Record Group 1.3: Office of the President
of UAB, 1969-
Immediate Predecessor: Office of the Executive Vice President,
1968-1969
Immediate Successor: NA
Reporting Hierarchy:
1969-1976: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees;
1976- : Chancellor of The University
of Alabama System and The University of Alabama Board of Trustees
Note: The UAB president reports to The University
of Alabama Board of Trustees and,
since 1976, also to the chancellor of The University of Alabama System.
The president works in conjunction with the presidents of the other two System
institutions, The University of Alabama (UA) and the University of Alabama in
Huntsville (UAH).
President:
Joseph F. Volker, 1969-1976
(Acting) George W. Campbell, 1976-1977
S. Richardson Hill, Jr., 1977-1986
(Acting) Charles A. McCallum, Jr., 1986-1987
Charles A. McCallum, Jr., 1987-1993
J. Claude Bennett, 1993-1996
(Interim) Paul Hardin, III, 1997
W. Ann Reynolds, 1997-2002
(Interim) Malcolm Portera, 2002
Carol Z. Garrison, 2002-
History:
The University of Alabama at Birmingham became
an independent entity within the new three-campus University of Alabama
System in 1969. Previously, it had functioned as
a branch campus of the Tuscaloosa-based University of Alabama.
The remarkable growth of programs in Birmingham
and the swift evolution of the campus from two educational centers into an
integrated, urban university was phenomenal. The development of the Office of
President of UAB, with its roots as a vice presidential office of The
University of Alabama, reflects the growth and evolution of the campus.
In 1966, President Frank Rose and The University of Alabama Board of
Trustees elevated the Birmingham Extension Center,
which had been in operation since 1936, to the degree-granting College of General Studies
and joined it with the University's Medical
Center to form the "University of Alabama
in Birmingham."
The Medical Center had been founded in Birmingham in 1945, when the Medical
College of Alabama was moved from Tuscaloosa and changed from a two-year,
basic-science program to a four-year, degree-granting program. Although the two
Birmingham
units were given the UAB designation in 1966, they still functioned as a
component of The University of Alabama.
The Office of Vice President for Birmingham Affairs eventually evolved into
the Office of the President of an independent UAB. In 1966 Dr. Joseph F.
Volker, vice president for Health Affairs, was given administrative
responsibilities over the campus and was elevated to vice president for
Birmingham Affairs. After this administrative change, the dean of the College of General Studies reported to Dr. Volker.
After 1968, the vice president for Health Affairs and the new vice president
for Fiscal Affairs also reported to him. In 1968, Dr. Volker's title changed to
executive vice president, and in December 1968 as his administrative
responsibilities increased with the growing autonomy of the University of Alabama
in Birmingham.
He turned over the duties of vice president for Health Affairs to Dr. S.
Richardson Hill, Jr. As vice president for Birmingham Affairs and later as
executive vice president, Dr. Volker reported directly to the president of The
University of Alabama.
On June 16, 1969, Alabama Governor Albert P. Brewer announced the formation
of the autonomous University of Alabama in Birmingham (UAB), one of three independent
institutions within the new University
of Alabama System. At the
same time, Governor Brewer announced that Dr. Joseph F. Volker, who had served
as the chief administrative officer in Birmingham
since 1966, would become the first president of UAB. The new president reported
directly to the Board of Trustees, composed of two members from each
congressional district in Alabama,
and had responsibility for the university's budgets, space, and academic
programs. At the time of its independence in 1969, UAB consisted of the six
health-related schools, the hospital, and the College
of General Studies, and it was the
only degree-granting, public four-year institution in the City of Birmingham. Thus, in a
relatively brief period of time, a disparate set of programs evolved into a
comprehensive, urban university
In 1984, in an attempt to better distinguish the university from the two
other autonomous campuses within the System, the Board of Trustees approved a
change of the designation of the University of Alabama in Birmingham to
that of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). Since 1969, UAB
has experienced tremendous growth in enrollment, programs offered, and numbers
of faculty. By 1994, when the university celebrated its 25th anniversary, UAB
was a comprehensive urban institution offering education to a wide range of
students at the baccalaureate, doctoral, and professional levels. Programs are
currently offered through its seven health-related and six academic schools and
through the graduate school. The university also offers numerous credit and
non-credit courses through special programming targeted for the non-traditional
student. UAB has a student enrollment of over 16,200 and is the largest
employer in Birmingham.
Through the Academic
Health Center,
UAB is also a major provider of primary, secondary, and tertiary health care
through its hospitals, research centers and institutes, and neighborhood health
clinics. The Office of President continues to function as the highest
administrative office of UAB.
Dr. Volker remained president of UAB until he was named first chancellor of
The University of Alabama System in 1976. Vice President of University College
George W. Campbell
served as acting president while a search was undertaken for Dr. Volker's
successor. The Board of Trustees soon chose Vice President for Health Affairs
S. Richardson Hill, Jr., as UAB's second president. Dr. Hill served as
president from February 1, 1977, until 1986. Hill was succeeded by Vice
President for Health Affairs Charles McCallum, Jr. Dr. McCallum served first as
acting president from September 1, 1986, until April 2, 1987, when he became
the third president of UAB. President McCallum retired effective September 30,
1993, and was succeeded by the chair of the Department of Medicine Dr. J.
Claude Bennett. Dr. Bennett served as the university's fourth president from
October 1, 1993, until his resignation on December 31, 1996. The University of
Alabama Board of Trustees then appointed Mr. Paul Hardin, III, chancellor
emeritus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
as interim president during the national search for Bennett's replacement. On
July 17, 1997, Dr. W. Ann Reynolds, chancellor of the City University of New
York, was named president-elect after her selection by the Board of Trustees.
When Dr. Reynolds assumed office as fifth president of the University of Alabama
at Birmingham on September 15, 1997, she became
the first female president in the history of the three-campus University of Alabama
System and the first president of UAB without a
previous association to the university. Reynolds served as president until May
2002 and was succeeded by University
of Alabama System Chancellor Dr. Malcolm Portera,
who served as interim president during the summer of 2002. On September 1,
2002, Dr. Carol Z. Garrison became UAB's sixth president. Dr. Garrison was once
a nurse in University Hospital, obtained a master's degree in nursing from
UAB in 1976, and taught in the School
of Nursing until 1978.
Maintained and last updated by Tim L.
Pennycuff, 27 May 2008.
Copyright 1996-2008: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees.
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