1905
Alberta becomes a province. The Alberta Normal School for training teachers is established in Calgary.
1906
Premier A.C. Rutherford names Edmonton as the site of the University of Alberta (U of A).
1907
Strathcona (now a part of Edmonton) is named as the site of the provincial university. Enraged, Calgarians conduct an unsuccessful battle to have the university relocated to Calgary.
1910
Calgary College is created.
1912
Calgary College opens its doors as a private post secondary institution. It has no degree-granting status.
1914
A provincial commission recommends against giving Calgary College degree-granting status.
1922
Calgary Normal School (formerly Alberta Normal School) relocates onto the Institute of Technology and Art campus (now SAIT).
1945
The Normal School becomes a southern extension of the U of A Faculty of Education.
1946
Citizens form the Calgary University Committee.
1947
The Calgary Branch of the U of A offers the first two years of a Bachelor of Education degree. A.L. Doucette is appointed the first director. Land is set aside in Houndsfield Heights for an eventual university.
The timetable for the fall term includes folk dancing and tumbling on Saturday.
1950
Land in Houndsfield Heights is exchanged for the present campus site.
The Board of Governors at the U of A sells all land south of 24th Avenue because the Calgary Branch of the University of Alberta would never grow large enough to use it.
1951
Radio broadcasts and ads on top of milk cartons are designed to encourage enrolment at the Calgary Branch of the University of Alberta.
The Calgary University Committee urges an expansion of the Calgary Branch of the U of A and succeeds. First years of the BA and BSc are offered.
1953
First year of BComm is offered.
1957
The name changes to University of Alberta in Calgary (UAC). By now the first years of the BSc (Eng) and BPE are offered.
1958
Sod-turning for the present campus. The Department of Public Works begins levelling the land.
1960
The new campus opens with two new buildings, Arts and Science A. McMahon Stadium opens. M.G. Taylor is appointed principal.
April 1, Gauntlet editor Alan Arthur launches the first Bermuda Shorts Day by writing on a chalkboard "Wear shorts tomorrow." The major events are a huge marble tournament and a game called squamish.
1961
The name changes to University of Alberta, Calgary . The first physical education building opens.
1962
The 80-acre research park is designated. Campus patrol arrives. Full degree study is offered.
1963
Students begin a drive for autonomy from the University of Alberta.
1964
H.S. Armstrong is appointed President. Name changes to University of Alberta at Calgary. The football Dinos begin to play.
1965
On May 1 UAC is granted academic and financial autonomy. The residence complex, Calgary Hall (now Craigie Hall), Science B and the Meteorological Station are completed. The Faculty of Engineering and the Division of Continuing Education are founded.
1966
The Universities Act passes, creating The Áù¾ÅÉ«ÌÃ. F.C. Manning is appointed as the first Chair of the Board of Governors. The Senate and School of Social Welfare are established.
1967
The first convocation is held March 29. The first recipient of a degree, Doctor of The Áù¾ÅÉ«ÌÃ, is Lester B. Pearson. Faculties of Business and Fine Arts are established.
1969 A.W.R. Carrothers is named President. School of Nursing is established. More buildings open: Social Sciences, Mathematical Sciences and Physical Plant. 1970
General Faculty Council is renamed General Faculties Council. First students are admitted to the Faculty of Medicine.
1971
Faculty of Environmental Design is established. Four year degree programs begin.
Dinnies Den opens as the first pub on campus.
Students' Union takes over management of MacEwan Hall.
1974
W.A. Cochrane is named President.
1975
Faculty of Law is established.
1976
Faculty of Arts and Science is divided into the University College and the Faculties of Science, Social Science, and Humanities. Day Care Centre opens. Artic Institute of North America is relocated here.
1978
Norman E. Wagner is named President. The Nickle Arts Museum opens.
1979
The Canadian Institute of Resources Law is established.
1981
The University College becomes the Faculty of General Studies. The Áù¾ÅÉ«Ìà Press is established.
1982
The Áù¾ÅÉ«Ìà is selected as the 1988 Olympic Games venue for the athletes' village and speed-skating events.
1984
A $17 million supercomputer is acquired. The Office of Technology Transfer is established.
1985
Calgary Hall is re-named Craigie Hall in memory of former Vice-President (Academic) Peter Craigie.
1986
The International Centre is established.
1987
The University acquires the land under McMahon Stadium in a trade with the city for a piece of northeast campus to expand the Light Rail Transit system.
The footbridge spanning Crowchild Trail is relocated to the entrance of the University. It was originally designed by Engineering Professor Bob Loov.
1988
The Winter Olympics come to campus. Murray Fraser is named President. Enrolment is frozen at approximately 16,000 full-time undergraduate students.
1989
The Áù¾ÅÉ«Ìà athletic teams win five national championships. Employment Equity program is adopted.
1990
Total outside funding for research reaches $60 million from government and private sources.
1991
The University celebrates its 25th anniversary.
1992
NASA space shuttle Columbia blasts off carrying a Áù¾ÅÉ«Ìà science experiment.
1993
The University raises more than $45 million in its first national fundraising campaign. Students commit $2.2 million to the Building on the Vision campaign.
1994
The Áù¾ÅÉ«Ìà hosts the 1994 Learned Societies Conference in June and welcomes a record 8,100 delegates representing 105 societies and conferences from 24 countries.
1995
The University acquires the Higher Education Reserve Lands west of Campus.
Site dedication ceremony held for the new Rozsa Centre.
1996
Construction of the Rozsa Centre for International Understanding and Fine Arts begins.
Terry White is appointed U of C President.
1997
The university launches U of C 101 - a four-day orientation session for new students and the first program of its kind in Canada. The program aims to help students make the most out of their university experience - both inside and outside the classroom. 1998
U of C cancer researchers receive international recognition after discovering a naturally-occurring human virus that kills cancer in mice.
1999
Largest Information Commons of its kind in North America opens in MacKimmie Library.
New 400-bed Cascade Hall residence welcomes students.
2000
Science professor Alan Hildebrand is part of an international research team that tracks down and recovers meteorites in northern B.C. The meteorites are discovered to be one of the most primitive solar system materials ever found.
International researches led by U of C archaeology professor William Glanzman partially uncover a 3,000-year-old temple in Yemen that is linked with the legendary Queen of Sheba. Experts believe the temple could be as significant a discovery as the ruins of Pompeii, the Pyramids of Giza, or the Acropolis of Athens.
2001
Dr. Harvey P. Weingarten is appointed as seventh President and Vice-Chancellor of the Áù¾ÅÉ«ÌÃ.
Information and Communication Technology (ICT) Building opens. It features state-of-the-art teaching and Research labs. The building is strategically located between the faculties of Science and Engineering, and provides a link between the two.
2002
President Weingarten unveils "Raising our Sights", a four-year academic plan designed to propel the Áù¾ÅÉ«Ìà into the upper echelon of Canadian universities by strategically allocating resources towards four distinct areas of strength where the university can truly become an international leader.
The Calgary Centre for Innovative Technology (CCIT) officially opens. CCIT fosters multidisciplinary initiatives through teams comprised of researchers, students and professors from such faculties as engineering, science, medicine, kinesiology collaborating with colleagues for industry, government agencies and other universities to find solutions to problems facing society and industry in several key areas.
2003
Ground for the new Alberta Children's Hospital was broken on the West Campus.
The Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta was created with a $15-million gift from the Alvin and Mona Libin Foundation and a $5-million donation by David and Gail O'Brien helped launch a world-class undergraduate educational centre in the Faculty of Medicine.
2004
Fine Arts professor Eric Cameron is awarded one of the highest honours for a Canadian artist: a Governor General's Award in Visual and Media Arts.
Allan Markin, chairman of Canadian Natural Resources, donates $18 million to establish an Institute for Public Health.
2005
Seymour Schulich, a director and the largest private shareholder of Newmont Mining Corp., the largest gold mining company in the world, donates $25 million to the University's engineering faculty, an amount matched by the provincial government. The faculty is renamed the Schulich School of Engineering in honour of the donation. Schulich's donation creates an endowment, more than 100 new scholarships, three new research chairs, and invests In enhanced learning opportunities for students.
The University launches Fast-Track 05, an initiative to enhance the quality of the student experience. Projects include more opportunities for experiential learning, a wireless campus, improved student spaces, and a new cyber café.
2006
The university marked its 40th anniversary with a series of celebrations touching on almost every area of the campus community. One of the biggest 40th anniversary projects was the Take Your Place initiative, which saw student designers renovate 40 student spaces on campus.
2007
Official opening of a branch campus called Áù¾ÅÉ«ÌÃ-Qatar, will bring state-of-the-art nursing education, in Qatar's capital city of Doha.
The Child Development Centre officially opened on October 9, 2007. The centre will house a second child-care facility on campus and be home to a full continuum of researchers and clinicians dedicated to the study of child development-related issues. It will ultimately house other community groups with similar interests. Canada's most advanced child development centre is also Calgary's most environmentally advanced structure, built to Leed Platinum standards.
2008
Áù¾ÅÉ«Ìà scientist Samuel Weiss, PhD, director of the Hotchkiss Brain Institute at the U of C Faculty of Medicine wins one of the world's most prestigious medical science awards, a Gairdner International Award.
U of C launches Canada's fifth veterinary program in the new Faculty of Veterinary Medicine. Student involvement beyond the classroom is recognized as part of a new initiative called co-curricular record. The record is a first for western Canadian universities.
U of C becomes the first university in Canada to offer students guaranteed access to classes for timely graduation.
Student involvement beyond the classroom will be recognized as part of a new initiative called co-curricular record. The record is a first for Western Canadian universities.
2009
The university finalizes the site of its new downtown campus, which will open its doors in the fall of 2010 for students and researchers in a variety of programs.
International House opens housing Global Village (the university's first multicultural living-learning residence) and Hotel Alma (the university's first on- campus hotel).
Alumnus and celebrated Canadian astronaut Robert Thirsk, BSc'76, LLD'09, began his 189-day mission aboard the International Space Station. While in space, he accepted an honorary degree from U of C.
2010
A new chapter in the U of C's 44-year history begins as Elizabeth Cannon, Dean of the Schulich School of Engineering, is officially selected as the Áù¾ÅÉ«ÌÃ's eighth president and vice-chancellor on March 24.
2011
In a short amount of time, construction has transformed the hole in the ground outside of MacEwan Hall into the Taylor Family Digital Library (TFDL). The first two floors of the building, including the Information Commons opened January 2011. The building is expected to be fully operational in summer 2011.
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