Margaret Perry Makes History
Margaret Perry served as UT Martin’s sixth chancellor from 1986 to 1997. She was the first woman to serve as…
Residence Halls Named for Pioneers
UT Martin named two residence facilities in honor of pioneers Jessie Lou Arnold Pryor and Harold Conner Sr..
‘I was one of the lucky ones’
Ninety-nine-year-old Army veteran T Joe Walker went from building bridges during World War II to leading mechanical maintenance at UT…
Interns Serving
Six UT Martin students served as legislative interns during the spring semester.
Honoring Their Humanity
Hours before his 22nd birthday, Mallie Wilson was condemned to die by a mob without a guilty verdict. Today, Mallie’s…
The Odd and Rare
Celebrate UT Knoxville’s 225 year with treasures from the UT Libraries’ Special Collections.
Ninth Chancellor Appointed
Donde Plowman has returned to UT Knoxville to serve as the campus’ ninth chancellor.
Historic Timeline and Memorable Moments: 1917 – 2017
Noteworthy, events, people and moments from the past century
I Will Hold
Clifton Cates was a 1916 UT graduate and a World War I hero.
Historic Naming
The newly named James A. Haslam II College of Business honors one of the university’s greatest benefactors and his family.…
From War to Writing to the World
Veteran Charles Herd found his place as a chamber of commerce executive
Honoring a Legend
Pat Summitt's legacy will forever be enshrined on the UT Knoxville campus with the addition of the Pat Summitt Plaza,…
Uncovering Secrets
Investigation of a World War II Practice Invasion Lives on at UT.
Classroom to Battlefield
Despite having few individual records on UT students who fought in the Civil War, some jewels of information still remain.…
Civil War on Campus
The Hill in Knoxville was quite a different place 150 years ago — not just because it was an earlier…
Continents Collide
Learn how natural forces created and continue to shape mountains across the globe at the Frank H. McClung Museum at…
Return Mail
A letter written by university president Joseph Estabrook in 1835 comes home to Knoxville.
They Paved the Way
UT's first African American undergraduates enrolled in 1961.
Ayres, not Ayers: Tale of a Troubling Transposition
With the debut of the renovated Ayres Hall came a new plaque that correctly spells its name.