Excerpted from “Hardly a High School” (2001) by Distingushed Nevadan Howard Hickson ’64. Lightly edited for Nevada Silver & Blue style.
There was a bustling brashness about young Elko in 1872. It was a railroad town, supply center for area ranches, and freight depot for the mining camps scattered in the hills of northeast Nevada. The community of about one thousand people had come a long way in three short years when Central Pacific Railroad crews laid track across the sagebrush flats next to the Humboldt River.
Miners, wranglers, sheepherders, and railroad men rubbed elbows in the town’s 45 saloons. Ranch wives filled wagons with long lists of staples on their monthly trips to town. Mining equipment and materials stacked on the docks of the three railroad warehouses waited for freight wagons. Times were very good.
An advertisement appeared in the Elko Independent asking for bids and proposals to be the site of the state university. The bids were due in ten days, and Elkoans wanted the school. So did every other water stop and tent town in the state. Let’s not beat around the bush. State institutions were spoils, distributed according to political influence. At the moment, Elko had a great deal of power through Lewis R. “Broadhorns” Bradley, a hometown boy who happened to be governor of Nevada.
On March 1, 1872, University Regents opened proposals from Elko, Genoa, Carson City, Washoe City, Washoe Valley, and Reno. Elko’s most verbal opponent, Reno, bid $10,000. Elkoans smirked a bit when their overture of $28,000 topped the field. The Regents decided they couldn’t make the decision and dumped the matter into the legislative chambers for the 1873 session. After attempts to substitute Reno and Winnemucca in the bill, Elko won by a large majority in both houses. A preparatory school would be established, making the coveted prize only a state supported high school. The battle, more small-town rivalry than zeal for education, was over — for a while.
A site on a hill west of town was selected by the local committee and a well dug. The well did not produce any water. Time was very short, only ten months to build a university building, when the group decided the campus would be on 21 acres just north of town. The area is now in the middle of Elko.
The University campus was bordered by Court, Ninth, Oak, and Twelfth Streets. The new building rose from the sagebrush in the northwest corner of the campus, where the old gymnasium at Elko High Schools now stands.
The contractor had to begin immediately since the deadline for completion of the $5,000 building was February 15, 1874. They didn’t fiddle around in those days. The main building was 30 by 50 feet, the two wings each 20 by 20 feet. Work was completed a month ahead of time.
Meanwhile, there was futile plea after futile plea in the newspaper for people to contribute to the building fund — without a great deal of success. The original cost was estimated at $5,000; before the smoke cleared, those costs had soared to $15,000. Fundraisers had gathered $3,000. The committee went to the county for bailing out.
Commissioners authorized a $12,000 bond. The University building was handed over to the state free and clear, but Elko County was saddled with the debt for years. But, the first university in the state stood on a hill overlooking Elko. It was a great day!
On February 23, 1874, the upstairs assembly hall was cleaned and the floors waxed in readiness of the Grand University Ball to be held that evening. What an evening it was when 65 couples, paying $6 each, came to the festivities in 33 degrees below zero weather. In today’s coin of the realm, the people paid eighty to ninety dollars for their ticket. It must have been a snobbish affair with only the wealthy attending.
David Robert Sessions, a Princeton graduate, was appointed to head the new school. For four years, he conducted a one-man school, teaching a list of subjects that might overwhelm a modern high school instructor.
Sessions enrolled the first class. In his words, “I set about to gather any pupils that were available. I made no formal examination for admission, but selected a class, boys and girls, more with reference to what they might learn as to what they knew. Two or three might have stood a fair entrance examination in a high school. The others I took on faith. All told, there were seven.”
Members of the first student body in a building built and furnished for one hundred were: Margaret (Yeates) Keyser, Jessie (Yeates) Hesson, Frank Rodgers, Allen Penrod, James B. Gallagher, Sarah (Gillan) Muller, and Charles L. Rood. All were from Elko except Gillan, from Lamoille, and Penrod, from Island Mountain Mining District. Classes began October 12, 1874. All the students earned passing grades that first year.
The next year, classes began September 24, 1875, with most of the former students and a few new ones showing up for entrance exams. The optimistic editor of the Independent claimed the University had 16 scholars.
Various legislators, mostly those from the towns still trying to get the school located in their community, continually tried to cut finances, or stop the money altogether over the next ten years. Somehow, though, funding, albeit miserly, was provided by the state.
A dormitory was constructed at the corner of Ninth and Court Streets. When it was finished in mid-January, Superintendent Sessions and his wife promptly moved in.
Even with sparse enrollment and money, the first athletic team was fielded in March 1877. James B. Gallagher, captain of the school’s baseball team, issued a challenge to any 10-man team to play for the championship of Elko.
The collegians played a three-and-one-half hour game against a town team calling themselves the Royal Exclusives. The red and white clad youngsters, “looking like cheerfully animated barber poles,” slugged out a 31 to 22 win.
When Sessions was elected State Superintendent of Public Instruction, he left Elko and the fledgling school he started still suffering from drastically low enrollment. W.C. Dovey was appointed to replace him.
Newspapers around the state continually complained that the institution was a failure and should never had been given to Elko. It was too far away from the population center. Study at the University cost next to nothing. Tuition and lodging were free. Board was only $30 monthly, but students from the western side of the state had to travel upward to three hundred miles on dirt roads or the railroad to get here.
With opposition from other towns, newspapers, and legislators the school struggled on. The largest enrollment reached 34 students, in its last year in Elko. Every session of the legislature was a battle of one kind or another — cut funding or move the school — but somehow the University stayed in Elko until 1885. It survived for 11 years.
In the 1885 session of the legislature a bill was introduced to relocate the campus to Carson City. It failed by one vote. On the last day, it was decided to move the University to Reno. Elko County would be paid $20,000. The measure passed the Assembly 30 to 9 and the Senate 12 to 6. That was it. On July 10, 1885, the University of Nevada in Elko closed its doors.