Utah State University
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Utah State University
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Utah State University
Utah State University
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Utah State University
Utah State University Logan, Utah
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Utah State University Logan, Utah
Utah State Agricultural College
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Utah State Agricultural College
Ǧāmiʿat Wilāyat Utah
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Ǧāmiʿat Wilāyat Utah
Utah State University of Agriculture and Applied Science, Logan
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Utah State University of Agriculture and Applied Science, Logan
Utah State University of Agriculture and Applied Science Logan, Utah
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Utah State University of Agriculture and Applied Science Logan, Utah
USU
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USU
Utah State University of Agriculture and Applied Science
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Utah State University of Agriculture and Applied Science
USU Abkuerzung
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USU Abkuerzung
Ǧāmiʻat Wilāyat Utah Logan, Utah
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Ǧāmiʻat Wilāyat Utah Logan, Utah
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Biographical History
Beginning in the 1950s USU contracted with the Iranian government under the Shah to develop agricultural projects designed to boost efficiency in agriculture and introduce modern technologies.
Utah State University changed from Utah State Agricultural College in 1957.
The University of Utah was first established as the University of Deseret in 1850 by Latter-day Saint President Brigham Young. Orson Spencer was the first president. The university was renamed University of Utah in 1894.
Utah State University has had 4 official names: Agricultural College of Utah (1888-1916), Utah Agricultural College (1916-1929), Utah State Agricultural College (1929-1957), and Utah State University (1957-to date).
Utah State University was established in 1888, after Anthon H. Lund introduced a bill for its creation. Originally known as the Agricultural College of Utah, its name was subsequently changed to Utah State Agricultural College, and in 1957 it became Utah State University.
For more information about the history of Utah State University see Pictures Past: A Centennial Celebration of Utah State University by A.J. Simmonds and An Encyclopedic History of Utah State University by Robert Parson, University Archivist.
Utah State University has had four official names: Agricultural College of Utah (1888-1916), Utah Agricultural College (1916-1929), Utah State Agricultural College (1929-1957), and Utah State University (1957- to date).
Buildings on campus were used for a multitude of purposes and often housed several academic departments over the course of the school's history. For continuity's sake, this inventory will use one specific name for each building or place, even though that name has changed over time. The following list indicates each building's most common name and a brief history. These buildings are denoted in the inventory by an asterisk.
Old Main Hill - The rather steep hill on the southwest corner of campus is well known to today's students as Old Main Hill, after the building which crown's its peak. Prior to the main building on campus being nicknamed Old Main, this hill was called College Hill, after the campus itself. For continuity's sake, the hill will be referred to as Old Main Hill.
Merrill Library - The first campus library was actually housed in Old Main, although it moved three times within the building due to departmental accommodations. In 1930, the University Library was built - a three story structure on the east end of the Quad. In 1963 and 1967, two additions were added to the building, completely enclosing the old structure, and the modified building was renamed after Milton R. Merrill, Vice President of Utah State University. In the summer of 2003 construction began for a new Merrill Library to be built adjacent to the east and north sides of the Stanford O. Cazier Science and Technology Library (Sci-Tech Library). The former Merrill Library was torn down in 2006 after the completion of the new Merrill-Cazier Library. To avoid confusion with the 1995 Sci-Tech and Merrill-Cazier Libraries, "Merrill Library" will refer to the original site of the 1930 University Library Building.
President's Residence - Originally meant to be the model farmhouse and the home of the School of Domestic Science, the President's Residence was first claimed in 1890 by President Sanborn, who swapped his planned residence in Old Main with the School of Domestic Science. It remained in use as the official residence of the President until Joseph Marion Tanner (1896), when it was vacated and turned into a dormitory. Currently it is used as the campus Alumni Center. Throughout this inventory, it will be called the "President's Residence" in order to avoid confusion with later dormitories.
Student Union Building - Until the 1950s, campus lacked a formal building for use by the student body. The Family Life Building, with a cafeteria and outdoor eating area, served as a social gathering place for the students. Other structures, such as the TUB (Temporary Union Building), were used from 1946 to 1952 while the Student Union Building was planned and built. On May 2, 1953, the first wing of the building was dedicated and opened for student use, with the second wing being completed nearly ten years later in December of 1964. From the 1950s to the 1970s, the building was referred to as the Union Center. Around 1980, the name of the building was changed to the Taggart Student Center after Glen L. Taggart, 11th President of the University. For continuity's sake, the building will be referred to as the "Student Union Building."
University Annex - Built in 1891, this building served as a co-ed boarding house until 1909. It was later used as the Domestic Science Building from 1909-1935, World War I barracks, Forestry Building from 1935-1960, and as the University Annex and Social Sciences & Arts Building from 1961-1970. It was condemned after the earthquake of August 1962 and demolished in the fall of 1970. Due to its changing use, the title "University Annex" will be used to identify the building throughout the inventory.
Collecting Memories: Oral Histories of American Folklorists is a joint effort by the American Folklore Society and Utah State University Special Collections and Archives . The American Folklife Center at The Library of Congress is the project advisor. Collecting Memories is an effort to collect, preserve and disseminate the voices and images of American folklorists and the field of folklore studies through oral histories (memories and personal commentary) and related materials (photographs, curriculum vitae, personal papers, diaries, logs, etc).
The project will help document the development and change of the field since the mid-twentieth century to more fully tell the story of folklore scholarship and to make accessible the institutional memory of the American Folklore Society, the premier folklore society in the United States. Project products (media, transcripts/logs, images and affiliated materials) will be housed at Utah State University, the official repository of the American Folklore Society Records: MSS 206. USU will host the products of the project in both physical and digital collections.
In October 2009, Randy Williams (Utah State University) proposed the project to Tim Lloyd (Executive Director American Folklore Society) and Michael Taft (Head of the Archive of Folk Culture, American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress). All parties agreed to participate. Simon Bronner and Jill Terry Rudy (members of the American Folklore Society History Section) and Guha Shankar (Folklife Specialist, Research and Programs, American Folklife Center, LOC) were invited to help Lloyd, Taft and Williams draft the project forms. Williams applied to USU's Institutional Review Board for IRB approval, which was awarded: USU IRB protocol number 2761. The project was introduced at the 2010 American Folklore Society Meeting in Nashville, TN, by Bronner, Lloyd, Rudy, Taft and Williams.
Members of the American Folklore Society (and their students) are invited to participate in the project by being interviewed or by interviewing a member of the society. Project forms are available to guide the process. For history of folklorist oral history efforts see Simon Bronner's "American Folklorists' Voices in Print: A Critical Survey" (2011 Folklore Historian).
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/151791657
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n79059872
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n79059872
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Academic libraries
Academic libraries
Accreditation (Education)
Education
Agricultural assistance
Agricultural colleges
Agricultural colleges
Agricultural education
Agricultural estimating and reporting
Agricultural innovation
Agriculture
Agriculture
Agriculture
Classrooms
Classrooms
Universities and colleges
Universities and colleges
College sports
College sports
College students
College students
College students
College students
Commencement ceremonies
Commencement ceremonies
Computer-assisted instruction
Distance education
Educational technology
Students, Foreign
Students, Foreign
Greek letter societies
Greek letter societies
Laboratories
Laboratories
Mormons
Mormons
Parades
Social life and customs
Student activities
Student activities
Student unions
Student unions
University extension
Vocational education
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Utah--Logan
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Cache Valley (Utah and Idaho)
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Utah--Logan
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Utah--Logan
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Utah--Logan
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Cache Valley (Utah and Idaho)
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Utah
AssociatedPlace
Logan (Utah)
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Cache County (Utah)
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Utah--Logan
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Cache County (Utah)
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Iran
AssociatedPlace
Logan (Utah)
AssociatedPlace
Utah
AssociatedPlace
Utah
AssociatedPlace
Utah--Logan
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Utah
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Convention Declarations
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