Higher education has played a prominent part in the city's history. 's Old Main
Hamline University (1854) Hamline was founded and named after Methodist Bishop
Leonidas Lent Hamline, who provided
USD $25,000 of his own money to launch the school. The university opened in
Red Wing, Minnesota, with the premise that the school would eventually move to
Saint Paul. A statue of the bishop, sculpted by the late professor of art
Michael Price, stands on campus. In 1869, the university shut down its operations after enrollment dropped drastically due to the
Civil War. The first building at the Red Wing site was torn down in 1872. A new building opened in 1880 in Saint Paul's Midway neighborhood housing 113 students. The building burned in 1883, and the following year, a new building was developed: Old Main, Hamline's oldest remaining building. In 1917 Hamline actively responded to the call of
World War I by incorporating an Army Training Corps at the university. More buildings developed after
World War II. By 1928, Hamline consisted of Old Main (classrooms and administration), Manor House (women's residence hall), a Methodist church, and Goheen Hall (men's residence hall). Hamline faced tough challenges during the U.S. economic depression of the early 1930s. After World War II, Hamline's choir and theater department became a musical reference in Minnesota. The choir would eventually become nationally renowned, and would travel overseas. By 1950, enrollment surpassed 1000 students, and the board of directors decided on further development. New developments included two new residential halls (Sorin and Drew halls), a cultural center (Bush Student Center), a new carpentry center (VanHemert Hall) a new arts center, and a new science center (Drew Hall of Science). All of these projects were completed in the mid-1960s.
Macalester College (1885) had its beginnings due to the efforts of the Reverend Dr.
Edward Duffield Neill, who had founded two schools in Saint Paul and nearby
Minneapolis which were named after M.W. Baldwin, a
locomotive builder and friend of Neill's. With the intention of turning his Saint Paul Baldwin School into a college, Neill turned to Charles Macalester, a businessman from
Philadelphia, for sponsorship. Macalester donated a building near
Saint Anthony Falls, and the college was chartered in 1874. The college moved to its present location in 1885 after building an endowment and seeking the help of the
Presbyterian Church. The college first admitted women in 1893, and despite being affiliated with a religious institution, remained open to students of other faiths. Macalester was largely carried through financial hardship and brought to prominence by Dr. James Wallace, father of
DeWitt Wallace. Wallace was acting president of the college from 1894 to 1900, president from 1900 to 1906, and professor until just before his death in 1939. After
World War II, the college developed a reputation for
internationalism under the presidency of
Charles J. Turck (later the namesake of Turck Hall), who recruited overseas and created a more diverse student body. Macalester continued to develop into the 1990s, building its endowment and adding new facilities and equipment. The
University of St. Thomas (1885) began as an all-male, Catholic seminary.
John Ireland,
archbishop of Saint Paul and Minneapolis started the Saint Thomas Aquinas seminary, which became a
liberal arts college in 1894. A gift from local railroad tycoon
James J. Hill provided funds to establish the Saint Paul Seminary apart from the college. The College of Saint Thomas became a military-based school for undergraduates in 1906 and awarded its first academic degrees in 1910. Before that, the school gave out two-year diplomas in commercial and classical programs. In 1915, the college and Saint Thomas Military Academy for high school students split into two institutions and in 1965 the academy moved to
Mendota Heights, Minnesota. The college later dropped its military distinction in 1922. From the late 1920s through the mid-1930s, the
Holy Cross Fathers, who run the
University of Notre Dame, controlled the college's administration. The
diocese called those priests in to help with the school's financial problems; they were known as a crisis intervention team of sorts for parochial schools of that time. During
World War II, St. Thomas served as a training base for naval officers, which kept the school open when men who would have attended college were fighting in the war. After the war, in 1948, the college established 'Tom Town' on the eastern end of the lower quadrant, which is currently home to the O'Shaughnessey-Frey Library. Tom Town consisted of white, barrack-like housing units for faculty, students and their families. The units helped to meet housing demand after WWII.
Concordia University (1893) was founded by the
Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod. It is part of the 10-member
Concordia University System. It was founded to provide a Christian learning environment to high school students planning to go into professional ministries with the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod. Current enrollment is about 5,500 students who learn in St. Paul, Portland, Ore. and online. The first predecessor of
William Mitchell College of Law (1900) was founded by five prominent St. Paulites (
Hiram F. Stevens,
Ambrose Tighe,
Moses Clapp,
Thomas D. O'Brien, and Clarence Halbert). St. Paulites
Warren E. Burger and
John B. Sanborn, Jr. received their law degrees from William Mitchell, while fellow native
Harry Blackmun taught at the school prior to his judicial service. The Saint Paul campus of the
St. Catherine University (1905) was founded by the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Carondelet. It was named for Saint
Catherine of Alexandria.
Luther Seminary (1917) (
ELCA) was initially formed through the merger of three institutions in 1917 in conjunction with the merger of three Norwegian Lutheran Churches to create what was later named the
Evangelical Lutheran Church. The ELC became part of the ALC in 1960. ==Religion==