127 Students
1909
Enrollment was 127 students for 1909.
1909
Enrollment was 127 students for 1909.
1909 September
School occupied the three building campus consisting of Science, Administration, and the Auditorium. In December 1927 the building were given the names: Husted Hall, Draper Hall, and Hawley Hall (now Dewey).
1909 October 15
The Athletic Association formed first by men and soon joined by women to promote all sports, but principally “basket ball,” to take advantage of the “well-equipped gymnasium” in the basement of the Auditorium (later the Hawley Building). The men played an inter-collegiate and high school schedule...
1909 October 28
The dedication ceremony is held for the Downtown Campus with speakers Governor Charles Evans Hughs, Commissioner of Education Dr. Andrew Sloan Draper, and Regents Vice-Chancellor St. Clair McKelway. Draper, in his address, said the school would be “a pedagogical college. It is to give a liberal...
Men’s basketball played first inter-collegiate matches versus Albany Medical College and the Union College freshmen. The scores were A.M.C. 53 and S.N.C. 10 and Union 26 and S.N.C. 6. The rest of the games included matches against local high schools and the State Normal College fared much better,...
The second Soldiers Memorial Tablet, costing $411.71, is installed in the Administration Building (subsequently Draper Hall) entrance hall. It replaced the original tablet lost in the 1906 fire.
–The Class of 1910 orders a stained glass memorial window for the Auditorium (now Hawley Hall) . The window was designed and executed by Mr. Chapman of Albany. The window was to be mounted over the main entrance to the Auditorium, subsequently named Hawley Hall.
The departments of industrial arts and home economics were officially opened in 1910, with instruction in industrial arts beginning in February of 1910. H.B. Smith was elected chair of the industrial arts department. The industrial arts department was discontinued in 1920 and the home economics...
The department was discontinued in 1932.