<Dd> Paul Kunz from SLAC visited Tim Berners - Lee at CERN in September 1991 . He was impressed by the WWW project and brought a copy of the software back to Stanford . SLAC launched the first web server in North America on December 12, 1991 . </Dd> <Dt> Corpus of Electronic Texts (formerly CURIA) </Dt> <Dd> Peter Flynn from University College Cork saw Tim Berners - Lee demonstrate the WWW at a RARE WG3 meeting, and installed the software at UCC for the CURIA project . </Dd> <Dl> <Dt> Nikhef </Dt> <Dd> The Dutch National institute for subatomic physics, originally at http://nic.nikhef.nl . This site was actually the third website in the world to come online in February 1992, after CERN and SLAC . </Dd> <Dt> National Center for Supercomputing Applications </Dt> <Dd> The National Center for Supercomputing Applications site was an early home to the NCSA Mosaic web browser, as well as documentation on the web and a "What's New?" list which many people used as an early web directory . </Dd> <Dt> Fermilab </Dt> <Dd> Second web server in North America, following in the trend of high - energy physics laboratories . </Dd> <Dt> SunSITE </Dt> <Dd> Early, comprehensive archiving project . Project as a whole started in 1992 and was quick to move to the web . </Dd> <Dt> Ohio State University Department of Computer and Information Science </Dt> <Dd> Early development of gateway programs, and mass conversion of existing documents, including RFCs, TeXinfo, UNIX man pages, and the Usenet FAQs . </Dd> <Dt> IN2P3 </Dt> <Dd> The French National institute for nuclear physics and particle physics, originally at http://info.in2p3.fr . </Dd> <Dt> HUJI </Dt> <Dd> The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Information service - both in Hebrew and English . Was the first RTL website and the 10th to come online in April 1992., at http://www.huji.ac.il . </Dd> </Dl>

According to cyber history the first web page (html) was created in which year