A history of inspired excellence

A history of inspired excellence

In 1864, the Constitution of the State of Nevada calls for the creation of a “State University” with instruction in Agriculture, Mechanic Arts and Mining. Ten years later, the University of Nevada, Reno was founded.

Campus scene, southwest view, 1900
This 1900 view of the University of Nevada campus from the northwest shows the historic Gymnasium, the Mechanical Arts Building, Morrill Hall, Lincoln Hall, the Nevada Agricultural Experiment Station Building, and Hatch Hall.
Credit: Special Collections & University Archives - University Libraries

Since its inception in 1874 as the state of Nevada’s first institution of higher education, the University of Nevada, Reno has delivered on the promise of providing the citizens of Nevada with a better future.

As the state’s original land-grant university and ranked among the nation’s top universities by the Carnegie Foundation, the University is providing new paths for the state’s next generation of leaders.

In 1885-86, the Board of Regents transferred the University from Elko to Reno. The campus, now nestled on a hopeful bluff above the Truckee Meadows, opened its first building, Morrill Hall, in spring 1886 and welcomed 35 students. By 1900 the campus had grown to 11 buildings, two student dormitories and a gymnasium. In 1936, University enrollment surpassed the 1,000-student mark.

A watershed moment for the University happened in 1969, when Governor Paul Laxalt signed Assembly Bill 130, officially creating the University of Nevada School of Medicine, making it the first medical school in the Silver State. It was established as a community-based medical school with a mission of educating primary care physicians for rural Nevada. Today, it ranks as the No. 7 most affordable medical school for in-state students in the nation, according to a 2018 study by U.S. News & World Report.

Over the past decade, the University has continued to achieve institutional records in practically every metric associated with success, including graduation, National Merit and Presidential Scholars, student body diversity and faculty productivity. The University is classified by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education as an “R1” institution — “very high research activity” — which is reserved for doctoral-granting universities with exceptional levels of research activity.

In 2020, it was announced that the University had reached the prestigious Carnegie Classification for Community Engagement, becoming one of only 119 institutions in the country so honored. The University celebrated new milestones in 2021 in three key areas, including the most National Science Foundation Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program awardees in a single year (eight, representing four colleges), a Sloan Fellowship recognizing early career faculty with potential to revolutionize their field of study and a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship. In December 2021, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching reaffirmed the University of Nevada, Reno’s status as a top-tier research university. In Fall 2021, the University welcomed 21,034 students to our beautiful and historic campus.

Logos for Carnegie Classification R1, Carnegie Community Engagement, US News Tier 1, Wall Street Journal, and Forbes Best Value Colleges