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Page 12 text:
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History The oldest chartered college in the City of Baltimore, Loyola College first opened its doors on September 15, 1852, with some 58 young men enrolled. Operating in two rented houses on Holliday Street, across from City Hall, Loyola had as its first president Rev. John Early, S.J. Eight Jesuits comprised the faculty of the young institution. Classes continued on Holliday Street until February, 1855, when overcrowded conditions brought about a move to a new building on Calvert Street at Madison (today, the home of Center Stage). There, for more than seven decades, Loyola students received sound academic preparation for careers of leadership in busi- ness, government, and the professions. With no room for further expansion downtown, in 1922 Loyola College moved to a 20-acre site at North Charles Street and Cold Spring Lane. With a 1971 merger with nearby Mount Saint Agnes College, Loyola became the first fully coeducational Catholic college in Maryland. Today, day and evening undergraduate programs, plus a variety of graduate division and professional development programs, serve the state ' s citizens with a wide range of educational offerings, combining a value-centered, liberal arts tra- dition with strong professional preparation and up- dating. An independent college in the traditions of the Jesuits and Sisters of Mercy, Loyola is the largest private college in Maryland with some 4,600 students enrolled. Its record of service; its high academic stand- ing; the accomplishments of its nearly 15,000 alumni; plus its response to the needs of the community — all account for the College ' s prominence in the educa- tional, professional, and cultural life of Maryland. Loyola ' s first home on Holiday St. in the F. Knapp Institute building. Photo taken 1867 Loyola ' s second site at Calvert and Madison Streets. Plaque in Maryland Hall representing Loyola ' s one hundred year history.
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Page 13 text:
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Aerial view of the carnpus, 1920 ' s, 01 EVfW66N , il EFlE,t.n m4 ill LO ' AILA Mit Newly-constructed Loyola gymnaslunn c, 1920 Students leaving campus. Andrew White Student Center, 1950 ' s
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