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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. This book is a chronicle of the history Muskingum College -- founded in 1837 by the Friends of Education, a group of men of who were of Scots-Irish heritage and members of various branches of Presbyterianism -- over the 172-year history of the college.

  6. Nov 2, 2014 · NEWS. Muskingum College of the past. Paul Hall on the Muskingum College (now University) campus in an undated Times Recorder photo. Paul Hall is the oldest building on campus, dating to 1838....

  7. A History of Muskingum College — Fisk, William L., 1921-2015

  8. Throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Muskingum College expanded its academic offerings and facilities. In 1927, the college celebrated its centennial and changed its name to Muskingum University to reflect its growth and evolution.