Founding and early years Founded in 1846 as the University at Lewisburg, Bucknell traces its origin to a group of
Baptists from White Deer Valley Baptist Church who deemed it "desirable that a Literary Institution should be established in Central Pennsylvania, embracing a High School for male pupils, another for females, a College and also a Theological Institution." The group's efforts for the institution began to crystallize in 1845, when Stephen William Taylor, a professor at Madison University (now
Colgate University) in
Hamilton, New York, was asked to prepare a
charter and act as general agent for the development of the institution. The charter for the University at Lewisburg, granted by the
Pennsylvania General Assembly and approved by the governor on February 5, 1846, carried one stipulation–that $100,000 ($ today) be raised before the new institution would be granted full
corporate status. In 1846, the "school preparatory to the University" opened in the basement of the First Baptist Church in Lewisburg. Known originally as the Lewisburg High School, it became in 1848 the Academic and Primary Department of the University at Lewisburg. The school's first commencement was held on August 20, 1851, for a graduation class of seven men. Among the board members attending was
James Buchanan, who would become the 15th President of the United States. Stephen Taylor officiated as his last act before assuming office as president of Madison University. One day earlier, the trustees had elected
Howard Malcom as the first president of the institution, a post he held for six years.
Female Institute sat atop College Hill Although the Female Institute began instruction in 1852, it wasn't until 1883 that college courses were opened to
women. Bucknell, though, was committed to equal educational opportunities for women. This commitment was reflected in the words of
David Jayne Hill of the Class of 1874, and president of the college from 1879 to 1888: "We need in Pennsylvania, in the geographical centre of the state, a University, not in the German but in the American sense, where every branch of non-professional knowledge can be pursued, regardless of distinction of sex. I have no well-matured plan to announce as to the sexes; but the Principal of the Female Seminary proposes to inaugurate a course for females equal to that pursued at
Vassar; the two sexes having equal advantages, though not reciting together." Within five years of opening, enrollment had grown so sharply that the college built a new hall–Larison Hall–to accommodate the Female Institute.
Benefactor William Bucknell In 1881, facing dire financial circumstances, the college turned to
William Bucknell, a
charter member of the
board of trustees, for help. His donation of $50,000 ($ today) saved the college from ruin. In 1886, in recognition of Bucknell's support of the college, the trustees voted unanimously to change the name of the University at Lewisburg to Bucknell University. Bucknell Hall, the first of several buildings given to the institution by Bucknell, was initially a
chapel and for more than a half century the site of student theatrical and musical performances. Today, it houses the Stadler Center for Poetry.
Continued expansion The 40 years from 1890 until 1930 saw a steady increase in the number of faculty members and students. When
the Depression brought a drop in enrollment in 1933, several members of the faculty were "loaned" to found a new institution: Bucknell Junior College in
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Today, that institution is a four-year university,
Wilkes University, independent of Bucknell since 1947. The depression era also saw the commissioning by President Homer Rainey (1931–35) of architect
Jens Larson to design Bucknell's master plan. Subsequent expansion of the institution still largely adheres to this plan. The post-War period saw a dramatic increase in higher education enrollment across the United States, thanks first to the
G.I. Bill and then to the
baby boom. Like other institutions, Bucknell's campus grew to accommodate a growing student body, and the college broke ground on many of the academic buildings that comprise upper campus. Chief among these is the
Ellen Clarke Bertrand Library, commissioned in 1946 under Bucknell President and former Governor of Maine
Horace Hildreth and opened in 1951. Other major additions from the building spree of the 1950s and 60s include the Olin Science Building and Coleman, Marts and Swartz Halls.
Building for the future A growing reputation and changing expectations for undergraduate education in the United States called for improved facilities. The 1970s brought construction of the Elaine Langone Center, the Gerhard Fieldhouse and the Computer Center. In the 1980s, the capacity of Bertrand Library was doubled, facilities for engineering were substantially renovated, and the Weis Center for the Performing Arts was inaugurated. Heading into the 21st century, new facilities for the sciences included the renovation of the Olin Science Building, the construction of the Rooke Chemistry Building in 1990 and a new Biology Building in 1991. The Weis Music Building was inaugurated in 2000, the O'Leary Building for Psychology and Geology opened in the fall of 2002, the new Kenneth Langone Recreational Athletic Center opened in 2003 and the Breakiron Engineering Building in 2004. The campus further expanded to its south, as the Academic complex (comprising Academic West and East) opened in 2013 and 2019, respectively. Holmes Hall, the new home for the Freeman College of Management, opened in 2021.
COVID-19 pandemic On March 10, 2020, President
Bravman announced the spring 2020 semester would be completed via
remote learning due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. The fall 2020 and spring 2021 semesters were completed with students and faculty onsite. ==Campus==