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ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï History and Heritage

North Park’s History: Enlightened Hearts, Warmed Intellects

ºÚÁϳԹÏ’s history and heritage reach back to a Minneapolis church basement in 1891, where classes in language and business gave Swedish immigrants the skills needed to prosper in America. With an offer of land in Chicago, the school moved to the North Park neighborhood which was then just beyond the city limits. Old Main, the first building on campus, was completed in 1894. Its cupola became a landmark for pilots to locate Orchard Field (now O’Hare International Airport). The cupola was the tallest point on the city’s north side. At various points in its history, North Park was an academy, a junior college, and a four-year liberal arts college. We became a university, with a theological seminary, in 1997.

Now, North Park is Chicago’s city-centered Christian University. It serves nearly 3,200 undergraduate and graduate students from around the country and the world. Within a diverse, close-knit community, it offers a values-based education to students through more than 40 undergraduate majors, as well as graduate and continuing education in business, nonprofit management, nursing, education, music, and theology. Campus facilities have been extensively renovated, including the LEED-certified Johnson Center for Science and Community Life, the Helwig Recreation Center, the Holmgren Athletic Complex, and the Brandel Library.

Cultivating Great Intellects & Great Hearts

North Park has grown from a humble, immigrant institution to a cosmopolitan University. Through great change and transformation, a single mission has persisted: a community where “great intellects are warmed by great hearts, and great hearts are enlightened by great intellects.”

An Immigrant Institution

Founded in 1891, the origins of the University are rooted in 19th-century immigration from Sweden, the faith traditions carried from the homeland and established in a new world, and the educational needs of an immigrant denomination, today’s Evangelical Covenant Church.

Taking Root

The first quarter-century was encompassed by challenge, growth, and transition. Classes in Chicago opened in 1894, all within five departments: Seminary, music, business, academy, and primary.

Americanization

When the First World War began, first- and second-generation immigrants made up one-third of the American population. By 1917, College courses were taught entirely in English with English textbooks.

Expansion

The Second World War transformed the country, the Covenant Church, and North Park. Servicemen and women who took advantage of the G.I. Bill increased enrollment and led to growth.

“A Turbulent Day and Age”

North Park graduated its first four-year college class in May 1960. Concern over the challenges of the country found clear expression at ºÚÁϳԹÏ, with students protesting, marching, and calling for justice. The 1960s also brought new buildings and the College’s first faculty member of color, L. Roger Boncy, a former U.N. employee.

A Cosmopolitan University

In 1980, facing neighborhood decline, North Park considered relocating to donated land in Lake County. A unanimous decision was made to remain in its present location citing the recognition “that our urban location has been instrumental to the quality of education our people receive.” The decision was motivated by concern for the vitality of the community and represented a commitment to reinvesting in the neighborhood’s revitalization.

The Student Experience

Within the very first year of the school’s founding, students organized a quartet, literary society, and student paper. From the beginning, student societies and publications have cultivated student leadership and promoted engagement—from the women’s society Nopaco (1913) to the Black Student Association (1969) and today’s Faith and Justice Club.

Images here are from the Historical Photograph Collection of ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï Archives. Copyright of the images are managed by the Covenant Archives and Historical Library at ºÚÁÏ³Ô¹Ï or we have been unable to identify the copyright holder.

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