91Ƶ College of Engineering Celebrates 50 Years


Posted on April 9, 2019
Bob Lowry


91Ƶ’s College of Engineering, located in Shelby Hall, has four academic departments and offers five baccalaureate degrees, four master’s degrees and a doctoral degree in systems engineering.  data-lightbox='featured'
91Ƶ’s College of Engineering, located in Shelby Hall, has four academic departments and offers five baccalaureate degrees, four master’s degrees and a doctoral degree in systems engineering.

It was 1964 at the University of South Alabama. Fall enrollment – the first fall enrollment for the one-year-old university – was 928 students. There was only one building. But it was from these humble beginnings that a seed was planted.

In just the second meeting of the University’s board of trustees, on Jan. 31, 1964, President Frederick Whiddon outlined in a brief report that 91Ƶ would add a “department” of engineering. Later that year, retired Admiral M.E. Eaton was named associate professor and head of the engineering department. He was, in fact, its only faculty member.

Times have certainly changed. The department became a college. Faculty have grown from one to nearly 50 full-time positions. 91Ƶ’s College of Engineering now has four academic departments: chemical and biomolecular engineeringcivil, coastal, and environmental engineeringelectrical and computer engineering; and mechanical engineering. It offers five baccalaureate degrees, four master’s degrees and a doctoral degree in systems engineering. More than 6,000 degrees have been awarded in the college’s history; roughly 4,700 undergraduate and 1,300 graduate degrees. Enrollment this fall included 1,210 undergraduate students and 67 graduate students.

Here in 2019, the College of Engineering is celebrating its 50th year as a college. Its home since 2012, Shelby Hall, will host the college’s 50th anniversary gala on Saturday, April 13, from 4-7 p.m.

“This signature event will honor the engineering profession, the college, and the world of difference engineers make in Mobile and beyond,” said Dr. John Steadman, dean of the college for the past 18 years. “As we mark this occasion, we want to honor our alumni, corporations, foundations, faculty and staff who have made a lasting impact on the college and the engineering profession.”

In many ways, Shelby Hall itself symbolizes the growth and maturation of 91Ƶ’s College of Engineering. The 155,000-square-foot classroom and laboratory building is prominently located at the southeast corner of campus near the intersection of University Boulevard and Old Shell Road. Shelby Hall contains 63 laboratories, 17 classrooms, three large multimedia auditorium classrooms, five computer labs, five student study areas and seven student design rooms, offices for faculty and staff, and much more.

In recent years, educational programs, relationships with industrial partners and donors, and the research mission of the college have been significantly strengthened. Just last month, William B. “Bill” Burnsed Jr., a 1972 graduate of the College of Engineering, donated $1.5 million to the college’s department of mechanical engineering, which will be named the William B. Burnsed Jr. Department of Mechanical Engineering.

91Ƶ’s College of Engineering has been successfully accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology. In addition, as further evidence of the college’s success, a survey of engineering graduates from the last ten years showed that 97 percent would strongly recommend the 91Ƶ College of Engineering to others.


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