History
Following the Living History of Valparaiso University
Valpo’s History
Important Dates
Explore the dates, defining moments and events that have come to shape the history of the University.
1859 – Valparaiso Male and Female College is founded as one of the nation’s first coeducational colleges.
1871 – Valparaiso Male and Female College closes as result of losses suffered during the U.S. Civil War.
1873 – Henry Baker Brown reopens the school as Northern Indiana Normal School and Business Institute.
1879 – The Valparaiso University School of Law is founded as the Northern Indiana Law School.
1900 – Northern Indiana Normal School is renamed Valparaiso College.
1905 – Valparaiso College is renamed Valparaiso University.
1916 – Valpo participates in intercollegiate sports for the first time.
1917 – After decades of success, Valparaiso University again experiences financial hardship as the United States enters into WWI.
1925 – The University is purchased by the Lutheran University Association.
1943 – A student-initiated, student-enforced Honor Code is created.
1949 – Engineering students strike a deal with the University, offering to build an engineering facility if a four-year program, reduced during wartime, is reinstated.
1959 – The Chapel of the Resurrection is dedicated.
1967 – Christ College, the third oldest honors college in the United States, is founded.
1968 – Valpo inaugurates its first two international study centers in Cambridge, England, and Reutlingen, Germany.
1971 – LeBien Hall is dedicated as home for the College of Nursing, which graduates its first class.
1976 – Valpo moves its athletics program to the NCAA’s Division I.
1988 – In Homer Drew’s first year as head coach of the men’s basketball team, a record crowd of nearly 5,000 at the Athletics–Recreation Center sees the men’s basketball team defeat Notre Dame in overtime, 71-68. Coach Drew dubs the game the “Lutheran miracle.”
1995 – The Center for the Arts is dedicated as the home for the visual and performing arts.
2004 – The Christopher Center for Library and Information Resources is dedicated.
2008 – Mark A. Heckler, Ph.D., is inaugurated as Valparaiso University’s 18th president.
2009 – The Harre Student Union is completed.
2011 – Donald V. Fites Engineering Innovation Center is completed.
2012 – The College of Arts and Sciences building welcomes classes in the fall.
2013
- The James S. Markiewicz Solar Energy Research Facility, designed and constructed by more than 50 Valpo students and alumni, is dedicated.
- The 15,000-square-foot Phyllis and Richard Duesenberg Welcome Center is dedicated, designed to create a front door for the University and support the needs of prospective students, alumni, and all guests visiting campus.
2014 – Beacon Hall, a suite-style residence hall, opens for sophomore students.
2015
- Construction begins on townhouse-style sorority housing units.
- The Kathleen and Mark Helge Center, located adjacent to the Chapel of the Resurrection, is dedicated during Homecoming Weekend.
- The University breaks ground on a science laboratory building.
2016
- Forever Valpo: The Campaign for Our Future, a $250 million endowment campaign, is publicly launched during Homecoming Weekend.
- Sorority chapters move into the newly opened Sorority Housing Complex.
2017
- The Center for the Sciences: Chemistry and Biochemistry and the Innovation Hub at McMillan Hall are dedicated during Homecoming Weekend.
- The University celebrates 100 years of sororities and 50 years of Christ College — The Honors College.
- Valpo Athletics joins the Missouri Valley Conference, one of the oldest and most prestigious collegiate athletic conferences in the nation.
2020
- Led by former University President Mark A. Heckler, Ph.D., Forever Valpo: The Campaign For Our Future, concludes after surpassing an ambitious $250 million goal more than one year ahead of schedule.
- President Emeritus Mark A. Heckler, Ph.D., retires.
- Colette Irwin-Knott ’81 assumes the role of interim president of Valparaiso University.
2021
- Josè D. Padilla, J.D., is inaugurated as Valparaiso University’s 19th president, the first Latino and Catholic to serve in this role.
- Valparaiso University retires the Crusader mascot.
- A student-led committee works with faculty and staff to select a new nickname for Valparaiso University with intentions to honor Valpo’s history and the light Valpo graduates shine wherever they land after graduation. Leaning into the University’s motto, “In Thy Light We See Light,” and light motifs across campus, the committee puts forth the new Valparaiso University nickname: the Beacons.
2022 – Beacon, a golden retriever, and Blaze, a chocolate lab, are introduced as Valpo’s new mascots.
Valpo’s first era
Pioneering Coeducation
In its 150-year history, Valparaiso University has passed through three distinct phases. Founded by Methodists in 1859 as an institution pioneering coeducation, the Valparaiso Male and Female College was forced by the reverses of the Civil War to close its doors in 1871.
Valpo’s Second era
Revival as “Poor Man’s Harvard”
It was revived in 1873 by an enterprising educator, Henry Baker Brown, as the Northern Indiana Normal School, renamed Valparaiso College in 1900, and rechartered in 1906 as Valparaiso University. During the next 20 years, it established business and law schools and won national recognition as a low-cost, no frills institution of higher learning; many alumni of this period achieved distinction in their fields as governors, legislators, scientists, business leaders, and other professionals.
Valpo’s third era
Lutheran University Association
Despite its decades of success, the University again experienced financial hardship as the United States entered World War I. The Lutheran University Association, a group of clergy and church laity who saw a bright future for the University, purchased it in 1925, ushering in the modern era of Valpo’s history.
1925-Present
Our Commitment to Lutheran Ideals
Distinguished by its Lutheran heritage of scholarship, freedom, and faith, Valparaiso University continues to fulfill the dreams of our modern founders.
In 1956, Valpo’s chapel-auditorium was destroyed by fire. In 1959, it was replaced by the majestic Chapel of the Resurrection, a fitting symbol of the University’s commitment to its Lutheran ideals—and of the thriving community’s renewed growth.
