The Alabama Baptist State Convention established a college for men, naming it Howard College in honor of John Howard, an 18th-century English social reformer.
In a controversial decision spurred by racial, economic and rural/urban tensions, Howard College relocated from Marion to East Lake, starting the year with 83 students.
Anna Judge became Howard's first female graduate. Coeducation was thereafter suspended for "lack of proper facilities." Five other women were admitted between the years of 1895-1896.
The school gained membership in and accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.
The campus relocated from the aging East Lake campus to Homewood. Construction of the Georgian-Colonial buildings began in 1953, with the first building dedicated in 1955.
Samford acquired the historic Cumberland School of Law, established in 1847 in Lebanon, Tennessee.
Howard College attained university status and renamed itself in honor of insurance executive and longtime trustee Frank Park Samford Sr. Howard College of Arts and Sciences retained the original name.
Audrey Gaston became the first full-time African-American student, enrolling in Cumberland School of Law and graduating in 1970. In 1969, Elizabeth Sloan became the first African-American female to live on campus. She moved into Vail Hall and graduated in 1973.
The university purchased the London Study Centre, located in the heart of London and later renamed it the Daniel House in honor of the Daniel family.
Samford attained ranking in the top 10 in its category by U.S. News & World Report. Samford is recognized as a top-ranked university in Alabama in rankings published by Forbes Inc., The Economist and The Wall Street Journal.
Samford began competing in the storied NCAA Division I Southern Conference where it has accumulated more than 80 conference championships and has seen many athletes drafted into professional sports.
Samford announced the formation of the College of Health Sciences, incorporating the historic Moffett & Sanders School of Nursing and McWhorter School of Pharmacy with new Schools of Health Professions and Public Health. In 2016 the college moved into renovated facilities in the former Southern Progress Corporation headquarters purchased in 2014.
University trustees adopted a comprehensive strategic plan, Fidelitas: Faith and Future, that will provide for the physical and academic needs of the university for decades to come.