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Northeastern State University

Public university in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, US

Northeastern State University

Public university in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, US

FieldValue
nameNortheastern State University
native_nameᎤᏴᏢᎢ ᎧᎸᎬ ᎢᏗᏜ ᏍᎦᏚᎩ ᏗᏕᏠᏆᏍᏗᎢ
native_name_langchr
imageNortheastern State University seal.png
image_size200
former_namesNortheastern State Normal School (1909–1921)
Northeastern State Teachers College (1921–1939)
Northeastern State College (1939–1974)
Northeastern Oklahoma State University (1974–1985)
mottoᎦᏟᏐᏗ. ᎢᏅ ᎠᎾᎩᏍᏗ. (Cherokee)
motto_langCherokee
mottoengGather Here. Go Far.
established
typePublic university
parentRegional University System of Oklahoma
presidentRodney Hanley
provostCarla Swearingen
students6,642 (fall 2024)
undergrad5,085 (fall 2024)
postgrad1,557 (fall 2024)
cityTahlequah
stateOklahoma
countryUnited States
coor
campus200 acre (Tahlequah)
colorsNSU green and gray
athletics_nicknameRiverHawks
mascotRowdy the RiverHawk
sporting_affiliationsNCAA Division II – The MIAA
website
logoNortheastern State University logo.svg
logo_size250

Northeastern State Teachers College (1921–1939) Northeastern State College (1939–1974) Northeastern Oklahoma State University (1974–1985)

Northeastern State University (NSU; ) is a public university whose main campus is in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. The university also has campuses in Muskogee and Broken Arrow. Northeastern is Oklahoma's oldest institution of higher learning and one of the oldest west of the Mississippi River. Tahlequah is home to the capital of the Cherokee Nation and about 25% of NSU students identify themselves as American Indian. The university has many courses focused on Native American linguistics, and offers Cherokee language education as a major. Some classes are taught in Cherokee for first language speakers.

History

On May 7, 1851, the Cherokee Nation founded the Cherokee National Female Seminary at Tahlequah, the same year that it opened a male seminary in its territory. This was after its removal to Indian Territory and part of its building institutions to support its future.

On March 6, 1909, after statehood, the State Legislature of Oklahoma passed an act providing for the creation and location of Northeastern State Normal School at Tahlequah, Oklahoma for the training of teachers. For this purpose, it purchased from the Cherokee Tribal Government the building, land, and equipment of the Cherokee Female Seminary.

In 1921, the name was changed to Northeastern State Teachers College as it had expanded to a full four-year curriculum. In the 1950s Northeastern emerged as a comprehensive state college, broadening its curriculum at the baccalaureate level to encompass liberal arts subjects and adding a fifth-year program designed to prepare master teachers for elementary and secondary schools.

With addition of graduate-degree programs, in 1974, the Oklahoma Legislature authorized changing the name of the institution from Northeastern State College to Northeastern Oklahoma State University; in 1985 it authorized a change in name to Northeastern State University. In 1979, NSU opened its College of Optometry.

In the early 21st century, NSU is the fourth-largest university in Oklahoma.{{cite web |publisher=NSU| access-date=February 20, 2008 | url=http://www.nsuok.edu/GettingStarted/NSUsHeritage.aspx

Presidents

  • Albert Sydney Wyly, 1909
  • Frank Redd, 1909–1911
  • Frank E. Buck, 1911–1912
  • W.E. Gill, 1912–1914
  • George W. Gable, 1914–1919
  • William T. Ford, 1919–1923
  • Monroe P. Hammond, 1923–1935
  • J.M. Hackler (acting), 1935–1936
  • John Samuel Vaughan, 1936–1951
  • Louis H. Bally (acting), 1951
  • Harrell E. Garrison, 1951–1970
  • Robert E. Collier, 1970–1977
  • Elwin Fite (acting), 1977–1978
  • W. Roger Webb, 1978–1997
  • Larry B. Williams, 1997–2007
  • Kim Cherry (interim), 2007–2008
  • Don Betz, 2008–2011
  • Martin Tadlock (interim), 2011
  • Steve Turner, 2012–2023
  • Rodney Hanley, 2023–present

Tahlequah campus

The Tahlequah campus, which spans over 200 acre, was developed on the grounds of the Cherokee Female Seminary. The original building for the seminary is now used as Seminary Hall, an academic building. The campus has numerous classroom, laboratory, residential, and athletic facilities. In recent years the university constructed a $10 million Science Center, funded by a bond issued by the university.

NSU offers 69 undergraduate degree programs, 18 graduate degree programs, and 13 pre-professional programs in five colleges (Business & Technology, Liberal Arts, Education, Optometry, and Health & Science Professions). The student-to-faculty ratio is 26 to 1, and in the Spring of 2008 the total enrollment for the Tahlequah Campus was 6,216. There is also a distance-learning program, by which students who cannot attend the university due to work or family obligations can complete courses via the Internet or videoconferencing.

The W. Roger Webb Educational Technology Center

Athletics

Main article: Northeastern State RiverHawks

The Northeastern State (NSU) athletic teams are called the RiverHawks. The university is a member of the Division II ranks of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), primarily competing in the Mid-America Intercollegiate Athletics Association (MIAA) for most of its sports since the 2012–13 academic year; while its men's soccer team competes in the Great American Conference (GAC). The RiverHawks previously competed as an NCAA D-II Independent during the 2011–12 school year; in the D-II Lone Star Conference (LSC) from 1997–98 to 2010–11; and in the Oklahoma Intercollegiate Conference (OIC) of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) from 1974–75 to 1996–97.

NSU competes in 12 intercollegiate sports: Men's sports include baseball, basketball, football, golf, soccer and tennis; while women's sports include basketball, golf, soccer, softball, spirit squads and tennis.

Accomplishments

In 2003, the men's basketball team won the NCAA Division II National Championship, beating Kentucky Wesleyan 75–64.

Name change

On May 23, 2006, NSU announced that it would drop "Redmen" and select a new mascot. The change was made proactively in response to the 2005 NCAA Native American mascot decision. On November 14, 2006, the university announced its new athletic name as the RiverHawks.

Campus life

Race and ethnicityTotalEconomic diversity
White{{bartable44%2background:cyan}}
American Indian/Alaska Native{{bartable22%2background:yellow}}
Two or more races{{bartable15%2background:violet}}
Hispanic{{bartable8%2background:green}}
Black{{bartable5%2background:purple}}
Asian{{bartable3%2background:orange}}
International student{{bartable2%2background:#008080}}
Unknown{{bartable2%2background:grey}}
Low-income{{bartable46%2background:red}}
Affluent{{bartable54%2background:black}}
The Iguana Cafe, right next to campus.

Greek life

Northeastern State University has several fraternities and sororities located on the Tahlequah campus.

Jazz Lab

The NSU Jazz Ensemble performs with regional, national, and international guest artists at the Jazz Lab every year.

Branch campuses

Muskogee

NSU's Muskogee campus opened in 1993 as a 27700 sqft facility on 23 acre. The campus offers upper-level and graduate courses in education, business, general studies, nursing, and industrial management. In 2001 the NSU Muskogee opened the Mike Synar Center in honor of former U.S. representative Mike Synar.

Broken Arrow

NSU's Broken Arrow campus opened in 2002 with about 1,000 students. Funding for the campus came from a 0.5% sales tax approved by Broken Arrow voters. The first phase of the campus included an administration building, a maintenance facility, and two classroom buildings. In 2004 the campus began a $26 million expansion made possible by Tulsa County's Vision 2025, which also funded Tulsa's new BOK Center. The expansion doubled the size of the campus and added a library and science and classroom buildings. It allowed room for up to another 5,000 students. Construction was completed in the fall of 2007.

Notable alumni

Main article: List of Northeastern State University alumni

Notes

References

References

  1. "OUR HERITAGE". Northeastern State University.
  2. "NSU's Heritage | Northeastern State University".
  3. "Common Data Set 2024-25". Northeastern State University.
  4. "Northeastern State University Graphic Standards".
  5. (October 4, 2024). "NSU to celebrate centennial anniversary of first homecoming". Northeastern State University.
  6. "General Information". NSU.
  7. Agnew, Brad. ''Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture''. "Northeastern State University."[http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/N/NO014.html] {{Webarchive. link. (November 19, 2012)
  8. "Cherokee". Ethnologue.
  9. "Tadlock named as NSU interim president". NSU.
  10. "Grand Opening Set For NSU Science Center". NSU.
  11. (September 2018). "Opening Enrollment Data". NSU.
  12. "It's Official – It's the NSU RiverHawks". NSU.
  13. Corbitt, Ken. (August 23, 2012). "Newcomers add strength to rugged MIAA". [[The Topeka Capital-Journal]].
  14. Toppmeyer, Blake. (July 6, 2010). "Commentary: What a 16-member MIAA would mean - Maryville, MO". Maryville Daily Forum.
  15. Toppmeyer, Blake. "MIAA adds 2, more on horizon - Maryville, MO". Maryville Daily Forum.
  16. (March 29, 2003). "Redmen go 9-for-14 from 3-point range in second half - Men's College Basketball - ESPN". ESPN.com.
  17. "NSU Announces Plans to Find a New Mascot". NSU.
  18. "College Scorecard: Northeastern State University". [[United States Department of Education]].
  19. "Interfraternity Council".
  20. "Panhellenic Council".
  21. (May 27, 2021). "Native NSU students want 'forgiveness' monument removed".
  22. "Other NSU Campuses". NSU.
  23. (1996–2012). "Northeastern State University - Broken Arrow". NSU.
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