Pacific University is a private, nonprofit, coeducational university, based in Forest Grove, Oregon, United States. Founded in 1849 as the Tualatin Academy, the original Forest Grove campus of the university is 23 miles (37 km) west of Portland, while the university maintains three other campuses in the towns of Eugene, Hillsboro and Woodburn.
Founded by United Church of Christ (UCC), the university motto is Pro Christo et Regno Ejus , which in Latin means â ⬠Å"For Christ and His Kingdom, â ⬠and has enrollment of over 3,500 students. Although the university has long been independent of the UCC, it still maintains a close working relationship with the church as a member of Christ's Church Council for Higher Education. The university is now a small independent private liberal arts school, offering graduate programs in education, optometry, writing, health and business professions.
Video Pacific University
History
Tabitha Brown, a pioneering pioneer from Massachusetts, immigrated to Oregon State on the new Applegate Track in 1846. Upon arriving in Oregon he helped start an orphanage and school together with Rev. Harvey L. Clark at Forest Grove in 1847 to care for orphans from the Applegate Trail. In March 1848, the Tualatin Academy was founded from an orphanage with Clark donating 200 acres (80.9 ha) to school. George H. Atkinson has advocated the establishment of schools and with the support of Presbyterians and Congregationalists helping to start the academy. Eliza Hart Spalding, part of Whitman's Mission, was her first teacher.
The Academy was officially hired by the territorial legislature on September 29, 1849. Reverend Clark served as the first president of the supervisory board and later donated an additional 150 acres (60.7 ha) to the agency. In 1851, what is now the Old College Hall was built and in 1853 Sidney H. Marsh became the first president of the school. The campus is currently deformed in 1851. In 1854, it became the University of the Pacific. The first beginnings took place in 1863 with Harvey W. Scott as the only graduate.
In 1872, three Japanese students started at the university as part of the country's modernization movement, with all three graduating in 1876. These students were Hatstara Tamura, Kin Saito, and Yei Nosea. President Marsh died in 1879 and was replaced by John R. Herrick. In the late 1890s, an alumnus gave Pacific a Chinese statue. The statue was purchased from a Chinese family who used it as a kind of symbol. It seems to be a mixture of several different mythical creatures though often simply called "dragon dogs" and serves as a base for the university mascot, Boxer.
Marsh Hall was built in 1895 and named for the first president of Pacific, which serves as a central building on the Pacific campus. The Carnegie Library (now Carnegie Hall) opened in 1912 after the foundation of Andrew Carnegie helped finance the brick structure. The library was designed by the Portland Whidden and Lewis architecture companies. In 1915, the preparatory department, Tualatin Academy, was closed due to the proliferation of public high schools in the state. By 1920, the school had grown to a total of five buildings on 30 hectares (12.1 ha) and had donations of about $ 250,000.
Marsh Hall was destroyed by fire in 1975, but its shell was preserved, and its structure was reopened in 1977. Phillip D. Creighton became the sixteenth president of the Pacific in August 2003 and retired in June 2009. Tommy Thayer, the lead guitarist of the KISS band, was elected to the university board in 2005. The seventeenth president of the Pacific, Dr. Lesley M. Hallick, named on May 19, 2009.
Maps Pacific University
Campus
Pacific University is located on four campuses in the state of Oregon in the towns of Forest Grove, Hillsboro, Eugene and Woodburn.
The Forest Grove Campus has several historical buildings. Old College Hall is the oldest educational building west of Mississippi and currently serves as a University of the Pacific museum. Carnegie Hall, the first specialized library building of the university, was built in 1912 and today is home to the department of undergraduate Psychology. Marsh Hall, at the center of the campus, houses several classrooms and faculty offices, alongside administrative offices and small auditoriums. The Forest Grove Campus opens a new residence hall, Cascade Hall, in 2014. The Forest Grove Campus is also home to a new university library, which was built and certified Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) in 2005, LEED- Berglund The Hall is certified, which houses the College of Education and the preschool community, and additional LEED Gold certified residence, Burlingham and Gilbert. Billing & amp; The Cathy Stoller Center is home to all inter-university athletic teams, athletic offices, and the Department of Exercise. It features over 95,000 square feet of floor space, including team room, dressing room, classroom, gymnasium, heavy floor and gym and Fieldhouse, the first indoor exercise area at Northwest Conference and the only one with FieldTurf. Outside the Stoller Center is the entrance to the Hanson Stadium, which includes FieldTurf football, lacrosse and the surface of football, nine lanes and tribune tracks. The new roof was built to close the stadium in 2014. The stadium is part of the Lincoln Park Athletic Complex, built in 2008, which also houses the baseball complex, Chuck Bafaro Stadium at Bond Field, softball complex, Sherman/Larkins Stadium and field natural grass for football events and throwing tracks, and is part of Lincoln Park Forest Grove City, also a place for fitness trails, playground equipment, BMX courses, skateboard park and picnic area.
Eugene Campus The University of the Pacific is a single building that houses most of the College of Education.
In 2013, Pacific University also opens campuses at Woodburn, providing undergraduate and postgraduate programs at the College of Education.
The Hillsboro campus opened in 2006 with its first building, a five-storey Building of Greenhouse Certified Energy and Design (LEED) in Hillsboro in 2006, dedicated as Creighton Hall. The second building, known as HPC2 and also LEED certified, was opened in 2010. The campus is part of Hillsboro Health & amp; District Education and adjacent to the light rail line MAX. Currently home primarily to the University of Health Professions of the University of the Pacific, the campus has several master's and doctoral programs in the health profession, as well as clinics, open to the public, for audiology, dental hygiene, physical therapy and professional psychology, as well as interdisciplinary diabetes clinics and clinics eyes run by Pacific University College of Optometry. Virginia Garcia Memorial Health Center also has a clinic and pharmacy on site.
Academics
Pacific University is consistently crowned among leading universities and universities in the western region by the US. News & amp; World Report , Forbes and The Princeton Review.
Pacific is home to college Arts & amp; Science, Education, Optometry, Health and Business Profession. About half of all students are students, while the other half are graduates and professional students.
College of Arts & amp; Science offers a liberal arts and science degree program in over 50 fields, as well as a low-residency master of art in writing. The MFA program has been rated by Poets & amp; The author magazine as one of the five low-residency MFA programs in the United States for four consecutive years. Pacific also opened a social work program master based in Eugene, Ore., In 2014.
Pacific's College of Education offers undergraduate and graduate degrees in education and learning. Students can study early childhood education and basic education, while postgraduate programs include MAT/MAT Flex, Special Education MAT and MEd in Curriculum Studies, as well as a joint program with College of Optometry, a visual function in learning. The College of Education offers courses for science and math teachers at the Woodburn College. The new School of Communication and Disorders began offering masters in tongue pathology in 2012.
The College of Optometry is one of 21 schools in the United States and Canada that offers doctoral degrees in optometry. The Pacific program began in 1945, when the Pacific joined the North Pacific College of Optometry. Pacific's College of Optometry also offers master's degrees of vision and operates eye clinics and optical glasses in communities throughout the Portland area.
The College of Health Professions was founded in 2006, although some of its programs are much more. Most courses and clinics are located on the Hillsboro campus. The program includes a doctoral audiology, an athletic training master, a bachelor in dental science, a graduate certificate in gerontology, a master in health administration, a postgraduate certificate in health care compliance, an online bachelor in health sciences, a doctor in occupational therapy, a doctorate in pharmacy, a doctorate in therapy physical, masters in physician assistant studies, and masters and doctorates in professional psychology. The curriculum in all programs of the health profession focuses on interprofessional cooperation, and students get training in caring for underserved populations.
The College of Business opened in 2013 with undergraduate programs in accounting, finance, international business and marketing. Graduate programs include master of business administration and master of science in finance.
Student life
Pacific newspaper, The Pacific Index , was first published in 1893. The following year the annual yearbook begins as the Heart of Oak .
Greek Life
All Greek societies at the University of the Pacific are "local", meaning that they are unique to the campus.
Fraternities
- ?? - Gamma Sigma
- ?? - Alpha Zeta âââ ⬠<â â¬
- ??? - Pi Kappa Rho
Sororities
- ??? - Alpha Kappa Delta âââ ⬠<â â¬
- ??? - Theta Nu Alpha
- ??? - Phi Lambda Omicron
- ??? - Delta Chi Delta âââ ⬠<â â¬
Athletics
Pacific University competes as a member of the Northwest Conference in the NCAA Division III. Pacific was one of the founding members of the conference in 1926.
Men compete in baseball, basketball, cross country, soccer, golf, soccer, swimming, tennis, track and field, and wrestling. Women's programs include basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, softball, soccer, swimming, tennis, track and field, and wrestling. The women's rowing will begin in 2013.
Pacific Women's Wrestling Program is one of only five university programs sponsored by a college in the United States. The team competed as part of the women's division of the National Collegiate Wrestling Association, which started the competition in 2007.
In addition to the facilities of the Stoller Center and Lincoln Park Athletic Complex, Pacific University also has indoor and outdoor tennis courts on campus and shares a competition-size swimming pool with City of Forest Grove.
Famous Alumni
- Shirley Abbott '52, OD '53 - is an American businessman, breeder, politician, and ambassador
- Les AuCoin '69 - is the US Representative of Oregon from the First Congress District from 1975 to 1992
- William A. Barton '69 - noting injury lawyer and author Oregon author
- Loren Cordain '74 - American scientist specializing in sports nutrition and physiology
- Chuck Currie '91 - minister
- Rick Dancer - Journalist and Politician
- Dick Daniels, a former NFL player and an executive
- Daniel Gault (attending Tualatin Academy) - educators, journalists, and state legislators
- Alfred Carlton Gilbert (graduated in 1902 from Tualatin Academy) - Olympian and inventor of Set Erector
- Tim Hauck, a former NFL player
- David G. Hebert '94, BA - music expert, musician, professor
- Lynn Hellerstein - ophthalmologist, speaker, and writer famous for her work in the field of vision therapy
- William A. Hilliard '52 - The Oregonian editor Augustus C. Kinney, a longtime doctor in Astoria, Oregon, and noted tuberculosis expert at the turn of the 20th century
- Mike Kreidler '66, OD '69 - American politician
- Gregg Lambert '83 - philosopher and literary theorist
- Olaus Murie 1912 - conservationist and mammalist
- Tela O'Donnell '05 - retired amateur and Olympian freestyle golfer Robert T. Oliver '32 - American author, lecturer, and authority in public speaking, arguments and debates, and the tradition of Asian rhetoric
- Carol Pott '86 - author and editor
- Harvey W. Scott 1863 - Pacific's first graduate, editor of The Oregonian
- Thomas H. Tongue 1868 - US Representative for Oregon's First Congressional District
- Calvin Leroy Van Pelt '49 - World War II veteran
- Nancy Wilson (non-degree, 1976) - lead guitarist and lead vocalist in the classic rock group Heart
References
Note
Further reading
- Drury, Clifford Merrill. "Henry Harmon Spalding: Pioneer of Old Oregon." Caxton Printers, Caldwell, ID, 1936.
- Miranda, Gary. Splendid Audacity: The Story of Pacific University, 2000.
- Smith, Alvin T. Original diary at the University of the Pacific Archives
- Spalding, Henry H., in the Oregon Historical Society collection, Protestant Mission in the Pacific Northwest
External links
- The University of Pacific Official Website
- Official University Athletic Athletic Site
- Hundred Years' History of Oregon, 1811-1912
Source of the article : Wikipedia