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BYU
Football Game in Provo
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Founded
in Provo, Utah, in 1875 to provide religion-centered education
to Mormon youth in central Utah, Brigham Young University
has become the largest church-sponsored university in
the United States, with a 1993 winter semester enrollment
of 27,985 full-time day students and an additional 3,632
part-time students. Less than a third now come from Utah,
and all of the states and more than eighty foreign countries
are represented in the cosmopolitan (yet 98 percent Mormon)
student body.
This educational centerpiece of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints was created as Brigham Young Academy
under a deed of trust from church president Brigham Young.
The Mormon leader's death in 1877 reduced the endowment
and forced the school to look to its local constituency
for funds to supplement tuition. Philanthropists including
Abraham O. Smoot and Jesse Knight, some church subsidies,
and a faculty and staff willing to accept low wages kept
the institution alive until after World War II, at which
time the church began making large and dependable contributions.
Brigham Young Academy was housed in Lewis Hall, in downtown
Provo, until fire destroyed the converted mercantile building
in 1884. Temporary accommodations, including a ZCMI warehouse,
served until a new Academy building on University Avenue
was dedicated in 1892. Other structures were added on
this block before the Maeser Building was built in 1911
on Temple Hill, where the BYU campus subsequently developed.
A demonstration Training School and Brigham Young High
School were discontinued in the 1960s and the last university-related
classes moved to the main campus shortly before Academy
Square was sold in 1975.
Three principals led the academy before it was renamed
Brigham Young University in 1903. Warren Dusenberry conducted
the first term. Karl G. Maeser, a well-educated German
convert to Mormonism taught the second, whose twenty-nine
members included Senator-to-be Reed Smoot. Under Brigham
Young's charge to teach nothing "without the spirit
of God," Maeser directed the Academy from 1876 to
1892, at which time about 700 students were enrolled,
some thirty of college age. Benjamin Cluff, Jr., put more
emphasis on collegiate work, particularly teacher training,
and the Normal College awarded its first degree (Bachelor
of Pedagogy) in 1897. Bachelor of Science (1902), Bachelor
of Arts (1906) and Master's (1916) degrees followed.
Adoption of the university's name coincided with the school's
designation as the teacher training agency for the LDS
Church. Since 1901 the church president has chaired the
board of trustees, and since 1939 only church officers
have served on the board. Preparing public school teachers
has remained an important function of BYU, and most teachers
in the church institutes and seminaries have received
undergraduate or graduate training there.
The presidencies of George H. Brimhall (1904-1921) and
Franklin S. Harris (1921-1945) witnessed the transformation
of BYU from a school with 14 faculty and 2,375 students
(only 64 in collegiate programs), to an accredited university
with 2,375 college students in 1939-40 and a faculty of
142 (27 with doctorates). When World War II cut enrollment
by two-thirds, the question of institutional viability
was again raised by the trustees. The postwar influx of
veterans under the presidency of Howard S. McDonald (1945-1949)
put this issue to rest, and the campus was soon dotted
with converted war surplus buildings to accommodate an
enrollment that reached 5,400 in 1947-48. Christen Jensen
served as acting president, 1949-1951.
Two decades of prodigious growth owed much to the presidency
of Ernest L. Wilkinson (1951-71). An energetic lawyer,
Wilkinson persuaded the trustees to send BYU recruiters
to church conferences, and enrollment that had slipped
below 4,700 in 1950-51 began a climb that passed 25,000
in his last year as president. A multimillion dollar investment,
mostly church funds, produced an impressively landscaped
array of almost 350 academic, administrative, residential,
and support buildings. Doctoral and professional programs
were established and the J. Reuben Clark Law School opened.
Travel-study and semester-abroad programs were launched
and the adult education offering was expanded. NIT basketball
championships in 1951 and 1966 helped generate an institutional
commitment to intercollegiate athletics; nationally ranked
teams and individual competitors in many intercollegiate
men's and women's sports came later.
An honor code regulating dress and deportment, a requirement
of religious instruction each term, a new system of student
wards and stakes, and an increasing component of former
missionaries promoted cultural unity in the geographically
diverse student body, while an honors program attracted
bright Mormon high school graduates. Wilkinson was more
successful in recruiting a competent faculty than in maintaining
harmonious relations with some of its members - the question
of academic freedom, always sensitive at BYU in areas
impinging on religion, produced additional tension because
of the president's management style and strong political
views.
Succeeding university presidents Dallin H. Oaks (1971-1980)
and Jeffrey R. Holland (1980-89) directed an era of consolidation,
in which facilities, programs, and funding were brought
up to standards commensurate with the growth and maturation
of the student body. The board of trustees imposed an
enrollment ceiling that was maintained with difficulty;
raising admissions requirements and deportment standards
were the primary methods. Responsibility for funding capital
improvements was transferred to the university, and aggressive
alumni relations and endowment programs were developed.
The church college in Laie, Oahu, became BYU - Hawaii,
and a residence center for religious studies was established
in Jerusalem despite resistance from orthodox Jews. Policies
of refusing public funds (except for research contracts
and student grants) and resisting federal regulation,
initiated under Wilkinson, were defended in the courts
and through active participation in the American Association
of Presidents of Independent Colleges and Universities.
In the 1988 fall term Brigham Young University enrolled
26,986 day students, plus extension and other special
categories students. They were offered eighty-five different
majors through eleven colleges and two professional schools
served by almost 1,700 full- and part-time faculty, 2,100
administrative and full-time personnel, and 9,000 part-time
student employees in over 500 academic, administrative,
residential, and support buildings. During that school
year 5,869 degrees were awarded, including 955 master's
and 243 doctoral degrees. At the year's end Rex E. Lee
became president of this prominent educational institution.
Richard D. Poll
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