Climbing the Hill at Kent
A wooded ridge was the central topographic feature of the 53-acre farm William S. Kent gifted to the state when the Normal School Commission selected Kent as the site of the new northeastern normal school in 1910.
When the newly appointed Board of Trustees met on July 17, 1911, the trustees named it СƬƵ Normal School in appreciation for the gift, making it the first state-assisted campus in Ohio to bear the name of an individual.
At that memorable meeting, the trustees also named John Edward McGilvrey as the school’s first president and chose Cleveland architect George Francis Hammond to draft a campus master plan and design its original buildings.
With Hammond, McGilvrey envisioned a semicircle of classical revival buildings at the top of the hill, originally known as “Normal Hill.” However, as construction was underway in 1911 on the first two buildings, Lowry and Merrill halls, McGilvrey grew impatient. He began extension classes in 25 northeastern Ohio communities and marked the start of СƬƵ’s regional campus system.
As McGilvrey hired the first faculty members in 1912, Merrill Hall was still under construction. It opened for the first summer term held on campus on May 19, 1913, with 47 students and 20 faculty members. On June 16, a second term began with 290 students registered. Lowry Hall, originally built as a women’s dormitory, didn’t have enough rooms, so McGilvrey appealed to local homeowners to absorb the overflow.
Impressed with what was happening at Kent, the Ohio General Assembly appropriated funds for three more buildings: Kent Hall, the Administration Building and a power plant.