Miami University
From Freepedia
- This is an article about Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. For the article on the University of Miami in Coral Gables, Florida, see University of Miami.
| Miami University | |
| Image:Seal of Miami University.gif | |
| Motto | Prodesse quam conspici ("To accomplish rather than to be conspicuous") |
|---|---|
| Established | 1809 |
| School type | Public coeducational |
| President | James C. Garland |
| Location | Oxford, Ohio, USA |
| Campus | Small Town, 2,000 acres (8 km²) |
| Enrollment | 15,300 Oxford; 2,700 Middletown; 3,400 Hamilton (grad included) undergraduate, 1,400 Oxford; 300 Middletown graduate |
| Faculty | 1,393, full and part-time |
| Sports teams | Redhawks |
| Colors | Red & White |
| Homepage | www.muohio.edu |
Miami University, founded in 1809, is the second oldest college west of the Allegheny Mountains. It is located in Oxford in southwestern Ohio about thirty miles northwest of Cincinnati. The Miami in this school's name refers to the Miami River valley, cut by two medium-sized rivers, the Little Miami River and the Great Miami River, that flow through southwestern Ohio; the rivers were in turn named after the Miami Indians who lived in that area before European settlement.
Miami was named one of the original Public Ivies in Richard Moll's 1985 book entitled, 'The Public Ivies: America's Flagship Undergraduate Colleges'. Miami is known as the "Cradle of Coaches" because several prominent football coaches worked there before achieving greater fame at more prominent college programs or the NFL. Among these coaches were Earl Blaik, Paul Brown, Sid Gillman, Woody Hayes, Ara Parseghian, Weeb Ewbank, and Bo Schembechler. Because it is home to a number of Alpha Chapters, Miami University is also considered the Mother of Fraternities.
Miami graduated an American President (Benjamin Harrison), putting it in a prestigious category of a league of Presidential alma maters. It is also the alma mater of many Ohio Governors.
For many years, the athletic teams at Miami were nicknamed Redskins, but in 1997, the nickname was changed to RedHawks. Some controversy surrounded this change and some aspects of the old identity persist. The RedHawks participate in NCAA Division I in all sports (I-A in football). Its primary conference is the Mid-American Conference; its hockey program competes in the Central Collegiate Hockey Association. Yager Stadium is home to Miami football.
Miami is also famous for its School of Education, the McGuffey School, named for Professor William Holmes McGuffey, who taught there and wrote America's most widely used pioneer text books while at the college.
Miami University was first provided for under the Northwest Ordinance, which would regulate the free states of the Midwest. On May 5, 1792, "the President of the United States was authorized to grant letters patent to John Cleves Symmes and his associates . . . provided that the land grant should include one complete township . . . for the purpose of establishing an academy and other public schools and seminaries of learning. After Ohio became a state in 1803, the State legislature assumed responsibility for making sure that John Cleves Symmes would set aside a township of land for the support of an academy. Such a law was passed by the State legislature April 15, 1803. . . . Finally, on February 17, 1809, the State legislature created Miami University and provided that one complete township in the State of Ohio in the district of Cincinnati was to be vested in Miami University for its use, benefit, and support."[1] This was known as the "College Township".
Miami was chartered by the government, but was considered a private college engaged in classical training. Antebellum Miami University took students from all over the West, and was known as the "Yale of the West". It was at one point the 4th largest university after Harvard, Yale, and Dartmouth. As the East-West rivalries subsided, but the North-South rivalries surged, Miami University split apart at the time of the Civil War. Most graduates volunteered for the Union, more than any other school except the military academies. The majority of those that didn't, primarily from Southern states (such as Jefferson Davis' nephew) volunteered in the Confederate armies. Because its students had left for war, because many alumni and professors died in the War, because the West opened up to other universities, and because Southern families no longer sent their sons to the North for an education, "Old Miami" passed on and Miami University nearly died. The university, unable to pay its huge debts, closed in 1873 and did not reopen until 1885.
With the help of alumni and Ohio legislators, "New Miami" was restarted as a coeducational school of education and liberal arts. Although Ohio State University had been launched in the interim, Miami University gained a fair share of Ohio students by the 1890s, and by the 1950s had massively grown. The rural Oxford campus with Georgian architecture is considered to be similar to Thomas Jefferson's University of Virginia campus and one of the most beautiful in the U.S; Robert Frost once called it "the prettiest campus there ever was." [2] Image:Betabell.jpg
Several women's colleges in Oxford were associated with or effectively merged with Miami University including the Western College for Women (now the Western College Program), a daughter school of Mount Holyoke. Miami University was coeducational long before most schools in the Ivy League. Miami has been a non-sectarian school as were other pioneer universities in the Midwest, though its early leaders were often Presbyterians.
Miami University's current enrollment is approximately 15,000 undergraduates and 1,400 graduate students. In addition to its Oxford campus, Miami has additional campuses in Hamilton and Middletown, Ohio, and a European Center in Luxembourg.
Miami University is known around the Greek World for the Miami Triad, three fraternities founded in the 19th Century that spread throughout the United States. These were Beta Theta Pi(1839), Sigma Chi (1855), and Phi Delta Theta (1848). The Delta Zeta sorority was also founded at Miami University in 1902 as was the Phi Kappa Tau fraternity in 1906.
The Oxford campus has become the first major public school in the United States to abolish tuition differentials between state residents and nonresidents. As of the 2004–05 academic year, all students pay tuition of over $19,000 per year, although Ohio residents are guaranteed scholarships of at least $10,000. [3]
Contents |
The Miami University System
- Miami University | Oxford Ohio
- Miami University | Hamilton Ohio
- Miami University | Middletown Ohio
- Miami University Dolibois European Center | Luxembourg
Divisions
- School of Fine Arts
- Richard T. Farmer School of Business
- College of Arts & Science
- School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
- School of Interdisciplinary Studies (a.k.a. the Western College Program)
- McGuffey School of Education and Allied Professions
- Graduate School
Alma Mater
Miami Glee Club singing the Miami Alma MaterOld Miami from thy hillcrest, Thou hast watched the decades roll, While thy sons have quested from thee, Sturdy hearted, pure of soul. Old Miami! New Miami! Days of old and days to be; Weave the story of thy glory, Our Miami, here's to thee!
Presidents of Miami
- Robert Hamilton Bishop, 1824-1841
- George Junkin, 1841-1844
- Erasmus D. MacMaster, 1845-1849
- William C. Anderson, 1849-1854
- Orange Nash Stoddard, 1854 (pro tempore)
- John W. Hall, 1854-1866
- Robert B. Stanton, 1866-1871
- Andrew D. Hepburn, 1871-1873 (pro tempore; later considered to be regular)
- Robert W. McFarland, 1885-1888 (pro tempore; later considered to be regular)
- Ethelbert D. Warfield, 1888-1891
- William Oxley Thompson, 1891-1899
- David Stanton Tappan, 1899-1902
- Guy Potter Benton, 1902-1911
- Edgar Ewing Brandon, 1909-1910 (acting), 1927-1928 (acting)
- Raymond M. Hughes, 1911-1913 (acting), 1913-1927
- Alfred H. Upham, 1928-1945
- Aldelphus K. Morris, 1945-1946 (acting)
- Ernest H. Hahne, 1946-1952
- John D. Millett, 1953-1964
- Charles Ray Wilson, 1964-1965 (acting)
- Phillip R. Shriver, 1965-1981
- Paul G. Pearson, 1981-1992
- Paul G. Risser, 1993-1995
- Anne Hopkins, December 1995-July 1996 (acting)
- Dr. James C. Garland, 1996-May 2006
Mission Statement
[4]The mission of Miami University is to preserve, add to, evaluate, and transmit the accumulated knowledge of the centuries; to develop critical thinking, extend the frontiers of knowledge, and serve society; and to provide an environment conducive to effective and inspired teaching and learning, promote professional development of faculty, and encourage scholarly research and creativity of faculty and students.
Miami's primary concern is its students. This concern is reflected in a broad array of efforts to develop the potential of each student. The University endeavors to individualize the educational experience. It provides personal and professional guidance; and, it offers opportunities for its students to achieve understanding and appreciation not only of their own culture but of the cultures of others as well. Selected undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs of quality should be offered with the expectation of students achieving a high level of competence and understanding and developing a personal value system. Since the legislation creating Miami University stated that a leading mission of the University was to promote "good education, virtue, religion, and morality," the University has been striving to emphasize the supreme importance of dealing with problems related to values.Miami is committed to serve the community, state, and nation. It offers access to higher education, including continuing education, for those who can benefit from it, at a reasonable cost, without regard for race, creed, sex, or age. It educates men and women for responsible, informed citizenship, as well as for meaningful employment. It provides both disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches to the pursuit of knowledge and to the solving of problems. It sponsors a wide range of cultural and educational activities which have significance beyond the campus and the local community.
Athletics
Miami University has a rich history of intercollegiate athletics and today fields a Division 1-A athletic program in the Mid-American Conference (MAC) East Division. There are mens sports teams for Baseball, Basketball, Cross Country, Football, Ice Hockey, Swimming & Diving, and Track and Field. For women, Miami offers Basketball, Cross Country, Field Hockey, Soccer, Softball, Swimming and Diving, Volleyball, Syncronized Ice Skating, Track and Field, and Tennis. Miami is well known among the sports world for its reputation as the Cradle of Coaches.
Miami historically has had some of the highest graduation rates of student-athletes in the NCAA second only to the US Naval Academy. Football and Ice Hockey are the most popular according to the student body. Miami is a member of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA). Fred Yager Stadium is the main football facility on the Oxford campus.
Miami has two college sports rivalries; one with the University of Cincinnati called the 'Battle for the Victory Bell' and another with Ohio University called the 'Battle of the Bricks'.
Miami and the University of Cincinnati square off each fall for the famed Victory Bell. The original bell hung in Miami's Harrison Hall (Old Main) near the site of the first football game in 1888 and was used to ring in Miami victories. The traveling trophy tradition began in the 1890's when some Cincinnati fans "borrowed" the bell. The bell went to the winner of the annual game for the next 40 years until it mysteriously disappeared in the 1930's. The original bell reappeared in 1946 and is on display in the lobby of the Murstein Alumni Center in Oxford. The current trophy is a replica of the original bell and is kept in the possession of the winning team each year. One side of the bell is painted red and black and shows Cincinnati's victories while the other side is red and white and shows Miami's victories. Miami leads the series 59-44-7 and has won three of the last four games.
The Miami-Cincinnati series ranks fifth on the list of the most played rivalries in college football and the oldest rivalry west of the Allegheny Mountains. Of the more than 30 rivalries that include at least 89 games, none are older than Miami vs. Cincinnati.
The Battle of the Bricks is an annual all-sports rivalry competition between the Ohio Bobcats and the Miami RedHawks athletic programs. The name "Battle of the Bricks" evolved from each school's reputation of a pristine campus of red brick buildings. Each varsity athletic competition in which the Bobcats and RedHawks meet including tournament play is counted as part of the years series record. At the conclusion of each academic year, the school with the most varsity wins takes the trophy back to their campus for the following year.
Famous Miami Alumni
Famous people related to Miami University
- President Benjamin Harrison
- Dr. Ryan J. Barilleaux, Chair of the Department of Political Science, Expert and author of 12 books about the American Presidency
- William Holmes McGuffey, Professor who developed the McGuffey Readers while at Miami
- Ben Roethlisberger, professional football player, Pittsburgh Steelers. (Attended MU from 2000-2004.)
- Ron Harper,National Basketball Association (NBA) former player for the Cleveland Cavaliers, Los Angeles Clippers and Chicago Bulls
- Wally Szczerbiak, National Basketball Association (NBA) player for the Minnesota Timberwolves
- Tina Louise, Actress who played role of Ginger in television series 'Gilligans Island'
- Nick Lachey, singer in 98 Degrees and star of MTV Show Newlyweds. (Attended MU
Points of Interest
- The 1991 film Little Man Tate with Jodie Foster was largely filmed on the Oxford campus.
- The replacement value of just the buildings alone on the Oxford campus is valuated at $1.3 billion
- Miami indirectly in trying to acquire state funds in the 19th century helped the founding of The Ohio State University and the College of Wooster.
External links
- Official school website
- Official athletics site
- The Miami Years, by Walter Havighurst
- Miami Student Newspaper
- Miami University Alumni Association
References
- Bert S. Barlow, W.H. Todhunter, Stephen D. Cone, Joseph J. Pater, and Frederick Schneider, eds. Centennial History of Butler County, Ohio. Hamilton, Ohio: B.F. Bowen, 1905.
| Mid-American Conference: EAST: Akron | Bowling Green | Buffalo | Kent State | Miami | Ohio | Temple (football only) WEST: Ball State | Central Michigan | Eastern Michigan | Northern Illinois | Toledo | Western Michigan | Image:MidAmericanConference 100.png | |
| Public universities in Ohio | ||
|---|---|---|
| Akron • Bowling Green • Central State • Cincinnati • Cleveland State • Kent State • Medical Ohio • Miami • NEOUCOM • Ohio State • Ohio • Shawnee State • Toledo • Wright State • Youngstown State | ||



