Project Description
Lewis & Clark College has a rich history as one of the oldest collegiate institutions in the Pacific Northwest, dating back to 1867 when it was founded by the Presbyterian Church as Albany Collegiate Institute in Albany, Oregon. Albany College established a junior college in Portland in 1934, with the entire school moving to Portland in 1939. In 1942 the college trustees acquired the Lloyd Frank “Fir Acres” estate in southwest Portland, establishing a permanent home and campus in Portland. To mark the transformation made possible by the acquisition of the Frank estate, the trustees changed the name to Lewis & Clark College.
The Lewis & Clark College Archives are composed of college records dating to the founding of Albany College in 1867. These records include administrative papers, student records, employee records, business records, photographs, publications, and institutional history. Only parts of the institutional archives are available for public use. Those parts are described in publicly available finding aids through Archives West.
All digitized material relating to the College’s history can be found at: LC Digital Collections.
Lewis & Clark College Timeline
February 2, 1867 | Albany Collegiate Institute was founded in Albany, Oregon on property donated by Thomas and Christine Monteith. |
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1867-68 | Rev. William J. Monteith named as Albany’s first president. |
1868-69 | Rev. Henry Bushnell, president. |
1869-71 | Rev. Edward R. Geary, president. |
1871-76 | Royal K. Warren, president. |
1873 | Albany honored its first graduates, four women: Maria Irvine, Cora Irvine, Weltha Young, and Mary Hannon. |
1876-78 | Rev. Howard W. Stratton, president. |
1878-79 | David B. Rice, president. |
1879-85, 1887-94 | Rev. Elbert Neal Condit, president. |
1885-86 | Joseph C. Wyckoff, president. |
April-June, 1886 | Earl T. Lockhard, president. |
1891 | Black and Orange are selected as the school colors. |
1892 | “The Orange and the Black” is designated as the official school song. |
1894-95 | Frederic George Young, president. |
1895-1905, 1915-20 | Wallace Howe Lee, president. |
1905 | Albany Collegiate Institute is officially renamed Albany College. |
1905-15 | Harry Means Crooks, president. |
1920-22 | Alfred Melvin Williams, president. |
1922-23 | Raymond J. Bake, term as president. |
1923-28, 1938-41 | Clarence W. Greene, president. |
1924 | Lloyd and Edna Frank and their children moved into the newly built Fir Acres estate, which later became the campus for Lewis & Clark College. This estate was designed by architect Herman Brookman, and soon after its construction was considered one of the most beautiful estates in the western United States. |
1927 | Albany College moved to a larger piece of property in Albany, Oregon, which was called the Monteith campus. |
1929-38 | Thomas William Bibb, president. |
1934 | Albany College attempted to improve its attendance by establishing a Portland satellite campus in Portland, Oregon. |
1938 | Albany College lost its accreditation with the Northwest Association of Secondary and Higher Schools. Although accreditation was not regained until 1944, the college remained open, and students continued to attend. |
June 1938 | The Board of Trustees made the difficult decision to close the Albany campus permanently, and focus on developing a campus in Portland. |
1940 | College Board of Trustees recommended the purchase of Weatherly Heights, on Mount Tabor, Portland, Oregon, for the new campus. The Weatherly Heights plan was abandoned in 1941 because of a lack of funds. |
1941-42 | Benjamin A. Thaxter, president. |
1942 | The Fir Acres estate was purchased from the Frank family for $46,000, and the College was renamed Lewis & Clark College. |
1942-60 | Morgan S. Odell, president. |
1946 | The name “Pioneers” was adopted by the student body. |
1960-81 | John R. Howard, president. |
1965 | Northwest College of Law merged with Lewis & Clark College. |
1966 | The college gymnasium burned down. |
1966 | Lewis & Clark College severed official ties with the Presbyterian Church. |
1981-89 | James Gardner, president. |
1989-2003 | Michael Mooney, president. |
2004 | Paul Bragdon, interim president. |
2005-2009 | Thomas J. Hochstettler, president. |
2010-2017 | Barry Glassner, president. |
2017 | David Ellis, interim president. |
2017-2022 | Wim Wiewel, president. |
2022- | Robin Holmes-Sullivan, president. |