1864
ÁùºÏ±¦µä entered statehood with a constitution providing for a state university.
1873
Governor L.R. Bradley signed a legislative bill locating the University in Elko.
1874
University Preparatory School opened in Elko with seven students.
1885
Governor Jewett Adams signed a legislative bill moving the University to Reno. Morrill Hall opened.
1886
The University formally reopened as a preparatory school in the new Morrill Hall on the Reno campus. Classes began with 75 students enrolled.
1887
The administration of President LeRoy D. Brown, the University’s 1st president, began.
1887
Fifty students enrolled in the 1887-1888 academic year for the first year of college-level instruction.
1887
President Brown and Hannah K. Clapp began as faculty, hiring two additional faculty members within the first year.
1888
The School of Mines launched, with Robert D. Jackson, Ph.D., as director.
1888
Following the provisions of the Morrill Act, and with the support of Congress, the University established the Agricultural Experiment Station.
1890
Stephen A. Jones, the University’s 2nd president, began his term on January 6.
1891
Frederick Bristol, Henry Colman Cutting, and Frank Norcross received the first three college degrees in the School of Liberal Arts.
1891
McKissick Opera House in Reno hosted the first graduation exercises.
1892
Blanche Davis became the first woman to graduate from the University. Along with four other people, she received a Bachelor of Arts degree.
1892
The Schools of Mines and Agriculture graduated their first classes.
1893
The first issue of the student newspaper, The Student Record, appeared on October 19.
1894
Joseph Edward Stubbs, the University’s 3rd president, began his tenure on July 1st.
1894
Students formed the Independent Association of the University of ÁùºÏ±¦µä.
1894
University graduates organized the Alumni Association of the University of ÁùºÏ±¦µä.
1895
The Mining Analytical Laboratory launched an assay service for citizens of the state.
1896
The first freestanding dormitory, Lincoln Hall, opened as a men’s dormitory.
1896
Manzanita Hall opened as the first women’s dormitory.
1898
An intercollegiate men's football team began competing.
1889
This year marked the first appearance of the University’s yearbook, The Artemisia.
1899
The University adopted silver and blue as the school colors.
1899
Washoe County presented the University with a sixty-acre farm valued at $12,000 to be used in connection with the Agricultural Experiment Station.
1900
The University opened a school of commerce, making it the fourth university in the nation to offer a four-year business degree.
1900
With a final price tag of over $8,000, construction on the president's house was completed.
1902
Because of a possible smallpox epidemic, University leaders and local health officials required students living in the dormitory to stay on campus.
1903
Joseph Williams earned the first advanced degree from the University, a Master of Arts in Social Sciences.
1904
The University celebrated the 30th anniversary of its founding. Professor of Classics James E. Church edited a memorial volume for the event.
1906
The name of the University officially changed from ÁùºÏ±¦µä State University to the University of ÁùºÏ±¦µä.
1906
A devastating earthquake destroyed large parts of San Francisco, California, including the printers responsible for the year’s Artemisia yearbook.
1907
The University received a bronze statue of Comstock pioneer John W. Mackay created by Gutzon Borglum commissioned by Mackay’s family.
1907
The department of Physics began offering classes.