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  1. Tri-State Normal College (BCE, 1927) Profession: Civil Engineer: Military service; Allegiance Colombia: Branch/service: Army: Years of service: 1920–1957: Rank: General: Battles/wars

  2. 1906. The school reorganized from Tri-State Normal College and revised the name to Tri-State College, which it was known as for more than 100 years. Two years later, the College completed its third facility, the Recitation Building, now Shambaugh Hall. 1922.

  3. Tri-State Normal College was established in 1884. For more than 120 years its name was derived from and referred to the "tri-state" area because of its location in Indiana with proximity to Michigan and Ohio. In 1906, the school name was shortened to Tri-State College, and in 1975 it became Tri-State University.

    • Rural, 450 acres (180 ha)
    • John Shannon
    • "Storm", a white tiger
    • 2,242 Angola campus, 8,446 total
  4. Normal schools in the United States. Normal schools In the United States in the 19th century were developed and built primarily to train elementary-level teachers for the public schools. The term “normal school” is based on the French école normale, a sixteenth-century model school with model classrooms where model teaching practices were ...

  5. Collection. allen_county; americana. Contributor. Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. Language. English. Volume. 1956. volumes : 28-32 cm. Some volumes bear distinctive titles and themes. Founded as Tri-State Normal College in 1884; renamed Tri-State College in 1906; became Tri-State University in 1975 and Trine University in 2008.

  6. Trine se fundó en 1884 como Tri-State Normal College y conservó la referencia al área "tri-estatal" durante más de 120 años debido a su ubicación en Indiana y su proximidad a Michigan y Ohio. En 1906, la escuela pasó a llamarse Tri-State College y en 1975 Tri-State University .

  7. Trine University was founded in 1884 as Tri-State Normal College. It was created by the citizens of Angola as a co-ed college. The first class of 36 students pursued studies in only two departments: literary and commercial. The 1902, the School of Engineering was added and four years later the college was renamed Tri-State College.