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  2. On April 24, 1837, Muskingum College opened. Muskingum became a coeducational institution in 1854. In 1958, the United Presbyterian Church of North America and the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America merged by signing a historic agreement in Brown Chapel on Muskingum's campus.

  3. In 2009, Muskingum College became Muskingum University, with its new name reflecting the breadth and depth of the undergraduate, graduate, and continuing education programs.

  4. Muskingum College, which takes its name from a Delaware Indian word, was chartered in 1837 by a group of New Concord residents. Women were first enrolled in 1854. The institution grew in the decades following the American Civil War, and its initial classical orientation evolved into a liberal arts curriculum.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The Muskingum University tradition of excellence dates back more than 175 years. Muskingum University’s proud heritage began in 1837, when Ohio was an infant state and covered wagons were bringing adventurous settlers westward over the newly completed National Road through New Concord.

  6. Nov 2, 2014 · Muskingum College's science center begins to take shape on January 27, 1970. Times Recorder File Photo Work on Muskingum's new science center gets underway on August 22, 1969.

  7. Overview. Muskingum University is a private institution that was founded in 1837. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 1,524 (fall 2023), and the campus size is 245 acres. It utilizes a...

  8. Muskingum University is a private liberal arts college in New Concord, Ohio. Chartered in 1837 as Muskingum College, the institution is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (USA). Collectively, the university's alumni are referred to as the "Long Magenta Line" and students (both past and present) are known simply as "Muskies" while its ...

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