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Lowell Technological Institute

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Type
  
Public

Campus
  
Urban

Ceased operations
  
1975

Established
  
1895

Founded
  
1895

Lowell Technological Institute httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb0

Location
  
Lowell, Massachusetts, United States

Notable alumni
  
Sam Cataldo, Robert B. Kennedy, John Janas

Parent organization
  
University of Massachusetts Lowell

Similar
  
Lowell State College, Bradford Durfee College o, New Bedford Institute o, Hyannis State Teachers, University of Massach

The Lowell Technological Institute was a public college located in Lowell, Massachusetts, United States. It was founded in 1895 as the Lowell Textile School. Its campus is now part of UMass Lowell.

Contents

Beginnings

Plans for the school were started when the Massachusetts State Legislature passed a law granting $25,000 to each of the four major textile cities in the state as long as they contributed to the building of a school of textiles in Lowell.

The Lowell Textile School opened on October 4, 1897. Originally, the first class had over 200 students. The school was modeled on the success of the Polytechnical School at Philadelphia. The school originally opened in three rented rooms on Middle Street in downtown Lowell. The college offered three year diplomas in cotton or wool manufacture, design, or textile chemistry and dyeing. Tuition at the time was one hundred dollars.

New Building

In 1903, the school moved to the newly built Southwick Hall. In 1913, the school granted its first bachelor's degree in textile dyeing and textile engineering. During World War I, the grounds of the college were used as a military training camp. During this time, the school almost went bankrupt due to the increased demand for soldiers and textiles.

By 1929, Lowell’s expanded curriculum, larger faculty, and livelier extracurricular program warranted a name change that reflected its evolution from a trade school to a technical college, and it became the Lowell Textile Institute.

During World War II, the school almost went bankrupt again as war demanded soldiers and textiles. The enrollment of the school fell to 73 students at one point.

Expansion

In 1953, President Martin Lydon expanded the curriculum to include programs in plastics, leather, paper, and electronics technology, increased the liberal arts, and renamed the school the Lowell Technological Institute. The mission of the college moved towards general engineering, and a bachelor’s program was created in 1956. The textile program was closed in 1971, reflecting the closure of most of the mills in the city.

In 1947 the first two dormitories were built, Smith and Eames Hall. In 1967, two dormitories were built across the Merrimack River. In 1973, Lowell Technical Institute Dormitory was built near Leitch and Bourgeois Hall. At eighteen stories, the building, which was later renamed Fox Hall, is one of the tallest buildings in Lowell.

Merger

In 1972, a feasibility study was conducted on merging the school with the nearby Lowell State College. The schools merged in 1975 to form the University of Lowell, which changed its name to the University of Massachusetts Lowell in 1991. Today, Lowell Tech's campus is known as the North Campus of UMass Lowell.

Staff

  • Dave Morey, coach (1916–1917, 1948–1959)
  • John Leslie Merrill, professor (1940-1965)
  • References

    Lowell Technological Institute Wikipedia