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College of Engineering -- University of Wisconsin-Madison  
Home : News : Over 150 Years of History :
Timeline

1838 State territorial legislature passed bill establishing a University of Wisconsin "at or near Madison, the seat of government."  
1848
May 29
Wisconsin became 30th state.  
1848
Jul 26
Governor Nelson Dewey signed bill creating University of Wisconsin and its board of regents.  
1849
Feb 5
University of Wisconsin founded and first classes held for 17 students.  
1857 Department of Theoretical and Practical Engineering created by Board of Regents. (However, no money was available to employ teachers.)  
1858 Ordinance reorganizing university grouped civil and mechanical engineering in Department of Science, Literature and the Arts.  
1858 Thomas D. Coryell appointed instructor of surveying and civil engineering (first graduate of the university to be given a post on the faculty).  
1860 Engineering instruction discontinued by university.  
1862 Morrill Act provided for military instruction on campus; university allowed to use military instructors to teach engineering courses.  
1866 University again restructured, this time providing for a College of Arts which "shall embrace courses in the mathematical, physical and natural sciences, with their applications to the industrial arts such as agriculture, mechanics and engineering, mining and metallurgy, manufactures, architecture and commerce . . ."  
1868 Colonel W.R. Pease named first professor of engineering (professor of military science and civil engineering).  
1869 University awarded first bachelor's degrees to women.  
1870 First mining courses held in basement of Bascom Hall.  
1871
Jan
Major W. J. L. Nicodemus instituted full course of study in civil engineering. (He has since been dubbed "the father of technical instruction" at the University of Wisconsin.)  
1871
Jun
Department of Mining and Metallurgy established. (Roland Duer Irving named first professor; first degree conferred in 1876.)  
1873 First regular class in engineering (three civil engineering students) graduated.  
1875 Mechanical engineering study introduced; Major Nicodemus appointed professor of civil and mechanical engineering.  
1876 First mining degrees granted. (Twelve conferred before program discontinued in 1889.)  
1877 Classrooms, drafting rooms, machine shop, steam and hydraulic power lab, and materials testing lab established in original Science Hall.  
1877 Engineering Shops and Chemistry Building constructed.  
1884
Dec 1
Fire destroyed Science Hall; engineering students forced to use cramped space in former dormitory North Hall for next four semesters.  
1886 Machine Shop completed and used to house engineering equipment such as lathes, saws and forges. (Building demolished in 1968 to make way for Helen C. White Hall.)  
1887
Feb
Engineering classes moved into new quarters in rebuilt Science Hall.  
1887 Department of Pure and Applied Mechanics (which eventually became the Department of Engineering Mechanics) established with A.D. Conover serving as first chair.  
1889 University reorganized again with Mechanics and Engineering being one of four colleges. (Appropriation of one percent of state's railroad license tax, for continuous use of the College of Mechanics and Engineering, enabled college to greatly expand its work.)  
1889 Enlarged program of instruction offered seven "systematic" courses: civil, railway, mechanical, mining, metallurgical and electrical engineering, and railway mechanics. (These areas underwent more refinement over the next several years.)  
1889 Civil Engineering Professor C.D. Marx conducted experimental Mechanics Institute in Racine, Wis. (College's first venture in outreach education.)  
1891 Department of Electrical Engineering founded. Dugald C. Jackson served as first department chair (1891-1907).  
1892 Charles R. Van Hise received first PhD ever conferred by UW-Madison (Metallurgical and Mineral Engineering) and made department head. (In 1903 he became university president.)  
1895 Charles F. Burgess received BS in electrical engineering and appointed to develop an electrochemistry laboratory. Professor D.C. Jackson directed Assistant Professor Samuel B. Fortenbaugh to develop a division of applied electrochemistry within Department of Electrical Engineering, marking beginning of chemical engineering at UW-Madison.  
1896 College produced first issue of "Wisconsin Engineer," a publication which has remained in print ever since.  
1899
Apr
Board of Regents approved BS in Applied Electrochemistry degree.  
1899 Department of Materials Construction established. (In 1905, this area of study transferred back to Department of Mechanics.)  
1899 - 1902 John Butler Johnson served as first dean of the College of Engineering. PHOTO
(large image)
1900 First classes taught in Engineering (now Education) Building. Facility included drafting room, steam lab and materials testing lab.  
1900 College again reorganized into seven course areas: civil, sanitary, mechanical, electrical and general engineering, and applied electrochemistry and premetallurgical engineering.  
1901 Extension Engineering launched summer school for carpenters, machinists, sheet metal workers, and stationary, marine and locomotive engineers.  
1903 General Engineering Course established to meet needs of business and industry. Course provided "fundamental principles and practices of some of the ordinary applications of science to modern industry."  
1903 - 1937 Frederick Eugene Turneaure served as dean.  
1904 Name changed to "College of Engineering."  
1904 Electrical engineering wing added to Machine Shops Building.  
1904 Engineering and Commerce Course established for students on five-year plan.  
1904 Scale model of UW campus, including steam engineering laboratory, displayed at Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis.  
1905 Department of Chemical Engineering established. Charles F. Burgess served as first chair (1905-1913).  
1905 Classes began in Chemical Engineering Building (previously the Chemistry Building) on Park Street, opposite Memorial Union. (Building demolished in 1968.)  
1905 Hydraulics Laboratory erected along Lake Mendota, where it remains today.  
1905 Agricultural Engineering Building erected (still home to this discipline).  
1908 Summer Session courses offered for first time.  
1908 Mining and metallurgical engineering degree revived.  
1909 Faculty voted to abolish general engineering course.  
1909 Former heating plant (now Radio Hall) became home to Mining and Metallurgy Laboratory.  
1912 Engineering students inaugurated annual parade in honor of St. Patrick, patron saint of engineering. With law students also claiming Patrick as their patron saint, spirited rivalry between two groups grew in intensity. Many parades involved egg tossing from both sides.  
1914 Engineering Experiment Station founded to assist industries in Wisconsin.  
1914 Department of Chemical Engineering held first Summer Course in Chemical Manufacture, an undergraduate requirement that still exists today (now called Operations and Process Laboratory).  
1915 Construction began on Camp Randall Stadium. Major additions made in 1924, 1940, 1950, 1957 and 1964.  
1918 Under quota of Student Army Training Corps, college required to train 450 men as mechanics, shop workers and electrical and radio specialists.  
1918
Sep 26
First Lieutenant A.E. Kelty (BSME '17) became one of college's first casualties of WWI while flying a photographic mission over Verdun, France. (Later received Distinguished Flying Cross.)  
1920 Randall Shop constructed on present engineering campus. (Now "Sawtooth" portion of Mechanical Engineering Building.) PHOTO
(large image)
1925 Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF) chartered to handle patents and earnings on their investments.  
1926 Emily Hahn became first female graduate of college with mining engineering degree.  
1926 Memorial Union erected.  
1928 Charles A. Lindbergh, who completed first solo flight across Atlantic Ocean in 1927, received honorary degree from University of Wisconsin. (Lindbergh enrolled in College of Engineering from 1920-22.)  
1931
Jun 22
Mechanical Engineering Building dedicated. (Department head, Gustus L. Larson, mechanical engineering's first chairman.) PHOTO
(large image)
1932 Former Forest Products Laboratory building remodeled for Mining Engineering.  
1933 Radio Station WHA goes on the air, thanks to the technological assistance of engineering students.  
1936 Department of Instruction renamed Department of Engineering Economics.  
1937 - 1938 A.V. Millar served as acting dean.  
1938 - 1946 Francis Ellis Johnson served as dean.  
1939 State Highway Commission of Wisconsin completed central highway testing laboratory on engineering campus. Forty-year agreement allowed university engineers to use facility for instruction, research and thesis work. In 1977, building remodeled to house computer sciences and physics. Building again remodeled in 1983 and 1987, becoming home to Computer-Aided Engineering in 1987.  
1939 Department of Civil Engineering founded, consolidating five engineering divisions: structural; hydraulic and sanitary; railroad; highway; and city planning, surveying and mapping. Leslie F. Van Hagan named chair.  
1940 College sponsored first Engineering EXPO as a replacement to St. Patrick's Day parades, which had grown increasingly hostile.  
1940 - 1945 Engineering Extension, along with College of Engineering departments, taught evening courses to help meet shortage of engineers and technicians in industry.  
1941
May 1
Governor Julius Heil signed bill calling for compulsory military training for all able-bodied male students during their first two years of study at UW-Madison.

(Throughout WWII, the College of Engineering and other departments trained 100 Navy officers in diesel engineering; 200 mechanics and 600 meteorologists for the Army Air Forces; 800 Navy aviation cadets, engineers and Marine glider pilots; and 600 civilian pilots.)

 
1941
Dec 7
Bombing of Pearl Harbor spurred massive changes throughout college and university: classroom schedules stepped up to permit earlier graduation; vacation periods shortened; curriculum changes made in technical fields to allow more practical and immediate applications of knowledge; fuller summer program inaugurated; Army and Navy take advantage of offer to use campus for any type of training.  
1946 Polymer Processing Research Group established.

Synthetic polymers played a pivotal role in World War II. Shortly thereafter, Emeritus Professor Ronald L. Daggett developed plastics program in Mechanical Engineering. Daggett attracted national attention in early 1960s for pioneering work on injection-molded heart valves.

 
1946 - 1953 Morton Owen Withey served as dean.  
1947 "Temporary" Buildings constructed throughout campus to handle enrollment surge after WWII.

Four remain on engineering campus, including General Engineering Building. Temporary buildings will be removed when construction of Engineering Centers Building begins in 2000.

 
1947 Engine lab established in temporary building (T-25).

By 1969, when research activity moved to Engineering Research Building (ERB), lab had gained international prominence. In summer 1986, Army Research Office announced that UW-Madison was to receive grant establishing it as Army's "Center of Excellence in Advanced Propulsion Systems." In response to this major award, Engine Research Center established. (Award was renewed in 1992.)

 
1947 Three-volume "Chemical Process Principles," by O.A. Hougen and K.M. Watson, published. (Remained an influential text for three decades.)  
1948 Engineering Extension's formerly separate departments of civil & structural, mechanical and electrical engineering combined into one department -- Department of Engineering. H.E. Pulver named first chair.  
1948 John Bardeen (BSEE '28, MSEE '29) co-invented transistor with two others at Bell Labs.  
1948
Dec 11
Construction of a new Engineering Building began. PHOTO
(large image)
1949 Engineers' Day established to recognize outstanding engineers and alumni. PHOTO
(large image)
1949 Professor Leonard Hillis of UW Extension's Department of Civil and Structural Engineering organized first Surveyor's Institute. (1949-50 formally marked inauguration of engineering institutes, with eight programs serving about 120 people.)  
1950
Fall
West Wing of Engineering Building completed. PHOTO
(large image)
1952 "Center arm" of Engineering Building's east wing completed. PHOTO
(large image)
1953 College initiated first teaching and studying abroad programs.  
1953 At urging of Wisconsin industry, Department of Chemical Engineering initiated BS degree in biochemical engineering with Prof. E.N. Lightfoot in charge. (However, program proved unpopular and soon was dropped.)  
1953 - 1971 Kurt Frank Wendt's served as dean.  
1954 Solar Energy Laboratory established under direction of Professor J.A. Duffie. (Emeritus Professor Farrington Daniels, a pioneer in this field, founded lab.)  
1955 Annual Benjamin Smith Reynolds Award established to recognize faculty member contributing most to instruction of engineering students. Olaf A. Hougen named first recipient.  
1957 Nuclear Engineering Program leading to MS and PhD in nuclear engineering established. (Curriculum leading to BS degree approved in 1961.)  
1957 Electrical Engineering Professor Robert J. Parent teamed up with Meteorology Professor V.E. Suomi and other researchers in series of experiments to measure heat budget of Earth. (As result of such pioneering satellite studies, Space Science and Engineering Center organized within Graduate School.  
1958 First PhD granted in Manufacturing Science.  
1959 Jack St. Clair Kilby (MSEE '50) co-invented integrated circuit, spawning microelectronics revolution.  
1959 Curriculum for BS in Engineering Mechanics set up. (Previously, only graduate degrees offered in this field.)  
1960 Professors R. Byron Bird, Warren E. Stewart and Edwin N. Lightfoot published "Transport Phenomena." Text has since become icon for chemical engineering students. (58th printing in 1998.) PHOTO
(large image)
1961 Limnology Building constructed next to Hydraulics Lab.  
1961 College-wide Engineering Computing Laboratory for instruction opened.  
1961 Experimental nuclear reactor built. PHOTO
(large image)
1961 University Extension Division moved to new building on Lake Street. Engineering occupied seventh floor (and it still does).  
1962 East wing of Engineering Building completed.  
1963 University-Industry Research Program established.  
1963
July
Department of Nuclear Engineering established with Professor Max Carbon as first chair.  
1964 Graduate interdisciplinary program leading to MS, Space Engineering and Science established.  
1964 Extension Engineering opened branch in Milwaukee.  
1965 Wing added to Metallurgical and Mineral Engineering Building.  
1966 Industrial Engineering MS and PhD programs established. (BS curriculum approved in 1968.)  
1967 Extension Engineering merges into unit named Departments of Engineering, Mathematics and Applied Science, University of Wisconsin-Extension.  
1967-68 Ednor Rowe, known in scientific circles as "the father of synchrotron radiation," created first electron storage ring, Tantalus.  
1968 First computer controlled robot designed and implemented by John Bollinger (now dean) to weld car frames at A.O. Smith Corporation.  
1968 Curriculum leading to BS in Agricultural Engineering established; PhD program approved in 1974.  
1968 Several interdisciplinary graduate programs approved: Biomedical Engineering; Oceanography and Limnology; Engineering and Area Studies; and Water Resources Management.  
1968 One of world's first Rheology Research Centers established at UW-Madison with Arthur S. Lodge as founding director.  
1969
July
Industrial Engineering (previously been part of Mechanical Engineering) became separate department.  
1969 Engineering Research Building opened. PHOTO
(large image)
1969
Nov
Coordinating Council for Higher Education approved Professional Development Degree Program. Mechanical Engineering Professor George Sell named first coordinator.  
1970 Interdisciplinary graduate programs leading to MS and PhD degrees in Water Chemistry and Materials Science established.  
1970 Program leading to the Professional Development Degree (under guidance of UW Extension Engineering) approved.  
1970 Department of Civil Engineering became Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.  
1970 Department of Electrical Engineering became Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.  
1971 Department of Engineering Graphics changed name to Department of General Engineering to reflect a broader curriculum.  
1971 Union South opened. PHOTO
(large image)
1971 - 1981 William Robert Marshall, Jr. served as dean. (Had been associate dean from 1953-71.)  
1972 John Bardeen (BSEE '28, MSEE '29) received his second Nobel Prize for Physics (with two other scientists) for developing theory of superconductivity at low temperatures. (He received his first Nobel Prize in 1956 (again with two others) for discovering "transistor effect," which led to invention of transistor.  
1972 Environmental Studies minor approved.  
1974 College initiates MS in Biomedical Engineering.  
1975 Two-story brick addition completed on Metallurgical and Mineral Engineering Building.  
1976 Kurt F. Wendt Library opened. PHOTO
(large image)
1976 First U.S. program in technical Japanese translation established at UW-Madison with Edward E. Daub as director.  
1976 Energy Technology Center introduced by Extension's Department of Engineering and Applied Science.  
1978 Ragnar E. Onstad Service to Society Award established to honor engineering teachers who have been leaders in contributing to the solutions of societal problems.  
1979
Apr 25-27
First World Conference on Continuing Engineering Education held in Mexico City. Program developed by Professor John Klus and Judy Jones of Extension's Department of Engineering and Applied Science.  
1980 Byron Bird Award for Excellence in a Research Publication established; Arthur S. Lodge named first recipient.  
1981
Jan
Wisconsin Electric Machines and Power Electronics Consortium (WEMPEC) founded.  
1981 Engineering Computing Laboratory (ECL) and Data Acquisition and Simulation Laboratory (DASL) merged to form Computer-Aided Engineering Center (CAE).  
1981 John Gustave Bollinger began term as College of Engineering's seventh dean.  
1982 Disaster Management Center founded by Extension's Department of Engineering and Applied Science.  
1983 Interdisciplinary graduate program in Manufacturing Systems Engineering established.  
1983 Brewster Shaw (BSEMA '68, MS '69) flew on first of two Space Shuttle missions. (Other in 1985.) PHOTO
(large image)
1983 Transportation Information Center established by Extension's Department of Engineering and Applied Science.  
1984 University Research Park founded to encourage technology transfer and create endowment for research programs.  
1984 Structures and Materials Testing Laboratory founded.  
1984 University of Wisconsin Polymerization Reaction Engineering Laboratory (UWPREL) founded under direction of Professor Harmon Ray.  
1985
Jul 1
Extension's Department of Engineering and Applied Science became official department within college; renamed Department of Engineering Professional Development.  
1986
Jul
College notified of $5 million grant from NASA to operate center for commercial development of space-related technology (then named WCSAR).  
1987 Department of Nuclear Engineering became Department of Nuclear Engineering and Engineering Physics (NEEP).  
1988
May 31
UW-Madison named Sematech Center of Excellence; research focused on X-ray lithography.  
1988
Aug 19
NSF announced UW-Madison would receive up to $12 million to establish Engineering Research Center for Plasma-Aided Manufacturing.  
1988
Winter
Department of Metallurgical and Mineral Engineering changed name to Materials Science and Engineering.  
1989
Fall
Department of Engineering Professional Development transmitted first live satellite course.  
1990
Spring
College granted first two "video" master's degrees to students who completed graduate work by watching course videos at home, mailing in assignments and taking exams at special testing centers.  
1991
Apr 19
Ground broken for new wing of Engineering Hall. PHOTO
(large image)
1991 Team of college engineers created first-ever working magnetic micromotors -- smaller in width than three human hairs.  
1992
Fall
Department of Engineering Mechanics changed name to Department of Engineering Mechanics and Astronautics.  
1993
Jan
Most recent addition to Engineering Building dedicated; facility renamed "Engineering Hall." PHOTO
(large image)
1993
Oct 14
First check presented to fund Reed Center for Photonic Devices.  
1994
Oct 21
Sculpture/fountain Máquina and Engineering Mall dedicated. PHOTO
(large image)
1995
Feb 23
Brainstorm: Schoofs Prize for Creativity launched. First winner: Tom Swetish, inventor of collapsible land yacht/iceboat. PHOTO
(large image)
1995
Mar 28
Gov. Tommy Thompson announced he would propose construction of $44 million Engineering Centers Building. PHOTO
(large image)
1995
Jul 1
Department of Engineering Mechanics and Astronautics merged into Department of Nuclear Engineering and Engineering Physics.  
1995
Jul 1
Johnson Drive, main thoroughfare of engineering campus, renamed Engineering Drive.  
1995
Summer
UW-Madison chosen as home of $10 million NSF National Institute for Science Education; COE Professor Denice Denton and educational psychology Professor Andrew C. Porter named co-directors.  
1995
Summer
College purchased Cray Supercomputer for Engine Research Center. PHOTO
(large image)
1995
Oct 20 -
Nov 3
Researchers from Wisconsin Center for Space Automation and Robotics (WCSAR) grew first food in space ó potatoes. PHOTO
(large image)
1995
Fall/Winter
Plasma Source Ion Implantation (PSII) research group received share of $15.5 million government/private sector grant.  
1996
Summer
Renovation began on Materials Science and Engineering Building. PHOTO
(large image)
1996
Sep 1
NSF funds kicked in for $10.6 million Materials Research Science and Engineering Center on Nanostructural Materials and Interfaces (MRSEC).  
1997 Department of Nuclear Engineering and Engineering Physics changed name to Engineering Physics.  
1997
Fall
Environmental Engineering Option offered as part of civil engineering degree.  
1998
Spring
BS and PhD programs in Biomedical Engineering approved by Board of Regents.  
1998
Spring
New track in Radiation Sciences approved for Department of Engineering Physics.  
1998
Spring
Board of Regents approved development of Master of Engineering in Professional Development (MEPP), a distance-delivered degree to be delivered by Department of Engineering Professional Development.  
1998
Summer
Public received first look at architects' renderings of proposed Engineering Centers Building, an education and research center for which construction will begin in the year 2000. PHOTO
(large image)
1998
June
Team of UW-Madison student engineers shared first place in national FutureCar Challenge, doubling over-the-road fuel efficiency of mid-size American car without sacrificing safety, comfort or performance. PHOTO
(large image)
1998
August
National Science Foundation announced Engineering Research Center for Power Electronics, a collaborative effort between UW-Madison, Virginia Tech, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, North Carolina A&T State University, and the University of Puerto Rico at Mayaguez.  
1998
August
Trace Research and Development Center, under direction of Industrial Engineering Professor Gregg Vanderheiden, received five-year, $6.75 million grant to make information technology more accessible to people with disabilities.  
1998
Fall
College began BS and PhD programs in biomedical engineering.  
1998
Fall
New Master of Engineering degree (Polymer Engineering and Science) offered.  
1998 Master of Engineering in Technical Japanese degree (METJ) approved; classes to start in fall of 1999.  
1999
July 1
Paul S. Peercy begins term as eighth College of Engineering dean.  
2000
Spring
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering begins degree program in computer engineering.  
2000
June 20
College breaks ground for new Engineering Centers Building.  
2000
Fall
Alumnus Jack St. Clair Kilby (MSEE '50) wins Nobel Prize for co-inventing the integrated circuit in 1958.  
2000
Fall
Student Leadership Center established to foster interaction among COE student groups.  
2000
Fall
College launches LINKS program, which joins freshmen in course clusters, which create student cohorts and "link" subject material across courses.  
2001
Jan. 1
John D. Wiley, professor of electrical and computer engineering, named UW-Madison chancellor.  
2001
Feb. 16
Dean Paul S. Peercy and Materials Science and Engineering Professor Max Lagally named to National Academy of Engineering.  
2001
May
First undergraduates graduate from biomedical engineering department.  
2001
May
Master of Engineering in Professional Practice program graduates first class. MEPP is the university's first internet-delivered degree.  
2002
Fall
NSF funds Women in Science and Engineering Leadership Institute with five-year, $3.5 million grant. WISELI is a catalyst for initiatives intended to enhance the advancement of women in science and engineering and to measure the success of such efforts.  
2002
Oct. 18
Engineering Centers Building dedicated. The first new building erected on the engineering campus in 30 years, the facility officially opened for use in spring 2003. PHOTO
(large image)
2003
February
Materials Science and Engineering Professor David Larbalestier named to National Academy of Engineering.  
2003
May
To reflect an increase in the scope of the discipline, and bring its name in line with research and instructional efforts, the Department of Chemical Engineering changes name to Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering.  
2003
June
FutureTruck team wins national championship second year in a row. PHOTO
(large image)
2003
June
Concrete Canoe team wins first-ever national championship. PHOTO
(large image)
2003
June 25
The National Cancer Institute funds a $10 million Center of Excellence in Cancer Communications Research. The center is headed by Industrial Engineering Professor Emeritus David Gustafson.  
2003
Fall
College debuts the Master of Engineering in Engine Systems, an online degree for professionals seeking to widen their training in engine technology.  
2003
November
Industrial Engineering Professor Raj Veeramani launches the UW E-Business Institute to help Wisconsin industries develop a better understanding of how Internet-enabled technologies and practices can increase their competitive edge in fierce global markets.  
2004
January
Several engineering faculty, including Industrial Engineering Professor Vicki Bier and Civil and Environmental Engineering Professor Lawrence Bank, begin research as part of the newly established $12 million Homeland Security Center for Risk and Economic Analysis of Terrorism Events at the University of Southern California.  
2004
February
Materials Science and Engineering Professor John Perepezko elected to National Academy of Engineering.  
2004
March
In only its third year of existence, the Clean Snowmobile team wins national championship, the Clean Snowmobile Challenge.  
2004
June
FutureTruck team wins third consecutive national championship and Concrete Canoe team wins second consecutive national championship.  
2004
July
Future Energy Challenge team wins American Tour de Sol Hydrogen Award.  
2004
September
A $2.5 million National Science Foundation grant establishes the Wisconsin Alliance for Minority Participation to boost the number of underrepresented students who receive bachelor’s degrees in science, technology, engineering and math.  
2004
September
National Science Foundation funding establishes the Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center to examine templated synthesis at the nanoscale and explore societal implications of nanotechnology.  
2005
January
To better represent the breadth and innovation of its work, particularly in health systems engineering, the Department of Industrial Engineering changes its name to Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering.  
2005
May
Civil and Environmental Engineering Professor Jeffrey S. Russell receives the Presidential Award for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Mentoring.  
2005
June
UW-Madison Engineers Without Borders chapter receives the Mondialogo Engineering Award, an international initiative that recognizes engineering achievements aimed at meeting United Nationals millennium development goals and fostering intercultural dialog.  
2005
June
Concrete canoe team wins third consecutive national championship.  
2005
August
U.S. Department of Transportation funds $16 million National University Transportation Center on UW-Madison campus.  
2005
November
U.S. President George W. Bush named Hilldale Professor Emeritus of Chemical and Biological Engineering Edwin Lightfoot as one of eight recipients of the National Medial of Science, the nation’s highest honor for science and technology.  
2006
February
Professor Mary Anderson, who holds appointments in geology and geophysics, the Geological Engineering Program, and the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies, named to the National Academy of Engineering.  
2006
March
Mechanical Engineering Professor Patrick Farrell named UW-Madison provost.  
2006
June
Concrete Canoe team wins fourth consecutive national championship.  
2006
July
Several UW-Madison faculty and staff launch the UW Energy Institute, which encourages collaboration on energy-related education, research and service activities.  
2006
September
Phase 1 of new Mechanical Engineering Building opens.  
2007
October
New Mechanical Engineering Building dedicated.  
2007
October
Engineering mechanics marks 120th year; the Department of Pure and Applied Mechanics formed in 1887, with A.D. Conover as its first chair. In 1997, engineering mechanics, nuclear engineering and engineering physics merged to form the Department of Engineering Physics.  

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