Northwestern Bible and Missionary Training School (1902–1944) Northwestern Theological Seminary (1935–1944) Northwestern Theological Seminary and the Bible School (1944–1956) Northwestern College (1956–2013)
The predecessor to the current university was first established in 1902 as the Northwestern Bible and Missionary Training School by William Bell Riley, a pastor at First Baptist Church of Minneapolis.[1] The school separately opened a seminar, the Northwestern Theological Seminary, in 1933 before merging into one singular unit, the Northwestern Theological Seminary and the Bible School in 1944.
In 1951, the school began offering baccalaureate programs and, five years later in 1956, changed its name to just Northwestern College.[2] The school briefly closed from 1966 to 1972 after failing to earn accreditation from the North Central Association, although it was able eventually reopen after the purchase of the former Nazareth Hall Preparatory Seminary from the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis and the sale of its former campus in Loring Park. Accreditation was finally received in 1978.[3]
UNW also owns a chain of radio stations across the Midwest and Eastern United States, broadcasting listener-supported Christian music and teaching programs. Noted evangelistBilly Graham served as the school's second president from 1948 to 1952.[4][5]
The college gained university status in 2013, officially becoming the University of Northwestern – St. Paul on July 1.
The university was granted an exemption to Title IX in 2016 which allows it to legally discriminate against LGBT students for religious reasons.[6][7]
Academics
The University of Northwestern offers over 65 areas of study,[8] 6 of which are through its FOCUS Adult Undergraduate Program. Northwestern offers five master's degrees.[9]
The Graduate Studies program offers the following graduate degrees:
In February 1949, the Northwestern Schools opened KTIS AM and KTIS-FM in the Twin Cities area, the first in a series of radio stations across the Upper Midwest.
University of Northwestern – St. Paul students operate a campus radio station, theMEL.fm, and a student television station. theMEL.fm is a station that broadcasts on KTIS-HD3 as well as a live Internet stream.
Music
Music ensembles at Northwestern include the Northwestern Choir, UNW Orchestra, Symphonic Band, Jazz Band, Con Brio Men's Chorus, Amata Women's Chorale, and numerous chamber ensembles. UNW Music degrees are accredited by the National Association of Schools of Music.
Since becoming a Division III member in 2008, the schools teams have earned bids to 32 NCAA Tournaments. In 2015 two University of Northwestern – St. Paul teams advanced to NCAA Sweet 16 appearances in men's basketball and women's volleyball. The Eagles volleyball team has advanced to ten of the last eleven NCAA Tournaments, 2 Sweet 16's (2015 & 2017), a Final Four (2016), and was a recipient of the NCAA's Sportsmanship Award for all divisions in 2009. The men's basketball team has also advanced to nine of the last ten NCAA national tournaments. The University of Northwestern – St. Paul became the first college football team in modern history to play two games on the same day. On October 8, 2005, under head coach Kirk Talley, the Eagles defeated Trinity Bible College 59–0 in a 12 noon kickoff before defeating Macalester College 6.5 miles down Snelling Avenue at 7 p.m. that night, 47–14.[12] The UNW football team has won two NCCAA Victory Bowls in 2000 and 2008.
The University of Northwestern – St. Paul men's basketball team won the 2010 NCCAA Division I Men's Basketball National Tournament, defeating King College (Tennessee - NCAA Division II), for its first ever Division I championship by a score of 58–54.[13]
University of Northwestern – St. Paul athletic and recreation facilities [14] consist of the Ericksen Center (1996) (volleyball, men's and women's basketball) and the Reynolds Field complex (2014), which houses the Johnson Tennis Complex and 100 percent artificially turfed fields for baseball, softball, football, soccer and lacrosse. The outdoor facility also offers a running and jumping pit for track and field participants, a stadium, and four locker rooms.
Notable alumni
Benjamin Fernandes (B.A.'14) - award-winning speaker, entrepreneur and former national television presenter.