A brief history of the School of Communication
The School of Communication traces its roots to the beginning of Buchtel College in 1870. The College offered courses in rhetoric, public speaking and elocution, which is the art of speaking clearly with correct enunciation.
The first graduate of Buchtel College was Susie Chamberlain (1873), later Chamberlain Cole, who returned to Buchtel College as a teacher of reading and rhetoric. Students were required to complete speech training in order to demonstrate their ability to share their education with others. The University of Akron continues that tradition to this day. All UA students are required to take a general education speech course.
The School of Communication existed under the name “Speech and Theater” throughout much of the 1900s. With Ruth B. Lewis serving as the first chair, it became the Department of Mass Media-Communication in 1977. Speech and Theater remained together as a department.
During the 1950s, ‘60s and much of the ‘70s, the department was housed in Kolbe Hall, which included television studios and the radio station WAUP-FM, which began in 1962. The call letters were later changed to WZIP.
The department moved to Guzzetta Hall in 1976, and it became the School of Communication in 1990. To meet the needs of the growing school, Kolbe Hall was renovated and expanded. The School of Communication returned to Kolbe Hall in 1998, where it resides today.