Timeline

1839

Philadelphia heiress Catherine Drexel shocks the nation when she takes religious vows. Some point out, however, that her vow of poverty "does not mean a necessary relinquishment of her private fortune to the Church."

1889
1889

Catherine Drexel's final vows establish her as the Mother Superior of a new order, the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament for Indians and Colored People. Her new name is Mother Mary Katharine. 

1891

The Archbishop of New Orleans enlists Mother Katharine to fund a separate parish for black Catholics, telling her that they themselves requested it. But a black newspaper criticizes her involvement, and in her journal she later records her misgivings about the parish.

1895

A Creole man, Homer Plessy, brings a lawsuit after he is arrested for riding in a "whites only" train car in New Orleans. The US Supreme Court rules against him, and Plessy v. Ferguson becomes the basis for racial segregation laws all across the South.

1896
1896

White homeowners petition to have New Orleans's Southern University and its black students "removed to the country." Black community leaders sue to keep Southern in the city. Their suit fails.

1912

Through a series of secret business negotiations, Mother Katharine buys the former Southern University campus with the goal of creating another black university there. The school opens despite white homeowners' attempts to pass a law against it.

1915

Mother Katharine's new school is incorporated as "Xavier University Preparatory School," although for years the Sisters and their students will also call it "Southern University of New Orleans." 

1916
1916

Xavier opens a College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. It's the only Catholic college in the country established for people of color, and the first Catholic college to admit both men and women. 

1925

Pope Pius XI issues an encyclical condemning co-education as a "pernicious error." Mother Katharine secures an official exception for Xavier, which has been co-educational since its founding.

1930

Xavier University opens a new campus at its present-day location. Hundreds of local residents attend the dedication ceremony, and Mother Katharine, knowing that black attendees will be expected to stand until all white attendees are seated, directs that no chairs be put out on the grounds.

xula admin building 1932
1932

Mother Katharine funds the NAACP's undercover investigation of the exploitation of black levee camp workers on the Mississippi Flood Control Project. US Senate hearings result.

1934

Xavier tennis sensation Jimmie McDaniel (XU '40) plays US tennis champion Don Budge in the country's first public interracial tennis match.

1940

Xavier's War Production Training Unit trains black men and women for jobs in war industries. Louisiana employers do not hire them, however, until Xavier strikes a deal with Higgins Industries in New Orleans.

1942
1942

Norman Christopher Francis (XU '52) enrolls at Xavier on a work scholarship, which includes a job repairing damaged library books. He will be elected president of his class four years in a row.

1948

Norman Francis is one of the first two black students admitted to Loyola Law School. Under Louisiana law, however, he cannot live with white students in Loyola's dorms, so Xavier's Sisters offer him housing as part of a job overseeing Xavier's freshman dorm.

1952

The US Supreme Court rules in Brown v. Board of Education that "in the field of public education the doctrine of 'separate but equal' has no place." The decision overturns the legal justification for 60 years of racial segregation laws.

1954
1954

Xavier loses its foundress, protector, and primary source of financial support when Mother Katharine Drexel passes away at age 96.

1955

The US Supreme Court rules in Brown v. Board II that public schools should be desegregated "with all deliberate speed." But the Court does not define what that means, and many state and local governments simply ignore the ruling.

1955 2
1955

72 Xavier and Dillard students are arrested when, returning from a basketball game on a bus with only one white passenger aboard, they toss the bus's racial dividing sign on the floor and sit wherever they want.

1956

Xavier's President, Reverend Mother Agatha, sends out an appeal for funding. "Owing principally to the death of Reverend Mother Foundress last year," she writes, "Xavier is now in much need of financial assistance."

1956

Xavier's Sister Mary Elise Sisson defies Louisiana's segregation laws by putting on opera productions for interracial audiences. The shows sell out.

1958
1958

Xavier hosts an "interracial art competition" and exhibition for students from across the country. The event is funded by art patrons from New Orleans's black community, who at the time are not allowed to visit the city's public art museums.

1959

Xavier Senior Class President Rudy Lombard (XU '61) is arrested at a sit-in at a whites-only lunch counter. He sues, and the US Supreme Court rules in Lombard v. Louisiana that state laws denying service based on a customer's race are unconstitutional.

1960

When a federal judge orders the Orleans Parish School District to admit four black first-graders to "white" schools, the Louisiana legislature votes to shut down all public schools in the state.

1960

Louisiana political boss Leander Perez urges white residents to fight back against school integration, prompting a mob to attack the Orleans Parish School Administration building. The police use fire hoses to protect the building.

1960
1960

Xavier's Sisters publish an open letter in The Times-Picayune condemning forced segregation as a violation of Scripture. Meanwhile, the Archbishop of New Orleans continues to segregate Catholic schools.

1961

Xavier Senior Class President Rudy Lombard helps organize the first "Freedom Ride" across the South. After the Freedom Riders are beaten, arrested, and firebombed by the Klan, Xavier Dean of Men Norman Francis arranges a safe haven for them at St. Michael's dorm.

The Freedom Riders are attacked in Anniston Alabama
1961

Xavier students, staff and alumni organize to help black voters register, a process that, at the time in Louisiana, includes a written test, an oral test, and a "moral" and "character" test.

1963

Artist and alumnus John T. Scott (XU '62) returns to Xavier, where, for the next 40 years, he will teach, produce landmark pieces of art, and, in 1992, receive a MacArthur "Genius Grant."

1965
1965

College protests sweep the country, including at Xavier, where students demand more black representation on the staff and in the curriculum. Xavier's Sisters call a campus-wide meeting and ask Executive Vice President Norman Francis to lead it.

1968

Xavier's Sisters ask Executive Vice President Francis to become the university's first black, lay president, and he accepts. In his inaugural address, he cites the "chaos" on US college campuses and says that people keep asking him "Why would anyone in his right mind accept the leadership at this time of a private, church-related institution which serves a predominantly Negro student body?" 

1968
1968

New Orleans's new mayor, Moon Landrieu, makes integration of city government a core part of his agenda. He starts with the city's parks and recreational facilities.

1970

Xavier hires Dr. J.W. Carmichael, who develops its Summer Science Academy and premed program. For the next 50 years, experts around the country will study his methods as a model of success for producing black doctors and scientists.

1970
J.W CARMICHAEL
1970

Xavier's Sister Patricia Downs and Sister Valerie Riggs organize and launch the Gert Town Resource Center and Senior Citizens' Program.

1975

Ernest "Dutch" Morial (XU '51) becomes the first black mayor of New Orleans.

1977

Xavier Vice President Sybil Haydel Morial and Xavier Professor of Art John T. Scott create "I've Known Rivers," a New Orleans World Expo pavilion showcasing African American heritage.

1984
1984

Xavier begins a series of major construction projects on the campus: the Norman C. Francis Science Complex (1988), Xavier South (1990), a new library (1993), and the Living/Learning Center (1998).

1988

Alexis Herman (XU '69) is appointed US Secretary of Labor. About Xavier, she says "we were encouraged to be a part of the movement, to be a part of the fight. For me, it helped to make me the person that I am today."

1997

Mother Katharine Drexel becomes Saint Katharine Drexel when she is canonized by Pope John Paul II.

Dr. Norman C. Francis speaks at Saint Katharine Drexel's canonization
2000

For the seventh year in a row, Xavier University ranks first in the nation in graduating black students who go on to medical school.

2001

Xavier builds a new University Center complex.

2003

Xavier achieves its longtime goal of enrolling 4,000 students.

2005

Hurricane Katrina hits New Orleans, bursting levees and flooding the city. Hundreds are trapped on Xavier's campus, with nuns cooking in their convent and administrators ferrying the food in boats to students. President Francis tells his staff that, in order to save Xavier, they must reopen it in time for spring classes.

Xavier campus after Hurricane Katrina
2005

Louisiana Governor Kathleen Blanco asks President Francis to chair the Louisiana Recovery Authority, and he agrees to do so.

2005

Xavier reopens on January 17, 2006. The "Hurricane Class" of 2006 will graduate that summer. The US Senator from Illinois and future US President Barack Obama will give their commencement address.

2006 2
XAVIER COMMENCEMENT
2006

65 percent of Xavier students volunteer for post-Katrina relief efforts. They also recruit about 1,500 students from other HBCUs to come to New Orleans and work with them.

2006

In December 2006, US President George W. Bush awards President Francis the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor.

2006 francis
2006

Dr. Regina Benjamin (XU '79) is appointed US Surgeon General. In 2013, she will return to Xavier as the NOLA.com/Times-Picayune Endowed Chair of Public Health Sciences.

2009

Qatar donates $17.5 million to help Xavier recover from Katrina. The university uses it to build a five-story pavilion for its rapidly expanding College of Pharmacy.

2010

Xavier commissions architect Cesar Pelli to design and build the new St. Katharine Drexel Chapel on its campus.

2012

President Francis retires, having served the longest tenure of any university president in US history. He will return the next year for the investiture of Xavier's new president, Dr. C. Reynold Verret, a distinguished biochemist and immunologist who grew up in Haiti and Brooklyn.

2015
2015

President Verret gives his inaugural address, noting that Saint Katharine understood education to be "a right by justice, and a means of empowerment," and that President Emeritus Francis "is the living embodiment of Xavier’s noble mission."

2016

LaToya Cantrell (XU '96) is elected Mayor of New Orleans. She is the first woman—and the second Xavierite—to serve as the city's mayor.

2017

Xavier's $165 million in Katrina-related loans are forgiven by the federal government.

2018

Xavier announces it will open a Center for Equity, Justice and the Human Spirit. "In a polarized world, universities can serve as honest brokers," says President Verret. "It's about rescuing our society."

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