Template:Duketime

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Duke University Timeline
 

1838

Brown’s Schoolhouse, a private subscription school, founded in Randolph county

 

1841

Methodists and Quakers organize Union Institute Academy

 

1851

State legislature grants rechartering of academy as Normal College

 

1859

Methodist Church provides financial support, formalizing name change to Trinity College

 

1871

First social organization on campus founded

 

1878

First women earn degrees

 

1881

First international student enrolls

 

1887

J.F. Crowell inaugurated as president

 

1892

Trinity moves to Durham, largely due to generosity of Washington Duke and Julian S. Carr

 

1894

J.F. Kilgo inaugurated as president; Washington Duke donates $300,000 for endowment

 

1900

Trinity becomes first white institution of higher education in the south to invite Booker T. Washington to speak; first Native American student graduates

 

1903

Bassett Affair

 

1922

Chronicle editors coin the term Blue Devils for athletic teams

 

1924

James B. Duke establishes the $40 million Duke Endowment, propelling the final name change to Duke University

 

1925

Original campus rebuilt with Georgian style buildings

 

1930

Majority of construction on the new Gothic style West Campus is complete

 

1938

Duke’s football team, dubbed the Iron Dukes, dominate their regular season opponents

 

1942

Duke hosts the Rose Bowl in Wallace Wade Stadium

 

1964

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. speaks to the university on the civil rights movement’s progress

 

1969

Terry Sanford, a former governor of North Carolina, is inaugurated as president; Perkins library complete

 

1971

Institute of Policy Sciences and Public Affairs founded

 

1972

Women’s college merges into Trinity, which serves as the liberal arts college for men and women

 

1974

Mary Lou Williams Center for Black Culture opens

 

1980

Duke Hospital opens

 

1986

Men’s soccer captures Duke’s first NCAA championship

 

1991

Men's basketball wins its first NCAA title. They would repeat in 1992 and win again in 2001

 

1993

Keohane inaugurated as the university's eighth president

 

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.

 

1994

Levine Science Research Center (LSRC) opens; Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy moves into new building

 

1995

East Campus converts to an all-freshmen campus

 

1996

Duke-Durham Neighborhood Partnership begins

 

1998

Campaign for Duke goes into its public phase with a goal of $1.5 billion

 

1999

Duke celebrates the 75th anniversary of its founding

 

2003

Duke's Center for Human Genetics opens in April

 

2003

Campaign for Duke ends having raised over $2.36 billion

 

2004

Brodhead inaugurated as ninth president

 

2004

Fitzpatrick Center (CIEMAS) opens

 

2004

The Palestinian Solidarity Movement (PSM) holds its annual conference at Duke

 

2005

Nasher Museum of Art opens

 

2005

The Rolling Stones play in Wallace Wade Stadium as part of their Bigger Bang world tour

Key (Contemporary President)
H.K.H. Brodie
N.O. Keohane
R.H. Brodhead