Happy 125th Birthday, UNCG!
The first graduating class of State Normal (1893) with Edwin Alderman and Charles Duncan McIver
Charles Duncan McIver and the faculty of State Normal, 1893
Campus from Spring Garden Street, 1894. Main Building (now Foust) is in the middle.
State Normal students at the nearby train stop, 1894
President McIver in his office in Main Building (now Foust), 1895
Construction of a dining hall addition to the Brick Dormitory, 1895
Faculty and students in the school’s science laboratory, 1896
An ox-drawn cart passing campus, circa 1897
Students sitting on the steps in front of the Main Building (now Foust), late 1890s
Sadie Hanes (Class of 1898) in front of Brick Dormitory
Charles Duncan McIver with the Class of 1899 on the steps of Main Building (now Foust)
The Class of 1900 basketball team, known as the “Naughty Naughts”
Students with daisy chains in front of Main Building (now Foust), 1901
Ezekiel Robinson with the college horse and buggy
Students in Peabody Park during Walking Period, 1905
On October 5, 1892, the doors of the State Normal and Industrial School (now UNCG) opened its doors for an initial class of 198 women from across North Carolina. The institution was originally chartered by the State of North Carolina in February 1891, with a mission of training female teachers and instructing them in “drawing, telegraphy, type-writing, stenography, and such other industrial arts as may be suitable to their sex and conducive to their support and usefulness.” After a year spent planning the new school and constructing its facilities, classes began at the State Normal on October 5, 1892 (the date we now celebrate as Founders Day).Courses of study were divided into three departments: normal (teaching), business, and domestic science. The normal, listed as the leading department, included pedagogy classes as well as coursework in English, history, math, science, foreign language, art, music, and physical culture.
Founding the State Normal proved to be a milestone in education – and particularly women’s education – in North Carolina and throughout the United States. McIver and the early educators and students at the State Normal set the groundwork for UNCG as it stands today. One hundred twenty-five years after the first classes took place, the legacy remains.
Want to learn more about the founding and earliest years of UNCG? Here are some posts about the founding of the school from our Spartan Stories blog to get you started:
- Greensboro Gets the Girls!
- Greensboro Got the Girls … Now Where Do We Put Them?
- 125 Years Ago: Starting Classes at State Normal
- Commencement Time at State Normal
- Early African American Campus Employees
- Physical Culture at State Normal
- Ringing “Glad Tidings”: A History of the University Bell
- Sports at State Normal
- State Normal and the Woman’s Betterment Association
- The Tradition of the Daisy Chain: A Link to the Past
We also have stories about many of the individuals who were critical to the opening and operations of State Normal:
- Edwin Alderman and the Founding of the State Normal and Industrial School
- Viola Boddie: Belle of the Early Faculty
- Dixie Lee Bryant and Scientific Study at State Normal
- The Lost Legacy of Philander P. Claxton
- Melville Fort: Early Advocate of Art Education
- Dr. Anna Maria Gove, Lady Doctress
- Personal Accounts of Charles D. McIver
- Behind the Scenes of State Normal with Lula Martin McIver, parts one and two
- Annie Petty, State Normal’s First Librarian
- Ezekiel “Zeke” Robinson
The Encyclopedia of UNCG History has additional information about many people, places, and events critical to the early development of UNCG. Additionally, the papers of founding president Charles Duncan McIver have been digitized and are available online. You can browse through over 125,000 pages of materials that document the earliest years of the university as well as McIver’s work with the Southern Education Board.