Laserfiche WebLink
A Brief History of IU South Bend <br />As the oldest and largest regional campus of Indiana University, IU South Bend’s mission is fo- <br />cused on regional impact, partnership, and transformation. IU South Bend acknowledges and <br />honors the Indigenous communities native to this region, and recognizes that the campus was <br />built on the homelands and resources of the Potawatomi, Peoria, Myaamia, Kickapoo, <br />Kaskaskia, Mascouten and Meskwaki people: the past, present, and future caretakers of this <br />land. <br />IU South Bend’s history is a mix of tradition and innovation. <br />******** <br /> <br />Indiana University offered its first extension class in South Bend during the spring semester of <br />1916. There were occasional classes from 1922 onward, but an organized extension program <br />began in 1933. Before World War II, most young men from South Bend and Mishawaka went <br />into factory jobs even before graduating from high school, while young women worked in offic- <br />es or retail stores, or settled early into raising a family. Higher education was largely for children <br />of families which could afford the cost of tuition, room and board at a residential college far <br />from home. The two well-known Catholic colleges located just outside the city limits enrolled <br />few students from the local community. <br />The IU extension program consisted almost entirely of evening courses at Central High School <br />in downtown South Bend, taught chiefly by local high school teachers who held advanced de- <br />grees. Enrollment reached about 500 before the outbreak of World War II, and all courses were <br />at the freshman and sophomore level, because it was assumed that students would somehow <br />find the time and money to complete their degrees at the home campus in Bloomington. Re- <br />turning veterans taking advantage of the G.I. Bill boosted credit enrollment to 1100 by 1950, <br />and there was also a popular program of non-credit classes and lectures. <br />By the mid-1950s, IU President Herman B Wells developed a new system of "regional campus- <br />es" for South Bend, Gary and Fort Wayne, all with new buildings to replaced crowded borrowed <br />and rented facilities. The South Bend-Mishawaka Center opened on its riverside site in 1961, <br />with some 1500 students and a small full-time faculty as well as a much larger number of ad- <br />junct lecturers, but still limited to a two-year transfer program. Not until 1965 did the Indiana <br />General Assembly authorize IU to offer degree programs at its regional campuses. The first de- <br />grees were awarded locally in 1967. Rapid growth in degree programs, faculty and facilities <br />quickly followed, and Indiana University at South Bend (renamed in 1968 and generally called <br />IUSB thereafter) enrolled more than 5,000 students by the early 1970s, when its expansion <br />slowed. <br />Lester M. Wolfson led the campus from 1964 until 1987, emphasizing programs in the liberal <br />arts, although there was a substantial enrollment in Business and Education, which offered <br />masters as well as undergraduate degrees. By purchase and new construction, as well as the <br />closure of several city streets, by the early 1990s IUSB achieved the image of a traditional <br />campus, with a central landscaped mall. Not until 2008 did the campus open its first long- <br />desired student housing, located across the St. Joseph River and reached by an elegant pe- <br />destrian bridge which became its most distinctive visual symbol. In 2016 Indiana University <br />South Bend has an enrollment exceeding 7,500 and awards nearly a thousand 'bachelors' and <br />'masters' degrees each year. <br /> <br />Patrick J. Furlong, <br />Professor emeritus of History <br /> <br />Alison Stankrauff, <br />former IU South Bend Archivist <br /> <br />1st Graduation Class—1967 <br />Indiana University South Bend Archives and Special Collections <br />Professor Harold Zisla teaching at <br />art class at Indiana University at <br />South Bend in 1979. Zisla is one of <br />several IU South Bend faculty who <br />have received a Sagamore of the <br />Wabash award for distinguished ser- <br />vice -- the highest distinction award- <br />ed in the state of Indiana. <br />Indiana University South Bend Archives <br />and Special Collections <br />Letterman Club at IU <br />South Bend, 1970s <br />Indiana University South Bend Archives <br />and Special Collections