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1971 |
Institute of Policy Sciences and Public Affairs founded |
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1972 |
Women’s college merges into Trinity, which serves as the liberal arts college for men and women |
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1974 |
Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture opens |
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1980 |
Duke Hospital opens |
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1986 |
Men’s soccer captures Duke’s first NCAA championship |
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1991 |
Men's basketball wins its first NCAA title. They would repeat in 1992 and win again in 2001 |
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1993 |
Keohane inaugurated as the university's eighth president |
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1994 |
Duke team wins Putnam Mathematical Competition. Duke teams would win again in 1996 and 2000 and have come in the top-three 9 times from 1996-2005. |
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1994 |
Levine Science Research Center (LSRC) opens; Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy moves into new building |
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1995 |
East Campus converts to an all-freshmen campus |
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1996 |
Duke-Durham Neighborhood Partnership begins |
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1998 |
Campaign for Duke goes into its public phase with a goal of $1.5 billion |
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1999 |
Duke celebrates the 75th anniversary of its founding |
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2003 |
Duke's Center for Human Genetics opens in April |
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2003 |
Campaign for Duke ends having raised over $2.36 billion |
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2004 |
Brodhead inaugurated as ninth president |
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2004 |
Fitzpatrick Center (CIEMAS) opens |
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2004 |
The Palestinian Solidarity Movement (PSM) holds its annual conference at Duke |
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2005 |
Nasher Museum of Art opens |
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2005 |
The Rolling Stones play in Wallace Wade Stadium as part of their Bigger Bang world tour |
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Key (Contemporary President) | |||
H.K.H. Brodie | |||
N.O. Keohane | |||
R.H. Brodhead |