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The
long-anticipated history of Methodist University's first 50 years
is available now! With 250 photos, 638 pages of annotated history,
92 appendices, and an every-name index, Methodist alumni are sure
to find themselves reliving their glory days at college through
this book. Authored by University Historian William H. "Bill"
Billings '68, this project has been in the making since 2002.
From Cotton Field to University: A History
of Methodist University, 1956-2006 is available in the University
Bookstore, or you may order
your copy online. You may also e-mail Bill Billings at
Brief History of Methodist University
(Prepared by Bill
Billings, University Historian, in October 2006 and updated in November
2011. A complete history of Methodist University's first 50 years
was published in March 2009.)
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| L. Stacy Weaver, first president |
In 1955, a citizens' group in Fayetteville, North Carolina, began
discussing the possibility of bringing a private college to the
city. The Presbyterian Synod of North Carolina had just announced
plans to build a four-year college somewhere in eastern North Carolina,
and many local leaders were hopeful that Fayetteville could attract
that institution. After the Presbyterians selected Laurinburg as
the site for their new college, the mayor of Fayetteville appointed
the "Fayetteville College Steering Committee" to formulate
a proposal for bringing a Methodist college to town.
The Fayetteville (later Methodist) College Foundation was created
to secure pledges of land and money. During 1956, Fayetteville attorney
Terry Sanford and other foundation leaders met with Bishop Paul
Garber of the North Carolina Conference of the Methodist Church
and his cabinet and formally invited the conference to establish
a four-year, coeducational college in Fayetteville. The group pledged
600 acres of land, $2 million for initial construction of the campus,
$50,000 annually for sustaining funds, and city utilities as well
as police and fire protection for the site. Bishop Garber's Long
Range Planning Committee voted to accept the Fayetteville group's
offer and a similar offer from Rocky Mount; the committee also proposed
to move Louisburg College to Rocky Mount and convert it into a four-year
college.
At a special session May 14, 1956, the North Carolina Conference
of the Methodist Church formally accepted the Fayetteville group's
offer, voting to build senior colleges in Fayetteville and Rocky
Mount and to retain Louisburg College as a junior college. As part
of its plan for expanding higher education, the North Carolina Conference
also voted to launch a $5 million fund drive to build the two new
colleges and help Louisburg; each of the two new senior colleges
was to receive $2 million toward initial construction.
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| Students at a reception, c. 1968 |
In July 1956, a Methodist College Board of Trustees was organized,
and Fayetteville attorney Terry Sanford was elected board chairman.
Methodist College was chartered by the state of North Carolina November
1, 1956 as a senior, coeducational, residential college of liberal
arts and sciences.
In June 1957, the trustees named L. Stacy Weaver, superintendent
of the Durham City Schools and an active Methodist lay leader, the
first president of Methodist College. The trustees adopted as the
college motto Veritas et Virtus, Latin for "Truth and Virtue."
Seeking a thoroughly "modern" look, the trustees retained
the architectural firm of Stevens and Wilkinson of Atlanta to design
the campus. The end result was a campus consisting of three terraced,
interlocking malls and contemporary buildings with vaulted roofs
and masonry sunscreens. Site preparation for the campus and construction
of the first four buildings began in the fall of 1958.
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| Construction proceeds as graduates process |
In September 1960, Methodist College opened for business with 88 full-time
students, 12 faculty members and four buildings: the Classroom Building,
the Student Union, the Science Building, and the Boiler Plant. Construction
continued. Three apartment buildings (temporary residence halls) and
a temporary gymnasium were built in 1961 and 1962. During 1963 and
1964, the Yarborough Bell Tower, Davis Memorial Library, and four
large residence halls (Cumberland, Garber, Sanford and Weaver) were
completed.
Intercollegiate sports began in the fall of 1963. As a member
of the Dixie Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, Methodist initially
fielded teams in cross country, golf, basketball, bowling, tennis,
adding soccer, wrestling, track and field and baseball over the
next six years. Methodist was affiliated with the National Association
of Intercollegiate Athletics (N.A.I.A.) before joining Division
III of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (N.C.A.A.).
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| Monarch Wrestling |
Methodist achieved important academic goals by graduating its first
class of 43 students in May 1964 and receiving full accreditation
by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools in November
1966.
Enrollment grew steadily in the sixties, reaching a peak of 1,069
in 1967-68. New facilities were added, including the Reeves Auditorium/Fine
Arts Building, Horner Administration Building, and an addition to
the Student Union in 1967-68. The Fleishman Fountain and Hensdale
Chapel were built in 1969.
Although enrollment had declined as the College began its second
decade, its programs and facilities continued to expand. O'Hanlon
Amphitheater was built in 1971, and Shelley Baseball Field was completed
and dedicated in 1974. In the early 1970s, majors in art and physical
education were added
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| Richard Pearce, second president |
In June 1973, President Stacy Weaver retired. He was succeeded
by Dr. Richard Pearce, vice president and dean at Florida Southern
College. One of Dr. Pearce's first acts was to distribute a statement
of principles to the trustees and the college staff and students;
therein he declared that the college would honor its church-affiliation
by strictly enforcing rules against substance abuse. In response
to the Arab oil embargo and soaring energy prices, Dr. Pearce had
the college boilers converted from fuel oil to natural gas, installed
new energy-efficient lighting, and took other energy conservation
measures.
Declining enrollment, which bottomed out at 610 in 1973, forced
the college to lay off faculty and staff, borrow from local banks
for current operations, and default on federal loans used to build
the first four residence halls. For most of the 1970s, the residence
halls were only half-filled, housing as few as 250 students at one
point. In 1974, as part of an effort to enhance residential life
and retain more resident students, President Pearce approved the
establishment of fraternities and sororities and the hiring of a
full-time director for the Student Union.
In 1975, a president's home was built on campus and the college
launched an evening program. In 1976, Methodist was designated an
American Bicentennial campus, and a gift from Mrs. Karl Berns provided
a Schantz pipe organ for Hensdale Chapel. During the next two years,
the road between Cumberland Hall and the Student Union was paved;
the soccer field was enlarged and a track laid around it.
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| Dr. Christian & Dr. Preslar advise Tapestry,
c. 1977 |
An Army ROTC program was added in 1977. In 1978, Methodist College
began offering associate or two-year degrees. By 1979, enrollment
had increased to 990, but only 360 students were living on a campus
designed to house 600. Over the next four years enrollment declined
to 771, putting further strain on the college's finances.
When President Pearce retired in 1983, the college trustees appointed
Dr. M. Elton Hendricks, academic dean at Randolph Macon College
in Ashland, Virginia, to be the third president of Methodist College.
A year later enrollment in the day program reached 760, showing
a 15 percent increase over the preceding year. Women's soccer was
added to the intercollegiate athletic program in 1984.
In March 1986, Methodist College established the Charles M. Reeves
School of Business to honor a Sanford, North Carolina businessman,
trustee, and benefactor. The Reeves School of Business established
a concentration in Professional Golf Management in 1986 and a similar
program in Professional Tennis Management the following year.
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| M. Elton Hendricks, third president, with ROTC, c.
1984 |
By the fall of 1986, enrollment had
grown to 1,375 students for the day and evening programs combined.
In 1986. the college established an Honor Code, began waiving tuition
for senior citizens, and launched a capital campaign to raise $3.5
million to build a physical activities center, the March F. Riddle
Center, which opened in January 1990. In 1988, the trustees approved
the addition of football to the Methodist athletic program (beginning
in 1989) and the college held a ribbon-cutting and open house for
the restored Mallett-Rogers House art gallery. A golf driving range,
eight tennis courts and nine golf holes were built between 1988
and 1993.
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| Dr. Perkins & a student in mock battle |
Methodist College began the 1990-91 school year with an enrollment
of 1,447—969 day students and 343 evening students. Increased
enrollment provided new opportunities. New majors were announced
in International Relations and Criminal Justice. A mentor/tutoring
program was started in the fall of 1991. In May 1992, the college
contracted with EUA/Highland Partners for a $1.5 million, two-year
energy savings plan involving installation of new heating and lighting
systems with electronic controls. The large boilers at the boiler
plant were phased out. After the new systems went on-line in 1994,
the college realized a 34 percent reduction in annual energy costs.
A four-year project to replace underground electric cables was completed.
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| M.C. Golf dominates the NCAA |
In June 1993, the Methodist College Board of Trustees
approved a series of important planning recommendations presented
by a Strategic Concepts Committee appointed by the president. Projecting
"at least 2,000 students" by the year 2000, the committee
recommended that the college borrow funds to build additional residence
halls over the next five years to accommodate 300 new resident students
and that the college undertake a major capital campaign "of
at least ten million dollars" for increasing the endowment
and constructing a library addition, a new academic building, and
a science building.
In 1994 the Methodist College Board of Trustees agreed to lease
30 acres of campus land (for a token fee) to a local non-profit
group for construction of a youth soccer complex consisting of eight
fields.
In the summer of 1994, the state attorney general's office authorized
the establishment of a campus police department at Methodist College,
giving certified and sworn officers full arrest powers. In the fall
of 1994, a new residence hall for women opened behind Garber Hall.
The college launched a $6.5 million Expanding the Vision capital
campaign to build an annex to the library, a math and computer science
building, and a new academic building.
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| More students meld college & family |
Methodist College began the 1994-95 school year with a record enrollment
of 1,826 students—1,237 in the day program and 589 in the
Evening College. In 1995, the college announced it would launch
a Physician Assistant program in 1996. The Lura Tally Center for
Leadership Development was established, allowing students to earn
an interdisciplinary minor in leadership over a four-year period.
During 1995-96, West Hall (for males) was opened and the main entrance
to the campus was realigned to meet a proposed stoplight. The Methodist
College Development Corporation was chartered and granted a 50-year
lease of 22 acres of college land (south and east of the main entrance)
for development of the College Centre Office Park.
In the summer of 1996, Methodist College dedicated the new Richard
L. Player Golf and Tennis Learning Center. Joe W. Stout Hall, housing
Enrollment Services, opened during the spring of 1997, followed
quickly by the Medical Science Building. The Math and Computer Science
Building opened in the summer of 1997. The second nine holes of
the college golf course were completed during the summer of 1998.
In 1999-2000, Walter and Margaret Clark Hall and the Library Annex
opened. Fall 2000 saw the completion of Cape Fear Commons, the college's
first apartment-style, co-educational, residence hall. Fall 2001
brought a record enrollment of 2,143, the enrollment of ten students
in the College's first graduate program, a Master of Medical Science
(Physician Assistant Studies) program, and the renovation of a brick
home (dubbed Union Station) to house the Student Government Association,
student activities personnel, and a coffee house. Union Station
was renamed Chris's House in 2004, in memory of Chris Ryan, director
of student activities from 1989-2003.
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| The Methodist College Mace is a 21st century Graduation
tradition. |
In the spring of 2002, Methodist fielded its first women's lacrosse
team. In May 2002, the College announced the “Seeds on Good
Soil, A New Season” campaign, a three-year effort to raise
$11 million: $5 million to build an addition to the Science Building,
$3.5 million to build a fitness and wellness center, $1.5 million
for operating expenses, and $1 million for the College endowment.
Cape Fear Commons II, a second apartment-style residence hall, was
completed and occupied in the fall of 2002.
In December 2003, Methodist awarded its first master's degrees
to seven graduates of the physician assistant program. In 2004,
the college changed its academic structure by creating six schools,
each with its own dean. In 2005, the College launched the Professional
MBA at Pinehurst, a weekend program taught in cooperation with the
nearby Pinehurst Resort. In 2006, a Master of Justice Administration
weekend program was established at the N. C. Criminal Justice Academy
in Salemburg, N.C.
In 2005-06, the college received $750,000 from the BB&T Foundation
and a $550,000 challenge grant from the Kresge Foundation toward
construction of the new Science Building, construction began in
the fall of 2005 on the Science Building, the fitness and wellness
center, and two new apartment-style residence halls near the golf
driving range. The apartments were funded from a $24 million bond
issue which also refinanced existing debt and provided initial construction
funds for the Nimocks Fitness Center and the new Science Building
as well as endowment and operating funds.
Helped by four $1 million gifts between 2003 and 2006, the "Seeds
on Good Soil, A New Season" campaign exceeded its revised goal
by $1.5 million, reaching a grand total of $14.7 million in gifts
and pledges. Methodist received $1 million each from Elizabeth B.
and David Nimocks, Jr, for the fitness center, Shelby M.C and Mrs.
Gala Davis for the Davis World Scholars Program, the Thomas R. and
Elizabeth E. McLean Foundation for the new Science Building, and
the estate of the Reverend Dr. William P. Lowdermilk for the William
P. Lowdermilk Scholarship.
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| Dr. M. Elton Hendricks announces that the Board of Trustees
voted unanimously to change the name of Methodist College to
Methodist University |
In the summer of 2006, Dr. Philip C. Williams, vice president for
academic affairs and dean, resigned to become president of the University
of Montevallo in Alabama. During the first semester of 2006-07,
Dr. Wenda Johnson and Mrs. Jane Gardiner served as interim co-academic
deans. In November 2006, President Hendricks announced the appointment
of Dr. Delmas S. Crisp, Jr., academic dean at Wesleyan College in
Macon, Georgia, as Methodist's new academic dean, effective June
1, 2007. Dr. Wenda Johnson was slated to become associate dean to
Dr. Crisp, but died of a heart attack early in 2007. Following Dr.
Johnson's death, Mrs. Jane Gardiner became interim academic dean,
to become associate dean when Dr. Crisp arrived in June 2007.
Two new apartment-style residence halls opened in August 2006,
bringing total residential capacity to 956 students. Methodist began
its 48th academic year in the fall of 2006 with the largest freshman
class (417) and the largest number of Presidential Scholars (171)
in school history. Enrollment reached 2,100 students.
Methodist observed the 50th anniversary of receiving its charter
November 1, 2006, with a special convocation and announcement. President
M. Elton Hendricks announced that the Board of Trustees had voted
unanimously to change the name of Methodist College to Methodist
University.
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