
The roots of the Manning School of Business trace back to 1948, when President Martin Lydon hired Stuart Mandell, an MBA from Syracuse University, to develop an industrial management program at Lowell Technological Institute (LTI). In the mid-鈥50s, Mandell wrote a new curriculum in industrial management that included two years of engineering and science courses and two years of management studies. In 1959, LTI introduced the Division of Business and Economics to produce 鈥渟cientifically-oriented鈥 managers and sales professionals.
Out of this program, along with Mandell鈥檚 connections with the International Marketing Institute at the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, LTI registered its first students in a four-year business administration program in 1964. The College of Management Science was developed in 1971, offering a range of degree programs in business administration. Mandell was named the college鈥檚 first dean, and new faculty staffed the options in finance, accounting, personnel administration and production management.

After the University of Lowell was formed in 1975, the College of Management Science grew dramatically. The college established an evening聽Master of Business Administration聽program, and in 1987, it was accredited by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business (now known as the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, or聽). In 1994, accounting alumna Kathryn Carter 鈥78 was named the college鈥檚 dean, a position she held for 19 years.
In 2011, the college was renamed the Manning School of Business in honor of alumnus Robert J. Manning 鈥84, chairman and CEO of MFS Investment Management. Manning and his wife,聽Donna聽鈥85, 鈥91, made a聽multimillion-dollar commitment聽to support ongoing initiatives at the school.

Sandra Richtermeyer聽was named dean of the Manning School in 2016. In the following spring, in April 2017, the school moved to its聽new home, the Pulichino Tong Business Center. The building is named after alumnus John Pulichino '67 and his wife, Joy Tong, who committed more than聽$4 million in scholarship funds聽for Manning School students. The Pulichino Tong Business Center has over 54,000 square feet of technology-enhanced classroom, office and conference space. The facility features a four-story atrium and a finance laboratory simulating a trading room floor.
Today, the Manning School enrolls more than 1,900聽undergraduate聽students and offers concentrations in accounting, entrepreneurship, finance, international business, management, management information systems, marketing, and analytics and operations management. At the聽graduate聽level, the Manning School offers master of science degrees in accounting, business analytics, finance, entrepreneurship and entrepreneurship with a health care option, as well as an聽MBA聽and a聽Ph.D.聽in business administration, to nearly 900 students.