Brigham Young University. Department of Bacteriology
Administrative History
The Department of Bacteriology (1934-1968) at Brigham Young University was an academic instructional unit.
The Department of Bacteriology was established in 1934 as part of the College of Applied Science, and was responsible for teaching bacteriology, soil microbiology, sanitation, public health, and related courses. In 1954 it was moved to College of Biological and Agricultural Sciences. The department was renamed the Department of Microbiology in 1968. Department chairmen included Thomas L. Martin (1935-1949), Dean A. Anderson (1950), Jay V. Beck (1951-1954), Don H. Larsen (1955-1958), David M. Donaldson (1959-1960), Richard D. Sagers (1961-1965), and Don H. Larsen (1966-1968).
Citation:
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology records, 1949-2006BYU Organizational History Project website, via WWW, July 30, 2013 (Department of Bacteriology; est. 1934 in College of Applied Science; moved to College of Biological and Agricultural Sciences in 1954; responsible for teaching bacteriology, soil microbiology, sanitation, public health, and related courses; renamed Department of Microbiology in 1968; department chairmen included Thomas L. Martin (1935-1949), Dean A. Anderson (1950), Jay V. Beck (1951-1954), Don H. Larsen (1955-1958), David M. Donaldson (1959-1960), Richard D. Sagers (1961-1965), and Don H. Larsen (1966-1968))
Found in 1 Collection or Record:
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Biology general departmental records, 1953-2004
Contains information regarding classes and majors within the department. In addition, contained are files on accreditation, general history, and University aims. Dates range from 1953 to 2004.
Filtered By
- Subject: Accreditation (Education) -- Utah X