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Admissions: Undergraduate
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Shuster Hall, Room 161Office Hours
Mon - Thurs: 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Fri - 12:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Extended Hours:
Until 6:00 PM on Tuesdays
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Opening of the Campus
Hunter College, then known as the Normal College, opens the first of four Gothic-style buildings-Gillet Hall. Plans for Greek temples complete with Doric columns originally inspired the campus design, but plans are scaled back by the 1929 Stock Market Crash.
Construction on the remaining three buildings-Davis Hall, the Gymnasium (now called the Old Gym Building), and the Student Building Student Hall (now the Music Building)-is finished by 1934.
Opening of Lehnert's Rock Garden
A large rock garden is dedicated in memory of Professor Edward M. Lehnert, chair of the Department of Geology and Geography from its inception in the 1920s. Besides being a quiet and special spot on the campus cherished by students, the garden served as an outdoor laboratory for the College's science students. Located north of Gillet Hall, it originally measured 106 by 68 feet and featured a reflecting pool filled with goldfish and turtles, a dozen rock benches, and nearly 200 rock and mineral specimens.
The Navy WAVES Report for Duty
With the United States' entry into World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt institutes a new division of the Armed Forces-the WAVES (Women Accepted for Voluntary Emergency Service)-marking the first time that women are able to serve in the American military. For three years, nearly 81,000 women are trained on the campus as decoders, navigators, and mechanics..
The United Nations Moves to the Bronx
After two world wars in twenty-five years, the United Nations is born. While searching for more permanent accommodations, the nascent U.N. settles on the Bronx campus, with the Gym Building transformed into the chambers of both the U.N. Security Council and the Economic and Social Council. The campus becomes the "diplomatic center of the universe," as the U.N. deals with crises in Iran, Greece, Spain, Indonesia, Syria, and Lebanon. Work begins in a newly created Division of Human Rights, led by Eleanor Roosevelt, which eventually culminates in 1948 in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Opening of the Fine Arts Building and Shuster Hall
These buildings, both designed by Modernist master Marcel Breuer, mark the first additions to the campus since it opened in 1931. The pair at first forms a larger complex that includes classrooms, a library, and a shared architectural exterior. Then in 1972, Shuster Hall is remodeled into Lehman College's administration building. A decade later, in 1983, the library exterior is remodeled with black glass and becomes the home for the College's Art Department and Art Gallery. Now, the Fine Arts Building hosts 11,000 visitors each year and is a leading art space in the Bronx.
CUNY is Born
The City University of New York is created. With the stroke of Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller's pen, New York's seven-college municipal higher education system, with new Ph.D. - granting authority, is organized into one interconnected organization. Although the University can trace its roots back to 1847, when the Free Academy was founded, CUNY - then the nation's largest public university system-marks a significant moment in the history of higher education in New York City. The mission of the University - to educate 'the children of the whole people' - continues to this day, a half century later.
Establishment of Lehman College
Following a twenty-minute ceremony, Herbert H. Lehman College comes into existence, the first — and still the only — CUNY senior college in the Bronx. Dr. Leonard A. Lief, a faculty member in the English Department when the campus was Hunter-in-the-Bronx, becomes its first President, a position he holds for more than twenty years. A new campus library, opened in 1980, is dedicated in his honor in May 2006.
Inauguration of the Herbert H. Lehman Memorial Lecture Series
Former U.S. Attorney Ramsey Clark is the first series speaker. He is followed in later years by a variety of distinguished men and women from the arts, government, education, and international affairs, including several former U.S. Senators and college presidents.
Opening of Carman Hall, the College's Principal Classroom Building
The building houses classrooms, offices, and lecture halls for more than a dozen academic departments. In 1999, a state-of-the-art Information Technology Center is added, featuring nine microcomputer classrooms, an open lab area with over 100 microcomputers, and "Sonic Pass Blue," a work of public art by sound artist Christopher Janney that transforms a walkway into a "synaesthetic environment" capturing the interaction between sounds and pedestrians.
Opening of Lehman Center for the Performing Arts
A performance by the New York Philharmonic opens Lehman Center for the Performing Arts. Designed by Jan Hird Pokorny and David F.M. Todd & Associates, the Center is the largest concert hall in the Bronx with seating for over 2,300 visitors. Critics hail its performance space as "acoustically perfect," and over the next three decades it becomes a premiere cultural destination, offering a range of programming from classical music and jazz to pop concerts.
Dr. Ricardo R. Fernández becomes President of Lehman College
Dr. Ricardo R. Fernández becomes the College's second President. Under his leadership, Lehman adds a wide array of new majors and graduate programs, vastly overhauls its technological capabilities, and greatly expands its outreach to the Bronx community, especially its schools.
Opening of The APEX
Designed by Rafael Viñoly Architects PC, The APEX houses an Olympic-sized swimming pool, gymnasium and auxiliary gymnasium, racquetball courts, dance studios, weight and aerobic rooms, classrooms, and the Lehman Athletic Hall of Fame. Outside its doors are tennis courts, refurbished in 2010 with the same court surface that graces center court at Arthur Ashe Stadium, home to the U.S. Open.
Naming of Leonard Lief Library
The College Library is named in honor of President Emeritus Leonard Lief, the founding president of Lehman College (1968-1990). The plaque unveiled during the ceremony praises him for shaping the College's "faculty, curriculum, and its very surroundings.” Through national political turmoil and restraints imposed by a severe fiscal crisis, he persevered with an enlightened, inclusive vision of higher education that still inspires the College today
Dedication of the Multimedia Center and Lehman Studios
Nestled in the basement of Carman Hall, Lehman College's Multimedia Center is the first state-of-the-art facility of its kind in the Bronx.
The $16 million, 22,000-square foot facility includes graphic workstations for art students; an all-digital newsroom and custom-built broadcasting studio for the Multimedia Journalism students; eight rooms of editing suites; and a computerized music studio for filming and recording.
The facility also provides a new home for filmmakers, digital artists, producers, and musicians who need access to a twenty-first-century facility.
Science Building
After four years of construction, Science Hall, the College's new state-of-the-art research and teaching facility, is dedicated in a ceremony attended by CUNY officials and the Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz, Jr., a proud Lehman alumnus.
Child Care Center
The Child Care Center, a modular building, opens to meet the childcare needs of students and staff alike, providing a safe and nurturing learning environment for children.
Lehman College receives a statue of "The King"
Lehman College receives a statue of "The King" a replica of an Olmec Head, a gift from Mexico to celebrate the first anniversary of the Jaime Lucero Mexican Studies Institute.
The Lehman College Peace Bell
The Lehman College Peace Bell, inspired by President Fernandez's trip to South Korea, is unveiled in a ceremony on campus. The bell is a generous gift by Mr. Yong Lee, a friend of the College, and his family.
President Barack Obama arrives at Lehman College
President Barack Obama arrives at Lehman College on May 4 to launch My Brother's Keeper Alliance, a nonprofit aimed at helping at risk young urban males to stay in school.
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon delivers the 47th Annual Herbert H. Lehman Memorial Lecture
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon delivers the 47th Annual Herbert H. Lehman Memorial Lecture, making him the second Secretary-General to visit Lehman College.
Dr. José L. Cruz Is Appointed Lehman College’s Third President
Dr. José Luis Cruz is appointed Lehman's third President by the CUNY Board of Trustees in June 2016 and begins his tenure on August 15, 2016.
Daniel Lemons named Interim President
Daniel Lemons served as a faculty member and senior administrator at CUNY for 30 years before being appointed Interim President at Lehman on July 1st 2019.
Dr. Fernando Delgado Appointed Fourth President of Lehman College
Dr. Fernando Delgado came to Lehman with more than 20 years of public college administrative experience in the Midwest and Arizona, including five years as executive vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of Minnesota, Duluth, which serves approximately 10,000 students through its four academic colleges. Prior to that he served as vice chancellor for academic affairs and provost at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls. He has also held roles as an academic dean at Minnesota State University, Mankato and Hamline University in St. Paul. His academic career began at Arizona State University, where he also began his work as a university administrator.
Nursing, Education, Research and Practice Center Opens
Powering Lehman College’s commitment to fighting health inequality in The Bronx and beyond, Lehman proudly opened its new $95 million, 52,000 square foot Nursing Education, Research and Practice Center with a crowd of state, city, and CUNY officials on hand to celebrate.
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Admissions: Undergraduate
Email
718-960-8713
Shuster Hall, Room 161Office Hours
Mon - Thurs: 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Fri - 12:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Extended Hours:
Until 6:00 PM on Tuesdays - News & Events