 |
Heads
of the course and department
| John
Henck |
1865-1881 |
| George
Vose |
1882-1887 |
| George
Swain |
1887-1911 |
| Charles
M. Spofford |
1911-1935 |
| Charles
Breed |
1935-1943 |
| John
Wilbur |
1944-1960 |
| Rolf
Eliassen |
1960-1962
(Acting Head) |
| Charles
L. Miller |
1962-1969 |
| Peter
Eagleson |
1970-1975 |
| Frank
Perkins |
1975-1980 |
| Joseph
M. Sussman |
1980-1985 |
| David
Hunter Marks |
1985-1992 |
| Rafael
L. Bras |
1992-2001 |
| Chiang
Mei |
2001-2002
(Acting Head) |
| Patrick
Jaillet |
2002-2009 |
| Andrew Whittle |
2009- |
Classes
in civil engineering were offered at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology when students were first admitted in 1865. First designated
Course II, it exchanged positions with Mechanical Engineering in
1873 to become Course I. In 1889 Civil Engineering merged with Course
XI, Sanitary Engineering, and in 1892 the name of the department
was changed to Civil and Sanitary Engineering. In 1934 Course XVII,
Building and Engineering, was added to Course I and in 1961 or 1962
Sanitary Engineering was dropped from the name of the department.
In 1992, reflecting further changes in the department's focus, Course
I was renamed the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
In
1911 the department, seeking to provide its students with field
experience, purchased 700 acres of land in East Machias, Maine,
where it established a summer surveying camp known as "Camp Technology."
The camp operated until 1953.
Prepared
by the Institute Archives, MIT Libraries
November 1995; updated October 2002
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