A little history here. After South Dakota and North Dakota became states in 1889, our institution was known as South Dakota Agricultural College (regardless of what Wikipedia says) until the title of "South Dakota State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts" was conferred.
As for USD, here goes. Back in 1902, USD started offering engineering courses. They had the gonads to take out advertisements in newspapers that stated that USD was the only institution in the state authorized to confer degrees in civil engineering and mechanical engineering. At the time, there was not a single member of the faculty at USD that had any engineering education whatsoever.
Further, the USD power group and its alumni insisted that the engineering programs at State be termed "mechanic arts" ... in an attempt to make their offerings more attractive. The Regents agreed (until 15 years ago, the Regents always favored USD over the other state schools) and thus, the name change: South Dakota State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. Then, USD's power group asked the attorney general for an opinion moving the engineering from State College to USD. The attorney general didn't see it their way.
The big power play happened beginning in 1931. USD's alumni and supporters attempted to gut South Dakota State. They wanted all engineering programs and the pharmacy program to go to SDSU. The plan failed. Then, help came in the form of the Great Depression. The Legislature handed down huge cuts and USD's engineering dreams went away. But, they didn't go down without a fight. A group of USD alums sued the Regents in the State Supreme Court ... and here is what they wanted: eliminate all engineering courses at SDSU; all music, journalism, economics, education, general sciences, history, political science, sociology, chemistry, English, foreign languages, mathematics and psychology classes ... all cut at SDSU. In return, SDSU would get USD's home economics program.
All of this information comes courtesy of the great Halvor Christian Solberg of Solberg Hall fame. He was always weary of the USD's motives. I'm with Halvor.
As for USD, here goes. Back in 1902, USD started offering engineering courses. They had the gonads to take out advertisements in newspapers that stated that USD was the only institution in the state authorized to confer degrees in civil engineering and mechanical engineering. At the time, there was not a single member of the faculty at USD that had any engineering education whatsoever.
Further, the USD power group and its alumni insisted that the engineering programs at State be termed "mechanic arts" ... in an attempt to make their offerings more attractive. The Regents agreed (until 15 years ago, the Regents always favored USD over the other state schools) and thus, the name change: South Dakota State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. Then, USD's power group asked the attorney general for an opinion moving the engineering from State College to USD. The attorney general didn't see it their way.
The big power play happened beginning in 1931. USD's alumni and supporters attempted to gut South Dakota State. They wanted all engineering programs and the pharmacy program to go to SDSU. The plan failed. Then, help came in the form of the Great Depression. The Legislature handed down huge cuts and USD's engineering dreams went away. But, they didn't go down without a fight. A group of USD alums sued the Regents in the State Supreme Court ... and here is what they wanted: eliminate all engineering courses at SDSU; all music, journalism, economics, education, general sciences, history, political science, sociology, chemistry, English, foreign languages, mathematics and psychology classes ... all cut at SDSU. In return, SDSU would get USD's home economics program.
All of this information comes courtesy of the great Halvor Christian Solberg of Solberg Hall fame. He was always weary of the USD's motives. I'm with Halvor.
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