- Apply
- Visit
- Request Info
- Give
The first graduation ceremony sends 22 women out into the world to become schoolteachers
1893George P. Phenix becomes principal (1893-1904)
1894Faculty and students leave Main Street and move up the hill to the first dedicated WNS building
1898
The women’s basketball team wins league championship
1904
WNS graduates its first two African American teachers
1910George Shafer becomes principal (1918-47)
1921First dormitory constructed, named after the school’s third principal, Henry T. Burr
1924Model school burns down
1928Model school replaced with what is now Noble Hall (dedicated in 1957), named after Frederick R. Noble, longtime principal of the model school
1930Room and board averages $325 per year for the 173 students attending WNS
1937Willimantic State Normal School transitions to a four-year curriculum and changes name to Willimantic State Teachers College (WSTC), making George Shafer the college’s first president.
1939For the first time, there are enough men in attendance to form a men’s basketball team
1942WSTC men’s basketball team becomes division champion in the New England Teachers Conference
1943The original Normal School building burns down after serving as the only classroom and administration building for 48 years
1947Searle Charles becomes president (1966-70); during his tenure, school becomes Eastern Connecticut State College
1967Goddard Science Building opens
1970Charles Richard Webb becomes president (1970-88)
1971National softball champions
1983School completes its metamorphosis and becomes Eastern Connecticut State University
1988David G. Carter becomes president (1988-2006)
1992Gelsi Young Hall built
2003Parking garage built
2004Laurel and Nutmeg Halls open
2006Expanded and renovated Student Center opens
2009Science Building Opens
2016Fine Arts Instructional Center Opens