About UNH
The University
of New Hampshire was originally founded as a land-grant college
whose mission was to shape and educate citizenry among the
state’s farmers, business people and engineers. Today,
the University is a land-, sea-, and space-grant university serving
a growing undergraduate student body of about 11,942 and a graduate
population of 2,257 in addition to 621 full-time faculty members,
86% of which have earned their doctorate degree. The
University has grown into a top public research university
occupying 2,600 acres of classic living and learning space while
still maintaining the look and feel of a New England liberal arts
college with a faculty dedicated to teaching. UNH’s student
to faculty ratio registers at 18:1 with 85% of its classes having
50 students or less.
HISTORY
As one of the most prestigious institutions in
the Northeast, the University of New Hampshire has always been
recognized as a leader in education and research, spanning all
fields of study and uniting them through interdisciplinary
programs, labs, farms, theatres, research centers and libraries.
Founded in 1866 as the New Hampshire College of
Agriculture and Mechanical Arts, UNH was among the early state
institutions of higher education whose formation was made possible
by federal government land grants. The purpose for the grants
was to establish colleges that would serve the sons and daughters
of farming and laboring families.
New Hampshire College was originally situated in
Hanover, N.H. Here it was in connection with Dartmouth
College before moving to Durham in 1893 after Benjamin Thompson
bequeathed land and money to further the development of the
college. The state legislature then granted its new charter
as the University of New Hampshire in 1923.
The University hosts 733 international students
from more than 45 countries and boasts a population of students
from all 50 states. Along with over 100 majors offered, UNH
encompasses seven schools and colleges that undergraduates can
choose from: the College of Liberal Arts, College of Engineering
and Physical Sciences, School of Health and Human Services, College
of Life Sciences and Agricultures, Whittemore School of Business
and Economics, and the Thompson School of Applied Science. At
the very heart of the University’s undergraduate studies is
the General Education Program. The GEP is a core program with a
breadth of academic subjects that aims to acquaint the student with
some of the major modes of thought necessary to understand oneself,
others, society and the world.
The University prides itself as being a top-10
entrepreneurial campus (Forbes.com and The Princeton Review) and is
among the top 30 universities nationally in science research
funding from NASA.
UNH is home to the NASA-recognized Space Science
Center; the Institute for Study for Earth, Oceans and Space; and
the Institute of Marine Science and Engineering. The English
program is staffed by an inspiring faculty of winners of the
Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, the MacArthur Fellowship,
the Edgar Allen Poe Award and the Young Poets Award. In
addition, the Whittemore School of Business and Economics,
established in 1962, was recently selected second among all
business schools in a nationwide pool of business school deans. UNH
also graduates students who attend top-notch graduate schools,
including Law School at Harvard and Cornell, Engineering at
Stanford, and Medical School at Dartmouth, Johns Hopkins and
Harvard.
CAMPUS
In the last few years, several of the athletic
facilities have received major upgrades and improvements. In
September of 2001, the University completed a new $2.15 million
track and field facility. The Jerry Azumah Performance Center, the
strength and conditioning facility located in the UNH Field House,
was dedicated on July 8, 2003. UNH athletics has also added
two $1.5 million outdoor artificial fields, Memorial Field and
Bremner Field. Lundholm Gymnasium has received some major
overhauls, including a new playing surface, new lights, new sound
system, new bleacher system, new backboards and new scoreboards.
The Paul Sweet Oval has been completely renovated to include new
surfaces, lighting, painting, infrastructure upgrades and the
replacement of windows that existed in the original
architecture.
In addition to the incredible improvements of
its athletic facilities, the University has upgraded and renovated
a large part of its academic campus as well. The latest addition to
the expanding campus is the Paul College of Business and Economics,
a 115,000 square foot academic building located on Garrison Avenue.
Slated for completion in January 2013, the building will feature 16
technology-rich classrooms, totaling 950 new instructional seats.
There will also be 25 high-tech groups study rooms along with a
two-story “Great Hall” for informal and special events.
Outside of the facility, there will be a courtyard for outdoor
activities and events. The building will be a LEED (Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design) Gold facility, maintaining the
University’s commitment to sustainable programs and
facilities. The University broke ground on the project in May
2011.
Thompson Hall, one of the standing historical
landmarks of the University, has been beautifully refurbished and
restored. The University also completed a $52 million
renovation of Kingsbury Hall, adding 6,000 square feet of student
project space for students in the College of Engineering and
Physical Sciences, as well as a $4.5 million revamp of Hewitt Hall
to expand the School of Health and Human Services. In
addition, the new 120,000 square foot Biological Sciences Building,
Rudman Hall and the Spaulding Life Sciences Renovation project now
provide state-of-the-art teaching and researching laboratories.
The University also spent $15 million to
complete Morse Hall, a science and engineering building as well as
$8.2 million to modernize the Memorial Union Building. This
revision to the existing student union building consisted of
several upgrades including top kitchen and dining facilities, two
theaters, student mailboxes, lounges and meeting rooms, as well as
additional retail spaces such as the University Bookstore.
The University has also completed construction of the new dining
facility on Main Street, Holloway Commons, as well as the
renovation of the Dimond Library.
In November of 1995, construction of the $27
million Recreation and Sport Complex reached completion. The
Whittemore Center includes a state-of-the-art 6,500 to 7,500 seat
arena for hockey, concerts and convocations, as well as a
three-level recreational sports facility within the structure that
had housed the old Snively Arena.
Combining the atmosphere of a small New England
liberal arts college with the resources and opportunities of a
major research university, the University of New Hampshire is a
place where all students can find or create their own niche and
succeed. While the University offers an extremely broad
academic base with an inspiring faculty, it also provides students
with thousands of opportunities to get involved, either through
athletics, campus recreation, student life, or research. The
University is a dynamic community that not only challenges its
members academically but also expands their understanding and
appreciation of cultural diversity and leads to incredible growth
as students, faculty, staff, and as a community.






