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Land-Grant College Act of 1862
(redirected from Morrill Act)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

Land-Grant College Act of 1862

 or Morrill Act

Act of the U.S. Congress (1862) that provided grants of land to states to finance the establishment of colleges specializing in “agriculture and the mechanic arts.” Named for its sponsor, Vermont Congressman Justin Smith Morrill (1810–98), it granted each state 30,000 acres (12,140 hectares) for each of its congressional seats. Funds from the sale of the land were used by some states to establish new schools; other states turned the money over to existing state or private colleges to create schools of agriculture and mechanic arts (known as “A&M” colleges). The military training required in the curriculum of all land-grant schools led to the establishment of the Reserve Officers Training Corps, an educational program for future army, navy, and air force officers. The second Morrill Act (1890) initiated regular appropriations to support land-grant colleges, which came to include 17 predominantly African American colleges and 30 American Indian colleges.



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In 1862, Congress passed the Morrill Act, which made bigamy a criminal offense.
The tuition dollars brought by women students to newly coeducational institutions prevented many former men's colleges from closing after the Morrill Act of 1862 established state educational institutions.
For example, in 1882, 20 years after the Morrill Act created the land grant colleges of agriculture and engineering, evidence of instruction in those subjects was spotty indeed, and research nonexistent.
 
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