Governor Bottolfsen. University of Idaho archives. |
The law arose largely at the instigation of advocates in the Boise Valley, who had long been on the junior college bandwagon.
Small local colleges came and went in the U.S. during the course of the Nineteenth Century. Churches tailored curricula for their members, and towns founded schools as a sign that they had “arrived.” Most struggled or died after a few years of operation.
Toward the end of the century, organizers began to consider offering just the first two years. That would cut costs and offer other advantages: Some felt it would provide a transition between high school and a demanding professional curriculum at a university. Others saw it as a kind of trade school to teach the “practical arts.”
Joliet Junior College, founded in 1901, is considered the first public junior college in the United States. The movement slowly gathered momentum. California authorized the beginnings of its statewide system in 1907, and by the Twenties, the idea had spread all across the country. By 1924, Ricks College, in Rexburg, had embraced the concept and proudly noted its membership in the American Association of Junior Colleges.
People in the Boise Valley felt they needed, and deserved a full-fledged college: By the early Thirties, the area graduated nearly 40% more high school students than all of North Idaho – and the Panhandle had not only the University, but also Lewiston State Normal School. The Valley graduated 300 more high schoolers than East Idaho, which had access to Albion State Normal School, Ricks, and the precursor to Idaho State University.
Unable to make headway toward their own university despite those numbers, Boiseans had settled for a junior college. Boise Junior College began its first classes in September 1932 [blog, Sept 6], as a kind of expansion of the Episcopal Church's St. Margaret's School. Enrollment tripled to over 120 students in its second year.
However, the church had said from the start that other funding must be provided after two years. Thus, locals created a private non-profit corporation in June 1934. After an initial rush of enthusiasm, private donations and corporate membership fees dropped off drastically. So backers sought a more reliable source of funding.
Administration Building, Boise Junior College, 1941. Idaho State Historical Society. |
But the first JC district law they pushed through the legislature in 1937 was vetoed by the governor. He felt that such local districts would prove inadequate and end up throwing the cost onto an already-strained state educational budget.
After Bottolfsen signed the district authorization in 1939, BJC enrollment shot up again. Eventually, of course, the school grew to be today's Boise State University. North Idaho College, formed as Coeur d'Alene Junior College in 1933, benefitted from the law, and it provided the basis for the College of Southern Idaho, which opened in 1965.
References: [Brit] |
Glen Barrett, Boise State University: Searching for Excellence, 1932-1984, Boise State University (1984). |
Eugene B. Chaffee, Boise College, An Idea Grows, Printing by Syms-York Company, Boise (© Eugene B. Chaffee 1970). |
James R. Gentry, The College Of Southern Idaho 1945-1985, College of Southern Idaho (1987). |
Jerry C. Roundy, Ricks College: A Struggle for Survival, Ricks College Press, Rexburg (1976). |