Brewton-Parker College

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Brewton-Parker College

Established 1904
Type Private
President Dr. David R. Smith
Students 1,136 (2004-2005)
Location Mount Vernon, GA, USA
Campus Small town
Colors Orange and Blue
Mascot Barons/Wildcats
Affiliations Southern Baptist Convention
Website www.bpc.edu

Brewton-Parker College is a four-year college whose main campus is located in Mount Vernon, Georgia, USA. Brewton-Parker is affiliated with the Georgia Baptist Convention.

Brewton-Parker College (BPC) has a long history of service to southeast Georgia. In 1904, local religious and community leaders, Dr. John C. Brewton and C. B. Parker, established a private boarding school to serve elementary and high school students from Montgomery County and the surrounding area. As there were no public high schools at that time, the private boarding school played an important role in furthering the education of the area’s youth.

By 1912, public high schools were established and the community’s needs changed. Brewton-Parker Institute received accreditation in 1918 from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools as a junior college and remained one until 1985 when accreditation as a full four-year College was granted. Again, the change in status was in response to community needs. Public two-year community colleges were being established throughout the state. At the same time, there was a greater demand for graduates from four-year colleges.

BPC now offers undergraduate degrees in seven academic departments with 36 majors. Most of its programs have internships offering practical hands-on experience as well as academic content. Further, in applicable areas, undergraduates are encouraged to participate with faculty in performing research and presenting papers.

As the only independent college in rural southeast Georgia, BPC plays an important educational role in one of the state’s poorest areas. It serves many first generation college students and provides learning assistance to other, non-traditional students seeking to improve their knowledge and skills. Among private colleges, Brewton-Parker enrolls three times as many minority students as the national average.

The college offers classes in Savannah, Hinesville where it built a facility, Glennville, Baxley, Norman Park, and Newnan. Most of these students come from nearby communities and, after graduation, many of them choose to return to these communities. This is in keeping with the College’s purpose “to provide a community of intellectual inquiry and learning under Christian sponsorship that fosters student maturation in knowledge, values, and citizenship.”

The College also fulfills an important cultural and economic role in the area. Noted scholars, writers, musical artists, and lecturers participate in on-campus presentations made available to the local community either at no charge or for a nominal fee, thus enriching the cultural offerings of the area. The College’s $6 million payroll and $5 million purchasing budget also enrich the area, serving as major components of the Toombs-Montgomery area economy. In fact, the Georgia Foundation for Independent Colleges recently reported that BPC has a $40 million annual economic impact in the local community.

Contents

  • State senator Tommie Williams
  • State representative Greg Morris
  • Walter Ray, a past chairman of the State Board of Pardons and Parole.
  • Spc. David Flanders United States Army (Volunteered for War on Terrorism)
  • SSGT. Daniel Lynes United States Air Force (Volunteered for War on Terrorism)

  • H. Lee Cheek, Jr. is Chair of the Social Sciences and Professor of Political Science. He is one of the world's leading scholars of American political thought generally, and of John C. Calhoun's political thought, more specifically. [See www.drleecheek.com].
  • William Faw is Dean of External Programs and a Professor of Psychology; is a well-known scholar of consciousness studies.
  • Alan Gragg is the former Vice-President for Academic Affairs and a prominent student of the philosophy of Charles Hartshorne.


Scandal hit the college in the late 1990's over fraud in the school's financial aid department. A lawsuit against the school was brought about by Martha Faw, then the assistant director of financial aid. An investigation begun by the U.S. Department of Education revealed that Pell grants had been given to ineligible students, payments had been made to non-U.S. citizens, and guidelines for work-study programs were not followed. In 1998, Brewton-Parker College agreed to re-pay the Government $4 million dollars, in what was said to be the the largest qui tam recovery in Georgia history. [Source: "Taxpayers Against Fraud Quarterly Review," Vol. 14, July, 1998, 54-55.]

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