A Mammoth Find at NTSC!

Posted by & filed under 1950's.

News

1953 was a big year for paleontological finds near Denton. Excavation related to the construction of the Garza-Little Elm dam (Lewisville Lake) revealed many significant ancient remains. A Denton County Archaeology Society formed after the discovery of a mastodon tooth cap near Lake Dallas. Society members joined together to locate and save artifacts from inundation… Read more »

Beulah Harriss and Joseph William “Dad” Pender

Posted by & filed under 1910's, 1920's.

Beulah Harris and the Green Jackets lend their support to the FB Team 1926cropped

Beulah Harriss, moved from Nebraska to Texas to join the faculty of the North Texas State Normal College (now the University of North Texas) in 1914.  She was the first woman hired as a member of the athletic faculty. Ms. Harriss supervised the women’s athletic program, including coaching women’s basketball.  The women’s team played three… Read more »

THIS SHALL NOT PASS!!: The 1986 Merger Proposal of NTSU and TWU

Posted by & filed under 1980's.

NT Daily, July 3, 2986

It was not the first time that politicians in Austin were considering the merger of North Texas State University (now UNT) and TWU. On several occasions before, the existence of two comprehensive state universities in one small north Texas city had become a subject of heated debate at the State Capitol. In times of economic… Read more »

“Get a man, while you can!” Celebrating Old Maid’s Day

Posted by & filed under 1950's.

Women at one of the Old Maid’s events including two of the oldest ladies, sisters May and Julia Marshall of Strawn on the right.  In 1954 two prizes were given out to the oldest (Miss May Marshall, 79) and the one from the greatest distance (Miss Lily Gulvady from India, not pictured).

A group of women in Denton started Old Maid’s Day in 1950 to get “recognition, not menfolks.” It all began when Miss Dorothy Babb, a Latin and English teacher at North Texas State College (NTSC, now the University of North Texas) was tired of buying gifts for weddings, Mother’s Day, and baby showers. She complained… Read more »

Annie Webb Blanton: Influential Educator

Posted by & filed under 1900's, 1910's.

annie webb blantoncropped

When Annie Webb Blanton, an early twentieth-century Texas feminist and educational reformer, moved to Denton in 1901 to join the faculty of North Texas State Normal College (a predecessor to the University of North Texas), the town had 4,000 residents. Over the next seventeen years Blanton witnessed Denton’s population double in response to the opportunities… Read more »

Alvin Owsley: Early Supporter of the Normal College

Posted by & filed under 1890's.

A C Owsley and Sally Burns

Alvin Clark Owsley (1856-1938) was born in Missouri, received most of his schooling in California, moved back to Missouri to study law, and moved to Denton, Texas in 1873 to be a public school teacher. A year later he was the examiner of teachers for Denton County, remaining in that position until 1884. Owsley continued… Read more »

Early Social Clubs at UNT

Posted by & filed under 1910's, 1920's, 1930's.

geezlescropped

The University of North Texas has been home to a rich and vibrant Greek community since 1952. Currently, UNT supports over 40 fraternities and sororities under four councils; organization members have made a significant impact in areas such as community service and academic excellence. But even before 1952, UNT students organized and gathered in various… Read more »

A New University in North Texas

Posted by & filed under 1890's.

The 1894 student body seated on the steps of the Normal Building, the first permanent university structure. This building was located at the corner of Hickory and Avenue B.

On September 16, 1890, a man dressed in a frock coat and top hat stood on the steps of the Denton County Courthouse and addressed the citizens of Denton, Texas.  President Joshua Crittenden Chilton’ s speech opened the Texas Normal College and Teachers Training Institute, now known as the University of North Texas.  The new… Read more »