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UNIVERSITY SYSTEM OF MARYLAND

ORIGIN & FUNCTIONS


The University System of Maryland comprises eleven campuses and two major research and service components. It is the twelfth-largest university system in the nation.

In 1807, the System's earliest unit was founded in Baltimore as the College of Medicine of Maryland (Chapter 53, Acts of 1807). In 1812, the College expanded its professional curricula and changed its name to the University of Maryland (Chapter 159, Acts of 1812).

At College Park, the Maryland State College of Agriculture was founded in 1856. The College merged in 1920 with the Baltimore professional schools to form an enlarged University of Maryland with campuses at Baltimore (UMAB) and College Park (UMCP) (Chapter 480, Acts of 1920). In 1959, the College of Special and Continuation Studies (founded 1947) became the University of Maryland University College (UMUC). The Baltimore County campus (UMBC) was established in 1966. The University of Maryland reorganized into a five-campus system in 1970. At that time, the Maryland State College in Princess Anne (founded 1886) was restructured to form the University of Maryland Eastern Shore (UMES).

The University of Maryland achieved land-grant status in 1865 (UMCP) and 1890 (UMES), and was designated a national sea grant college in 1983.

As the components of the former University of Maryland were evolving, so too were the State's teachers colleges. The earliest of these was founded privately in 1865 in Baltimore to train African-American teachers. It later became a State institution, moved to Bowie, and assumed the name Bowie State University. In 1866, the first public teachers college formed as the Maryland State Normal School, now Towson State University. State Normal School no. 2, now Frostburg State University, followed in 1898. In 1900, the Baltimore City School Board laid the foundation for what would become Coppin State University. The first normal school on the Eastern Shore opened in 1925 and now bears the name Salisbury University. In 1963, these five former teachers colleges were brought together under the direction of a single governing body: the Board of Trustees of the State Universities and Colleges. In 1975, the University of Baltimore, privately founded fifty years earlier, joined the campuses governed by the Board.

The University of Maryland System was created in 1988 through the merger of campuses and components of the University of Maryland with those formerly under the Board of Trustees of the State Universities and Colleges (Chapter 246, Acts of 1988). In 1997, the System was renamed the University System of Maryland (Chapter 114, Acts of 1997).


BOARD OF REGENTS

The Board of Regents governs the University System of Maryland. The Board may issue revenue bonds to finance the building of dormitories and other student housing facilities. The Board issues such bonds directly, with the payments of principal and interest made from revenues realized from the use of the building.

With Senate advice and consent, the Governor appoints the seventeen-member Board of Regents. Sixteen members serve five-year terms and a student member is appointed for a one-year term. The Secretary of Agriculture serves ex officio (Code Education Article, secs. 12-102 through 12-104).


SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION

System Administration directs and coordinates the twelve institutions of the University System of Maryland. The System includes eleven degree-granting institutions, two regional higher education centers, and a major research and public service component.

Campuses of the University System are located in Allegany County at Frostburg (Frostburg State University); Baltimore City (UMB, Coppin State University, University of Baltimore); Baltimore County at Catonsville (UMBC) and at Towson (Towson University); Prince George's County at Bowie (Bowie State University) and College Park (UMCP); Somerset County at Princess Anne (UMES); and Wicomico County at Salisbury (Salisbury University). From its headquarters in Adelphi, University of Maryland University College administers adult and continuing education courses and programs at sites across the United States and in Europe and Asia. Two regional higher education centers offer programs to undergraduate and graduate students: Universities at Shady Grove (Montgomery County), and the University System of Maryland at Hagerstown (Washington County). The University System of Maryland also includes the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science (Code Education Article, secs. 12-101 through 12-113).

Since the restructuring of the University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute in July 2010, the Institute for Bioscience and Biotechnology Research is overseen by the System.