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Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology
Private university in Terre Haute, Indiana, US
Private university in Terre Haute, Indiana, US
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| name | Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology | |
| image | Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology seal.svg | |
| image_upright | 0.6 | |
| former_name | {{indented plainlist | |
| motto | ||
| mottoeng | Work and Knowledge | |
| established | ||
| type | Private university | |
| endowment | $285.26 million (2024) | |
| president | Robert A. Coons | |
| provost | Rick Stamper | |
| faculty | 196 (fall 2022) | |
| undergrad | 2,169 (fall 2022) | |
| postgrad | 19 (fall 2022) | |
| city | Terre Haute, Indiana | |
| country | United States | |
| campus | Suburban | |
| campus_size | 1300 acre | |
| sports_nickname | Fightin' Engineers | |
| mascot | Rosie the Elephant | |
| colors | Red and white | |
| athletics_affiliations | NCAA Division III – HCAC | |
| accreditation | Higher Learning Commission | |
| academic_affiliations | {{indented plainlist | |
| website | ||
| logo | Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology wordmark.svg | |
| logo_upright | 0.7 |
- Terre Haute School of Industrial Science (1874–1875)
- Rose Polytechnic Institute (1875–1971)
- AITU
- MUPEC
Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology (RHIT) is a private university in Terre Haute, Indiana, United States. It was founded in 1874 and houses twelve academic departments with over thirty undergraduate and graduate degree programs in science, engineering, technology, and engineering management, leading to bachelor's and master's degrees.
History==

Founding (1874–1917)
Founder Chauncey Rose, along with nine friends, created the Terre Haute School of Industrial Science in 1874 to provide technical training after encountering difficulties in recruiting local engineers during construction of his railroads. Mr. Rose donated the land, at 13th and Locust St., and the majority of the funds needed to start the new school. A year later, the cornerstone of the new institution was laid and the name was changed to Rose Polytechnic Institute despite the objections of the president of the board of managers and chief benefactor, Mr. Rose. The original campus was a single building, with no dormitories or recreational facilities.
The first class of 48 students entered in 1883, chosen from 58 applicants. All students were male, and 37 came from Indiana. All but four chose to major in mechanical engineering, with civil engineering and chemistry the only other majors. Nearly half of the original students would eventually leave their studies before graduation for several reasons, including poor grades or conduct. The first president was Charles O. Thompson, who modeled the education of Rose Polytechnic after eastern institutions, making it the first private engineering college west of the Alleghenies.
During the early years of the school, finance was a major concern. Many faculty and staff accepted pay cuts to stay at the institution.
In 1889 the school awarded what it considered to be the first chemical engineering degree in the country. In 1897 John B. Peddle was appointed professor of machine design, a post he held until 1933. In 1910 he published the Construction of Graphical Charts, which was the first book in the English language treating the art of graphical representation.
Relocation and war years (1917–1951)
In 1917, the school, having grown to more than 300 students, moved from 13th and Locust Street to a new site consisting of 123 acre of farmland east of town, donated by the Hulman family of Terre Haute. The old location was used continuously by the Vigo County School District from 1922 to 2013; as of 2020 the Terre Haute Boys & Girls Club occupies the site. The cornerstone of the new campus was laid in 1922. The new campus consisted of an academic building (now known as Moench Hall) and the institute's first dormitory, Deming Hall, both of which are still in use today.
Early life at Rose consisted of social fraternities, athletics, and the occasional "high jinks". A popular "high jinks" involved the sophomore class inviting the freshman class to a baseball game but were told to "leave their pipes with the nurse". The freshmen would produce the pipes at a specific time and a brawl would ensue.
During World War I, Rose Polytechnic trained students in technical subjects such as vehicle maintenance, and created a Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) Engineer unit which later became the Wabash Battalion Army ROTC program. During World War II the ROTC unit was replaced with an Army Specialized Training Unit and students could enter and graduate after every quarter to support the war effort. This enrollment schedule continued through the post-war years until 1951.
1960s–1970s
In recognition of the Hulman family's significant contributions and continued financial support, in particular a $15 million addition to the endowment, Rose Polytechnic was renamed Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology in 1971.
During the 1960s and 1970s, growth accelerated under president John A. Logan. Five new residence halls, a new student union, library, and a student recreation center were all constructed between 1963 and 1976. Permission was sought and received to increase the student population to 1000.
The quarterly cryptology journal Cryptologia was founded and published at RHIT from 1977 to 1995, at which time it was moved to the United States Military Academy.
1990s–present
For most of its history, Rose–Hulman was a men's only institution with some cooperative arrangements with Saint Mary Of-The-Woods College women's school and Indiana State University. It voted to become coeducational in 1991, with the first full-time women students starting in 1995.
In the decade following 1995, Rose–Hulman's growth was aided by a major fundraising campaign, "Vision to be the Best". Originally a $100 million campaign over ten years, it met its goal in half the time. The goal was extended to $200 million, and by the end of the campaign in June 2004, over $250 million had been raised. In 1997, many physical changes were made to the Rose–Hulman campus. Using a gift from the F. W. Olin Foundation, an expansion of Olin Hall known as the Olin Advanced Learning Center opened. Additionally, The John T Myers Center for Technological Research opened, with space for research laboratories, presentation rooms, classrooms, and academic offices. Shook Field House was replaced by the $20 million Sports and Recreation Center, which the National Football League's Indianapolis Colts used for their summer training camp from 1999 to 2010. In 2002, Hatfield Hall, a theater and alumni center, was opened.
After the 2004 retirement of institute president Samuel Hulbert, who had led the school since 1976, the college faced a leadership crisis. Soon after John J. Midgley arrived as the new president, rumors of conflict between Midgley and the administration started to circulate. Students, some wearing T-shirts proclaiming "Hit the Road Jack", held a rally calling for Midgley's resignation. Midgley resigned as president of the institute on June 11, 2005, less than a year into his presidency, after the faculty, staff, and Student Government Association approved votes of no confidence. During the succeeding academic year, Robert Bright, the chairman of the Board of Trustees, served as interim chief executive officer.
In 2006, Gerald Jakubowski, Vice President and Professor of Engineering at Arizona State University, became the 13th president of the institute, taking over July 1, 2006. He resigned in 2009, and the Board of Trustees elected Matt Branam to serve as interim president. He became president later that year. Branam died of a heart attack in April 2012, and the cabinet subsequently selected Robert A. Coons as the institute's interim president. In 2013, the Board of Trustees named James C. Conwell as the institute's 15th president, starting May 1, 2013.
In 2017, the school acquired 4.5 km2 from the former home of Mari Hulman George.
In 2018, Conwell resigned as president, and Senior Vice President Robert Coons was appointed to serve as acting president and then, in November 2018, as the university president. In the same year, the Hulman Memorial Student Union was renovated and renamed the Mussallem Union after the primary donors, the Mussallem Family. The Mussallem Union is centrally located on campus and provides student meeting spaces, dining areas, conference rooms, health services, bookstore, and administrative space.
In 2019, an expansion of the Branam Innovation Center (BIC), the Kremer Innovation Center (KIC) opened. The BIC and KIC provide rapid prototyping and manufacturing options to students, in addition to housing thermofluids and wet lab facilities, conference rooms, classrooms, and project team workshops.
In 2021, the New Academic Building was opened, with funding provided by a $15 million lead gift by an anonymous donor. The New Academic Building is home to the Engineering Design program, chemistry laboratory facilities, food science laboratory, breakout and study rooms, as well as a large atrium. Together with Moench Hall and the Myers Center, a new courtyard was opened. The New Academic building is the first building in the state of Indiana to apply for WELL recognition.
Campus





Most of the university property is in the Terre Haute city limits, though parts extend outside of the city limits. The university as a whole is in Lost Creek Township.
Academics
The curricula at RHIT concentrate on engineering and the natural sciences. The school's primary focus is undergraduate education, though there is a small graduate program for master's degree students. There are no doctoral programs. As of 2021, Rose–Hulman has 189 faculty members, 99% of whom hold a PhD. The current student-to-faculty ratio is 11:1. In 2022, 602 freshman students enrolled out of 3,353 accepted applicants.
Accreditation
Rose–Hulman has been regionally accredited by the Higher Learning Commission since 1916, with the most recent reaffirmation of accreditation having occurred in the 2014–2015 accreditation year. The Biomedical Engineering, Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Computer Engineering, Computer Science, Electrical Engineering, Engineering Design, Engineering Physics, Mechanical Engineering, Optical Engineering, and Software Engineering programs are accredited by The Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET).
In addition to institutional membership in the American Society for Engineering Education, the institute is also a member of the Association of Independent Technological Universities, a group formed to further the interests of private engineering schools.
Rankings and reputation
As of 2025, the institute has been ranked first among engineering colleges that do not offer a doctorate degree by U.S. News & World Report for 27 consecutive years. Each individual program assessed has also been ranked first since the magazine has published individual rankings. These programs are the Chemical, Civil, Computer, Electrical, Mechanical, and Biomedical Engineering programs (Biomedical Engineering programs have only received assessment in the 2015 rankings). Rose–Hulman is ranked 24th nationally for Return on Investment for Students by PayScale's 2024 rankings.
Student life
The student body tends to come mostly from the Midwestern United States, though, as the school has gained prominence, it has gradually attracted a more geographically and ethnically diverse applicant pool. 39% of students are from the state of Indiana with large numbers of students from the nearby states of Illinois, Ohio, Michigan and Minnesota.
The school has several competition teams that operate out of the Branam and Kremer Innovation Centers. These include Team Rose Motorsports, Grand Prix Engineering (Formula SAE), Human Powered Vehicle Challenge, Rose Rocketry, AIAA Design/Build/Fly, Chem-E-Car, MakerLab, Make It Happen, and various robotics competitions among many others.
There are eight social fraternities and three social sororities, some of which have their houses on campus. As of 2003, nearly 69% of the students were members of Greek social organizations.
Rose–Hulman Ventures serves as a source of internships and job opportunities with startups and established companies of all sizes for Rose students and alumni. Rose–Hulman Ventures was established in 1999 with a $30 million grant from the Lilly Endowment and received a $24.9 million follow-up grant in 2002.
Media
The school's student-run newspaper is The Rose Thorn.
Rose–Hulman has an amateur radio club, the Rose Tech Radio Club (call sign W9NAA), that maintains a dedicated on-campus station.
The Rose–Hulman Film Club produces student-directed short films.
The campus radio station was WMHD-FM 90.7 FM, "The Monkey". The station originally broadcast with a very low power transmitter and antenna located on campus, but later operated with an off-site transmitter at 1400 watts. The studio facilities for the station were in the basement of the BSB residence hall. The station was operated entirely by student volunteers, and all disc-jockeys choose their own format and playlists. In August 2014, the station was sold to Indiana State University.
Athletics
Main article: Rose–Hulman Fightin' Engineers
The team's sports teams are called the Rose–Hulman Fightin' Engineers.
Notable alumni
An external reliable source of each person's association should be cited. Alphabetize by last name please. Use a short one line description of notability (no period). END OF NOTICE * * * * * * * * * * * * END OF NOTICE * * * * * * * * * * * *END OF NOTICE --
- Tim Cindric 1990 (Mechanical Engineering), former president of Penske Racing
- Barzilla W. Clark, 16th Governor of Idaho
- Ernest R. Davidson 1958, National Medal of Science winner
- Michael Fagge, Ph.D. 1991, Systematic theologian
- Lawrence Giacoletto 1938, Transistor pioneer
- Marshall Goldsmith 1970, Noted Management consultant
- John Hostettler 1983, Former U.S. Congressman from Indiana
- Curtis Huttenhower 2000, professor at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
- Don Lincoln 1986, Particle Physicist
- Chris Mack 1982, Noted Lithography expert
- Art Nehf 1914, Major League Baseball pitcher
- Abe Silverstein 1929, Aeronautical engineer, NASA center director, and Guggenheim Medal winner
- Mike Thomas 2000, co founder of Monomi Park, software engineer for Slime Rancher
- Mat Roy Thompson 1890–1891, Civil Engineer and builder of Scotty's Castle
- Jim Umpleby 1980, former CEO of Caterpillar, Inc.
- Bernard Vonderschmitt 1944, co-founder of Xilinx
- Robert L. Wilkins 1986, Judge, United States District Court for the District of Columbia
Presidents
The following persons have served as president of Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology:
| No. | Image | President | Term start | Term end | Refs. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Presidents of Rose Polytechnic Institute (1883–1971) | ||||||
| 1 | Charles O. Thompson | March 7, 1883 | June 25, 1885 | |||
| acting | [[File:ProfWaldo99.jpg | 70px]] | Clarence Abiathar Waldo | 1885 | 1886 | |
| 2 | [[File:T.C.Mendenhall-1918.jpg | 70px]] | Thomas Corwin Mendenhall | September 1886 | July 1889 | |
| acting | [[File:ProfWaldo99.jpg | 70px]] | Clarence Abiathar Waldo | September 1889 | June 1890 | |
| acting | Carl Leo Mees | September 1890 | December 1890 | |||
| 3 | [[File:Photo of Henry Turner Eddy from The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography Vol. XV.png | 70px]] | Henry Turner Eddy | January 1891 | September 1894 | |
| acting | Carl Leo Mees | 1894 | September 1895 | |||
| 4 | September 1895 | 1919 | ||||
| acting | John White | 1916 | 1917 | |||
| acting | 1919 | 1921 | ||||
| 5 | Philip B. Woodworth | May 1921 | May 1923 | |||
| acting | Frank C. Wagner | May 1923 | Fall 1924 | |||
| 6 | Fall 1924 | November 24, 1928 | ||||
| acting | [[File:Self Portrait John B. Peddle, 1909.jpg | 70px]] | John B. Peddle | November 24, 1928 | September 1, 1930 | |
| 7 | Donald B. Prentice | February 1, 1931 | June 1948 | |||
| acting | Carl Wischmeyer | June 1948 | January 1949 | |||
| 8 | Ford L. Wilkinson | January 1949 | September 1, 1958 | |||
| acting | Herman Moench | 1958 | August 31, 1959 | |||
| 9 | Ralph A. Morgen | September 1, 1959 | August 31, 1961 | |||
| acting | Herman Moench | September 1, 1961 | August 31, 1962 | |||
| 10 | John A. Logan | September 1, 1962 | August 31, 1976 | |||
| Presidents of Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology (1971–present) | ||||||
| 11 | Samuel Hulbert | September 1, 1976 | June 1, 2004 | |||
| 12 | John J. Midgley | July 1, 2004 | June 30, 2005 | |||
| interim | Robert Bright | July 1, 2005 | June 30, 2006 | |||
| 13 | Gerald Jakubowski | July 1, 2006 | June 30, 2009 | |||
| interim | Matt Branam | July 1, 2009 | December 3, 2009 | |||
| 14 | December 4, 2009 | April 20, 2012 | ||||
| interim | Robert A. Coons | April 21, 2012 | April 30, 2013 | |||
| 15 | James C. Conwell | May 1, 2013 | November 14, 2018 | |||
| 16 | Robert A. Coons | November 15, 2018 | present |
Table notes:
References
References
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- "Common Data Set 2022–23". Rose–Hulman Institute of Technology.
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- [[William Crosby Marshall]], ''Graphical Methods for Schools, Colleges, Statisticians, Engineers and Executives''. New York, McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. 1921. p. V
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- "President Jakubowski Announces Resignation Effective June 30".
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- "Ribbon Cutting Opens Mussallem Union".
- "New Innovation Space Becomes Hub of Activity, Learning".
- "$15 Million Lead Gift to Create New Academic Building".
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- (September 13, 2021). "Rose-Hulman is No. 1 in U.S. News' Engineering Rankings for 24th Straight Year". Rose–Hulman institute of Technology.
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- "Best-value Colleges {{!}} Payscale College ROI Report".
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- "$24.9 Million Lilly Endowment Gift Expands Successful Rose-Hulman Ventures". Rose-Hulman Ventures.
- "Publications". Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.
- "Amateur License - W9NAA - Rose Tech Radio Club". Federal Communications Commission.
- "W9NAA Callsign Page".
- "Film Club". Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.
- Jennifer Waits. (June 20, 2014). "College Radio Watch: Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology to Sell WMHD to Indiana State University". Radio Survivor.
- (21 May 2025). "Team Penske fires president Tim Cindric, IndyCar managing director Ron Ruzewski and GM Kyle Moyer in wake of scandal". Yahoo Sports.
- (19 May 2025). "IndyCar president says qualifying scandal is "devastating" to Roger Penske". www.motorsport.com.
- Schnatz, Pete. (May 30, 2004). "Penske again up to speed Tim Cindric has helped guide the racing outfit's turnaround.". [[Philadelphia Media Network]].
- "Idaho Governor Barzilla Worth Clark". National Governors Association.
- "Michael L Fagge, PhD - Curriculum Vitae".
- "Rose Hulman Article on Thomas's Involvement in Slime Rancher Development". Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.
- Grant Smith, [http://www.rose-hulman.edu/news/alumni/2014/alumnus-robert-wilkins-is-driven-to-make-a-difference-as-federal-appeals-court-judge.aspx Alumnus Robert Wilkins is Driven to Make a Difference as Federal Appeals Court Judge], ''Rose–Hulman Alumni Affairs'' (June 3, 2014)
- (2024). "Forever Rose: 150 Years of STEM Education". Rose–Hulman Institution of Technology.
- (March 18, 1885). "Death of President Thompson, of Terre Haute.". [[Indianapolis Journal]].
- (September 20, 1890). "New President of Rose Polytechnic". [[Indianapolis Journal]].
- (September 2, 1958). "Wilkinson, Rose Poly Head". [[The Indianapolis Star]].
- Perry, Lucy. (March 5, 2003). "Rose-Hulman president says good-bye". [[Vincennes Sun-Commercial]].
- Mullins, Nicole. (February 11, 2004). "Rose-Hulman names new president". Indiana Statesman.
- (June 14, 2005). "Rose-Hulman president resigns". [[The Herald-Times]].
- (March 17, 2006). "Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology Names Gerald Jakubowski as 13th President". Arizona State University.
- (February 27, 2009). "New provost for Maritime Academy". [[Vallejo Times Herald]].
- (December 8, 2009). "Rose-Hulman trustees elect new school president". [[The Victoria Advocate]].
- (April 20, 2012). "President of Rose-Hulman dies from medical emergency". [[Purdue Exponent]].
- Sweeney, Chris. (April 25, 2012). "Coons named Rose-Hulman's interim president". Indiana Statesman.
- (March 22, 2013). "Peters alum named president of Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology". [[Almanac (Pennsylvania).
- (November 7, 2018). "Rose-Hulman President Steps Down". Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.
- (November 16, 2018). "Rose-Hulman Board Names Coons School's 16th President". [[WFYI-FM]].
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