
The History of the University of North Carolina
In North
Carolina, all the public educational institutions that grant baccalaureate
degrees are part of the University of North Carolina. The University
of North Carolina at Greensboro is one of 16 constituent institutions
of the multi-campus state university.
The University
of North Carolina, chartered by the NC General Assembly in 1789, was
the first public university in the United States to open its doors and
the only one to graduate students in the eighteenth century. The first
class was admitted in Chapel Hill in 1795. For the next 136 years, the
only campus of the University of North Carolina was at Chapel Hill.
In 1877,
the NC General Assembly began sponsoring additional institutions of
higher education, diverse in origin and purpose. Five were historically
black institutions, and another was founded to educate American Indians.
Several were created to prepare teachers for the public schools. Others
had a technological emphasis. One is a training school for performing
artists.
In 1931,
the NC General Assembly redefined the University of North Carolina
to include three state-supported institutions: the campus at Chapel
Hill (now the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), North Carolina
State College (now North Carolina State University at Raleigh), and
Woman's College (now the University of North Carolina at Greensboro).
The new multicampus University operated with one board of trustees and
one president. By 1969, three additional campuses had joined the University
through legislative action: the University of North Carolina at Charlotte,
the University of North Carolina at Asheville, and the University of
North Carolina at Wilmington.
In 1971,
the General Assembly passed legislation bringing into the University
of North Carolina the state's ten remaining public senior institutions,
each of which had until then been legally separate: Appalachian State
University, East Carolina University, Elizabeth City State University,
Fayetteville State University, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical
State University, North Carolina Central University, the North Carolina
School of the Arts, Pembroke State University, Western Carolina University,
and Winston-Salem State University. This action created the current
16-campus University. (In 1985, the North Carolina School of Science
and Mathematics, a residential high school for gifted students, was
declared an affiliated school of the University; and in 1996, Pembroke
State University was renamed The University of North Carolina at Pembroke
through Legislative action.)
The UNC
Board of Governors is the policy-making body legally charged with "the
general determination, control, supervision, management, and governance
of all affairs of the constituent institutions." It elects the
president, who administers the University. The 32 voting members of
the Board of Governors are elected by the General Assembly for four-year
terms. Former board chairmen and board members who are former governors
of North Carolina may continue to serve for limited periods as nonvoting
members emeriti. The president of the UNC Association of Student Governments,
or that student's designee, is also a non-voting member.
Each of
the 16 constituent institutions is headed by a chancellor, who
is chosen by the Board of Governors on the president's nomination and
is responsible to the president. Each institution has a board of trustees,
consisting of eight members elected by the Board of Governors, four
appointed by the governor, and the president of the student body, who
serves ex -officio. (The NC School of the Arts has two additional ex-officio
members.) Each board of trustees holds extensive powers over academic
and other operations of its institution on delegation from the Board
of Governors.
|