The University of Tennessee at Martin traces its origins to 1900 and
the establishment of the Hall-Moody Institute. Built on a site donated
by Ada Gardner Brooks at what was then the edge of town, and named for
two locally prominent Baptist ministers, Hall-Moody was a denominational
school Closure of the one of the state's most praised small colleges concerned
many citizens of west Tennessee. As Hall-Moody
announced its impending closure, several influential citizens from the
area petitioned the state to take over the facility and organize a junior
college under the auspices of the University of Tennessee. Since
the new institution would operate under the UT banner but be controlled
by the legislature, University president Harcourt Morgan was less than
thrilled. Knowing of a Hall-Moody capital campaign that had failed
only the year before, Morgan agreed to accept the proposition on the condition
that the local community acquire the property and find it enough space
to expand. To Morgan's surprise the City of Martin and Weakley
County each promptly agreed to float $100,000 tax bonds. The money
purchased the Hall-Moody campus--the old Administration
Building, the Ellis Home for Young Women (Reed Hall), the Lovelace
Home for Young Men (Freeman Hall), a science hall,
the Old Dining Hall, an unnamed men's
dormitory, and gymnasium-- The Hall-Moody Junior College closed its operations on June 1, 1927.
The first Executive Officer (Chancellor), C.
Porter Claxton, had his hands full. Personally responsible for
virtually everything about the new campus, his duties ranged from recruiting
students to buying a lawn mower. On September 2, a faculty of fourteen
began classes for 120 students at the Tennessee Junior College (shortly
the University of Tennessee Junior College), most of whom were returning
Hall-Moody students. During the Depression, UTJC enrollments declined and construction came to a standstill. By 1933, the college's student enrollment had dropped to just 96. Faculty members were released, salaries were reduced, and intercollegiate athletic events were suspended. Though the Knoxville campus endured a similar decline, Claxton was made a scapegoat on the grounds that he had not recruited enough students. Not exactly fired, the young man was dismissed as head of UTJC and transferred to a minor post as an instructor at the main campus. His replacement in Martin was a personal friend and former UT class officer, Paul Meek. The junior college began to gradually recover with increased enrollment and the construction of a new dining hall, which is now the Communications Building. Throughout the middle and late 1930's, there were distinct signs of recovery as enrollment crested three hundred in 1937 and reached 336 by 1940. However, this brief period of good fortune and financial prosperity reversed with the entrance of the United States into the Second World War. As war spread across Europe and the U.S. was drawn into conflicts in
two hemispheres, virtually the entire male student complement at UTJC
departed for service. Returning servicemen caused the largest influx of students in the school
s history. Between the end of the war in the fall of 1945 and the
beginning of fall term in 1946 the student population more than tripled
to 649, over five hundred of which were veterans. The 1950's brought steady growth to the junior college in enrollment, higher education quality and the construction of new facilities. The number of students doubled during the 1950's and nearly reached one thousand before the end of the decade. The scope of education increased significantly as well. Programs expanded, and in 1951 the state legislature passed House Bill 264 which designated the first college as a four year university and renamed the junior college the University of Tennessee, Martin Branch. Of necessity, more classrooms, offices, and living quarters were built to meet the new standards required for a four year institution. The Agriculture-Biology- Library Building (now Brehm) was completed in 1951. Many said that this building was the first to give the college a sense of genuine institutional permanence. Browning Hall (currently the Business Administration Building) was completed later the same year as a men's dormitory. Westview Terrace , a temporary housing complex for married students, was finished in 1955 and two years later, Clement Hall was built as a new women's dormitory. The Administration Building was built to replace the aging original administration facility in 1959, and a Home Management House was completed the same year. The 1960's brought to campus a new generation of students
with higher expectations and greater demands. For the Martin campus, 1967 was a banner year. Following prompting
from the UT Board of Trustees, Governor Buford Ellington sign into law
House Bill 488 changing the school's name to the University of Tennessee
at Martin. Its status as a genuine university was at last secure. Student enrollment levelled slightly during the 1970s, but the scope of academic programs continued to increase as more four year and graduate programs were offered by the university. Programs in music, education, home economics, social work, engineering technology and nursing were independently accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) by 1972. To accommodate these new programs, as well as to upgrade and enhance older programs, the university began construction on two new state-of-the-art facilities in the 1970's. The Fine Arts Building was the first of these structures to be completed (1971) and currently houses the Division of Fine and Performing Arts. Three years later, Gooch Hall opened to house offices and classrooms for the Education, Home Economics, and Nursing departments. A Residence Hall Swimming Pool was built in 1975 as a recreational facility for students living in the dorms. UTMartin's first international students (from Venezuela and shortly thereafter from several Arab countries) were welcomed to campus that year as well.
Margaret Perry was selected as institutional Chancellor in 1985, the first woman to head a UT-system school. Her efforts to draw the faculty into meaningful participation with University planning and governance drew wide praise. Her successor, Philip Conn, pushed through a number of far-reaching organizational and changes on campus. He ran aground over a shakeup in programatic priorities and accepted a reassignment to Knoxville as the University celebrated its centennial in October, 2000. The University began its second century by being moved up from the third into the second tier in the U.S. News & World Report's ranking of public colleges its size. The quality and breadth of UTMartin's programs continue to expand, with a new degree program in Public Administration and graduate program in Agricultural Operations. Good for another hundred years or so, the University of Tennessee at Martin's future is brighter now than ever before. Biographical data on past Chancellors of the University of Tennessee at Martin is also available. © 1996, 2001 Special thanks to Dr. Glenn S. Everett and the Faculty Multimedia Center |