
Central opened its doors in 1892 as the
Central Michigan Normal School and Business Institute. At that
time, few of the state's teachers received any formal training
in teaching. School founders made teacher training their mission
in founding the state's second normal school.
Thirty-one students attended classes in
second-floor rooms over an office on the corner of Main and
Michigan streets in downtown Mount Pleasant. Most students at
the time were eighth-grade graduates, attending the "Normal" for
a few weeks or months prior to beginning their careers as
teachers. Within the first two years, land was acquired and a
$10,000 Normal School Building was constructed where Warriner
Hall now stands.
In 1895, the Michigan State Board of
Education assumed control of the school, renaming it Central
Michigan Normal School. By 1918, the campus consisted of 25
acres with five buildings, one of which — Grawn Hall — is still
in use, though substantially remodeled.
A
fire destroyed the school's main building in 1925, and Warriner
Hall was built to replace it. Prior to World War II, the
school's name changed again — first to Central State Teachers
College, then to Central Michigan College of Education.
On June 1, 1959, with 40 buildings standing
on a 235-acre campus and an enrollment of 4,500 students,
Central was renamed Central Michigan University, a designation
that reflected growth in the complexity of the school's academic
offerings as well as its physical growth in the post-war period.
And even though so much has changed over the
last two centuries, our values today do not stray from those
inscribed upon our seal in 1892: Sapientia,
Virtus, Amicitia – wisdom, virtue, and friendship.
For more CMU history, stop by the Clarke
Historical Library inside the Park Library for interesting
artifacts and exhibits or
visit the
Web site.