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University of Nebraska at Kearney: 1905 Kearney: 6,041 NU: University of Nebraska–Lincoln: 1869 Lincoln 23,805 NU: University of Nebraska Omaha: 1908 Omaha 15,058 NU: University of Nebraska Medical Center: 1880 Omaha 3,660 NU: Wayne State College: 1910 Wayne: 4,773 NSCS
The University of Nebraska Omaha (UNO) is a public research university in Omaha, Nebraska, United States. [6] Founded in 1908 by faculty from the Omaha Presbyterian Theological Seminary as a private non-sectarian college, the university was originally known as the University of Omaha .
At that time the University was located just south in the posh Kountze Place suburb. With new bleachers built to accommodate a crowd of a thousand, the Saratoga Field was home to OU's team until 1951. [4] The University of Omaha moved to 6001 Dodge Street in 1938, where its successor institution the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO) remains.
It was founded in 1869 as the University of Nebraska. The University of Nebraska Omaha is the state's public urban university. It was founded in 1908 as Omaha University, and joined the University of Nebraska system in 1968. The University of Nebraska at Kearney is a university especially focused on undergraduate education, in a smaller setting.
The college began in 1971, [5] when the Nebraska State Legislature consolidated eight technical community college areas into six for about 2000 employees. Metropolitan Technical Community College's first campus, a former warehouse at 132nd and I streets, offered 46 programs and had a total student population of 1,059.
The original Omaha Medical College building at 12th & Pacific in 1900. A private medical college was founded in Omaha by the state legislature in 1869 and chartered in 1881 as the Omaha Medical College. [4] It became part of the University of Nebraska system in 1902. A university hospital opened in 1917. In 1968, the University of Nebraska ...
In 1930, the city of Omaha took control of the University of Omaha, turning it into a public municipal institution rather than a private, religious university. In 1931, after an eight-month search, the Board of Regents named William E. Sealock, then dean of the teachers' college at the University of Nebraska, president of the newly created Municipal University of Omaha. [14]