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Dixie College and Dixie State College Faculty Honor Lectures

 Collection
Identifier: UA-064

Scope and Contents

This collection contains one copy of "Who Counts in Dixie History" booklet from the Dixie College Faculty Honor Lecture (1994), two copies of the "Washington County: Past, Present, and Predictions" booklet from the Dixie College 5th Annual Faculty Honor Lecture (1998), and one copy of "Nathan Hale: One Life" booklet from the Dixie State College 14th Annual Faculty Honor Lecture (2008).

Dates

  • Creation: 1994 - 2008

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open and freely available to researchers during Special Collections’ hours or by appointment. Researchers must complete an Application for Use and show a photo ID prior to accessing materials.

Conditions Governing Use

Copyright restrictions may apply. Permission to publish, quote, or reproduce must be obtained from the Special Collections and Archives.

Biographical / Historical

Utah Tech University was established in 1911 as St. George Stake Academy with the original campus on the northwest corner of Main Street and 100 South in Saint George, Utah. High school classes were taught in the original building for the campus, which still stands, and is currently the St. George Children’s Museum. In 1913, the first class of thirteen students graduated from St. George Stake Academy when the population of Saint George was about 1,700 people. The name for the institution changed to Dixie Normal College a few years after its creation, in 1918, when college classes to train new teachers were added to the course offerings. The name was changed to Dixie College in 1923 until 1933 as more college programs were offered. In 1934, the name changed slightly to Dixie Junior College as oversight was transferred to the state. The school’s name legally changed back to Dixie College in 1971, although it may have operated under this name as early as 1952. The campus moved to its current location at 225 South 700 East in 1963, which is when the Dixie High School and Dixie College became separate entities. Then, in 2000, the name was changed to Dixie State College of Utah as bachelor degrees were added. The school became Dixie State University in 2013 as the school was approved to offer graduate degrees. In 2020, Saint George had a population of about 95,300, and the university had approximately 12,000 students enrolled in over 125 programs including masters, bachelors, associates, certificates, and endorsements. The school’s name was once again updated in 2022 to Utah Tech University to strongly identify the location and academic mission of the university outside of Utah.

Full Extent

1 Files (1 file in a gray letter document case)

Language of Materials

English

Metadata Rights Declarations

  • License: This record is made available under an Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International Creative Commons license.

Abstract

This collection contains four programs for the Faculty Honor Lecture event at Dixie College and Dixie State College, dated 1994-2008. The Faculty Honor Lecture was an event where a series of lecturers spoke about various topics, including the history of Washington County and other significant historical topics in American history.

Arrangement

This collection was arranged in chronological order.

Source

Status
Completed
Author
Madeline White, Special Collections Paraprofessional
Date
May 2024
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • June 2024: Changed titles to be shorter. MW 6/24/2024

Repository Details

Part of the Utah Tech University Special Collections and Archives Repository

Contact:
330 Holland Centennial Commons
225 South 700 East
Saint George 84770 United States
(435) 634-2087