Founded in 1874, Macalester College began as a Presbyterian college with few resources and only six students. The private liberal arts college became known for its rigorous academics and commitment to internationalism, multiculturalism, and service to society.
Macalester College, named for benefactor Charles Macalester, was founded in 1874 by Minnesota education leader Edward Neill. After bobbling between locations, including the elegant Winslow House, Macalester found a permanent home on forty acres of land between Minneapolis and St. Paul. The surrounding sprawl was named Macalester Park. The college’s first building, the east wing of Old Main, was completed there in 1884. It opened for classes the following fall to just five professors and six students.
The college’s beginnings were rocky, slammed with falling enrollment and rising debt. Yet president James Wallace helped the college gain financial footing with a vigorous fundraising campaign. Figures like George Dayton, James J. Hill, and Andrew Carnegie chipped in to keep the college afloat.
James Wallace’s son and daughter-in-law, Dewitt and Lila Wallace, followed to become some of Macalester’s most generous and consistent donors. The Reader’s Digest founders helped the college through the Great Depression and many other financial setbacks in the decades to follow.
Though founded as a nonsectarian college, Macalester has always held ties to the Presbyterian Church. Early on, its religious focus attracted Presbyterian students and led many to work in religious fields after graduation. Charles Turck, president from 1939 until 1958, began to shift the college toward a more religiously welcoming and less explicitly evangelical atmosphere in the 1940s. He also began to define the set of values for which the school became known: internationalism, multiculturalism, and service to society.
Macalester’s ties with internationalism reach back to 1893, when the college admitted its first international student. Many domestic students also travelled abroad during those early years, though their trips were often fueled by a desire to evangelize or provide humanitarian aid. By the 1930s, the curriculum had expanded to include subjects like international law and additional world languages. In 1950, Macalester became the first Minnesotan college to fly the United Nations flag. In the 2010s, international students made up about 12 percent of the student body, and 60 percent of students studied abroad during their college career.
Multiculturalism, too, has a long history with the college. In 1915, Catharine Lealtad became Macalester’s first African American graduate. Esther Suzuki followed as its first Japanese American graduate in 1946. In 1969, Macalester joined the Expanded Educational Opportunities (EEO) program. EEO admitted more than 300 students of color before approaching an end in 1975, a year after substantial budget cuts sparked a twelve-day student protest.
In its earlier years, Macalester focused heavily on religion and the sciences. The curriculum expanded to include the arts when women were admitted in 1893. A school of music opened soon after. Later, during Turck’s presidency, the college focused on preparing students for work with a variety of vocational programs. Macalester is known today for its liberal arts curriculum, which was introduced in 1964.
Outside of classes, students can play for a sports team or choose from a variety of campus clubs. The student newspaper, the Mac Weekly, has published student work since 1914. WBOM (now WMCN) became Minnesota’s first campus radio station in 1948. In honor of its Scottish roots, the college also offers free bagpipe lessons to any interested student. Macalester celebrates the anniversary of its founding each year with a game of pushball, first played on campus in 1914.
In the 1990s, Macalester’s Reader’s Digest shares rocketed in value. The college has used the funds in the decades since to remodel much of the campus, as well as diversify the faculty and strengthen academic programs.
Notable alumni include Kofi Annan, Danai Gurira, Joan Adams Mondale, Walter Mondale, Tim O’Brien, and John S. Campbell founder of Malt-O-Meal Company, as well as members of the music groups Sounds of Blackness and Hüsker Dü. Notable professors include former vice president Hubert Humphrey and Man Booker Prize winner Marlon James.
Haebig, Steve. “Macalester’s Old Main and Its First Century.” Ramsey County History 25, no. 3 (Fall 1990): 35.
Kilde, Jeanna Halgren. Nature and Revelation: A History of Macalester College. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2010.
Macalester College. Macalester’s History.
https://www.macalester.edu/about/mission/history/
Macalester College, a Century and Beyond. St. Paul: Macalester College, 1985.
Swanson, Edward. “Macalester and its First Forty Years.” Ramsey County History 11, no. 1 (Spring 1974): 3–11.
In 1939, Charles Turck becomes college president. He steers Macalester toward a more nonsectarian identity and begins to define its key values.
Baldwin School, the college preparatory school associated with Macalester in its early days, opens.
Edward Neill founds Macalester College, naming it after benefactor Charles Macalester.
A group of investors purchases 160 acres between Minneapolis and St. Paul, then gifts forty of those acres to Macalester College for its campus.
Macalester’s first building, the east wing of Old Main, is completed.
Macalester opens for its first day of college-level classes to just six first-year students.
Women are admitted to the college for the first time. Macalester also admits its first international student: Joseph Koshaba, from Persia.
After years of fundraising, president James Wallace eliminates Macalester’s debt and restores its financial security.
Catharine Lealtad becomes Macalester’s first African American graduate.
Dewitt and Lila Wallace, the founders of Reader’s Digest, make the first of many donations to Macalester College.
Charles Turck becomes president of the college, driving it towards a more nonsectarian, international focus.
Macalester becomes the first Minnesotan college, and one of the first in the nation, to fly the United Nations flag.
College officials approve a plan to fully convert to a liberal arts curriculum and build more residence halls on campus.
The religion requirement, in effect to some degree since the college’s founding, is eliminated.
Macalester’s Reader’s Digest shares explode in value, allowing the school to begin a campus-wide revitalization including widespread building renovations and new faculty positions.