ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì Timeline
200 Years of Seeking Truth and Transforming Lives.
1818
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì becomes the first institution of higher learning west of the Mississippi River when Saint Louis Academy (later known as Saint Louis College) is founded in a private residence near the Mississippi River at the request of the Rev. Louis William DuBourg, Catholic Bishop of Louisiana.
The history of ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's College of Arts and Sciences dates back to the original Saint Louis Academy.
18181888
DuBourg Hall opens on July 31, the Feast of St. Ignatius Loyola, the founder of the Society of Jesus. Though now home to ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's administration, the building at its opening contained the whole of the University's operations, including classrooms, laboratories, a museum and library, and dormitories for both students and the Jesuit faculty.
18881908
The ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì School of Law admits five female students -- the first women to attend ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì.
The Billiken, ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's mascot, is created by American art teacher and illustrator Florence Pretz. Learn more about the Billiken's unique history.
19081923
Inez Specking becomes the first female faculty member in Arts and Sciences.
19231927
Parks Air College, later to become ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology, is founded at Lambert Field in St. Louis by Oliver "Lafe" Parks. He gives the college to ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì in 1946. In 2022, Parks College becomes part of ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's School of Science and Engineering. It is the oldest federally certified school of aviation west of the Mississippi River.
19271943
Nancy McNeir Ring becomes ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's first dean of women. ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's highest award for teaching has been named after her since 1966.
19431944
Father Claude Heithaus, S.J., delivers a sermon at College Church decrying racial prejudice in America, ultimately leading to the integration of ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì. That summer, five African-American students are admitted to ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì — two undergraduates and three graduate students — making ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì the first university in any of the 14 former slave states to establish an official policy of integration.
19441949
The College of Arts and Sciences becomes co-educational. While women had been allowed to attend graduate and select programs since 1908, undergraduate men and women were not allowed to register and attend classes together until this time.
Jesuits from ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì perform the religious rite that becomes the basis of "The Exorcist" book and movie.
19491950
Anita Lyons Bond becomes the first Black undergraduate student to graduate from Saint Louis University with honors. ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì awarded Bonds, who became a noted civil rights activist, an honorary doctorate of humanities in 2015.
19501959
The University's Pius XII Memorial Library, honoring His Holiness Pope Pius XII, opens. The Knights of Columbus Vatican Film Library is established there, becoming the first repository of its kind outside of the Vatican itself.
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì launches the 1-8-1-8 Plan, now called the 1818 Advanced College Credit Program, offering high school students the chance to earn college credit for certain high school courses. ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's program is the oldest dual credit program in the nation.
19591967
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì becomes the first major Catholic university to give lay and clergy people combined legal responsibility for institutional policy on its board of trustees.
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì establishes a campus in Madrid, Spain. Originally intended as a study-abroad program for U.S. college students, ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì-Madrid is now a free-standing campus of Saint Louis University where students from more than 65 countries take undergraduate and graduate courses.
19671977
Cecilia "Kitty" Cummings becomes ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's first female Black undergraduate and the first sophomore to be elected Student Government Association President. In 2022, junior Aric Hamilton becomes the first Black male elected to the post.
19771989
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì founds the Center for Vaccine Development. The Center has been instrumental in developing numerous vaccines that protect public health, including the FluMist nasal spray influenza vaccine and vaccines against smallpox and other potential biological weapons following the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on the United States.
19891990
The first late-night Sunday student Mass is celebrated at St. Francis Xavier College Church. Now a ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì tradition, particularly for undergraduates, the Mass is celebrated each Sunday ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì is in session during the academic year.
Robert R. Hermann Stadium, home to ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's men's and women's soccer teams, is christened.
19901993
The Joseph G. Lipic Clock Tower Plaza is added to campus, the culmination of a project that closed West Pine Boulevard between Spring and Vandeventer avenues to create a large pedestrian mall.
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's Museum of Contemporary Religious Art (MOCRA) opens. It is the world's first interfaith museum of contemporary art that engages religious and spiritual themes.
19932013
The ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì School of Law moves to downtown St. Louis. Located in Scott Hall, which is also home to the ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì Law Library and ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì's legal clinics, the law school is situated near the city's Civil Courts Building, criminal courts, City Hall, the U.S. Court of Appeals and the U.S. Attorney's Office.
The University opens its Center for Global Citizenship in what was once the West Pine Gym.
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì grants the world's first Doctor of Philosophy degree in aviation.
20132020
In March, ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì moves classes online due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Classes are back in person that September and ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì becomes a COVID-19 vaccine research site. More than 13,600 people went on to receive COVID-19 vaccinations through ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì by 2022.
20202021
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì formally recognizes Juneteenth, commemorating the day in 1865 when more than a quarter-million enslaved people living in the former Confederate state of Texas learned from arriving Union troops that they were free by presidential decree.
ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì’s first dean of students and trailblazer for women’s rights at ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì Mary Bruemmer dies at the age of 101. As an undergraduate, Bruemmer was the first female editor of the student newspaper and yearbook. During her 34 years as a University administrator and 26 years as a ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì volunteer, she founded the Women's Commission and was named ÐÔÅ«µ÷½Ì’s first Woman of the Year.
2021