Texas Authors Institute of History

A Unique Museum that saves history, inspires the future, depth and gives to the present..

 

Author: Evelyn Barker and Lea Worcester
Publisher: The History Press
Retail:
 $21.99
ISBN: 978-1467132312
Copyright: February 2015
Pages:
 128

In 1895, seventy-five students enrolled at Arlington College, an elementary and secondary institution located on the North Texas prairies. Over the next 120 years, the school changed into a military school, a vocational college, a two-year college in the Texas A&M System, and finally, a full-fledged university with more than 34,000 students from across the globe. Throughout its history, UT Arlington has benefitted from strong leadership and strong community commitment to education. During the low-enrollment period of the Great Depression, Dean E.E. Davis went into the cornfields of East Texas to recruit students. In World War II, art professor Howard Joyner switched from teaching fine art to teaching the art of camouflage painting. The turbulent 1960s saw students clashing over the school’s rebel flag theme, the resolution of which paved the way for the university to become one of the most diverse in the nation today.

 

Drawing from the rich visual collections of the University of Texas at Arlington Libraries Special Collections, authors Evelyn Barker and Lea Worcester look back over a century of exceptional education on the site of what is today the second-largest institution in the UT system.