School History
The Early Years
What is today the University of Washington’s Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering was originally established by the University of Washington Board of Regents as the Computer Science Group — a graduate program reporting to the Dean of the Graduate School — in March 1967.
What is today the University of Washington’s Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering was originally established by the University of Washington Board of Regents as the Computer Science Group — a graduate program reporting to the Dean of the Graduate School — in March 1967.
In 1979, our reporting relationship was changed at the request of the Provost so that we became a unit of the College of Arts & Sciences exclusively.
The Engineering Era
In 1989, a different Provost decided that we should be a unit of the College of Engineering. A Computer Engineering undergraduate program was added at that time, and our name was changed to the Department of Computer Science & Engineering. (Thirty years later, 90% of our undergraduate students are enrolled in our Bachelor of Science in Computer Science program offered through the College of Arts & Sciences. Although housed in the College of Engineering, we are truly a unit of the entire university.)
A Professional Masters Program — a part-time, evening/distance program for fully-employed professionals — was added in 1996. A five-year combined bachelors/masters program was added in 2008.
And on March 9, 2017, which marked our 50th anniversary, the University of Washington Board of Regents voted to create the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering, elevating the status of CSE within the university and linking us in perpetuity with the internationally renowned investor, philanthropist and computing pioneer.
Space: The Final Frontier
The Computer Science Group was initially housed in Roberts Hall — “the mining building.” In 1974-75, when departmental status was conferred and an undergraduate program was introduced, we were relocated to Sieg Hall.
In 2003 we moved to the Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering, more than doubling our total space and more than tripling our laboratory space. In January 2019 we added the Bill & Melinda Gates Center for Computer Science & Engineering, again doubling our space. (A detailed version of our early space history is available here as pdf.)
Department Chairs / Allen School Directors
- Jerre Noe, 1968-76
- Hellmut Golde (acting), 1976-77
- Bob Ritchie, 1977-82
- Jean-Loup Baer (acting), 1982-83
- Paul Young, 1983-88
- Jean-Loup Baer, 1988-93
- Ed Lazowska, 1993-2001
- David Notkin, 2001-06
- Hank Levy, 2006-17
- Hank Levy became the first Director of the Paul G. Allen School in March 2017, and served through the end of 2019
- Magda Balazinska, 2020-
Faculty through the years
Includes tenured/tenure-track, teaching and research faculty:
- 1970: 7
- 1975: 11
- 1980: 15
- 1985: 22
- 1990: 26.83
- 1995: 29.83
- 2000: 39.66
- 2005: 43.16
- 2010: 50.66
- 2015: 60
- 2020: 83.33
- Complete list (docx)
Ph.D. graduates through the years
- 1970: 4 (#1: John Quinlan, Spring 1968)
- 1975: 24
- 1980: 37
- 1985: 60 (#50: Albert Greenberg, Spring 1983)
- 1990: 108 (#100: Brian Bershad, Spring 1990)
- 1995: 166 (#150: Cathy McCann, Autumn 1994)
- 2000: 231 (#200: Soha Hassoun, Autumn 1997)
- 2005: 316 (#250: Saurabh Sinha, Summer 2002 / #300: Gerome Miklau, Summer 2005)
- 2010: 395 (#350: Tian Sang, Summer 2008)
- 2015: 507 (#400: Jiun-Hung Chen, Winter 2011 / #450: Andrey Kolobov, Spring 2013 / #500: Nicola Dell, Summer 2015)
- 2020: 638 (#550: Cyrus Rashtchian, Spring 2018 / #600: Aditya Vashistha, Summer 2019)
- 2025: ???? (#650, Koosha Khalvati, Winter 2021 / #700, Keun Park, Spring 2022 / #750, Ashrujit Ghoshal, Spring 2023)
- Complete list (CSE NetID required)
Formal Reviews of the Allen School
2022
2010
2000
The Archives
- 1967 Board of Regents action authorizing a graduate program and creating the Computer Science Group
- 1967 memo from President Odegaard to the Dean of the Graduate School informing him of the Regents’ action
- 1967 memo from the Dean of the Graduate School to Bob Ritchie informing him of the Regents’ action
- 1968 faculty, staff, and student phone list
- 1968 graduate program requirements
- 1968-75 graduate student climbing log
- 1970 memo from Jean-Loup Baer to the Dean begging for improved space, describing his “office” in Roberts Hall
- Photos of the replica open pit coal mine that graced our space in Roberts Hall – hence “Pit Party”
- 1970 NSF proposal “Development of the Graduate Program in Computer Science at the University of Washington” (pages 3-16 provide a terrific overview!)
- 1971 letter from Hellmut Golde to high school student Paul Allen asking him to turn in his Computer Science Laboratory keys due to various transgressions
- APL interpreter for the Burroughs B5500 programmed in 1971 by Ph.D. students Gary Kildall (of CP/M fame), Leroy Smith, Sally Swedine, and Mary Zosel
- 1973 memo requesting departmental status and establishment of an undergraduate program
- 1974 Board of Regents action authorizing an undergraduate program and creating the Department of Computer Science
- 1974 memo from the Dean of the Graduate School to the Computer Science Group informing them of the Regents’ action
- 1975 press release announcing the launch of the undergraduate program
- 1979 memo transferring the department to the College of Arts & Sciences
- 1983 memo from Dean Henley detailing plan for growth from 13.5 to 20.5 faculty
- Jerre Noe’s 80th birthday party, 2003 (CSE’s 35th anniversary)
- Beautiful Sieg Hall (our home from 1975-2003)
- CSE newsletter Most Significant Bits preceding the October 2003 dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center for Computer Science & Engineering – includes two-page CSE historical timeline
- Web resources on the dedication of the Paul G. Allen Center, October 9 2003
- Hellmut Golde’s 80th birthday party, 2010
- Establishment of the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering, March 9 2017
- Dedication of the Bill & Melinda Gates Center for Computer Science & Engineering, February 2019
- History of program growth, updated November 2021 (Word version)
- A photographic history of Allen School community events