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Fort Lewis College and Durango, CO Chronology


M001 RG11 Fort Lewis history (these records are where much of the information in the chronology was gathered from)

Fort Lewis College administrative history: land and property rights

Historical markers: a campus walking tour

1876 Colorado becomes the 38th state; John L. Routt is elected Governor; Animas City is incorporated.
1878, Sept Lt. Col. William L. Lewis is mortally wounded in conflict with Cheyennes in Kansas.
1878, Oct Fort Lewis is staffed as a military post at Pagosa Springs to control the Southern Ute Indians and protect the settlers who were moving into the area. The location of this post was roughly where the football field currently is at the junior high school building (which used to be the Pagosa Springs High School).
1879 Ute uprising at White River Agency ("the Meeker Massacre"), which results in the move of many Utes out of Colorado.
1880, Aug 15 Lt. Col. Robert Crofton and four companies of U.S. 13th Infantry arrive two miles south of Parrott City, on the banks of the La Plata River, to construct a relocated Fort Lewis military post in a more central location.
1880, Aug 30 U.S. War Department orders are issued for new Fort Lewis; 6,318 acres are reserved near Hesperus, Colorado.
1880, Sept 13 The city of Durango, Colorado, is established. By the following year, about 1,000 people lived in Durango.
1880 Fort Lewis army post is established/ relocated to 14 miles southwest of Durango near Hesperus to be more centrally located.
1881, Aug Denver & Rio Grande Southern Railroad track is laid 17 miles north from Durango to Rockwood.
1882 Pagosa Springs military post (former Fort Lewis) is officially abandoned; the land is given to the Secretary of the Interior in 1884.
1882, July The first train from Durango reaches Silverton.
1883 Fort Lewis is inspected by General William T. Sherman.
1885, Nov 11 A group of Durango citizens organize the Durango Light and Power Company, which delivered the first electric service in early 1887.
1889, July 1 Fire destroys much of Durango.
1890, Oct-Nov Heavy and deep snow cuts Fort Lewis off from Durango for six weeks.
1891 L. L. Nunn pioneers the world’s first commercial use of alternating current, at Ames, Colorado (near Telluride), to power the Gold King Mine.
1891, May 28 Fort Lewis is ordered closed by the Federal government and turned over to the Department of the Interior for use as an Indian School.
1892, Mar 17 Following the close of the military period, Fort Lewis was converted into an Indian School to educate and "civilize" Indians. The Fort Lewis Indian School was established at Fort Lewis, under the Department of the Interior.  Mr. Lewis Morgan of Fort Defiance was transferred by the Bureau of Indian Affairs to Fort Lewis to take charge of the school. In a very short time, he had the school organized and in operation using the buildings left by the Army. Morgan brought 5 Navajos with him to start the school. On April 23, sixteen Southern Utes arrived and by September 1, four additional Navajos and 26 Mescalero Apaches had arrived, making a total of 51 students.
1893 On August 30, there were 45 pupils in attendance. On December 15, there were 128 pupils in attendance with the average attendance for the past twelve months being 62.  Considerable resentment must have been felt on the part of some of the Indians, as they destroyed several barracks by burning them along with most of the houses on "officers’ row."
1894, Apr 10 Attendance at Fort Lewis Indian School was 132 total; 111 boys and 21 girls, as follows:
Navajos 11 Mescalero Apaches 25 Jicarilla Apaches 26
Southern Ute 8 San Carlos Apaches 13 White Mt. Apaches 34
Papagos 4 Pimas 6 Diggers 4
1894, Summer Activity was interrupted at the school by the outbreak of an epidemic, during the course of which students died. This enraged some already skeptical and superstitious parents who came and took many of the children away by force. The school had to be abandoned for over a year, during which time vandals looted and stripped it of everything of value, even the plumbing fixtures and pipes. After there was no further danger from epidemic, the superintendent returned to operate the school again, bringing with him several Pimas and Papagos.
1895, June 30 183 students were in attendance (71 were Navajo). A report dated July 16, 1895 said only 5 Utes were in attendance. In the fall of 1895, over 300 Indians, representing several different tribes, and a few Mexican-Americans reported to the school. Some were less than 5 years of age and a few were only 3 years old. Some pupils attended the school for more than 10 years.
1896 195 enrolled; 151 average attendance; 19 Jicarilla Apache.
1897 On June 30, 186 boys, 111 girls = 297 total.  Average attendance was 198.
1898 School enrollment was 221 boys, 149 girls = 370 total.  Fifteen tribes were represented, with Navajos, Apaches and Pueblos in majority.
1899 Average attendance for the year was 313.
1900 Enrollment was 412, but the school had capacity for only 300. Average attendance was 307.  Twenty-five Southern Ute children were placed at Fort Lewis Indian School; some ran away; one died. The Federal census listed persons at Fort Lewis Indian School.
1901, May 7 Attendance was 350.
1903 87 boys and 42 girls were enrolled as of March 31, 1903.  Later in the year, 136 were reported enrolled with 118 average attendance.
1904 In January, the enrollment was 178.  Later report said: 175 enrolled; 151 average attendance.
1905 198 enrolled; 180 average attendance.
1906 Mesa Verde National Park is founded - the first national park in Colorado.
1907 242 enrolled; 192 average attendance.
1909 40 enrolled; 35 average attendance.  [Note: The preceding statistics of Fort Lewis Indian School enrollment were drawn from three sources: The Annual Reports of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, "School Statistics Accompanying the Annual Report" from the Superintendent of Fort Lewis School, and reports of the Inspector of Indian Schools.]
1910 The last year of the Fort Lewis Indian School.
1911 Page 30 of Annual Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs noted:  "… the governor of Colorado similarly to Utah’s in regards to the Ouray School accepted the buildings and fixtures of the Fort Lewis school and the Grand Junction school.  Each of these schools is to be maintained by the State as an institution of learning to which Indian students will be admitted free of tuition and on an equality with white students."
1911, Jan Congress deeds the Hesperus site to State of Colorado.
1911, Jan 25 Colorado Governor John Shafroth signs a bill establishing an agricultural high school at Fort Lewis under the governance of the State Board of Agriculture, as a branch of the State College of Agriculture.
1911, Oct 5 Animas River peaks at 25,000 cubic feet per second, washing out bridges and turning the Animas Valley into a lake.
1912, Summer Agricultural high school sessions begin at Fort Lewis. Courses for girls are dropped.
1913 An electrical system is installed in buildings on campus, and the dormitory is heated by steam.
1913, Mar 12 Western Colorado Power Company is organized; during the ensuing year it consolidates the operations of eight major companies on the Western Slope of Colorado.
1914 Courses for girls are reinstituted at the high school.
1915 First annual Visitors' Day.
1916 The first cement sidewalks are installed on campus. The calendar changed to Summer Term, April to September.
1917 Construction of the highway connecting Durango, Silverton and Ouray ("the Million Dollar Highway") begins.
1918 Continuous twelve month school sessions begin at Fort Lewis High School.
1918-1919 Flu epidemic ("Spanish influenza") in the region; 5 of every 75 people died.
1919 Girls' dormitory burns.
1920 Gymnasium built. Nine month teacher training course of study added.
1923-1924 Snyder Hall, men's dormitory, is built.
1924 Nine-month courses of study in teacher training and agriculture are offered at Fort Lewis School.
1925 Petition of over 1,000 signatures requests the 26th Colorado General Assembly to establish Fort Lewis as a college.
1927, Sept Two year college curriculum inaugurated at Fort Lewis; beginning of some college level courses in education during regular school year.
1927, Oct 12 Dedication of the Durango Municipal Airport (on the current site of Fort Lewis College).
1929 Stock market crashes/ start of the Great Depression.
1929 The Student Council selects the Beaver as the school mascot, because of the animal's industrious habits.  The school colors are green and gold.
1930 Lory Hall, women's dormitory, is built.  Durango Natural Gas builds a pipeline to campus.
1931 Annual "Senior Day" begun.  All high school seniors of the San Juan Basin are invited to the campus to get a taste of college life.
1933 Fort Lewis begins offering only college-level courses; high school classes are discontinued.
1933-37 Dust Bowl days.
1934 Fort Lewis College Dean George F. Snyder dies; Ernest Bader becomes Dean.
1935 Wiley Post and Will Rogers fly into Durango, staying at the Strater Hotel; they die in a plane crash in Alaska several weeks later en route to the Orient.
1936 Road from Hesperus to Fort Lewis is graded and oiled.
1937 Electrification by Western Colorado Power Company.
1938 Vocational education is established by joint action of State Board of Public Education and State Board of Agriculture. New library building is constructed.
1941-1945 World War II - uranium produced at Durango's smelter for the nuclear bomb.
1943 First Farmers' Institute.
1946 Largest enrollment ever at old Fort Lewis College campus: 235 men and women, most are veterans.
1947 Uranium mining begins in the southwestern and western regions of Colorado, to supply raw materials for nuclear weapons and nuclear energy.
1948 Fort Lewis is officially designated a junior college with its own president; autonomous from Fort Collins but under control of State Board of Agriculture.
1949, June Charles Dale Rea becomes the first president of Fort Lewis A & M College after resignation of Dean E. H. Bader.
1950 Fort Lewis College begins offering extension courses in Durango.
1951, Dec Last trip of old Rio Grande Southern Railroad (including the Galloping Goose rail car) through Wildcat Canyon from Hesperus to Mancos, Dolores, Rico and Telluride.
1952 First San Juan Basin Summer Music Camp.
1956, Summer Fort Lewis College is moved to Durango (classes begin there in September).
1956, Oct Fall enrollment of 384 students (238 full-time and 146 part-time).
1956 Old Fort Lewis College campus at Hesperus begins to be used as an agricultural experiment station.
1957, May 30 New campus dedication ceremonies.  Two men's dormitories, one women's dormitory, the president's home (later renamed Kroeger Hall), Student Center (Miller), and twenty married students' apartments are occupied.
1958   Fine Arts Building (currently the Theatre) and the Chapel are occupied.
1960 The population of the city of Durango surpasses 10,000.
1960, Apr 280 acres on the east side of the Durango campus, now known as Raider Ridge, are purchased from La Plata County at $2 per acre for future expansion.
1960, June The State Democratic Convention is one of the first big events held at Fort Lewis College; presidential candidate Senator John F. Kennedy is the keynote speaker.
1960, Fall The College's Hesperus dairy herd of 85 animals is sold at a special public auction.  On Oct. 7, 1961, the State Board of Agriculture approves leasing to the Colorado State University Experiment Station 6,318 acres of land comprising the Fort Lewis Reservation, at $10,000 per year.  The Hesperus farm equipment is transferred from the college to the Colorado State University Experiment Station at Hesperus, at no charge, effective Nov. 1, 1961.
1961, Dec 14 After considering allegations related to the purchase of a 1951 surplus college truck by President Charles Dale Rea at a public sale, the State Board of Agriculture announces the resignation of Charles Dale Rea as president of Fort Lewis A & M College, effective June 30, 1962.
1962 Fort Lewis College becomes a baccalaureate degree-granting institution; Dr. John F. Reed is installed as president; 7 majors are authorized.  The Fort Lewis A &M College Post Office Contract Station commences operation.
1963 New women's dormitory is occupied (planning began at least by 1961).
1963, Sept 21 The State Board of Agriculture authorizes President Reed and the Secretary to ask the Governor to change the name from Fort Lewis School to Fort Lewis College; the change was approved by March of 1964.
1964, Apr "A & M" is dropped from Fort Lewis College's name. The College mascot is changed from Aggies to Raiders, and school colors are changed from green and gold to blue and gold.  The "Howdy Walk" walkway on campus is dedicated, with a plaque provided by the Westerners Club.
1964, Apr 19 First commencement of a Fort Lewis College graduating class as a four-year institution.
1965, Mar 26 State Board of Agriculture approves offering advanced levels of training in professional fields of law, medicine, etc. (3-1 transfer program).
1965, Aug 14 State Board of Agriculture approves the name, "East Campus", for the land near the Bader-Sheridan dormitories.
1965, Dec 8 State Board of Agriculture approves a Ballantine Visiting Scholar Program, to be financed from gifts and grants to the College.
1966 Full accreditation by North Central Association of Collegesand Secondary Schools.
1966, Apr 1 State Board of Agriculture approves the definition of "American Indian" for the tuition waiver.
1967, Apr 16 Library/classroom building (Reed Library) is dedicated (in conjunction with commencement) and is occupied.  The new dorms are named Bader Hall Triangle (Dorm "H")and [Philip H.] Sheridan Hall Triangle (Dorm "I") (discussed at State Board of Agriculture meetings on Feb. 14, 1964 and May 9, 1967).
1967, Apr 27 At a special meeting, the State Board of Agriculture approves exchanging 12 acres of the Hillcrest Municipal Golf Course land for equal acreage owned by the City of Durango which was formerly the site of the city reservoir.  The exchange is finalized at the June 21, 1968 meeting.  In April of 1973 the old golf course and reservoir sites (presently the city softball fields) are annexed into the City of Durango.
1968 New Student Union Building (CUB) and 6 new dormitories are occupied.
1968 U.S. government funding is approved for the Dolores Project, an archaeological excavation (the largest contract archaeology project in the U.S. at the time) to salvage artifacts prior to the construction of McPhee Dam and the second-largest reservoir in Colorado.
1969 John F. Reed resigns effective June 30 (dies Dec. 4, 1997); on June 13, the State Board of Agriculture appoints Rexer Berndt as president of Fort Lewis College and appoints Dr. Reed as President Emeritus.
1969, Oct 24 The State Board of Agriculture approves discontinuing the five Divisions of the college and establishing the Schools of Arts and Sciences, Business Administration, and Education effective Fall 1970.  Also, the Board approves a summer Master's degree program.
1970 Thirteen additional majors are authorized at Fort Lewis College. Inauguration of student exchange agreement with Concordia College (8 students exchanged for Winter 1970 semester).
1970, Dec 9 State Board of Agriculture approves limitation on Native American tuition waivers.
1971, May Colorado General Assembly passes a law limiting tuition waivers for Indian students to residents of Colorado; U.S. District Court of Colorado holds that such action constituted a breach of contract by Colorado; its decision is appealed but is upheld by the federal Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1973 - upholding the decision of the trial court to admit Indian students tuition-free.
1971 New Physical Education Building is finished. It seats 2,800. New Humanities-Fine Arts Building (known as Fine Arts until it was renamed Sage Hall in about 1997) is built.
1974 Accreditation by National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education, and by American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business.
1974, Aug 25 Durango's worst fire to date destroys buildings on west side of 800 block of Main Ave.
1975, Apr The new swimming pool (the "Natatorium") is being utilized.  By December of 1978, the use of natural gas was reduced due to solar energy heating that was installed in 1977-78. 
1975, Sept 22 The State Board of Agriculture approves having a State Forest Service office on the Fort Lewis College campus.
1976 Accreditation by North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools is renewed for ten years without qualification.
1978, Fall The new Centennial Apartments complex (named in honor of Fort Lewis's 100th anniversary since its establishment of a military fort) is ready for occupancy.
1983, Jan 100-unit apartment project (Anasazi complex) is proposed. On June 1, 1986, the State Board approves naming these the Anasazi Apartments.
1984, Oct 26 State Board of Agriculture holds a hearing regarding the possibility of removing Fort Lewis College from the Colorado State University System, which the Board created on July 26 to include Colorado State University, University of Southern Colorado, and Fort Lewis College, with Philip Austin as Chancellor. A motion to exclude Fort Lewis College is defeated 5-1 at the Board's meeting on Nov. 16, 1984.  FITE (Fighting for Independence, Tradition and Excellence) Committee of Fort Lewis College faculty, et al., responds.
1984 Rexer Berndt retires effective December 31; the Durango Chamber of Commerce names him Citizen of the Year.
1985 The State Board of Agriculture appoints Bernard S. Adams as president, to succeed Dr. Berndt.  Dr. Adams goes on Administrative Leave on December 20, 1986, until his resignation effective June 30, 1987.  Donald F. Whalen is appointed Acting President effective December 20, 1986.
1986, Oct 4 Dedication of Dan Noble Hall (formerly called the New Classroom Building) and renaming of library as John F. Reed Library, in a ceremony held in conjunction with Homecoming and the 75th anniversary of the college.  These names had been approved by the State Board of Agriculture on June 11, 1986, along with renaming the Old Classroom Building "Hesperus Hall."
1987, Oct Fall enrollment of 3,738 - the highest up to that time.
1987/88, Winter Measles epidemic among the students at the college.
1988, Mar 20 Joel M. Jones is appointed president.
1992, Mar 17 Shawn Slater of the Ku Klux Klan appears at a forum on racial awareness that was sponsored by the Political Science Club.  In retrospect, the event was considered to be one of school's most significant non-events in terms of cost and time.
1992/93, Winter Fort Lewis College water tower is dismantled. The architectural drawings for the tower (in the FLC Archives) were drawn by Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. in 1955.  The Center of Southwest Studies has a piece of the anchor bolt that was removed from the base of the Fort Lewis College water tower (accession 2006:079.001).
1993, Sept New $4.4 million West Residence Hall opens on Fort Lewis College campus; for the first time, the College requires freshmen to live on campus if their homes are not in the area.
1993, Summer $4.3 million in ADA accessibility projects begin on campus.
1994 College mascot is changed from Raider to Skyhawk after much controversial discussion.
1996, July Fort Lewis College begins using a voice-response telephone system (OPUS = On Campus Phone User System) for students to register for classes.
1996, Mar 18-20 Decennial reaccreditation review of Fort Lewis College by the North Central Association.
1996, Mar Reaccreditation review (conducted every 9 years) of Fort Lewis College School of Business Administration by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business; AACSB announces its plan to use the SOB's self-study as a model case study for other institutions seeking this accreditation.
1996, July 1 Interim Vice President for Academic Affairs and Dean of the School of Education Stephen Roderick becomes Vice President for Academic Affairs, replacing William Langworthy who stepped down from that role in 1995 to teach in the Department of Chemistry; Professor of Education Ginny Engman (deceased Sept. 2, 2004) is named interim Dean of the School of Education in August.
1996, Aug J. R. Smith is appointed Athletic Director, replacing Daryl Leonard who had accepted the position in March but resigned days before her July 1 contract was to start.
1997, Sept New $4.4 million Art Building opens on Fort Lewis College campus.
1997, Oct New $5 million Fort Lewis College Community Concert Hall is inaugurated; finale of the month-long series of events is a performance of Beethoven's 9th Symphony.
1997, Oct Dr. M. J. Moseley is honored as the 1997 Colorado Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.
1998, July Dr. Joel Jones steps down as president of Fort Lewis College; Stephen Roderick serves as Interim President.
1998, Sept New/renovated $2 million Chemistry/Biochemistry labs open at south portion of Berndt Hall.
1999, Jan Skyhawk Hall, a new $600,000 classroom and Exercise Science lab facility located between the Natatorium and the football stadium, is opened for use.
1999, Feb Kendall Blanchard takes office as the 6th president of Fort Lewis College.
1999, Mar Dr. Karen Spear's role is moved from Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences to full-time professor in that School.
1999, Aug Record 7.51 inches of rainfall on Durango during the month.
2000, June 9 President Bill Clinton signs the proclamation that created Canyon of the Ancients National Monument, 164,000 acres, west of Cortez, containing the highest known density of archaeological features in the U.S.
2001 Completion and dedication of several new buildings on campus: Business/Education Building, Center of Southwest Studies, Chemistry Hall, Dale Rea Memorial Clock Tower, and Student Life Center.
2002, Jan Dr. Blanchard announces that he will step down as president of Fort Lewis College effective July 1;  Vice President of Business and Finance Robert Dolphin, Jr. (who was planning to retire at that time) agrees to serve as Interim President (later appointed by the Board as President).
2002, Mar Student Life Center chosen by the NIRSA Facilities Management Committee and the Outstanding Indoor Facility Selection Committee as one of the Outstanding Indoor Facilities for 2002.
2002, June 4 Colorado Governor Bill Owens signs House Bill 1419, approving the creation of a stand-alone Board of Trustees for Fort Lewis College.  The State Board of Agriculture (SBA) governed Fort Lewis since it first became an agricultural high school in 1911 until the passage of this new legislation.  Additionally, in 1984 the SBA created the Colorado State University System, which consisted of Colorado State, Fort Lewis College, and the University of Southern Colorado; the new legislation moves Fort Lewis College out of the CSU system.  The legislation calls for the appointment of a new, nine-member Board of Trustees by Aug. 1.  The trustees, working in conjunction with the SBA, will develop agreements to transfer all assets and liabilities by Sept. 1.  The bill enables Fort Lewis College to offer professional programs and a limited number of graduate programs to serve regional needs. It also establishes the college as a regional education provider with two-year authority, explicitly recognizes that "the Center of Southwest Studies provides a valuable regional, national and international resource," provides for the continued use of campus property for the state Forest Service facility, and provides for the use of the Hesperus property.
2002, Jun 9 Following one of the driest winters and springs on record, the largest forest fire in the recorded history of southwest Colorado begins near Missionary Ridge, north of Durango, and moves toward Lemon Reservoir, burning 70,485 acres and numerous homes. It is controlled on August. 7, having cost $40.8 million to fight.
2002, June 12 State Board of Agriculture holds its last meeting on the Durango campus as the governing board of Fort Lewis College.
2002, June Nearly all of the married student housing units and Hesperus Hall are razed.  ("The wreck of the Hesperus.")  The quonset hut (i.e., the last of the buildings that remained of those that were brought to the Durango campus from the Old Fort Lewis campus in the mid-1950s) was demolished at the end of July, followed by the west row of Physical Plant Services buildings in August.
2003, June 4 The gymnasium (recently renovated with a new roof) is named in honor of Dr. Donald F. Whalen.
2003, Oct 1 The Center of Southwest Studies begins a three-year federally funded $1.6 million Congressional Earmark focused on training Native American archivists, librarians, museum curators, and historic preservation professionals.
2004, June 1 Brad Bartel takes office as the 7th president of Fort Lewis College.
2004, Aug 26 After a 10-year hiatus, Fort Lewis College revives the tradition of Fall Convocation, an academic ceremony that welcomes new students to campus.  For the first time, faculty parade in full academic regalia to welcome and honor the new freshmen and transfer students.
2004, Aug 30 The new 14,400-square-foot $2.5 million Fort Lewis College Linda and Ben Nighthorse Campbell Child and Family Center opens, replacing the 2,100 square feet facility at the end of Raider Drive that occupied one of the last remaining married student housing units.
2004, Sept 14 After reviewing a half-million incoming email messages and determining that 400,000 of them were spam, the Office of Computing and Telecommunications introduces a new server to help minimize the amount of junk email that is seen in the campus user's inbox.
2005, Apr 27 Senate Bill 194 (Fort Lewis College Selectivity for student admissions standards) passes the Colorado House unanimously with 9 co-sponsors, and is signed into law by Governor Owens in mid-May.
2005, Dec 4 Soccer team wins the NCAA Division II Men's Soccer Championship; the game, played at Wichita Falls, Texas, was broadcast live on national television.  This was Fort Lewis College's first-ever national championship in any varsity team sport (the FLC cycling teams and a ski squad have also won national championships).
2007, Feb 20 Board of Trustees approves the renaming of Sage Hall (formerly the Fine Arts Building) as Jones Hall in honor of former President Joel M. Jones.
2007/08 Fort Lewis College undertakes a $55 million bond revenue issue - the College's largest bond issue ever, by far - to pay for a new College Union Building (projected to cost around $25-30 million, to be paid primarily through student fees), new dorms, and to reimburse some old bonds (Student Life Center, etc.) to obtain better terms and lower rates.
2008, July 1 Dr. Kevin Britz is appointed director of the Center of Southwest Studies (deceased January, 2011).  Dr. Britz had experience with historical organizations across the nation such as the Stearns County Historical Society in Minnesota and the High Desert Museum in Oregon.  His experience extended into the higher education arena as well with teaching duties at Kenyon College in Ohio and as an assistant professor of history at Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
2009, Aug Animas Hall opens to students.  Fort Lewis' first new dorm since West Hall opened in 1993.  Animas Hall features modern accommodations and green design characteristics, with suites with private rooms, great views, and good solar orientation.  It is LEED gold certified for its sustainable features and design. Animas is also home to the Faculty-in Residence program, where a Fort Lewis faculty member lives in the hall to provide out of the classroom activities and relationships.
2009, Dec 5 Soccer team wins its second NCAA Division II Men's Soccer National Championship in school history after defeating Lees-McRae 1-0 in Tampa, FL. David Barden's goal in the 78th minute gave the Skyhawks the lead which they would not relinquish. Oige Kennedy is the first coach to win the National Championship in his first season. The Skyhawks finish the season 24-1.
2010, Mar 27 Women's basketball team finishes as NCAA Division II National Championship Runners-Up.
2010, Summer/Fall The Native American tuition waiver is once again challenged; the treaty is continued to be honored.
2010, July 1 Dr. Dene Kay Thomas takes office as the 8th president of Fort Lewis College and the first woman president to lead the college in its 99-year history.
2010, Sept 1 Fort Lewis College celebrates the grand opening of the new Student Union addition.  Most of the funding for the student union construction came from the students themselves. A fee was voted upon and approved by the students, essentially taxing themselves to ensure the new building became a reality. The approval of this student fee represented a remarkable commitment by the students to the future of Fort Lewis College. The remainder of the funding needed to complete the new student union came from food service contracts and fundraising by the Fort Lewis College Foundation. The existing College Union Building is currently being completely renovated and will house most of the major campus offices and organizations. New facilities will also be created, such as a media center housing KDUR, the Independent, the Intertribal News and Durango Community Access Television, among others. In total, the new student union will boast more than 100,000 square feet and a LEED Gold rating for the addition.
2011, Jan 25 Fort Lewis College celebrates its Centennial which commemorates the State of Colorado’s acceptance of a federal land grant of the Hesperus site to establish an agricultural and mechanic arts high school via legislation signed January 25, 1911.  That grant came with two conditions: that the land would be used for an educational institution, and that Indian students admitted to that institution could attend tuition free. The school opened on October 2, 1911 and reported a first-term enrollment of 19 pupils.

This page was last modified: Friday April 21 2017.