The Kyushu Institute of Technology (Kyutech) was originally founded as a private institution called the Meiji College of Technology (MCT) in 1907, in the northern area of the island of Kyushu in Japan, where Tobata Campus resides now. The founders, Mr. Keiichiro Yasukawa and Mr. Kenjiro Matsumoto, were managers of the Meiji Mining Company and they held the strong belief that they should not personally profit from the company, because there were only a few Japanese technological and educational facilities at the time, which caused Japan a disadvantage with other countries.
In 1909, the first students entered MCT, and academic activities began. In 1921, MCT’s management was transferred to the government. In 1944, its name was changed to the Meiji College of Industrial Technology. In 1949, it became a national university and was renamed the Kyushu Institute of Technology. The new Faculty of Computer Science and Systems Engineering (1986, Iizuka Campus) and Graduate School of Life Science and Systems Engineering (2001, Wakamatsu Campus) were founded in addition to the already established Faculty of Engineering. In 2009, Kyutech celebrated its 100th anniversary and is already looking forward towards the next century.