Ohio Northern University (Ohio Northern or ONU) is a private college in Ada, Ohio. Founded by Henry Solomon Lehr in 1871, ONU is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. It offers over 60 programs to choose from across five colleges and is affiliated with the United Methodist Church.
Henry Solomon Lehr founded the Northwestern Ohio Normal School in August 1871. When the college's curriculum grew to include pharmacy, engineering, law and business programs, its name was changed to Ohio Normal University in 1885 and, eventually, in 1903, to Ohio Northern University. In 1899, it became affiliated with the United Methodist Church to reduce debt.[4]
Interwar and post-war education
Martin Luther King Jr. statue at Ohio Northern University
Before the Great Depression, more than one thousand students were typically enrolled at Ohio Northern every year. Both the Great Depression and the following World War II plunged the school into low enrollment, and the possibility of closure was considered. During World War II, enrollment reached a low of 156 students. Thanks to the G.I. Bill, Ohio Northern was able to bring enrollment back up to nine hundred students by 1946.
Throughout the 1960s, a number of ONU students and faculty/staff participated in the American Civil Rights Movement. ONU hosted Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on January 11, 1968, four days before his 39th birthday and just three months before his assassination.[5] During his visit at ONU, King famously spoke regarding the myth that many immigrant and/or ethnic groups successfully pulled themselves up by their bootstraps, whereas African Americans were incapable of doing so.[6][7] ONU honored King and his speech on campus with the unveiling of a statue in his likeness on April 17, 2018.[8][9]
Later 20th century into today
Growth continued under Dr. DeBow Freed through the 1980s and 1990s with additions to the Taggart Law Library, Presser Hall, Dukes Memorial, Wilson Art Building, Biggs Engineering, Heterick Memorial Library, and Meyer Hall of Science, and the construction of the Freed Center for the Performing Arts and a new president's on-campus home. Under Dr. Kendall Baker, campus additions include Dicke Hall, an expansion of the Robertson-Evans Pharmacy building, the Dial-Roberson Stadium and the Mathile Center for the Natural Sciences. In 2008, Ohio Northern University built and opened The Inn at Ohio Northern University.[10] A new engineering building was opened in October 2019.[11]
Leadership
Melissa J. Baumann is Ohio Northern University’s 12th president, and first female to serve in the role.
Past ONU presidents
Henry Solomon Lehr (1871–1900)
Leroy A. Belt (1900–1905)
Albert Edwin Smith (1905–1930)
Robert Williams (1929*–1943)
Robert O. McClure (1943–1949)
Frank Bringle McIntosh (1949–1965)
Samuel Lewis Meyer (1965–1977)
Ray B. Loeschner (1977–1979)
Harold A. Bolz (1979, interim)
DeBow Freed (1979–1999)
Kendall L. Baker (1999–2011)
Daniel A. DiBasio (2011–2022)
Academics
Presser Hall, housing the music department of Ohio Northern University, with the Dukes and Lehr buildings in the background.
The institution comprises five colleges:
Getty College of Arts and Sciences
James F. Dicke College of Business Administration
T.J. Smull College of Engineering
Rudolph H. Raabe College of Pharmacy
Claude W. Pettit College of Law (established 1885)
Prior to 1973, the law school was known as "the Warren G. Harding College of Law". It was renamed in honor of Claude W. Pettit, a judge and former dean of the college.[12]
Athletics
A Polar Bears punter during a football game in 2022
ONU students participate in intercollegiate, intramural, and sports clubs in a variety of sports. The ONU Polar Bears compete in the NCAA Division III Ohio Athletic Conference (OAC). The men's volleyball team participates in the Midwest Intercollegiate Volleyball Association in the Great Midwest Men's Volleyball Conference.
The ONU varsity football team defeated Mount Union College in 2005 to snap the Purple Raiders 110-game regular season winning streak.[14]
The ONU women's volleyball team had an NCAA All-Divisions record 36 consecutive winning seasons.
Men's sports
Baseball
Basketball
Cross country
Football
Golf
Lacrosse
Swimming
Tennis
Track & field
Wrestling
Women's sports
Basketball
Cross country
Golf
Soccer
Lacrosse
Softball
Swimming
Tennis
Track & field
Volleyball
National honors
NCAA Championship
1993 Men's Basketball NCAA Division III Champions[15]
NCAA Runner-up finishes
1989 Women's Volleyball NCAA Division III Runners-up[16]
2012 Men's Soccer NCAA Division III Runners-up[17]
NCAA Final Four appearances
2001 Men's Basketball NCAA Division III Final Four[18]
2008 Women's Volleyball NCAA Division III Final Four[19]
NCAA Elite Eight appearance
2017 Women's Basketball
NCAA Sweet Sixteen appearances
1999 Football
2000 Football
2010 Football
2015 Football
2019 Women's Soccer
2022 Men’s Soccer
2023 Women’s Basketball
2023 Men’s Soccer
Club Sport Championship
2007 Men's Volleyball NIRSA Division II National Champions[20]
Notable alumni
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations.(January 2024)
Frank T. Bow, jurist and politician who was honored by naming the Frank T. Bow Federal Building in Canton, Ohio.
James Cloyd Bowman, a children's book author who received a Newbery Honor in 1938 for Pecos Bill: The Greatest Cowboy of All Time.
Benjamin Brafman, a prominent criminal defense attorney based in New York.[21][22]
William J. Brown, former Ohio Attorney General (1971–1983).[23]
Anthony J. Celebrezze, Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare under the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, the 49th Mayor of Cleveland, and a Sixth Circuit Appellate Judge
George Washington Crile, founder of the Cleveland Clinic and inventor of the system for blood transfusion
Robert R. Cupp, former Ohio Supreme Court Justice
Mike DeWine, Governor of Ohio
Simeon Davison Fess, a Republican politician a former president of Antioch College
George Getty, American lawyer, father of industrialist J. Paul Getty and patriarch of the Getty family
John W. Grabiel, Arkansas Republican gubernatorial nominee in 1922 and 1924; Ohio native, attorney in Fayetteville, Arkansas, until his death in 1928[24]
Stephanie L. Haines, United States federal judge
Stacey Hairston, former Cleveland Browns player
Thomas Hutson, doctor and medical researcher
Robert Franklin Jones, served as Allen County (Ohio) prosecuting attorney, 1935–1939. Elected in 1938 to the Seventy-sixth U.S. Congress, and elected for three subsequent terms to Congress, serving from 1939 to 1947. Appointed commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission, serving from 1947 to 1952
George E. Killian, a sports administrator and a president of the International University Sports Federation
Carla F. Kim, Associate Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical School and Principal Investigator at the Stem Cell Program at Boston Children's Hospital
Cheryl L. Mason, Chairman of the Board of Veterans' Appeals, US Department of Veterans' Affairs (first woman appointed to the position)
Clay Mathile, former owner of Iams pet food
Harry McNeal, Major League baseball player
Bill Peterson, former head football coach at Florida State, Rice University, and with the Houston Oilers
Bob Peterson, story artist, animator and voice actor