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Oregon State

Oregon State University
Oregon State University seal.png
Type Public
Land-grant
Sea-grant
Space-grant
Sun-grant
Established 1868
Academic affiliations
APLU
Endowment $492.5 million (2016)
President Edward John Ray
Provost Ron Adams, interim
Students 30,354 (Fall 2016)
Undergraduates 25,327 (Fall 2016)
Postgraduates 4,466 (Fall 2016)
Other students
561 (Fall 2016)
Location Corvallis, Oregon, U.S.
44°33′50″N 123°16′44″W / 44.564°N 123.279°W / 44.564; -123.279Coordinates: 44°33′50″N 123°16′44″W / 44.564°N 123.279°W / 44.564; -123.279
Campus College town,
400 acres (160 ha)
Operating Budget $1.1 billion
Colors Orange and Black
         
Nickname Beavers
Mascot Benny Beaver
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IPac-12 Conference
Website www.oregonstate.edu
Oregon State University logo.png
University rankings
National
ARWU 62-71
Forbes 328
U.S. News & World Report 143
Washington Monthly 75
Global
ARWU 151-200
QS 451-460
Times 251-300
U.S. News & World Report 218

Oregon State University (OSU) is a coeducational, public research university in the northwest United States, located in Corvallis, Oregon. The university offers more than 200 undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degree programs and has the largest total enrollment in Oregon. More than 230,000 people have graduated from OSU since its founding. The Carnegie Foundation designates Oregon State University as a "Community Engagement" university and classifies it as a doctoral university with a "Highest research activity" status along with another 114 top U.S. academic institutions.

OSU is one of 73 land-grant universities in the United States. The school is also a sea-grant, space-grant, and sun-grant institution, making it one of only two U.S. institutions to obtain all four designations and the only public university to do so (Cornell is the only other with similar designations). OSU received $308.9 million in research grants and contracts for the 2015 fiscal year, which is more research funding than all other public universities in Oregon combined.

The university's roots date back to 1856, when it was established as the area's first community school for primary and preparatory education. Throughout the university's history, the name changed eleven times. Like other early established land-grant colleges and universities, the majority of name changes occurred through the 1920s. Generally, name changes were made to better align a school with the largest available federal grants in agriculture research.

Early names

*Unofficial title 1868-1885.

Corvallis area Freemasons played an important role in developing the early school and several large campus buildings are named after these founding fathers. The school offered its first college-level curriculum in 1865, under the administration of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South.


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