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  1. 15 de sept. de 2021 · Milwaukee State Teachers College granted its first Master's of Education degree in 1945, and in 1951, was authorized by the Wisconsin state legislature to offer liberal arts degrees.

  2. In 1927, the Milwaukee normal school changed its name to Wisconsin State Teachers College-Milwaukee in an effort by the State Normal School Regents to refocus on the instruction of teachers. The college became one of the nation's top teacher's training colleges in the 1940s.

  3. History. In 1867 in a leaky railroad boxcar, a normal school was formed, Teacher Training School (then renamed Cook County Normal School). Over the next 150 years, this school grew from Chicago Normal School to Chicago Teachers College, and eventually to Chicago State University (CSU).

  4. Milwaukee State Teachers College - Wisconsin Labor History. Rice, Mary Kellogg. Useful Work for Unskilled Women: A Unique Milwaukee WPA Project. Supported by the Leslie T. Bruhnke Fund, Greater Milwaukee Foundation and the Milwaukee Idea Fund University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeMilwaukee, Wis.: Milwaukee County Historical Society; 2003. 136 p.

  5. Studied at the Milwaukee State Teachers College, University of Wisconsin, Chicago Art Institute, Layton School or Art, Art Students’ League, National Academy of Design. Frequently exhibited in local and national shows.

  6. The collection contains biographical materials, correspondence, a history and prophecy statement to College alumni (1940), and several photographs of Baker, including one with J. Martin Klotsche, UWM's first chancellor. The correspondence documents the College curriculum, courses, and enrollment; activities and programs; budget and staffing.

  7. Chartered as a State Normal School in 1885 and expanded in 1927 as Milwaukee State Teachers College, this campus became Wisconsin State College in 1951. In 1955, it became the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee (UWM).