Eugene Emerson organized a combination
grade school and
Bible school in 1913 as Idaho Holiness School. It was renamed twice in 1916, first to Northwest Holiness College and then to Northwest Nazarene College, and then became a
liberal arts college in 1917 with degree-granting authority from the Idaho state Board of Education. While the college's first president, elected in 1916, was
H. Orton Wiley of
Pasadena University,
Fred J. Shields filled in as acting president before leaving for the
Eastern Nazarene College in 1919, while Wiley finished his
graduate work. Under
Russell V. DeLong, Northwest Nazarene College (NNC) received
educational accreditation as a two-year school in 1931 and as a four-year school in 1937,
Master's degree programs were added in the 1960s and 1970s. It was renamed Northwest Nazarene University (NNU) in 1999. Northwest Nazarene University was granted an exception to
Title IX in 2014 which allows it to legally discriminate against LGBT students for religious reasons. ==Affiliations==