![]() ![]() The third college, the College of Business Administration, was established in 1937, and the College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences was established in 1945, following a merger that absorbed the Indianapolis College of Pharmacy. In 1930, Butler merged with the Teachers College of Indianapolis, founded by Eliza Cooper Blaker, creating the university's second college. Butler left U of I in 1906 after the Medical College of Indiana joined with Purdue University's medical school in 1905 (itself later merging with the Indiana University School of Medicine in 1908). Renamed as Butler College, the school constituted the undergraduate and liberal arts organ of the new university. The Indiana Dental College later joined in 1904. In 1896, Butler joined with two private professional schools, the Medical College of Indiana and the Indiana Law School, to form the University of Indianapolis (U of I), an institution unrelated to the modern university of that name. The university moved to a new site in the community of Irvington, on the east side of Indianapolis, in 1875, and changed its name to Butler University in 1877. Today the Demia Butler Chair of English Literature is occupied by Susan Neville. Merrill was just the second female university professor in the country. Catharine Merrill, was the first to occupy the chair in 1869. The chair was the first endowed position at an American university designated for a female professor. In 1869, Ovid Butler endowed the Demia Butler Chair of English Literature in honor of his daughter, who was the first woman to graduate from the Classical course at the university and had died in 1867. The university established the first professorship in English literature and the first Department of English in the state of Indiana. The university was the second in Indiana and the third in the United States to admit both men and women. The university's charter called for "a non-sectarian institution free from the taint of slavery, offering instruction in every branch of liberal and professional education". The university was founded by members of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), although it was never controlled by that church. Attorney and university founder Ovid Butler provided the property. After five years in development, the school opened on November 1, 1855, as North-Western Christian University at 13th Street and College Avenue on Indianapolis's near northside at the eastern edge of the present-day Old Northside Historic District. On January 15, 1850, the Indiana General Assembly adopted Ovid Butler's proposed charter for a new Christian university in Indianapolis. Illustrations depicting buildings on the school's Irvington campus in 1896 ![]()
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