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History of Texas A&M University at Galveston
In 1958, at a Maritime Day Celebration at the Galvez Hotel, the guest speaker, Admiral Ford from the federal Maritime Administration, noted that one of the responsibilities of the Maritime Administration was to oversee the operation of the nation’s five state maritime academies. During the question and answer session the possibility of establishing a maritime academy in Galveston was raised. Admiral Ford’s positive response prompted the Galveston Chamber of Commerce to form a steering committee to pursue a local academy. This led Rear Admiral Sherman Wetmore, of the U.S. Naval Reserve, and other interested Galvestonians to petition the Texas Legislature to appropriate monies to establish the Texas Maritime Academy.
The Academy began operation as part of The Texas A&M University System in 1962. Several hundred people attended the 1964 dedication of Fort Crockett as the campus of the Texas Maritime Academy. The federal government provided a training ship, the 15,000-ton TEXAS CLIPPER, a former passenger-cargo liner and U.S. Navy vessel, in 1965.
Then in 1968, a gift of one hundred acres of land on
Texas A&M University at Galveston now serves as the “ocean
oriented campus” of
In addition to the facilities at Ft. Crockett and the Mitchell Campus on Pelican Island, Texas A&M University at Galveston also includes an Offatts Bayou Campus. These 14 acres of land on Teichman Road house the Center for Marine Training and Safety, as well as research and recreational facilities. There are three residence halls on campus housing around six-hundred students. A physical education facility opened in 1994. The facility was the training camp facility for the World Champion Houston Rockets in 1994 and 1995. The Jack K. Williams Library, completed in 1986, contains over 46,000 books, 35,000 bound volumes of journals, a collection of charts and maps, and houses the Galveston Bay Information Center. There are numerous other buildings on campus providing classroom and laboratory space, including the Marine Engineering Research Complex which opened in 2005.
Enrollment has increased significantly from ninety-one students in 1971 to more than 1,600 at present. The first “non-license” students (including women) enrolled in 1973 and women registered as cadets for the first time in 1974.
At Texas A&M University at Galveston, the Ocean is Our Classroom.
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