1. The Department of Animal Science was originally Animal Husbandry.
From 1903 to 1966, the department was known as the Department of Animal Husbandry. The name changed to Animal Science when the departmental research, teaching, and extension expanded beyond just husbandry.
2. The Cornell Net Carbohydrate and Protein System (CNCPS) was founded here.
Current faculty, Mike Van Amburgh, and Tom Overton, along with Emeritus Professors, Danny G. Fox, Larry Chase, Peter Van Soest, Charlie Sniffen, Jim Russell and others contributed to the creation of the CNCPS model in 1992, which helps formulate diets for over 70 percent of dairy cattle in North America.
3. Our home wasn’t always Frank B. Morrison Hall.
The first headquarters of the department was in the basement of Morrill Hall. In 1915, a designated building for animal husbandry named Wing Hall was created. The place where the department is housed today, Frank B. Morrison Hall, was built in 1961 in honor of the past chairman.
4. Students used to be able to take courses on tropical animals and plants.
Classes on international animal science such as Agriculture in Tropical Americas, Tropical Livestock Production, and Tropical Forages used to be offered.