DEPARTMENT HISTORY |
The MTU Physics DepartmentThe Earliest Years
The State Legislature soon provided funds for a building to house the Mining School, to be completed in 1890 on a site just East of downtown Houghton. The bulk of the property was donated by State Senator Jay A. Hubbell, a strong supporter of the School. Initially the building was simply referred to as "The Mining School." Once a second building appeared specifically to house engineering disciplines, the building was often referred to as the "Science Building." Through most of its history the building would be known as Hubbell Hall. The Physics Department was housed in Hubbell Hall until 1964.
Haynes had been a professor at Hillsdale College in Hillsdale, Michigan, for about fifteen years before accepting the MMS position. He came with some prominence as a mathematician as he was one of only a small number of Americans to have been elected to the London Mathematical Society at that time. Prof. Haynes moved to the University of Minnesota after the Spring of 1893, and was replaced by Fred W. McNair. James Fisher, Jr., a Hancock, MI, native and an MMS graduate of 1893, was added as an instructor a couple years later. Nathan Osborne, who had no college degree at the time, joined the faculty a year after Fisher. Osborne later earned his Engineer of Mines (EM) degree in 1899 while serving as Instructor. In 1897 the School became a college:
the Michigan College of Mines, MCM.
McNair was named MCM President in 1899, replacing Wadsworth, and Fisher was
promoted to fill the departmental role vacated by McNair, first to Assistant
Professor and then in 1902 to Professor of Mathematics and Physics. The
combination of Profs. McNair, who retained his Professorship in Math and
Physics (including some teaching duties), and Fisher dominated the
early decades of the Physics Department’s history. * In the late 1800's and early 1900's the catalog served as a comprehensive
annual report and prospectus for the College and included much more
information than is found in today’s catalogs.
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Michigan Tech had its beginnings in 1885 as the Michigan Mining
School (MMS) offering a two-year mining program. The first classes were held
in the Fall of 1886 in the Continental Fire Hall, which still stands next
to the old Portage Lake District Library on Montezuma Avenue in downtown
In the earliest years a department included a single Professor, also referred
to as the Department Head, with teaching help from Instructors and
Assistants. For the first several years the School catalogue referred to a
Physics Department and an empty position for a Professor of Physics and
Mechanical Engineering. The first instructor in physics listed in the School
catalogue* was George H. Perkins in 1889, who is then our first Physics department
faculty member. The Professorship, by then of Mathematics and Physics,
was finally filled in 1890 when