Although
classes began on this campus in October 1859, the first
sociology course was not taught until fall semester
1919. The course was "Elementary Sociology."
From the time of this first course until 1935, when
a separate Department of Sociology was established,
all sociology courses were offered by the Economics
Department. During the 1970s, the Sociology Department
was restructured and Anthropology and Criminology became
separate programs. Today, the Sociology Department
houses the
Center for Innovation,
the Center
for Research on Military Organizations, and
is affiliated with the
Maryland Population Research Center.
Over
the years, the sociology faculty has included many nationally
and internationally renowned scholars. In the
1920s, sociology courses were taught by George Peter
Murdock, who later created the Human Relations Area
Files. In 1938, Logan Wilson, who later became
the President of the University of Texas, joined the
faculty for a few years. C. Wright Mills, the
author of The Power Elite, White
Collar, and The Sociological Imagination,
was a member of the faculty from 1941-1945. The
most renowned scholar on the faculty during the last
quarter-century was
Morris Rosenberg, the
world's foremost student of how
social forces shape the self-esteem.
Since
its founding, the Department has had nine leaders: Theodore
B. Manny, Carl Joslyn, Harold Hoffsommer, Robert Ellis,
Kenneth C. W. Kammeyer,
Jerald Hage,
William Falk, Lee Hamilton,
and Suzanne
Bianchi. The current chair is
Suzanne Bianchi.
Among
the many people who have earned a degree from this department
and subsequently achieved considerable recognition are
William Form, the first person to hold a Ph.D. (1945)
from this department; Parren Mitchell, who became a
member of the U.S. House of Representatives; Adele Stamp,
for whom the Stamp Student Union is named, and Charles
Wellford of the Department of Criminology and Criminal
Justice.