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About 'florida state university location'|Campus Florida Map State University







About 'florida state university location'|Campus Florida Map State University








The               roots               of               Florida               State               University               can               be               traced               back               to               1857,               when               it               began               operating               as               the               West               Florida               Seminary.

During               the               next               150               years,               West               Florida               Seminary               changed               its               name               and               its               student               base               several               times,               until               it               became               the               institution               it               is               today.

Find               out               more               about               the               history               of               the               Florida               State               University.

The               college               that               is               now               called               the               Florida               State               University               was               originally               called               the               West               Florida               Seminary,               when               it               opened               in               1857,               12               years               after               Florida               became               a               state.

Its               opening               was               the               culmination               of               six               years               of               work               and               planning.

Tallahassee               was               chosen               as               the               location               for               the               school               because               of               its               'salubrious               climate               and...intelligent,               refined,               and               moral               community."
               When               the               West               Florida               Seminary               opened,               it               offered               post-secondary               education               to               men.

It               became               a               coeducational               school,               when               it               began               admitting               women               in               1858.

With               this               name,               classes               were               offered               through               1863,               when               the               name               was               changed               to               The               Florida               Military               and               Collegiate               Institute,               in               recognition               of               the               military               cadets               who               were               now               being               trained               there.
               After               the               end               of               the               Civil               War,               the               school               grew               and               changed;               the               first               diplomas               were               given               out               in               1884.

Thirteen               years               later,               in               1897,               it               was               recognizably               a               liberal               arts               college,               the               first               in               Florida.
               The               Florida               Military               and               Collegiate               Institute               became               the               Florida               State               College               in               1901.

At               that               time               it               was               a               4-year               school               with               four               departments:               the               college,               a               school               for               teachers,               a               school               of               music,               and               the               College               Academy.

It               was               now               able               to               offer               a               Master               of               Arts               degree,               and               awarded               the               first               one               in               1902.

The               student               population               numbered               252.
               In               1905               six               schools               in               the               state               of               Florida               were               consolidated               into               just               two,               one               of               them               the               Florida               State               College,               the               other               the               newly               established               University               of               Florida               in               Gainesville,               which               admitted               men               only.

The               Florida               State               College               became               a               women's               school,               and               its               name               was               changed               to               the               Florida               Female               College,               only               to               change               yet               again               four               years               later               to               the               Florida               State               College               for               Women.
               The               school               grew               during               the               1930s               and               1940s,               and               in               1947               it               once               again               became               a               coeducational               school,               and               received               its               final               name,               Florida               State               University.

The               student               body               now               numbered               just               over               4,000;               a               mascot,               the               Seminole,               was               chosen,               the               Flying               High               Circus               was               created,               and               a               football               program               was               brought               back.
               The               Doak               Campbell               Stadium,               named               for               school               president               Doak               Campbell,               who               oversaw               the               switch               from               the               Florida               State               College               for               Women               to               the               Florida               State               University,               was               built               in               1950.

Long-time               football               coach               Bobby               Bowden               joined               the               team               in               1976,               and               in               the               years               since,               has               led               the               Seminoles               to               more               than               20               Bowl               Games.
               Several               new               schools               and               programs               were               added               during               the               1950s,               and               the               first               Ph.D.

was               handed               out               in               1952.

The               Florida               State               University               currently               has               17               schools               and               colleges,               located               in               513               buildings               situated               on               1,432               acres.

The               student               body               numbers               more               than               30,000.


               Florida               State               University               has               been               recognized               and               honored               in               many               areas:               'The               Atlantic'               named               its               creative               writing               program               in               the               top               five               in               the               nation;               US               News               &               World               Report               rated               its               graduate               nuclear               physics               program               8th,               and               the               law               school's               environmental               law               program               10th               in               the               nation.
               The               National               High               Magnetic               Field               Laboratory,               funded               by               the               National               Science               Foundation               calls               Florida               State               University               home,               as               does               the               Center               for               Advanced               Power               Systems,               which               is               supported               by               United               States               Departments               of               Defense               and               Energy.
               Many               notable               people               have               graduated               from               The               Florida               State               University,               including               Max               Mayfield,               former               director               of               the               National               Hurricane               Center,               actor               Robert               Urich,               NFL               players               Laveranues               Coles               and               Sebastian               Janikowski,               2-sport               athlete               Deion               Sanders,               and               Florida               Governor               Charlie               Crist.
               Sources:               
               The               Florida               State               University               www.fsu.edu






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