The
University of Iowa celebrates many "firsts" and special events
in its long history of promoting diversity. Here are just a few:
- 1855—The
University of Iowa opens its doors as the first state university to
admit men and women on an equal basis.
- 1870—The
Medical Department held its first sessions, and with eight women in
its original class, it was America’s first co-ed medical school.
- 1873—The
first woman to graduate from the University’s Law Department,
Mary B. Hickey Wilkinson, receives her Bachelor of Laws diploma. She
is possibly the first woman to earn a law degree in America.
- 1879—G.
Alexander Clark, son of America's first black ambassador to Liberia,
becomes the first African American to graduate from the Iowa law school,
and possibly the first African American in the nation to earn a law
degree.
- 1895—Frank Kinney Holbrook
is believed to have been the first African American to compete in
varsity athletics at an Iowa college and one of the first black collegiate
athletes in the nation.
- 1907—Mildred
Whitcomb is named editor of The Daily Iowan, becoming the
first woman to head an American college daily newspaper.
- 1909—Dr.
Laurence C. Jones, a 1907 graduate of the University of Iowa, founds
the Piney Woods School in Mississippi. Piney Woods is one of five
historically black boarding schools in the United States.
- 1921—Frederick
W. “Duke” Slater, the University's first African American
All-America football player, graduates from Iowa and is named to the Chicago
Tribune’s All-American football team. He later returned
to Iowa to earn a law degree and became a municipal court judge in
Cook County, Illinois. Slater Residence Hall is named in his honor.
- 1927—The
University of Iowa becomes the first tax-supported university to establish
a school of religion. Iowa is also the first state university in the
nation to offer a PhD.
- 1940—Elizabeth
Catlett Mora, a significant 20th-century sculptor and civil rights
advocate, earns her MFA from Iowa, where she studied under the renowned
painter, Grant Wood.
- 1947—University
Hospital School, the first program on a college campus devoted to
rehabilitating disabled children and young adults, opens its doors
to its first 20 patients.
- 1954—Jewel
Limar Prestage becomes the first black woman to receive a doctorate
in political science from a U.S. university.
- 1965—Margaret
Walker Alexander, noted African American poet and activist, completes
her doctoral dissertation at the University of Iowa. It is later published
as a Civil War novel titled Jubilee.
- 1966—Dr.
Philip G. Hubbard, who received his doctorate from Iowa in 1954,
becomes the first African American vice president at any Big Ten university
when he was promoted to vice president for student services and dean
of academic affairs at Iowa.
- 1970—The
University of Iowa's Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Allied
Union is founded, making it one of the oldest such campus organizations
in the United States. In fact, it is the oldest state-university recognized
and continuously funded GLBTA student organization in the country.
- 1974—The
Women's Studies Program is established at the University of Iowa,
making it one of the oldest such programs in the country.
- 1993—The
American Indian and Native Studies Program (AINSP) is instituted at
The University of Iowa.
- 2004—Tony Robinson, a journalism major from Davenport, Iowa, is
appointed editor-in-chief of the Daily Iowan, the University's daily
student newspaper. Robinson is the first African American student to
hold the position.
- 2004—UI alumus Rose Vasquez of Des Moines is appointed
to the Board of Regents, state of Iowa, to fill the unexpired term
of Dr. Deb Turner.
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